The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial: Evolution of an Experience

The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial:
Evolution of an Experience
Presented by
Paul Scardina, FASLA
Steven Koch, FASLA
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Introduction: A brief history of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt era.
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The Great Depression and War Years
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s lasting legacy through social interventions
Lawrence Halprin’s unique connection to the life and time of FDR. Larry was in a very real sense
annealed by the same challenges having witnessed FDR leadership and vision. Larry often
remarked that “FDR was his president”; that FDR was the only president during his formative
years.
Lawrence Halprin was indelibly linked to the FDR era, the depression, war and recovery.
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Site Selection and Brief history of Washington planning
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1791 Thomas Jefferson sketch; 1792 L’Enfant Plan
1901 Macmillan (Kite) Plan; McKim, Meade & White, D. Burnham, FLO. Jr., St. Gaudens
1974 Macmillan Plan update by Skidmore Owings and Merrill
7.5 acres, in Potomac Park within a grove of Cherry trees.
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Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial
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1961 National Competition for a FDR Memorial ; 574 submissions
Categories 1. Architectural; 2. Sculptural; 3. Landscape,
1974 Invitational Competition
Architectural
Sculptural
Landscape
Pederson-Tilney 1961competition winner
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Source: The Architecture of Monuments,
Thomas Creighton 1962
Design Concept and Layout
The evolution of a single design concept over 23 years is evidence by major themes remaining
constant throughout the process.
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four rooms/four terms;
axial geometrics views to Washington, Jefferson, etc.; L’Enfant and MacMillan Plan
historical narrative of times through inscriptions and artworks;
separation of secular space from more spiritual space with the walls and berm;
choreography of movement through space as a key determinate of form and visitor experience;
Source: Personal notebooks of Lawrence Halprin
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Collaborations
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Having established the basic design layout and cross-section concept, Larry assembled a
team of consultants and artists that more or less remained involved from the 70’s on.
Artists where selected through research, interviews, workshops and Fine Arts Commission
approval. One major challenge was the delegation of themes to each artist to respond to.
FDR quotations were selected by Halprin and an expert assistant. Halprin choreographed the
position, location, font and size in concert with John Benson, master stone letterer.
The selection of the stone type was multi-faceted. Tone, the emotion imparted and inherent
in the stone, and color similarities to that found at Hyde Park played an important role.
Richard Chaix of CMS Collaborative worked closely with Halprin to achieve specific water
quality nuances and affects that play a major role in the choreography of the entire memorial.
Lawrence Halprin and George Segal c1978 OLH
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Michael O’Leary, Lawrence Halprin, Leonard Baskin,
George Segal c 1977 OLH
Time
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Some changes were driven by budget and the Fine Arts Commission. Formalization of the
four rooms, the grand scheme vs. the reduced scheme. the shift in entry point and
abandonment of axial run-up to the Washington.
Impacts of time on societal acceptance of images of both Eleanor and Fala influence artists
work and final approval by the Fine Arts Commission. Eleanor having been originally
proposed, omitted, then accepted. FDR’s disability and how that dialogue evolved over time
ultimately resulting in the addition of the Forecourt.
Time was the real key factor; the time lag created by the ongoing funding challenges allowed
the design to age and be refined, and allowed Larry time to establish a much more personal
and hands on design process and supporting cast.
Eleanor Roosevelt
maquettes: clay final; plaster
with fox stole.
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Halprin studying scale of Neil Estern’s
sculpture of FDR assisted by Steven Koch
Maquette of Estern’s FDR
sculpture exposing knee and
leg brace.
Process
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Halprin’s process included extensive use of sketches, workshops, models, mock-ups, sampling,
etc., Each of the key elements of the design evolved from sketches through to field tooling of the
final in-situ work. Larry collaborated with artists, visited foundries, visited quarries, built scale
models from 1/8 inch to full scale and of various types and uses.
Stonework
Artwork/Artists
Inscriptions
Planting
Fountains
Lighting/Night Experience
Clay study model of stone walls and inscription placement,
1inch/ft c1995
LH sketch and watercolor c1977
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Gary Roth, assists with design
models c1993
Technical Challenges
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Site constraints
Cherry Walk
Stone typology
300 year life span
Forensic Consultants
De-mountability, access and view ports.
Materials Selection
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Plantings
Lighting
Pavement Design
Drainage
Pre-purchase
Coordination
Tolerances
The Construction of the Memorial
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Halprin instilled in those building and maintaining the Memorial the same passion that served him
throughout the design process and that which inspired the Memorial’s design.
Bidder and Construction Team Education
Explain unique complexities, using design models for bidding
Personal presence and interaction with the crews
Sketching during construction visits
Hand carving of the inscriptions in the field
Final stone tooling and water displays
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The Memorial Experience
An engaging unfolding of spaces with a multiplicity of sensual environmental triggers choreographed
to events and challenges of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt during the most empowering eras in
the history of the United States of America.
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