Architecture

Building A Yurt Kazakh Style

Found this while Stumbling around this morning…Can’t wait to try one of my own.

TrailerWrap by Michael Hughes

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Love this idea, though the economic model does not seem to work. Trailer parks exist to fill a gap in the market. Anyone who can afford to will buy a stick-built house. Not to mention the fact that trailers actually depreciate in value rather than appreciate. But this one does look good:

"To Hughes, trailer parks offer an architectural opportunity to address questions of affordable housing. And he believes that trailers simply make sense as high-density alternatives to suburban sprawl. But first, they need to be made into attractive living spaces. "This is refabricated housing," Hughes says. "What does it mean to have light pouring into your home, with nine-foot instead of seven-foot ceilings? We wanted to highlight what’s possible even on a small house."

Read the rest here

via

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Wind Dam by Chetwood Associates

Winddam01 Just when you think you’ve seen it all, out of Inhabitat comes word of this terrific idea for green power design; the wind dam. It feels like a Phillip K Dick prop, but it’s for real. Check it out:

"The spinnaker shape is similar to the mainsail of a yacht, and is thought to be particularly effective in capturing the wind with it’s kite-like properties. Project architect Laurie Chetwood stated that the shape of the sail was influenced by functionality and a desire to produce something “sculptural”. “The sail looks like a bird dipping its beak into the water, which will be much less of a blot on this beautiful and unblemished landscape…It is also highly effective at capturing the wind because it replicates the work of a dam and doesn’t let the wind escape in the way it does using traditional propellers.”

via Inhabitat

Project7ten: NOW in Venice!

Project7ten Gonna miss this one, but let me know what y’all think…

Los Angelenos looking to continue their environmental education can head to Venice to take a tour of the recently completed LEED® Platinum certified Project7ten house, before it goes on sale to the highest bidder. Real estate developer Tom Schey (in conjunction with the A+D Museum’s “Enlightened Development” exhibition) is opening the doors of his environmentally conscious home to the public to raise awareness about simple everyday choices and green products that can lead to a healthier living environment. Throughout the month of October, locals and tourists alike are invited to tour the cutting-edge structure and catch a glimpse of the future of sustainable building—which in this case includes solar paneling, recycled materials and certified lumber for building, as well as reusable rain water irrigation systems, lower gas emissions, and more. Proceeds from the tours and the sale of the home will be donated to Healthy Child Healthy World, an organization dedicated to educating the public about environmental toxins that effect children’s health.

Project7ten
710 Milwood Avenue
Venice, CA
ph: 310.454.0290

Solar Decathlon Competition:

This little house caught our attention yesterday when we heard about the Latest Solar Decathalon Competition in DC. Congrats, and lets all steal these ideas and put them to good use for one and all!

Solardecathlonwashingtonmon "When Cornell students David Wax, Emile Chin-Dickey, Stephanie Horowitz, Benjamin Uyeda, and Jordan Goldman set out trying to create an off-the-grid solar-powered home for the biennial Solar Decathlon Competition, little did they know that their efforts would launch their careers as gurus of Zero-Energy design. The Solar Decathlon, which is held on the mall in Washington DC every two years — and kicks off again tomorrow! — is a green design-build competition where student teams compete to see who can create the most energy efficient solar house. The Cornell students’ cleverly designed home was so smart and energy efficient that it took second prize in 2005’s prestigious competition, inspiring the group to start their own business dedicated to designing zero energy homes.

so many great recources here

La Révolution du Jour: Art, Memory, Form and Peter Schjeldahl

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Form is how memory works.

Peter Schjeldahl dropped the above mini-aphorism on us about three-quarters of the way through his Oct. 8th, article in The New Yorker, "All Together Now" which covered the 2007 Istanbul Biennial, among other things. Coincidentally, I’ve been thinking alot about memory too, mostly because I’ve recently gotten back in touch with some old friends who seem to have entirely memories of our childhood together and I’m not sure how this could be. After reading Schjeldal’s article, I thought I’d try to get some of these thoughts down on paper and see what kind of connections I could find.

Sarcastically, the first thing I thought after reading Schjeldal’s assertion was, whew! Now we don’t have to worry about the hippocampus, basal ganglia or all those pesky neural pathways in the limbic system. Forget those cumbersome classifications like working memory, phonological memory [whatever that is], visual/spacial memory, procedural, declarative, and semantic memory. Olfactory sensations? Emotions? Nope. Form is it.[yep, I know about these obscure things because I'm on meds that influence these systems and I have an obsession with knowing how I'm 'knowing', if you know what I mean...]

Guernica Well okay, obviously he didn’t meen it that way you’re thinking, but I’m not so sure. Schjeldahl made the statement, with no apparent irony, in support of a remark by curator Okwui Enwezor that "contemporary art spaces risk becoming ‘incubators of amnesia,’ devoid of historical recall." In this context we have to conclude that Schjeldahl would like to see art spaces–and by extension art works–that are ‘incubators of remembering,’ and ‘rife with historical recall.’ As if David’s The Death of Marat, or Picasso’s Guernica were viable models to aspire to. Too much? Maybe, but Schjeldahl’s statement certainly betrays a longing for a more engaged, even efficacious art. The notion is touching, nostalgic and powerful.

Lascaux After all, the history of the relationship between images and real things is one of continual distanciation; as EH Gombrich had it, "in primitive societies, the thing and its image were simply two different, that is, physically distinct, manifestations of the same energy or spirit. Hence, the supposed efficacy of images in propitiating and gaining control over powerful presences. Those powers, those presences were present in them."

In other words, the power to paint the bull was the power to kill the bull. In this sense, art did change the world, it gave man the ability [psychologically and therefore physically] to survive. It was as if we were literally in Plato’s Cave; the shadows and the reality behind the shadows were one and the same. Not entirely unlike some video games…

After_walker_evans_sherrie_levineToday, it’s a post-Postmodern, post-Simulacrum, post-Theory, post-[insert favorite enemy here] world, and art is made up of:

a vertigo of serial signs–shadowless, impossible to sublimate, immanent in their repetition–who can say where the reality of what they simulate resides? -J. Baudrillard

Art has evolved–like any other complex endeavor–mathematics, science, poetry–quite indifferenent to concerns outside itself, with its own lanquage, theories, factions, professionals, critics and fans.

And while it often takes everyday life as its subject, contemporary art does not address an everyday audience. When Sherrie Levine rephotographed Walker Evans work, did anyone outside the art world take notice, except to laugh, jeer or write dismissive articles in local newsletters? Which brings us again to the subject of language. Memory, history, politics and form are all of a piece, unified through language, naming and knowing. In other words, we’ve been hi-jacked once again by narrative.

RashomonNarrative, not form, is the stuff of memory. If the form we are talking about is visual, which one assumes given Schjeldahl’s profession and the subject of his article, then his use of the term is an obvious set-up, and a good one at that. For if form is how memory works, it begs the question, do the blind have no memory? How would the lack of this one sensation eliminate a major aspect of cognition?

It doesn’t, obviously, and Schjeldahl isn’t implying that it does. I think he is implying something entirely different: synesthesia, or the union of the senses. Can we smell red? Can a sound taste bitter? Or in this case, can one see history ['see, that is history!], or more precisely, can memory be seen ['that is what I saw!'...Rashomon anyone?] both questions which have at their core the classic aesthetic nut, ‘Can art change the world?’

Too big a jump? I don’t think so, given the context of Schjeldahl’s article. It’s implied by the guilt-ridden invocation of the idea that artists somehow have a responsibility to keep people from forgetting…about political and social injustice and atrocities one assumes.

But that is not how art changes the world.

Piss_christ_serranoEvery ‘outrageous’ or ‘blasphemous’ or ‘seditious’ work of art is always already dismissed by the general public–the audience it most likely intended to arouse [Serrano's Piss Christ anyone?]–and counted on in advance on by the ‘institution’–the very power it probably intended to denounce. Need evidence? The following list is in no particular order and is by no means complete: Constructivism, de Stijl, Bauhaus, Dada, La Révolution surréaliste, Situationists, The Personal as Political, Fluxus, Happennings, Futurism, Expressionism, Suprematism, and most of the art of the seventies…

Whether stated or implied, much of this art attempted to align itself with the la révolution  du jour. Of course, I’m just as guilty as the next. I’d like to believe that the practice I’ve given my life over to has some kind of importance beyond the limited influence of galleries and publications, friends and critics. I often play with these ideas in my work, developing projects that use the language of global aspiration and political ambition. The projects have been accused by some of signifying the inability of art to change the world. Conversely, they’ve been called flat-footed agit prop or propoganda; an ironic attempt to revive a 60′s, grass-roots ethos.

But that is not how art changes the world.

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So now after all this, how does art change the world? I don’t really know, but I have a kind of working definition which is helping me in the studio and elsewhere. It goes something like:

  • It can let us know that we are not alone.
  • It can make us question assumtions we didn’t know we had.
  • It can show us things in a different way.
  • It can stimulate our imaginations
  • It can be absolutely useless, and in so doing, be invaluable
  • It can make the world a better place by the simple fact of its existance.

I’ve strayed far from the subject of memory, true. But I think this post makes a kind of sense, because just as we need to believe we are doing something worthwhile, we need also memory, for as Saul Bellow said:

Memories keep the wolf of insignificance from the door.

(to be continued…)

Small is Big: Unless Big is Big

This is fantastic! Particularly in the light of the ideas I am working with in "Small Spaces" which is a kind of manifesto for the small and pragmatic space. According to the author, the land of blarney, leprechauns and my ancestors is going in exactly the opposite direction of my current work. A really great article from the Irish daily. Check it out:

IrelandA few years ago, the philosopher EF Schumacher propounded the idea that small was beautiful. He had a point and in a world where a new brutalism was becoming everywhere apparent — in the scale of commercial enterprise, in architecture, in the size of our cities — he soon had a following.

But not so much in Ireland. In Ireland we were fed up of small. We were, we were endlessly told, a small nation and we came from small farms on a small island where small shops served our needs in the small towns and cities which were our typical urban centres.

Nor did small is beautiful seem to make much sense as an aesthetic doctrine. Why should it? But you may think that it made and makes at least as much sense as its opposite, a fact which it is necessary to emphasise just now because in Ireland at this very moment we seem to be moving fast towards a general view that Big is Beautiful without reservation or further qualification.

In fact, judging from a lot of what is admired merely for being big, aesthetics has very, very little to do with it.

I live beside an infant school where young mothers (the "yummy mummies" of David McWilliams’ mythology) deliver their small children in the morning and then collect them in the afternoon. Almost one and all, they use SUVs and people carriers for this. Mostly the ratio is one small child per one large vehicle. But the attraction of these monstrous conveyances is not their practicality. Nor is it, I need hardly say their beauty — in fact they are amongst the ugliest motor cars ever made. What makes the young women’s eyes shine when they sit in behind the wheel of one of these dangerous monsters is simply their size, their power and their cost.

There was more than a touch of the yummy mummy about many of the responses when the plans for a new building on the Jurys-Berkeley Court site were unveiled recently.

The proposed building will be 37 stories high, or more than three times the height of Liberty Hall and 12 metres higher than the Spire in O’Connell Street. In other words, it will be a giant, even among the many other huge new skyscrapers which are planned. Mr Michael Colgan’s eyes evidently shone at the thought.

"I think we have to start producing really, really magnificent architecture, and this is it," he told a reporter for this newspaper. Mr Colgan is an arbiter elegantiarum — artistic director of the Gate Theatre, former member of the Arts Council — but this seems to be a reference to size rather than beauty.

However, art will be suitably looked after. Mr Colgan is to be in charge of what is described as a "cultural centre", provision for which is included in the plans. What will go on there?

"What I have planned is that you are going to come in here during the day and you are going to hear music. You are going to see dance studios through glass partitions. You are going to have public art."

Actually, it sounds a little more like Soho in the old days than Ballsbridge in the future.

Mr Paul McGuinness is also, in a sense, an arbiter of the True, the Good and the Beautiful — manager of U2, former member of the Arts Council, etc. But in relation to ultra-large buildings he seems more concerned with hard-edged stuff like inevitability, progress and size than with aesthetics.

"The city has to go up … we have to allow high-rise in the city," he said.

But he did not say why.

more here

Stitch Room @ Vitra Design Museum

Stitch3 "At the intersection of green design, space-making, and textiles, the Bouroullec brothers’ Stitch Room is one part design genius, one part child-like playtime. Known for designs that cross the boundary between furniture and architecture, the creations of this design duo tend to emphasize possibilities, and their exploration of space in The Stitch Room is no exception. Using eco-friendly textiles from the ultra-green Danish company Kvadrat, the brothers have created organized, versatile spaces that can be transformed to almost any imaginable use."

(more…)

Beer, Babes and Butoh:The Bridge Motel Blowout, Seattle 9/15/07

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…For those of you who don’t already know, the Bridge Motel has been a Seattle icon of sorts for the last 50 years; needles in the sheets and no questions asked. A year ago DK Pan took over as manager with an eye to holding this event just before the motel was to be razed [I thought that was Pan in the picture on the left, holding the red umbrella on the roof of the motel, but it was probably either Sheri Brown or Diana Garcia-Snyder performing "Praying Walk", I think...]. The only stipulation for artists was to avoid the subject of drugs, prostitution, or other obvious cheap motel clichés.

We showed up around 7:30 and jumped right in, though we didn’t have the courage to open the door to ‘The Van’–Mike Min’s contribution to the festivities–at least not at first.

The event drew around 1200 people (according to the people who should know), though the small footprint of the motel and parking lot made it seem like twice that number. We found a place in the line and settled in.

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Standing in the phenomenally long line, I thought I heard the sound of howling, and as the crowd parted, there it was, a perfectly preserved, young coyote–stuffed, mind you–sitting in a Red Flyer wagon, flanked by the curious and the confused…

read the rest HERE

Arne Quinze @ DailyServing.com

Arnequinze91007 "On Sept. 14 Belgian artist/designer Arne Quinze’s latest work "Cityscape" will open on the suburban streets of Brussels, Belgium. The enormous wooden sculpture is 131-feet long, 82-feet wide and 39-feet high and will stand for year in Brussels’ luxury district. Quinze, the artistic director of design company Quinze and Milan,says of his piece, "’Cityscape’ resembles a frozen movement, speed caught in time." The piece encourages interaction, people are able to walk through and experience the changes in light as the sun comes through the wood. The aritst built a similar structure last year at the Burning Man Festival in Nevada. At the end of the festival the structure was set on fire. A self-taught artist, Quinze first found his creative outlet with graffitti as a homeless 15-year-old. Later this month Quinze has several pieces in Mutagenesis, a solo exhibition at the Abitare Il Tempo design exhibition in Verona, Italy. To listen to a discussion with the artist on WPS1 Art Radio click here."

via DailyServing.com