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

EUR -
AED 4.216858
AFN 76.287482
ALL 96.62124
AMD 439.275977
ANG 2.0553
AOA 1052.921862
ARS 1665.800597
AUD 1.764598
AWG 2.066803
AZN 1.948252
BAM 1.954156
BBD 2.311905
BDT 139.923505
BGN 1.956149
BHD 0.432875
BIF 3386.324906
BMD 1.148224
BND 1.500171
BOB 7.931535
BRL 6.156315
BSD 1.147859
BTN 101.868962
BWP 15.495369
BYN 3.912594
BYR 22505.190994
BZD 2.308618
CAD 1.620667
CDF 2576.614474
CHF 0.930831
CLF 0.027674
CLP 1085.648805
CNY 8.18655
CNH 8.188307
COP 4420.949573
CRC 576.227781
CUC 1.148224
CUP 30.427937
CVE 110.172794
CZK 24.348377
DJF 204.062184
DKK 7.464486
DOP 73.616786
DZD 150.115359
EGP 54.436956
ERN 17.22336
ETB 176.209064
FJD 2.620419
FKP 0.880337
GBP 0.88032
GEL 3.123151
GGP 0.880337
GHS 12.511801
GIP 0.880337
GMD 84.397056
GNF 9967.701253
GTQ 8.7966
GYD 240.154239
HKD 8.927775
HNL 30.180085
HRK 7.535912
HTG 150.316161
HUF 386.513447
IDR 19153.525049
ILS 3.737544
IMP 0.880337
INR 101.710263
IQD 1503.608865
IRR 48340.23171
ISK 146.995861
JEP 0.880337
JMD 184.814521
JOD 0.814047
JPY 176.862075
KES 148.349302
KGS 100.412127
KHR 4607.244425
KMF 489.14312
KPW 1033.372355
KRW 1654.441377
KWD 0.352803
KYD 0.95662
KZT 602.978485
LAK 24927.680312
LBP 102792.409226
LKR 349.748812
LRD 210.058772
LSL 20.062122
LTL 3.390407
LVL 0.694549
LYD 6.279772
MAD 10.69445
MDL 19.674962
MGA 5190.768768
MKD 61.479617
MMK 2410.392225
MNT 4118.341843
MOP 9.193606
MRU 45.460152
MUR 52.852664
MVR 17.68839
MWK 1990.477471
MXN 21.347655
MYR 4.812778
MZN 73.429353
NAD 20.061773
NGN 1653.017526
NIO 42.244828
NOK 11.728882
NPR 162.98943
NZD 2.028467
OMR 0.441485
PAB 1.147864
PEN 3.885465
PGK 4.916864
PHP 67.443241
PKR 324.52791
PLN 4.254343
PYG 8126.163679
QAR 4.184398
RON 5.085024
RSD 117.215292
RUB 93.410447
RWF 1667.840467
SAR 4.306396
SBD 9.450564
SCR 15.850475
SDG 689.504407
SEK 10.98925
SGD 1.500689
SHP 0.861465
SLE 26.63433
SLL 24077.683263
SOS 655.965293
SRD 44.273203
STD 23765.919172
STN 24.479939
SVC 10.043551
SYP 12697.898274
SZL 20.056564
THB 37.289151
TJS 10.629336
TMT 4.030266
TND 3.402637
TOP 2.68926
TRY 48.327607
TTD 7.779625
TWD 35.478742
TZS 2824.409479
UAH 48.299767
UGX 4008.714858
USD 1.148224
UYU 45.651595
UZS 13740.500324
VES 256.837274
VND 30224.127038
VUV 140.013148
WST 3.221714
XAF 655.422735
XAG 0.023829
XAU 0.000288
XCD 3.103133
XCG 2.068705
XDR 0.813804
XOF 655.408477
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.908673
ZAR 19.977985
ZMK 10335.396067
ZMW 25.712041
ZWL 369.727669
  • CMSC

    0.2100

    23.8

    +0.88%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1900

    14.94

    -1.27%

  • CMSD

    0.1850

    23.995

    +0.77%

  • NGG

    0.3300

    75.47

    +0.44%

  • BCC

    1.0600

    71.47

    +1.48%

  • SCS

    0.0800

    15.95

    +0.5%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    76

    0%

  • RIO

    1.2450

    69.135

    +1.8%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.74

    +0.29%

  • VOD

    0.0450

    11.245

    +0.4%

  • GSK

    -0.1190

    46.701

    -0.25%

  • BTI

    0.9400

    53.92

    +1.74%

  • AZN

    -0.8150

    81.215

    -1%

  • BP

    0.5450

    35.665

    +1.53%

  • BCE

    0.3150

    22.605

    +1.39%

  • RELX

    0.3000

    44.6

    +0.67%

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