The Prague Post - Architects don't need AI, says high-tech pioneer Norman Foster

EUR -
AED 4.309534
AFN 72.754274
ALL 95.443922
AMD 436.010721
ANG 2.100359
AOA 1077.236895
ARS 1655.166205
AUD 1.632459
AWG 2.112229
AZN 1.996962
BAM 1.954652
BBD 2.364411
BDT 144.425143
BGN 1.957452
BHD 0.442908
BIF 3488.950079
BMD 1.173461
BND 1.494622
BOB 8.112234
BRL 5.853806
BSD 1.17391
BTN 110.514068
BWP 15.805713
BYN 3.296863
BYR 22999.826529
BZD 2.363411
CAD 1.598195
CDF 2716.561237
CHF 0.920433
CLF 0.026704
CLP 1051.00991
CNY 8.022128
CNH 8.010206
COP 4198.594864
CRC 533.38661
CUC 1.173461
CUP 31.096704
CVE 110.200252
CZK 24.356343
DJF 209.047175
DKK 7.472385
DOP 69.788996
DZD 155.312085
EGP 61.66124
ERN 17.601908
ETB 183.300502
FJD 2.580199
FKP 0.869379
GBP 0.865973
GEL 3.144357
GGP 0.869379
GHS 13.024348
GIP 0.869379
GMD 86.251334
GNF 10302.946538
GTQ 8.974727
GYD 245.605695
HKD 9.197144
HNL 31.198669
HRK 7.531743
HTG 153.699694
HUF 364.291396
IDR 20188.215082
ILS 3.491573
IMP 0.869379
INR 110.432435
IQD 1537.896414
IRR 1545447.527717
ISK 143.40832
JEP 0.869379
JMD 185.321115
JOD 0.831926
JPY 186.88591
KES 151.552595
KGS 102.596478
KHR 4698.239565
KMF 492.853336
KPW 1056.114477
KRW 1728.554693
KWD 0.36098
KYD 0.978325
KZT 537.833997
LAK 25724.88543
LBP 105125.933612
LKR 373.610486
LRD 215.413435
LSL 19.346833
LTL 3.464924
LVL 0.709815
LYD 7.446625
MAD 10.847826
MDL 20.32106
MGA 4879.133282
MKD 61.580714
MMK 2464.176769
MNT 4196.870724
MOP 9.476532
MRU 46.875458
MUR 54.811953
MVR 18.129868
MWK 2035.603988
MXN 20.395037
MYR 4.638107
MZN 74.995914
NAD 19.346833
NGN 1595.108737
NIO 43.204615
NOK 10.890242
NPR 176.822109
NZD 1.983858
OMR 0.451216
PAB 1.17391
PEN 4.093495
PGK 5.098005
PHP 71.325288
PKR 327.205152
PLN 4.248277
PYG 7395.654708
QAR 4.291279
RON 5.092117
RSD 117.415292
RUB 87.956139
RWF 1720.389191
SAR 4.40142
SBD 9.440851
SCR 16.282555
SDG 704.668671
SEK 10.806832
SGD 1.494995
SHP 0.876107
SLE 28.896481
SLL 24606.876236
SOS 670.905812
SRD 43.846376
STD 24288.263913
STN 24.485614
SVC 10.271965
SYP 129.696704
SZL 19.330642
THB 37.980251
TJS 11.026222
TMT 4.112979
TND 3.415293
TOP 2.825412
TRY 52.83388
TTD 7.971316
TWD 36.888319
TZS 3048.075258
UAH 51.77306
UGX 4367.433929
USD 1.173461
UYU 46.692566
UZS 14173.672307
VES 566.974661
VND 30931.2463
VUV 138.690769
WST 3.201795
XAF 655.571821
XAG 0.015674
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.171335
XCG 2.115757
XDR 0.816642
XOF 655.566238
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.046558
ZAR 19.392081
ZMK 10562.550389
ZMW 22.216947
ZWL 377.853814
  • CMSC

    -0.0020

    22.948

    -0.01%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    84.6

    +0.53%

  • RIO

    0.0700

    99.68

    +0.07%

  • GSK

    -0.0450

    54.395

    -0.08%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    87.57

    +0.17%

  • BCE

    -0.1450

    23.735

    -0.61%

  • AZN

    -1.2200

    188.53

    -0.65%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    15.35

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0050

    12.895

    +0.04%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64.94

    0%

  • RELX

    0.0500

    36.58

    +0.14%

  • BTI

    -0.6200

    57.47

    -1.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.36

    +0.17%

  • VOD

    -0.0750

    15.555

    -0.48%

  • BP

    -0.1700

    46.08

    -0.37%

Architects don't need AI, says high-tech pioneer Norman Foster
Architects don't need AI, says high-tech pioneer Norman Foster / Photo: JOEL SAGET - AFP

Architects don't need AI, says high-tech pioneer Norman Foster

British architect Norman Foster has spent six decades pushing the boundaries of technology with awe-inspiring modernist structures from California to Hong Kong, but he is yet to be convinced by the craze for artificial intelligence.

Text size:

"Artificial intelligence at the moment has the ability to cheat, to invent," he told AFP in a recent interview in Paris, which is hosting a retrospective of his work.

"We live in a world which is physical, we inhabit buildings, streets, squares. That physicality, you can't replicate by artificial intelligence."

Foster has been shaping urban landscapes since the 1960s and won the Pritzker Prize, the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in architecture, in 1999.

His statement projects include Apple's giant ring-shaped headquarters in California, London's Wembley Stadium and Millennium Bridge, and Berlin's Reichstag.

Experts describe his practice, Foster and Partners, as possibly the most prolific in history, and the most adept at navigating changing trends and technologies.

"He conceives architecture almost as an organism balancing itself with the air, the sun, life," said Frederic Migayrou, curator of the Norman Foster exhibition at the Pompidou Centre in the French capital.

Yet he has not swerved controversy, irking climate campaigners with his keenness to build airports and his views on the environment.

- 'Hard facts' -

He is a champion of urban living -- "people live longer in cities" -- but his vision for sustaining urban lifestyles has courted some criticism.

He supports nuclear power, saying it had not caused a single death and the world would only be able to tackle climate change "with hard facts, not emotion".

He sees it as a vital part of the solution to the deprivation and poverty seen in megacities and overpopulated slums across the world.

"Many people gravitated to those cities because there are more opportunities," he said.

"The answer has to be an abundance of clean energy, and the cleanest, safest form of energy is nuclear."

Hong Kong's Chek Lap Kok airport, opened in 1998, made a huge splash for his firm, and he has worked on several airports since -- much to the annoyance of climate activists, who see air travel as part of the problem.

Yet when he talks of his broader philosophy, the 87-year-old could easily make common cause with climate activists.

- End of the sprawl -

Surrounded by models of his greatest creations, he talked breezily about the development of cleaner, greener cities.

The pandemic accelerated a growing need for people to have access to outdoor spaces for eating and strolling, and for services within walking distance of their homes, he argued.

"The cities which are most popular... they fit that model, essentially it's a European model born before the ascendency of the automobile," he said.

And the transformation of our relationship with cars is central to the reshaping of modern cities, he said.

"You have younger generations who are less interested in ownership, who will move towards ride-sharing and mobility more as a service," he said.

This was pushing us away from sprawling car-centric cities with rigid work-home zones to ones where buildings were multipurpose, reducing the need for commuting.

Despite his storied history, Foster, still a central figure in all these threads of modern design, is not keen to dwell on his achievements.

The Pompidou exhibition, which displays models of his buildings alongside exhibits that inspired their design, has allowed him to see hidden connections.

But understandably for someone who forged the "high-tech" architectural movement in the 1960s with fellow Briton Richard Rogers, what comes next is always more important than what has already gone.

"Overall, I'm more excited by the future than I am by the past."

L.Bartos--TPP