Sunday, January 6, 2019

Paolo Soleri and the "Arcology"

Arcosanti interior.
In 1946, Italian architect Paolo Soleri came to study in the US under a fellowship at Frank Lloyd Wright's summer home, Taliesin West, in Scottsdale, AZ. It was in this year and a half and the decades that followed that Soleri would develop the idea of the "arcology." This new type of urban plan was to draw from the disciplines of architecture and ecology in order to create a city that was energy and waste efficient, aesthetically striking, in touch with nature, and built to human scale. Soleri watched with dismay as American cities expanded rapidly outward into suburbs comprised of single-unit homes and connected by highways only traversable using gas-guzzling, human-isolating automobiles. As Soleri continued to develop his vision, it increasingly stood in stark contrast to the wanton sprawl of nearby Phoenix, AZ, built seemingly without purpose during the Sun Belt migration of the early Cold War.

Bell Tree at Cosanti gallery.
In 1970, Paolo Soleri moved his family from his home in Scottsdale to the Arizona desert between Phoenix and Flagstaff to found the community of Arcosanti, a sustainable "arcology" built from Soleri's own vision and intended to support 5,000 residents. Since 1970, Arcosanti has expanded significantly to include many single and family residential units, public spaces including a gallery and amphitheater where numerous musical events are held, and sustainable energy infrastructure. The signature arcs that make up Arcosanti's architecture were designed using cement-pouring techniques picked up by Soleri from Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin West. Much of the revenue for Arcosanti comes from the making of unique bells that are crafted in a foundry at Arcosanti, as well as Soleri's home and gallery of Cosanti in Scottsdale. Though Soleri passed away in 2013, around 70 people currently live at Arcosanti at any given time, and it has ambitious plans for expansion.
Taliesin West exterior.

Over winter break, I had the privilege of visiting Arcosanti and Cosanti, as well as Taliesin West, on a family road through Arizona. Soleri's vision seems to me to fit squarely under UN Sustainable Development Goal #11: "Make cities inclusive, safe, sustainable, and resilient." As my Global Scholars grant proposal with Ian McLeod is currently working on tackling this same goal by expanding affordable housing, I feel truly inspired by Soleri's work and want to keep his philosophy in mind as I move forward with my project.
Mixed-use amphitheater and apartment spaces at Arcosanti.

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Global Scholars Year Reflection