Curriculum
Vitae
Name Mick
Pearce
Date of birth: 02.06
38
Place
of birth: Harare Zimbabwe
Professional
education: Diploma of Architecture (Hons), Architectural Association, London 1962
RIBA,
MIAZ.
Professional
Experience: Michael Pearce has been
working in Zimbabwe and Zambia for 33 years. His experience covers a wide range
from building in remote parts of Central Africa to converting old buildings in
north east England and large-scale city developments in Harare, Zimbabwe.
Committed to appropriate and responsive architecture, Michael Pearce has
specialised in the development of buildings which have low maintenance, low
capital and running costs and renewable energy systems of environmental control.
The most recent work involves developing passive control systems in small-scale
single storey buildings as well as large-scale commercial multi-storey buildings
using building methods which rely even less on imported materials, technologies
or human resources. He has been closely involved in the development of rammed
earth construction for low cost housing in remote locations in Zimbabwe where
transport and energy are the largest costs in producing buildings. He was also
directly responsible for the design and surervision of Eastgate in
Harare. The following passage was taken from The 2003 Prince Claus Award presented to Mick Pearce on the 10 Dec 2003 “Mick Pearce is among the most ingenious critical tropicalist architects practising today. He has had to be. Like Tai Kheng Soon of Malaysia, he is one of the rare architects who are pursuing a solution to these problems in the tropics. Like them, he has designed a large-scale urban project that successfully adapts sophisticated technologies to minimise economic and ecological cost, adapting the global to the identity of the particular region. In Zimbabwe, in the early 1980s, Mick Pearce produced a series of buildings: five major commercial office blocks, university buildings, a major hospital, a Hindu temple and an international school. His most seminal project is Eastgate, a mixed
office complex and shopping mall covering half a city block in the business
centre of Harare. What makes it unique
is that it is not only ventilated, cooled and heated entirely through natural
means, but it works. Its ventilation
costs one-tenth that of a comparable
air-conditioned building and it uses 35 percent less energy than six
conventional buildings in Harare combined.
In the first five years alone, the building saved its owner $3.5 million
in energy costs. One needs a considerable leap of design imagination to model a building on a termite mound, or more precisely, on the termite mounds that dot the Zimbabwean savannah. In a rare case of architectural bionics – bionics being the field in which principles from living organisms are transferred into engineering – this is what Mick Pearce has done at Eastgate. Small wonder he became so fascinated with termites – they , too, happen to be ingenious because they have to be. They can only survive if their environment has a constant temperature of exactly 30 to 31 degrees. As temperatures in Zimbabwe fluctuate from 35 degrees at night to 104 degrees during the day, termites dig a kind of breeze-catcher at the base of their mound which cools the air by means of chambers carved out of the wet mud below, and sends hot air out through a flue to the top. They constantly vary this construction by alternatively opening up new tunnels and blocking others to regulate the heat and humidity within the mound. Based on the termite mound analogy, Mick Pearce’s Eastgate building uses the mass of the building as insulation and the diurnal temperature swings outside to keep its interior uniformly cool. With Ove Arup & Partners, he devised an air-change schedule that is significantly more efficient than other climate-controlled buildings in the area. Fans suck fresh air from the atrium, blow it upstairs through hollow spaces under the floors and from there into each office through baseboard vents. As it rises and warms, it is drawn out through 48 round brick funnels. During cool summer nights, big fans send air through the building seven times an hour to chill the hollow floors. By day, smaller fans blow two changes of air an hour through the building. As a result, the air is fresh, much more so tha from an air conditioner which recycles 30 percent of the air that passes through it. The building is an astonishing example of what one might call Zimbabweanist architecture, not only in its locally inspired bionic approach to design but also in the way it is rooted in local culture. With its heavy masonry walls on the exterior of the building, it is an expression of the traditional native stone masonry architecture from which Zimbabwe derives its name. On the inside, it is the expression of industrial machine architecture brought in by European immigrants. As one would expect from a graduate of the AA and a student of the technology-enthusiasts Reyner Banham and Cedric Price, the interior atrium has a high-tech gleam, with its delicately detailed steel-lattice girders, walkways suspended on tendons, bridges, and filigreed tiaras atop the main entrances to the complex. This project is the very symbol of diversity at work in creating a better world. With this building, Mick Pearce has tossed the norms of architectural correctness out of the window and looked to nature and local cultures for a solution to sustainability. This goes to show that local culture and the realities of the natural geo-climatic region have much to teach those who are willing to reject standardised ready-made solutions. His building stands as a defence of diversity in the face of the homogenising forces of globalised practice, but also as a defence against a backward-looking refusal to engage with the modern world. Mick Pearce has probably moved further away, than any other architect in the world today, from the lip service the profession usually gives to enhancing sustainability and diversity. His great achievement has been to come up with a truly innovative and successful alternative to the all-glass high-rise that tropical countries tend to import from the North. Perhaps it is no coincidence that such an architect has wide experience of working in the tropics, where ecological, economic and political crises are so pressing and so serious that they demand nothing less than ingenious solutions, not only for the benefit of the local population but for pASSAGEpost/neo-colonising world of the North does not tend to look to the post-colonial world for groundbreaking ideas, but Mick Pearce has come up with some brilliant ones...“ By Liane Lefaivre and Alexander Tzonis
M L PEARCE WAS THE LEAD DESIGNER AS WELL AS
THE PARTNER IN CHARGE OF THE FOLLOWING PROJECTS:
Information
about my approach to my work
Conference
papers
·
The
Intelligent Building Design Symposium in Stuttgart 1997. I delivered a paper
entitled “Eastgate, Harare: a Living System in the City
Recent
publications about my work
BOOKS
in which Eastgate is described
· PRIZES &
AWARDS
International
Competitions
Winner,
1985, of the competition for the New Parliament Building, Harare, Zimbabwe
Finalist, 1997, one of the five for the International Competition for the New
Constitutional Court of South Africa Winner, (with Jackson Moore Architects), 1990, of the competition for the Agricultural Finance Corporation Headquarters, Harare |