Star Architect Rem Koolhaas
Rem Koolhaas, 65, is one of the most important architects of our time. In Asia, the Dutch master is most famous for the CCTV Headquarters in Beijing, but a partner from his firm is also behind the designs for Bangkok’s Mahanakorn Building, set to be the city’s tallest. He tells us why he resents being called a star architect.

By Winnie Yeung | May 06, 2010

Share this article
  • Star Architect Rem Koolhaas
    Rem Koolhaas

I was born in 1944 in Rotterdam, right before World War II ended. Our family moved to Indonesia for three years when I was eight. It was my first experience of Asia and led to my interest in Asia in my later life.

I became a journalist in Holland at 17 although I‘d had no training. I was also writing screenplays.

Journalism is the most underestimated and underrated profession. You need to be incredibly intelligent for it; generous for letting people speak their minds; and genuinely interested in people.

I interviewed Federico Fellini when I was 21—it pretty much tells you how easy it was to do anything back then.

Fellini’s interview was odd because he was incredibly human. He offered me a role as an apostle because he said I had a very severe face.

Journalism is a lot more similar to architecture than most people think—they both demand a great deal of curiosity. Curiosity is what drives me to do most things in life.

I asked myself, “What would be interesting to do when I’m 70?” Did I want to be a screenwriter for the rest of my life?

I was introduced to the Russian avant-garde movement. For the first time I realized architecture is not just about accommodation, but also about bringing forward development.

Up until the 1980s, architects were convinced they were offering something to society with their designs.

These days all the market-driven craziness means this belief has been lost.

I’ve been very uncomfortable with the direction architecture is taking. Back then architects mainly worked for the public sector—that’s why they thought they were creating things for the greater good. Today architects work for individuals and the market is pressuring them to make exceptional things.

Dubai is the extreme example. People call it excessive, vulgar—however to the Arabs, Dubai is a free land. It’s an interesting and important experiment combining modernity and Islam.

I hate being called a star architect. The concept of stars comes with presumption—ego, ruthlessness. The word “star” is also used with resentment. I hope they drop me from the star category.

CCTV Headquarters in Beijing is small, modest and tentative. It fits incredibly well in its context.

I have no obsession for large things. I really reject the notion that it is larger than life. Some of our best works are private houses. We make sure the enormity of a project is not translated directly into the actual scale.

China has the lowest ratio of architects among its population, but it also has the most number of projects. Chinese architects will soon become the most important architects. They know they’ll never run out of jobs, so they can make mistakes and be outrageous. It’s the best time to be an architect in China.

I was astonished to find out two percent of the earth’s surface has been declared as world heritage. Two percent of the world will never change. That’s the size of a country.

Heritage conservation should be more than preservation. Heritage should evolve.

I still write today because being an architect is frustrating sometimes—any project is teamwork, not your own.

Related Articles

Feng shui master Visit Techakasem talks about own lucky life
I was born to a strict Chinese family. My grandfather was very traditional. He controlled everything, from the numbers of stairs we built in a house to the amount of money we gave to others for special occasions. It was god’s…
Architectural Heritage Preservation in Bangkok
Praya Palazzo When Chulalongkorn University announced plans to raze the Lido, and possibly Scala, there was a public outcry. Partly, the indignation stemmed from the prospect of an educational institution bulldozing two independent movie theaters. But in Scala’s case, it was…
Amata Lupaiboon
It was automatically expected that I would become a doctor or an engineer. I was a really good student and it was pretty much the formula that you would study high school at Triam Udom, then move on to do…
Saranyu “Tua” Wongkrajarng On Politics, Movie Flop and Today's Industry
I would draw every day and on everything I could find. I never thought that my passion for drawing could become a career until I learned what architecture was all about. Like other typical parents at the time, mine wanted me…
Architect Duangrit Bunnag
With creative professions, sometimes, you get stuck. You need a new idea, something to push you forward and help you come up with a new idea again. Creativity isn’t a gift, contrary to what most people think. Through theoretical thinking and…