Preface
Paolo
Soleri and the Arcosanti project.
Arcosanti
is an experimental architectural project through which Italian
architect Dr. Paolo Soleri is attempting to build a town
intentionally designed to be ecologically friendly. The project has
been underway since 1970; when completed, it will house five thousand
people. Arcosanti is located near the geographical center of the
state of Arizona, at Cordes Junction. The concept upon which the plan
and design of the town is based is called “Arcology” – that is,
a portmanteau of ‘architecture’ and ‘ecology.’ Arcology is a
conceptual idea, materialized by a three dimensional design for a
city or a town: that is, a structure rising up, to be thought of as
three dimensional rather than as spread out in a flat pattern, as
most modern cities do. In other words, an arcology is envisioned as a
town or city built entirely as one free-standing integral structure.
However, Dr. Soleri’s plan for Arcosanti as an arcological project
is not, strictly speaking, a single arcology structure; rather it is
imagined as several small arcological structures across the mesa on
which it is being constructed.
The
notion of Arcology originates in Soleri’s personal philosophy,
which posits that urban design should follow the rules of evolution.
Soleri believes that as organisms develop and evolve, they become
more complex and more miniaturized; processes that engender a
three-dimensional structure. Soleri makes an analogy between
organisms and cities. The next step in the evolution of humankind, he
believes, will be to develop three- dimensional urban
infrastructures. Through his work, Dr. Soleri often states (and
restates) that he wants to develop a more advanced human
ecology.
Human
settlements have historically been the crucible for civilization:
culture, science, art, technology have all been and continue to be
bred in the urban environment. Today, more than half of the world’s
population lives in cities. In the coming decades, global
megalopolises will dominate the world. As the megalopolises expand in
a harmful two-dimensional way, they cover arable land and produce
pollutants; they are inherently inaccessible to their inhabitants.
Paolo
Soleri graduated with highest honors from Italy’s Torino
Polytechnico University in 1946, with a doctorate in architecture. He
was an apprentice to the great American architect Frank Lloyd Wright,
living and working at Wright’s Taliesin East and Taliesin West
communities during the late 1940’s. Architecturally, however,
Wright was only a minimal influence on Dr. Soleri; the famed French
architect and city planner le Corbusier was a greater influence on
his work.
.
The construction of Arcosanti is the paramount concern of the Cosanti
Foundation, a 501-3C charitable organization established by Dr.
Soleri and his late wife, Colly, in the early 1960’s. About 3% of
the total plan for Arcosanti has been completed to date. Despite lack
of funds, the Foundation perseveres in its mission to build Arcosanti
with the participation of those attending “Arcosanti Workshops.”
Dr. Soleri continues indefatigably to believe that there must be room
in society for urban experiments such as Arcosanti.
Arcosanti
Experienced
I
felt it might be helpful to tell my tale, a partial account of my
almost 16 years of experience between 1975 and 2000 with Dr. Paolo
Soleri and The Cosanti Foundation, at the Arcosanti site in central
AZ and the Cosanti studios in Paradise Valley, a suburb of
Scottsdale, near Phoenix, AZ. There is a strong oral tradition at
Arcosanti, and certainly some of the information in this book has
been derived from that. But in this account, I’ve tried to keep
only to those things which I directly experienced myself, tried to
eschew rumor and hearsay (of which there is also quite a bit at
Arcosanti). This book is best understood as MY version of the
“Truth.” I’ve expressed my observations and opinions in my own
way; I’ve written from memory as I did not keep a daily journal
when I was at Cosanti and Arcosanti. Real names have been retained
for authenticity. (In some real-life stories, names are changed “to
protect the innocent.” But I believe I have a special case here. It
would make no sense to change the names, since the people I refer to
have been so closely associated with the Arcosanti project – which
is, after all, a real place, a public place; that there is, quite
simply, no way to disguise who they are.) I contend that these
people, because of their involvement with the Arcosanti project, are
public figures.1
Dr. Paolo Soleri himself is a public figure. Thus, they can be
discussed in a public manner.
Paolo
Soleri would say – in fact has said, that the daily experience at
Arcosanti is irrelevant to the goal of building the Arcosanti
arcology, and is simply a consequence of the construction effort. But
to me, the daily experience there is very relevant; in fact it is the
essence of the project as it exists today.
For
more information about the Arcosanti project, it is worthwhile to
peruse the Arcosanti website at <www.arcosanti.org>
About
Me. Part 1: My
Introduction to Arcosanti
I’m always looking for something
new and interesting. Frequently, this has led to being interested in
the “latest thing” but in my more mature years, I have come to
see how ephemeral this is and so I’ve started trying to stick with
the tried and proven (which, it must be said, frequently was the
“latest thing” forty years ago).
As
a young person, I read voraciously. In addition to nonfiction science
and technology (for example, science encyclopedias), much of what I
read in my youth was science fiction or SciFi. Everything from ‘Tom
Swift, Jr.’ to Robert A. Heinlein’s Space
Cadet
was what I went to, right after “Dick & Jane”). As I matured,
I read newspapers and news magazines. From those mainstream
publications, I learned there was a burgeoning study of the future,
called futurology, or futuristics. My Sci-Fi background naturally led
to an interest in futurology, so I subscribed to The
Futurist
magazine. In 1970, Alvin Toffler published Future
Shock,
which I read in paperback as a college freshman. The cover of Future
Shock
had an image in a few primary colors with the title, “Future Shock”
printed in a black digital-style typeface
While attending the University of
Cincinnati (UC), I took an interdisciplinary course in the school of
Design, Art, Architecture and Planning (DAAP) called “Man &
Environment.” I wrote a long term paper for the class, in which I
attempted to tie together human evolution and the development of
technology. I think it was on a bulletin board at UC that I learned
that a futurology conference was to be held in August of 1973 at the
College of Mount Saint Joseph, just outside Cincinnati. Tuition for
the conference was reasonable, and I signed up immediately to go.
Futurology
conferences
The
College campus of Mount Saint Joseph is a collection of modern
buildings set in the green Cincinnati suburb of Delhi. Upon arrival
there for the conference, I discovered that a high school friend,
Kathy Neuman, was a student at the College and was working at the
futurology conference. At that time, the College of Mount Saint
Joseph was a conservative Catholic school and I was pretty sure the
nuns didn’t care for my long hair and brash attitude. Several of
the conference participants were middle-aged women. In between
sessions, they talked and read copies of the original large-format W
(Women’s
Wear Daily)
magazine. Some of them commented that I was “wordy” when I stood
up to ask questions during the conference sessions.
During
this, my first futurology conference, I got to hear futurist John
McHale, author of The
Future of the Future,7
speak; and also the late futurist Robert Theobald, who lived in
Wickenburg, Arizona, and presented a book titled, Teg’s
1994,
in which he projected the widespread use of personal computers in the
1990’s. The movie Soylent
Green,
starring Charlton Heston and predicting a dystopian future, was
shown. Werner von Braun, the rocket scientist, was the final speaker.
The
next futurology conference at the College of Mount Saint Joseph, in
August of 1974, held destiny for me: Dr. Paolo Soleri was listed as
one of the main speakers, and the conference brochure featured a
photograph of Soleri standing in front of his “3-D Jersey” model,
a complex-looking structure. For this Global
Man And His Future
conference, there were several other speakers listed, including
social scientist Dr. Benjamin Hourani, who was scheduled to speak
just before Paolo Soleri. I confess that what excited me most at Dr.
Hourani’s session was anticipating Soleri’s presentation. Dr.
Hourani, wearing a conservative suit and a tie, stood at a lectern
and read aloud a paper he had written. This was boring; but when
Paolo Soleri came out, he was dressed in a green polo shirt and grey
slacks. He made short, quick movements as he adjusted the two slide
projectors set up for him. Two screens hung above the stage in the
auditorium, and Soleri presented an amazing slide lecture. His thick
northern Italian accent was difficult to understand at first, but I
was astounded by the images he was presenting. He showed slide after
slide of the unusual structures at Cosanti and Arcosanti, as well as
images of models for his urban designs, including a silt-cast plaster
model for an urban dam, which completely captured my imagination. In
addition to amazing architecture, Soleri described and explained the
workshops being held at the Arcosanti site in Arizona. There were
slides of the students working, slides of the students at Morning
Meeting in the shade against the mesa cliff.
It
could have been that it was my Sci-Fi background that prompted me to
identify with Paolo Soleri’s architecture, insofar as it seemed
“futuristic” in nature to me. I thought, ‘Here is a man doing
science fiction, developing new ways of designing for the future.’
In my readings about Buckminster Fuller, I had gathered that one of
Fuller’s main points was that instead of changing “man” to
improve the world, we had to change humanity’s technology. So I saw
Soleri’s proposition for a new urban planning paradigm, which he
called Arcology (‘architecture + ecology’), as a kind of
technological solution for the world’s problems.
Following Soleri’s presentation,
walking out of the auditorium, a woman assured me that his lecture
was “just for fun,” and that Dr. Hourani’s lecture was the more
substantial of the two. I hardly heard her: I was dazzled by Soleri’s
presentation. But it did not initially occur to me that it was
possible to go to Arcosanti myself.
After
a break, a college staff member appeared on the auditorium stage to
announce that Paolo Soleri would take questions in a classroom down
the hallway. I was very interested to hear anything Soleri had to say
so I walked down to the classroom, already half-full of interested
students sitting at student desk-chairs. I sat down in the right
front row, much as I do in a normal school setting. Paolo sat facing
us, behind the teacher’s table at the front of the classroom.
Others in the room who were more familiar with Soleri’s work than I
was asked some questions, some of which were cryptic to me. They
referred to Paolo’s book, Arcology:
the City in the Image of Man;
this became a rapid-fire exchange between Soleri and the students. I
was still new to Soleri’s arcology concept, and I was struggling to
completely understand it. I had yet to read the Arcology
book but I’d been excited and influenced by an illustration of an
arcology that had appeared on the cover of Analog,
a
science fiction magazine. My imagination was running rampant and I
raised my hand to ask whether an arcology would consist of layers,
some with greenery and some with human habitation. Soleri smiled,
held his hands horizontal to one another, and said, “A sandwich!”
The whole room laughed! (Decades later, during a meeting in his
studio at Arcosanti, Paolo would acknowledge that he remembered this
encounter.) After that, the question-and-answer session quickly wound
down.
Towards
the end of this second futurology conference, the 1972 film titled,
Future
Shock
was shown, inspired by Alvin Toffler’s book of the same name. The
film projected all sorts of technological advances and cultural
oddities for the coming decades. In fact, it was prophetic.
In
order to get some college credits from the College of Mount Saint
Joseph for having participated in this conference, I had to submit a
short paper. In my paper, I attempted to summarize Soleri’s
arcology concept and advocate for it as a solution to the world’s
problems. I had yet to read Soleri’s books, and my description of
the arcology concept was vague since it was based on what I had
grasped from Paolo’s presentation. I received a telephone call from
the teacher at the college who’d read my paper. She pointed out
that I had lifted a sentence from the back cover of The
Bridge Between Matter and Spirit is Matter Becoming Spirit,
but said that didn’t matter; what did matter was that the arcology
idea was ridiculous and that Soleri should not be taken seriously.
Serendipity
Sometime during the next couple of
months, it dawned upon me that Paolo Soleri had a program at
Arcosanti that I could actually participate in. In the fall of 1974,
I started to ask around the University of Cincinnati campus to find
out what I could about it. It didn’t occur to me to go to the
library since I had no idea of the number of articles in print about
Paolo Soleri and Arcosanti. Then someone in the DAAP School at UC
gave me the name of Soleri’s organization, The Cosanti Foundation.
Someone else told me the people at Arcosanti were very “arty,”
and the late urban planning professor Harris Forusz warned me that
those who managed Arcosanti were “very shrewd” and would take
advantage of someone naïve like me.
I
found an article about Paolo Soleri, The Cosanti Foundation and
Arcosanti in The
Last Whole Earth Catalogue.9
An
address was listed; I immediately wrote a letter to ask for
information about Arcosanti. I received back a sepia-toned poster for
the 1974 Arcosanti Workshops, showing a panoramic view of the high
desert site and an explanation of the program. The text emphasized
the wilderness environment of the Arcosanti site, stating what some
might think obvious: one would find no “city” there. A
hand-written note accompanied the poster, explaining that I would
receive the 1975 Arcosanti Workshop poster as soon as it was
available. The information packet included a brochure about Ivan
Pintar’s Paolo
Soleri and Arcosanti Slides,
without any mention of just who Ivan Pintar was. A list of books and
materials available for sale was included, as well as a small Cosanti
Originals/Soleri windbells catalog. I promptly ordered a paperback
copy of Soleri’s book, Arcology:
the City in the Image of Man.
(I had previously ordered the 1975 Arcosanti
Calendar
and a copy of The
Sketchbooks of Paolo Soleri.)
Serendipity and coincidence: I was
gradually inspired to involve myself in Paolo Soleri’s Arcosanti
experiment. I was young and naïve and I thought it was all a
straightforward proposition. Idealistically, I imagined the project
as being populated with intelligent and magnanimous people; I thought
the project was succeeding and would succeed. I didn’t
realize how precarious the whole venture is and I had only a few
preconceptions, going in, as to what I would actually find at
Arcosanti.
Beginnings
In
early 1971, I was a high school student who read constantly. I read
and read, and one day in the daily newspaper, the Cincinnati
Post1,
I happened upon an article describing a new city that was to rise
vertically in layers, being designed and built by a foreign-named
architect. A photograph was featured, of a long-haired young man in a
hard-hat! This was unusual garb for a hippie-type. He was facing away
from the camera, towards concrete pillars rising vertically in front
of him. This, of course, was the beginnings of the South Vault at
Arcosanti. (Since then, although I have seen perhaps 90% of all the
articles ever published about Arcosanti and Paolo Soleri, I have
never again found that particular one article and photograph.) The
newspaper article amazed me: I had forgotten an article I’d seen
two years earlier in Life
magazine, with photos of models for cities rising vertically in
strange geometric shapes. The architect who’d designed the models
and his assistants were hanging around in the background; an Arizona
sunset lit the scene.
As
a teenager interested in the social upheavals of the late 1960’s
and early 1970s, I frequented stores and other places in Cincinnati
that catered to the “counter-culture.” I was involved in the
fashion and music of the time: I listened to the local FM rock
station, which featured a program on Saturday nights called “The
Jelly Pudding Show.” In those times, in the late 1960’s and early
1970s in downtown Cincinnati, Kidd’s Books on Vine Street drew
local counter-cultural-types like a magnet. The street-level floor
was filled with tables of children’s books and a rack of magazines,
but the real
bookstore was downstairs. You traversed steps with “Good Ole
Grateful Dead” stickers on some of the risers to get to a basement
room with art books off to the side, the main room full of Sci-Fi,
fantasy, and especially books aimed at the counter-culture crowd.
Evidently Kidd’s catered to the local Cincinnati “hip”
community; it would carry books at special request, holding them on
display for specific individuals. The original series of The
Whole Earth Catalogue
was prominent. So were books on the Grateful Dead. Kidd’s carried
all kinds of books and publications I had never heard of, including
the underground portable video movement’s publication, Radical
Software.
There was a book that documented exactly what a million is by
displaying a million dots. Pages and pages of dots. Just dots.
“You’re too young to be in here,” the female clerk behind the
counter said, one time when I was there in 1970. I asked why and she
pointed out some soft pornography in the back corner. But I wasn’t
interested in that, I protested. They sold stuff to me anyway, even
though I was in the eleventh grade at Western Hills High School in
1970.
One
Saturday when I went into Kidd’s, they had on a display table a
large horizontally-formatted book titled, Arcology:
the City in the Image of Man3,
by architect Paolo Soleri. I didn’t realize that Soleri is an
Italian name. I briefly flipped through the huge pages and saw
drawings of futuristic cities built as whole structures. Fascinating.
Looking around the store, I later found another book by the same
author, The
Bridge Between Matter and Spirit is Matter Becoming Spirit,,
a
collection of essays written by Soleri primarily during the 1960’s.
I took the small paperback home and put it in my to-read-later
drawer. Kidd’s also carried a book about Soleri’s work, Visionary
Cities: The Arcology of Paolo Soleri,
5
by Donald Wall. It was a trade paperback with a square format and
designed with 1970s black and white supergraphics. It turned out that
this was a condensed version of a larger hardcover published at the
time, of Paolo Soleri’s 1970 retrospective exhibition at the
Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. From Kidd’s I also
regularly purchased some of the science fiction I was reading,
including books by Robert A. Heinlein (Farnham’s
Freehold)
and Larry Niven (Ringworld).
At one point, they also had Leonard Nimoy’s I
Am Not Spock.
Reading
mainstream news magazines about the counter-culture (as well as The
Last Whole Earth Catalogue),
I became aware of architect-engineer Buckminster Fuller’s
importance. He had invented the geodesic dome, among other things,
and advocated for technology’s allowing the equitable distribution
of resources for the world’s population. Fuller was a
counterculture hero; his geodesic domes were built as living
structures in various communes including Drop City in Colorado and
Earth People’s Park in Vermont. Kidd’s Books carried some of
Fuller’s publications, and after I read a newspaper article about
Fuller, I purchased Operating
Manual for Spaceship Earth7
from Kidd’s. This was a difficult read, but very interesting.
Around 1972, my friend Jamie Alexander and I drove up to Kent State
University in northern Ohio to hear Buckminster Fuller speak. At Kent
State, Fuller spoke before a SRO crowd in a large auditorium. We
listened to him as he expounded upon his ideas for hours, but finally
had to return to Cincinnati. I mailed away for an information packet
about Buckminster Fuller but my Mother wouldn’t let me go to his
workshop in Carbondale, Illinois.
Coming
of Age
I grew up in in western
Cincinnati, Ohio, in a small suburban-style house on a cul-de-sac in
a working-class neighborhood. As an only child, not only was I a
loner, I learned at an early age to be a loner. I was born with birth
defects, among them a right club foot that necessitated a series of
painful childhood corrective orthopedic surgeries; I wore plaster leg
casts and had to use crutches. I was technically handicapped, which
afflicted me with psychological problems throughout my life. I felt
abused by the kids in my neighborhood, by students, teachers and
principals in junior and senior high schools; I tried to retain my
focus on the horizons of my intelligence and interests. An ability to
influence a clutch of friends in high school who saw me as a “hip”
voice gained me some close relationships, including some young women.
But the breakup of my community of friends after we all graduated
from high school and went our separate ways led me back to being a
loner. I yearned for another place, beyond the ken of my small
Cincinnati community. I yearned for a community of kindred souls who
were also interested in the future and the fate of humanity, perhaps
pursuing a futuristic project of some kind. I had a vision of a group
of people in the mountains, somewhere Out West, doing this. That, I
believe, is why I was drawn to Arcosanti.
When I first came to Arcosanti, I
was 23 years old and inexperienced. I had led a sheltered childhood
in a provincial community. I believed Arcosanti was a project that
could save the world. I didn’t realize what a pastiche of
personalities Arcosanti was.
Over time, as I gathered other
experiences in addition to the Arcosanti experience (UC, the Grand
Canyon, Yellowstone, ASU) and as mental illness crept in, as I
matured and changed, it was not always in keeping with the tides of
Arcosanti. I didn’t realize how personal the atmosphere at
Arcosanti could be, or how close I’d become to its leaders.
Growing up reading science
fiction, I was exposed to many different alternative social,
scientific and technological ideas and notions. This exposure caused
me to question the world around me. I saw different ways of using and
developing technology and social systems than those that were widely
accepted by the general public, worldwide. When I encountered the
ideas of Buckminster Fuller and Paolo Soleri, I thought that they
were working out alternative ideas for using technology than those
that were presently being used in what passes for civilization. I
thought that Fuller and Soleri were “doing” science fiction. This
alternative view of the world also caused me to be attracted to what
was then the counter-culture, although as I learned more about the
counter-culture’s ideas I found I did not always agree.
Preparing
for Arizona
In
late summer, 1974, I went into the Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati for
hernia surgery. I had a long recovery there, as the surgery was
initially botched. While I recovering in the hospital from the
surgery, I read Donald Wall’s paperback version of Visionary
Cities,
a book about Dr. Soleri’s Arcology concept. It was intriguing and
inspiring. Because I was still recovering from the surgery, I could
not attend the University of Cincinnati for Fall Quarter, 1974. After
some rest at home, I went out and got a part-time evening janitorial
job. I had decided that, since I had all this time on my hands, I
would use it to save my money and prepare to travel to Arizona for a
spring, 1975 Arcosanti Workshop. I applied for an Arcosanti Workshop
and received an acceptance packet from Cosanti Foundation. Little did
I know the hard work that lay before me. Around this time, my Father
saw an advertisement in the classified employment section of the
Sunday Cincinnati
Enquirer
for summer jobs at the Grand Canyon in northern Arizona. I was
excited at the prospect of spending spring and summer of 1975 in
Arizona!
I went to Stouffer’s Hotel on
the western edge of downtown Cincinnati to interview for the summer
job with Grand Canyon National Park Lodges. I told the interviewer
that I was willing to work hard and even cut my long hair but I just
had to get out of Cincinnati. My life at that time wasn’t very
good. I was a pothead with no friends to speak of and my relations
with my parents at home was strained. They certainly would have been
happy to see me leave the house I had grown up in. I suffered from
acute depression, as well; so much so that I would say later, “I
couldn’t see straight.” One of my professors in the Sociology
department at the University of Cincinnati had sent a letter to my
parents, suggesting that I be pulled out of school and put into a
hospital, but I received by mail the good news that I had been hired
by Grand Canyon National Park Lodges. So I went ahead and applied for
the second Arcosanti Workshop of 1975, including in my application an
introductory essay, which I had written in green ballpoint pen while
I sat at my desk.
During
the daytime, my parents were not at home; I could crank up my stereo
and listen to a lot of music. Vinyl records, including Emerson, Lake
& Palmer, Pink Floyd. ELP’s songs about suicide, war and
starving Third World children depressed me no end. I was a Pink Floyd
fan long before their 1973 breakout hit album, The
Dark Side of the Moon
but its admonishments to “do something with your life” inspired
me to get out of my parent’s house and Cincinnati. Jefferson
Starship’s 1974 album, Dragonfly,
includes a song, ‘Ride the Tiger,’ with a partial lyric, “Look
to the summer of ’75…” I sat on the floor of my room and
flipped through the pages of the trade paperback edition of Arcology:
The City in the Image of Man,
sometimes smoking a joint, listening to loud rock music, including
The Who’s Quadrophenia.
I studied the book in depth. Later, as I worked on my Masters Thesis
at Arizona Sate University in the mid-1980’s and then under Soleri
at Arcosanti, I understood it better. But in 1974, reading The
Bridge Between Matter and Spirit is Matter Becoming Spirit
in the parked car before going to my evening janitorial job at a
printing company, I used a green felt-tip pen to underline
significant passages.
I arranged things so the dates on
which my spring 1975 Arcosanti Workshop ended and my summer
employment with Grand Canyon National Park Lodges were a couple of
weeks apart. Having never been to Arizona and not having done my
homework; therefore not comprehending the distances involved, I
thought I would travel around Arizona (this without a car), camp out,
see the sights, and so on. I had looked at a Rand McNally road atlas
and had fixated on the campground at Picacho Peak between Phoenix and
Tucson as a destination. My Mother wouldn’t have this, so I
telephoned the Grand Canyon National Park Lodges to ask whether I
could arrive a couple of weeks early. OK, they said.
I bought a TWA airline ticket
since I thought TWA was the epitome of travel (next to the SST). The
Cosanti Foundation’s acceptance packet included a list of things to
bring along with you; this included any tool you might want to have
available for your personal use during the construction workshop (I
didn’t), specifically a tape measure, which I bought at a local
hardware store (I still have it today). I began packing—my Father
lent me a military surplus bag with handles. I knew I was going to be
gone for six months or so, so I packed two bags. I eagerly
anticipated my adventure in Arizona—my first time away from home!
The day to travel finally came. My
folks took me to the Greater Cincinnati Airport across the Ohio River
in Northern Kentucky. Of course this was my first time flying. The
flight I had booked went first to St. Louis, where I would catch a
connecting flight to Phoenix. I had, in. Cosanti’s information
packet, instructions for getting from Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport to
Cosanti, in the suburb of Paradise Valley.
Boarding
the airplane, sitting in my seat, I noticed that the plane was only
partially filled. I saw businessmen in suits, while I wore blue
jeans, an army surplus jacket and had long red hair. Take-off and the
fight itself were more than I had imagined. When we arrived at the
quiet St. Louis-Lambert Airport, I had to wait for my connecting
flight. I sat on long, flat black, padded benches, gazed out of
expansive windows at the green Missouri countryside. The airplane for
the flight to Phoenix was filled to capacity. I had a window seat and
stared out at the passing rural American landscape. I used my camera
to take pictures out of the window. Paolo Soleri’s comments in The
Bridge Between Matter and Spirit is Matter becoming Spirit
concerning a “museum of the air” and “the sculpture earth”
came into my mind:
“Given
the landscape of Europe let’s say 20,000 years ago, blanketed by
forests, and the Europe of today almost uninterruptedly farmed, would
we find more etherialization among the saber-tooth tiger, mammoth,
bison, bears, and trees than today? If we say yes, we must carefully
disconnect ourselves from everything which is ‘civilized’ nature:
that is to say, all that which is human and return to the innocence
of the animal. Step forward, please, if any of us is so inclined. I
for one, will stone you, betraying the spirit, you a true ‘entropic
pollutant.’”
The airplane finally landed at
Terminal 2 of Sky Harbor Airport in Phoenix, surrounded by desert
landscape. The current large Terminals 3 and 4 had yet to be built.
After we disembarked from the plane, I made my way through the
new-looking building and went outside. I was struck at how bright the
sun was. I had the old Kodak Brownie camera my Mother had lent me
ready and photographed a palm tree; I had not seen a real one before.
It was sunny and warm, and I removed my jacket.
The
First Days
The instructions in my packet from
Cosanti were to catch a Gray Line Limousine from Sky Harbor Airport
out to the Radisson Resort in north Scottsdale, then to take a taxi
to 6433 Doubletree Road. I found the “limousine” parked several
yards from the terminal. This was not the standard limousine you
usually think of as a “limo;” it was more like a large station
wagon with a few rows of seats. The driver agreed to my destination,
took my money and strapped my bags to the top of the car. There were
a few other passengers going along as well.
Travelling through Phoenix and
Scottsdale, I was goggle-eyed at the desert, the mountains and the
city. The limousine stopped at a few hotels and resorts in Scottsdale
to let off passengers. I was the last to be let off since I was going
the furthest north. We arrived at the Radisson Resort, and when the
driver went to off-load my bags I discovered one was missing. So we
had to back-track to one of the other resorts to retrieve my other
bag. Luckily it was till there on the pavement. The driver was angry
about this; he said I should have noticed my bag being off-loaded but
I was too distracted by the sights and sounds of Scottsdale. The
limousine drove me back to the Radisson resort ; this time I got out
with both my bags. The “limo” drove away.
I pushed open the large, heavy
doors of the building, entered the cool, dark lobby, found a bank of
pay phones on the right. On one I called the taxi company Cosanti had
listed, then went outside to wait for the cab. I didn’t dawdle in
the lobby—I felt I didn’t belong there. When the taxi arrived,
the driver had never heard of Cosanti, but when I showed him the
hand-drawn map I’d adapted from the one in Cosanti’s letter, he
immediately understood where to go. We drove a short distance up
Scottsdale Road, then turned west onto Doubletree Road, looking for
signs of Cosanti. We drove back and forth a couple of times, and
then, near the intersection of Invergorden and Doubletree Roads, I
spotted the North Studio’s skylight frame, jutting up from a small
rise in the desert. “That’s it!” I exclaimed.
The taxi drove into Cosanti’s
then-unpaved parking lot and the driver turned the car around. We
looked own into the sunken courtyard in front of the North Studio.
“What is this place?” the driver asked, and I replied,
“Experimental architecture.” I exited the taxi with my bags and
it drove away. I left my luggage at the top of the ramping brick
walkway leading down into the North Apse. The bronze bell and light
chandelier hanging from the roof of the North Apse was striking. The
photographs I’d seen of Cosanti did not do it justice. I hadn’t
realized how closely integrated it is, and smaller and more rustic
than I had imagined.
I walked under the Ceramics Studio
skylight, out past the foundry Apse on the left, where long-haired
workers were noisily casting bronze Soleri windbells. Bells hung
everywhere at Cosanti, from ceilings and beams. They were mostly
ceramic, clacking in the breeze. As I passed the Pumpkin Apse, I
remembered how I had seen it in a dream, back in Cincinnati.
I climbed the brick pathway, past
the Barrel Vault on the left, the South Apse Courtyard and the Cat
Cast House on the right. Walking past the sunken Earth House on the
left, I arrived at the Student Apse area, where Arcosanti women
awaited the arriving workshop group. I couldn’t help myself—I
walked up, spread my arms, grinned widely and said, “Here I am!”
They looked at me as if to say, Who is this guy? One of the women
asked my name and I told them. Another said, “You’re Scott
Davis?” To which I said Yes, and to which she said, “I’ll go
tell Colly you’re here,” walking away. I don’t know how, but
evidently my reputation had preceded me.
I went back to the entrance to
retrieve my bags—luckily they were still there. I carried them to
the Cat Cast House back yard, then proceeded to walk around Cosanti,
exploring. I walked to the open entrance of the North Studio where
the original Plexiglas Arcosanti model occupied most of the available
space. The floor was dirt. You could barely walk sideways around the
model. It was dusty and full of cobwebs but impressive nonetheless.
There were posters of Paolo Soleri’s drawings at the top of the
walls.
The northeast quadrant of the
Cosanti compound comprised the new earth-cast concrete Antioch
building, with earth still spilling from its interior. This structure
had been built the previous year, by a workshop group from Antioch
College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. Elsewhere, scattered around the
compound, were green garden hoses running to various plantings. One
hose ran into the new Antioch building’s bathroom, powering a
toilet. In certain entranceways were hand-made plastic signs marking
private areas, such as “Stop! Keep Out!” (This disturbed me at
first, but years later, when I lived at Cosanti, I learned the
necessity for those signs.) Outside the north Apse, near the Metal
Studio, was the original bell tree. Soleri windbells hung from the
display with yellow and red sale tags dangling from them. With my
fifty percent workshopper discount, I bought a small Soleri windbell
for $10.
Socializing with the Arcosanti and
Cosanti people, someone told me that Colly Soleri would like to meet
me. In the narrow, partially enclosed Ceramics Studio passageway
outside the circular windows of the Office, Colly Soleri approached
me and introduced herself. Someone had pointed me out to her. She was
a beautiful lady with an oval face and short graying hair with bangs.
She had a pretty smile and sparkling eyes. I introduced myself, and
she complimented me on the introductory essay I had sent. She laughed
that it was hand-written in green ballpoint, since most application
essays were typed. She said Paolo wasn’t sure about it but she
thought it was brilliant. She told me that Paolo was traveling and
would meet our group up at the Arcosanti site.
I proceeded to the back yard of
the Cat Cast House, where our workshop group was gathering. At the
back door to the Cat Cast House, I met Naomi Kaufman, who was our
Workshop Coordinator. Naomi was of medium height and build, with
short, curly brown hair, beautiful and friendly. She told me about
Paolo’s new arcology design series, the “Two Suns Arcology” and
an upcoming exhibit of these arcology models at Xerox corporate
headquarters in Rochester, New York. She also mentioned that Soleri
had gone to Iran to meet with the Shah about constructing a desert
arcology there. Years later, Paolo clarified: he never actually met
with the Shah but he did meet with one of his staff.
About thirty workshoppers were
expected that weekend—at the time, this was considered to be a
medium-sized group. People trickled in. In the Cat Cast back yard, a
couple of hand-made picnic-type tables had been set up from which to
serve meals. As evening fell, we were expected to spread our sleeping
bags on the remaining lawn or on the Swimming Pool deck. For dinner
the first evening, we were served “McCleve’s Chili.” Michael
McCleve was a denizen of Cosanti, locally known for his all-day chili
recipes. After everyone had eaten, the staff asked for a volunteer to
wash dishes in the Cat Cast House Kitchen. I was intrigued by the Cat
Cast, which seemed to me to be very architecturally advanced and even
“hip.” I volunteered to wash dishes so I could go into the Cat
Cast House and see it from the inside. People played country music
while I washed dishes; I hadn’t expected country music to be
popular at Arcosanti.
The Cat Cast House is
predominantly earth-cast concrete structure supported by railroad
ties. The earth mold upon which the concrete roof had been cast had
been shaped by a caterpillar tractor, thus it was literally
“cat-cast.” As I understand it, the design for this house was
influenced by the French architect and city planner le Corbusier. The
railroad ties are in-filled with intricate wood window framework.
Wood window panels open while glass ones are fixed. The building is
L-shaped in plan. Inside, at the sink, I was told not to go back to
the bunk rooms behind sculptural silt-cast concrete panels; nor down
into the “Pit,” where there is a living room with a bunk room
under the north entrance.
I finished washing dishes and was
praised for doing a good job, quickly. As evening fell, I socialized
with a few people and was invited to the parking lot to smoke pot.
I’d thought I’d come to Arizona to get away from this, but was
assured marijuana was more prevalent in Arizona than in Ohio. I’d
hoped to mitigate my drug problem in Arizona but it would,
eventually, get worse there. The first night at Cosanti, I slept in
my sleeping bag out on the lawn of the Cat Cast’s back yard, along
with several others. The second night, I slept on the floor of the
Pumpkin Apse (also known as Jacob’s Studio, after Jacob Portnoy, an
apprentice who had died of a brain tumor). In the morning, some of
the group complained about my snoring. Nothing I could do about that.
At one point, out of curiosity, I ducked into the entrance of the
Barrel Vault drafting room to see a large elaborate drawing of the
projected Pierre Teilhard de Chardin Cloister that was to be built on
the south slope of the Arcosanti mesa.
Our workshop group was to stay and
work at Cosanti for two or three days. The first morning, breakfast
was served in the Cat Cast back yard; it consisted of granola with
milk and orange juice to drink. After breakfast, the Workshop group
was led to the south end of the Barrel vault building to register and
pay tuition, if it had not already been paid. The beautiful blond
Kimberly Cameron was the Cosanti Foundation’s Registrar that year.
As soon as we paid our money, we were put to work.
At first, I was on a crew
shoveling earth out from under the Antioch building’s roof. Then
they told me that they wanted me at another work area of the
compound. I was reassigned to scrubbing sand from bell castings,
using steel brushes over on one side of the Foundry Apse. I foolishly
asked how the sand got on the castings in the first place—the ins
and outs of casting I would learn the hard way, in the early 1980’s,
working in the Cosanti Foundry. We had a lunch break in the Cat Cast
House back yard. For lunch, we were served cream cheese and walnut
sandwiches on organic whole wheat bread; this was very good. There
was iced tea, cold water and KoolAid to drink.
The educational portion of the
Workshop, which was more interesting and pleasant than the manual
labor, took up most of the second day. Paolo Soleri usually met with
people in the Workshop group soon after their arrival. He would go
around the group, ask people their names and their reasons for coming
to Arcosanti. Then he would answer questions. Paolo rarely “lectures”
to an Arcosanti group—usually he depends upon the
question-and-answer method of discussion.
Since
Paolo was on a lecture junket and not immediately available to us,
Colly Soleri and Roger Tomalty met with the group separately. Colly
met with us first, at the concrete stage at the rear of the Cat Cast
House. She asked our names and how we had learned of Soleri and
Arcosanti. I mentioned the futurology conference at College of Mount
Saint Joseph. Colly said she was glad they had drawn one participant
from that engagement. Several people in the group had seen the 1973
article in Architecture
Plus,
with color photographs of the Cosanti oasis.
Next, Roger Tomalty met with the
Workshop group on the swimming pool deck under the twenty-nine ton
concrete canopy that stood on twelve telephone poles. Roger was a
construction foreman at Arcosanti, had been with the Cosanti
Foundation since shortly before ground was broken at the site of the
Arcosanti project, and was well-established in the hierarchy. He had
blueprints of construction drawings and a conceptual drawing of the
projected Arcosanti arcology. Roger is smart and talks fast. He
described the construction drawings, going over what we would be
working on. He made a point of saying that they were constructing
only small outlying structures of the Arcosanti plan, and explained
that the first structures built at Arcosanti were the South Vault and
Ceramics Apse. He said one of the reasons for building the South
vault first was “psychological.” A critic had said Paolo could
build the small earth-cast structures at Cosanti using amateur
student labor but that he couldn’t build something larger, like the
South Vault at Arcosanti, that way. Roger answered some questions
concerning the size and complexity of the buildings under
construction at Arcosanti.
On the afternoon of the second
day, I just had to have a shower. I asked an apparent staffer, Mary
Hoadley, where I could take a shower. She directed me to the shower
in the Earth House. I took my towel and toiletries to the north door
of the Earth House and found the earth-cast concrete shower stall in
the center of the small house, with Soleri-designed fish decorating
the interior of the shower stall. Upon leaving the shower, I ran into
Ivan Pintar, one of the occupants of the Earth House. He looked at me
as if to say, “What the hell are you doing in here?!” I excused
myself and exited the house past him. Later, Mary came to me to say
that I shouldn’t have used that shower: Ivan was unhappy. She told
me I should have used the new shower in the Antioch building but she
herself had directed me to the Earth House. Afterwards, I felt badly
about intruding on a private space and wondered if Mary had
misdirected me deliberately. I later learned there was a dispute
going on between Mary and Ivan and I had gotten caught in the middle.
The actual Arcosanti Workshop was
about to begin. The next morning, we were to travel up to the
Arcosanti site. Naomi, the Workshop Coordinator, had driven up to the
site the previous day on business and had just returned that morning.
She paraded around the Cat Cast back yard in a red down jacket,
finally telling us, “It’s a little cooler up at the site.” It
had been warm those first days in the Valley of the Sun. Luckily I
had thought to bring a warm jacket and clothes—I had surmised from
Cosanti’s information packet that it would be cold up in the
mountains this time of year. Just how cold, I was about to find out.
The leaders told us that those with cars should round up riders
without. I was the last to find a ride and wound up in the back of a
station wagon with a few other guys.
We left Cosanti and drove up
Scottsdale Road; unlike today, it was hardly built up, still mostly
suburban desert. Our car turned onto Bell Road (according to Colly’s
directions) and we drove through the desert past a few suburban
developments to the I-17 on-ramp, then proceeded north on the
highway. I was amazed at the desert and the mountains. The desert is
so expansive and the mountains so large! Stands of Saguaro cacti
climbed the hills—there was nothing like this back in Ohio! After
an hour or so in the car, we arrived at Cordes Junction.
This area was mountainous,
mesa-dominated country, the skyline ringed with mountains and mesas
that shadowed the land below. The developed area around Cordes
Junction, at the junction of I-17 and Arizona State Highway 69,
consisted of The Hub, an old highway diner right next to the highway,
the Copper Star, an old cowboy bar with diner attached and the old
full-service Chevron Station. There was a cattle guard at the
entrance to Cordes Junction from the highway, to keep cows from
wandering onto the road. (Years later, the old Chevron station was
torn down and replaced with a new self-service one; the cattle guard
removed as well.)
We
drove through the Junction and turned north onto Arcosanti’s three
mile dirt access road. As we approached, we could see the site from
the road. The photos in the 1975 Arcosanti
Calendar
came alive—the buildings really were crouched like a futuristic
village on the mesa top. We proceeded onto the site, driving behind
it and down the High Road to the Camp in the Valley below. Camp is
built on the south bank of the Agua Fria River, which is lined with
Cottonwood trees. Camp occupies several acres; it consists of a few
types of structures, including the Cubes. The Cubes are eight feet on
each side, with large circular windows and skylights. They are all
filled-in with various configurations of painted wood, including
windows that project beyond the surface, with shelves on the
interior. Most Camp residents live in these concrete huts. Adjacent
to the Cubes was a white geodesic dome (where the Yurt stands today)
with Plywood City standing to the east. Near Plywood City was the
Octagon; standing among the Cubes is a long Cube that is the bathroom
Cube. In the middle of the Camp was a garden, with a small plastic
greenhouse near the center.
Many of our fellow Workshoppers
had beaten us to Camp, so the Cubes were all taken. The only living
space available for occupation was Plywood City, a long rectangular
structure made of 2x4’s and – of course, plywood. Plywood City
sat on the bank of the Agua Fria River; it’s a fifteen foot drop to
the riverbed below. There were sex-segregated men’s and women’s
bathrooms and showers on the west end of the building. The exterior
of Plywood City was white-painted plywood. It had a decent roof.
Plywood City was one of the few structures on site made of wood. Most
of the other buildings were made of pre-cast and/or silt-cast
concrete. At the east end of Plywood City was the Camp Kitchen, the
only functioning kitchen on site at that time; everyone was fed from
there. In between the east and west ends were six bunk rooms, three
on the north side, three on the south side. The bunk rooms housed
four people each, with plywood bunk-beds built into the walls. We had
been given canvas-covered thick foam mats to lay our sleeping bags
on; mine was navy blue. I chose the south west upper bunk, loaded my
sleeping bag and luggage in. There was only a brown canvas flap with
steel eyelets to hook onto nails, to cover the open bunk room; the
wind was blowing it around. I took a photo but I was depressed by the
primitive conditions.
Soon a few other guys arrived,
also intending to move into this Plywood City bunk room. They said we
had to do something about the open entrance right away since it was
going to be cold at night. They planned to use the canvas and some
wood to build a wall and a door. They sent me up the Hill, to the
construction site, to find some wood to use for this. I climbed the
high Road to the job site on the mesa top and learned from someone I
met there that construction materials from the job site were not to
be used in Camp! This trek took at least half an hour, but when I
finally returned to Camp, having walked over a mile without finding
anything, the rest of the guys were well on their way to constructing
the wall door on the bunk room. When the door was complete, one guy
used a blue marker to draw the logo of the rock band, Blue Oyster
Cult, on the door’s plastic window. Naomi walked by and
complimented us on a job well done that was a needed improvement.
Temperatures
did indeed drop after sunset, especially in this valley surrounded by
mesas. At night when it got cold, my room mate fired up an old
Coleman gas camp stove and boiled water so steam vaporized into the
room’s air. This did warm the room up some. The plywood walls in
our bunk room were so thin you could hear most activities in the
bathrooms next to it. The graffiti on the interior walls of Plywood
City included a well-drawn caricature of Paolo with a caption, “Would
you buy a used arcology from this man?”
On the ceiling of one of the rooms, “Skunks smell” was scrawled
in construction chalk. The Camp Kitchen on the east end of the
building had a screened-in area around the serving window to keep
flies out but at mealtimes, mostly at dinner, people lined up between
the serving window and the Octagon, holding the door to the
screened-in area open, letting flies in.
The bathroom building had in its
interior three shower heads at the north wall with no stalls, and it
was co-ed! This was in 1975; the situation has changed considerably
since. But at the time I was embarrassed to shower with naked young
women whom I didn’t know. Once, one of the women approached me in
the shower and wanted to chat! Naked and wet! I found this very, very
awkward.
My introduction to the Arcosanti
project led me to go there to participate in a Workshop; I never
anticipated that my involvement would stretch into decades. A certain
structure to the daily activities and work at Arcosanti and the fact
that one hundred or so people lived and worked on its site garnered a
small and close-knit community. My next experiences, as the Workshop
progressed, revolved around the Arcosanti community and construction
site.
1 comment:
So ...when did You first encounter that blue-toothed rogue McCleve? That had to be a memorable encounter worth a paragraph or two.
Paolo, Collie, Roger, Mary, ...and the Cosanti foundry crew Bob and Dave, Tim Pekins, that kid Greg Upshaw, the architects Andy, Jeff, and Tomiaki... And you, Scooter. Sadly, Paolo, Collie, Mike, and Dave have all left us. Maybe Tim too by now. Don't know about the rest. They were a notable bunch by any measure.
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