99% Invisible - 80- An Architect’s Code
Episode Date: May 28, 2013Lawyers have an ethics code. Journalists have an ethics code. Architects do, too. According to Ethical Standard 1.4 of the American Institute of Architects (AIA): “Members should uphold human rights... in all their professional endeavors.” A group called Architects, Designers, … Continue reading →
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
I swear to fulfill to the best of my ability and judgment.
This covenant.
A man must have a code.
I don't know.
Doubt.
The fundamental ethical precept of medicine is that doctors first do no harm.
This led the American Medical Association to adopt opinion 2.06
of the AMA code of medical ethics in 1992.
An individual's opinion of capital punishment is the personal moral decision of that individual,
a physician as a member of a profession dedicated to preserving life when there is hope of doing
so should not be a participant
in a legally authorized execution.
It goes on from there.
Lawyers have an ethics code, journalists have an ethics code, so it shouldn't surprise
you that architects do as well.
The relevant ethical standard from the AIA that we're discussing is ES1.4.
Human Rights. that we're discussing is ES1.4 human rights. Members should uphold human rights in all their
professional endeavors. A number of architects have taken a stance that there are some buildings
that just should not have been built. And they don't just mean the ugly buildings.
That by design, they violate standards of human rights. That's our producer Sam Greenspan. He's talking about prisons.
Specifically, prisons that keep inmates alone in cells
with little to do and with minimal human contact.
Inmates have names for these places,
the box or the bing.
On the outside, we know them as supermax or the shoe.
That's SHU, for security housing unit.
Now it's up for debate as to whether or
not the shoe is solitary confinement. Reason being, and this is something weird we found
while researching the story. There is no legal definition for solitary confinement. The
UN doesn't have one, the Department of Justice doesn't have one, and neither does the CDCR,
the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, the CDCR
maintains that no prisoners in California are kept in solitary confinement.
They refer to the shoe as a quote, segregation unit.
But a number of groups, including Amistigh International and Human Rights Watch, do call
the shoe solitary confinement.
And there's a lot of controversy surrounding one shoe at a Northern California prison called Pelican Bay. Pelican Bay State prison was designed by San Francisco-based
architecture firm KMD. KMD declined to speak to us for this story, but Jim Muller, an
architect with KMD who worked on Pelican Bay, did talk with Architect Magazine about
the prison. He said, quote, the inmates have no contact with other inmates
during the vast majority, if not all, of the day.
They are only allowed out of their cells
for very short periods of time
for constitutionally required exercise periods."
End quote.
Life inside of a shoe means 22 to 23 hours a day
inside of a tiny room, 80 or so square feet.
Nancy Malaine, a radio reporter with Life of the Law, managed to get access to the
shoe in Pelican-Based-A prison in California.
She went inside one of the cells and had an inmate, Robert Luca, describe the room.
Basically, the cell, I don't know, was size 6x9 or 6x12, whatever it is.
And that's your bunk, your living room, the center of it is your walking area, and two
steps to the right is your bathroom, pretty much.
The official measurements are actually 7.5x12 feet.
It's not a space that's designed to keep you comfortable.
But it's not these architectural features
that concern humanitarian activists and psychiatrists. It's the amount of time many prisoners spend
in that cell alone, without any meaningful activity. Long-term solitary confinement, which is either
for months or years, or it goes on forever, as at Pelican Bay.
Connected with absolute idleness, that is, the individual socially isolated to the extreme,
but also has nothing meaningful to do, and this causes human breakdown, this destroys
people as human beings.
Terry Cooper is a psychiatrist who specializes in forensic work.
That is, he's an expert on the intersection of mental health
and criminal justice. He served as an expert witness on more than 20 class action lawsuits concerning
prison conditions. He says there's a whole litany of effects that solitary can have on a person.
Massive free-floating anxiety, paranoid ideas, insomnia, depression, and suicidal thoughts are very prominent. Their eyes are destroyed because if you do not look at a distance for a long length of
time, your eye deteriorates.
They have concentration and memory problems.
And I ask if they read and they'll say no because I can't remember what I read three pages
earlier.
Mounting anger and they almost universally report
that they're terrified that their anger
will get out of control.
They'll be in more trouble
and then they'll have a longer term in solitary.
And that's just for a normal stable person.
For prisoners with a history of
or predisposition to mental illness,
solitary can bring on a breakdown.
Now again, there is no universally accepted definition of solitary confinement.
And life the law reporter Nancy Malayne says that compared to other prisons she has visited,
there are actually some good design elements in the Pelican Bay shoe.
Inmates can get natural light from skylights outside of their cells, which drifts into
the doors made of perforated metal.
These porous doors allow for inmates to communicate
with each other, even though there are no lines of sight
to any prisoner from within the cell.
But on the other hand, cells don't have windows.
Inmates never get to see the horizon.
The only time prisoners get to leave the cell
is to visit the shower or the exercise yard.
And the exercise yard is an empty, windowless room,
not much bigger than a cell with 20-foot
high concrete walls.
And while many prisoners in the shoe have a cellmate, Terry Cooper's says sharing a
cell is often worse than being alone.
So if that's not solitary confinement per se, you could call it a kind of binary confinement.
And all of this taken together, some people call torture.
In 2011, Juan Mendes, the UN Special Rapper Tour on Torture, said anything over 15 days
15 days in solitary confinement is a human rights abuse.
Now various other commentators have said that means it's torture.
15 days says the UN is the point at which people in solitary can begin to have irreparable
psychological damage.
I don't actually like the 15-day standard.
Some people fall apart in two days.
And what Terry Cooper's calls torture happens in buildings specifically designed to maximize
the isolation or, quote, unquote, segregation of prisoners for the duration of their time
in the shoe.
So if it is the ethical code of architects to promote human rights,
what is their responsibility to the people who are incarcerated in their buildings?
In Argentina, the military regime tortured people in a former auto body shop
that was one of their big torture centers. I'm not going to... nobody's going to say
that the architects who designed the auto body shop are somehow responsible
or even that the car mechanics, who just own it are.
No, of course not.
This is Rafael Sparry.
But when solitary confinement is a practice that requires a certain kind of space, and
when you're specifying the space exactly for that and making sure that all the doors
can be operated without, you know, seeing another human being, that the outdoor space
is going to be one that's occupied by one person at a time, that there's nowhere for a group of people to
actually be together.
So it just won't happen.
Then that is a design intent.
When used as intended, human rights violations will result.
Rafael Sparry is an architect here in San Francisco, and he's the president of a group called
ADPSR.
Architects, designers, and planners for social responsibility.
A few years back, Raphael had been following the news from Guantanamo Bay and
reading up on mass incarceration in the US, not necessarily as an architect
per se, just as a civic-minded social justice-oriented kind of guy.
And then, one day in 2010, he saw an article in the San Francisco Chronicle
about the redesign of San Quentin Prison in California.
So yeah, the Chronicle actually ran a picture that was supplied by the Decrection's apartment that was the CAD model.
A kind of three-dimensional floor plan of the execution chamber suite of rooms.
And I was like, they're using the same tools that I use to make
residential additions for people to make schools.
Only this project is going to kill people.
That was totally shocking.
Seeing the remodel of the death chamber was the catalyzed event, but you could argue that
there's a difference between designing a death room and designing a shoe.
But Sparry views both as immoral and in violation of the human rights that architects
wear to uphold.
Rafael Sparry wants architects and the profession of architecture as a whole, at least in the
U.S., to stop building shoes or any structures that are designed for long-term solitary confinement
or are designed to put people to death.
He's not talking about all prisons or jails, just the ones where isolation is baked into
the physical structure, like the AIA
architect designed shoe at Pelican Bay Prison. Pelican Bay State Prison is way up in Northern
California near the Oregon border, hours from any major city. It opened in 1989 to house the
so-called worst of the worst, suspected gang members, and people who are seen to pose the greatest
threat to officers and other inmates.
It was modeled after a prison in Arizona and has since inspired design for other prisons across
the country, even buildings in Guantanamo Bay. Life of the Law's Nancy Malaine head corrections
officer, Lieutenant Rick Graves, describe his take on the purpose of the shoe when she visited Pelican Bay in 2012.
The key to making this design work in our favor is not just the design of it, but how it's managed.
And historically Pelican Bay has done a very good job of managing the worst of the worst in the state.
This prison was designed and built to manage 5% of the California prison population.
Those were the 5% that were causing the majority of crimes in the other prisons throughout the state.
The way that Pelican Bay or any prison has managed is really the determining factor in what life is like for prisoners.
The way these prisons are used isn't the only way they could be used.
Prison management could decide that shoe prisoners could be allowed to go outside of the
building in a security area, or the exercise yard could be repurposed as a communal dining
hall.
We're just making these up as far as I know these have never been considered.
But for Rafael Sparry, the key here is design intent.
Pelican Bay is managed the way it is, and prisoners day in, day out are the way they are,
because that's how architects imagine the place to work during the design process.
And Sparry along with the ADPSR, architects, designers, and planners for social responsibility,
say it's time to stop building the prisons that are designed for what he sees as solitary confinement or any other kind of torture or execution.
It would seem like the least that architects could do would say to demonstrate our commitment
to public health safety and well-being is to say, when you enter one of our buildings,
it's not intended to kill you or torture you.
Which brings us back to the rather minimal statement in the AIA Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct.
Ethical Standard 1.4.
Members should uphold human rights in all their professional endeavors.
That's it. Human rights refers to the international system that is built up around the United Nations and strongly supported by these advocacy organizations.
Like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.
Human rights is not a term that the United States courts use and it's not a term in the
US Constitution.
It actually refers to something even bigger than that.
They said members should support the US Constitution that would be different.
Sparry and the ADPSR are petitioning the AIA to adopt a new clause in its ethics code.
Quote, members shall not design spaces intended for execution or for torture or other cruel
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, including prolonged solitary confinement.
And so if you happen to find yourself in prison, you should know that because you're
prison in design by an architect, you won't be subjected to cruel inhuman, degrading punishment
or get killed there.
So far, the San Francisco chapter of the AIA has recommended the proposal.
We should point out here that the AIA San Francisco was instrumental in the creation of 99%
of visible, but it doesn't give us any money or servant in the editorial function we
run our own ship completely.
If the AIA National adopts this amendment, it will become part of the ethics code for
all AIA architects, virtually
every practicing architect in the United States.
Regardless of how you feel about prisons, whether we should rehabilitate people or whether
we should lock them up and throw away the key, it's important to keep in mind that these
attitudes change over time.
From around the 1890s to the 1950s, the US had a really different take on prison.
The emphasis was on curing or rehabilitating people from a life of crime.
Granted, there were some really terrible things that happened in prisons during that time,
but the emphasis, at least, was on getting prisoners to become productive members of society
again.
A big shift happened with the war on drugs,
which sent a lot more people to jail,
and then there was the violence of the prison riots
or uprisings that happened through the 1970s.
So from the point of view of prison officials
who were in charge of jailing these populations,
locking people up in their cells for most of the time,
started looking like a good option.
Hence the shoe.
But when you create a building with a very extreme design intent with little variability,
you're locking prisoners into that current mindset for the lifespan of the prison.
Tam's correctional center, a supermax prison in Illinois, was closed in early 2013 to
make up for a state budget shortfall.
It turns out housing a shoe prisoner is nearly twice as
expensive as housing a general population inmate. Wide spread budgetary pressure and possibly the
influence of anti-solitary confinement activists is also causing state governments to reduce the number
of Supermax prisoners in Mississippi, Maine, and Colorado. Rafael Sparrow may find he has a strange and powerful ally in his fight to stop architects
building Supermax prisons, and that is broke state governments.
But even if Supermax facilities fall out of fashion, Sparrow says it's still important
to establish ethical guidelines that distinguish architects as a profession.
It's professional ethics that set a profession aside from other occupations.
When you join a licensed profession, your group has a monopoly to provide services in that sector.
Not anybody else can be an architect.
And in fact, one of AI's big activities is patrolling people who are holding themselves out as architects,
but aren't actually architects.
In exchange for the public monopoly that we get as a group,
we as a group have to adopt professional ethics
that put the public interest first.
And the way that we do that is the way,
for instance, that doctors do that,
is to say we're not gonna do anything
to injure any of you intentionally.
This episode of 99% Invisible is a special co-production with the podcast Life of the Law.
You can hear their show at lifeofthelaw.org.
This story was produced by Sam Greenspan, Nancy Malaine, Caitlin Prest, Julia Barton, Shannon
Heffernon, Ashley Ann Craigbaum, and me Roman Mars.
We are a project of 91.7 local public radio KALW in San Francisco and the American Institute
of Architects in San Francisco.
You can find the show and like the show on Facebook, I tweet at Roman Mars, but we have loads
of more information and a link to life of the law at 99tapia.org