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Returning to Beirut, An Architect Has Designs on Its Future

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  • Returning to Beirut, An Architect Has Designs on Its Future

    The Wall Street Journal
    PAGE ONE

    Returning to Beirut,
    An Architect Has
    Designs on Its Future

    Bernard Khoury's Plan
    In Restoring a Building
    Is Not to Forget the War
    By BILL SPINDLE
    Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
    June 25, 2004; Page A1

    BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Bernard Khoury stared up at an egg-shaped building,
    half of it sheared away. A tangle of broken concrete, rusting girders
    and bent steel rods stuck out the side. What remained was pocked with
    bullet and shell holes. But for the Harvard-trained Lebanese architect,
    here was something to behold. "It's beautiful," he said. "Like Beirut is
    beautiful."

    Slated for destruction as recently as last year, the Beirut City Center
    Building is among the last structures in Beirut's once war-torn downtown
    that still bear the scars of the war that raged off and on here until
    1990. The building, constructed in the 1960s, has been empty since 1975,
    when the conflict first broke out in the city commonly called the Paris
    of the Middle East.

    Beirut went on to suffer a decade and a half of shooting and shelling by
    ethnic clans, religious fanatics and the Israeli, U.S. and Syrian
    militaries. Since the end of the war, much of the area around the City
    Center building has been restored through a monumental, and often
    controversial, renewal effort led by a private development company,
    Solidere, whose biggest investor, Rafik Hariri, is now Lebanon's
    billionaire prime minister.

    Tourists once again fill downtown Beirut's pavilions, which are lined
    with Italian, French and Mediterranean cafés. The downtown renovation
    has erased almost all signs of the war. Assem Salam, a prominent
    Lebanese architect and Solidere critic, says it "has been done with a
    total disregard for the memory of the city."


    But in a region where strife is again on the rise, the City Center
    building's path to preservation shows how Beirut's turbulent past
    continues to intrude on its present -- and future.

    Although Mr. Khoury, 35 years old, grew up in Beirut, he barely
    remembers the distinctive egg-shaped dome from back then. The war
    started when he was 7 years old. Downtown was especially contested
    precisely because it was the area where the city's ethnic and religious
    hodgepodge -- Druze, Maronite Christians, Shiite Muslims and
    Palestinians -- mixed each day and held competing claims. It became a
    fearsome no-man's land, divided by a "Green Line" demarcating the almost
    completely Christian east side from the mostly Muslim west. Though
    Christian, Mr. Khoury's immediate family lived on the predominantly
    Muslim side of the city, separated from relatives in the east.

    Mr. Khoury left Lebanon in 1986 to attend the Rhode Island School of
    Design, and then Harvard University's architecture school, where he
    became interested in the reconstruction of his hometown, just getting
    under way. He returned with big ideas, mostly for the monumental
    architecture he figured would mark the effort. But after more than a
    dozen attempts to win major commissions, he came up empty. Solidere was
    meticulously rehabilitating downtown, but largely in a refined French
    Colonial style. Mr. Khoury bristled at this "postcard image" of the
    Middle East. "There was just nothing here for me," he says.

    But after moving to New York in 1997 -- for good, he thought -- Mr.
    Khoury was asked by a friend to design a dance club back in Beirut. The
    project wasn't exactly what he had aspired to, but he agreed to do it.
    The site for the new club, eventually named B018, had a long history as
    a refugee camp: Armenians congregated there around the first World War
    and Palestinians in the early 1970s. In 1976, about 1,000 Palestinians
    were massacred on the spot just after the beginning of the war.

    Mr. Khoury says that kind of history can't be ignored, even for a dance
    club. So he designed a dark, bunker-like underground space with a
    retractable roof and a dance floor studded with benches clearly designed
    to evoke coffins. Criticized by some as utterly macabre, B018, named for
    the number of an apartment where the club owner threw parties during the
    war, attracted a big local and international following. It also won Mr.
    Khoury a measure of acclaim in architectural circles.


    That led to bar and restaurant commissions from Beirut to Berlin,
    another city struggling to integrate its past with its present and
    future through architecture.

    Meanwhile, Solidere continued with its multibillion-dollar recasting of
    downtown and frequently hired eminent architects and urban designers.
    Despite long delays and financing headaches, the project helped put
    Beirut back on the international bon vivant circuit. What was once the
    local opera house is now a Virgin MegaStore. Officials talk of bringing
    Formula One auto racing to town.

    The next big phase of the project was launched earlier this month with
    an international competition to design what's known as Martyr's Square,
    a once bustling plaza where ethnic groups mixed more than almost any
    place else in the country. It is now a barren swath of land. But plans
    to revitalize the square have forced a confrontation with one painful
    result of the war: Balkanized into sectarian enclaves, Beirut is still a
    long way from the mixing pot it once was. Solidere planners want a
    rejuvenated Martyr's Square to help remedy that. "It's the only place
    where all the groups in the city really came together. That has to
    happen again," says Angus Gavin, who manages the urban development
    division of Solidere. "If [downtown] works, it means the idea of a
    multireligious, multiethnic society is back in business."


    Overlooking Martyr's Square is the wreck of the Beirut City Center
    Building. It was designed in the 1960s by Lebanese architect Joseph
    Philippe Karam. At the time, Lebanon was coming into its own two decades
    after gaining independence from the French. Beneath the large white
    dome, which housed a theater and exhibition space, were six underground
    floors of shopping and parking.

    The war brought a long period of neglect. In the early '90s Lebanon's
    finance ministry eyed the building as a headquarters, and even
    constructed a foundation and four basement floors for a new tower next
    to the egg before aborting the project. At first, Solidere recognized
    little special about the building and planned to demolish it. But as
    Solidere Chairman Nasser Chamma squired celebrity architects around town
    in the past year, many were struck by the odd-shaped building next to
    Martyr's Square. "I'm glad we didn't do anything to it," Mr. Chamma
    says.

    Having decided to spare the building, Solidere officials didn't know
    what to do with it. But they did know who might: Mr. Khoury. He jumped
    at the chance.

    Classic restoration, though, isn't what he has in mind. He plans to
    surround the distinctive dome in huge red scaffolding that spreads out
    over the whole property, giving it the permanent feel of a construction
    site. The surface of the building will be left as is -- bullet pocks,
    mortar holes, crumbling plaster and all -- wrapped in wire mesh. A
    pavilion below the dome will be studded with windows onto the
    subterranean floors, which will house gallery and exhibition spaces.

    Solidere officials say they're excited, and they especially hope the new
    City Center will attract more young residents downtown. So does Mr.
    Khoury. But if it does, he points out, the attraction will be the way
    Beirut's past and future intersect in its present. "It's a complicated
    situation, and I like complicated situations," he says.

    --Farnaz Fassihi contributed to this article.

    Write to Bill Spindle at [email protected]
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