"It's all about beauty," said architect Joan Soranno. "Whether it's the placement of a joint in a wall or the design of a whole building, to me it's all about beauty."
At a time when fast, cheap, no-frills buildings litter the landscape and beauty is discounted even by architects, Soranno's values set her apart. And they have won her acclaim, including the Star Tribune's 2012 Artist of the Year award for her design of the Garden Mausoleum at Minneapolis' landmark Lakewood Cemetery.
The $30 million mausoleum, which opened in May near Lake Calhoun, already has garnered a dozen awards and citations for its elegant design, extraordinary light, artful shape and integration into the landscape.
"It's one of the major works of architecture of any type built in the nation this year," said Tom Fisher, dean of the University of Minnesota's College of Design. For a new building in Minnesota to get so much national attention is unusual, but for a mausoleum it is unprecedented, he said. "I can't remember a time when a building of this type has received this many awards."
Notched into a hillside in the 1871 cemetery, the mausoleum looks from nearby 36th Street like a little pavilion embraced by ancient trees. In summer, its rough gray-granite exterior contrasts with lush green lawns; when winter snows wrap the building, they echo the white marble mosaics that gently curve around the entrance.
Inside, the building unfolds in a direct but often counterintuitive way as light seems to flood in from all directions, including the floor below.
"I think it's breathtaking," said Susan Mundale, author of "Haven in the Heart of the City," a history of Lakewood Cemetery. "It is so simple, yet the architecture is so sophisticated, and instead of being dark and gloomy, it is full of light and so peaceful."
Light from underground