«I strongly believe in the importance of common sense and intuition in architecture, and try to think about how people will feel in the spaces we create.»
«I strongly believe in the importance of common sense and intuition in architecture, and try to think about how people will feel in the spaces we create.»
«I strongly believe in the importance of common sense and intuition in architecture, and try to think about how people will feel in the spaces we create.»
I am an architect living and working in Warsaw, Poland. Since 2015 I have my atelier, where I develop projects of different types and sizes. This diversity is what interests me very much. I concentrate on buildings but also love to work on a landscape scale and projects of small objects. I am very passionate about the work and believe that architecture is important and meaningful in our lives.
I studied at the Warsaw University of Technology. I was lucky to meet professors who helped me to develop my own attitude towards architecture. From early years I participated in architectural contests trying to compete with professional offices. It was a good method to practice designing and define my approach while making independent decisions. It was an important forming experience. Now I encourage my students to do the same.
The diploma project I did at the University was also a competition entry. The task was to design the Museum of Polish History in Warsaw. My diploma consisted also of a theoretical thesis. The title was “The meaning of degradation in perception of architecture” and it had some relation with my diploma project. The topic had interested me for a while, and I have to say, after all these years, is still important in my daily practice.
Right after finishing University, I moved to Switzerland where I started to work for Peter Zumthor. It was a deeply valuable experience. After 4 years, I decided to leave this beautiful place, as I always dreamt of my own practice. I won the first prize in a competition for a mobile pavilion for the Polish National Opera, which was the reason to come back to Warsaw.
Unfortunately, and quite unexpectedly, the client stopped the project before it started. These are the though rules of this game: it's difficult to win a competition, especially when, as in this one, there are more than 100 entries, and when you win, you are still not sure whether you will build it or not. I already moved back to Poland when the bad news arrived. I decided to stay in Warsaw anyway. Now, after 5 years, I still think it was a good decision to come back. Many good things happened to me here during this time. And, by the way, I still hope that one day the project of the mobile pavilion will return. I would love to build it.
It's a relatively big and vivid city. There is lots of life in it and this keeps me stimulated. As I grew up here, I feel very much connected to the place – in an emotional way. But if it's about the building industry in Warsaw, my feelings are different. I look around and see the constant rapid production of new buildings. But most of them are, let's say, not so much interesting architecturally to me. Work-wise I prefer to stay aside from it all, that rush and speculation. I try to concentrate on developing my projects at my own pace and the way I feel it can bring valuable results.
I like to have everything well-ordered around me when I work. But this is never this kind of rigid, sterile order. It's a relaxed one, as it is more fertile for me. My working space is pretty good externalization of what's inside me, what is on my mind at a moment. In my atelier, I am surrounded by many things that are related to the current projects, but also to the things that move or inspire me. There are drawings, photos, materials, prototypes, and models.
The atelier is full of objects that we work on – mostly of working models that are constantly under construction and in development. We build lots of them in different materials and with different scales: from the context scale, checking how our proposal of a building will change its surrounding, up to the scale of detail. There is never enough space for all the models we would like to have at the same time in the atelier. I dream of a bigger space that will increase the comfort of our work.
As I wrote in the beginning I believe that architecture is important and meaningful. It has a great impact on people's lives. You design a house in which a person will live for dozens of years. Her or his well-being depends on your work during this time. Comparing to the length of a life of a building, designing takes a relatively short time, but it's a very responsible task, so you should take all the time needed to create valuable spaces. Time and hurry is not the right advisor to do it well, though money-wise it would be better to do it quickly, some say. I would say that there is a strong relationship between the time you take to design and its effect. It's hard to skip it.
The other important issue is that you never build solely a house for a single client. Even a single-family house is raised, in a way, for the whole society, because every house changes it's surrounding irrevocably. So in fact we never design a house, we always design the whole landscape.
Architecture is a complex discipline. I am teaching architecture at the Warsaw University of Technology, and I am interested in theory, as it helps to understand what is a valuable design. It's worth searching for this truth, but to be honest it's been a while since I stopped to trust theories confidently claiming to embrace the essence of good architecture in a set of some simple rules.
I am also very allergic to creating abstract architectural concepts that have very little to do with how people, in general, perceive architecture. I strongly believe in the importance of common sense and intuition in architecture, and try to think about how people will feel in the spaces we create.
Project