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Classic Animaton
Team Disney Building, Burbank, California
Dirk Sutro

Disney’s Burbank headquarters is the latest addition to the company’s growing design portfolio.

NEW BUILDINGS DESIGNED FOR DISNEY BY Michael Graves and other leading architects have sparked lively debate. Can architecture that incorporates themed fantasy imagery maintain credibility? Can it function as entertainment while exploring weightier design issues and meeting basic programmatic needs? If Disney World's Graves-designed Dolphin and Swan hotels in Orlando, Florida, with their towering statuary and superficial graphic decoration, cross the fine line between architecture and cartoon, Graves's new Team Disney Building on the Disney lot in Burbank, California, strikes a more delicate balance.

Yes, this building features seven 19-foot-tall dwarfs, cast from thin-shell glass fiber reinforced concrete (GFRC). But unlike the swan and dolphin sculptures that adorn the architect's hotels, these dwarfs are fitting contemporary counterparts to ancient caryatids – they appear to support a pediment, giving at least the illusion of a functional purpose. And while the barrel-vaulted roofs over the 330,000-square-foot headquarters' most prominent corner vaguely resemble film reels or a certain mouse's ears, Graves claims he had no such symbolism in mind.

"I wanted to design a corporate office building for a serious company engaged in entertainment," he says. "It happens, of course, that they are identified with cartoon characters, and that's how Disney started. 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs' was their first full-length animated feature, so the dwarfs seemed an appropriate symbol for both the company's beginning and the new beginning with Michael Eisner and the new board."

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Title
Source type Magazine
Published
Language en
Document type Feature
Media type text
Page count 10
Pages pp. 80-89

Metadata

Id 4320
Availability Free
Inserted 2019-05-28