The Architect Magazine
by Sean McCaughan
June 22, 2016
With its bright red, ziggurat form, one of Miami-based
architecture firm Arquitectonica’s first buildings, the Babylon Apartments in
Miami’s Brickell neighborhood, is at risk of demolition if its longtime owner,
a former “spaghetti western” movie star, gets his way. The six story building
is an icon of subtropical postmodernist architecture in Miami; it’s also one of
the signatures of the city’s ‘Miami Vice’-era 1980s comeback. The Babylon also
earned Arquitectonica its first international award, a Progressive Architecture
Citation Award, only a few years after the firm’s founding in 1977.
Although the Babylon is thirty four years old, well below
the typical fifty year cutoff for historic designation, the City of Miami’s
Historic Preservation board is considering the fate of the iconic structure on
the grounds that it demonstrates “exceptional importance.” A final draft
historic designation report was publicly released last Friday, and will be
considered by the board on July 5th.
When the news became public earlier this year, a flurry
of press, including articles by myself, raised public awareness of the
potential to lose the Babylon. A change.org petition was started. The modernism
preservation group DoCoMoMo rallied for its preservation, planning an event.
Arquitectonica designed the Babylon in 1979, at the same
time as the much larger Palace Condominium on the other end of Brickell Bay
Drive, in Miami, although the Babylon wasn’t built until 1982. “It was one of
our first buildings; our first building that’s not a house” said Bernardo
Fort-Brescia, a principal at Arquitectonica, to a recent gathering of
University of Miami students. His wife and business partner Laurinda was the
main designer of the building. Fort-Brescia added “it hasn’t been kept up that
well over the years.”
Indeed, the building’s owner was about to obtain a demolition
permit for the site in hopes of constructing a much taller building when, on
May 3rd, historic preservation board member Lynn Lewis requested a report from
city staff on the potential for designation. This set a 120 day moratorium on
demolition. Francisco “Paco” Martinez
Celeiro, also known as George Martin
from his days starring in “spaghetti western” films in the 1960s, has owned the
Babylon since 1989. He has been trying for the last two years to demolish the
building and get the sliver of land underneath it zoned for a 48 story
structure. Up until recently, it was at least partially occupied, although
according to neighbors nobody has been seen inside lately.
Amid all of this, the usually outspoken Fort-Brescia and
wife Laurinda have declined to give their own opinions on the question of
preservation itself. “I shouldn’t talk about the Babylon being demolished
because I’m not the one to talk about that” Fort-Brescia told the UM class, as
well as when I called.
Architect Andres Duany, a former principal at
Arquitectonica and founder of Duany Plater-Zyberk, was much more outspoken.
“Arquitectonica is the most important firm in Miami, probably in the Caribbean,
possibly in the southeastern United States, in the last 50 years—since Morris
Lapidus,” Duany told the Miami Herald. “If they were to demolish this building,
it would be an act of cultural barbarism. Completely beneath the artistic
reputation that Miami thinks it has. And it would betray that we are nothing
but a bunch of swamp-dwelling barbarians. Still.”
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