Time to Put an End to “Carbon Copy Cities”: Jean Nouvel’s Approach to Architecture

Acclaimed French architect Jean Nouvel keeps arguing against generalist architecture. Nouvel has introduced in October 2009 one of his latest projects, the Pavilion B at Genoa’s Salone Nautico. With an inspiring lesson on aesthetics, Nouvel, who has the Pritzker Prize 2008, has explained the basics of his achievement: he was looking to inscribe the edifice within the urban and social conditions of the city of Genoa.

Certainly, from the vantage point of the sea, the edifice is in harmony with the water and the boats that are moored. An analogous idea can be felt by looking at other of Nouvel’s achievements such as the Muse Quai Branly in Paris, the Akbar Tower in Barcelona and the improvement of Colle Val d’Elsa in Tuscany. Nouvel affirms to be against the so-called “carbon copy cities” in an interview appeared in La Repubblica, Italy, led by Renata Fontanelli on October 12th 2009, and of which are some lines roughly rendered in English here:

“Nowadays you cannot tell the difference from San Paolo in Brazil from Dubai or Shanghai from Milan because it is as if the project designers do not seem to take into account the uniqueness of each urban agglomeration . Architects do not seem to look at the light, the wind, the water, the history and the culture that make every city, be it small or large, unique. [...] Today,” concludes Nouvel, “modern architecture lies in the relation with its context.”

This vision is in accord to the modern traveler’s growing attention to boutique hotels. Indeed, in the past 20 years the market of boutique hotels has experienced a remarkable boom and this is arguably due to the fact that people are looking more and more for a hotel that can give them a pinch of the city’s essence, rather than choosing a “carbon copy hotel”, a “big box” like you could find in any other city.

Just like a “boutique” in French is a small upscale shop as opposed to a big department store, in the same way a boutique hotel is different from a bigger Hotel Chain, which is generally standardized in features and looks. Boutique hotels are more expected to deliver the zest of the location where it is set and it is by and large a one-of-a-kind experience.

In a world that is becoming increasingly standardized, where commodities, stores, restaurants, indeed society in general is developing into a homogenized entity, boutique hotels are a beacon for diversity and originality.

David Maranzana has founded Epoque Hotels and Avantgarde Hotels, a showcase of boutique hotels in the major destinations worldwide.

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