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1 Childhood and early life  





2 Career  





3 Major architectural projects  





4 Notes  





5 References  





6 Further reading  



6.1  News reports  





6.2  Books  







7 External links  














Jan Kaplický






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Jan Kaplický
Born(1937-04-18)18 April 1937
Died14 January 2009(2009-01-14) (aged 71)
OccupationArchitect
AwardsStirling Prize (1999); World Architecture Awards (2001), Royal Institute of British Architects Award for Architecture (2004)
PracticeFuture Systems
BuildingsMedia Centre, Lord's Cricket Ground, London (1999)

Selfridges Building, the Bull Ring, Birmingham (2003)

Museo Casa Enzo Ferrari, Modena, Italy (2012)
ProjectsNational Library of the Czech Republic, Prague, Czech Republic (commission awarded 2007, cancelled 2008)
DesignNeo-Futurism

Jan Kaplický (/ˈjæn ˈkæplɪtski/; Czech: [ˈjan ˈkaplɪtskiː]; 18 April 1937 – 14 January 2009) was a Neofuturistic[1][2] Czech architect who spent a significant part of his life in the United Kingdom. He was the leading architect behind the innovative design office, Future Systems. He was best known for the neofuturistic Selfridges Building in Birmingham, England, and the Media Centre at Lord's Cricket Ground in London.

Childhood and early life[edit]

Jan Kaplický, the only child of a sculptor and a botanical illustrator,[3] was born on 18 April 1937 in Prague, Czechoslovakia, and grew up in a suburb of Prague called Ořechovka.[4]

Between 1956 and 1962 he studied at the College of Applied Arts and Architecture and Design (VSUP) in Prague, receiving a Diploma in Architecture. He worked in private practice in Czechoslovakia between 1964 and 1968.[5][6] In the wake of the Prague Spring, the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, he escaped to London in September 1968 with fellow architect Jaroslav Vokoun carrying only US$100 and a few pairs of socks.[7] In 1969 in London he met again Eva Jiřičná whom he had known in Prague, who then became his girlfriend.

Career[edit]

In England, Kaplický first worked for Denys Lasdun and Partners (1969–1971), then obtained employment with the office of Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers (1971–1973), where he worked on DRU extension at Aybrook Street, London and later helping to develop the design for the Centre Georges Pompidou (constructed 1971–1977) in Paris by joining the team of more than 30 strong.[8] When the practice relocated to Paris, he was unable to follow as at that time he still did not have a British passport. After working with Jiřičná, and a short spell at Spencer and Webster, Associates (1974–1975), he joined Foster Associates, now Foster and Partners (1979–1983).[3][5]

At the same time, in 1979 Kaplický set up his own architectural think tank called Future Systems with David Nixon,[9] and began to develop an architectural style that combined organic forms with high tech futurism. Among the drawings he made were structures orbiting the Earth built by robots, weekend houses resembling survival capsules that could be transported by helicopter, and home interiors that could be manipulated. In the 1980s his design for the Grand Buildings in Trafalgar Square, London, was a free-form monocoque structure pierced by portholes; it lost to a more conventional reconstruction of an Edwardian facade.[3] Kaplický told BusinessWeek in 2005: "Where is it written that buildings have to be boxes? People aren't boxes."[9]

Amanda Levete joined Future Systems as a partner in 1989. Kaplický and Levete married in 1991 and were a couple for 15 years; they had a son named Josef.[10] Although they divorced in 2006,[3] they continued their professional association in the architectural practice, saying that the separation strengthened their working relationship.[11]

The Selfridges Building in the Bull Ring in Birmingham, which won Future Systems seven awards, including the RIBA Award for Architecture 2004.

Although Kaplický was a finalist for the Prince Philip Prize for designer of the year in 1991, for the first 15 years of its existence Future Systems received few commissions, and it was not until 1994 that the company was commissioned to build the new media centre at Lord's Cricket Ground which eventually won the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Stirling Prize – considered the most prestigious architecture award in the UK – in 1999 and the World Architecture Awards in 2001.[9] Kaplický considered the media centre "my favourite creation", saying, "It is something which was revolutionary in many areas – a real technical achievement – but above all, the people operating inside it have said: 'We love it,' and that's great."[12] In 2000, he was made an Honourable Fellow of RIBA.[7][13] Future Systems' next major project, the iconic Selfridges Building in the Bull Ring in Birmingham, won seven awards, including the RIBA Award for Architecture 2004. That year, Kaplický was the subject of a Czech documentary entitled Profil (Profile).[14]

In 2007, Kaplický won the design competition for the new Czech National Library building. This was to have been his first major building in his home country, and he said the project was the most important event in his life.[15] However, the design for the building, resembling a green and purple blob and nicknamed by locals "the Octopus", was heavily criticised. President of the Czech Republic Václav Klaus was overheard saying he would be willing to prevent the building going ahead with his own body; his spokesman later clarified it was an off-hand remark that had not been meant to be taken seriously.[16] Pavel Bém, the Civic Democrat Mayor of Prague, supported the design when it was selected but later become hostile to it, saying that the City Council of Prague, which is dominated by the Civil Democratic Party, would not allow the Octopus to be built as it would ruin Prague's panorama.[17] Vlastimil Jezek, a former director of the Library, regarded Kaplický as "another protagonist of Czech culture who has been crushed by Czech narrow-mindedness."[6] Although the design was eventually dropped, Kaplický remained hopeful that the building would be built through funds from a private foundation established for this purpose.[18]

Apart from his design work, Kaplický was active in the education of architects. He taught from 1982 to 1988 at the Architectural Association School of Architecture, the oldest independent architectural school in the UK, and in 1992 at the School of Architecture in Bordeaux and at the Design Workshop of the Technische Universität Berlin. He was also an external examiner for the Architectural Association between 1995 and 1998, and in 2000 was an assessor for the Domus Awards of the B.B.J. Competition in Milan.[13]

In October 2008, news broke that Kaplický and Levete intended to go their separate ways after having collaborated professionally for 20 years. Kaplický was due to keep the Future Systems practice name.[19]

Towards the end of his life, Kaplický began to spend more time in the Czech Republic, where he was awaiting the construction of the Czech National Library[3] and where his design for the Congress and Concert Hall Centre in České Budějovice (Budweis) had been approved.[18] He married the film producer[3] Eliška Kaplický, née Fuchsová, in 2007. On 14 January 2009, hours after the birth of his daughter Johanna Kaplická, he collapsed on a street in Prague near Vítězné náměstí (Victory Square) with heart failure and could not be revived by emergency services.[18][20] The city authorities of Budweis have announced their determination to obtain funding to finally build a Kaplický building in his native Czech Republic.[18]

In a 2002 interview with The Observer, Kaplický said: "The world is full of beautiful things, and you have to be observant as an architect – if not, you are in trouble. Creativity is everywhere. ... The initial idea for a job comes to me literally just like that sometimes, and if that first idea is good then you are on the right track. It's not a sign of creativity to have 65 ideas for one problem, that's just a waste of energy. I also don't think you need to go anywhere particular to be creative; people just use that as an excuse. But I do think a lot of creativity depends on your relationships with other people, your personal relationships, your partner or whatever. Your personal happiness or unhappiness comes out in your work, it's a reflection of your emotional state and you can't separate the two."[12]

Major architectural projects[edit]

Image Information Awards
Hauer-King House

Hauer-King House
Canonbury, London, England
Completed 1994

  • First Prize, Aluminium Imagination Award (1995)
  • Geoffrey Gribble Memorial Conservation Award (1995)
  • Civic Trust Award (1996)
West India Quay Bridge

West India Quay Bridge
Docklands, London, England
Completed 1996

  • British Construction Industry Award (1998)
  • Civic Trust Award (1998)
  • RIBA Award (1998)
Media Centre, Lord's Cricket Ground

Media Centre, Lord's Cricket Ground
London, England
Completed 1999

  • BIAT Award for Technical Excellence (1999)
  • British Construction Industry Award (1999)
  • First Prize, Aluminium Imagination Award (1999)
  • RIBA Stirling Prize (1999)
  • Civic Trust Award (2000)
  • World Architecture Awards (2001)
Selfridges Building

Selfridges Building
The Bull Ring, Birmingham, England
Completed 2003

  • Civic Trust Award (2004)
  • Destination of the Year, Retail Week Awards (2004)
  • Institution of Civil Engineers (2004)
  • Overall Winner, Concrete Society Awards (2004)
  • RIBA Award for Architecture (2004)
  • Royal Fine Art Commission Trust, Retail Innovation (2004)
  • British Constructional Steelwork Association Structural Steel Design Awards (2004)

Naples Subway Station
Naples, Italy
Commission awarded 2003; completed 2009 by Amanda Levete Architects

Ferrari Museum

Museo Casa Enzo Ferrari
Modena, Italy
Completed 2012

  • RIBA Award (2013)

National Library of the Czech Republic[21]
Prague, Czech Republic
Commission awarded 2007; project cancelled 2008.[22]

Congress and Concert Hall Centre
České Budějovice (Budweis), Czech Republic
Commission awarded 2008.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "If Famous Buildings And Paintings Made Babies, They'd Look Like This | Co.Design". Fastcodesign.com. 5 September 2014. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  • ^ Sep 14, 2014 (14 September 2014). "Artist-Architect Collabos That Never Were - artnet News". News.artnet.com. Retrieved 19 March 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • ^ a b c d e f Deyan Sudjic (16 January 2009), "Jan Kaplický: Czech architect whose free-form designs revolutionised British building", The Guardian, retrieved 9 October 2009
  • ^ The profile of Jan Kaplický: A documentary by Jakub Wagner introduces Jan Kaplický, Jihlava International Documentary Film Festival, 26 October 2005, archived from the original on 13 January 2014, retrieved 13 January 2014, Jakub Wagner introduces a portrait of Jan Kaplický ... The documentary has been filmed in Great Britain and Prague – at the National Technical Museum and Orechovka Quarter, a place where Kaplický used to live.
  • ^ a b [CV: Jan Kaplicky], Future Systems, archived from the original on 4 July 2010, retrieved 17 January 2009
  • ^ a b Czech-born architect Kaplicky dies aged 71, ČeskéNoviny.cz, 14 January 2009, retrieved 17 January 2009
  • ^ a b Ellis Woodman (31 March 2007), "The library has landed", The Daily Telegraph (Review), archived from the original on 12 January 2008
  • ^ Martin Pawley, Future Systems, Phaidon, London, 1993, pp. 15–17
  • ^ a b c The 1979 date is given in Maria Paggetti (28 November 2005), "The shape of things to come: Architect Jan Kaplicky on Europe's new keenness for exciting solutions to building designs", BusinessWeek, archived from the original on 6 March 2008, retrieved 9 October 2009. A date of 1982 is mentioned in the Daily Telegraph article.
  • ^ Stephen Bayley (21 January 2009), "Jan Kaplicky: Visionary architect who designed Selfridge's in Birmingham and the Lord's Media Centre", The Independent, archived from the original on 24 January 2009, retrieved 9 October 2009
  • ^ Marcus Fairs (April 2003), "Future Systems uncovered", Icon, archived from the original on 29 March 2007
  • ^ a b Kate Mikhail (22 September 2002), "Jan Kaplicky: 65, Architect best known for the Media Centre at Lord's Cricket Ground", The Observer (Magazine)
  • ^ a b Jan Kaplický – CV, Profil: Filmový Portrét Zakladatele Londýnského Architektonického Studia Future Systems [Profile: A Film Portrait of the Architectonic Studio Founder Future Systems], 2004, archived from the original on 21 January 2009, retrieved 17 January 2009
  • ^ Profil – Jan Kaplický, Česká televize, 14 March 2005, retrieved 1 April 2007 (in Czech). See also ProfilatIMDb Edit this at Wikidata, retrieved on 17 January 2009.
  • ^ Lenka Petaková (5 March 2007), National Library to have new building by Jan Kaplicky, Radio Prague, retrieved 11 August 2008
  • ^ Rob Cameron (9 May 2007), Row continues over Kaplicky's "Octopus" design for National Library, Radio Prague, retrieved 11 August 2008
  • ^ Rob Cameron (18 October 2007), 'Octopus' skewered on political harpoon as Kaplicky, Bem square up for TV clash, Radio Prague, retrieved 11 August 2008
  • ^ a b c d Dominik Jůn (15 January 2009), Czechs mourn architect Jan Kaplický, Radio Prague, retrieved 17 January 2009
  • ^ Robert Booth (15 January 2009), "Radical architect Jan Kaplický dies: Czech-born architect dies only hours after the birth of his daughter and in the midst of a battle to begin work on his national library in Prague", The Guardian, retrieved 9 October 2009
  • ^ Czech architect Kaplický dies in Prague aged 71, aktuálně.cz, 15 January 2009, retrieved 17 January 2009
  • ^ "Britain's Future Systems wins design competition for building Czech National Library", International Herald Tribune, 26 July 2008
  • ^ "Prague scraps library project admired abroad". Centrum.cz. 17 December 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  • References[edit]

    Further reading[edit]

    News reports[edit]

    Books[edit]

    External links[edit]


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