How do you build a sacred space Siamak Hariri

The school of architecture
that I studied at some 30 years ago

happened to be across the street
from the wonderful art gallery

designed by the great
architect Louis Kahn.

I love the building,
and I used to visit it quite often.

One day,

I saw the security guard run his hand
across the concrete wall.

And it was the way he did it,

the expression on his face –

something touched me.

I could see that the security guard
was moved by the building

and that architecture has that capacity

to move you.

I could see it, and I remember thinking,

“Wow. How does architecture do that?”

At school, I was learning to design,

but here – here was
a reaction of the heart.

And it touched me to the core.

You know, you aspire for beauty,

for sensuousness, for atmosphere,
the emotional response.

That’s the realm of the ineffable

and the immeasurable.

And that’s what you live for:

a chance to try.

So in 2003, there was
an open call for designs

for the Bahá’í Temple for South America.

This was the first temple
in all of South America.

It’s a continental temple,

a hugely important milestone
for the Bahá’í community,

because this would be the last
of the continental temples

and would open the door
for national and local temples to be built

around the world.

And the brief was deceptively simple

and unique in the annals of religion:

a circular room, nine sides,
nine entrances, nine paths,

allowing you to come to the temple
from all directions,

nine symbolizing completeness,

perfection.

No pulpit, no sermons,

as there are no clergy
in the Bahá’í faith.

And in a world which is putting up walls,

the design needed to express in form

the very opposite.

It had to be open, welcoming

to people of all faiths,
walks of life, backgrounds,

or no faith at all;

a new form of sacred space

with no pattern

or models to draw from.

It was like designing one of the first
churches for Christianity

or one of the first mosques for Islam.

So we live in a secular world.

How do you design sacred space today?

And how do you even define
what’s sacred today?

I stumbled across this beautiful quote
from the Bahá’í writings,

and it speaks to prayer.

It says that if you reach out in prayer,

and if your prayer is answered –
which is already very interesting –

that the pillars of your heart
will become ashine.

And I loved this idea
of the inner and the outer,

like when you see someone
and you say, “That person is radiant.”

And I was thinking, “My gosh,
how could we make something

architectural out of that,

where you create a building

and it becomes alive with light?

Like alabaster, if you kiss it with light,
it becomes alive.

And I drew this sketch,

something with two layers, translucent

with structure in between capturing light.

Maybe a pure form,
a single form of emanation

that you could imagine

would be all dome

and everything we kept making
was looking too much like an egg.

(Laughter)

A blob.

So you search.

You all know this crazy search,
letting the process take you,

and you live for the surprises.

And I remember quite by accident

I saw this little video
of a plant moving in light,

and it made me think of movement,

reach,

this idea that the temple
could have reach,

like this reach for the divine.

You can imagine also

that movement within a circle
could mean movement and stillness,

like the cosmos,

something you see in many places.

(Laughter)

But rotation was not enough,

because we needed a form.

In the Bahá’í writings, it talks about

the temples being as perfect
as is humanly possible,

and we kept thinking,
well, what is perfection?

And I remember I stumbled into this image
of this Japanese basket

and thinking our Western notions
of perfection need to be challenged,

that this wonderful silhouette
of this basket, this wonkiness,

and that it has the kind of dimple
of what you might imagine a shoulder

or the cheekbone,

and that kind of organic form.

And so we drew and made models,

these lines that merge at the top,

soft lines,

which became like drapery

and translucent veils and folding,

and the idea of not only
folding but torquing –

you remember the plant
and the way it was reaching.

And this started to become
an interesting form,

carving the base, making the entrances.

And then we ended up with this.

This is this temple with two layers,

nine luminous veils,

embodied light,

soft-flowing lines

like luminescent drapery.

180 submissions
were received from 80 countries,

and this was selected.

So we went to the next stage
of how to build it.

We had submitted alabaster.

But alabaster was too soft,

and we were experimenting,
many experiments with materials,

trying to think how we could have
this kind of shimmer,

and we ended up with borosilicate.

And borosilicate glass,
as you know, is very strong,

and if you break borosilicate rods
just so and melt them

at just the right temperature,

we ended up with this new material,

this new cast glass which took us
about two years to make.

And it had this quality that we loved,

this idea of the embodied light,

but on the inside, we wanted
something with a soft light,

like the inner lining of a jacket.

On the outside you have protection,
but on the inside you touch it.

So we found this tiny vein
in a huge quarry in Portugal

with this beautiful stone,

which the owner had kept
for seven generations in his family,

waiting for the right project,
if you can believe it.

Look at this material, it’s beautiful.

And the way it lights up;
it has that translucent quality.

So here you see the structure.

It lets the light through.

And looking down,

the nine wings are bound,

structurally but symbolically strong,

a great symbol of unity:

pure geometry, a perfect circle,

30 meters in section and in plan,

perfectly symmetrical,

like the idea of sacredness and geometry.

And here you see the building going up,

2,000 steel nodes,

9,000 pieces of steel,

7,800 stone pieces,

10,000 cast glass pieces,
all individual shapes,

the entire superstructure all described,

engineered, fabricated
with aerospace technology,

prefabricated machine to machine,

robotically,

a huge team effort, you can imagine,

of literally hundreds,

and within three percent
of our $30 million budget

set in 2006.

(Applause)

Nine wings bound together

forming a nine-pointed star,

and the star shape moving in space,

tracking the sun.

So here it is.

Audience: Wow!

(Applause)

Hopefully, a befitting response
to that beautiful quote,

“a prayer answered,”

open in all directions,

capturing the blue light of dawn,

tent-like white light of day,

the gold light of the afternoon,

and of course, at night, the reversal:

sensuous,

catching the light in all kinds
of mysterious ways.

And the site: it’s interesting;
14 years ago when we made the submission,

we showed the temple
set against the Andes.

We didn’t have the Andes as our site,

but after nine years, that’s exactly
where we ended up,

the lines of the temple set against
nothing but pure nature,

and you turn around and you get
nothing but the city below you,

and inside, a view in all directions,

radiating gardens

from each of the alcoves,

radiating paths.

Last October, the opening ceremonies –

a beautiful, sacred event,

5,000 people from 80 countries,

a continuous river of visitors,

indigenous people
from all over South America,

some who had never left their villages.

And of course, that this temple
belongs to people,

the collective, of many cultures
and walks of life,

many beliefs,

and for me, what’s most important
is what it feels like on the inside;

that it feel intimate,

sacred,

and that everyone is welcome.

And if even a few who come

have the same reaction
as that security guard,

then it truly would be their temple.

And I would love that.

Thank you.

(Applause)

大约 30 年前,我就读的建筑学院

恰好

与伟大的
建筑师路易斯·卡恩 (Louis Kahn) 设计的精美艺术画廊隔街相望。

我喜欢这座建筑,
而且我以前经常去参观它。

一天,

我看到保安把手
伸过水泥墙。

这就是他做事的方式,

他脸上的表情——

有些东西触动了我。

我可以看到保安
被建筑物移动了

,而建筑物具有

移动你的能力。

我可以看到它,我记得当时想,

“哇。建筑是如何做到的?”

在学校,我正在学习设计,

但在这里——这
是内心的反应。

它触动了我的核心。

你知道,你渴望美丽

、感官、氛围
和情感反应。

那是不可言喻

和不可测量的境界。

这就是你活着的目的:

一个尝试的机会。

所以在 2003 年,

南美巴哈伊圣殿的设计公开征集。

这是整个南美洲的第一座寺庙

这是一座大陆寺庙,对巴哈伊社区来说是

一个非常重要的里程碑

因为这将是
最后一座大陆寺庙

,将为在世界各地
建造国家和地方寺庙打开大门

其简略看似简单

,在宗教史上独树一帜:

一个圆形的房间,九个侧面,
九个入口,九个路径,

让您可以
从四面八方来到寺庙,

九象征着完整,

完美。

没有讲坛,没有布道,

因为
巴哈伊信仰中没有神职人员。

在一个正在建造墙壁的世界里

,设计需要以

完全相反的形式表达出来。

它必须是开放的,

欢迎所有信仰、
各行各业、背景的人,

或者根本没有信仰;

一种新形式的神圣空间

,没有

可供借鉴的图案或模型。

这就像
为基督教设计第一座教堂

或为伊斯兰教设计第一座清真寺。

所以我们生活在一个世俗的世界。

你今天如何设计神圣的空间?

你怎么定义
今天什么是神圣的?

我偶然发现了巴哈伊著作中的这句优美的引语

,它与祈祷有关。

它说,如果你在祈祷中伸出手

,如果你的祈祷得到了回应——
这已经很有趣了——

你的心柱
就会变得灰白。

我喜欢这种
关于内在和外在的想法,

就像当你看到某人
并说,“那个人容光焕发”。

我在想,“我的天哪,
我们怎么能用它来做一些

建筑的东西

,你创造了一个建筑物

,它就会在光的作用下变得活跃起来?

就像雪花石膏一样,如果你用光亲吻它,
它就会变得活跃起来。

我画了这个草图 ,

有两层的东西,半透明的

,在捕捉光线之间有结构。

也许一个纯粹的形式,
一个单一的放射形式

,你可以想象

将是一个圆顶

,我们一直在做的一切
看起来太像一个鸡蛋。

(笑声)

一团 .

所以你去搜索。

你们都知道这种疯狂的搜索,
让过程带你去

,你为惊喜而活。

我记得很偶然,

我看到了这个
植物在光线下移动的小视频

,它让我想到了运动 ,

到达,

这个寺庙
可以到达的想法,

就像神圣的到达。

你也可以想象

一个圆圈内的
运动可能意味着运动和静止,

就像宇宙一样,

你在很多地方看到的东西。

(笑声)

但是旋转 还不够,

因为我们需要一个表格

。 在巴哈伊著作中,它

谈到寺庙要尽可能完美

,我们一直在想,
好吧,什么是完美?

我记得我偶然发现
了这个日本篮子的图像,

并认为我们的西方
完美观念需要受到挑战,

这个篮子的美妙轮廓,这种摇摆不定,

以及它有你想象的那种肩膀的那种酒窝

或者颧骨,

还有那种有机的形式。

因此我们绘制并制作了模型,

这些线条在顶部融合,

柔和的线条

,变得像窗帘

和半透明的面纱和折叠,

以及不仅
折叠而且扭转的想法——

你记得植物
和它到达的方式 .

这开始成为
一种有趣的形式,

雕刻底座,制作入口。

然后我们就这样结束了。

这就是这座两层的神殿,

九层夜光面纱,

体现着光,

柔顺的线条

就像夜光的帷幔。

收到了来自 80 个国家的 180 份投稿

,这被选中了。

所以我们进入
了如何构建它的下一阶段。

我们提交了雪花石膏。

但是雪花石膏太软了

,我们正在
试验,很多材料试验,

试图思考我们如何才能拥有
这种闪光

,我们最终得到了硼硅酸盐。

如您所知,硼硅酸盐玻璃
非常坚固

,如果您将硼硅酸盐棒折断

在合适的温度下熔化,

我们最终得到了这种新材料,

这种新的铸造玻璃,我们花了
大约两年时间制作。

它具有我们喜爱的这种品质,

这种体现光线的想法,

但在内部,我们想要
具有柔和光线的东西,

比如夹克的内衬。

在外面你有保护,
但在里面你触摸它。

因此,我们
在葡萄牙的一个巨大采石场中发现了这块

带有这块美丽石头的小矿脉,这块石头

的主人已经
在他的家族中保存了七代,如果你相信的话,我们

正在等待合适的项目

看看这材质,真漂亮。

以及它点亮的方式;
它具有半透明的品质。

所以在这里你看到了结构。

它让光线通过。

向下看

,九个翅膀被束缚,

结构上但象征性强,

是统一的伟大象征:

纯几何,完美的圆形,

30米的截面和平面图,

完美对称,

就像神圣和几何的概念。

在这里你看到建筑物在上升,

2,000 个钢节点,

9,000 块钢,

7,800 块石块,

10,000 块铸造玻璃块,
各种不同的形状

,整个上层建筑都被描述、

设计、制造,
采用航空航天技术,

预制机器对机器,

机器人 ,

一个巨大的团队努力,你可以想象,

从字面上看,数百个

,在
我们 2006 年设定的 3000 万美元预算的百分之三以内

(掌声)

九个翅膀结合在一起

形成一个九角星

,星形在空间中移动,

跟踪 太阳。

所以就在这里。

观众:哇!

(掌声)

希望对那句美丽的名言有一个恰当的

回应,“祈祷得到了回应”

,向四面八方开放,

捕捉黎明的蓝光

,白天的帐篷般的

白光,下午的金光

,当然, 到了晚上,反转:

感性,


各种神秘的方式捕捉光线。

还有网站:很有趣;
14 年前,当我们提交申请时,

我们展示了
与安第斯山脉相对的寺庙。

我们没有将安第斯山脉作为我们的站点,

但九年后,这
正是我们最终到达的地方,

寺庙的线条与
纯净的自然背道而驰

,你转身,
除了你脚下的城市,什么也没有,

而且 在里面,四面八方的景色,

从每个壁龛辐射花园,

辐射路径。

去年 10 月,开幕式——

一个美丽而神圣的活动,

来自 80 个国家的 5,000 人

,源源不断的游客,

来自南美洲各地的土著人,

有些人从未离开过他们的村庄。

当然,这座寺庙
属于人们,

属于集体,属于多种文化
和各行各业,

多种信仰

,对我来说,最重要的
是它的内部感觉;

它感觉亲密,

神圣,

并且每个人都受到欢迎。

而如果来的几个人,

也有
和那个保安一样的反应,

那真的就是他们的神殿了。

我会喜欢的。

谢谢你。

(掌声)