Archive for January, 2010

Let’s all agree that Architecture with a capital A is outside of our control.

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

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Image sources: Architecture Depends (left) and http://www.greatbuildings.com/ (right)

 

I’ve always struggled with Architectural Theory and how we’re expected to reconcile the ideals with the world in which we practice, so it’s somewhat surprising to find myself having spent the last four months glued to Architecture Depends by Jeremy Till. Refreshingly this discourse refrains from telling us how things should be and instead concentrates on telling us how things are; the surprising yet almost commonsensical revelation that the world is beyond our control; from design conception to site completion our projects are buffeted by forces outside of our control and that while “we can still have vision… at the same time we need to be modest and light footed-enough to allow the vision to be adjusted to the circumstances.”

 Till’s central point is that while an architect will generally be aware of and accept the contingent nature of architecture, the profession as a whole (and in particular our methods of education and self-review) has been woefully inadequate in dealing with this situation. As a result architecture has often been left appearing detached, high-minded and aloof, and a flick through the pages of the AR or the AJ (choose the flavour depending on your country) will reveal reviews solely interested in the clarity of ideal while the general media’s architectural columns are more often than not about what the “architect” is “imposing” on the town.

A striking piece of evidence put forward , and one that is hopefully familiar to anyone who has recently been in education, is the nature of the architectural photograph which Till exhibits as the epitome of our struggle to deny contingency and to hold up perfection as the idol we must worship. Pictured above is Corbusier’s kitchen in the Villa Stein-de Monzie. An image of domestic perfection? In reality rather than capturing the occupants messy life style each item was carefully picked to follow Corbusier’s intentions (and as any Frenchman worth his salt will tell you while a teapot might look good next to a fish you’d certainly never take the two together…) Is this really how we should sell our architecture, as an ideal that doesn’t reflect life? Perhaps quite fittingly while searching for a copy of this image I came across the same scene but this time empty of the clutter of day-to-day life.  You can’t help feeling that this nicely sums up the thrust of Architecture Depends; that timeless architectural perfection cannot work for the chaos of our lives and that in imposing our ideals on a world not suited to isms we’re always destined to failure. Rather than worrying about the modernists’ mantra of “less is more” we’d probably be better off accepting that our ideas need to be accommodating. Let’s all follow Till’s own take on the matter, that “mess is the law.”

 (As a taster to the full book there’s an article from Till available online at the excellent Field Journal.)

Sustainability and Sociology

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

There was a recent article in the New York Times reporting that therapists are seeing an increase in disputes over being “green.”  One partner may feel the other is not doing enough to save the environment or a parent may make decisions that affect the entire household; issues that put strain on a relationship in an attempt to do good.  (If you’re interested in reading the article it can be found here.)  After reading the article, I thought about how as architects and designers we often try and manipulate social behavior by way of the spaces we create and how these strategies can be changed to incorporate sustainability.

PrimitiveHut

 ”Primitive Hut” by Abbe Laugier.
Image source: http://www.usc.edu.

If we consider buildings prior to the mass deployment of HVAC systems that seal the inside of buildings from the outside environment, conditions such as temperature, light, smell and sound were driving factors in how people interact with each other and their built environment.  The hearth made the house a home, it was the place that was not only a source of heat but for daily gathering and sharing.  Architecture has long been considered a struggle for light; some of the best regarded and most emulated works have ingenious methods of achieving the proper balance of letting just enough light in and keeping harsh solar radiation out – the birth of the window.  These are but two of innumerable examples of the qualities that have been eliminated by the mechanical processes that control our indoor environments.  Early ideas of the roots of architecture have always been embedded in the natural environment; take for instance the depiction of the “primitive hut” by Abbe Laugier in the eighteenth century.  Today in the twenty-first century we now struggle with returning to the idea of the natural world as integral and not exiled from our buildings.

Thus the challenge becomes not only how do we design our buildings to be more sustainable, but how do we make sustainability work towards manipulating the experience of the spaces we design and the activities/interactions that take place there?  Do the interactions of white collar workers across America change because we eliminate sick building syndrome?  Do modern families once again sit together in peace to share dinner and discuss the day’s events without the interruption of television, Facebook, texting or telephone calls?  Well that’s another issue altogether, perhaps discussion for another day.

Presenting Outside the Box

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

I recently tested an innovative presentation tool with some pleasing results.  I’ve been on the prowl for something not so “PowerPoint-ish.” Something that provides some flexibility in a presentation’s order and takes a different “twist.”

Prezi.com was my find.  It’s kind of like throwing PowerPoint, a mind map, and spinning roller coaster into a blender, with the ability to at any time put on the brakes, zoom out for a bird’s eye view and dive right back in.

You assemble your presentation online (pro version allows offline creation) and then you can send a link to your client or download it locally to your computer for presentation.

Presentations can incorporate pictures, video, PDF files, etc.  Other than having to watch the resolution size, and being aware of the “public” listing of your presentations, everything worked extremely well.  

Check out these examples and see what kind of presentations “spin” to mind for you.

Any suggestions for other cool presentation formats?  Leave them in the comments below.

Biomimicry and Design

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Image source: http://asknature.org

 

Recently, engineers and scientists faced with challenges are asking themselves the question “how would nature solve this problem?”  Doing so has helped some to come up with innovative and environmentally friendly solutions to some of the biggest challenges.

Almost all design challenges seem to have been solved by nature in very efficient and interesting ways as well.

The science of biomimicry is being embraced by many designers also, as it provides a vast vault of time-tested and proven natural solutions to a host of challenges.

AskNature.org is a beta open source project started by The Biomimicry Institute and sponsored by Autodesk Inc. to collect and organize all of nature’s 3.8 billion+ years of design and engineering brilliance and how some of this knowledge is currently being used by sustainability innovators.

Below are a few interesting resources and video links that I believe some designers might find pretty interesting and informative.

 

 

http://www.stocorp.com/webfiles.nsf/htmlmedia/lotusan/$file/long_md.wmv

http://asknature.org

http://www.biomimicryguild.com/indexguild.html

FREE Movie Night!

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

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Last Tuesday FREE Movie Night – Addicted to Plastic

Date: Tuesday, January 26th
Time: Doors open at 6:00 p.m.  The movie will start at 6:30 p.m.
Location: Dallas Center for Architecture (1909 Woodall Rogers Freeway, Suite 100, Dallas, 75201)
Cost: FREE!

Come to the Dallas Center for Architecture on Tuesday night to see a free showing of Addicted to Plastic, directed by Ian Connacher.  Addicted to Plastic is a point-of-view style documentary that encompasses three years of filming in twelve countries on five continents, including two trips to the middle of the Pacific Ocean where plastic debris accumulates.  The film details plastic’s path over the last 100 years and provides a wealth of expert interviews on practical and cutting edge solutions to recycling, toxicity, and biodegradability.  These solutions – which include plastic made from plants – will provide viewers with a new perspective about our future with plastic.

For more information on the film, please visit http://www.bullfrogfilms.com/catalog/atp.html.

FREE Movie Night is sponsored by the North Texas Green Council (formerly called the USGBC North Texas Chapter), the Emerging Green Builders, and the AIA Committee on the Environment (COTE).  FREE Movie Night is held the last Tuesday of every month at the Dallas Center for Architecture.  The movies are always green/sustainability/socially conscious, and they are usually documentaries.  All showings are open to everyone, so bring a friend or two if you like.

Vintage Printing

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

A short film documenting the process of printing business cards on 1920′s printing presses.

Keegan Meegan Press & Bindery from :::MAGNETIC ARCHIVES:: on Vimeo.

Roar Before the 24

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

MKS-3336

(from left to right) Racecar champion Davy Jones, HKS Architect Principal Melanie Cornell and husband, Jamie,  and Hunt Construction Company Vice President John McCutchen attended the “Roar Before the 24” on January 9 prior to the Rolex 24 At Daytona International Speedway, held in Florida on January 30-31, 2010.  On a pro-bono basis, HKS volunteered to design Godstone Ranch Motorsport’s Corvette “heart” red graphics to raise funds for the Texas Heart Institute. The Rolex 24 At Daytona features the top racers in the world of sports car racing in the ultimate test of man (and woman) and machine.

Trace Paper in your Inbox

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

RSS-iconYou probably see it everywhere.  RSS.  (Or, you see the RSS icon.)  But, what the heck is it anyway?  RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication.  By subscribing to an RSS feed, you can receive updates from frequently updated websites or blogs.  So, instead of always visiting your favorite blogs, you can have them fed to you via your inbox.  If you use Outlook here’s how you can add HKS Trace Paper to your feeds:

1. Copy feed link – http://www.hkstracepaper.com/?feed=rss2
2. Right click on RSS feeds in your Outlook left sidebar
3. Click on “Add a New RSS Feed…”
4. Paste the link into the box and click “Add”
5. One last pop up, then you’re good!

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HKS on YouTube

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

For more videos visit the HKS YouTube Channel.

iArchitecture

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Got a new iPhone for the Holidays?  Here are a few apps to make your architectural career a little more efficient.  (Or in some cases not.)

image001inchCalc+:  I got into architecture for the design and fun.  Not math.  This little app is great for figuring out those pesky fractional inches.

 

 

image003ReQall: It’s 3:00am.  You jolt out of bed because you just remembered you need to call Joe Client at 2:00 on Friday.  Start this app, speak “call joe at 2:00 Friday” and it’ll show up on your calendar and as an email reminder just be for 2:00.  Also good for making lists out in the field.

 

image005Dragon Dictation:  Need to make some notes and fire them off in an email, text, etc.  Dragon Dictation is great for speech recognition dictation while on the go.

 

 

image007Tripit:  Set up a free account on their website.  When you receive an itinerary from your travel agent by email, forward it to trip it and you get a well organized itinerary on your phone.  Additional info like weather, delays, or maps are available right from your itinerary.  It even advises you if your seat is good or bad on the specific plane you’ll be on.

 

image009Dropbox:  File sync app.  Great for making sure you’re files are always with you. Free for the first 2 Gigs.

 

 

image011GoogleEarth:  Google earth in your pocket.  Enough said.

 

 

 

image013AutoStitch:  At a job site, did you forget your camera.  Use autostitch to “stitch” together several photos for a great panorama.

 

 

image015PSMobile: Photoshop in your pocket. Enough said.

 

 

image017Kayak: A smaller version of www.kayak.com.  Great for checking out flight times and costs while on the go.

 

 

image019LastPass:  Can’t remember your hundreds of passwords.  Let LastPass do it for you.  No matter what machine you’re on you can get your password and login in, even on your iphone.

 

 

image021iBeer:  Enjoy a refreshing beverage after a long day.