It’s AYA Day and Building Design’s 50th birthday! To celebrate, we invited Norman Foster to launch our landmark new series in which leading architects talk about their favourite buildings

Norman Foster Joseph Paxton The Crystal Palace

Source: Shutterstock

Norman Foster

Source: Frederic Aranda

Norman Foster

Wonder: Crystal Palace | Architect: Joseph Paxton

Nominated by: Norman Foster

My favourite building is Joseph Paxton’s Crystal Palace. To me it represents the birth of modern architecture. Designed to house the Great Exhibition in 1851, the budget and timescale precluded traditional construction methods. Paxton’s solution was prefabricated, lightweight and transparent. It did more with less.

50_wonders

The entire building was based on a module size of 49 inches (120cm) tall and 10 inches (25cm) wide; the size of the largest mass-produced panes of sheet glass at the time.

Two thousand on-site workers took just eight months to build the palace’s structure. When completed it was the largest enclosure in the world.

As a truly “high-tech” building, the Crystal Palace was symbolic of a new industrial approach to architecture – the construction process itself became a popular public spectacle.

作为一个临时建筑,它只在海德公园停留了6个月,吸引了600万游客——相当于当时英国人口的五分之一!就像它刚建成时一样,它很快就被拆除并重新安置在了西德纳姆。

Norman Foster Joseph Paxton The Crystal Palace

Source: Shutterstock

The influence of the building is all around us. Its clearly expressed structure was a key driver for the Chicago school of skyscrapers that revolutionised architecture in the late 19thand early 20thcenturies.

In its reliance on triangulation I can see the beginnings of modern geodesic structures. The soaring spans and transparency are echoed in the vast airport and exhibition spaces of today. A tangible legacy from a wonderfully ephemeral project.

Norman Foster Joseph Paxton The Crystal Palace

Source: Shutterstock

The Crystal Palace was an exceptional work which proved to be a source of inspiration to generations of architects. It has an idealistic spirit and pushed the technological limits of design and engineering. It was a celebration of confidence and a belief in the future – something as relevant today as it was in 1851.

>> Learning from lockdown:Norman Foster on the future of cities

>> From the archive:Video: Norman Foster leads a drone tour of the Hearst Tower

>> From the archive:Foster ‘overjoyed’ to win third Stirling Prize

How to watch today’s AYAs

It’s today! Building Design’s Architect of the Year Awards will be broadcast live on the website at 4pm. The most important celebration of architectural success in the UK is free to attend. Just bookmark theBuilding Design home pageand make sure you’re here at 4pm when proceedings will get underway promptly. And join in the conversation that’s already buzzing on social media using #AYA2020