Wednesday, November 12, 2008


I just found this image from Bruce Mau's book - powerlines collapsed under the weight of snow - completely beautiful and exciting, from a blog I stumbled across (called predesign)
and really wanted to share.

Monday, October 6, 2008

the re-surfacing of Teddy Cruz

A friend sent me this article on Artkrush, an interview with Teddy Cruz. I wrote about him last year when he was in town and still find his work fascinating; he experiments with and highlights the difference between the uber-planned, government/developer spaces (formal) and the socially determined (informal), and although he doesn't go for the jugular, hints at the corrosion of our democracy reflected in these regulated spaces and the inability of citizens to responsibly make these decisions in modern planning. The current paradigm strikes me as disturbingly contrary to the core values of democracy, and suggests that the inhabitants of the informal might be better in touch with true democracy than those of the formal. I also really enjoy his description of possible 'pixelization' of these mcmansions, possibly the first of many 'pixelizations' and a movement toward a high-resolution built world: designed not for magazines and elevations, but for experiencing up-close. I recommend you read it.

Monday, September 8, 2008

The Olmsteds and American urbanity, present and future

I never realized how much of America the Olmsteds shaped. I knew about the parks, of course. but then there were the parkways, campuses, and enormous subdivisions they planned, setting the tone for practically a century of urban and landscape planning.

The Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site and Arnold Arboretum hosted a panel discussion this past Sunday. Historian Charles Beveridge, UVA's Ethan Carr and Yale's Alexander Garvin and Dolores Hayden (who has authored some very interesting books) spoke specifically on the future of the Olmsted legacy, past and future. The family (Olmsted's sons have careers as prodigious as his own) defined the American city and suburb, with a little help from the City Beautiful movement, etc. - injecting a thirst for "natural" (though heavily engineered) green spaces into the public mind, a noble cause in the filthy cities of their time. In retrospect, they had a hand in our contemporary problem of sprawl.

I can't help but suspect there are solutions to sprawl in Olmsted ideas. His insistance that nature should be part of daily experience and that parks should be inclusive of all activity made me think of my daily commute. It also conflicts with the strict definition of American public space as leasure space, where the business of life is excluded. All public spaces in America, save a very few, are either strict leasure olmstead parks, or elaborate ornament for shopping or civic use. Rarely is there the richness of piazza life, were citizens interact in real-time.

The day left me dreaming of my urban streets filled not with sooty smog but the Olmstedian picturesque, my front door contuguous with all-purpose, useful parks. The convergence of these ideas - Olmsted, Shared Space, super-scale "machines as garens", is a hopeful sign, let's hope I get to be a part of it. ;)


Saturday, August 23, 2008

'Machine as the Garden' & the future of development

The Spring/Summer Harvard Design Magazine's main theme is non-formal cities, a hot topic and certainly a rich one - but the there is an an exciting counterpoint to this issue. Nathalie Beauvais, examines an exceptionally 'formal' planned city (well, campus extension): Harvard's Allston Campus. And her article is, mercifully, free. 

She asserts elegantly that the environmental "performance targets... can be read like source code... [and] will direct the forms of the built environment", facades will perform as permeable, reactive skins, and an entire ecosystem of solar panels, geothermal wells, bioswales and their compatriots will increase efficiency and protect the Charles river. The article explains much better than I can (links will remain valid until the issue is archived, I'm guessing).

Frequently the sheer scale of contemporary development seems overwhelming, homogeneous, a dehumanizing beast to attach stone veneer to or rally against at town meeting. What is so exciting about this article and the idea of the working landscape is that entire neighborhoods are being thought of as systems and structures; that scale is being used to enable harmonious diversity and increase sustainability rather than threaten these things.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Shared Spaces: harnessing the civility of people

A recent article in the Boston Globe Magazine suggests "Boston drivers are bad, but Boston pedestrians might be worse", presumably because they break traffic rules. But what if the rules are the problem? Because of the questionable habits of both parties, many streets in Boston exist in a de facto state of Shared Space, the slowly & steadily growing idea of Dutch planner Hans Monderman. It seems we are edging toward the recognition that the urban street is an altogether unique creature.

The idea is that all our fussing and stoplights and walklights and orchestration for safety is making our streets less safe. Drivers and pedestrians believe if they obey, everything will be fine. People stop thinking. Shared Space advocates the removal of curbs, signs, lights, etc. and letting people figure it out for themselves. Calling on common sense and cooperation, it harnesses the civility of people rather than letting it atrophy. Apparently it actually does reduce accidents, and reportedly reduces congestion due to increased efficiency.

The aesthetic value of clearing the clutter is promising as well, in addition to the promise of freeing urban life from the four foot strip of concrete mashed against building facades.

It's had success in the Dutch town of Drachten and in Germany.

The discussion brings the larger political implications of urban design tantalizingly close to the surface, but that's a post for another day.


"We're losing our capacity for socially responsible behaviour, ...The greater the number of prescriptions, the more people's sense of personal responsibility dwindles." [4]
- Hans Monderman






Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Living in parks

I've abandoned my blog and I'm sorry. Spring came, work got crazy, the academic season ended, and I've realized a phenomenal urban situation is evolving in our fine city.

I live in parks.

I wake up in the morning and weave through the narrow streets of my near medieval-density neighborhood, cross two lanes of (admittedly ornery) traffic and find my way down the lush greenery of the Greenway, through fountains and lawns for at least a third of my commute, then into urban fabric so dense it makes traffic seem ridiculous (it takes much longer to drive than to walk, and once you get there you can't park anywhere near by). My whole life is arranged around this park: work, gym, friends, groceries, farmer's market, favorite bars, the T, the highway tucked neatly underneath. Even trips to the bookstore, library, barber, and clothes are more than half spent in the Common, Garden, and Commonwealth Mall in that order. When I take the train to Cambridge I have found ways to do most of my walking next to lawns, as are my frequent destinations. I run on the esplanade, far from the road as possible. I'm not alone.

It's significant because it could make urban density more than palatable to the vast majority of people, reversing the wasteful cycle of sprawl and highway extension we are locked in.

The thing it's missing is contiguity: the ability to walk from a building directly into a park setting, to avoid almost entirely the damaging effects of particulate exhaust inhalation that will certainly surface in health care costs as generations age, dangers of traffic to children, and prevent the foolish hope that you are that very special person for whom the universe has reserved a parking spot directly in front of your destination.

This does exist in one quiet but enormously pregnant instance: the "corridor" park that runs between the Back Bay and South end, however no buildings open onto it, not one building admits it's proximity even though the park is lined with wealthy residents and their high-end retail establishments - what a precedent that could be. Oh well.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

cyborg urbanism: Matthew Gandy, Geographer

Last week I went to go see what Geographer Matthew Gandy had to say about cyborg urbanism, mainly because it's a ridiculous title for a lecture, he is a Geographer, and it was beautiful out and I wanted to wander around Harvard Square.

His lecture delivered on the promised sci-fi kitsch from the moment he stood up at the podium, thirtyish with that skinny, wild-haired supernerd genius look and continued with references to awesome, campy sci-fi pop culture & movies (Metropolis sticks out in my mind).

He also delivered on substance, putting some meat on the study-but-inanimate bones of science fiction: he explained the term 'cyborg' and illustrated how it could be applied to the city, if we think of the city as an organism.

cyborg: Abbreviation of cybernetic organism.

cybornetics: the interdisciplinary study of the structure of complex systems, especially communication processes, control mechanisms and feedback principles. The essential goal of cybernetics is to understand and define the functions and processes of systems that have goals, and that participate in circular, causal chains that move from action to sensing to comparison with desired goal to action.

feedback and goals are the key to this idea. At first I was confused, he talked about the cyborg as an organism with both natural and artificial systems, and when we apply that to the city as an organism it falls a little flat - urbanity is natural (bodies) and artificial (streets, buildings). The novelty is in the idea of the digital enabling the city to pursue goals through feedback loops, presumably responding mechanically. This relates to a lot of the exciting work being done at the MIT Media Lab by folks like the Tangible Media Group and Ambient Intelligence Group. It also leaves the door open for material feedback systems that rely on the material's innate properties to create the desired mechanical reactions, rather than depending on delicate electrical systems.

I don't really know how this all relates to geography.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

seeing our cities: Cervin Robinson's "By Way of Broadway" and our urban experience

I went to see architectural photographer Cervin Robinson's work the other day. It is titled "By Way of Broadway" and is a series of shots up and down Broadway in New York City, to show a cross-section of Manhattan.
The photos were largely deadpan, head-on views of buildings, with a few perspectives in the mix. While it didn't seem to be the intent of the exhibit, it struck me how little we see our cities as we scurry up and down the sidewalks, mashed up against the buildings in single-file by the rush of cars.

Our entire urban lives are forced into high-speed linearity. But pedestrian life is omni-directional. Do we not loose some richness of urbanity with this tunnel vision? It seems like our buildings are strangled by ropes of traffic, isolated, unable to reciprocate or participate as anything but anonymous, perpendicular shelter or distant monument in this rush.


I found this pdf of his images, hopefully it will remain after the exhibit announcement is gone.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

the inevitable Rose Kennedy Greenway commentary

The Rose Kennedy Greenway, flower of Boston's Big Dig, is nearing completion and there are a lot of things to say about it in terms of American use of open space, park obsession and urban shame (it's OK that we aren't suburban, really)... thankfully I have this article from the Boston Globe's Tom Keane to take the edge off my bloviation temptation...

Monday, March 10, 2008

big talk about the formal/informal

There's a lot of talk about the divide between the "formal" (i.e., the planned, the controlled, the centralized) and the "informal" (messy, unplanned life), frequently the formal being associated with the first world, mcmansion, gated-community mentality (although the "first-world" status of gated communities is debatable) and the informal embodied in it's most pure form in Brazilian favellas and the dream worlds of Lebbus Woods.

I'm watching a fantastic video of a GSD lecture by Teddy Cruz (fantastic b/c, in addition to the content, I am in my sweatpants, eating dinner, and able to pause-and-rewind). He is giving a fascinating tour of the Tijuana/San Deigo border and the exchange that is going on there - the clash of the corporation-saturated southern California and the disorder of Mexican Tijuana. Drug dealer's tunnels through earth and buildings, entire houses picked up and transported south to make room for new ones, a double-headed Trojan Horse, built for transparency, straddling the boarder. I could go off on a dozen tangents.

He asserts, as many do, that the formal is ignorant of the informal, which is hard to deny. But isn't the formal just a reaction to the informal? Isn't it a clumsy, ham-fisted reaction to the informal, deriving it's existence from the very thing it seeks to squash?

Isn't it more than that, but actually a product of the failures of the informal?

look at the 'formal' systems around you - they seem to sink into the cracks in our "informal' society, where tight social circles fail and crime sneaks in, the formality of police force oozes in after it. Where private/civic organizations fail to provide comprehensive and open education, public education arises. Where the social contract fails to moderate land use, zoning arrives.

The strength of the organic, freely determined will always overwhelm the hollow and the formal, but can we guide and accelerate this to ensure it is as positive as possible?

Monday, February 18, 2008

Hylozoic soil - mechanical earth.

Philip Beesley's “Hylozoic Soil” in Montreal – this stuff is unbelievable. I found it during my portfolio binge and didn’t have the energy to report it to all my devoted readers (hi mom!) but it relates to a project I was developing for my portfolio that didn’t make it in… Hylozoic Soil reacts to human presence, like some renaissance garden folly/fantasy, the very earth comes alive to meet your needs.
The prototype seems reacts to human presence, it seems designed to amaze and possibly terrify - it tries to touch you. !

what hylozoic means.


Thursday, February 14, 2008

architecture and the modern experience

David Claerbout is currently exhibiting at MIT’s List Visual Arts Center, which I just visited (I figured I may not be in Boston that much longer, so I should take advantage of all the free awesomeness that I can). His work, from what I could tell, deals a lot with the passage of time, light as a marker/narrator of a sequence of images or scenes, and from my brief visit a lot about modern loneliness (a condition that is thoroughly modern, I have recently come to realize and will address individually at some point).

Naturally his emphasis on light creates a great deal of emphasis on space, inserting something architectural into many pieces. One seemed to comment directly on a question modern architecture has been dancing around for a while: the role of self-determination, community determination, and variety.

“Sections of a Happy Moment, 2007”, is a series of images, like a slide show, of a blissful afternoon shared by an extended Chinese family in the courtyard of a massive, urban-renewal/Corbusian housing development. After a few slides pass, emptiness begins to undermine sincerity, both of the activity (a few children toss a ball, all watch) and of the housing project (thousands must live in the complex, only one other party is seen). It begins to seem set up, promotional, propagandistic.

While this calls into question many aspects of modern living, for me it highlighted the role of self-determination in modern architecture: in our scale-crazed development paradigm, do we really deliver usable assets to clients? Did this family choose this bleak community of their own free will, and would others? Modern Americans do not, a visit to any of these archi-dictatorial creations will reveal.

Who does the architect serve, and who should be served?


Saturday, February 9, 2008

why I love bare concrete monoliths














Library at the University of Brasilia (UNB), from MasonPritchett's Rotch travelling scholarship blog.

the breaking point

New technologies have a tendency to bull-doze the previously existing systems, video kills the radio star, so to speak. But you don't want to always watch a video, for example, while you are driving. Video has turned out to be a compelling way to re-tell a song and develop themes that are not explicit in the audio alone, and is a fantastic complement to radio - however, I don't think too many hard working people get home from work and watch music videos. They do, however, listen to the radio all the way home. New technologies overwhelm, people take them too far, but eventually they reach a breaking point after which they settle down and complement existing ones, enriching rather than just replacing.

Cars opened entire new worlds to our parents and grandparents - any mid-century movie is flush with the romance of the automobile, hard to deny. The lifestyles it has afforded are bewildering in retrospect - an entire generation moved from cramped, dirty cities into lush, spacious towns, remote except for the high-speed luxury of the automobile. But our generation has witnessed the wastelands spawned by this lifestyle, the placelessness, the degraded urban condition even while our cities are enriched by this accelerated transportation.

We sit in our cars, alone, stuck in traffic on the way to the greater togetherness cars promised.

It seems we have reached a breaking point with regard to automobile dependency, people seem to be slowly recognizing the comfort and vivacity of pedestrian life, not to mention its environmental benefits. Cars are an essential complement to urban life, bringing greater concentration and diversity to and between, but they are a means and not an end.

Mitchell Joachim's 'soft car', more an urban planning tool than automobile advancement (of course it is that, too).
new urbanism, a good impulse popularly embraced
pressure for density in my own Boston neighborhood


The same can be said of the standard computer, the time will come when we free ourselves from the relentless screen-restricted information and find other ways to interface with an increasingly networked humanity.

There is no cool site or article to link to for this, I'm just putting my thoughts down.

Monday, January 21, 2008

wefeelfine.org

the previous post reminded me of something only vaguely related to architecture - in that it was in METROPOLIS mag a while ago and I meant to share it... more poetic & utterly unique moments serendipitously created on the internet... wefeelfine.org is a site that matches a variety of feelings, conditions, locations etc from blogs and presents an utterly irreplicable moment - except for the snapshots, which include tagged images I assume. I actually replicated one below.

they are little snippets, sentiments and thoughts from a location, feeling, weather condition etc that unites people. I did Boston and was reminded of the unique character of these folks, and why, at the end of the day, I still do love this place and call it home.

watch out for the porno though. it seems to be unfiltered. gross.




Check out more of his work at www.number27.org.

knitting the internet

some ingenious people have once again tapped into the poetic ephemera of the internet, weaving RSS feeds into fabric and making kinda dumpy but super awesome sweatshirts out of it. what a lovely and fantastic idea - thanks again, architectradure, for sharing. (I'm going to direct you to her blog so she gets the cred.)

http://architectradure.blogspot.com/2008/01/knitting-rss-feed-data.html


a fascinating exploration of the unimagined mass production of almost unreplicable objects: the machine will never create two of the same patters.

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

chairs!


after a long absence from the blogoshpere, I've finally got the time to comb through all that I have missed and found these chairs on one of my favorite blogs, architectradure. I thought they were kind of funky and lighthearted and I am always struck by fully modern ideas within traditional packaging - there is something so egalitarian about being accepting of popular taste and using it as a tool to make innovation immediately accessible to everyone... anyway, chairs!

http://www.kraud.de/aktuell.html