H A

David Yencken

Merchant Builders

Date: 15/02/2010

Location: Albert Park

Who: DS, BA

David Yencken Portrait

David Yencken

…Pieces there as I said to you. I am sure I photocopied much more than you would want. Should I take you through them.

Des Smith Portrait

Des Smith

Sure thing. Sounds great. Sounds good.

David

Ok. Right the first two are pieces when I was at the time that the Black Dolphin was running, so I had a lot of contact with Robin [Boyd] so that one and the next one were the first pieces on architecture that I ever wrote and they appeared as you can see in 1960, ‘70 rather.

Des

70. Yeah.

David

In Architect.

Des

Does that one say “failure”?

David

Yeah, failure. Ok. Right. The next one is something I have been writing more recently on.

Des

So this is chapter two of the book you were putting together?

David

Well yeah, it might be a book.

Des

Ok, and that is just about the motels?

David

Only about the motels.

Des

Yeah.

David

That is a piece that I don't know who wrote it. Do you know Neil O'Reilly. Do you know Tim?

Bruce Allen Portrait

Bruce

Neil O'Reilly? No, I don't.

Des

So the Black Dolphin. This is at the time of the Black Dolphin, or subsequently?

David

Subsequently, yeah.

Des

Ok.

David

And that - what's that?

Des

Canberra Times. But not published.

David

That was something I wrote when ANSETT had bought the Black Dolphin, and I found out they weren't going to use Robin [Boyd].

Des

Ok.

David

So I wrote that piece talking about Robin with the hope that it would be published as an opinion piece, but they chose not to.

Des

Right Ok. So, in ‘65 it went to ANSETT. So you guys held it for only about five years or so?

David

Something like that.

Des

Ok.

David

The reason that we only held it for five years is that there was a flaw in the title and in order to make it viable you really needed to make it bigger. And it was impossible to borrow money against it. The flaw in the title was known all the time. We had a solicitor on the board who told us that it wasn't important. Well it wasn't important in the sense of risking somebody else coming along and claiming the place, but it was extremely important when it came to getting people to lend us money.

Des

Was it an easement or something?

David

No. No, it was just something that hadn't, you know, been transferred properly and it had a very complicated, long history that was quite a shock.

Des

And this is the National Estate.

David

So that is another chapter?

Des

Ok.

David

The Heritage Commission.

Des

Sustainable Architecture.

David

That is just a piece of the paper I gave in Adelaide.

Des

How long ago?

David

About, I guess it would have been 19 probably 86.

Des

’86?

David

Yeah.

Des

And did you head Sustainable Architecture in ’86?

David

Yeah, but it was not properly sustainable. I wouldn't probably… thinking not quite so much in the way it would be looked at now.

Des

So, we can blame you for that title.

David

That was when somebody in Adelaide, John Bryan, was asked to invite a number of people to write for the English journal The Planner, and he asked me if I would do one of those pieces.

Des

‘75.

David

Yes.

Des

So in ‘75 Merchant Builders was still going?

David

Yes Merchant Builders still going.

Des

Great. Thank you.

David

Now there is a piece there I am sure I photocopied it. Monash [University] put on a series of public lectures and Robin [Boyd] spoke. The first one was given by the Vice Chancellor there. He was an engineer at the time and he was highly critical of architects in, I think, a not very thoughtful way. Robin gave one of the talks, [Harry] Siedler gave one of the talks, and for some strange reason they asked me to give one of them. So I did have that paper.

Des

Not so strange that you should be asked to give them.

David

Well you know, I wasn't an architect so…

Des

Yeah but you said one guy was an engineer, and your impact on architecture at that time - we're talking ‘70s? Yeah, that would have been about right.

Bruce

I could see the logic in that.

Des

I mean that is one of the reasons why we're interested to chat with you because it is incredibly significant for architecture. It just doesn't happen to have been as an architect from within architecture but it gives a completely different side to the whole discussion. It’s fantastic.

David

Just hang on a second if it is not there I am sure I have got a copy, but can I just take a quick look?

Des

Yeah sure.

David

I'll go and have a look downstairs.

Bruce

I am sure it’s there…

David

You are going to end up with a huge library of stuff, even though you have got so much of it on disk.

Des

Yeah, I have been thinking - I mean I have to turn it into a proper project.

Bruce

You are going to have to.

Des

Yeah, I am going to have to. So I'll do that, then I will have to try and work out how we do the archive. And also one thing to do now is to start looking through mags of the time to see what the conversations were, and also what the work was kinda looking like. ‘Cause we haven't even done that, have we? We haven't really talked about the work at all. The Black Dolphin has probably been the most direct conversational piece of any and still not a lot about it other than great quotes. I listened to the quote again this morning about the when the student said about the columns looking, overdesigned and that guy coming up and hugging the columns and said “God, don't do it again”.

00:08:10

Bruce

With the tree back…

Des

Yeah, that is probably the next thing we will do. Turn it into a real project, then get some funding for it so we can do it properly. I want to speak to Hugh O'Neill shortly as well.

Bruce

Because I noticed the editor of the Green Magazine is Tamsin O’Neill. That is in North Melbourne, and I wonder whether that is his daughter.

Des

Yeah probably is. As in the Green Guide?

Bruce

No its a magazine on sustainability. Pretty good magazine actually. Bec [Rebecca Naughton] subscribes to it. When we go back to the office I'll show it to you, and I am sure it is Tamsin O'Neill. It has to be.

Des

Probably is. Yeah sure, cause I think he still has that big house in North Melbourne. Do you know the house in North Melbourne?

Bruce

Is it on Flemington Rd?

Des

You can see it from Flemington Rd. It is actually one block back it is a big double storey rambling place with a big veranda all the way around it and stuff. Yeah so I was thinking of talking to uni lecturers. Someone else mentioned the other day that someone you really need to speak to about RMIT and I think they said it was Jason Pickford cause someone else has said Ross Ramus. it was obviously Gunny [Graeme Gunn], but someone said, I am sure they said, Jason Pickford.

Bruce

This is RMIT in the 60's.

Des

Well the 70's. When the big changes were occurring which is quite early on I think. Apparently Jason is still around, though I haven't seen him for a long long long time.

David

[David returns with the papers]
The date is on the back.

Des

‘71.

Des

Foolscap or taller?

David

Foolscap.

Des

Feels more vertical than my memory says it is. Definitely the tallness. Do you want me to copy that?

David

Would you like to?

Des

I can certainly do that. That would be great.

David

That would be good.

Bruce

If you are coming back to my office we can do it there, and I can drop it off tonight on my way home. I don't live far away.

David

We didn't get terribly far.

Des

Bruce and I were just talking about that. That is part of the fantastic thing. There was a couple of things I have thought about asking you because I really do love the rambling nature of it. I wondered, I was going to ask you about the questions as well. Whether you want that standard list of questions. But there are a couple of things I wrote down and I will read them out. I mean for me the conversation is just fantastic because of the opportunity for diversions. Like I couldn't help but remember. I have heard half of the previous one again where you said you walked past Alex Stitt’s place, and you just happened to be talking about doing some advertising, and there he is, ‘Norm… [Life.] Be In It’, and all that sort of stuff. So those asides are great. And then I just mentioned to Bruce again the "Dear God, don't do it again" comment about the size of the columns at the Black Dolphin, and if you set out to just ask a series of questions you are probably not going to get that kind of insight. And it also drags in other people. Like I think you said it was David Saunders who brought the students up or something. So there is that kind of stuff that I am really engaged by. A couple of things that I thought about anyway was - your family is Australian isn't it?

David

It is.

Des

You mentioned you mother and grandmother early on in the last conversation. So are you Victorian?

David

Yes we lived in Melbourne but my father, I don't know if I mentioned this, by some very strange series of accidents found himself in England, having just finished a degree at Cambridge, and then the First World War broke out and because he was there he enlisted in the British Army. And when the war was finished, and because he was lucky to survive. And just simply by attrition, because he enlisted as a trooper but ended up a Major in the army, he then, because he had done well at Cambridge, someone said to him why don't you apply for the British Foreign Office. Which he did. So he became an English diplomat.

Des

Even though he was Australian.

David

Even though he was Australian. In fact, there was no Australian foreign service at the time. On that account we lived all over the place. I was born in Berlin, my sister was born in Berlin, my brother was born in London, and by some amazing series of accidents we all live here again. Even though I certainly can speak for myself, the last thing I wanted to do after I left Cambridge was to come back to Australia.

00:13:48

Australian Landscape

Des

Because you said you came back to Australia with a friend from Canada.

David

No he came later. He came on a trip around the world and he looked me up and then we made this very important trip together around Australia.

Des

And did you go all the way around?

David

Well we didn't go all the way around, but we went right up the East coast and then we cut across from Cloncurry and Mt Isa, where I spent the only night I ever spent in gaol.

Des

Well if you are going to spend a night in gaol you might as well do it in Mt Isa, I suppose.

Bruce

You won't get cold!

David

I was somewhat annoyed by that. We were staying in a pub and we did something unbelievably foolish. And that was when the pub closed, which wasn't that early, when the bars closed we went and knocked on the door on the basis that as we were staying there we were entitled to drink, to go on drinking even if other people weren't. But unfortunately, there were two policemen at the bar, and I don't think that they appreciated the fact that they had been found there, and they got immensely aggressive. And my friend stood about 6 foot 6 and weighed about 18 stone so they reached across him and grabbed me. Off to gaol.

Des

So were you drinking in the bar?

David

We had been drinking and then we were refused service after a certain point but we felt that as were staying in the hotel we were entitled to go on drinking.

Des

Right, ok. So then did you continue west?

David

Then we went up to Darwin, and we had a look around. Not a very extensive one, then we drove down to Alice Springs, and then we put the car on the Ghan and travelled back down south.

Des

To Port Augusta. So, you didn't get to the west?

David

No. I didn't go that far across.

Des

What were you driving?

David

Good question.

Des

Was it a car - it wasn't a truck?

David

It was a car. I think it was a Holden, I am pretty sure it was a Holden. A very dangerous Holden.

Bruce

Early model?

Des

They all were.

David

Really dangerous. In fact I nearly killed myself with one. Came so unbelievably close. I was going down the way to Ballarat. I was going down a part of the Western Highway there where there was a steep slope down, absolutely straight road, and the car started to swing. I think I was probably travelling too fast but not hugely too fast, and then it really got into this big swing and I found I simply couldn't control it. And I went over a part of the road onto the side into an area below. It did a complete somersault. Stopped about a couple of metres before some kind of small ravine, and all I can remember when it was happening. I was told that Holden’s doors flew open. It was long before the days of seatbelts, so I clung to that wheel in ways that you can rarely imagine, and I didn't realise how hard I clung on until the next day when I simply couldn’t move. I emerged unscathed. A truck stopped, and he come across and the driver shook his head said, “You must be the luckiest man alive. Go and buy yourself a Tatts ticket”.

Des

So you didn't drive the car away?

David

No. It was a bit of effort to actually get it out of where it was.

Des

Pre-seatbelts that’s amazing. Good trip then. The reason for that was whether… because your family was multi-generations of Australians, I am assuming…

David

Yes.

Des

That even though the last thing you wanted to do was come back to Australia, we can't help but look at it - well I certainly can't - and think there is some kind of contribution to Australian culture that is driving this effort of yours. Or is it really just the opportunities, and you take them? ‘Cause it does, looking from the outside, it seems the 60s and 70s, particularly the 60s, is just an incredible period of “well, let’s give that a go”.

David

I think that is right. I should perhaps say that my father had a posting in Spain during the War [WW2], right at the end of the Spanish Civil war, and when the war broke out, we had been in England for a short break. And my father then drove us back through France after the declaration of war, and we managed to get to Spain, which was lucky. My parents then decided, as did many other diplomat parents - allied diplomat parents did, in fact all I think - to evacuate their children. And because we were Australian, we were sent back to Australia for two and a half years. When I was from the ages of 9 to 11 and half. That was absolutely crucial, because when I had a car - this same terrible Holden left to me. The second-hand Holden at Sydney - I don't know quite how it happened but there was this car up there - and so I drove it down from Sydney. And as I went through this landscape I knew there was something incredibly significant about it. Something I really loved about it, and I wasn't ready to admit it for quite some years. Quite some time really. It was absolutely without question very strong in my blood.

00:20:20

Des

So did you drive down the Hume or the Princes?

David

Down the Hume?

Des

So I imagine you were going through the territory around Gundagai or even before that?

David

Yeah, just going through the whole wide landscape.

Des

So it was at that point that you went “there is something tugging me here that I…”?

David

It wasn't a single moment, but it was just the whole experience of that drive over a couple of days, and progressively going into the landscape. I did know that it was familiar and well loved. So that was very powerful. And then, yes, it had to do with opportunity. You see things that are very interesting. I was really interested in paintings. That was important. But the painting in turn drew me really powerfully into Australian culture because it was illustrating… relating to and reflecting Australian culture in ways that were unique to Australia. So that was very important, and the people were extremely important. And then when it came to actually doing something like building and the choosing of architects and so on - although not immediately - choosing an architect because that architect seemed to reflect things that were obviously very key to Australian culture. Because I don’t think I would have been sufficiently well informed by that time to be able do that, or doing the… I am talking about now the choice of John Mockridge. But progressively you start to think more as you become exposed to architects and know how architects work, and as I got to know John extremely well, and after that Robin [Boyd], to get to know what he was doing.

Des

And were they talking about doing Australian work, or were they, like… was it a conscious effort on their part to try and understand this place and embody it and present it architecturally. Because when you spoke about the Black Dolphin you mentioned last week, or the other week, I think I might have asked something about that, and you said, “Well look, the site was so beautiful anyway. The strong mahogany trees… it had all these great things going for it and the issue of trying to express something about the place in the work didn't really come up. It just seemed to be the thing you would do because the site just seemed to offer so much”. I am wondering whether it was a kind of, can I call it, subconscious direction that everybody was sharing, or whether some of them because Boyd must have been, I imagine, consciously trying to understand what the place was…

David

Yeah. Boyd obviously was reacting to the site thinking about how he could give expression to a building that reflected those qualities of the site, and which could be seen to be the best possible way for an Australian building in an Australian setting. And as I think I may have mentioned, you will see it in the piece there, that that motel was used very frequently in trade promotion. Overseas trade promotion. It really did have that kind of… people were… all over it when it was finished. And I think I mentioned it…

Des

You did say that. But you said that many people changed their view.

David

Yeah.

Des

Especially if they had stayed there for a short period of time.

David

I am talking about the people who stayed. My fellow directors I think for the most part, were pretty shocked. What ended up was that the people of Merimbula were greatly shocked by it to begin with. But, I think, it wove its magic in time, and I have also mentioned in that piece and, I think I may have mentioned last time, that when Graeme [Gunn], after the building was sold, Graeme came to design the house that I have now a little bit further north. Which is an absolutely fantastic house, and which used some of the same elements - some of the poles in this instance. I was working to a very simple idea but given very extravagant expression. That house has been admired by everybody. The people who have worked on it thought it was fantastic. That wasn't true about the Black Dolphin. And everyone who is roundabout has come to that, so I think that it was something very important that had happened in the meantime.

Des

Bruce and I were talking this morning very briefly… I mentioned that I was going to ask you about this Australian thing, and then this process of the sort of opportunity of doing things. And I was just reflecting because you had done the motel, and that seemed to have worked and opened up a whole lot of avenues - of both ways of doing things, and being, as well as expressing. Particularly when you did the Black Dolphin, and then Merchant Builders fires up, and then the project home market in Australia, - certainly coupled with Pettit and Sevitt in Sydney, and then yourselves in Melbourne - there is, you know, design becomes a possibility for the project market. And then they become known as quite Australian in their characteristics. Certainly this is of course the Sydney School - basically from the Pettit and Sevitt houses which the architects then did other things from.

David

Syd Ancher before that probably.

Des

Yeah. He was kinda a little it unsung in a way, wasn't he? He didn't quite get the stand-alone credit that I think historically… we’ll look back and go, Ancher is really an important figure. So with that I was thinking, I mentioned it to Bruce, you guys must have been looking around the rest of Australian culture going “That one is ripe for the picking. We should have a go at that one. Then maybe this aspect of culture". It must have felt like that to you, I am imagining.

00:29:55

David

I am not quite sure that it was quite like that. I think that, first of all for me, making the first motel work by getting it built, for the amount of money that became available, and the way that I was involved as somebody who knew absolutely nothing about building, or architecture or anything, and then finding that I could make it work. And learning an awful lot in the process. Not just an awful lot, an unbelievable amount. It gave me incredible confidence, and I don't mean ridiculous confidence - but confidence that it was possible to make things work. And when you read some of this stuff you see the argument reflected again and again and again, through what I have written about. The inaccuracy of the statements of the current Australians don't want, or won't accept, or won't like, and I keep saying in what I have written that it is simply not true. They don't necessarily speak out about something that they haven't yet experienced, and that is very understandable, but when it is put in front of them and if it is interesting or some superior model, then a decent percentage will react in a very favourable way.

Des

And do you think that is historically imbedded in an Australian character?

David

Well, to begin with when I start to write about this, I was writing in response to Robin Boyd's .. Australian Ugliness. There he was saying there was a fifteen-year time lag for anything in Australia, following on from the American model. And so I was, perhaps not so much, trying to say he was wrong about the fifteen-year time lag, but more to say that’s not the full story, and in some instances of course it is not the case like that. I certainly know that when I was involved with the National Estate Program that led to the Australian Heritage Commission, I was on first of all a committee of enquiry. And I happened to be going to Europe at the time, I was on the committee of enquiry, and because I was doing that I decided to go to North America to see if there was anything interesting happening there because North America has a system of government that is more akin to ours than that of the United Kingdom. I went to Heritage Canada and they sent me down to visit a body in Washington, and that body was a very impressive one. And I met the guy who ran it, and I thought there was something very interesting there. So I carried that idea back to Australia, and we, in the drafting of the Heritage Commissions Act, which then I had a lot to do with because by this time I was the Chair of the Interim Committee, we borrowed from that and we borrowed from some other provisions in the Act in the Environment Protection Act, United States. But we did something that none of these people had done in that we included in the program, and in the legislation, not just historic areas and historic structures as in the United States, but natural and prehistoric and everything as well. So, it was an absolutely comprehensive so…

Des

And had no one else done that before?

David

Well not in that way. And I recall with amusement, receiving a call from someone in the States, someone in quite a senior position, saying I am thinking of coming out to Australia next week can you see me urgently because we want to do what you have done in perhaps changing the legislation here and putting together all these things. So, I laughed, and I said, are you aware that we started off by borrowing from you. I used to have lots of disagreements with the then director of the Heritage Commission. They were sometimes very serious disagreements and he sometimes would say "ah well things aren't as good here as they are in other places", and I would say " I don't agree with you". And in fact in the Heritage Commission legislation there is something really significant, really unique. It eventually got replicated in the World Heritage Convention, which has got listings of natural areas, natural properties of prehistoric, and historic, properties and areas.

Des

The World Heritage Listing is a fabulous process.

David

Wonderful process, and I was lucky enough to be involved, just at the time when it was all happening. So I attended a couple of the meetings and found it very interesting.

Bruce

Are you happy about the present situation as far as heritage…

David

No, I am not really. Because as you'll see if you bother to read what I have written there, in the Howard years the Australian Heritage Commission Act was abolished. And although it had remained relatively intact across many different coloured governments, for twenty something years, and it was replaced by the Heritage Council Act - admittedly there were some benefits - but the council was stripped of a number of very important powers. The Australian Heritage Commission was a body having a great deal of independence. We were not able to be directed by the minister, except in very strange circumstances. And I know that Tom Uren often said that was one of the things he was most proud of - that he did agree when I argued with him that this is the way he should go - that you should leave the listing of a property to an expert body because listing should be based on expert criteria. But then what happens to it, it is a political matter and so it is reasonable that politicians have under certain circumstances the final say. So that did in fact happen. That is taking you away from where we were, but it is an illustration of an argument that you will see reflected all the way through these different pieces of writing that I’m giving you.

Des

When you were making that drive from Sydney - cause I am really interested in the character of this place and the way it gets embodied and presented - when you are doing this, particularly when it is spotted by people whose productive mode isn't to try and express it, because you are not an architect and it sounds like you never desired to be an architect, never felt like you could move into that field. You ran a gallery, so you obviously appreciated painters and painting and other art forms but didn't really do them, so this process of having some attachment to the place. When you were doing the trip from Sydney you hadn't lived in Australia for much of your life then had you?

David

No.

Des

So how does that happen? Isn't that fascinating?

David

Oh it is absolutely fascinating. As far as my change of attitude to living here is concerned, it began with the opening of the gallery [Brummles]. Up to that time I had stayed for a large part of the time I had been there, at my brother and sister-in-laws house and they were wonderful to me. I was meeting their friends, and their friends were delightful in many ways, but there weren't necessarily the people I wanted to meet and congregate with debate with, and do things with. Opening the gallery opened up a completely new world to me. It opened up a world of people who were doing creative things.

Merchant Builders

Des

So you must have had some hankering for that whole world but recognised in yourself that you weren't going to be an active productive player in it. That your attachment to it has been quite different and that has been proven because, for me the fascination of the Merchant Builders thing is particularly being able to foster that incredibly rich process of making those… putting that into project housing, and doing it so richly and it went on for quite some time. And was so emblematic of the endeavours about trying to make Australian architecture. It wasn't even down to things like making it somehow look Australian, whatever that is, ‘cause there is an American kind of basis to the work in a way, architecturally, but the expression of it and the character of it was quite uniquely Australian. I am, even in my own work, I’m certainly fascinated by that. Trying to work out even to draw an Australian line. You have some amazing works around here and I am sure Bruce and I are sitting there looking at them - just the one behind you, someone being able to draw that line. And the Whitely here. His ability to draw Sydney Harbour without it being photographic. But for all of us that have been to Sydney Harbour know, you know, what that painting is about. That embeddedness is really fascinating. So to hear you say that when driving a Holden down the Hume Highway suddenly it kind of comes to you that there is a contribution to be made here. There is something particular about this place. How do we do this? Also, that it is kinda ripe for the doing. It’s a kind of an aside, and I don't know why I am rambling on, but I had this wonderful conversation about a year ago. I was lucky enough to go to Sicily a couple of years ago and I met some Italian architects over there, and about a year later there was a group of Italian architects came to Australia. They went to Sydney and Melbourne and there was a couple of the Sicilians that just happened to be in this group. So, I met them, I think we met at the casino, I think at the bar, and I was just chatting in my broken Italian and their broken English and I was just, as you do, asking what they thought about Australia for instance. It’s a standard question, particularly architecturally, and the comments that these two guys made were just fantastic ‘cause you may have had similar conversations, that's why I am saying them. The first one was they said, I said, “what did you think of Sydney and Melbourne?” and they said, “Sydney was kind of beautiful but that was it. But Melbourne is the sort of place where you could build a culture”. They had only been here for two days, but the difference is so amazing. Then they said the other really striking difference, particularly to Italy, ‘cause they are so worried about Italy because they can't do anything. You know they get a shoe shop to do every ten years and they think it’s heaven. So, they come out to Australia and the first thing they said was they struggle with just how much work there is. Fascinated, as architects, just seeing how much work gets done. And then the other one said the most amazing thing. He said “I can't believe how much Australia has done in 150-200 years. It is incomprehensible that all of this is cut out of scrub in less than 200 years.” Of course, he was saying for them a 200-year-old building is a relatively new building. And we think we work quite hard, and they were both saying that not only is it incredibly available and you guys do so much stuff with such energy, that they couldn't get over just how much had been done. They were dumbstruck by it. That all that could have been done on the other side of the world by largely not many people, even now, not many people. That really struck me. I think there is something about that opportunity. That is why I agree with you when people say Australians don't want dah de dah, but in fact Australia is driven by ‘just give it a go’, or and as you say, that once people see the benefit of it, or are open to it, then they'll go with it. There is always so much to do. Am I making sense?

00:45:22

David

Yes, I think that is absolutely correct. I should know though. This is probably directed at me, David Yencken. I was 23, or something like this, and very correctly aimed at me. People kept saying to me when I was telling them about the motel “oh Australians don't want this” and “they are born thieves”, and some of the most amazing things, which were directed at me. As I say they were probably trying to say that you will never make it. But nevertheless, I think there was some element of conviction in what they were saying. But for me, coming from England I think one of the things that I felt very strongly was that there was scope ‘to do’. Just the point that you are making - scope to do all kinds of things that would be immensely difficult in England.

Des

I think that is what these Italian guys spotted just straight up. Just imagine being confronted with such opportunity. It goes at such a pace. And in the 60's it must have been going at an even, in some ways, an even more amazing pace because it wasn't that long after the slowness of the war and all the restrictions, and then it burst open. And not only was there a lot done, but the images thing was transformed like modernism, particularly in Melbourne and Sydney. That new kind of work, and then the art and everything just took off. And then of course Merchant Builders and Pettit and Sevitt came out the other end of that. It’s kind of fantastic.

Bruce

I think the interesting contribution that Merchant Builders made was, pre-Merchant Builders there was AV Jennings, and that we were able to come up with a much better design solution and convince the public, and educate the public that that was the way to go. And then to make it achievable financially. So, an architect who was committed to good design, like Robin Boyd, didn't have all the skills necessarily. And correct me if I am wrong, but you had all these other skills, as well as recognising design and then using that skill to choose an appropriate architect. It was these other skills of convincing the public, or educating the public in design, and also the business acumen to make it reachable to relatively low-income earners. That was what created success.

David

I think that is absolutely correct. I think that to do the sort of things we were doing, it needed first of all absolute conviction about what you are trying to do from on top. It needed the best possible team you could find. Best group of designers you could find, and then it needed very good training, of your own staff, so that they also became totally convinced of what was attempted. That included, very specially, the people who were selling the products. I may have mentioned to you - I am not sure what I have mentioned and what I haven't - that when it came to the cluster schemes and the project housing schemes such as Elliston and Winter Park and High Street, we, in each instance, gave ordinary estate agents or local estate agents, the opportunity to sell our products. We paid them or offered them full scale commission. In the three projects they would have possibly sold 2 or 3 houses only. They simply didn't know how to sell them. They were so different, and the whole concept of the development was so different. Whereas it wasn't easy to sell them, not because young people, because they were mostly young, were not attracted to them but often they brought along all kinds of advisers who said, “We know. I don't think that is… you know it will probably be risky. You may lose capital gains”. And the new buyers might be parents or something like that, you know. So, it wasn't easy to sell them. But at least our people did sell them, and there was a sense I think right through the organisation that this was something really great to be doing and everyone was happy with it. And there was a marvellous sense of camaraderie between the designers which still exists, and we still very regularly meet. Obviously, Ellis Stone has long been dead, but Graeme [Gunn], Steve Calhoun, and Rodney Wulff, and to a slightly lesser degree Jan Faulkner, and I we regularly interact with each other and it’s…

00:51:43

Des

I think it’s great, when I hear about that camaraderie thing, it is still, I think I mentioned it previously, it still strikes me. There is a shift that has occurred. I didn't really do it in the 60's, I sort of entered architecture in the mid to late 70's, and the camaraderie and the magnanimous nature of the connections between people was incredibly important to us. I think it has faded a bit. I'm not sure, not completely sure of the reasons for that, but it has faded off a bit. So it is interesting that you say that you still catch up with those characters and the fact that it was an endeavour. That it was about, you know, this was a good thing to do. It wasn't just a business venture. This was a great thing to be part of. Do you know if the guys in Sydney had similar kind of ideals as well?

David

They were a strange couple Pettit and Sevitt. I don't know the full story, but I know they were associated with a firm called Sunshine Homes before Pettit and Sevitt opened. I am not quite certain how Ken Woolley got involved with them, whether it was a prize or something, but whatever it was he did a marvellous job for them.

Des

Yeah, he did a great job.

David

We later had a group of, we were a member of, a group of four project builders, one from Queensland Pettit and Sevitt from NSW and one from Western Australia. Without question Pettit & Sevitt were the most difficult to work with, because we were never really sure whether they were telling the truth or not. And the whole basis of this exercise was that we would expose everything. All our finances, everything. You do have to take a deep breath before you do that, I know that I did, and I know that my partner did but anyway we decided to do it. It was in our best interests to do it, and once you've done that of course it makes your discussions very much more interesting and open and so on. But we were never sure what we got from Pettit & Sevitt was true. And then they seemed also at times, to have difficulty getting along together.

Des

So there was a Mr Pettit and a Mr Sevitt?

David

Oh yeah.

Des

Ok. Who was the Brisbane group, and who was the WA group?

David

Courses in Western Australia. Much more traditional. Not really especially interested in design. I am just trying to think what the hell the name of… there were three people in… I think two might have been engineers… very well run, and so was Courses.

Des

But they were all project home ensembles.

David

Yes.

Des

And were you looking at joining up?

David

No. No. We were just comparing information for our mutual benefit.

Des

With any thought of assisting or working with one another, or trying an Australia-wide idea about housing, or was it not that?

David

I don’t think we ever wanted to do that. Certainly, I never did.

Des

So you had not thought of doing any work in Sydney? Did the Sydney people ring you up and say…?

David

Oh yes, we did. We opened an office in Sydney. But only selling kit houses.

Des

How many houses did Merchant Builders do? Do you know?

David

How long were we in existence? Well we… ‘65. 21 years. So I would have thought that, at a guess, 100 houses a year.

Des

Ok. So 2000.

David

2000? Over 2000…

Des

Did the Pettit and Sevitt guys do any subdivision stuff?

David

No.

Des

They just did houses?

David

Yep. And they seemed to get themselves into quite a bit of trouble. At some stage they must have been so, so unbelievably successful, but for some reason they didn't quite know how to manage that.

Des

Were they Australians?

David

Oh. Yeah.

Des

Ok. So do you think they had a similar kind of endeavour to make a contribution?

David

No.

Des

They just lucked onto Ken Woolley, and etc, and these houses seemed to work.

David

I think they understood the benefits that came from working with Ken Woolley, and I think that the company that I referred to, Sunshine Homes, had probably gone a little bit down that path. I know they tried to get other architects to do design things for them, and I don't think that was particularly successful. I think they asked… I am just trying to think who they did ask.

Des

There was, I was going to say Bruce Eels, but it wasn't him, but it was someone from that era who I think did some of those houses. Pettit and Sevitt are interesting because the look of the houses is so completely different to the Merchant Builders ones and just trying to think about where that… you know the bagging of the brickwork and the sort of double pitch roof idea. That also seemed to work, and seemed to be such a great Sydney thing. But no-one has really spoken about that much. We know a bit more about the Merchant Builders one because we know the characters involved, and there has been much more discussion, but I haven't heard much about the Sydney stuff.

Bruce

Were Merchant Builders ever tempted to get into higher density residential?

David

We did do some. We did do the townhouses before we did the cluster houses. We did a whole series of townhouses which I think were very interesting. They were relatively small developments, but there must have been about 8 or so of those. At least 8. We did one high rise building overlooking the park just close to Kensington Street in South Yarra.

Des

Is it residential?

David

Yeah.

Des

How high is it? I don't know that one.

Bruce

It is opposite the South Yarra library? I think a little park there…

Des

Yeah. Ok…

David

At a guess 10, 12 stories something like that.

Des

Ok.

David

And then towards the end we did quite a lot of ski lodges. We did start a division that involved more of that work, and my partner was very keen to get more into more standard construction work. We would tender. I was not at all keen to do that, and I don't think we were properly equipped to do that. I don't think we had the people with the right skills, particularly the ability to cost correctly.

Des

Whereas with the Merchant Builders stuff you were fully in control of…

David

Fully in control.

Des

‘Cause there was Merchant Kitchens wasn't there? Was that you?

David

Well there was Nexus. We started off Graeme [Gunn], and Jan Faulkner, and I started Nexus. And the initial idea for Nexus was that we would try and develop modular kitchen cabinets. It didn't really work because none of us had the time to devote to it. It sort of struggled along for a while and didn't really end up in anything that was worthwhile. We eventually closed that down. Syd Spindler who became a senator, know him? Painting contractor. He took on the running of, part time, Nexus for a while and then Jan took it over and developed it as an interior design and… Attley as a graphic design enterprise with great success.

Des

With Merchant Builders, you were the builders, you were the designers, so the client could come in, and you could do the whole thing from scratch to finish, so did you make the kitchens? I am just wondering how much was Merchant supplied.

David

No.

Des

Ok so you were the builders so there would be contractors doing the kitchens and other people did the windows?

David

Yes, we very much subcontracted. We subcontracted all the trades work but with one very important qualification, and that was that the carpenters that we used, the subcontracting carpenters were, I suppose, in two different categories. Those that we knew to be of really high quality and which we knew, also, we could guarantee work to - come summer, or come winter. In the sense that there were going to be variations in the demand for houses and so we used to keep them by guaranteeing them work. And that worked really well.

Des

Even though they were subcontractors you would say to them you can keep working for us well keep supplying you for whatever.

David

That worked well for them and worked well for us. We had earlier agreed Johnnie [Ridge] and I. And certainly from my experience with motels, and I think he came to the same conclusion, that if we were going to do this we had to be builders. We could not simply come with the idea and allow the construction work to be carried out by somebody else. It would be too expensive, and they wouldn't necessarily understand what was wanted. All the experience that I had was that, there is a premium put on architectural designs, at the time, by normal builders. That was the case when we got the first costing of the first serious house that we wanted to build. Which was the ‘Terrace House’ - Graeme’s [Gunn] terrace house. We gave it to a quantity surveyor and the quantity surveyor duly produced the result. I think that the house cost 5,000 pounds, we built for a fraction over 4,000. My view of that is not that the quantity surveyor was wrong, but rather that he had included a premium that would be charged by an ordinary builder.

Des

That's good. You would have had, I assumed you had foremen, and people who worked for Merchant Builders who organised each of the jobs, but all the trades were subcontractors.

David

Yes.

Des

So how many people were on staff in Merchant Builders? ‘Cause you were doing 100 houses a year?

Bruce

That is quite a lot.

David

Not a huge number. We might have had in sort of head office functions, you know finance and accounting and so on, up to 10. There would be probably 4 or 5, say 5, sales staff and typically a sales manager, and architects.

Des

So Merchant Builders had in-house architects?

01:07:39

David

Yes, we did. We didn't start off like that. But then we had two. Barry Gray, who was an architect who continued to practice in Brighton, and Leo Deyung[?] who came across…

Bruce

Leo has his own practice too.

David

Yeah, that’s right. And they did really good work for us. What we decided to do, which was a bit different from other people. First of all, the architect, based on a site survey that was done by a surveyor, had an interview with the client. To begin with, that was Graeme [Gunn], and then subsequently there was someone working in Graeme's office, and then subsequently Barry or Leo. And at that meeting the client requirements, and the siting of the house was discussed and so forth. And then that would be developed further and sent to the client. When we agreed with the client we would follow the usual process. We also gave the client, later on, a meeting with a landscape architect, which would be quite unusual, to discuss ways in which they might landscape their site with the hope that some of them would actually employ the landscape architect, which was initially Ellis Stones, and then later someone from Tract after we had started Tract. And then Jan Faulkner also did some work of that kind, advising clients of what they might do. So, we tried to provide them with that kind of advice.

Des

Yeah, ok. It was comprehensive again, like you said.

David

So right from the beginning we were concerned not just to have a group of people working for us who represented the totality of the design professions needed to do a very fine job say on our display houses, we also tried to replicate that in the way in which we dealt with clients once they decided to buy one of our houses. Then later, when we got into group houses - the town houses, Elliston project and cluster houses - we did the same thing again by bringing back all these talented people to work together.

Des

So, there was a range of houses weren't there, that were the Merchant Builders houses? So, if a client came in and chose a particular house would they still meet with the architect? So, there were adjustments to the standard house to make it work on whatever the site?

David

First of all the siting of the house. Which they needed to have discussions with the architect about, and then it was a question of their special requests, needs or whatever.

Des

So people could personalise the scheme? And that was always part of the idea?

David

Always. That became probably more so as we went on. Probably, it was inevitable. But it tended to happen that people who were more affluent started to buy our houses, and they of course wanted more changes and we weren't able to stick so rigorously to a perhaps simple design idea that was expressed in the initial display houses.

Bruce

I think that running parallel with that design work some interesting technical things were happening at the same time. With, for example, Stegbar windows, which I think were designed originally by Robin Boyd.

David

Absolutely.

Bruce

And then, a major change in the making of cabinets from the old ladder frame and wriggle nails of the 50's, had merged with manufactured materials, particleboard and so on, and Merchant Builders embraced all that. Probably ahead of anyone else.

David

I think that probably Robin Boyd’s work for Stegbar preceded the motel. We used a new form of joinery development in the motels. We didn't actually use Stegbar, but we used other people who were developing window joinery using the same sections.

Des

So did Boyd develop that? I didn't know that.

David

Absolutely.

Des

And Stegbar is a Victorian company then.

David

Oh, yes.

Des

I always thought they were just some big company that made windows. I had no idea.

David

Robin designed…

Bruce

They were quite revolutionary sections too…

Des

Revolutionary in the world?

David

No, I don't think in the world.

01:14:23

Des

But they certainly changed windows here dramatically to the point where you can't get anything else. Certainly, for a while, you couldn't get anything else. Everybody used those window sections, that is why I assumed that Stegbar were some mega company and that people had ended up following because they had created the market. Which effectively they had, but I didn't realise that it had been bred here. That's interesting ok. ‘Cause Merchants always used Stegbar windows?

David

We didn’t use Stegbar but we used the same sections, I mean similar sections, and used another joinery for cabinet supply.

Bruce

I think Graeme [Gunn] had load bearing windows quite often in his design. I think that Graeme used window frames in a load bearing capacity as well, which was an interesting break through.

Des

Your partner in Merchant Builders, I can't remember his name, he had a timber company, didn't he?

David

He did, but he wasn't involved in joinery.

Des

And did they supply the timber to Merchant Builders?

David

Yes, he did.

Des

‘Cause Merchant Builders had lots of oregon in their work, didn't they?

David

Yes.

Des

Were there Australian timbers involved? Did the push to Australianness go that far?

David

We might have used hardwood framing to begin with but then as treated pine became more available and easier to work with…

Des

Much more trustworthy than… hardwood is gambling…

David

I think we would have moved to that fairly soon.

Des

‘Cause there was lots of timber linings in Merchant Builders houses weren't there?

David

Yes. The ceilings were timber lining, or pine lining board above the rafters.

Des

Would clients come to Merchants to get Merchants to do a one off for them? Or were they usually adaptations?

David

Mostly adaptations but there were instances where they might have done that.

Des

Did any of the public instrumentalities come to Merchants and say “are you interested in doing projects for us?” I am just thinking aloud. Did the education department ever come along and go, “We've got a school which we would like to have the character of your?”

David

We did a few schools. I am not so sure if they were public ones. And we did, I think one, at least, it was of houses that were for the public agency. But we weren't really approached much.

Des

Where were the schools?

David

Schools on the Mornington Peninsula somewhere.

Bruce

Is it Wooley?

David

I think Wooley is right.

Des

And Merchants did the whole scheme? There wasn't an architect did the design and Merchants made it happen?

David

I think we did the whole scheme.

Des

Interesting. I didn't know that. I just imagined that Merchants were so proficient and such a good quality product I couldn't see any reason why, I'll call them public instrumentality, even if it is a private school, its at the public level of building, that they wouldn't come to you if the character of it is correct. Then you would get people with confidence to do it. I am glad to hear that. I am not surprised, but I was unaware that you had actually done that.

David

Well it didn't happen perhaps as much as we probably would have liked. It would be nice to carry through some of the work we were doing into the public sphere.

Des

Certainly it was very fine work, spatially, and I am imagining efficiency wise, because Merchants, that whole character, that way of building was, standard architectural stuff but you can get much more from the square meter usage, than simply the square meters would tell you. So for people doing buildings like schools where the use of the space in incredibly plastic and it will get used for lots of different things, and you can get more from the same space, because the architecture allows it. Then Merchants seem to be the perfect mixture of people who can both do all that stuff, keep it completely under control, guarantee a product. You kind of know where you are heading and you know you are going to get good products. One of the scary bits of people working with architects is, particularly if they choose edgy architects, is that the edginess is both exciting and dangerous because you are not really sure, ‘cause they are going to give you something that has never been done at some level before, so you are a kind of guinea pig every time round. Whereas for us it is well that is what we do. So, you have to back us. Whereas Merchants seem to have established that territory with great convincingness through conviction. But from the outside its convincing to client bodies. Which public instrumentalities have lost now. They are so unbelievably and annoyingly timid that must frustrate you, I am imagining, no end.

01:20:40

Political Climate

David

I am really sad that nobody else has picked up the mantle and gone on doing this. I really am sad. I think the trouble is that this kind of work is not something that can be done with a conventional attitude. It really has to start with the conviction, and if the conviction is not there at the beginning and the understanding that in order to make it work not only do you have the conviction, but you also have to bring together a kind that we did, and infuse them all with the same conviction. You have to get first of all the design, but all the other people as well, or it really won't work. And in that sense, it is a sort of boutique business, and it is very, very difficult to get other people who may come in later to make a success of boutique businesses. Exactly the same problem with the Black Dolphin after it was sold. Exactly the same problem.

Des

I am wandering off the territory. Do you know what happened to Pettit and Sevitt? Did they just finish up?

David

I know they got themselves into some financial trouble and then Pettit came down to Melbourne to set up a Pettit and Sevitt group down here. That didn't work, and it was not the smartest thing in the world to do. If you have got a financial problem the last thing you should do is try and set up another empire in another state, particularly when in a state where you have got really strong competition, as we obviously would have given them. So, I don't think we ever thought that was going to be a serious threat to us. And indeed, it wasn't. I don't think it lasted much longer after that.

Des

That conviction thing you just mentioned, and the fact that no one has taken up the mantle as you called it, you must have reflected on when that occurred, and why that may have occurred?

David

Well after I got to the university and took to it, and some of the graduates coming through… and there were some who came to see me and said, “I would really love to do something similar to Merchant Builders and develop that.” I remember one young woman who was doing a building course and went away to do her PhD somewhere else, and she was absolutely determined that she was going to do it, and I imagine that she would have done very well. She had some of the right qualities as far as I could judge them. I don't know maybe one day someone will have a go.

Des

Has society shifted though so that the…

David

No, I don’t think so at all. I think there should be as strong a demand as ever for something like that because people are still buying project houses.

Des

It is interesting that you say that with such conviction. You said it straight up. Have the politicians changed? How much did Merchant Builders rely on any kind of political atmosphere? Any at all?

David

No, I don't think political background was of any consequences at all. After all we were practising, and came into being in a period of extreme conservatism. Liberal conservatism.

Des

Yeah, I am just doing the figures in my head going, aah… I think it was Henry Bolte. Not known for his adventurous attitude to culture and like.

David

I got drawn into the work of the Liberal government when it came to power but by that time Merchant Builders was well established so it wasn't reliant on having a Labour government with lots of interesting ideas in the background, anything but. In Victoria, of course, it wasn't until the Cain government got appointed that there was a Labour government of any kind for twenty years or more.

Des

When Gough [Whitlam] was in Dick Hamer would have been the premier of Victoria at that time was he?

David

No, he came much later.

Des

Ok. Interesting because in the talks with Evan Walker there has been some fabulous banter about, particularly the politicians. And the not so much the fostering of architecture as the social, and thus cultural connections, of who was talking to who. Not so much opportunities but at least encouragement and backing came from… but you're right, Merchants are really before that stuff and all of Australian politics was pretty Liberal at that stage wasn’t it.

David

As far as I was concerned it was the other way around it was because Merchant Builders had a very considerable reputation at the time that Whitlam came to power in 1972. People weren't wandering around Australia looking for what was happening and looking for people that might be involved in some of the initiatives that were being considered. Because of the work we had done, I was one of the people they came to talk to. And also, by that time, because of the work we had done, I had been invited across to South Australia and had quite a few discussions with Hugh Stretton. Do you know Hugh Stretton?

Des

‘Ideas for Australian Cities’.

David

Yes.

Des

But also Don Dunstan.

David

I met him later. But Hugh Stretton was very interested to try and persuade me to think about joining the South Australian Housing Trust, to take it over when… Ramsey, who for a long time was an outstanding director of the Housing Trust. A very interesting body, the South Australia Housing Trust, and I did very seriously consider it, because it was doing such interesting work.

Des

Much more interesting work than Melbourne?

David

Much more interesting, and much more expensive work.

Des

Ok. So, was Hugh Stretton part of the Housing Trust?

David

Yes. Yes he was.

Des

Hugh Stretton is not an architect, is he?

David

No, he is a social scientist.

Bruce

They didn't manage to convince you to cross to the public sector?

David

They very nearly did.

Tract

Bruce

In Victoria that is?

David

Ramsey in South Australia was terribly keen about the idea because I would have to go in as his Deputy to begin with. So I did a little bit of work for him and for Hugh Stretton looking at Elizabeth. That was quite interesting. All these things help to create in my mind the sense that there was an opportunity to create another kind of entity, related to Merchant Builders, which ended up by being Tract. Which would in part, turn into the roles played by Ellis Stones because he was reaching the end of his life. And I, at a certain point of my working life. The other part related to town and regional planning, which I was getting drawn into. That led to the creation of Tract. And Howard McCorkell being a fellow who worked in England and then worked for the NCDC. He was the first person that I got to join Tract. Then Rodney Wolf. I tracked him down - he was in the United States. There didn't seem to be anybody in Victoria that seemed to be doing especially good work at the time. He joined, and then I had got to know in a rather extraordinary way somebody called Pete Walker, who was the principle of Sasaki Walker in the United States, and subsequently the head of the graduate School of Design at Harvard [University]. And I got to know him by going to San Francisco on a trip - at one stage going across to Sausolito, and walking along the street and seeing a sign… I think I mentioned that last time?

Des

I thought it was the Alex Stitt sign?

David

…I do this. And I met an interesting group. I knew nothing about them. They were incredibly warm and encouraging and I had something with me that Merchant Builders was doing, and out of that process I got to know Pete Walker very well. He came out many times, and he considered starting a practice out here and he decided, no he wouldn't do that. And then later I wrote to him and I said is there anyone on your staff that would like to come out for a year or something like that. And he cast around and Steve Colhourn put up his hand, and Steve came out for the year. That turned into the rest of his life.

Des

So did Tract start from within Merchant Builders?

David

Yeah.

01:33:13

Des

And then it grew into a separate entity? It worked on very large projects. It moved very rapidly.

David

Tract have done really well, and it is just fantastic to think that Tract, on the one hand, and Nexus on the other, have been so successful. It has been really lovely. Very nice to feel that you were there at the beginning and then see how other people have taken things on. Because it so often happened in my life, that I have been involved with something and people that followed have done something awful and haven't been able to make it work.

Des

But Tract also must have, in my mind even more so than Nexus, there was a whole cultural enterprise that previously had nothing in it, and yet society must have been going, ‘we need this thing resolved’, and then either you, or someone, must have spotted it, and thats why its just ballooned.

David

It think the difference really was, not that there had been no talented landscape architect in Australia before Tract came, cause there clearly had been, and Ellis had been one and there had been plenty of others…

Des

But they had all been one, hadn't they?

David

They had all been one. They had also been one, and none of them had had the sort of design education that would be typical of good design education, good landscape design education, in the United States. None of them came with that broader perspective of using or thinking of landscape architecture. Not simply being the design of garden, of open space, or something like that, but large-scale landscape planning projects.

Des

It is really the planning, at the level of urban planning, that is the bit that Tract answered that no one else was doing. ‘Cause the other planners were, planners, like Lodder and Bailey. And those people were planners, but it is the integrated thinking, you mentioned a few times, that’s what Tract did brilliantly, didn't they? Particularly because the people that they were associated with were also the best architects who could plug their ideas into the Tract ones and vice versa.

David

There was a lot of education that Tract needed to give to the architects, too. That was to stop architects, as a matter of course, thinking that they could do the landscape work as well as the properly trained landscape architects were.

Bruce

I thought they could!

David

There was a lament, a constant lament at the beginning.

Des

I am sure it was.

David

Certainly, it is interesting in the United States, in many jurisdictions, if architects with plans for any projects of any size, they also are required to submit a landscape design, and then produce the landscape architect who is going to do it.

Des

Well, there has been some brilliant examples - Sea Ranch [MLTW] - to the great landscape urban proposals like the plaza thing, in Portland Oregon [Lovejoy Plaza - Lawrence Halprin]. There have been some amazing fully blown urban design landscape, but Sea Ranch is the one that sticks in my head, because that was started by [Ian] McHarg wasn't it? Do you know Sea Ranch?

David

Oh yes. That wasn't Ian McHarg.

Bruce

‘Design with Nature’ was his book.

David

He did his work mostly on the other side of the continent, but to begin with, who is the architect from… architect… famous architect…

Des

Charles Moore is the most noted one.

David

The thing that struck me most about going to see Sea Ranch, was to look at the first building designed by Charles Moore, sitting all on its own, without landscaping around it really of any consequence, in a reasonably bleak surrounding, and how perfectly that building worked. Absolutely perfectly. I thought to myself I couldn't have imagined it. Very striking.

Des

Did you see it? When it was reasonably new then?

David

Yes.

Des

Ok. ‘Cause that is the mid '60s isn't it? Late '60s… Sea Ranch ‘68?

David

Yeah. I think it is probably not worth going to now, because there will be lots of large allotments. I think it ended up being a big subdivision…

Des

Around that main building - there has been a reasonably recent book published about the whole Sea Ranch thing - and its surrounds looked reasonably intact. But it was, I think it was an incredibly influential work, particularly in Melbourne. Sea Ranch. People like Max May, Kevin Borland. And despite the fact they often say they didn't read anything, you don't have to look too hard. Certainly Pete [Crone]… and Max, and I think Kevin as well, the Charles Moore Sea Ranch influence is really powerful. And they did it in a particular way as well here. They didn’t just do copies. They managed to do things to it that were not done at Sea Ranch. I think it was a really influential piece of work. Did you meet Moore or any of those characters?

David

No. He wasn't there.

Des

He must have been quite a character, I understand.

David

I did meet [Luis] Barrigan.

Des

Oh, ok!

David

When I went to Mexico on the way to Europe. I spent the most amazing week in Mexico City. Amazing on many counts. I had been specially interested in Barrigan because I had seen some of the things he had done, and my mother had just been in Mexico, and she found out where I could contact him. So, I got in touch with him and tried… I actually have found that walking in on people is unbelievably successful. It really is unbelievably successful. And I didn't actually quite walk in on him, but I certainly went to see him, at his house, and it was very - well it was a typically Spanish house, built right to the street frontage and no front garden or anything like that. A very small courtyard behind it. And in the courtyard he had the minimum planting and he had a big bowl and there was just a single drip that was dripping into it. And I went to have a look at his other landscape architectural works, and I got to know him extremely well over that week, as far as you can get to know anyone over a week. His assistant - his young assistant, we were the same age - and he was wonderful to me. He took me everywhere and introduced me to someone he said had been Barrigan’s ‘guru, master philosopher’ and met him. It was a rather strange friendship, because he spoke no English and I've got virtually no Spanish, and so that was really, really lovely.

Des

So you got to meet Barrigan as well?

David

I got to meet Barrigan. Yeah.

Des

It is revolutionary work. You look at the dates that he was doing that stuff - it is just amazing.

David

When I went, the other thing that struck me so very powerfully [about] his work, his public work, was so often neglected, was in bad shape. And it really reinforced the thing that I was saying to you before - that things in Australia, not being as good as they are overseas, you know. There was, right from the very first time I was writing for Robin Boyd, I was trying to disagree with the review. The assumption things are always done better somewhere else, is I think, a very enervating and unhelpful one.

Des

But the strength of that must have been energising for Boyd.

David

What is that sorry?

Des

It must have been energising for [Robin] Boyd though - maybe to prove himself wrong. That you could actually do things. Because he was quite, he was a pretty edgy architect here, and he got work. It must have been a bit strange for him to write those things when in fact…

David

He got work, but he never I think, got work that he wanted. He didn't get the work he really wanted, and I think he was very bitter about that.

Des

I would say his public work, the larger than housing work, other than the Black Dolphin, is not nearly as good as the housing.

David

No, not nearly as good.

Des

Some people heads are just houses, and some people’s heads are…

David

I think one of the reasons for that though, is that he took on work he just simply shouldn't have taken on. It wasn't appropriate and made him compromise. I hear he died really quite bitter about some of those things.

Des

‘Cause the work at Melbourne Uni, is it Ormond College, that Octagon thing [McCaughey Court] is pretty bad to start with. That is not a beautiful building. Roy Grounds' building, just down the road, the one that sits in front of the…

Bruce

The Master’s Block.

Des

Yeah, that is a very elegant piece of work. Roy Grounds is one of those people, I think, who is a bit up and down, but he can do work across a number of different scales and functions and enterprises, and be pretty successful at them if he did a good job. Like, he did a good job at lots of levels. But I always found that Boyd's - I'll call it public work, well larger than housing work - not so good.

David

I think you are absolutely right.

Des

But he could write.

David

He was a marvellous writer.

Des

I think he had that kind of - I'll call it small scale energy - and that is why the houses were so successful. Because when you write you can charge into something - particularly his kind of writing - you charge into it, and you kind of deliver the message, and then you back off and you do something else. You know you don't have to…

David

But there is also something else, I think, that is at stake. And that is, that if you are going to do what he was doing - he was very disciplined. He would start the day by devoting, as I understand it, devoting two or three hours to writing, and then he would go into his architectural practice. You would have to ask other people but that’s what I understand he did. What he told me he did - You are really splitting the energy, aren't you, the creative energy, in a really significant way? I felt that at the Black Dolphin. Once when I was away, because of the demands on his time, he didn't perhaps stew over things enough when there was something that was a bit tricky, that needed to be dealt with. Or it was a personality thing that he needed to resolve. ‘Cause I went away and while it was being constructed and something needed to be altered, only a small thing, but I sort of felt that he had given in a bit too early. And I think it is a bit because of that sense that he really didn't have enough time to do it, or he - not that he couldn't be bothered - but the requirement for more emotional energy to solve that problem on the one hand, or, to deal with a personality, which will take time you know.

Des

Corb [Le Corbusier] apparently used to paint every morning. Quite religiously. You couldn't get him in the office in the morning. But he would say the painting was the contribution to the work for him.

David

I think it is different.

Des

I think it is different to writing, and Mies Van Der Rohe is famous for apparently - a detail would come up, and it would have to be solved and some of the people would be badgering him for weeks about an answer, and then people thought he was not paying attention to it - and then four weeks down the track the detail would lob on someone's desk. The one that you wanted, and it was the one that you had asked for. People said he'd been stewing over it for a while. He wasn't just going to put something out, really wanted to make it work.

David

I think that is the point I am making about Robin.

Des

I mean architecture is an incredibly complex process, and not all of us have heads for all of it.

David

I wonder if you would be kind enough to tell me what the time is?

Bruce

Quarter to two.

Des

Chewed up another two hours.

David

It’s interesting.

Des

It’s great David.

David

I think it is very, very interesting.

Bruce

It is very important to be down on tape - all of this information.

Des

Would you like to have another chat at some stage?

David

Yes, I'd love to. I enjoy it greatly. We are going to be away, so it may have to be at the end of January. Does that matter?

Des

That is absolutely fine and I'll…

Bruce

I can drop this document back to you on my way home tonight.

  • Version History
  • 01/01/2023Published