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    Adelaide site vacant for decades to be redeveloped

    An “infamous” lot in North Adelaide that has sat empty for more than 30 years could soon be occupied by a three-tower complex with apartments, shops and offices.
    Designed by Woods Bagot, the 88 O’Connell Street project goes before South Australia’s State Commission Assessment Panel on Wednesday, 23 June, three and a half years after the City of Adelaide purchased the site to kick-start its development. Since furniture retailer Le Cornu sold the site in 1989, numerous development proposals have fallen over, leaving a noticeable gap in the otherwise bustling high street.
    The council purchased the site in 2018 and then called for expression of interest to find a suitable developer. Commercial and General, and its Woods Bagot-designed proposal for a mixed-use building, was selected. Under the agreement with council, the developer will have to include 15 percent affordable housing and provide public open space at the ground-level corner of Tynte and O’Connell Street as well as ensuring that the planned terrace atop the podium will be publicly accessible.
    Above the two-storey podium, the north and south towers will each reach 13 storeys, while the central tower will be 15 storeys. In total the complex will include 176 residential apartments and townhouses, six shop tenancies at ground level and 2,114 square metres of office space on levels one and and two. There’ll also be a 1,006-square-metre “consulting room” on level one, a gym, basement carparking and pedestrian throughfares running both east-west and north-south.

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    88 O’Connell Street by Woods Bagot.

    Woods Bagot says the tripartite composition will maximize opportunities for corner apartments and capture key views, but members of the public and South Australia’s government architect have some concerns.
    Government architect Kirsteen Mackay noted that the city had initially expressed a preference for an eight-storey limit, which “may have established height expectations for the community.” She also expressed concern about the overshadowing consequences to the lower level apartments in the central and southern buildings and overshading impacts to the broader precinct, though her office later acknowledged that the apartment configuration – which ensures east or west frontages with living spaces pushed to the corners – “goes some way to mitigating overshadowing impacts.”
    The Advertiser reports that 180 people attended a meeting protesting the development, with a spokesperson for a residents’ group calling the proposal a betrayal. “It is completely inappropriate to overwhelm a historic centre of international significance with a block-long monolithic structure,” he said.
    The City of Adelaide supports the proposal. CEO Clare Mockler described Woods Bagot’s design as “an exemplary standard and market leading in South Australia.”
    “At a street level, the proposal integrates both commercial and retail spaces to bridge the lifeless gap between Archer and Tynte Street,” she wrote in a letter of support. “At a vertical level, the proposal provides open space for public use as well as sufficient vertically massed residential offerings to organically grow the North Adelaide population.” More

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    UK trade deal paves way for mutual recognition of architecture qualifications

    The Architects Accreditation Council of Australia has welcomed the announcement of an in-principle free trade agreement between Australia and United Kingdom, noting that it will pave the way for mutual recognition of qualifications between the two countries.
    “This new arrangement enhances the global exchange of skills, expertise, collaboration and employment opportunities – something we have not had with the UK for decades,” said AACA CEO Kathlyn Loseby.
    “The AACA, with DFAT’s authorization, is in the final stages of negotiating a Mutual Recognition Arrangement (MRA) that will ‘recognise the professional credentials of architects registered in the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand’ and ‘ support their mobility by creating the opportunity to practise beyond their borders’.”
    The MRA with the UK was instigated under the AACA’s former CEO Kate Doyle and will “facilitate the registration of an architect registered in the United Kingdom as an Australian architect or New Zealand architect; and the registration of an Australian architect or New Zealand architect as an architect in the United Kingdom.”
    “While COVID-19 has put a halt temporarily to international travel and migration, we are forging ahead with this MRA so that when Australia’s borders re-open both our architects and our communities here will be poised to benefit from a much more straightforward skills recognition process,” Loseby said.
    “Recognizing architects’ credentials globally will literally open up a whole new world of tremendous opportunities to transform the lived experience of our built environment.”
    According to the OECD, Australia’s exports of professional services (which includes architectural services) was about $5.6 billion or 8 percent of Australia’s total service exports in 2016. The UK is the third largest destination market behind the United States and Singapore.
    The Royal Institute of British Architects reported in a submission to the UK government that “In 2017, revenue earned by RIBA Chartered Practices from work in Australasia came to £11 million, which is 2% of the sector’s total international revenue.
    “There are significant market opportunities for UK architecture in Australia if a mutual recognition agreement can be struck, enabling easier access to the market for UK architects and allowing Australian architects to work in the UK.”
    Australia’s trade minister Dan Tehan said, “The FTA will improve working holiday opportunities for youth in both countries. Eligibility to participate will be raised from 30 to 35, stays allowed up to three years, and people will have more freedom to choose where they work.”
    Australia has existing mutual recognition arrangements with Canada, New Zealand and the United States through the APEC Architect Project. More

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    New folds into old at NSW Far North Coast school upgrade

    A school on the NSW Far North Coast will get a $20 million upgrade with new and refurbished spaces for teaching and core facilities. Designed by SJB, the project includes a new library, new creative and performing arts building and purpose-built outdoor sports pavilion. An existing block will be refurbished to create flexible learning spaces […] More

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    Build-to-rent towers proposed adjacent to Docklands Stadium

    Two towers of 30 and 28 storeys will be built adjacent to Melbourne’s Docklands Stadium after councillors gave the green light to Cox Architecture’s amended proposal.
    The $400 million project includes the provision of 676 build-to-rent apartments across both towers, along with 3,382 square metres of retail and associated uses within a three-level podium.

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    Build-to-rent tower proposed adjacent to Docklands Stadium

    Located on the south side of La Trobe Street, the towers will front between Wurundjeri Way to the east, Harbour Esplanade to the west and the concourse of Docklands Stadium to the south.
    Although the increased height of the towers – from 23 and 21 storeys – will result in some shadowing of the Docklands Stadium playing field in winter, City of Melbourne planners note that given the lighting technology now employed by the Australian Football League “this will not detrimentally impact the playing surface.”
    The podium level will also include a large function space, which could potentially be used by the AFL.
    Also located within the podium, at level two, will be communal facilities for the towers’ apartments, including a 25-metre pool, gym, change facilities, lounge and dining, laundry, working hub, resident lounge, pet centre, treatment rooms, kitchen, cinema and a rooftop outdoor terrace area.
    Cox Architecture’s design seeks to emphasize the breakup of two towers and the podium, with diverse façade materials and articulation breaking up the building mass to create a “building of buildings.”
    With City of Melbourne councillors in support of the proposal, the application will now go before the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning. More

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    Major hospital building completed in western Sydney

    The adult and children’s hospitals at the Westmead Health Precinct in western Sydney are connected for the first time with the stage one completion of a more than $1 billion transformation.
    HDR is the architect of the completed stage one project, having provided design work from the masterplanning stages and designing concept plans (then as HDR Rice Daubney) with MSJ Architects in 2015.
    An overall masterplan for the Westmead Hospital Precinct was prepared by MAAP.
    The centrepiece of the project is a new 14-storey Central Acute Services Building, which physically links the children’s and adult hospitals. It is designed to provide timely access to “world-class” clinical services and advanced research and development, with a theatre floor with advanced interventional and MRI capabilities shared between the adult and children’s services.

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    Westmead Health Precinct state one development by HDR. Image:

    Brett Boardman

    HDR national director of health Ronald Hicks said the project was a demonstation of the transformative effect architecture can have in health care contexts.
    “When it was conceived 10 years ago, the level of integration we proposed was ahead of its time, almost unfathomable for stakeholders, but they supported the vision and the outcome has been incredibly positive.”
    Along with the integration between the exiting hospitals, the acute services building also integrates research and education with health care provision.

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    Westmead Health Precinct state one development by HDR. Image:

    Brett Boardman

    It includes education, training and research facilities on each floor as well as dedicated floors for the University of Sydney. There are also two new emergency departments (one for adults, one for children); 25 digital operating theatres; expanded imaging; pharmacy and logistics; more than 300 patient rooms and dedicated carer zones.
    HDR said the design had a pronounced focus on wellbeing with natural light brought into the hospital and views extendng to the Sydney CBD.
    Also completed is the six-level innovation centre, which is designed to support education and development of the latest clinical technologies and research and has the capacity for future development of biomedical services.
    It includes an exhibition space, large meeting environments, social spaces and a flexible work environment on the top floor.

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    Westmead Health Precinct state one development by HDR. Image:

    Brett Boardman

    HDR director Alan Boswell said the projet “develops a significant identity for Westmead Hospital as a pre-eminent teaching hospital at the cutting edge of science and technology. It has reinvigorated the urban fabric of the precinct, and it has re-engaged the community through good quality public space and connections.” More

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    Design competition forthcoming for redevelopment of Powerhouse Ultimo

    A design competition will be held in 2021 to find the architect for the redevelopment of the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney’s Ultimo, with between $480 and $500 million to be allocated to the project in the NSW budget.
    The state’s arts minister Don Harwin and Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences CEO Lisa Havila made the announcement today, telling media that along with the $1.1 billion committed to Powerhouse Parramatta the spending represented the largest cultural infrastructure investment in the state since the Sydney Opera House was built.
    The Ultimo museum had been earmarked for closure, before the state government backflipped on its decision to sell the site, to fund its relocation to Parramatta, and announced it would be retained in July 2020.
    The redevelopment will deliver renewed and expanded exhibition and public space, connecting the museum to the city by re-orienting it to the Goods Line and connecting to adjacent precincts.
    The renewed museum will focus on design and fashion, showing off the museum’s significant collections and hosting exclusive international exhibitions and programs, while the Parramatta museum will focus on science and technology.
    The development of a “creative industries precinct” will also deliver subsidized studio and workspaces at Ultimo for creative industries, while “more than 5,000 regional and remote students from across NSW will further their design and fashion education through immersive experiences at The Academy, which will provide residential accommodation within the museum precinct.”
    The $480-500 million in the budget will cover the cost of the design competition and approval processes.
    “When the Ultimo project is finished we will not only have a new museum but a great new day and night precinct that will continue the activation of the Southern CBD,” said Harwin, Arts Hub reports. “This area is focused on technology and design but it will also keep a nod to the past.”
    Powerhouse chief executive Lisa Havilah said, “The renewal of our institution will deliver two world-class museums – with a design and fashion focus at Powerhouse Ultimo and our flagship museum focused on science and technology museum, Powerhouse Parramatta.
    “This visionary investment will see the expansion of our exhibition spaces as well as renewal of our historic exhibition spaces. We will create a vibrant public square beside the Goods Line, and creative industries workspaces that will become home for Australian designers.”
    Treasurer Dominic Perrottet will hand down the budget on 22 June.
    The budget is also expected to include more than $1 billion for the development of the Aerotropolis, now known as Bradfield, around Western Sydney Airport. More

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    Architects recognized in 2021 Queens Birthday Honours

    Six people have been recognized for services to architecture in the 2021 Queen’s Birthday Honours.
    Among them are Charles Justin, founding director of both Plus Architecture and SJB Architects; Epaminondas (Nonda) Katsalidis, founding partner of Fender Katsalidis; Lolita Mohyla, architect, lawyer and author; Shelley Penn, architect, academic and government advisor; Dominic Charles Richards, architect, educator and LGBTQI activist; and Roger William Poole, former director and chairman of Bates Smart.
    Charles Justin was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for significant service to the museums sector, arts administration and architecture. He was a founding director of Plus Architecture (1997) and SJB Architects (1980s) and has been the planning and project advisor for the Caulfield Hebrew Congregation since 2013. He is a life fellow of the Australian Institute of Architects and was president of the Institute’s Victorian chapter from 1986 to 1988. He was president of the Jewish Museum of Australia from 2004 to 2009 and is the founder and director of the Justin Art House Museum.

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    Nonda Katsalidis.

    Nonda Katsalidis also appointed a Member of the Order of Australia, for significant service to architecture and sustainable construction innovations. He was the co-founding partner of Nation Fender Katsalidis , (1996-2001) and, later, Fender Katsalidis (since 2001). His citation notes that his is a “leader in the integration of art into architecture” with notable buildings including the Melbourne Terrace Apartment, Republic Tower and Eureka Tower.
    Lolita Mohyla was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for significant services to architecture and construction law. She is the author of Construction in Australia: Law and Project Delivery (1996) and has been senior counsellor for the Australian Institute of Architects’ South Australian chapter since 2002. She is also a commissioner for the Environment, Resources and Development Court of South Australia and is managing partner of Mohyla Architects Interior Designers.

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    Shelley Penn.

    Shelley Penn was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for architecture and design in the public realm, and to professional institutes. She is an associate professor in architecture at the Melbourne School of Design and has been the principal architect and owner of Shelley Penn Architect since 1993. She was president of the Australian Institute of Architects from 2012 to 2013, associate Victorian government architect from 2006-2010 and has sat on numerous government advisory boards in Victoria, NSW and the ACT.
    Elsewhere in the honours, Dominic Richards was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for services to architecture and the community. He is the co-founder and chief executive of Our Place, London and a director of Architekton. He is also chairman and co-founder of Prosper Education, Sydney and RoyalABC and was previously chairman of LGBT London and co-founder of Queercompany.
    Roger Poole was also awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for services to architecture and the community. He was a director of Bates Smart from 1981 to 1997 and chairman from 1998 to 2015. He has been director of Roger Poole Architects from 2015 and has sat on various committees and boards for the Property Council of Australia and Committee for Melbourne.
    Interior designer Sue Carr was also appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for services to interior design, to education, and to women in business. The founder of Carr Design Group is also a member of Women Chiefs of Enterprise in Australia. She has been inducted into the Australian Businesswomen’s Hall of Fame and the Design Institute of Australia’s Hall of Fame, and was named one of 100 Women of Influence by the Australian Financial Review in 2016. More

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    After Half a Century, White Columns Still Surprises

    New York’s longest running alternative art space celebrates its own near-mythic history — as well as the twists and turns of the city’s cultural scene.“I’m going to use a word you’re not supposed to say,” the sculptor Jeffrey Lew declared with a touch of bravado. “I’m sort of a sociopath.”In 1969 Lew and Rachel Wood, then his wife, purchased a decrepit six-story rag-salvaging factory in SoHo for $110,000. They moved into its upper floors with an assortment of kindred artists and, with fellow sculptors Gordon Matta-Clark and Alan Saret, turned the unheated ground floor and basement into a 7,400-square-foot exhibition space named 112 Greene Street (and later 112 Workshop), after its location. Subsequent shows featured a wall-mounted piece made of 500 pounds of decaying carrots, massive holes cut into the floor, and a dance troupe swinging overhead from the 17-foot-high ceiling.Installation view of the inaugural group show at White Columns’ first home at 112 Greene Street, Oct. 1970.Cosmo Sarchiapone, via White ColumnsThe Glenn Branca Ensemble performing at White Columns’ “Noise Fest,” June 20, 1981.Terri Slotkin, via White ColumnsThose early ’70s spectacles have since attained near-mythic status; work staged there that Lew felt museums and established galleries either couldn’t, or wouldn’t, show has since been feted in museums and blue-chip galleries. But Lew soon grew tired of the creeping professionalism brought on by a National Endowment for the Arts grant. “When I got the N.E.A. grant they said, ‘Give us your schedule.’ A schedule?” Lew recalled with a laugh. “The minute people start acting like curators, that’s when the good stuff ends.”By late 1978, Lew said he’d had enough of committees and payroll issues. He’d already turned the building’s upper-floor lofts into co-ops, but he was still the art space’s landlord. Citing his hefty tax bill, he tripled its $550 monthly rent, fully aware that its governing board could never afford the new rate. “Like I said, I’m a sociopath,” Lew explained. “I just didn’t have any feelings whether it went under.”Audience at a concert by the Italian folk group Pupi e Fresedde, held in conjunction with a White Columns exhibition of Peter Schumann’s puppets and masks, September 1977. Peter Schumann and White ColumnsYet 112 Greene Street didn’t die. Quite the opposite. It eventually found a new home in the West Village, as well as new leadership. Rechristened White Columns, the nonprofit became not only New York City’s longest running alternative art space, but one of its most enduringly vital. The evidence is on its walls as part of its 50th anniversary exhibition, which Matthew Higgs, the gallery’s director and chief curator since 2004, describes as part celebration and part tribute to the ongoing story of the New York art scene.Poring over the archival installation photos and printed ephemera, what emerges is a dizzying array of artists who began their careers with solo debuts there. From John Currin and Cady Noland in the ’80s to Rachel Feinstein and Glenn Ligon in the ’90s, no one style predominates. The common thread is simply that a given director found an artist interesting enough to present work and offer it for sale with no strings — one of 15 to 20 such shows every year — relying on grants and donations to cover its now approximately $1 million budget.Jeffrey Lew with his installation “Drawerings,” Jan. 25 – Feb. 6, 1975.Jeffrey Lew and White Columns; Cosmo SarchiaponeOne of Lew’s parting gifts may be precisely what allowed White Columns to continue past his brinkmanship. In late 1979, sensing a simpatico spirit, Lew encouraged Josh Baer, then 23 years old, to apply for the space’s vacant director position. Baer had no formal administrative or curatorial experience. But he’d grown up at the heart of the ’70s New York art world — his mother and stepfather were the acclaimed painters Jo Baer and John Wesley. Even more crucially, he was immersed in the new art forms bubbling up downtown. “Everything was blending together,” Baer recalled. “Hip-hop was breaking out, break dancing, graffiti art, noise music. That Gordon Matta-Clark era, that minimalist sculpture thing of SoHo, had now been replaced by a generation that’s more at home at the Mudd Club.”Baer insisted that being chosen to run White Columns in 1979 “wasn’t a glamorous thing to walk into. It was in impossible shape.” Sighing over his own naïveté, from his current perspective as an art adviser, he added, “Only somebody that young would be dumb enough to do it.” Monthly rent may have only been $415 at the space’s next home near the West Side Highway, but that was hardly a well-trafficked art burg. Moreover, the entire year’s budget was a mere $8,000 — with no provision for a director’s salary.From left, the artists Gretchen Bender, Cindy Sherman with Josh Baer, the White Columns director, at a fund-raiser, May 27, 1982.Robin Holland, via White ColumnsThe crowd inside a Danceteria benefit for White Columns, May 27, 1982.Robin Holland, via White ColumnsThe artist and new board member Mike Roddy suggested that Baer rebrand the space as “White Columns,” an architectural nod to the classically styled features of both its old and new addresses. It was also a droll statement about the rigid hierarchy of the art world being 100 percent white, Baer said critically. Hoping the frisson of spotlighting artists of color under the new name wouldn’t be lost on anyone, the updated moniker was made public for a September 1980 show featuring a sprawling subway-style mural by Lee Quiñones and Fred Brathwaite, a.k.a. Fab Five Freddy, one of the first times graffiti had been brought indoors into a prominent gallery setting.“We were both planting our flags in a whole new atmosphere,” Quiñones said recently, speaking of Baer’s invitation to spray-paint White Columns’ interior. Indeed, his show drew a host of downtown luminaries, from the critics Edit DeAk and Rene Ricard to the writer and cable TV host Glenn O’Brien, all of whom in turn helped spark a thorny love affair between the worlds of contemporary art and graffiti which continues to this day. The buzz-laden response also firmly linked White Columns’ new identity with both the nascent East Village art scene and the art market boom as each gathered steam in the ’80s.Lee Quiñones’s and Fred Brathwaite’s Sept. 1980 show at White Columns, one of the first prominent gallery exhibitions of graffiti in New York City.Charlie AhearnThat soaring market — and the ability of a White Columns show to catapult an unknown artist into its midst — could take on almost ridiculous aspects. “The commercial art world is a genius in finding ways to sell things that seem unsellable,” noted Bill Arning, who became director in 1985 and is now a Houston gallerist. At the March 1988 solo debut of Cady Noland’s unsettling installations — including a pair of geriatric walkers slung over a stanchion with a photo of a pistol leaning nearby — Arning said he fruitlessly tried to convince the collectors Don and Mera Rubell to purchase a piece for $400. He said Mera Rubell eventually admitted to him that she’d ended up buying that same piece a year later, once Noland’s career exploded — for $40,000.As the ’80s ended and the market mania collapsed, the resulting tensions rebounded inside White Columns. The painter Marilyn Minter said her 1988 solo debut there resulted in no less than 10 galleries pursuing her. Grateful to the space for plucking her out of semi-obscurity, she joined its board in 1991, happy to put her growing cachet at its service, even as her own sales slowed. “We were lucky to keep the doors open back in the ’90s,” Minter remembered. “Just keeping the air-conditioning on in the summer was a big deal!”Jeff Lewis studying a selection of White Columns publications from the 1990s and early 2000s.Victor Llorente for The New York TimesDespite the ’90s deepening recession, artists continued to see a White Columns show as transformational. “It changed my life completely,” John Currin said of his 1989 debut there, long before his portraits would fetch seven-figure sums at auction. “I made $5,000, that was huge! My entire income for the whole year before was $9,000 slaving away on drywall jobs.” A decade later, his wife, the sculptor Rachel Feinstein, said her own debut quickly moved her from working at the front desk of the Marianne Boesky Gallery to becoming one of its represented artists.Accordingly, Paul Ha, Arning’s successor in 1996 — and current director of the MIT List Visual Arts Center, in Cambridge, Mass. — said he learned to set aside his misgivings at having White Columns act as a de facto “talent scout” for commercial galleries. “When you see so many people struggling, you just want to help them with their career,” Ha explained. Some of Esteban Jefferson’s work at his Nov. 2019 solo debut at White Columns.Esteban Jefferson and White Columns; Marc TattiHiggs continued that tradition, with a notable tweak. “When I arrived at White Columns,” he said, “the question for us as an organization was what could we do that would make a difference?” The inclusion of both Black and female artists was finally on the cultural world’s radar. However, “What was strikingly obvious to me was that the work of artists with developmental disabilities was just completely underrepresented in the field of contemporary art. There were these extraordinary organizations like Creative Growth in Oakland or Visionaries + Voices in Cincinnati, supporting extraordinary communities of artists. But they just didn’t have access to the same kind of networks that artists coming out of Yale or Columbia’s M.F.A. programs might.”Enter White Columns. Higgs has presented 25 solo shows of developmentally disabled artists so far, including William Scott, who he notes finally had a work acquired by the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art — 14 years after his debut at White Columns. “Patience is a key factor here,” he quipped.Matthew Higgs, left, and the artist B. Wurtz during the opening of White Columns’ 50th anniversary exhibition.Victor Llorente for The New York TimesYoung art school graduates haven’t been entirely nixed: The painter Esteban Jefferson was an immediate sensation with his 2019 solo debut, an expanded version of his Columbia M.F.A. thesis vividly contrasting a Paris museum’s African statues with the faces of its staffers and their blandly institutional setting. But Higgs has also made a point of spotlighting barely seen older figures, from David Byrd, who drew chilling drawings of the Westchester psychiatric ward where he worked for 30 years until 1988, to Ben Morea, who created abstractions in 1964 before becoming better known as an art world provocateur and political activist. Even other venues have received attention: In 2010, the artist Margaret Lee was asked to put together a retrospective on the raucous, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink group shows she began staging in 2009 at her semi-legal 179 Canal space in Chinatown.Lee said she was pleasantly shocked by her discussions with Higgs as she explored recreating 179 Canal’s chaotic vibe and messy energy within White Columns. “He never said ‘I don’t like the aesthetics of this.’ It was more ‘I’m around if you want to talk, but you’re free. Just be responsible.’” So, echoing the anti-guidelines first offered by Jeffrey Lew on Greene Street decades ago — Do what you want, just don’t burn the place down? “Actually,” Lee recalled wryly, “we did almost burn White Columns down. We wanted to leave a microwave running for 24 hours. Matthew said, ‘No, you cannot do that. You need a fake microwave.’ That’s where he drew the line!”From the Archives: White Columns & 112 Greene Street/112 Workshop — 1970-2021Through July 31 at White Columns, 91 Horatio Street, Manhattan; 212-924-4212; whitecolumns.org. More