Tag Archives: TITANIUM

#217: TRIBUTE | FRANK GEHRY (1929-2025) AND A VISIT TO BILBAO

December 16, 2025

From across the river passing under a bridge (photo by Anthony Poon)

In 1998, I was traveling through Spain, and this new building just opened: the Guggenheim Museum. In the obscure industrial port city of Bilbao, the Basque Country of northern Spain, this museum was the talk of the industry. So I wrapped up my tour of Barcelona, then hopped on a short flight to check out the buzzy Guggenheim structure. No doubt, it was a work of genius.

Program booklet and visitor wristband

My travel partner asked, “Why do we need go out of our way to some unknown town just to see a single building.”

I responded, “Well, based on all the press, reviews, rumors, etc., missing this opportunity would be like being in Egypt and not seeing the pyramids.”

As seen from the bus soon to arrive at the museum (photo by Anthony Poon)

There is little I can add in this tribute to Frank Gehry (1929-2025) that hasn’t already been said in thousands of articles from the past weeks. After all, he is the most celebrated and visionary architect of our generation.

A pairing of glass and metal panels (photo by Anthony Poon)
left : the structure behind the exterior titanium skin; right: the museum meeting its river setting (photos by Anthony Poon)

Instead, I will simply share images from that random rainy visit in the 90s to Bilbao. The iPhone was certainly not yet invented. My following grainy photos are shot on a Nikon FE2 on ISO 200 film. Despite the greyness of that day, the importance of this single work of architecture was as illuminating as a bright afternoon.

Plane ticket, Barcelona to Bilbao
Fish scale-like titanium panels (photo by Anthony Poon)
© Poon Design Inc.