• Urban trees and benches should be aspects of urban forestry and urban design

    Updated: 2010-09-30 16:47:17
    The placing of benches and trees seems to bring out the worst in public authorities. Having created good SLOAP (= Space Left Over After Planning) they try to ameliorate the problem by calling up the landscapers and asking them to stick in a few benches and trees. Damn them! The correct policy is to treat [...]

  • Fitting into tight spaces

    Updated: 2010-09-30 06:16:35
    The question of urban density seems to keep being asked anew every five years or so. It is said that in 1800 only three percent of the world’s population lived in cities. That means many of us have become used to tighter spaces very quickly in evolutionary terms. Do we need to tie ourselves in knots [...]

  • Should London’s Tower Bridge be painted red?

    Updated: 2010-09-28 08:22:23
    Probably not, but (1) London can be a grey old place (2) red is London’s emblematic colour (3) Tower Bridge is one of the best-known London icons (4) the colour would appeal to Chinese tourists (5) from time to time, one should ‘paint the city red’ (6) I had a red toy model of Tower [...]

  • Winter

    Updated: 2010-09-28 06:22:09
    In trying to define a thesis - because that is that time of year - one can dig himself a deep and dark hole by bouncing between two approaches (two extremes?). a. Does this have everything (or anything) to do with problem-solving, or b. is it about rigorously working at creating opportunities that are unashamedly thought of as impossible? If these are not the same question, bottled differently, I'd go for b.

  • The London Tower: Home and Away.

    Updated: 2010-09-28 06:22:07
    Designing a city is a complex business. There are commercial and development pressures to be considered. But a city is more than just a continual investment of capital and occupation of new space. It has an identity. Sometimes only a local one. But sometimes a global one. Sometimes a remembered one. What gives a city its identity? [...]

  • New vistas from the Eye

    Updated: 2010-09-26 04:50:14
    Looking at London from the Eye gives a whole new perspective on the city. Another view from the Eye enables the viewer to ask ‘how green is my city?’ Some of the answers might surprise.

  • Paris goes green

    Updated: 2010-09-25 05:12:46
    The French farmer’s protested their financial plight in a charmingly French manner by greening the Champ-Elysee. Another unusual example of the trend towards green is the Lost House of Paris. The occupants literally live within a greenery covered house. To travel green in the city of romance you simply phone a ‘Vectrix’ taxi. As Pierre Patel’s 1688 [...]

  • Planning an urban landscape for London’s economic and financial future

    Updated: 2010-09-20 07:30:28
    London has had many economic roles over the centuries and now hopes to settle down as a cultural capital and somewhere between ‘Europe’s financial centre’ and ‘the world’s financial centre’. This requires a planning and design response which is likely to include (1) more large green buildings, because big firms have big space requirements (2) more homes [...]

  • Jean Nouvel Serpentine Pavilion and Garden 2010

    Updated: 2010-09-18 06:33:36
    Jean Nouvel’s design models for the Serpentine Pavilion (& see below) were attractive but ‘parked’ on the grass like a se of London buses. As built, the pavilion is better related to its context. It must be that the organizers have taken heed of the Gardenvisit blog’s comments on the 2010 Serpentine Pavilion. We remarked [...]

  • London’s gay and liberal landscape welcomes the German Pope

    Updated: 2010-09-15 02:00:16
    Big Ben and I would like to ’speak for England’ in respectfully reminding the German Pope that England is more important as the home of Europe’s political passion (liberalism) than as the home of the world’s most beautiful game (football). England is the country in which Hobbes and Locke wedded Latin and Germanic ideas of [...]

  • crit day!!

    Updated: 2010-09-14 20:41:57
    It's the first crit for the school year. The project explores form as a generative idea in design. Students were asked to create a series of three dimensional compositions comprised of 3 rectilinear volumes. Each object within the composition had to maintain an orthographical relationship to each other, and a series of adjustments testing</i the idea were made. The outcome was produced as an all-white 200mm2 composition. models en masse

  • scandinavia

    Updated: 2010-09-14 12:40:47
    stokholm/helsinki/turku/tallinn scandinavian travel. http://jarzyniecki.com/image/outside/ now in berlin.

  • Top quality home grown organic Charlotte potatoes, seaweed-fed, flavoured with wild mint and dressed with parsley

    Updated: 2010-09-13 06:31:44
    Here are some of the world’s best potatoes – and I grew them! They are organic Charlottes, seaweed-grown, flavoured with wild mint and dressed with fresh organic parsley. No chemical fertilizers or herbicides or pesticides were used. So if the local supermarket can charge £5/kilo for their best spuds then mine must be worth £10/kilo [...]

  • Architects Answering the Important Questions

    Updated: 2010-09-07 14:15:00
    modative what is modative projects blog people resources contact modative a modern architecture firm a blog about modern architecture , design , development modative happenings Loading We post , you get an email . That's it . Your : email blog authors Derek Christian Michael connect facebook modative architecture twitter architect- derek modative_ navar linkedin derek christian Most Popular Posts How to Start an Architecture Firm Introduction Mid-Century Modern Colors Architects Creative Professionals Is It Time To Rethink Your Resume 7 Tips for Starting an Architecture Firm Tip 01 : Be Cheap 7 Tips for Starting an Architecture Firm Tip 02 : DIY How to Become a Licensed Architect 7 Tips for Starting an Architecture Firm Tip 03 : Get Advice Why Open Architecture Competitions Are Bad for

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