Rockwell Group is designing the interior architecture for

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Rockwell Architecture,
Planning and Design, P.C.
5 Union Square West
New York, New York 10003
tel 212-463-0334
fax 212-463-0335
Crystals at CityCenter
Design Fact Sheet
Use:
Retail, Entertainment, Dining
Location:
Crystals is part of the 67-acre mixed-use CityCenter
development along the Las Vegas Strip between Bellagio and
Monte Carlo resorts.
Size:
120,000 SF (Rockwell Group’s scope); 500,000 (overall)
Client:
MGM MIRAGE and Infinity World Development Corp
Background:
Rockwell Group is designing the interior architecture for Crystals, the central
retail, entertainment and dining district of the LEED-Gold CityCenter in Las
Vegas, a joint venture between MGM MIRAGE and Infinity World Development
Corp, a subsidiary of Dubai World. Crystals will be the connective core of the
hotels, resorts and residences that make up this new groundbreaking metropolis.
Rockwell Group joins a world-renowned group of architects who have
contributed to this monumental urban project, including Daniel Libeskind, Cesar
Pelli, Rafael Viñoly, Norman Foster and Helmut Jahn.
Design Concept:
Rockwell Group envisioned Crystals as an abstracted 21st century park to fit into
this new larger-than-life urban center in Las Vegas. The organic, curvilinear
vocabulary of the interior architecture reinvents and re-imagines the idea of the
central urban park as a social gathering place for shopping and dining.
Design Highlights:
Interpretations and abstractions of nature animate the scenery that complements
the sharp angles of Studio Daniel Libeskind’s crystalline exterior, with a glowing
three-story wooden sculpture inspired by a modern tree house. Floor-to-ceiling
columns and trellises above are abundant with hanging plants as a reinterpretation
of a gazebo, and a dynamic flower carpet at the node of the three promenades in
Crystals that transforms with the seasons. Natural and tactile materials abound in
response to CityCenter’s overall LEED Gold aspirations, including the flowing
24-foot grand bamboo stair, inspired by Rome’s Spanish steps.
LEED Gold Details:
Beyond the actual design, however, was the effort to use materials, techniques
and processes that were in keeping with LEED Gold specifications.
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All the woods we used are FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) certified,
including the sapele and mahogany used for the tree house, and the mahogany
for the balcony rail and planters.
We chose bamboo as the material for the grand stair that goes up 24 feet.
Bamboo is a wood that easily replenishes, so we thought it would make sense
to highlight it in a central design feature.
Themed elements construction will be fabricated off site to allow for the
majority of off-gassing to occur off the premises.
Integrated walk-off grates – all entries will have integral walk off grates to
help with indoor air, maintenance, and durability of finished surfaces.
No added urea formaldehyde to wood products.
All the substrates, sealants and the terrazzo flooring contain no toxic agents,
and comply with all LEED criteria.
Many of our structures use 100% recycled steel, including the hanging
garden.
Water efficient fixtures will achieve 38% savings over code, over 1.8 million
gallons of water saved annually.
All the integrated lighting are energy efficient LED systems.
Firm Description
Rockwell Group Lobby
With a desire to create immersive environments, Rockwell Group takes a crossdisciplinary approach to its inventive array of projects. Based in downtown New York
with satellite offices in Madrid and Dubai, our innovative, internationally acclaimed
architecture and design firm specializes in hospitality, cultural, healthcare, educational,
product, theater and film design. Crafting a unique and individual narrative concept
for each project is fundamental to Rockwell Group’s successful design approach. From
the big picture to the last detail, the story informs and drives the design. The seamless
synergy of technology, craftsmanship and design is reflected in environments that
combine high-end video technology, handmade objects, special effects and custom
fixtures and furniture.
Past projects include the Chambers hotel (New York); W New York and W Union
Square; the Walt Disney Family Museum (San Francisco); Maialino in the Gramercy
Park Hotel (New York); Aloft hotels, Starwood Hotel & Resort’s new urban roadside
oases; “Hall of Fragments,” the entrance installation to the 2008 11th annual Venice
Architecture Biennale; the Kodak Theatre, home of the Academy Awards ceremony
(Los Angeles); set design for the 2009 81st Academy Awards; Canyon Ranch Miami
Beach; Casinos of the Earth, Sky and Wind at Mohegan Sun Casino (Uncasville, CT);
interior work and brand conceptualization for the jetBlue terminal at John F. Kennedy
International Airport; the Broadway musicals “Hairspray” and “Legally Blonde;” the
Children’s Hospital at Montefiore; Adour Alain Ducasse at The St. Regis New York;
Nobu restaurants worldwide including New York, Hong Kong, Melbourne, and Dubai;
Bar American; Gordon Ramsay’s Maze (London); and a collection of wall coverings
for Maya Romanoff. Currently projects include the Elinor Bunin-Munroe Film
Center at Lincoln Center; Morgans Hotel Group’s Ames Hotel (Boston); and Crystals,
the central retail and dining component of MGM MIRAGE and Infinity World
Development Corp’s CityCenter in Las Vegas.
In May 2009 Rockwell Group broke ground on Imagination Playground at Burling
Slip in the South Street Seaport area of Lower Manhattan, a public-private partnership
with the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation. Imagination Playground
is a rich environment of diverse materials that encourages unstructured childdirected “free play,” the very sort of activity that is vital to developing cognitive,
social and emotional skills. Through a partnership with KaBoom!, the leading nonprofit dedicated to playground development all over the country, Rockwell Group
will be offering fixed-site and other scalable models of Imagination Playground to
communities nationwide.
Pleasure: The Architecture and Design of Rockwell Group, was published by Universe,
a division of Rizzoli Books in 2002. Spectacle by David Rockwell with Bruce Mau
– a book examining the history and public fascination with larger-than-life manmade
events – was published by Phaidon Press in October 2006.
David Rockwell was honored with the 2009 Pratt Legends Award, the 2008 National
Design Award by Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt for outstanding achievement in
Interior Design, a lifetime achievement award from Interiors magazine, an induction
in Interior Design magazine’s Hall of Fame and the Presidential Design Award for his
work for the Grand Central Terminal renovation. Rockwell serves as Chairman of the
Board of the Design Industries Foundation Fighting AIDS (DIFFA), and as a board
member of City-Meals-on-Wheels and the Public Theater. He is a member of the
Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum’s committee on Exhibitions.
5 Union Square West | New York, NY 10003 | (212) 463-0334 | www.rockwellgroup.com
Project List
Hotel & Spa
Chambers Hotel
Virgin Spa at Natirar
Residential
Spring Street Hotel
Affinia Hotel, New York, NY
Alex Hotel, New York, NY
Aloft Hotel Concept, Nationwide
Ames Hotel, Boston, MA
Art’otel, London, England
Belvedere Hotel, Mykonos, Greece
Benjamin Hotel, New York, NY
Cancun Hotel, Cancun, Mexico
Canyon Ranch Miami Beach, FL
Carlton Hotel, New York, NY
Chambers Hotel, Minneapolis, MN
Chambers, New York, NY
Confidential Spa, Phoenix, AZ
El Conquistador Resort Puerto Rico, Condado Plaza
Fairmont Hotel, Chicago, IL
Four Seasons Hotel, Washington DC
Greenwich Hotel, New York, NY
Hyatt Andaz Wall Street, New York, NY
Ibn Battuta Walk Master Plan, Dubai
Ink 48, New York, NY
Le Meridien, Oran, Algeria
Pacific City, Huntington Beach, CA
Se San Diego, CA
Virgin Resort and Spa, Peapack, NJ
W Hotel, Vieques, Puerto Rico
W Hotel, New York, NY
W Hotel, Union Square, New York, NY
W Hotel Paris-Opéra, France
Watercolor Inn, Watercolor, FL
2 Gold Street, New York, NY
75 Wall Street, New York, NY
455 Central Park West, New York, NY
Bridge Tower Place, New York, NY
CityPlace One, Atlanta, GA
Murano Grande, Miami, FL
Octagon Park Apartments, New York, NY
One Carnegie Hill, New York, NY
One Union Square South, New York, NY
Palm Beach Condominium, Palm Beach, FL
Queens West Buildings 1, 2, 3, 6 & 7, Queens, NY
Riverhouse, New York, NY
The Lyric, New York, NY
The Sagamore, New York, NY
The Sonoma, New York, NY
The Tate, New York, NY
Tribeca Tower, New York, NY
West Port, New York, NY
5 Union Square West | New York, NY 10003 | (212) 463-0334 | www.rockwellgroup.com
Restaurants & Bars
Matsuhisa, Belvedere Hotel
Adour Alain Ducasse, New York
Nobu 57
Adour Alain Ducasse at the St. Regis Hotel, New York, NY, Washington, D.C.
Alma de Cuba, Philadelphia, PA
A Voce, Time Warner Center, New York, NY
Bar Americain, New York, NY
BLT Burger, Las Vegas, NV
Blue Ginger, Wellesley, MA
Bobby Flay Steak, Atlantic City, NJ
Bobby’s Burger Palace, Monmouth, NJ, Smithtown, NY, Mohegan Sun Casino, CT
Bourbon Steak, Four Seasons, Washington D.C
brgr, New York, NY
Café at Country, New York, NY
Café Carlyle at the Carlyle Hotel, New York, NY
Café Citron Saks Espresso and Juice Bar, New York, NY
Café Gray, New York, NY
Carriage House Culinary Center, Peapack, NJ
Chambers Kitchen at Chambers Hotel, Minneapolis, MN
Cherry Nightclub, Las Vegas, NV
Citarella, New York, NY
Country at the Carlton, New York, NY
Django, New York, NY
Emeril’s Fish House, Las Vegas NV
Emeril’s, New Orleans, LA, Miami, FL, Atlanta, GA
Geisha, New York, NY
Grand Central Terminal Dining Concourse, New York, NY
Heartbeat at W New York, New York, NY
J&G Steakhouse, Scottsdale, AZ
Kittichai, New York, NY
Le Bar Bat, New York, NY
Lollipop Club, New York, NY
Maialino, Gramercy Park Hotel, New York
Matsuhisa, Athens, Mykonos, Greece
Maze, London, England
Mesa Grill: Las Vegas, Bahamas
Michael Jordan’s The Steak House NYC, New York, NY
Nectar, Berwyn, PA
Nobu, Nobu 57, Nobu Next Door, New York, NY
Nobu: Bahamas, Dallas, Dubai, Hong Kong, Las Vegas, Los Angeles,
Macau, Melbourne, Mexico City, Moscow, San Diego, Waikiki
Noche, New York, NY
Olives and Underbar at W Union Square, New York, NY
Olives, Xen and Bamboo Bar, Roppongi Hills, Japan
Payard Patisserie and Bistro: New York and Las Vegas
Pod, Philadelphia, PA
Rosa Mexicano: New York and Washington D.C.
Ruby Foo’s Dim Sum and Sushi Palace, New York, NY
Samba Grill, Las Vegas, NV
Serafina, New York, NY
Simon at Palms Place, Las Vegas, NV
Strip House: New York, Houston, Las Vegas, Naples, Key West, San Juan
Sushi Samba Rio, Chicago, IL
Sushi-Zen, New York, NY
Tatou, Beverly Hills, CA, New York, NY
Tchoup Chop, Orlando, FL
The Library at the Regency Hotel, New York, NY
Tisserie, New York, NY
Town Restaurant at Chambers Hotel, New York, NY
Vong, New York, NY
Washington Square, Philadelphia, PA
Wildwood Barbeque, New York, NY
Yellowtail Restaurant, Las Vegas, NV
5 Union Square West | New York, NY 10003 | (212) 463-0334 | www.rockwellgroup.com
Master Planning & Mixed-Use
Old Convention Center
CityCenter
Asbury Park, Asbury, NJ
Complexe Cirque, Hong Kong, China
Coney Island, Brooklyn, NY
Crystals at CityCenter, Las Vegas, NV
Disney Village Master Plan, Paris, France
Downtown Disney, Lake Buena Vista, FL
East River Park, New York, NY
Mixed-use Development, Monterrey, Mexico
Montovun Polo Club, Istria, Croatia
Old Convention Center, Washington D.C.
Pier 17 Studies, New York, NY
Pier Park Drive, Panama City, FL
Waterfont Redevelopment, New York, NY
Central Department Stores, Various Cities, India
Jersey Gardens, Elizabeth, NJ
Market City Mall, Various Cities, India
MGM MIRAGE, Atlantic City, NJ
Mohegan Sun Casino, Phases I - III, Uncasville, CT
Mohican Casino, Sullivan County, NY
Pier at Caesar’s, Atlantic City, NJ
Seminole Paradise, Hollywood, FL
Starhill Center, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Retail
F.A.O. Schwarz
Mauboussin
Adidas, New York, NY
Best Cellars, New York, NY, Boston, MA and Seattle, WA
CBS Retail Store, New York, NY
Crayola Works, Baltimore, MD
Disney Flagship Store, Times Square, NY
FAO Schwarz, New York, NY
Forth & Towne, Various
Mauboussin, New York, NY
Meijer Stores, Grand Rapids, MI
Mikasa Retail Experience, New York, NY
Morgenthal Frederics Opticians, New York, NY
Origins, New York, NY
Stuart Weitzman Redesign Concept
Sports Stadiums
Coca-Cola @ Stade De France, Paris, France
Coca-Cola Skyfield, Turner Stadium, Atlanta, GA
Comerica Park for the Detroit Tigers, Detroit, MI
Pittsburgh Steelers, Pittsburgh, PA
Miami Dolphins Stadium, Miami, FL
The Hacienda, NFL, Los Angeles, CA
The New Coliseum, NFL, Los Angeles, CA
Detroit Tigers’ Comerica Park
5 Union Square West | New York, NY 10003 | (212) 463-0334 | www.rockwellgroup.com
Theater & Set Design
Cirque du Soleil
Hairspray
Museum & Exhibit
Walt Disney Family Foundation
Catch Me If You Can, Seattle, WA
Cirque du Soleil, Orlando, FL
Disney Cruise Lines
Downtown Disney, Orlando, FL
Film Society at Lincoln Center, New York, NY
Hollywood Playhouse, Hollywood, FL
Kodak Theatre for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, Hollywood, CA
Loews Theatres 42nd Street at E-Walk, New York, NY
Loews Theatres Broadway at 84th Street, New York, NY
Nokia Theater, Times Square, New York, NY
Phantom of the Opera Theater, the Venetian, Las Vegas, NV
Siam Paragon Theater, Bangkok, Thailand
Sony Theatres at METREON, San Francisco, CA
Star Theatres, Southfield, MI
Syracuse Stage Renovation, Syracuse, NY
42nd Street Entertainment Building, New York, NY
81st Annual Academy Awards, Hollywood, CA
“Armed and Naked in America,” Naked Angels, New York, NY
“All Shook Up,” Broadway, New York, NY
“Catch Me If You Can,” 5th Avenue Theater, Seattle, WA
“Dirty Rotten Scoundrels,” Broadway, New York, NY
“Omnium Gatherum,” Variety Arts Theater, NY
“Hairspray,” Neil Simon Theater, NY
“Hairspray,” National Tour
“Legally Blonde,” Golden Gate Theatre, San Francisco and Broadway, NY
“The Rocky Horror Show,” Circle in the Square Theater, NY
Team America, Paramount Pictures
Walt Disney Family Museum, San Francisco, CA
“Hall of Fragments,” entrance installation to the 2008 Venice Architecture Biennale
Incubator, New York, NY
Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame, New York, NY
Federal Hall Visitors’ Center, New York, NY
Motown Center, Detroit, MI
SteelStax, Bethlehem, PA
Declaration of Independence, Salt Lake City, UT
“Reinventing the Globe: a Shakespearean Theater for the 21st Century,” Washington D.C.
I.D. Magazine’s Annual Design Awards Exhibition, 1996, 1997, New York, NY
Health Care & Public Works
Imagination Playground, Imagination Playground in a BOX, nationwide
Jet Blue Terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport, Queens, NY
L!BRARY Initiative, Robin Hood Foundation, New York, NY
P.S. 6, New York, NY
The Children’s Hospital at Montefiore, Bronx, NY
Infusion Bay, Children’s Oncology Unit, The Children’s Hospital at Montefiore, Bronx, NY
The DeVos Children’s Hospital Concept Design, Grand Rapids, MI
WTC Temporary Platform, New York, NY
Children’s Hospital at Montefiore
5 Union Square West | New York, NY 10003 | (212) 463-0334 | www.rockwellgroup.com
Office
Rockwell Group, New York, NY
McCann-Erickson, New York, NY
Foote Cone Belding, New York, NY
@radical.media, New York, NY, Santa Monica, CA
Foote Cone Belding
Strategy & Branding
Products
Maya Romanoff & Dennis Miller
Publications
brgr, New York, NY
City of New York
Club Med
Gap Stores
Marriott International
McDonald’s
Meijer Stores
Miami Dolphins Stadium
Nobu Hotel
Proctor & Gamble
Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide
The Coca-Cola Company
Tom’s Hotels
APF Frames
Appoggi
Dennis Miller
Desiron
Leucos Lighting Collection
Maya Romanoff Wallcovering Collection
Meijer Stores
Mikasa
The Rug Company
Saloni Ceramica
Steelite
Swarovski
Pleasure, Rizzoli and Universe Publishing, 2002
Spectacle, Phaidon Press, 2006
5 Union Square West | New York, NY 10003 | (212) 463-0334 | www.rockwellgroup.com
Events
Absolut Bar at Esquire Apartment, New York, NY
Bon Appetit Supper Club and Cafe, New York, NY
City Meals-on-Wheels Chef’s Tribute Event, 2001-present, New York, NY
DIFFA Dining by Design, 1996-present, New York, NY
The Great Bazaar, Lincoln Center, New York, NY
Metropolitan Home Design 100 Gala, Four Seasons Restaurant, New York, NY
New York Magazine’s Taste of New York, 2009
Foote Cone Belding
5 Union Square West | New York, NY 10003 | (212) 463-0334 | www.rockwellgroup.com
Museum Review | Walt Disney Family Museum
Exploring the Man Behind the Animation
October 1, 2009
By Edward Rothstein
SAN FRANCISCO — Given the heritage of the place, you expect to see a ride at the Walt Disney
Family Museum, which opens on Thursday in the Presidio here. And in a way, there is one, since
the museum does just what Disney thought a ride should do when he created Disneyland more
than half a century ago: it tells a story.
And while the museum is almost leisurely in relating its narrative, only here and there veering into
uncharted terrain, and while children will quickly pass by many sections that will fascinate their
elders, there are more than enough thrills for everyone. Who needs Fantasyland, Tomorrowland,
Caribbean pirates, Matterhorn rides or a robotic Abraham Lincoln when the story being told
touches the experience of anyone who had contact with the 20th century and its Disneyesque
amusements?
The ride in question is, of course, just a walk, but it leads through 19,000 square feet of galleries
in this new museum complex, a $110 million transformation of an Army barracks and two
neighboring buildings, devoted to telling the story of Disney’s life and work. This might seem a bit
secondhand, since it means gazing at original character sketches and animation notes for the
seven dwarfs (Dopey: “Droopy effect in all clothing” or Bashful: “Head usually down, eyes looking
up”) rather than seeing them Hi-Ho-ing into their mine. And it can hardly be said that Disney’s
career is the stuff of adventure stories: he knew how to make cartoons and amusement parks,
and he created companies that could do both. It is a life of relatively tame domesticity,
extraordinary hard work and occasional controversy.
Photographs by Noah Berger for The New York Times
The motivation behind the museum did not seem to promise much more excitement. As the
decades passed since Disney’s death in 1966, his daughter Diane Disney Miller discovered that
fewer and fewer children had any idea that her father was more than a corporate logo. Some
recent biographies, she said in a recent interview in The New York Times, also portrayed him and
his marriage in an unflattering light. So the Walt Disney Family Foundation, a nonprofit
organization independent from the company, decided to create a museum entirely devoted to
Disney.
His personal archives are enormous, but major copyrights and important films and artifacts are
held by the Walt Disney Company, so it lent the museum materials, including a two-story-high
“multiplane” animation camera that was used to create three-dimensional effects for “Pinocchio”
and “Fantasia.” A 114-seat theater at the museum will host concerts and screen Disney films.
Photographs by Noah Berger for The New York Times
Early visitors browsing inside the Walt Disney Family Museum on Sunday. The space is created from a
former Army barracks and two neighboring buildings.
At first, the museum (Page & Turnbull are the architects) seems to be precisely what it promises
to be: a family institution designed to undo anything negative and celebrate the man. The lobby is
really a large gallery given over to displays of Disney’s many awards, certificates and statuettes.
They include Harvard’s honorary degree and the special Oscar designed for “Snow White” in
1938, but also minutiae like a plaque presented to Disney in 1959 during “National Want-Ad
Week” commemorating the ad he answered in 1920 seeking a “first class man” to do “cartoon
and wash drawings.”
But the impulse to put the rest of the family attic on display is resisted, and as overseen by the
founding executive director, Richard Benefield (who had been deputy director of the Harvard
University Art Museums), the Disney Museum is far from being an air-brushed portrait. While
there are no hints of the domestic tensions described, for example, in Neal Gabler’s fine recent
biography, and while there is much more to understand about the arc of Disney’s life and the
frustrations of his final decades, his imagination was so capacious, his ambition so disciplined
and his achievements so vital to the evolution of American entertainment media that he seems a
natural force. The family movies on display show, at the very least, Disney’s childlike sense of
play, particularly with his two young daughters.
Disney’s drive, the museum demonstrates, was relentless. Having mastered the basics of
animation in the ’20s, Disney kept pushing at the possibilities. (The exhibition design, by Rockwell
Group, helps provide a basic education in animation’s history.) In one of his earliest
achievements, “Alice’s Wonderland,” a young girl visits an animation studio and falls asleep,
dreaming herself into the cartoon world, mixing fantasy and reality, a vision Disney must have
shared. Small screens show clips of Disney’s Alice cartoons, framing them within larger drawings,
amplifying the playfulness.
Disney entered a new era with his first sound cartoon, “Steamboat Willie,” the third starring
Mickey Mouse. We take it for granted now, but at the time the work meant selecting an expensive
technology, developing a technique for coordinating music and image, and convincing distributors
the cost was worth it. Nothing about it was easy: one wall contains an array of 348 enlargements
of drawings from that cartoon; they constitute less than a minute of action.
Photographs by Noah Berger for The New York Times
A young visitor examines a wall of 348 Steamboat Willie frames, enough for only 16 seconds of animation.
And there were other challenges. Disney’s first company went bankrupt. His second, created with
his brother Roy, was nearly destroyed by a jealous rival who lured away staff members and took
over one of Walt’s early cartoon characters, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit.
Out of that debacle grew the idea of Mickey Mouse, an insouciant creature whose pluck and
autonomy must have been appealing in the wake of disappointments (those traits also found
resonance with the temper of the times). A wall of display cases features Mickey memorabilia that
will make collectors drool; it also shows how quickly Disney had figured out how to merchandise
his characters, transforming the film business.
But if Disney had not been interested in character and story, this might have led to just an early
onset of today’s merchandising fever. He was constantly running out of money, not because he
was profligate but because he was a compulsive idealist, straining for something beyond the
reach of common cartoons.
By the time he created his first feature-length work, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” he had
transformed the very notion of animation. Disney insisted that cartoons literally animate their
world, bring it so thoroughly to life that even inanimate objects would react to events. He pushed
his staff to strain for realism (and sponsored drawing classes in his studios). But he was
interested in something more than reality: even tables and trees would display character.
One of the most fascinating objects here is an enormous notebook created by Herman
Schultheis, a technician in the camera-effects department in the late ’30s, in which he
documented how images were produced in “Pinocchio” and “Fantasia.” Next to it, an animated
display of the book responds to touch, so you can almost feel the creators’ imagination at work as
they transmute real objects into fantastical washes of color.
Photographs by Noah Berger for The New York Times
Some displays include touch-screens to flip through notebooks.
The museum goes on to describe the animators’ strike of 1941, which so shocked Disney that
after World War II, he became an eager witness for the House Un-American Activities Committee;
the displays deftly present interviews with workers on both sides of the picket lines.
Other exhibits cover the war years, postwar live-action movies (like “20,000 Leagues Under the
Sea”), nature films and, finally, in an annex to the original Presidio Building, a gallery in which
Disney’s own toy train is on display — one he rode around his property — along with a model of
his original plans for Disneyland.
In that final gallery, the pace is quick, the detail slight. In barely the space it took to define the
beginning of Disney’s animation revolution, we hear about his television work in the 1950s (like
“Zorro” and “The Mickey Mouse Club”), the years of continuing films, both flops and hits, and
Disney’s final fantasies of an urban utopia to be constructed just beyond Disney World in Florida;
it was never built.
There is much to admire here (space is also devoted to Disney’s creations for the 1964-65 New
York World’s Fair and to the movie “Mary Poppins”), but it becomes clear that while his energy
and imagination remained intact until his death from lung cancer at 65, the trajectory he mapped
out in the ’30s in animation was left for others to explore.
He was a pioneer in packaging and synergy, but nothing else was to break artistic ground the
way those early films did, and no animated movie ever got Disney’s full attention again. He was
preoccupied with other things. It is as if a cartoon character had broken out of all celluloid
constraints and decided to test its fantasies in the real world — Alice returning from Wonderland.
Those efforts had mixed results, but it was an exceptional ride.
The Walt Disney Family Museum opens on Thursday at 104 Montgomery Street, the Presidio of
San Francisco; (415) 345-6800, disney.go.com/disneyatoz/familymuseum.
dkc NEWS
10016 • Tel. (212) 685-4300 • Fax (212) 685-9024
fromDan Klores Communications 386 Park Avenue South, 10
th
Fl. • New York, NY
June 19, 2009
David Rockwell, the New York architect and designer, describes
Dubai as “an incredible city of superlatives”, a list he has helped
expand considerably.
Andrew Henderson / The National
David Rockwell, the New York architect and designer, describes Dubai as “an incredible
city of superlatives”.
He has helped add to the list of superlatives. His first project was to design the Nobu
restaurant at the Palm Atlantis, where he created a surreal environment reflecting the
spectacle of the hotel and its man-made Palm Jumeirah island home.
“One of the most important aspects of the design was choreography: how the guests
would enter, how they would move through the space,” Mr Rockwell says.
“We envisioned the guests coming in from the beautiful Middle East beachside, or the
other-wordly landscape of Atlantis. We wanted them to have a smooth transition into our
space, while also introducing them to a totally new and sensuous experience.”
So Mr Rockwell crafted a marine environment where enormous, hand-woven plant fibre
panels line the restaurant walls and ceilings to evoke a setting under an ocean wave.
Dubai is appealing for designers, he suggests, because in many ways it is a blank slate.
“You look at Dubai, you think of all the towers,” Mr Rockwell says. “But down on the
ground … where are the parks? Where are the communal spaces? It’s not conceived of
from a pedestrian point of view. As a designer, that’s an opportunity.”
Since Nobu’s opening, his Middle East portfolio has expanded with another Nobu
restaurant, this time in Doha, and an Aloft Hotel in Abu Dhabi, prompting him to open a
Dubai office.
On a recent visit, Mr. Rockwell is obviously exhausted. (He asks the photographer to use
settings that would best mask his fatigue.)
Still, the affable designer becomes enthusiastic as he describes a portfolio spanning 25
years.
As well as restaurant commissions, his work has taken him from Broadway (the stage
production of Hairspray) to Hollywood (the set of this year’s Academy Awards).
The Oscars was a particular design challenge: how to make a TV programme watched
by hundreds of millions of viewers across the globe look like an intimate gathering of film
enthusiasts?
Mr Rockwell’s solution was to scrap what he saw as the impersonal layout of the Kodak
Theatre in Los Angeles that he had designed nine years earlier in favour of a setting
more like a small night club.
“It’s no longer unique to see a close-up picture of a movie star. Everyone sees them,” he
says. “What’s unique is if you can invite the audience on TV to participate and not just
observe.”
His interest in design was inspired by his mother, a vaudeville dancer and
choreographer. She had long given up her dancing career by the time David, the
youngest of her five sons, was born. Instead, she set up a theatre group in the New
Jersey shore community where the family lived.
Mr Rockwell says that even as a child he was struck by the stark contrast between the
private nature of suburban life and the public space of the community theatre.
“There was very little stuff happening publicly except this community theatre,” he says. “I
think I was kind of hypnotised by everyone coming together and creating this thing.”
Then, when he was an adolescent, the family moved to Guadalajara, Mexico. “It was
almost like taking that suburb and turning it inside out. The public realm was incredible:
market places, bull rings, music squares with mariachis …”
Growing up in Mexico introduced him to an important distinction in design that he uses in
his practice: constructing buildings versus creating spaces.
“What I remember about it isn’t so much the buildings. You know, as architects we tend
to be focused on the fixed building, but what I remember about the experience in Mexico
was the rituals and the experiences that linked the buildings.
“I remember the sense of dance and the sense of performance. Clearly my interest in
colour and light came from those early days in Mexico because the light is so intense.”
Mr Rockwell returned to the US to study architecture at Syracuse University in New York
but it was a Broadway production of Dracula that gave him the idea of combining
architecture and theatre.
“It blew me away and the next day – I was young and didn’t know better – I called up the
lighting director and said I’d like to come and work for you for two weeks for free, and if it
works out I want to stay. And I did.”
His big break came in 1983 when he designed a small Japanese restaurant in New York
called Sushi Zen. He had little space and a tight budget, but he focused on one concept:
a bar in the shape of a lightning bolt.
“This project was an early example of my longtime focus on creating places where
people can best connect and gather,” he says. “And that was the reason for creating the
jagged bar, as opposed to one long bar where you can only socialise with and see the
people sitting directly next to you.”
With that success, he established his own firm, The Rockwell Group, in 1984.
A decade later, Mr Rockwell would cement his relationship with Nobu and go on to
design projects as diverse as Cirque du Soleil and the viewing platforms at the
September 11 Ground Zero site in lower Manhattan.
He emphasises that all his projects are about bringing people together socially.
“I realised that there was something about creating places that allow a celebration and
celebrate a moment that interests me, and I was lucky enough to build a successful
practice around that,” Mr Rockwell says. “We’re fortunate as a firm that we’re not
focused just on one industry and there’s clearly globally less money to build projects,” he
says, pointing out that some of the greatest projects, such as the Rockefeller Center in
New York, were created at the height of economic turmoil.
“Dubai wanted to be the biggest and the brightest. That can’t go on forever.” But like
New York in earlier times of financial fallout, he believes Dubai will find a way to proceed
with its often grand ideas. “I think there’s an interesting opportunity in Dubai.”
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