the architecture of diplomacy: america builds embassies abroad

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U.S. Embassies: America’s Face Abroad Jane C. Loeffler The Architecture of Diplomacy The National Building Museum June 4, 2010 U.S. Embassy, Lima, Peru, Arquitectonica (1996)

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Page 1: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassies:

America’s Face

Abroad

Jane C. Loeffler

The Architecture of Diplomacy

The National Building Museum

June 4, 2010

U.S. Embassy, Lima, Peru, Arquitectonica (1996)

Page 2: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, Prague (former Schoenborn Palace) (purchased 1925)

Page 3: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

The U.S. builds its first embassies

Top: Tirana (Wyeth & Sullivan, 1929); Ottawa (Cass Gilbert, 1928)

Below: Paris (Delano & Aldrich, 1932); Helsinki (Lindeberg, 1938)

Page 4: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

Lever House, New York City (1952)

U.S. Consulate General, Frankfurt (1952-55) Gordon Bunshaft/ Skidmore, Owings & Merrill

Page 5: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

United Nations Secretariat Building, NYC

U.S. Embassy, Rio de Janeiro (right)

Harrison & Abramovitz (1952)

Page 6: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, Copenhagen(1951-54)architects: Ralph Rapson and John van der Meulen

Page 7: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

INTERNATIONAL STYLE MODERN

U.S. Embassy Copenhagen (Rapson and van der Meulen, 1954) and

Danish Embassy in D.C. (Lauritzen, 1960) (right)

Page 8: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

Staying with the Modern Style

U.S. Embassies in the 1950s

Vatican Embassy, DC

(Murphy, 1939)

U.S. Embassy, London (top

center) (Saarinen, 1956-59)

U.S. Embassy, Dublin (right)

(Johansen, 1957-64)

U.S. Consulate General,

Tangier (bottom)

(Stubbins, 1956-59)

Page 9: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, New Delhi (1954-59)architect: Edward Durell Stone

Page 10: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

1954-64: “Heyday” of the FBO building program when U.S. embassies featured glass walls, screens, and pilotis and local themes

TOP: Manila (1959) Aydelott; Baghdad (1959) Sert ; Athens (1959) Gropius

BOTTOM: Accra (1959) Weese; New Delhi (1959) Stone

Page 11: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, London (1956-59)architect: Eero Saarinen

Unlike many other embassy designs, this featured load-

bearing walls. Like many others this had multiple public

entrances: one on either side and one in the front--consular,

chancery business, and USIS (see library at left).

Local critics had little good to say about this or new

embassies in The Hague and Dublin when they were new.

They labeled the eagle as “xenophobic.”

Page 12: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, The Haguearchitect: Marcel Breuer (1956-59)

U.S. Embassy, Dublin (1957-64)architect: John Johansen

Page 13: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

Early security

changes

Page 14: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, Brasilia (1971)architects: Henningson, Durham &

Richardson (top left)

U.S. Embassy, Kuala Lumpur (1983)

architects: Hartman/Cox (above)

U.S. Embassy, Nairobi (1971)architects: A. Epstein & Sons

Page 15: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

Attacks on U.S. Embassy and Marine Barracks, Beirut

(1983)

Page 16: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

“Inman” architecture (late 1980s-early 1990s):U.S. embassies in Sanaa, Singapore (top), Santiago and Lima (below)

Page 17: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

“Inman” exception: U.S. Embassy, Ottawa (1994-99)

architect: David Childs/SOM

[After Beirut (1983) and Oklahoma City (1995)…but before Nairobi (1998)]

Page 18: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

Escalating

attacks on U.S.

embassies

1994-99Nairobi and Dar es Salaam (1998)

Nairobi shown here (above)

Beijing (1999)

Beirut (1983)

Damascus (1998)

Jakarta (1994)

Page 19: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, Kampala, Uganda (2001)architect: RTKL

prototype that led to “Standard Embassy Design”

Page 20: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

52 new embassy

compounds built

to “Standard

Embassy Design”

specifications

since 2001;

34 more in design

or under

construction now

U.S. Embassy

Conakry, Guinea

2006Architect: Integrus

U.S. Embassy

Bamako, Mali

2006

Architect: Integrus

SED

prototype

Page 21: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

SED in Managua, Nicaragua (2007)architect: Page-Southerland-Page

Page 22: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, Accra (2007)architect: SOM

Page 23: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, Panama City (2007)architect: Einhorn Yaffee Prescott

Page 24: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, Berlin (2008)architect: Moore Ruble Yudell

Across from the Memorial to

the Murdered Jews of

Europe; near the

Brandenburg Gate and the

Reichstag (shown above).

Entrance (far left) is adjacent

to Gehry’s DZ Bank.

Page 25: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, Beijing (2008)architects: Craig Hartman/Skidmore Owings & Merrill (SF)

sculpture: “Tulips” by Jeff Koons, ART in Embassies Program

Page 26: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

U.S. Embassy, London: old and new

architect: KieranTimberlake

Page 27: The Architecture of Diplomacy: America Builds Embassies Abroad

From Copenhagen (in 1954 & 2000)…

…to Quito in 2008