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2009

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2015

2019

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2024

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Drawing, World Trade Center Transportation Hub, New York, NY: Sketch

This is a Drawing. It was designed by Santiago Calatrava. It is dated ca. 2014 and we acquired it in 2015. Its medium is watercolor and graphite on white wove paper. It is a part of the Drawings, Prints, and Graphic Design department.

Santiago Calatrava’s work explores the significance of place and its human context by considering both topographical and cultural landscapes. In this sense, Calatrava believes that it is fundamental to form a relationship – a feeling and sense of spirituality – with a physical site. In the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City, Calatrava was commissioned to build a new transit hub that connected PATH trains from New Jersey with New York City’s subway system. The steel and white marble structure, which bears a striking resemblance to the contours of birdwings, encompasses approximately 800,000 square feet with 225,000 square feet of retail space. The structure is meant to evoke the form of a white dove, an international symbol for peace. The structure is called “Oculus,” but is more commonly referred to as the World Trade Center Transportation Hub.
For Calatrava, drawing is a fundamental part of the design process. The architect’s sketches fill notebooks, which line the shelves of his New York City townhouse. He often communicates his ideas not with words but rather with images and has been known to stand in front of a rapt audience sketching rather than speaking. This drawing for Oculus reveals the architect’s time-honored approach. The elegant geometry of the bird-like structure is revealed at two different elevations. The side view, at right, evokes the form of wings spread wide. It also affords a view of an architecture that bears a proximate resemblance to the organic, undulating forms of Modernisme, an early-20th century movement associated with Spanish-Catalan architect Antonio Gaudi. The cross-section view illustrates the multi-layered character of the space, home to the PATH train and several intersecting New York City subway lines, as it extends many floors underground. Designing for public use and interaction is a central concern for Calatrava. In that vein, the architect’s design has been compared to another great civic New York City design of the last century, Whitney Warren’s Grand Central Terminal, for which Cooper Hewitt holds a drawing in the museum’s collection. Calatrava’s design for Oculus, first revealed in 2004, takes special care to consider the need for ample light and vast, open public spaces, expressing his sensitive approach to building on a site weighted in great significance. Set to be completed in early 2016, the Oculus is already an icon of 21st-century design.

This object was donated by Santiago Calatrava. It is credited Gift of Santiago Calatrava.

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Its dimensions are

66.7 × 101.6 cm (26 1/4 in. × 40 in.)

It is signed

Signed, in pencil: Calatrava / NY

Cite this object as

Drawing, World Trade Center Transportation Hub, New York, NY: Sketch; Designed by Santiago Calatrava (Spanish, b. 1951); watercolor and graphite on white wove paper; 66.7 × 101.6 cm (26 1/4 in. × 40 in.); Gift of Santiago Calatrava; 2015-35-1

This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition Making Design: Recent Acquisitions.

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<ref name=CH>{{cite web |url=https://collection.cooperhewitt.org/objects/69167759/ |title=Drawing, World Trade Center Transportation Hub, New York, NY: Sketch |author=Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum |accessdate=19 April 2024 |publisher=Smithsonian Institution}}</ref>