I have never claimed that this blog is about architecture. However, I am an architect, and once upon a time I wrote fairly frequently about buildings I designed, the construction site in which I lived, and the sad state of housing for the less fortunate in this country.
A couple of months ago, The Architect, who writes the blog Maison Camy about the construction of the house he designed, linked to Music and Cats, which he described as being “really about architecture.” When I read this, I laughed… sad, wistful laughter.
Recently, I haven’t written much about architecture. Why not? Because I’ve been so damn busy being an architect. I miss writing about architecture. I’m going to get back to it soon, I promise.
But in the meantime, I’ll share something that has been clogging up the inboxes of architects this week. Annie Choi’s “open letter” was published a while back in Pidgin, the grad school journal of the Princeton School of Architecture. I don’t know who started it zinging its way around the Internets, but I’m glad they did. This letter made me laugh, too… the sort of laughter that comes with painful recognition. Not everyone is laughing; Ms. Choi has received hate mail from some architects. As she notes, “not all architects understand irony or humor”… which is sad, because sometimes that’s the only thing that gets an architect throught the day… and night.
Once, a long time ago in the days of yore, I had a friend who was studying architecture to become, presumably, an architect. This friend introduced me to other friends, who were also studying architecture. Then these friends had other friends who were architects – real architects doing real architecture like designing luxury condos that look a lot like glass dildos. And these real architects knew other real architects and now the only people I know are architects. And they all design glass dildos that I will never work or live in and serve only to obstruct my view of New Jersey.
Do not get me wrong, architects. I like you as a person. I think you are nice, smell good most of the time, and I like your glasses. You have crazy hair, and if you are lucky, most of it is on your head. But I do not care about architecture. It is true. This is what I do care about:
* burritos
* hedgehogs
* coffeeAs you can see, architecture is not on the list. I believe that architecture falls somewhere between toenail fungus and invasive colonoscopy in the list of things that interest me.
Perhaps if you didn’t talk about it so much, I would be more interested. When you point to a glass cylinder and say proudly, hey my office designed that, I giggle and say it looks like a bong. You turn your head in disgust and shame. You think, obviously she does not understand. What does she know? She is just a writer. She is no architect. She respects vowels, not glass cocks. And then you say now I am designing a lifestyle center, and I ask what is that, and you say it is a place that offers goods and services and retail opportunities and I say you mean like a mall and you say no. It is a lifestyle center. I say it sounds like a mall. I am from the Valley, bitch. I know malls.
Architects, I will not lie, you confuse me. You work sixty, eighty hours a week and yet you are always poor. Why aren’t you buying me a drink? Where is your bounty of riches? Maybe you spent it on merlot. Maybe you spent it on hookers and blow. I cannot be sure. It is a mystery. I will leave that to the scientists to figure out.
Architects love to discuss how much sleep they have gotten. One will say how he was at the studio until five in the morning, only to return again two hours later. Then another will say, oh that is nothing. I haven’t slept in a week. And then another will say, guess what, I have never slept ever. My dear architects, the measure of how hard you’ve worked and how much you’ve accomplished is not related to the number of hours you have not slept. Have you heard of Rem Koolhaas? He is a famous architect. I know this because you tell me he is a famous architect. I hear that Rem Koolhaas is always sleeping. He is, I presume, sleeping right now. And I hear he gets shit done. And I also hear that in a stunning move, he is making a building that looks not like a glass cock, but like a concrete vagina. When you sleep more, you get vagina. You can all take a lesson from Rem Koolhaas.
Life is hard for me, please understand. Architects are an important part of my existence. They call me at eleven at night and say they just got off work, am I hungry? Listen, it is practically midnight. I ate hours ago. So long ago that, in fact, I am hungry again. So yes, I will go. Then I will go and there will be other architects talking about AutoCAD shortcuts and something about electric panels and can you believe that is all I did today, what a drag. I look around the table at the poor, tired, and hungry, and think to myself, I have but only one bullet left in the gun. Who will I choose?
I have a friend who is a doctor. He gives me drugs. I enjoy them. I have a friend who is a lawyer. He helped me sue my landlord. My architect friends have given me nothing. No drugs, no medical advice, and they don’t know how to spell subpoena. One architect friend figured out that my apartment was one hundred and eighty seven square feet. That was nice. Thanks for that.
I suppose one could ask what someone like me brings to architects like yourselves. I bring cheer. I yell at architects when they start talking about architecture. I force them to discuss far more interesting topics, like turkey eggs. Why do we eat chicken eggs, but not turkey eggs? They are bigger. And people really like turkey. See? I am not afraid to ask the tough questions.
So, dear architects, I will stick around, for only a little while. I hope that one day some of you will become doctors and lawyers or will figure out my taxes. And we will laugh at the days when you spent the entire evening talking about some European you’ve never met who designed a building you will never see because you are too busy working on something that will never get built. But even if that day doesn’t arrive, give me a call anyway, I am free.
Yours truly,
Annie Choi
Well. At least she likes my glasses.
So, you wanna get dinner tonight after work? Hey, it’s Friday, so I’ll get off early… let’s make it ten-thirty, OK?


{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }
okay! I’m not even an architect, and I laughed. I do teach mythology and spend some time talking about the shape of buildings and caves and so forth. . . .
man, thank you for that, i haven’t laughed so much in ages. when i was a student, i used to hang with the architecture students, almost married one, took 4 semesters of archit. history. she nailed them but good. if not ever sleeping is macho, y’all got it all. trying to perpetrate monstrostities on folks that need houses and offices and malls not giant toys! hey, i still love architecture, especially when it’s NRHP-quality and they are paying me to measure and photo it.
This reminds me of a young management psychology student a long time ago. She worked best at night. The silence in student halls in the early hours of the morning (broken only by the occasional squeaking bed spring) was conducive to writing. If, however, she felt in need of a coffee and a chat, she knew that the only place on campus at four in the morning to find someone bright eyed and bushytailed and always ready for both was in the design studios of the School of Architecture. Unfortunately for her it became a habit.
I’m sure she would say to Ms Choi that in the long run most of them do recover. As they get older they do it more and talk less about it (architecture that is). Unfortunately, in general, they don’t get any richer – but as Ms Choi gets older she might one day have enough money to move out of her tiny bedsit and get one of her architect friends to design her a house – then she can REALLY take advantage of the freebies from the lawyer friend!
PS – I was right, it is really about architecture.
She neglected to mention that the post-modern ones are worse than axe-murderers. ;~)
That was the most fun I’ve had with my clothes on in a long time.
Hello!
I stumbled across your blog MONTHS ago, and I forgot to bookmark it. I remembered about your blog recently and yay – I FOUND IT again (Hurrah for Google!).
I am 25 and recently made the decision to go back and study architecture (an old passion of mine), this, combined with my love for cats as well, pretty much ensures I will be a regular reader to your blog (now that I’ve found it again!!).
PS – I hope no-one shows Annie Choi a photo of the gerkin in London… she will FLIP!
Amanda.