322 Hicks Street by Smith-Miller and Hawkinson Architects


High concept infill architecture in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn by Smith Miller Hawkinson Architects.  Images from their portfolio website.

FRP by Hitoshi Abe



Atelier Hitoshi Abe: FRP Ftown Building, Tokyo, Japan, 2007
(images via Abe's portfolio site)

Kohler Bowl


Given the hyper-competitive naming and sponsor of the college bowls games in the recent years.  I think this might be an excellent and hilarious sponsorship for  the college bowl season.

MOVE THE BIKE LANE

BEFORE

AFTER


I really wish they moved the bike lane.  Mayor Bloomberg has done and excellent job embracing bike culture in NYC and especially in Brooklyn.  Bicycle infrastructure is amazing yet they are missing one important detail.  Get the bike lane out of the street.  Move the bike lane between the sidewalk and parked cars.  I think if we used parked cars to buffer the bike lane we there would be less bike fatalities and less bicycle accidents. I applaud transportation alternatives and Mike Bloomberg on the bike friendly initially the city has seen in recent years but this simple repositioning will save lives.  And from the drivers point of view it is a lot easier to parallel park without driving backward through the bike lane.

Hip Hip Hooray for Bow Wow


    Currently, my favorite architectural firm is Atelier Bow Wow, a young Japanese firm that specializes in small scale residential projects. In there 2006 they published a book Post Bubble City. Their work responds to the economic climate since the Nikkei crashed in the 1990’s. Needless to say a survey or buildings leading into the economic collapses in Japan and US (and worldwide) were plagued by tremendous proportions and irrational exuberance. In the 80's Japan built massive buildings by the lies of Arata Isozaki, Kenzo Tange (Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building), Hiroshi Hara (Kyoto Station) and Kushio Kurokawa. Conteporary NYC is represented by condos such as 40 Bond (Herzog and DeMueron), Beekman Place Tower (Gehry), 5 Franklin (Ben Van Berkel) and everything on http://www.triplemint.com - I won't even mention the Toren.  Shanghai and Dubai are competing to build skylines and the Burj is secretly adding another floor. Interestingly enough the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building held the title of the tallest building in Tokyo from 1991 until 2006. The economy crashes were in 1990 and 2008 respectively.
    Amid our current economic situation there is an opportunity to specifically crafted.  I believe it become utterly important to understand and appreciate smaller scale developments as a response to economic instability.
    Atelier Bow Wow epitomizes this. Their projects deal predominantly with the complexities of dense urban environments. Conversations on twelve different urban and architectural issues relevant to their practice are threaded throughout this book which comes exhaustively illustrated with photographs, models, plans, sketches and elevations.  If the American recovery can take a lesson from the recovery of post bubble Japan the silver lining will be a renaissance for small scale residential projects This new scale of operation is exemplified the current generation of Japanese architects, Kengo Kuma, Atelier Bow Wow.  Images from their portfolio website.

Express Window



not bad for chain retail

Screen Capture from the 5th Element



Holiday Card


















Here is a holiday card with a robotic red nose reindeer for your enjoyment!

Font


I love typography. Here is a not so good font I designed out of boredom a couple of years ago.

Hoxton Square by Zaha


Interesting take on the potential of infill architecture. This one is all dressed up.

Shoerack


Concept design for a shoerack that fits behind a traditional door. An easy way to make good on what is usually lost space.

Sixx Design: Interior Design Supercouple













Do you hate couples? Your in for a treat! Sixx Design, a interior design supercouple are improving interiors all over NYC one at a time.  Sixx Design is Cortney and Robert Novogratz.  Here's thier NYT slideshow.

Superbowl 43 Logo Contest

What makes two things that are great even better?  Combining them! The New York Times mixed football and Graphic Design and ran a Superbowl Logo contest.  Here are some of my designs - I think the contest might of be rigged given my unlucky outcome and that they finally posted the winning deisgns 3+ weeks after they said they would.

Absurd Urban Logo


Christoph Niemann NYT Blogger renovates his bathroom


cool bathroom

Art Curators has Sweet Apartment


Art world heavy weights Tobais Meyer and Mark Fletcher show of their badass apartment in W Magazine. (images from W magazine)


Yahoo vs. Google


everyone likes google more than yahoo should get rid of it's service but offer asimple version of its service
http://www.y.com/

to compete with google

David Adjaye


Quite possibly the most stunning structure on the eastern seaboard built in the last 20 years is more or less unknown to exist.  The project is called Pitch Black.  It was built in 2006 by Adjaye Associates.  It looks like the office of David Hotson Architect helped out and is the architect of record and possibly a designcollaborator.
If you want to see more Pitch Black pics here is a flickr photostream or check it out for yourself at 208 Vanderbilt St between Dekalb and Willoughby.

MAN vs RAT


I live in new york city and I have to deal with rats more than I care to admit.  Disappointlingly man is powerless vs the rat.  There is nothing you can do to stop the vermin (step on it - yeah right?) .  The only thing you can do is dial a hotline a place a formal complaint.  On more than one occassion, due to a rat infestation near my residence I have placed a formal complaint to NYC and have subsequently waited (for weeks) for the NYC department of health employee to come and relieve a my rat problem.  Awaiting my knight in shining armor / underpaid government employee to arrive and eliminate the rats as they multiple and fester.  I propose the rat gun that can be used to take the matter of eliminating rat into your own hands.  If there are are ever too many rats - or just one rat - and you feel powerless against the nasty vermin - this is the rat elimination product you have been waiting for.  This gun is specially engineered to eliminate rats with one quick and deadly strike.  Here is footage from our rat infestation behind an undisclosed italian restuarant. Also available in pigeon gun.  

Deconstuction Maps of New York City


Why Architecture school is useful and design is useless

Thinksolving / conceptual problem solving
Unpacking the conflict between design and construction 


A common parlance in archispeak (the way architects speak when other people aren't around) is to 'rethink' the thing which you are designing.  For example an when an firm designs an airport, they often lay claim they are, rethinking the airport.  The CEO of a well known design firm calls this model ‘design thinking’.  But designing or rethinking the airport, is kind of made up since it is subjected to real world conditions- building codes, schedules, costs, laws of gravity and natural limits of mankind, and the list goes on.   Except for projects with ridiculous budgets the final design product is ultimately compromised.  Insiders in the business refer to this as the - time / cost / quality  triangle - you can get  2 of the 3 - but not all three.  If we return to our example the airport, the end result inevitably ends up being a long hallway and usually looks like other airports. The same goes for restaurants, hotels museums etc.


Average people are more concerned with catching their flight and don’t pay attention to the overall design, nevermind how the glass is engaged with the steel.  The only people who notice the design are people who actively try to notice it.  Yet for some reason as asociety we romanticize the notion of architecture.


I had a drawing professor claim the most beautiful piece of paper is the blank paper.  Before the pencil touches the paper the paper has limitless possibility.  The finsihed drawing or in our airport example, the built airport destroys the dream that was once the unbuilt airport.  The physical building was compromised.  The possibility that the building truely embraces the spirit of change was compromised and the original intent is forgotten.  The notion that a building can propagate social change is a falsehood.  In fact architecture, built architecture as a means to reform is ridiculous.  Renaming design as "rethinking" is total bullshit.  However, there is something good we can extract from this lesson.

In all honesty, creativity is probably a more common skill than we care to admit.  When we were five everyone used crayolas, we all drew when we were in grade school.  Humans are born creative creatures and the romanticizing the creative arts is human.   Perhaps, at a moment in time, we all participate in a personal romantic dream to design through a creative outlet such as fashion, music, cooking, or remodeling our kitchen.  In the television show Seinfeld, George Constanzas claims a false identity as an architect, and goes as far to claim he designed "the new addition to the Guggenheim."  George, thinks, as many of us do, that the architect leads a superior life. Buildings are fun and easy to design, architects enjoy a high overall quality of life and architects possess superpowers, such that with the wave of the hand they can create life improving buildings for the masses  / ordinary people.  But in reality, the unspoken truth of architecture is that these dreams fall short of these aspirations and Georges alter ego perpetuate a false vision of the dream that is architecture.  George, as have many of us, is caught romanticizing architecture as a powerful instrument of social change.

The utopian vision of architecture is possible, but not in the harsh reality of the real world, but in a insular dream land called architecture school.  Nothing is built.  Everything is a dream everything is an exercise in conceptual problem solving.  

According to Wikipedia, “architecture is the activity of constructing and designing buildings and other physical structures”


Architecture is composed of 2 major themes, 'designing and constructing'.  An academic training is also broken down corespondingly.  The first is the physical construction of building and the second is a ‘creative design’ involved in designing extruded rectangles.  Construction embraces convention and practicality, the design pushes innovation and creativity.  Examining how these two themes play out at both the professional and academic level reveal a added value of academic architecture.   While architecture firms (real world) usually tend toward practical constuction and realised project  -  academic architecture programs are almost entirely creative think tanks.  Below is a short list of firms and university’s broken down by type (construction 1st vs. creative 1st) (hmmdoes this make sense?)


FIRMS
Construction / technical 1st - the Practical architect 98%
Heintges
Kendall Heating
Creative 1st the creative firm ( the dream of architecture) 2%
OMA
IDEO


Universities
Construction / technical 1st - the technical schools 2%
NJIT
NY Tech
anything with a tech at the end
creative theoretical  1st Designthinking 98%
Columbia
Harvard
Yale
think newsweek graphics red black and grey



Unpacking the conflict between design and construction though the lens of professional vs. academic institutions (bring to light something interesting  The cushioned and pampered lifestyle that the academic architecture institution can offer a student is suddenly invaluable because it was a serves as an haven for ideas, creative thinking and collaboration.  Architecture schools embed a strong fundamental comprehension of how to create solutions and use innovative thinking create . It is essentially multidisciplinary. 

The goal of both fields is to introduce you to a new way of thinking about data, and help you to gain an understanding of how to use, communicate, and interpret information  and convey a new concept model way of thought.  This happens in school, where there are 6 semester long research projects, in which at the end I gave a presentations about ideas.  Another such example occured through my work with Volume Magazine.  Volume Magazine is an experimental think tank venture.  They are devoted to the process of cultural reflexivity. Cultural reflexivity is the circular relationships between cause and effect. A reflexive relationship is bidirectional; with both the cause and the effect affecting each another in a situation that renders both functions causes and effects.  The objective was to supersede architecture and reach out toward an understanding of broader social structures and global organizations.   The project mandates an expansion of thought, culture and design.


If we return to our proverb about the blank paper an architecture can posit limitless possibilities on what the airport may be.  Contemporary practice in a university promotes numerous drawings and diagrams of how a building is dreamed to work. 


Typical design requires thinking and drawing dimensionally but the progressive schools emphasize filtering preconceived notions and processing data to discharge a powerful unseen creative vision.  And while the crestfallen architect goes back to his drawing board to value engineer his design that can’t get built the way it is the architecture student gets straight A’s.  In academic architecture there are no buildings but conclusions to research.  A scientist would a arrive at a hypothesis after an experiment about the system he is studying and at the end of a semester the architecture student arrives at a conclusion about social.  unbuilt airport holds/contains the promise of
 This is where we arrive at the term thinksolving.

Development in Brooklyn is Ridicoulous - Brooklyn2012 Video




Conversation in a taxi from circumnavigated the Atlantic yards.
Ben: What do you think of all these buildings
Driver: They puttin up all these tall buildings here.
B: I don't believe it.
D: All of these buildings and ain't got nobody to live in em.  can't they be creative. same thing over and over. they got so much money the don't know what to do with em. they are probably smoking cigarettes and lighting them with money.
B: Build a school
D: Who drew that plan? ..... moe-ron !
B: what do you think of the stadium
D: That would be great.  i would love to see Lebron play in this hood.
B: It's too big but a little part of me wants to see 'em play here.
D: It's good too cuz it brings in tourists

Carless City

Awesome New York Times slideshow about Vauban, Germany a city where there are no cars. 
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2009/05/12/science/20090512-SUBURB_index.html

Bus Stops: The "If it ain't broke don't fix it" Dept.


Ben: What do you think of the new bus stops?
Girl: They're nice, they put a couple of them in Staten Island
B: But are they really necessary
G: No not really, like kids in Staten Island like to shoot them with bb guns just for fun
B: So they become targets for crime and vandalism?
G: Yes definately

Mr. Bloomberg was this the best way to improve our city? Why can't we have more places to lock our bikes?
Why can't we have more hybrid buses?

The new New York City bus shelter was designed by Grimshaw Architects and is run by the Spanish advertising company Cemusa.

Mini Cooper Advert



Here is an image I submited to a Mini Cooper Design Contest.  Oh well better luck next time.

All Along the Pacific Ave


All along dean and pacific in prospect heights there is a collection of chic trendy and reasonable new construction.  The scale and the shapes appeal to the sensibility of the neighborhood.   All of the projects are designed by loading dock 5 and built by supreme builders. Located in the backyard of the Atlantic Railyards.  Quick somebody should send curbed a tip.

What is an Isthmus? A diagram of Madison Wisconsin


An isthmus is strip of land nestled between bodies of water. The name of the lakes Mendota and Monona translate into sunset and sunrise and the basketball team is pretty good too.