Tuesday, October 26, 2010

I Met The Walrus

Lest we forget, this John Lennon tribute which has been in the ether for awhile but recently in the news again as a finalist for a juried exhibition at the Guggenheim, "YouTube Play, a biennial of Creative Video". The argument that the YouTube video environment is "complex beyond comprehension" or "video art equally hard to fathom", it is a testament to the power of words underlying the video 40 years later, that still resonate.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Reaching vs. Pointing

Willis Tower, Chicago

The Contrarian was in Second City recently. The skyscraper is better appreciated on flat midwest terrain. Actually, I believe one of the easier structures to design, except for the ground floor, which few designers are able to overcome. Many enthusiasts play with hats to compensate for the lack of body that many of these buildings project. There is always a subtle distinction between ornament and decoration. I would argue one requires purpose. As one looks below at Trump tower, the naked pole seems to point to an attitude whereas in the case of Willis Tower (formerly Sears) the communication poles reach for the skies in a more egalitarian gesture.

Trump Tower, Chicago

Saturday, October 9, 2010

YES!

A nod to an influence who for me epitomizes the phrase for those whom the gods love die young. Happy 70th...

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Exactly


Exactitudes is dedicated to what I would describe as human typology. By framing subjects in similar poses it distinguishes individuality assuming group identity, whether intentionally or not. The practice of architecture is no different, with style and generation being arbiters. The contradiction between individuality and uniformity may not be more than six degrees of separation. Architecture might even have less division.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Color IQ


Another chance to waste a few moments with this color IQ site. I was surprised how well I am able to get it right, but my favorite color is still white.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Become Pollock


Jacksonpollock.org has been around many years, reminds me the best work is usually the simplest. I met Miltos Manetas years ago at a IDCA conference where as a painter (known for painting electronic gadgets) he successfully noodles in other media. Waste a few minutes...

Friday, August 27, 2010

Theatre?


Exit stage right...

Monday, August 23, 2010

Industrial Morphology


A cool time-lapse video of the preparation for launching the shuttle showing us a glimpse of the depth of effort required to put one of these birds in orbit. Equally amazing, is the lack of advertising on this bus.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Moxie

As I was reading an article in the NYT on Russian Peat Fires, I could not help notice the remark referring to Vladimir Putin as ..."taking to the skies to serve as co-pilot of an amphibious firefighting jet...on a dive-bombing run over a burning forest in central Russia, though he has no known pilot training." No pilot training? Really?

How often we create persona's for ourselves or project them onto others as we deem fit. It is not only politicians who hold high the ability to be alchemists. Can we see the peat beyond the smoke?

Monday, August 9, 2010

Annus Unus


If one writes a blog and no one reads it, does it really matter? We're (I'm) a year into this, and as far as I can tell, few have ever looked at this thing. And yet, I am optimistic. I hear trees falling in the forest even though I live in the city. After a year, the first post may have been our best. Reminders are a better value than judgments. Its never easy to communicate, and of the 30 or so posts, one, maybe two stand out. But like working out, the more one takes the chance with a few words, the better you understand yourself... And yes, remember to vote! (If you live in Washington)

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Alice, one of these days... I'mmmm gonna send you to the moon!

Its very Seattle what is happening with the proposal to replace the Highway 99 viaduct with a new tunnel. To paraphrase the oft maligned Spiro T Agnew, in Seattle today, we have more than our share of the nattering nabobs of negativism. While our mayor is against the burden of cost overruns being forced on his constituency, he is clearly against the notion of the tunnel itself. There is another constituency here as well. But, building or delaying the project are both knowingly expensive solutions. As a constituent, we get taken either way.

Back in the day, when the original viaduct was proposed there was still controversy, but the project was green lighted by one powerful city council member who wanted a quicker commute from his West Seattle home, bollox the notion of any greater good to the community. Its really no different today, just different players with a similar narrow focus. Lately, the luddites want to put it to a vote, as if the majority can know what's better for the community than politicians. Where are the intellects?

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Chihuly's reach...


Dale and the Museum...

Any reservations about the privately controlled Chihuly shop of horrors being proposed for the very "public" Seattle Center Fun Forest site? The heart of the matter, the pivot to approve such a venture leans toward financial viability. Privatization of any public space is the last consideration members of the Century 21 Committee need to be forwarding to the Center director. Even the viability of the site to cover expenses should not necessarily preclude a more "public" function. Of course, it would be better if a solution could take care of itself fiscally, but again, there must be larger purpose. A private company taking control of public property, celebrating one individual, in a narrow medium, and charging a $15 dollar entry fee smacks somewhat patronizing. Remarkably, in short order the community has circled its wagons to propose more democratic solutions. Hopefully, intelligence will prevail over recognized surnames.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Monterey




I've written in the past about my reluctance of the value of housing the wild as a means of explaining it, but a recent visit to the Monterey Aquarium gave me room to pause. Do jelly fish have souls? Can they understand or feel the boundaries within the tank? I don't know. But the presentations in this aquarium were impressive. I don't know that the flamingos or the otters have that same understanding enclosed in their "habitats". The irony was the immediate context of the location in a converted fish cannery where so many of their brethren were put in tin cans and the beauty of the ocean setting. So close, yet far away.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

SJC



By coincidence we traveled through the new San Jose Airport on its very first morning in operation. This piece of public sculpture graces the mezzanine entrance to the gates, randomly recording (with cameras and video screens), rotating, and flapping, but alas the poor thing can't fly. A mechanical hybrid albino flamingo penguin. A keeper!

FLW



A chestnut archival interview with the grand don of American architects; Frank Lloyd Wright with Mike Wallace. Is there anyone in our profession today that speaks with as much authorship as Mr. Wright? Herbert Muschamp once described the architectural scene back in the 70's as a time with very few professionals, that most practitioners were in fact merely brokers. Reflecting on this interview one may feel the same way today.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

The message is the medium...


Ground Zero Subway

Its make perfect sense that construction workers working in isolated environments deserve common amenities. Up a hundred or so stories in a skyscraper counts as one of those. Taking up to an hour to descend and ascend these buildings takes the bite out of lunch, so through the kindness of Jared, a Subway Shop in a doublewide serves food at floor sixty. A weird necessity but practical. The weirdness lays in the BRAND! One can never escape the BRAND. Another parallel, at the Kandehar Airfield, Afghanistan, Army Gen. Stanly McCrystal recently shut down a number of American Brand restaurants (TGI Fridays, Burger King, etc..) located in this war zone as not an appropriate message to convey in the Afghan war.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Complexity over Substance


WYSIWYG! Seattle Municipal Code Update

In the years since the notion of urban villages were first introduced in Seattle, the political debate remains predictably partisan. Developers argue there is too much regulation. The community responds saying development is actually proof municipalities should have more control over building.

But the real issue has to do with neighborhood assessment; where a complex regulatory system meets human psychology. We’ve come to depend on an ever-expanding array of zoning regulations to monitor the built environment. These regulations are too complex for any single person to understand. Yet every day, municipalities are asked to manage the health of our neighborhoods, weigh the risks of growth and take appropriate measures to reduce the impact of new development. If there is one thing we know, it’s that politicians are unable at measuring and responding to growth when placed in situations too complicated to understand.

To begin, people have trouble imagining how small failings can combine to lead to catastrophic disasters. When the latest Low Rise zoning regulations were codified in Seattle, politicians trying to grapple with the impact of growth had in mind to appease their constituencies, by forcing multi-family development to imitate the notion of single-family housing. These poorly designed regulations defined poorly designed development. The series of seemingly minor regulation changes failed quickly by the saturation of so many projects taking advantage of rules with no manner of adjustment, as the community clearly saw disasters unfolding. It was the interplay between these seemingly minor events that led to an unanticipated blight.

Second, people have a tendency to get acclimated to their own environs and if there must be change, its o.k. as long it’s not in their back yard. Developers on the other hand like playing Russian roulette. Success in the last economic boon is not a good predictor of success in weaker economic times. Nonetheless, as things seemed to be going well, people unconsciously adjust their definition of acceptable change and risk.

Third, politicians place elaborate faith in their own truths. More pedestrians die in cross walks than when jaywalking (that’s why we have sky bridges…). That’s because they have a false sense of security in crosswalks and are less likely to look both ways. Politico's selling urban villages and growth, created this illusion of community that encouraged developers to behave in more reckless ways by encouraging less diversity.

Fourth, people match complicated neighborhood politics with complicated governing structures. Zoning changes in Seattle have been completely muddled, with council members, developers and stakeholders hopelessly tangled in confusing lines of authority and responsibilities with blurred definitions of who is ultimately responsible for what.

Fifth, politicians tend to spread good news and hide bad news. Everybody wants to be part of a decision that succeeds and nobody wants to be responsible for the reverse. For decades, has anybody checked on promises by developers and politicians after what was built? A culture of malaise has settled upon all concerned (I'm including myself), from politicians who don’t want to lose face, to developers who do not wish to compromise profits.

Finally, people with similar motivations begin to think alike, whether they are in oversight roles or not. In the years that the city council was compelled to make a series of decisions about what sort of density we might support, they made decisions without a clear sense of the risks, in an environment that encouraged overconfidence. The city council has constructed a world in which the potential for catastrophe is embedded in the fabric of regulations, and changes quickly become irrelevant because the group of politicians and certain stakeholders are so much in each other’s pockets.

So it seems important, as new Seattle zoning regulations become codified, to not only focus on details of design minutia, but also more broadly on helping the community to deal with potentially catastrophic complexity. There must be better methods to improve architecture and ultimately evolve as a community; to help people guard against risk creep, false security, groupthink, the good-news bias and all the rest.

This isn’t just about zoning. It’s a challenge for people living in complex social environments.

apologies to david brooks

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Spiral Jetty



What do rocket ships have to do with Robert Smithson's seminal work, Spiral Jetty? A whole lot. After a number of years the lake has left the art piece land locked and the white salt patina that once covered the piece has worn off to return it to the original volcanic darkness. A few years back we went and took a look and some video.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Frozen Music


Musicians Village, Ninth Ward
p
Having just come back from this Habitat for Humanity project again after seeing it two years ago, it remains in my view the best example of affordable, sensible, housing to be constructed in the United States in long time.

wtf?


Thom Mayne/Brad Pitt

The road to hell is paved with good intentions. Brad Pitt in the Lower Ninth Ward. Martin Mull once said "Hollywood is high school with money"

Naw Oleans



The Contrarian recently returned from New Orleans where I had the chance to see some of the reparation work being done in the Ninth Ward. These photos were taken a few days before the off shore oil rig catastrophe. I mention this, because my perception of the progress since Katrina is still a fragile effort, at best, in certain areas. Will this new evironmental disaster reach as far as to affect the reconstruction still ongoing from the previous event. In the distance in the photo below is the canal that failed in the Ninth Ward. There is still much to do.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

La Vida Loca

Many Chickens...


A Chicken Processing Plant...


That age old question which came first, the chicken or the egg seems moot at this point. Lately it's been difficult keeping this blog thing fresh, but we still have so many thoughts to pass on. Work and career have become paramount so the blog has suffered. Not as much as the chickens or those who must place them in packaging, but I sympathize. I feel the same way sometimes.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Pareto


Pareto is my new years resolution. A mentor mentioned it over the course of a discussion on my ability to get work (or not get work) and where to focus. Pareto principle, known as the 80-20 rule, states that for many events, roughly 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes. As I participate in the ponderous new economy, it serves as a efficient method and reminder to prioritize to achieve a level of success.

A case in point, is supplying glasses for the worlds poor. Some put the estimate as high as two billion who do not have corrective lenses that would allow them to lead better, more productive lives. Now efforts are under way to find a means of distributing inexpensive glasses on a wide scale. One promising technology is self adjustable lenses, that untrained wearers can set the right focus themselves in less than a minute, reducing the need for trained optometrists, who are rarely available in many parts of the world. Though these adjustable glasses cannot yet help conditions like astigmatism, at least 80 percent of refractive errors can be fixed. Ergo Pareto!!!



Thursday, January 7, 2010

Fake Real...



I recently visited the new Platinum-level LEED certified Academy of Sciences Natural History Museum and Steinhart Aquarium building, designed by Renzo Piano in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco. It is purported to be the worlds "greenest" museum. From radiant heat to bike racks to photo voltaic cells, it is all but painted green. Nothing $500,000,000 can't buy. Really, its a wondrous structure combining divergent activities- museum, aquarium, planetarium, zoo, restaurants, shops and so on. What bothered me though, is the underlying environment didn't seem to to be satisfactory to any of the nature that have to live there. From the big albino crock to the lightest butterfly, all still run into a net or high wall and know it. The beasts with gills circle the perimeter in search for that ever elusive cove to the way out. Only the taxidermy animals at best(above) look to be at peace.

A year ago I chaperoned a middle school group of immigrant students to the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle. I had never been there after all these years here. I quickly understood why, because those animals in my mind, know better about the boundaries they are given. In this time of fantastical internet and media along with capacity to include the disenfranchised into nature better than any other time in memory, why do we continue to house the wild as a means to explain it? I was struck by the kids too, who also seem to see the resignation in the Sloth's as they lumbered about their "habitat". The one twinkle in the eye that struck out was the tall girl as she noticed the Giraffe's and turned, "we eat those where I come from..."