Interview with James Wines for Arch2o

Honored to have had the chance to speak with James Wines of SITE …

This is the latest in a series of interviews which delve into the work and philosophy of a handful of contemporary architects who are actively re(de)fining not only architecture proper, but what it means to be an architect today and, perhaps, in the future.

James Wines is best known for his innovative buildings, public spaces, parks, interiors and product designs. He founded SITE, an architecture and environmental arts studio in New York City in 1970, and immediately broke into the architecture scene with his controversial BEST Products buildings. With a background in sculpture, he viewed architecture as something to be examined and challenged. The BEST buildings questioned the typology of the big-box retail store while experimenting with the user's expectations in such a setting. Wines continues to create architecture that eschews the comfort of conventions, and as a result, his work has reshaped how buildings are perceived and how architecture is itself defined.

Much has changed since SITE was first founded, yet the studio's work continues to be relevant. In 2000 Wines wrote Green Architecture, a book that posed the question of what makes a building “green”? The studio cites a growing concern with ecology and the environment, believing that future projects should go beyond early modern influences and find ways to respond more effectively to the current age of information and ecology. Concurrently, the studio advocates an approach to design which blurs the boundaries between conventionally separate territories such as art, architecture, landscape architecture and urban planning.

We speak with James Wines about using architecture as raw material, whether the city as a project is still relevant, and how the pandemic will affect the future of design.

Full interview can be found here: https://www.arch2o.com/interview-with-james-wines-arch2o/

Image: BEST Notch Building. BEST Products Company, Inc. Miami, FL. 1979. Image property of James Wines / SITE.

2021.