Feeds:
Posts
Comments

far-wal-016.jpg

Architectural photographer Cristobal Palma has has taken the following photos from South America, this is a project in Chile that is a mixture of cave, house and tent.

far-wal-014.jpg

Wall House, architects by FAR frohn&rojas, has four “delaminated” structural layers: a cave-like concrete core; an outer ring of shelving; a “soft skin” of polycarbonate panels and finally a fabric membrane.

far-wal-002.jpg

far-wal-017.jpg

far-wal-020-1.jpg

Below is a brief description from the architects:

WALL HOUSE, Santiago de Chile (2004-2007)
 Suburban residence

As opposed to the general notion that our living environments can be properly described and designed “in plan”, this project is a design investigation into how the qualitative aspects of the wall, as a complex membrane, structure our social interactions and climatic relationships and enable specific ecologies to develop.

The project breaks down the “traditional” walls of a house into a series of four delaminated layers (concrete cave, stacked shelving, milky shell, soft skin) in between which the different spaces of the house slip. From the inside out the layers build upon one another, both materially and geometrically, blurring the boundary between the interior and the exterior and creating, through the specificity of the different materials used (many of which are not common in architectural applications), a series of qualitatively distinct environments.

far-wal-023.jpg

The building’s most standout feature, an energy screen typically used in greenhouse construction, constitutes the outermost layer, creating not only a diffused lighting and comfortably climatized zone inside but also, through its folding and sometimes reflective/sometimes-translucent surface, contributes to the diamond-cut appearance of the structure.

far-wal-024.jpg

FAR frohn&rojas
 project team: Marc Frohn, Mario Rojas Toledo, Amy Thoner, Pablo Guzman, Isabel Zapata

http://chronicle.com/free/v54/i26/26b01401.htm

envelope1.jpg

envelope2.jpg

envelope12.jpg

envelope7.jpg

For millennia, great and not-so-great leaders have celebrated themselves in monuments. The ziggurats of Mesopotamia, the pyramids, the Forbidden City, the Louvre, and Monticello all convey their builders’ legacies, as did the many lavish palaces of Saddam Hussein.

Modern U.S. presidents have only their presidential libraries. Now that the George W. Bush era is almost over, the world needs a place to archive the legacy of the 43rd president. That place will be Southern Methodist University, in a building designed by Robert A.M. Stern. The building will probably cost $500-million.

We thought that Chronicle readers would have their own ideas about how that building should be designed, and we invited people to send in designs on the backs of envelopes. About 120 people sent in sketches that were good, bad, serious, humorous, abstract, or really angry. Their designs took the form of toilets, bunkers, crosses, and W’s, some crudely drawn and some very elegant. A sampling of those designs is displayed on these pages.

Chronicle readers are invited to take a look at some of the designs and to vote for the best one.

The envelopes, please …http://chronicle.com/free/v54/i26/26b01401.htm

OBELISK

BUNKER

FLOATS ON FOUNTAINS

TEMPLE

PLAZA

OPEN BOOK

HOLE IN THE GROUND

SUSPENDED DISBELIEF

SOLID | VOID | SOLID |

CROSS LAYOUT

CRUCIFORM PLAN

FUN RANCH

“W” DESIGN

NON-LIBRARY

juno…

http://www.showroom.org.uk/cinema/filminformation.html

picture-1.jpg

Juno, the third film I have seen in three day’s, to some this may seem extreme however the relaxed, enjoyable environs of the showroom cinema, Sheffield more than accomodating in the use of internet facilities and of table work space I can only dream of….the film was an up to date sharp and quick witted view on human life , told in a very charming and amusing way by ellen page…the following is a review or rather short synopsis of the film by the showroom cinema, weblink above….description below

Dir. Jason Reitman | USA | 2007 |1hr 36mins
Savvy coming of age tale which won Best Screenplay in this year’s Oscars. Pregnant sixteen-year-old Juno (Ellen Page) seeks to turn her accidental situation into a blessing for yuppie adoptive parents. Torn between her feelings for the teen father of her child Paulie, and thirty-something rocker Mark. With an excellent soundtrack featuring Kimya Dawson (Moldy Peaches) and Belle and Sebastian, Juno is touching, never judgmental and above all extremely funny.

boat race…

Boat Race

headofriver.jpg

2004 saw the first running of the Irish Universities Boat Race. The Race is held on the Lagan between Queen’s University Belfast and Trinity College, Dublin. The race is made to mirror the Oxford-Cambridge Boat Race which is held annually on the River Thames. In 2004 the race was held over 3800 m, in 2005 it was shortened to 2700 m and in 2006 it was shortened again to 2000 m. Dr Robert Gamble of Queen’s University Belfast in 2006 remarked, ‘this year’s race will be over the shorter distance of 1 mile and 550 yards, which mimics the original Oxford Cambridge course distance and is the same distance as the most prestigious rowing event in the calendar, Henley Royal Regatta.’.[4] The inaugural race was won by Trinity, beating Queens by 4 lengths. The 2005 race was a thrilling contest with the Queens crew holding of Trinity in the final stages to win by a length.[5][6] Trinity took the 2006 and 2007 races to give them a 3-1 lead overall.

Flight Of The Red Balloon

picture-6.jpg

Dir. Hsiao-Hsien Hou | France | 2007 | 1hr 53mins
Directed by Taiwanese master Hsiao-Hsien Hou, this follows a film student in Paris who is hired as a nanny for the seven-year-old son of a puppeteer (Juliette Binoche). As the nanny takes the boy for walks around the city, he’s followed by a red balloon a la Lamorisse’s classic short. A charming film that feels like a love letter to Paris. A tough, telling study of the pressures facing (and caused by) professional single parents, and a look at different kinds of storytelling.

picture-7.jpg

lay the keel…

A structural keel is a large beam around which the hull of a ship is built.

keel2.jpg

The keel runs in the middle of the ship, from the bow to the stern, and serves as the foundation or spine of the structure, providing the major source of structural strength of the hull. The keel is generally the first part of a ship’s hull to be constructed, and laying the keel, or placing the keel in the cradle in which the ship will be built, is often a momentous event in a ship’s construction–so much so that the event is often marked with a ceremony, and the term lay the keel has entered the language as a phrase meaning the beginning of any significant undertaking.

keel.jpg

The keel contributes substantially to the longitudinal strength and effectively local loading caused when docking the ship. The most common type of keel is the ‘flat plate keel’, and this is fitted in the majority of ocean-going ship and other vessels. A form of keel found on smaller vessels is the bar keel. The bar keel may be fitted in trawlers, tugs,etc.. and this is also found in smaller ferries.
Where grounding is possible, this type of keel is suitable with its massive scantlings, but there is always a problem of the increased draft with no additional cargo capacity. If a double bottom is fitted the keel is almost inevitably of the flat plate type, bar keels often being associated with open floors, where the plate keel may also be fitted.
Duct keels are provided in the bottom of some vessels. These run from the forward engine room bulkhead to the collision bulkhead and are utilized to carry the double bottom piping. The piping is then accessible when cargo is loaded.

keel1.jpg

009xstudio.jpg

school_trip01.jpg

3364531.jpg3364527.jpg

titanic-in-belfast.jpg  Everyone knows the story of RMS Titanic, yet few realise the ship was built in Belfast. In fact, no other city in the world can lay claim to having lived beneath its magnificent shadow for so long. The emerging superstructure dominated Belfast’s Harland & Wolff shipyard for just over two years, from the moment its keel was laid in March 1909 to its launch on 31 May 1911. Only the cold, Atlantic seabed has been its home for longer.

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »