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Speaking of brutalism: James Lileks trashed the downtown YWCA building in his article that ran with the online headline, "One of the ugliest buildings in downtown Minneapolis will likely be demolished. Should we care?" Yes, we should, and we do.
My family cares. My wife spent 20 years working at the YWCA of Minneapolis, loved the interior environment, and both of our sons spent all of their preschool years in the early education program. Lileks drools: "A boring first floor that turns its back to the street?" We thought the floor plan was gracious and innovative. The innovative, cascading interior ramp to the upper level brought joy to our toddlers each day as they raced to their classrooms. "Abstract shapes that give no indication as to their function?" Huh? The spacious roof deck with playground equipment was a wide-open respite within a city environment, which is sorely lacking for urban kids.
"Holes in the wall to indicate where the concrete was pumped?" As an architect, I wonder why Lileks has been tasked with architectural criticism while clearly not understanding basic construction practices. Concrete is not pumped through "holes." The little circles are called form ties. Look up how Pritzker prizewinning Tadao Ando uses them if you want to continue in this line of work. I think this building has great bones and great potential for adaptive reuse. Need some ideas? Call me.
You can dislike the building and still agree that Lileks should have done his research on this important building before trashing it.
Christopher A. Strom, Minneapolis
MINING
With a parent like that ...
Let us once and for all put an end to environmentally hazardous mining in Minnesota ("Mining firm again threatens the BWCA," editorial, Oct. 15, and "Mine foes are the ones staging an 'end run,'" Oct. 19). The executive director of MiningMinnesota, Julie Lucas, has failed to drill more deeply and expose an exploratory big hole in the historically untrustworthy parental guidance of Chilean mining conglomerate Antofagasta.