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I have been photographing Fire Drill Houses for a few years. I remember
the
first time I ever encountered one of these structures. It was in my
early
twenties when I first moved to the UK since we did not have them in my
native country (back then, we do now). I felt an instant sense of
wonder and
fascination by its form and apparent lack of utility. I asked some of
my
British friends about them but I did not get the answers I was
expecting.
Most of the people I asked have never seen them. No matter how much I
explained what they looked like, they could not recall having ever seen
one.
I could not believe they could be invisible; after all, they are very
big,
tall and prominent structures. How could they be unseen? The second
group
was formed by people who had seen them but did not know what they were.
A
very small minority knew they were Fire Drill Towers, or places where
fire-fighters do rescue practice. The first point I would like to make
is
the different levels of visibility and comprehension these
constructions had
for different people. The second point, and the most important is what
these
places mean or why do I photograph them? First of all, what I find
incredibly interesting about these places is related not to what is
seen but
to what is hidden or invisible. Firstly, they are generally known as
Fire
Drill Towers but I decided to call the project Fire Drill Houses
because
this is precisely what I find interesting, that they are simplified
representations of houses. A staircase, a set of balconies in each
level,
and not much more. Very useful for fire-fighters to practice how to
access a
high-rise flat during a fire but useless for human habitation since
they are
built lacking any rooms, water supply, toilets, etc. All the things
that
make a house a habitable place to dwell. I am not suggesting these
places
are invisible because they cannot be inhabited, quoting Lefebvre: "the
city
is made of uninhabited and even uninhabitable spaces: public buildings,
monuments, squares, streets, large or small voids. It is so true that
'habitat' does not make up the city and cannot be defined by this
isolated
function?"
Lefebvre (112). What I am suggesting is that these houses
have
been stripped of any features that are not related to the functions
they
were built for (fire practice). Those who can gather meaning and relate
to
this building (fig.1) are few, a fire-fighter, an architect. These
places
come short or maybe surpass the expectations of what a house should
look
like for most people and so, we ignore them or simply do not see them. |
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