A Weekly Dose of Architecture Updates:
This week's dose features Slip House in London, UK by Carl Turner Architects:
The featured past dose is the Carmarthen Place SE1 in London, England by Emma Doherty and AiR:
This week's book review is Architecture in the Netherlands: Yearbook 2011-12 edited by Samir Bantal, JaapJan Berg, Kees van der Hoeven, Anne Luijten (L):
(R): The featured past book review is Hunch 13: Consensus edited by Salomon Frausto.
: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
World-Architects.com U.S. Building of the Week:
Kukkla Winery in Paso Robles, California by Studio B Architects:
Architectural engineering design.autocad career .learnin,news,architecture design tutorial,
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Sitcom Architects
Michael Brady is without a doubt the most popular television architect who was a recurring character. While his portrayal barely resembled the realities of architecture (as Jody Brown humorously recounts), he did a good job of setting a precedent for architects in sitcoms: He sits at his desk surrounded by pretty pictures of houses, but the profession takes a backseat to the usual sitcom antics. This is not a characteristic specific to architects but how sitcoms operate, inherently deriving their humor from situations, most of them revolving around the relationships of families and friends. The workplace is for dramas, and as far as I know no dramas about architects have been tried.
Very few succeeding sitcom architects come to mind — Ted Mosby, Elyse Keaton, Rob (a landscape architect) — so I'm surprised to hear that the new sitcom Partners revolves around the "bromance" of two architects who are partners in a firm.
[Partners screenshot — an architectural model as metaphor for relationship troubles — image source/clip]
What's even more interesting is that the 2012 CBS sitcom bears a striking resemblance to a 1995 Fox sitcom also called Partners that also focuses on two architects. Both shows are about the tensions in the partners' friendships that arise from one of them getting engaged. The earlier show was cancelled after 22 episodes, and if the above clip (and reviews like this one) are any indication, the new Partners won't be around even that long.
Very few succeeding sitcom architects come to mind — Ted Mosby, Elyse Keaton, Rob (a landscape architect) — so I'm surprised to hear that the new sitcom Partners revolves around the "bromance" of two architects who are partners in a firm.
[Partners screenshot — an architectural model as metaphor for relationship troubles — image source/clip]
What's even more interesting is that the 2012 CBS sitcom bears a striking resemblance to a 1995 Fox sitcom also called Partners that also focuses on two architects. Both shows are about the tensions in the partners' friendships that arise from one of them getting engaged. The earlier show was cancelled after 22 episodes, and if the above clip (and reviews like this one) are any indication, the new Partners won't be around even that long.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Awakener
A few examples of landscapes waking up after long periods of time lying dormant have been in the news recently.
[Image: Maria Thereza Alves's Seeds of Change garden, via Facebook].
First, there is artist Maria Thereza Alves's "ballast seed garden" project, called Seeds of Change, which arose from a moment of revelation:
[Images: The ballast garden, via Facebook].
This idea of accidental ballast gardens—heavily detoured landscapes-to-come lying patiently in wait before springing back to life several centuries after their initial transportation—is incredible; I might even suggest parallels here with such 21st-century problems as how we might sterilize spacecraft before sending them offworld, to places like Mars, lest we, in a sense, bring along our own bacterial "ballast" and thus unwittingly terraform those distant locations with escaped landscapes from Earth. Might we someday culture "ballast gardens" on other planets from the tiniest of remnant organic compounds found on our own ancient and dismantled ships?
[Image: Maria Thereza Alves's Seeds of Change garden, via Facebook].
Meanwhile, in a headline that reads like something straight out of Stanislaw Lem or H.P. Lovecraft, we read that "Nunavut's Mysterious Ancient Life Could Return by 2100 as Arctic Warms." In other words, forests that thrived in the hostile conditions of "Canada's extreme north" nearly three million years ago might return to re-colonize the landscape as the region dramatically warms over the next century due to climate change.
This is a relatively mundane resurrection—after all, it is just a forest—but even the suggestion that future climate conditions on Earth might re-awaken ancient ecosystems, dormant environments in which humans might find it less than easy to survive, is an incredible cautionary tale for the future of the planet. That, and this story offers the awesomely mythic image of human explorers wandering across the thawing earth of the far north as strange and ancient things bloom from cracks in the ground around them.
[Images: Various herbaria pages].
In both cases, I'm reminded of an essay published in Lapham's Quarterly a few years ago, by novelist Daniel Mason. There, Mason writes about "nature's return," a scenario in which dormant and waylaid seeds thrive on the rubble of the present-day landscape. "In the dusty cracks between the concrete, seedlings would germinate, grow," Mason writes, heralding unpredictable landscapes to come.
[Images: More herbaria pages].
However, referring to these remnant seeds left over from older landscapes, Mason writes that "most would not germinate straight away," even if given free rein over an empty field or cracked streetscape. "Rather," he adds, these seeds "would lodge in microscopic nooks and crannies, some to be eaten or crushed, others to be paved over, but most, simply, to wait. A square meter of urban soil can contain tens of thousands of seeds persisting in a state of suspended animation, waiting to be woken from their slumber. After the fire brigades rescued the London Natural History Museum from German incendiaries, Albizia silk-tree seeds bloomed on their herbarium sheets, liberated from two hundred years of dormancy by the precise combination of flame and water."
A square meter of urban soil can contain tens of thousands of seeds persisting in a state of suspended animation, waiting to be woken from their slumber. In Mason's words, this return of dormant life "suggests the parallel existence of a hidden world, fully formed, simply awaiting the opportunity for expression."
Whether dredging up old riverbeds full of ballast from previous centuries, or watching new storms form over the Arctic, bringing back climates unseen for millions of years, what might yet wake up from the ground around us, return from dormancy, resurrect, as it were, and make itself at home again on a planet that thought it had since moved on?
(Ballast garden link spotted via Katie Holten).
[Image: Maria Thereza Alves's Seeds of Change garden, via Facebook].
First, there is artist Maria Thereza Alves's "ballast seed garden" project, called Seeds of Change, which arose from a moment of revelation:
Between 1680 and the early 1900s, ships' ballast—earth, stones and gravel from trade boats from all over the world used to weigh down the vessel as it docked—was offloaded into the river at Bristol. This ballast contained the seeds of plants from wherever the ship had sailed. Maria Thereza Alves discovered that these ballast seeds can lie dormant for hundreds of years, but that, by excavating the river bed, it is possible to germinate and grow these seeds into flourishing plants.While Alves seems not to have literally dug down into the old layers of the river in order to harvest her seeds—instead sourcing contemporary examples of species known to have sprouted from mounds of ballast over the last few hundred years—her project nonetheless has the character of a long-lost landscape waking up, popping up like a refugee amidst the rubble in a return to visibility.
[Images: The ballast garden, via Facebook].
This idea of accidental ballast gardens—heavily detoured landscapes-to-come lying patiently in wait before springing back to life several centuries after their initial transportation—is incredible; I might even suggest parallels here with such 21st-century problems as how we might sterilize spacecraft before sending them offworld, to places like Mars, lest we, in a sense, bring along our own bacterial "ballast" and thus unwittingly terraform those distant locations with escaped landscapes from Earth. Might we someday culture "ballast gardens" on other planets from the tiniest of remnant organic compounds found on our own ancient and dismantled ships?
[Image: Maria Thereza Alves's Seeds of Change garden, via Facebook].
Meanwhile, in a headline that reads like something straight out of Stanislaw Lem or H.P. Lovecraft, we read that "Nunavut's Mysterious Ancient Life Could Return by 2100 as Arctic Warms." In other words, forests that thrived in the hostile conditions of "Canada's extreme north" nearly three million years ago might return to re-colonize the landscape as the region dramatically warms over the next century due to climate change.
This is a relatively mundane resurrection—after all, it is just a forest—but even the suggestion that future climate conditions on Earth might re-awaken ancient ecosystems, dormant environments in which humans might find it less than easy to survive, is an incredible cautionary tale for the future of the planet. That, and this story offers the awesomely mythic image of human explorers wandering across the thawing earth of the far north as strange and ancient things bloom from cracks in the ground around them.
[Images: Various herbaria pages].
In both cases, I'm reminded of an essay published in Lapham's Quarterly a few years ago, by novelist Daniel Mason. There, Mason writes about "nature's return," a scenario in which dormant and waylaid seeds thrive on the rubble of the present-day landscape. "In the dusty cracks between the concrete, seedlings would germinate, grow," Mason writes, heralding unpredictable landscapes to come.
[Images: More herbaria pages].
However, referring to these remnant seeds left over from older landscapes, Mason writes that "most would not germinate straight away," even if given free rein over an empty field or cracked streetscape. "Rather," he adds, these seeds "would lodge in microscopic nooks and crannies, some to be eaten or crushed, others to be paved over, but most, simply, to wait. A square meter of urban soil can contain tens of thousands of seeds persisting in a state of suspended animation, waiting to be woken from their slumber. After the fire brigades rescued the London Natural History Museum from German incendiaries, Albizia silk-tree seeds bloomed on their herbarium sheets, liberated from two hundred years of dormancy by the precise combination of flame and water."
A square meter of urban soil can contain tens of thousands of seeds persisting in a state of suspended animation, waiting to be woken from their slumber. In Mason's words, this return of dormant life "suggests the parallel existence of a hidden world, fully formed, simply awaiting the opportunity for expression."
Whether dredging up old riverbeds full of ballast from previous centuries, or watching new storms form over the Arctic, bringing back climates unseen for millions of years, what might yet wake up from the ground around us, return from dormancy, resurrect, as it were, and make itself at home again on a planet that thought it had since moved on?
(Ballast garden link spotted via Katie Holten).
Friday, September 28, 2012
Today's archidose #622
Here are some photos of the recently opened Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam in Amsterdam, Netherlands, by Benthem Crouwel Architects (2012), photographed by Matthijs Borghgraef.
To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose
MA Architecture + Urbanism Third Annual Graduate Colloquium 2012
MA Architecture + Urbanism Third Annual Graduate Colloquium 2012 You are cordially invited to a celebration of the work of the Manchester School of Architecture MA Architecture + Urbanism graduating cohort of 2012 on the afternoon of Thursday 4 October at CUBE Gallery Manchester 1.00 Edward Patton MA 1.25 Rajinder Matharu MA 1.50 Mark Turner MA 2.15 Laura Minca MA 2.40 Jack Penford Baker MA 3.05 Damien Woolliscroft MA The MA Show continues until 5 October
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Today's archidose #621
Here are some photos of "The Desert Forest" at Burning Man in Black Rock City, Arizona Nevada, by Phoenix, (2012), photographed by Ben Lepley. More information on the installation can be found at Kickstarter.
To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose
Morpholio Trace
Yesterday The Morpholio Project released the app Trace, "an evolution of design process, enabling the development of ideas, free thinking and communication amongst a global community of designers and creators."
This morning I played around with the app briefly, importing a photo and "tracing" over it with black and red lines, adding sheet after sheet, just like a real roll of tracing paper (nothing worth posting here, believe me). Basically Trace is a drawing tool, along the lines of the gazillion others on iTunes, but one that is synced up with Morpholio, therefore allowing people to import their portfolio and mark it up. Sketches can then be saved, emailed or shared again via the Morpholio app. I'll admit that I've browsed Morpholio, but I've yet to upload anything to it, so therefore I'm missing out on realizing the full potential of Trace. Nevertheless it's clear that Trace benefits from being straightforward (everything is up top in a retractable menu), simple (two colors—black and red—and three lined widths), and familiar (yellow just like trace paper, but with adjustable opacity) without being too sentimental, like Apple's wood-grain bookshelf. The app is free, though various grid underlays do cost $0.99.
Overall the app is a good idea with a very good execution, though it's probably best they didn't call it Bumwad.
This morning I played around with the app briefly, importing a photo and "tracing" over it with black and red lines, adding sheet after sheet, just like a real roll of tracing paper (nothing worth posting here, believe me). Basically Trace is a drawing tool, along the lines of the gazillion others on iTunes, but one that is synced up with Morpholio, therefore allowing people to import their portfolio and mark it up. Sketches can then be saved, emailed or shared again via the Morpholio app. I'll admit that I've browsed Morpholio, but I've yet to upload anything to it, so therefore I'm missing out on realizing the full potential of Trace. Nevertheless it's clear that Trace benefits from being straightforward (everything is up top in a retractable menu), simple (two colors—black and red—and three lined widths), and familiar (yellow just like trace paper, but with adjustable opacity) without being too sentimental, like Apple's wood-grain bookshelf. The app is free, though various grid underlays do cost $0.99.
Overall the app is a good idea with a very good execution, though it's probably best they didn't call it Bumwad.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Entering a civic university
The new cohort of MA A+U students have commenced their studies and were introduced to an interpretation of the landscape of the University of Manchester campus by Robert Camlin in preparation for the initial phase of their urban research during the new academic year.
Today's archidose #620
Here are some photos of the New Waitomo Caves Visitor Center in Waitomo, New Zealand, by Architecture Workshop, (2010), photographed by Christopher Brown.
To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose
Monday, September 24, 2012
Monday, Monday
A Weekly Dose of Architecture Updates:
This week's dose features Archway Studios in London, UK by Undercurrent Architects:
The featured past dose is the Palmwood House in London, UK by Undercurrent Architects:
This week's book review is Five Borough Farm: Seeding the Future of Urban Agriculture in New York City (L):
(R): The featured past book review is The Unsettling of America by Wendell Berry.
: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
World-Architects.com U.S. Building of the Week:
Mid-North Residence in Chicago, Illinois by Vinci | Hamp Architects:
and (catching up from last week):
Small House in Truro, Massachusetts by CKA/Christopher Kilbridge, Architect:
This week's dose features Archway Studios in London, UK by Undercurrent Architects:
The featured past dose is the Palmwood House in London, UK by Undercurrent Architects:
This week's book review is Five Borough Farm: Seeding the Future of Urban Agriculture in New York City (L):
(R): The featured past book review is The Unsettling of America by Wendell Berry.
: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
World-Architects.com U.S. Building of the Week:
Mid-North Residence in Chicago, Illinois by Vinci | Hamp Architects:
and (catching up from last week):
Small House in Truro, Massachusetts by CKA/Christopher Kilbridge, Architect:
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Today's archidose #619
Here are some photos of the Department of Islamic Art at the Louvre in Paris, France, by Rudy Ricciotti and Mario Bellini, (2012), photographed by Laurent Ruamps.
To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose
Friday, September 21, 2012
Another Antinori Update
My last progress report on Studio Archea's project for the Marchesi Antinori Winery, which I originally featured in 2005, was way back in April last year. Back then the building was starting to take shape, but it was far away from realizing many of the striking details, particularly the stairs and the brick (or is tile?) vaults. It looks like a good deal of progress has been made on the construction.
Here are a few of the many images on the project from Studio Archea's website. Click over to see many more.
Here are a few of the many images on the project from Studio Archea's website. Click over to see many more.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
What To Do This "Archtober"
It's about a week-and-a-half until Archtober, "the second annual month-long festival of architecture
activities, programs and exhibitions in New York City." So it's time to start planning what to do, where to go, and what to see. Below are a few of the highlights, but check out Archtober's calendar or download their PDF guide for a list of all the events taking place next month.
1-7
CITY MODERN
Dwell and New York Magazine have teamed up for a week of home tours, design studio tours, panel discussions, and an exhibition. Tickets are now available. Many of the events are free for readers of this blog; just click this link and enter nypress12 in the Promotional Code field.
4-7
Bridging the Nature-Culture Divide 2
The Cultural Landscape Foundation is hosting a symposium at the Museum of the City of New York on October 5 that "engage[s] experts with a range of relevant experience in the field of landscape architecture and environmental design in a discussion of woodland restoration and management in Central Park." October 4 is a reception at El Museo del Barrio, and symposium registration includes tours as part of What's Out There Weekend NYC on the 6th and 7th.
6-7
OHNY
The 10th anniversary of Open House New York, a weekend when buildings open their doors to the public, is sure to be packed to the gills with some great places to visit and tours to attend. But the full schedule, and reservations for many of the events, won't happen until September 27. I'd recommend signing up for their newsletter because many of the events fill up very quickly -- quickly like the Black Keys at Madison Square Garden.
6
DOCOMOMO US Tour Day
DOCOMOMO is an international organization that works for the preservation of modern architecture. One of the most important buildings in New York City in this regard is Eero Saarinen's TWA Terminal at JFK Airport. The organization's NY/Tri-State chapter is teaming up with OHNY to host a free open house from 10am to 4pm.
9
STILLSPOTTING NYC FINALE
"The Guggenheim and Unsound host a variety show featuring architects, artists, scientists, musicians, politicians, and philosophers... [to] wrap up the cycle of editions in the New York project and start a larger conversation about how man-made environments can be reconceived, reshaped, and redesigned to provide increased opportunities for calm and stillness." Purchase tickets via the link above.
13-14
BIts & Mortar: Architecture in the Age of Digital Communication
AIANY presents "a one-and-a-half day symposium that will bring together some of the most influential thinkers and achievers in design, technology, fabrication and publishing to discuss ways in which the discipline of architecture – enabled by fundamental technological advances– can re-establish itself as a driver of cultural change beyond the traditional boundaries of the discipline." Sunday keynote is Frank Gehry.
13-21
Cooper-Hewitt's National Design Week
"During National Design Week, Cooper-Hewitt's award-winning Education Department hosts a series of free public programs based on the vision and work of the National Design Awards honorees. National Design Week culminates with the National Design Awards gala ceremony."
18-21
Architecture and Design Film Festival
"This year's festival at Tribeca Cinemas will offer more than 25 films from around the world, panel discussions with design leaders and filmmakers and architectural driving tours of lower Manhattan."
24
Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Park Opens to the Public
The memorial designed by Louis I. Kahn four decades ago finally opens. Don't want to wait until the 24th? Reserve a spot for the October 19 open house -- I did. Related is a book talk at Aperture on the 30th with Barney Kulok (who photographed the construction of Four Freedoms Park) and Joel Smith.
26-28
Designers and Books Fair
The first Designers and Books Fair takes place at FIT with two days of programs and an exhibition of architecture and design publishers. The three-day event starts with a keynote on the 26th: Designing the Future of the Design Book.
activities, programs and exhibitions in New York City." So it's time to start planning what to do, where to go, and what to see. Below are a few of the highlights, but check out Archtober's calendar or download their PDF guide for a list of all the events taking place next month.
1-7
CITY MODERN
Dwell and New York Magazine have teamed up for a week of home tours, design studio tours, panel discussions, and an exhibition. Tickets are now available. Many of the events are free for readers of this blog; just click this link and enter nypress12 in the Promotional Code field.
4-7
Bridging the Nature-Culture Divide 2
The Cultural Landscape Foundation is hosting a symposium at the Museum of the City of New York on October 5 that "engage[s] experts with a range of relevant experience in the field of landscape architecture and environmental design in a discussion of woodland restoration and management in Central Park." October 4 is a reception at El Museo del Barrio, and symposium registration includes tours as part of What's Out There Weekend NYC on the 6th and 7th.
6-7
OHNY
The 10th anniversary of Open House New York, a weekend when buildings open their doors to the public, is sure to be packed to the gills with some great places to visit and tours to attend. But the full schedule, and reservations for many of the events, won't happen until September 27. I'd recommend signing up for their newsletter because many of the events fill up very quickly -- quickly like the Black Keys at Madison Square Garden.
6
DOCOMOMO US Tour Day
DOCOMOMO is an international organization that works for the preservation of modern architecture. One of the most important buildings in New York City in this regard is Eero Saarinen's TWA Terminal at JFK Airport. The organization's NY/Tri-State chapter is teaming up with OHNY to host a free open house from 10am to 4pm.
9
STILLSPOTTING NYC FINALE
"The Guggenheim and Unsound host a variety show featuring architects, artists, scientists, musicians, politicians, and philosophers... [to] wrap up the cycle of editions in the New York project and start a larger conversation about how man-made environments can be reconceived, reshaped, and redesigned to provide increased opportunities for calm and stillness." Purchase tickets via the link above.
13-14
BIts & Mortar: Architecture in the Age of Digital Communication
AIANY presents "a one-and-a-half day symposium that will bring together some of the most influential thinkers and achievers in design, technology, fabrication and publishing to discuss ways in which the discipline of architecture – enabled by fundamental technological advances– can re-establish itself as a driver of cultural change beyond the traditional boundaries of the discipline." Sunday keynote is Frank Gehry.
13-21
Cooper-Hewitt's National Design Week
"During National Design Week, Cooper-Hewitt's award-winning Education Department hosts a series of free public programs based on the vision and work of the National Design Awards honorees. National Design Week culminates with the National Design Awards gala ceremony."
18-21
Architecture and Design Film Festival
"This year's festival at Tribeca Cinemas will offer more than 25 films from around the world, panel discussions with design leaders and filmmakers and architectural driving tours of lower Manhattan."
24
Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Park Opens to the Public
The memorial designed by Louis I. Kahn four decades ago finally opens. Don't want to wait until the 24th? Reserve a spot for the October 19 open house -- I did. Related is a book talk at Aperture on the 30th with Barney Kulok (who photographed the construction of Four Freedoms Park) and Joel Smith.
26-28
Designers and Books Fair
The first Designers and Books Fair takes place at FIT with two days of programs and an exhibition of architecture and design publishers. The three-day event starts with a keynote on the 26th: Designing the Future of the Design Book.
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