
应该
Art should be a space for possibility.
The line between art and life should be blurred.
Art should be a conversation, not a lecture.
Art should be dangerous - not physically dangerous, but dangerous to ideas.
Art should comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable.
Art should be as unpredictable as life itself.
The conjectures of the Langlands program are not merely problems to be solved but a vision of how mathematics should be.
A good mathematician should be both rigorous and imaginative.
Architecture should be quiet, but not silent.
A building should be a good neighbor.
A school should not just be a place to learn, but a place that inspires learning.
Every building should be a teacher. It should teach us about light, about air, about how to live together.
The materials we use should tell a story - the story of where they come from and the people who work with them.
Every intervention should leave things better than we found them.
Architecture should be quiet and background, not shouting for attention.
We believe in generosity, in the idea that architecture should give more than it takes.
Architecture should be generous - it must give more than it takes.
Architecture should be like a cloud - constantly changing and never the same.
A building should grow from its site like a tree from the earth.
Architecture should be generous - generous with space, with light, with possibility.