Archive for the ‘Possibilities’ Category

h1

Your Next Lasercutter Project

December 14, 2007

The makers of Pepakura have released pop-up card making software for Windows:

h1

New Lunar Habitat Will Not Be Built With NURBS

October 10, 2007

In a cursory glance through the authors of the International Space University’s “Luna GAIA:
a Closed Loop Habitat for the Moon”
, it must be noted that though there is a chiropractor and an aquanaut/artist among the authors, there is not one architect. What does this say about the relevancy of our profession? As one would imagine, their diagrams are static and child-like…

via SlashDot Science/ Cosmos: http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/node/1646

h1

ArchiPORN and the city of the future.

September 29, 2007

Here’s some content from XEFIROTARCH, aka Hernan Diaz-Alonso – a re imagined Los Angeles of 2106. The entry received an honorable mention in the Discovery Channel, “City of the Future Competition.” It’s Archigram for the digital techniques crowd, full of kitsch, and possibly a little bit ridiculous.

Anyhow, more to come on Hernan – we’re transcribing a lecture from his Theory Mini-series from Spring 2007. In the mean time – What’s your city of the future? and if you’re looking for some parameters, here’s a link to the current AFHny competition – What if NY?

and

(old) City of the Future coverage in the Times

h1

Spreading The Green Message – Literally, a call to arms (or green thumbs)

September 22, 2007

It is in architecture’s nature to appropriate. Design doesn’t happen in a vacuum. Rhyming and stealing rules the roost. This is a field which is all but impossible to pin down, is it any surprise that architects borrow from anywhere and everywhere? In the empire state building of appropriations that is the practice, software, language, and materials are but floors one through twelve and social issues are the antenna. It is fitting, therefore, that a medium that originating in garden design be pressed into use to comment upon its host.

For years gardeners have provoked the growth of moss in prescribed places to decorate garden walls or to add the patina of age. The use of laser cut stencils, however, widens the scope of the canvas and makes the medium potentially far richer. What better way to draw attention to new buildings which are green in name only? What better form of social protest of the act of building itself than a ‘green’ intervention?

Graffiti itself is part art, part protest, part urban blight, and all aerosol. Reinvented, the fluorocarbons are replaced with plant spores but the rest remains just as vivid, just as urgent, and just as tactile, and yet, somehow, it becomes the urban pastoral. It is urban in that it has been splashed across the side of a building in the wee hours of the night, but it’s green. It grows. The green movement couldn’t ask for a better form of protest. No more Green movements promoted with printed flyers. We will retro-bypass the paper and start with the trees. You want Green? We’ll give you green. In your face green, borrowed, of course, from the people who actually grow things. A garden of Banksian urban delights for a new wave of critics. Go forth and grow. Let the tagging begin.

Neill (nseltzer@pratt.edu)