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John Lautner, I Love You
by Katy Purviance on 07/31/08 @ 09:55:28 am
Categories: Architects, Events | 51 words | 904 views

I recently told you about the John Lautner exhibit at the Hammer Museum here in LA. I went to see it yesterday (free with student ID!)

I was moved. (I fell in love.)

I want you to go. It’ll be good for you. You’ll thank me.

Look at the slide show.

Mar Brisas House

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And the winner is...
by Katy Purviance on 07/31/08 @ 09:41:11 am
Categories: Competitions | 143 words | 913 views

Not too long ago, I told you about Dwell and the AIA’s “How Green Are You” Competition.

They have a winner.

Check out the slide show.

The competition was fierce, with numerous submissions from across the country pitting recycled materials against low energy consumption and anemic carbon emissions in an all out sustainable design steel cage match. In the end Ryan Walsh of DRW Design Build in Portland, Oregon emerged as the grand prize winner.

Walsh’s Recycled Aesthetic project stood out for its alternative design approach, affordable cost, and uncommon use of recycled materials. Rather than pre-determining the aesthetic, Walsh first figured out what repurposed materials he wanted to use, and let the process inform the appearance. “The reward of this design challenge was reaching the utilitarian goals” Walsh said, “while honoring the inherent beauty of the materials.”

Read the whole thing.

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China builds another wall
by Katy Purviance on 07/30/08 @ 09:48:29 am
Categories: Articles | 195 words | 4509 views

When we were kids, we knew there were two ways to clean our rooms. We could (a) clean our rooms, or (b) shove averything into the closet and under the beds.

Choice (a) took a lot longer, was a little overwhelming, and certainly wasn’t any fun. Choice (b) took about ten seconds.

Guess which one we did?

So I can appreciate this methodology from a micro level.

But when China does the same thing, when China hides their mess – their messy shops, messy squalid homes, and messy people, by building a brick wall in front of them for Olympic beautification purposes – then I feel like the parent. I want to repeat the words our mother said to us so many times: “You can’t just shove everything under your bed! Clean it up!”

A mysterious notice appeared beside the shops on July 17, typed on white paper and signed by no one. It read, “In keeping with the government’s request to rectify the Olympic environment, a wall will need to be built around No. 93 South Tianqiao Road.” The next morning, several bricklayers showed up with a police escort.

Read the New York TImes article.

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Stuff to go do
by Katy Purviance on 07/30/08 @ 08:56:03 am
Categories: Events | 228 words | 1142 views

Chicago
Friday, August 1: At 32nd & Urban, 59 artists, graphic designers, illustrators, and photographers fill frames of various sizes (from 4x6 to 11x15) with their creations. Stop by the group exhibit from now through August 30. 32nd & Urban, 3201 South Halsted.

Los Angeles
Saturday, August 2: Take a self-guided tour of architect Richard Neutra’s VDL Research House, a glass house he built on Silver Lake Boulevard. 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; 2300 Silver Lake Blvd.; (213) 639-0767.

Miami
Sunday, August 3: Mikhail Baryshnikov, Johnny Depp, and Isabella Rossellini are among the twenty-five video portraits by avant-garde artist Robert Wilson now shown at The Bass Museum through today. (For a more traditional take, the museum has dusted off its extensive collection of Flemish, Italian, and Dutch portraiture from the 16th to early 19th centuries in the neighboring galleries.) The Bass Museum, 2121 Park Ave.; (305) 673-7530.

New York
Wednesday, July 30: At MoMA today, architectural critic Nader Vossoughian discusses the ways Rem Koolhaas, Peter Eisenman, and other architects have contributed to the New York City skyline. After the talk, hit the galleries for the new exhibit Dreamland: Architectural Experiments Since the 1970s. 1:30 p.m.; The Museum of Modern Art, 11 W. 53rd St.; (212) 708-9400.

San Francisco
Saturday, August 2: SFMOMA’s latest exhibition explores the work of artists Zilvinas Kempinas, Alison Shotz, and Mary Temple, who manipulate our perceptions with plays of light. Through November 4. Phyllis Wattis Theater, 151 3rd St., (415) 357-4130.

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Need help drawing plans?
by Katy Purviance on 07/29/08 @ 12:42:02 pm
Categories: Articles | 111 words | 1960 views

I just came across this article on Archinect that I thought you might find helpful when it comes time to developing plans.

Making Plans

Raumplan, masterplan, plan libre, planned community, game plan, health plan, escape plan, business plan, floor plan … There is likely no other word in the architect’s, landscape architect’s, urban designer’s, urban planner’s vocabulary that is more vacuous than “plan.” When uttered, its use and application are completely overlooked, or resigned to technicality.

Can the agency of the plan be entirely rethought to no longer be simply relegated to a set of descriptive orthographic drawings? Can the plan be resuscitated into new life, new applications, new considerations?

Read the whole thing

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Those who most need an architect are least able to afford one
by Katy Purviance on 07/27/08 @ 11:36:22 am
Categories: Articles | 190 words | 812 views

This is so cool.

Skidmore, Owings and Merrill is doing a makeover.

Of Bombay’s slums.

Extreme Poverty Makeover

It may just be the world’s most extreme property makeover: 125,000 Bombay slum dwellers are about to have their homes rebuilt by one of the world’s hippest architects.

I heard once that those who most need an architect are least able to afford one. This would be one of those examples.

Do you watch Extreme Makeover: Home Edition on Sunday night? Those shows make me cry. This is one of the reason why I want to be an architect. I want to make a difference in the lives of those who need it the most.

(I can’t stand those design shows where they redo a master bedroom for some uninteresting affluent corpulent couple who are about as excited as toast when the design team unveils the new look.)

…the American firm’s latest venture is the low-rise redesign of 124 acres of squalid shantytown. If that sounds like a comedown from the grandeur of its past projects, it shouldn’t - the slum’s inhabitants are shaping up to be some of SOM’s toughest judges yet.

Read the Whole Thing

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Oh wait, more architecture blogs
by Katy Purviance on 07/26/08 @ 11:04:39 am
Categories: Articles | 1621 words | 1544 views

The other day I told you about a list on Treehugger that lists the top 30 architecture blogs. Well, I just found a list of fifty on BestCollegesOnline.com.

I just had to share. (And no, we’re not on this list either. YET. Which means we have to try harder.)

Architecture can be a challenging and sometimes stressful major, but you can help yourself stay informed and get creative new ideas by keeping on top of the news through the use of the Internet. With many architects blogging, and loads of resources and information out there, it can be well worth your time to check out at least a few blogs in your free time or to help you with a project. Here’s a list of 50 blogs and helpful sites we think are great sources for architecture majors.

Top Blogs

These blogs cover a wide range of subjects and can be great reading material.

  1. A Daily Dose of Architecture: Blogger John Hill, a New York City resident and architecture student, posts his almost daily musings on architecture from around the world.
  2. anArchitecture: This blog is written by Austrian Christoph Wassmann and contains a variety of links, news and commentary on the field of architecture.
  3. BLDGBLOG: Written by Archinect team member, writer and editor for DWELL magazine Geoff Manaugh, this blog contains posts on design, architecture and landscape design.
  4. a456: Here you’ll find a variety of thoughts, commentary and ideas on design and architecture from Enrique Ramirez, a Ph.D. student in History and Theory of Architecture at Princeton.
  5. Archinect: While not a single blog in itself, this site brings together architecture blogs from schools around the world in order to create a more cohesive and collaborative field.
  6. City of Sound: This blog covers a range of issues from music to architecture. It’s written by a director at Monocle, Dan Hill, who explores the relationship between form and function in the buildings and cities we inhabit.
  7. Inhabitat: Here you’ll find green and sustainable design news, especially on issues related to architecture.
  8. Interactive Architecture: Diploma thesis tutor Ruairi Glynn created this blog as a place to collect ideas about how students at the Bartlett School of Architecture and elsewhere can create architectural installations that require interaction and activity.
  9. Pruned: This blog is dedicated to showing how landscape forms a big part of overall design, and the blog is written by landscape architect Alexander Trevi.
  10. Super Colossal: Based in Australia, this design firm’s blog covers issues related to a range of design and architecture related topics.

Architecture News

Stay on the edge of the field of architecture with these news-filled blogs.

  1. ArchNewsNow: This blog makes it easy to keep up with the latest and greatest moves in the architecture world. You can read the blog or sign up for the newsletter to get news delivered right to you.
  2. Architecture Planet: This site aggregates news from sites all over the Web that have to do with architecture. You can find a wide range of stories, information and links to keep you busy.
  3. Modern Architecture Design News: Find loads of pictures and news stories about the latest in modern architecture on this blog.
  4. Architecture Lab: This online magazine and news site provides access to all kinds of new and up-to-date information on architecture.

Blogs By Architects

Check out these blogs by architects to see what other kind of work is being done out there.

  1. Architecture: This blogger is an architect in a big firm in Singapore, and the blog focuses on new ideas and urban living, especially in Singapore and surrounding areas.
  2. Life Without Buildings: While the title of this blog may imply otherwise, it’s actually all about architecture. You’ll find hundreds of photos and commentary on modern buildings and postmodern design.
  3. Architecture + Morality: Three bloggers, a civil engineer, an architect and a pastor, use this blog as a forum to discuss a range of social issues behind architecture.
  4. Arkitec TRUE: Run by Long Beach architect Yelda Horozoglu, this blog covers ideas on urban planning, design and architecture.
  5. Continuity in Architecture: This blog is a teaching forum created by architecture professors at the Manchester School of Architecture and contains a scholarly perspective on architecture related themes.
  6. Tessellar: The author of this blog, architect Mazlin Ghazali, resides in Malaysia and describes his idea to create communities based on a honeycomb based shape in order to create a better layout for communities and housing.
  7. The Architecture of Fear: This blog was created by George Agnew during his time at Columbia University’s School of Architecture and explores the ideas of how architecture functions with war, terror and fear.

Green Building Blogs

Green and sustainable building is a big part of architecture these days, so learn all about it on these sites.

  1. BLYGAD: The name of this blog, which stands for Blog Like You Give a Damn, is written by Colin Kloecker for the Architecture for Humanity in Minnesota. This organization is focused on creating sustainable architecture worldwide.
  2. Earth Architecture: This blog is dedicated to buildings that have been constructed from natural materials like dirt, mud and bricks.
  3. Eco Tecture: Here you’ll find information that focuses on green build projects in cities like Chicago, Brooklyn and London.
  4. Treehugger: While this blog focuses on a number of issues related to environmentalism, it contains a large section on green architecture and design, which can be a great resource for those interested in the cutting edge of green building.
  5. greenbuildingsNYC: Check out the latest green buildings in NYC and plans for new construction on this eco-focused blog.

Architecture Photography Blogs

These blogs focus on documenting architecture through photos and can not only be a good read but great eye candy as well.

  1. FotoFacade: Architectural photographer Andy Marshall shares his photos in this extensive photography blog, with both new and old buildings being represented.
  2. B.E.L.T: Standing for Build Environment in Layman’s Terms, this blog contains photography and commentary by professional Toby Weiss.
  3. URBANPHOTO: This blog contains photos from all over the world of urban environments, buildings and people.
  4. Bluejake: This amateur photographer shares his photos of New York City, both of the architecture within it and the people who reside there. New photos are posted regularly.
  5. Chicago Uncommon: Here you’ll find photos from all over Chicago of the buildings, gardens and more that make up its neighborhoods and landmarks.
  6. The Urban Observer: This blog not only offers regular photography but commentary, observations and more that deal with the urban environment in Chicago and cities all over.
  7. Eye Candy: Blogger and architect Eric shares photos of buildings old and new from all over, with the purpose of improving the level of design.
  8. Offbeat Homes: Browse through photos of all kinds of unique homes in this fun blog.

Landscape Architecture Blogs

Those more interested in the landscape around the buildings rather than the buildings themselves can find some pertinent information on landscape architecture in these blogs.

  1. Aesthetic Grounds: Written by landscape architect and public artist Glenn Weiss, this blog focuses on projects that get people involved with their environments through art and design.
  2. Free Soil: This blog’s purpose is to share ideas about landscape design that work to create effective landscapes that work with their natural settings to create sustainable and functional outdoor spaces.
  3. Land + Living: Here you’ll find news on landscape design issues from all over the world that focus on thoroughly modern design.
  4. The Dirt: The American Society of Landscape Architects runs this blog which shares news and views on ongoing projects and conceptions throughout the nation.
  5. Turned Earth: The blog of landscape design firm O’Connell Landscape, this blog covers design, planting furniture and anything else that forms part of an outdoor environment.

Reference and Publications

These sites provide reference material and access to online publications on architecture.

  1. Center for Universal Design: This group aims to make buildings accessible to all people, even those with limiting disabilities. Ensure your designs allow for all to enjoy them by giving this site a look.
  2. ArtLex Dictionary of Visual Art: Find definitions of thousands of art and architecture terms in this helpful reference tool.
  3. TechStreet: If you want to build things you need to know what building and safety codes you’ll need to comply with. This site provides an easy place to find all the information you need on these and more.
  4. Architectural Record: This publication from McGraw Hill shares news and articles in this regularly updated online format.
  5. Architype Review: Here you’ll find a forum to discuss architectural typologies like schools, libraries, parking garages and more, and how these types affect design. It can be a great place to look if you’re trying to think outside of the box for new designs.

Buildings and Architects

Get some background on great buildings and famous architects from these resources.

  1. Great Buildings: From country to country and throughout time, this site covers the great buildings and is a great reference and inspirational site.
  2. AGRAM: This site focuses on some of history’s most important architects, providing background information and photos of their well-known buildings.
  3. ArchINFORM: Here you’ll find a huge online database of architects and buildings which has been described as one of the most useful architecture resources on the Internet.
  4. High Rise Buildings Database: Love skyscrapers? You can read all about them with information from this site.
  5. National Register of Historic Places: Find out what buildings hold historical significance in your city or anywhere in the United States.
  6. Famous Architects: This site brings together a huge archive of information on the world’s most famous and influential architects and can be a great reference for a class project.
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Random Quote Generator
by Katy Purviance on 07/25/08 @ 10:57:17 am
Categories: Observations | 189 words | 847 views

Have you noticed the newest addition to the Architecture Addiction Blog?

That’s right, a random quote generator.

I just added this one from one of my favorite books, Suburban Nation by my New Urabnist heroes, Andres Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, and Jeff Speck.

“The level of traffic which drivers experience daily, and which they bemoan so vehemently, is only as high as they are willing to countenance. If it were not, they would adjust their behavior and move, carpool, take transit, or just stay home, as some choose to do. How crowded a roadway is at any given moment represents a condition of equilibrium between people’s desire to drive and their reluctance to fight traffic. Because people are willing to suffer inordinately in traffic before seeking alternatives – other than clamoring for more highways – the state of equilibrium of all busy roads is to have stop-and-go traffic. The question is not how many lanes must be built to ease congestion but how many lanes of congestion you want. Do you favor four lanes of bumper-to-bumper traffic at rush hour, or sixteen?

Andres Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, Jeff Speck, Suburban Nation“,

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People are Angry about the Architecture Blog lists
by Katy Purviance on 07/24/08 @ 11:32:06 am
Categories: News | 99 words | 3954 views

Over the past couple of days I shared a couple of Best Architecture Blog lists. Turned out TreeHugger’s version was a dimunitization of BestCollegesOnline’s version.

Anyway, I was reviewing the comments people had left for these two lists. You can imagine. People wrote things like, “What about [insert cool architecture blog here].”

Heck, I even did that.

One comment-leaver let everyone know that the best green architecture blog out there was Jetson Green. Which I had never heard of. Which I had to go check out right away.

Conclusion: They’re awesome. You gotten stop on over and say hello.

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Still not in the top 30...
by Katy Purviance on 07/24/08 @ 10:48:55 am
Categories: Articles | 657 words | 1419 views

I just read this blog post at Treehugger called “Top 30 Blogs & Resources For Architects.”

You can imagine my disappointment to have not made this list. Yet.

But I still enjoyed seeing what else was out there for the architecture blog connoisseur. So here’s the list:

Top Architecture Blogs

1. A Daily Dose of Architecture: Written by John Hill, a New York City resident, architecture student and blogger.

2. BLDGBLOG: Written by Archinect team member, writer and editor for DWELL magazine Geoff Manaugh, with tidbits on design, architecture and landscape design.

3. a456: Nice density of architecture theory and history, written by Enrique Ramirez, a Ph.D. student in History and Theory of Architecture at Princeton.

4. Archinect: This site is more of a go-to point that converges a number of architecture school blogs that are worth looking through. Also has job and design competition postings for you seekers out there.

5. Death By Architecture: Run by a small team of designers who say Death By Architecture is “an understatement.” Lots of information on competitions, as the title suggests. Interactive calendar, too. (Personally, I would love to sport the T-square through the heart t-shirt…)

6. Inhabitat: Always informative, always pithy, a valuable news resource on green design.

7. Interactive Architecture: Maintained by Diploma thesis tutor Ruairi Glynn as a place to collect ideas about integrating interactivity into architecture.

8. Pruned: This blog focuses on the role of landscape in design and is written by landscape architect Alexander Trevi.

9. Architecture + Morality: A civil engineer, an architect and a pastor and their musings on the connections between architecture, politics, economics and religion.


Architecture News


10. ArchNewsNow: Good site for architecture news from around the world. Sign up for their newsletter for daily updates.

11. Architecture Planet: This site collects architecture-related news from sites all over the world.

12. Modern Architecture Design News: Huge list of topics and current news.

13. Architecture Lab: Informative and well-organized online magazine with the latest in architecture news.


Green Building Resources


14. BLYGAD: Translating into “Blog Like You Give a Damn,” is written by Colin Kloecker for the Architecture for Humanity in Minnesota, and focuses on creating sustainable architecture on a global scale.

15. Earth Architecture: One of my favourites, this site is a great resource on sustainable earth architecture happenings worldwide.

16. Eco Tecture: Information on green build projects in large cities like Chicago, New York and London.

17. greenbuildingsNYC: This blog covers news on the latest green buildings in NYC.

Architectural Photography (gotta see it to believe it, right?)

18. URBANPHOTO: This photo-blog has images of urban spaces, buildings and people from all over the world.

19. Offbeat Homes: Quirky homes get their fifteen minutes!

Landscape Architecture Resources

20. Free Soil: Nifty-as-heck site where you’ll find ideas about effective and sustainable landscape design, organized by topic.

21. Land + Living: Latest news on landscape design issues.

22. The Dirt: News blog by the American Society of Landscape Architects.

General Resources

23. Center for Universal Design: This site provides information on the “principles of universal design” to help designer create buildings that are accessible as possible.

24. ArtLex Dictionary of Visual Art: Simple site that lets you brush up on thousands of art and architecture terms and their definitions.

25. TechStreet: Building and safety codes may not be exciting fare to read, but necessary if you actually want to build something. Find what you need here.

26. Architype Review: Site organized by information on various building typologies; there’s a discussion forum, and can be a good place to comb through to generate ideas on new building types.

27. Great Buildings: From the pyramids of Giza to more recent masterworks, you can find great buildings from anytime and anywhere on this site.

28. ArchINFORM: Here you’ll find a huge online database of architects and buildings which has been described as one of the most useful architecture resources on the Internet.

29. High Rise Buildings Database: All about skyscrapers.

30. World Architects: Profiles of architects, firms from New York, Germany, Austria, Mexico, China, Japan and more – covering 14 countries and then their sub-regions.

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What you need to know before you start designing
by Katy Purviance on 07/17/08 @ 09:38:48 am
Categories: Products, Green Design | 138 words | 1015 views

Before you design, it would be wise to know how sunlight will interact with the different components and spaces you intend to bring to life.

SusDesign, Christopher Gronbeck’s Seattle consultation firm, has just the software to help you out:

SunAngle Software
Our premiere solar design tool is SunAngle, a shareware program used by people around the world since 1995 to calculate solar angles based on location, date, and time. SunAngle runs directly in your web browser.

A more sophisticated version of SunAngle is also available for purchase. The Sun Angle Professional Suite includes additional features, thorough technical documentation, and full technical support. It’s available for sale on CD-ROM or by e-mail delivery.

About Sus Design
SusDesign provides solar engineering, green building consulting, graphic design, and web site design and programming services, primarily within the sustainable energy and architecture fields.

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Your 5-minute guide to college costs
by Katy Purviance on 07/17/08 @ 09:04:51 am
Categories: Grad School | 1005 words | 1088 views

I just read this article on MSN Money about skirting college costs. I had to show you.

Your 5-minute guide to college costs

Paying for college? It might feel like there’s a vacuum hooked up to your bank account. But these two dozen tips can ease some of the pocketbook pain.

Before you do anything else, apply for financial aid. Even if you think your family earns too much to qualify, send in the forms. Then try these tips:

* Look for scholarships. Many colleges offer academic scholarships that aren’t based on need. (See the Scholarship Search Wizard and “The insider’s guide to scholarships.”)

* Besides scholarships, apply for loans (which you have to pay back) and grants (which you don’t). (See “Find free money for college” and “The insider’s guide to student loans.”)

* The Federal Work-Study Program provides jobs for students, encouraging them to perform community service and work related to their studies to help pay for education expenses. Many schools also have on-campus jobs that are not part of the program but offer tuition discounts and wages.

* Negotiate your aid package. At some colleges, as many as 75% of students who appeal their financial aid receive extra money.

* Programs such as AmeriCorps, Vista, the ROTC and the Peace Corps will help pay off student loans or provide funds during college in exchange for a service commitment upon graduation.

* Tax breaks on 529 plans and larger deductions also are available. Talk with a tax professional. (See “Uncle Sam will help pay for college.”)

Pick up credits where you can
The more credits you can bring with you, the less money you’ll pay to a four-year university.

* Take the first two years at a community college, which has lower costs and easy-to-transfer credits. Pick one that has an articulation agreement with a four-year university. It’s quite common and specifies which community-college credits will be accepted toward a bachelor’s degree at the four-year institution. (See “College for half-price.”)

* If attending a four-year school, take summer classes at a community college near your home.

* Get college credit early. Many high schools offer college-level classes to prepare students for Advanced Placement exams. Some colleges also may let you take College Level Examination Program exams to receive college credit.

Paying for the basics: Eating and sleeping
The cheapest room and board is living with Mom and Dad. Commuting from home can save as much as $6,000 a year. But if you go away to school, try these tips:

* If your college requires you to live on campus the first year, don’t automatically accept the three-meal-a-day food plan if you’re not going to use it. Consider a once- or twice-a-day plan.

* Furnish your dorm room in early American thrift shop rather than new décor.

* Be a resident assistant. Typically open to undergraduates after freshman year, this job involves some work and a commitment to be on call at certain times, but it usually comes with a break on room and board. Plus, you can learn leadership skills for the post-college world.

* Ask your family to buy you a home. It’s not such a crazy idea. If other students rent rooms in the house, the income could offset monthly mortgage payments. Families should make certain, however, that the property they purchase meets all of the requirements of rental property. Consult a tax professional. (See “Buy your college kid a condo?”)

Textbooks: Read ‘em and weep
College students can spend nearly $1,000 a year on textbooks. But there are a growing number of options. Find out what books you need (title, author and ISBN, or international standard book number), then get busy – and don’t wait until the last minute.

* Find used books online through Craigslist.org, eBay’s Half.com and Campus Book Swap. Textbook prices are highest online in August, September, January and February.

* Purchase electronic textbooks. If you do most of your work on a laptop computer and don’t mind e-books, purchase them as downloads and cut the cost in half.

* Look for free books. One company, Freeload Press, provides some electronic texts at no charge in exchange for placing advertisements within the books. Other sites, such as Bartleby.com, offer classic literature to be downloaded free.

* Look on a publisher’s Web site for alternative formats that are less expensive, such as soft-cover editions and e-books.

* Consider purchasing an international edition, which typically is cheaper than a U.S. edition of the same book. The differences between the editions are usually cosmetic, and the content almost identical. Search for international editions at sites such as AbeBooks.com or TextbooksRus.com.

* Share books with other students or use a library copy. This could make you more efficient with your time because you will have to do your work before the last minute.

* Resell your books when you’re through. If you do that, remember to handle the books with care and not mark them up.

Little things can add up
Students have lots of small personal expenses. Maintain a written budget. (See “Simple ways to make college cheaper.”)

* A car is a killer if you’re footing the bills. Especially if you live on campus, getting rid of it is the fastest way to pare expenses. If possible, walk or buy a monthly bus pass.

* Compare cell-phone plans. Some carriers entice students with discounts or enhanced service. Know that you – not your family – will pay the extra charges if you exceed the allotted minutes.

* Many schools require students to have a personal computer. If possible, use a basic PC rather than an expensive laptop. Remember to factor in the costs of software, a printer and, if you live off campus, an Internet connection.

* Find out whether you are being charged for insurance or another health-care fee by the college. If it duplicates your family coverage, get the charge waived.

* Stay on track to finish in four years or less. Decide on a major area of study early on or you could find yourself tacking on years – and additional debt – to your college career.

Source

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Stuff you like
by Katy Purviance on 07/16/08 @ 11:35:50 am
Categories: Events | 227 words | 1918 views

Chicago
Friday, July 18: For the next six weeks, the Silent Summer Film Festival screens 1920s classics like director Ted Wilde’s Speedy and Fritz Lang’s Metropolis. Through August 22. 8 p.m.; Portage Theater, 4050 N Milwaukee Ave.; (773) 736-4050.

Los Angeles
Tuesday, Jul 22: “Some of the most original animations we have seen in years,” the New York Times gushed after seeing Brent Green’s films. Catch Green’s work at The Hammer Museum tonight, along with live performances by Fugazi, Califone, and The Bitter Tears. 8 p.m.; Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Blvd.; (310) 443-7000.

Miami
Friday, July 18: Using California pop culture of the 1960s as his muse, Sean Duffy created an installation at the Miami Art Museum. Catch the unveiling of the LA artist’s work today. Through October 12. Miami Art Museum, 101 W Flagler St.; (305) 375-3000.

New York
Sunday, July 20: For MoMA’s latest exhibition, Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling, Kieran Timberlake Associates and four other firms built prefab homes in a vacant lot outside the museum. Meanwhile, prefab projects spanning the past 180 years fill the galleries. Through October 20. Museum of Modern Art, 11 West 53rd St.; (212) 708-9400.

San Francisco
Saturday, July 19: Environmentalist Michael Harris Sammet discusses the innovative ways urbanites are greening our cities—from green roofs and rooftop gardens to alternative transport and urban agroforestry. 10 a.m.–1 p.m.; UC Berkeley Extension San Francisco, Room 204, South of Market Center, 95 Third St.

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Veiled under cancers of smog is the puke spill of Los Angeles
by Katy Purviance on 07/14/08 @ 05:22:56 pm
Categories: Events, Articles | 246 words | 772 views

The other day I told you about the John Lautner exhibit at the Hammer Museum here in LA (go see it!) Christopher Hawthorne of the LA Times has done an article on the exhibit too, and something in the article made me feel…well, justified.

It’s no secret that Lautner disliked Los Angeles. He described his life here as “too rotten to imagine” and complained that the city was “so ugly it made me physically sick.” Many of his most significant houses, sunk into or hovering over hillsides, are precisely containers for a life safely detached and hidden away from that ugliness.

Over the weekend, my boyfriend and I climbed all the way up to the HOLLYWOOD sign. Or actually, just behind and above it. A sign threatens arrest and a $103 fine if you actually, um, bypass, the fence to reach the sign.

It’s quite a site from the very top of the hill. Look south, over the sign, and there veiled under cancers of smog is the puke spill of Los Angeles, undecipherable under its shroud of pollution. About face and take a few steps and there’s the also-smoggy Burbank/Glendale spread. I made out Forest Lawn Mortuary, the 134 freeway, and ABC studios, all of which were close to the foothills, but everything else was indistinguishable. Ugliness and sameness and smog hiding it all away.

Anyway, I’m looking forward to Lautner’s exhibit. It runs until October somethingth. Go see it!

Read the LA Times article

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A solution to the housing shortage
by Katy Purviance on 07/14/08 @ 09:25:28 am
Categories: Events, I love this building | 226 words | 834 views

I could watch design shows all day long, but you know what I can’t stand? Those shows where a pair of enormous empty nesters renovated their continental living room and their palatial kitchen. Do they really need all that room? Do they enjoy being a drain on our limited resources? (Or are they just dumb?)

I just read about the micro compact house (or m-ch) on a blog about sheds.

micro compact house

The micro-compact home (m-ch), inspired by frequent flights on business class, is to make its US debut this summer at The Museum of Modern Art in New York, as part of the exhibition Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling (20 July - 20 October 2008). It is a low energy lightweight prefabricated dwelling pioneered by Professor Richard Horden and his fellow teachers and students of the department of Architecture and Product Design, Technical University Munich.

Selected from 400 architectural projects, the 2,65m aluminium cube is one of five full-scale prefabricated homes to be displayed in the outdoor space to the west of MoMA’s building. The five projects will be shown in the context of a further 58 projects displayed in the sixth-floor International Council of The Museum of Modern Art Gallery, offering the most thorough examination to date of both the historic and contemporary significance of factory-produced architecture from 1833 to today.

Read more baout it.

And visit the official site.

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Straw Bale: the FAQs
by Katy Purviance on 07/11/08 @ 03:58:53 pm
Categories: Articles | 70 words | 819 views

Another thing I came across while going through my collection of product literature is this flyer put out by Robert Castle Gay of Radius Associates.

Frequently Asked Questions about Straw Bale Buildings

Among other things, you’ll learn that, yes, it really is possible to build a straw bale house for less than $30 a square foot.

Doesn’t that sound reassuring, what with the (unaffordable) housing market falling apart all around us?

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The choice is yours
by Katy Purviance on 07/11/08 @ 03:51:45 pm
Categories: Articles | 297 words | 1520 views

I did it. I went through my entire collection of Dwell, Architectural Record, Natural Home, and Ready Made Magazine, and then I donated them all to the students at the Los Angeles Institute of Architecture & Design, my most recent alma mater.

It’s all part of Operation: Minimalize Material Posessions, which is a reactionary operation. It’s a reaction to the Bush Administrations’s Operation: Make It So Nobody Can Afford Gas.

It costs too much to move. So I’ve gotta give everything away.

I also went through my collection of product literature. (Do you collect that stuff too?)

I found this flyer from Blazing Solar that I picked up at a convention in Phoenix a few years back. I thought I’d share it with you.

Every Day The Sun Rises…
The Choice is Yours

Electric/Gas Water Heating
* Pay 100% of your water heating bill
* Constantly rising yearly utility bills
* No equity or increased value in your home
* Monthly payments for hot water with no return on your investment
* Creates air pollution and puts heavy toxic metals into our air and water, helping to destroy the only living planet

vs. Solar Water Heating
* Eliminate 70% - 90% of your water heating bill
* Constantly increasing savings in non-taxable income
* Your home equity value increases becasue of your investment
* Income generator produces a monthly positive cash flow
* By using non-polluting free solar energy, you are being a responsible citizen of the planet.

Bottom Line
Electric/Gas Water Heating is money spent
with no return on your investment and with increased damage to the environment day by day. More CO2 is pumped into the air causing global warming.

Solar Water Heating is money earned
with built-up equity in your home and a non-taxable rate of return on your solar system of 7% to over 30% annually.

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Grow Up, Part 2wo
by Katy Purviance on 07/10/08 @ 10:24:14 am
Categories: Green Design | 268 words | 843 views

The other day I wrote about how I’m going to try to grow my own food once I start grad school. And it’s not just because I’m going to be poor. It’s also because I kinda get a kick out of the idea of growing my own food. And plus it’ll taste a lot better.

So I did more research and found a few more companies who might be able to help me in my quest. I thought I’d share what I found with you.

Sprout Home has a number of indorr gardening solutions, some of them a little too cute for my aims –

TaterPots

– but they do have something that I think I’d like to try called the BioDome.

BioDome

We finally found a great seed starter kit. The seed tray has 60 starter plugs, Each plug has been dibbled so that a starter hole is there, just waiting for you to drop the seed in. The removable dome top has two vents that can be opened or closed, depending on what air needs you need. No hassle, just starter kit for your plants. The biodome comes with a little one ounce bag of plant food.

Green Fortune has, oh my goodness, a PLANT WALL

Plant Wall

and a personal hydroponics garden called “Streamgarden.”

Streamgarden

Now you can cultivate at home or your workplace with the same technique used in space stations and greenhouses.

Style Meets People has a Sprout Salad kit.

Sprout Salad

Potting Shed Creations has a clear winner with its

Garden in a Pail

with which I can grow tomatoes and strawberries!

Stay tuned as I dig deeper into this investigation of apartment gardens.

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Between Earth and Heaven: The Architecture of John Lautner
by Katy Purviance on 07/10/08 @ 10:01:32 am
Categories: Architects, Events | 648 words | 995 views

You have to go to the Hammer Museum in LA and see the work of John Lautner. You just have to.

It’s at:
10899 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90024

They’re open:
Tue, Wed, Fri, Sat 11am-7 pm
Thu 11am-9 pm
Sun 11am-5 pm

It’s free with student ID.

Between Earth and Heaven
July 13 - October 12, 2008
Between Earth and Heaven: The Architecture of John Lautner

About the Exhibition

John Lautner (1911-94), one of the most important and influential architects of the twentieth century, had a remarkable career spanning nearly six decades. Residing and working in Los Angeles during much of that time, his designs are known for their radical innovation with specific attention to materiality, space and a consciousness of the natural environment.

While Lautner has attained a cult-like status in the world of architecture and design, until now his achievement remains little known and often misunderstood by the public at large –- from his infamous coffee-shop “Googie” style at the start of his career; the misperception of his poetic experiments with form as Space Age or dystopic; to the dismissal of his later, perhaps most meditative houses, as Hollywood showcase.

The Hammer Museum brings John Lautner’s legacy and creative process to a wider audience by presenting the first major exhibition survey of his work: Between Earth and Heaven: The Architecture of John Lautner, on view in Los Angeles from July 13 through October 12, 2008.

An aesthetic, philosophical and social visionary, Lautner made buildings that continue to amaze architects and patrons alike with their formal variety and freedom, their structural originality and their sculptural force. Lautner’s work has come to represent some of the most important examples of architecture in Southern California including private residences such as Elrod House (1968) in Palm Springs and Malin House (1960) in Los Angeles – also known as the “Chemosphere,” which hovers high over a canyon balanced on a single support – all iconic examples of his work and vision.

Lautner is often referred to as an architect’s architect and many renowned practitioners, such as Frank Gehry, have cited him as an abiding influence. One can see the influence and legacy of his vision time and again in the work of architects that have followed him.

“This exhibition is long overdue as it recognizes one of architecture’s greatest visionaries,” says Ann Philbin, Director of the Hammer Museum. “We hope it will encourage wider recognition of Lautner’s work and working methods which have contributed so greatly to Southern California’s art and design history.”

Curated by historian Nicholas Olsberg and architect Frank Escher, Between Earth and Heaven will feature an exhibition design that is as visceral an experience as Lautner’s buildings themselves. Newly crafted large-scale models will give a sense of the internal spaces and scale of key projects and digital animations will reveal Lautner’s construction processes. Short color films by prize-winning documentarian Murray Grigor will convey the sensation of movement through these buildings and their sites, helping the visitor to feel the “vitality within repose” that Lautner sought to create. Surrounding this dramatic core will be a wealth of archival materials, including never-before-seen drawings, architectural renderings, study models and construction photographs which will offer visitors insight into how the structures and spaces unfolded in Lautner’s mind and emerged physically in their settings.

“Lautner’s dwellings took on dramatically new and varied shapes, as he moved toward the central theme of his career – how to use architecture to sublimate the domestic, and to domesticate the sublime,” states Nicholas Olsberg. “As we follow him from his early work with Frank Lloyd Wright to the emergence of his own practice in the 1940s in rapidly expanding, automobile-based Los Angeles, we see how he responded to a changing society and the natural environment by developing an extraordinarily sensuous, thoughtful and innovative architecture, poised between feeling and reason, stillness and motion, vista and shelter.”

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Someone's got it figured out
by Katy Purviance on 07/08/08 @ 10:56:53 am
Categories: Articles | 2174 words | 947 views

After you read this article by Purple S. Romero, read the easy-to-read (i.e. lots of pictures) book,
Commonsense Architecture: A Cross-Cultural Survey of Practical Design Principles

Believe it or not, but the humble bahay kubo, an abode whose creation dates back to the pre-war period and which is commonly used today in rural areas, is an archetype of an energy-efficient structure: it is built from natural, renewable materials such as bamboo and nipa, its sloping roofs are good insulators of heat, and its openings are convenient for air circulation.

adobe house

“The bahay kubo is the perfect example of a green structure,” architect Eduardo Reformado, chair of the Green Architecture Movement (GAM) told abs-cbnnews.com/Newsbreak.

Going back to the bahay kubo is timely amid the skyrocketing price of fuel, and threats of climate change, a long-term alteration in global weather patterns that leads to stronger typhoons and severe droughts.

The major culprit behind climate change is massive energy use, as more energy means more carbon emission. Carbon dioxide is one of the greenhouse gases which under intensified concentration may trigger climate change.

While it is long believed that vehicles are top carbon emitters, buildings actually take the cake. Buildings consume 40 percent of the world’s energy and materials, 25 percent of its wood, and 17 percent of the water.

But it is improbable to reduce these buildings to bahay kubo to cutback on energy consumption. “We couldn’t just return to the bahay kubo,” Philippine Green Building Council (PGBC) chair Christopher De La Cruz said.

But what could be done is to adopt the principles of the design of the bahay kubo to malls, hotels, and, yes, our homes, in order to save energy.

adobe house

Down with concrete walls

Green architecture has simple precepts. According to Clifford Espinosa, who specializes in the use of space to save energy and resources, green architecture entails two things: the use of renewable and natural materials, and a design that exploits the science of air circulation—hot air rises, cold air sinks.

The house of Eddie Concepcion, an acupuncturist with three kids, contains the above features. Concepcion’s house sits on a 150-square meter lot in UP Village, Quezon City. Before Espinosa came in, Concepcion’s house had concrete walls. When the renovation started in April, Espinosa shattered the walls and replaced them with 2.7 meter-tall grills and screen. The result was more inflow of air and light.

“Tumahan ang mga anak ko the first day that we moved in our house. Tumahan means to be at peace, which is the very essence of a home – tahan is the root word of tahanan or home,” Concepcion told Abs-cbnnews.com/Newsbreak.

Espinosa used recycled wood for the benches that lined up the walls of the house. One of the benches was made of old wood from a gabaldon schoolhouse, which was constructed in the American period. No sofa was in sight

Cabinets in the kitchen were dismantled to give way to almost four-feet tall frames where pots and pans now hang. The maid’s room, which was the first thing that greeted the eye upon entering the Concepcions’ house, was torn down.

What replaced it is an attic-like bedroom made of wood, about seven to eight-feet high. To go to this room, which Concepcion amusedly calls the “crib,” one has to climb up a good old-fashioned wooden ladder. But Espinosa was able to stretch the crib’s functionality as the family’s flat screen television was attached to the crib’s front wall. This led to added air space.

“I wanted to bring back the silong,” Espinosa said. The silong is the ground space in larger bahay kubo that could serve both as a family room and workroom. “It’s a good storage for cool air,” he said.

Concepcion’s house, with the crib and three rooms in the elevated portion of the house, has, big uncluttered space, mirroring a modern-day silong.

Less electricity expenses

Another crib could be found in one of the first houses that Espinosa designed – that of Jimuel Naval, a four-time Palanca awardee and a professor in UP’s Filipino department, who also turned out to be Espinosa’s roommate when they were still students in the country’s premier state university.

This crib was designed for an artist. It starts from the concave terrace, which is akin to Padre Damaso’s pulpit as described in Jose Rizal’s books. This is where Naval’s students read or recite their poems.

It then extends all the way up, where at the far right end is a wall, generously lined with books. At the other side of the room is a nook where the writer or artist could receive guests. At first glance, a wall seemed to close over the nook, but this wall is actually made of composite doors, which lead to the veranda and the open sky.

But this design is not just meant to inspire an artist or complement the way he works. The room’s wide windows and slits in the floor are good openings for air. After Espinosa remodeled his house, Naval said that their electricity bill went down to P1, 400 at the lowest from a rate of around P3,000 and up.

The reduction in electricity use was a result of having to use less electric fans. Naval said that they still have air-conditioning, but only in their bedrooms.

Concepcion has also done away with electric fans. “Before the house was renovated, we had an electric fan at every corner. Now we only have one,” he said.

High initial fees

Decreased electricity cost is one of the long-term effects of green architecture. It is a key reason architects use to persuade developers and homeowners to go green amid the initial higher fees entailed by this major shift.

“Budget for green architecture is twice that of its traditional counterpart because of the materials,” Espinosa said. Thermoplastic roofing, for example, which Espinosa used for Concepcion’s house, costs around P1,400-P1,700 in the local market, twice that of the price of corrugated iron, which hovers at P500-P600. But thermoplastic roof membranes are known to have higher tolerance to extreme temperatures than corrugated iron sheets.

In Western countries, solar panels are installed in homes to transform energy collected from the sun into electricity. Solar panels, which use photovoltaic cells, cost around $14,000 with solar power priced at $4.82 per watt.

But does this mean that green architecture is only for the moneyed? We got mixed answers.

Reformado and Espinosa said that green architecture on a low budget could be possible. “We can apply green architecture with a measly P100,000 by changing the orientation,” he said. In architecture, orientation is defined as the “position of a building in relation to an east-west axis.”

“Instead of placing the windows in the east or west, let’s put them at north and south so that we could have cross ventilation,” Reformado explained. “We can put aluminum foil at the ceiling and paint the interior white so that heat is reflected, not absorbed,” he said. Aluminum foil could upgrade the ceiling’s capacity for heat isolation.

Espinosa seconded the option to use light-colored materials. “It’s basic science. Heat bounces off from light colors, while dark colors absorb it,” he said.

Low-cost housing

However, architect Rowena Ramos, conference chair of Building Green 2008, the green building awareness event spearheaded by PGBC, posed doubts. “At present day, what could we do with P100,000? Orientation is only just one aspect of green architecture,” she said.

On the other hand, Pablo Suarez, a principal architect in Green Architecture and Eco-Sustainable Design Consultancy, said that families at the base of the pyramid could best adopt basic environment-friendly practices such as proper solid waste management.

But Reformado stressed that the ultimate direction for green architecture is to marry its principles to low-cost housing. “That’s what we at GAM want to do. I think low-cost housing projects such as Gawad Kalinga should totally use green architecture,” he said.

Gawad Kalinga (GK), a housing development program for the poor that has tapped 900 communities worldwide, has already started its foray to green architecture last year.

Josephine Cayabyab, coordinator of Green Kalinga, the environmental program of GK, said that houses in Sitio Paho in Quezon City have been retrofitted to reduce energy use.

The design for green GK houses includes features such as a slot at the top and bottom of the house to boost air circulation. Plans to use bamboo for the walls of an extension were crafted to widen ducts for natural light. Cayabyab said that the working budget for each house is P85,000.

The whole cycle

Green building involves the whole building cycle – from the design, operation, to the maintenance and removal.

Green building, according to De la Cruz, consists of a gamut of technologies and practices that lessen a structure’s blow to the environment and human health.

Let’s start with the design. Orienting windows and walls, placing porches, and insulating ceilings and floors open to better air circulation. In operations and maintenance, solid waste management and wastewater treatment prevent garbage buildup and pollution.

Green GK, for its part, aims to conserve water by using green building technologies such as rainwater harvesting, which could be done through the use of a rain catcher with a filter. Rainwater would be collected and cleansed in the rain catcher so that it could still be used for flushing the toilet and cleaning houses.

Green GK also promotes wastewater treatment in their communities, where water from domestic, agricultural and industrial use would be treated first before it is funneled to rivers, lakes and other bodies of water with the use of constructed wetland, septic tanks, drain fields and other mechanisms.

No rating system yet

But while the concept behind it is simple, the growth of green architecture and the proliferation of green buildings require a deeper look into the nitty-gritty of corporate practices, standardized measurement and evaluation mechanism, and stronger policy muscle.

It begins with the selection of materials. Yes, there are cut-and-dried green materials such as bamboo, straw and the recyclables. However, these are not the only materials used in construction – there is cement, for example.

Portland cement, which is commonly used worldwide, emits dust and carbon dioxide from its raw materials during production.

“We should ask first for a laboratory testing of the materials before we use them,” Reformado said. “We need to make sure that they were not made of toxic substances,” he added.

But Reformado bewails the lack of a mandated certification system for producers and suppliers of construction materials. He said that a certification of green materials would force business players to go green.

Green Choice eco-seal

In the Philippines, a labeling program called Green Choice Philippines was launched in 2001 to identify green products. An imperative requirement in getting the Green Choice eco-seal is having manufacturing processes that pass the ISO or the International Organization for Standardization program for environmental systems.

Cemex cement is one of the materials recently awarded with the Green Choice eco-seal. It is the third product to gain this label, and the first one in construction resources to do so. However, obtaining this seal is voluntary.

The procurement of sustainable, green products is actually mandated in government agencies. In 2004, President Arroyo issued EO 301 to require government offices to come up with their respective green procurement programs and submit them to the National Ecolabelling Program Board (ELPB). The ELPB, with the Department of Trade and Industry as chief agency, would verify the environmental soundness of the products and services in the said procurement program.

However, there is a gap in the evaluation not only of the green procurement program but also of green building sustainability, as there is no single system which measures the implementation and effectiveness of green practices in building construction.

In Western countries and some parts of Asia, what fills this gap is a national rating system that serves as yardstick for the design, construction and operation of green buildings.

In the works

The Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method is the earliest rating system in the world, established in Britain in the 1990s. It gives credit to site aspects, materials aspects, energy use, water use, indoor environment quality and innovation and performance enhancement.

Other rating systems such as the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) in the United States works with the same point system. What made LEED highly successful, however, is policy backing. LEED-supportive legislation has been issued in 90 cities, 29 counties, 20 towns, 30 states, 12 federal agencies, 15 public school jurisdictions and 37 institutions of higher education in the US.

The PGBC is devising the Philippines’ rating system for green buildings. Once drafted, it would be submitted to the Department of Energy for approval. At this point, Reformado said that “we are way too late.”

But Suarez, the head of the technical working group which would craft the rating standards, remains hopeful. “The government will approve this system. The global initiative to go green is already there. We cannot deny that.”

Source

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Notes from the Underground
by Katy Purviance on 07/08/08 @ 09:33:59 am
Categories: Articles, I love this building | 568 words | 2186 views

A few years back, I illustrated The Earth Sheltered Solar Greenhouse Book for Mike Oehler.



So now I’m going through my old issues of Dwell and I came across an article about Malcolm Wells, another big underground housing guy.

“I used to care about how buildings looked on the outside,” says Malcolm Wells, a charming, self-deprecating man with a bushy beard that is more salt than pepper. “Phew, that was so self-centered of me. Now I care only about the physical effects of architecture.”

Underground House

Wells’s exterior designs for two houses with the same floor plan were published by Popular Science in 1989.

At 80 years old, Wells is a man ahead of his time. In fact, the architect, author, cartoonist, and sand-castle expert has been so for some 40 years, ever since he turned his back on traditional architecture in favor of earth-sheltered housing. His self-sustaining “underground” buildings are covered in upwards of 200 tons of earth, are waterproofed by a thin membrane of rubber, insulated by plastic foam board, employ passive solar energy via south-facing floor-to-ceiling windows, and, most important, create a natural habitat for wild plants and animals. “Underground buildings answer just about any question relating to a building problem: They’re fireproof, hurricaneproof, landslideproof, soundproof, and cost just about nothing to maintain,” Wells explains. “It’s so obvious, yet our egos get in the way. We want to pop up above the earth and show that we’re here, that we’re somebody.”

Underground House

Glass always plays a big role in Wells’s designs, with glass walls often running the length of the south sides.

How did a man whose raison d’être was once office buildings and factories go green? Accidentally. “In the late 1940s, I was just out of the Marine Corps, looking for a job and a way to get dates,” he says with a sly smile. “I stumbled into a New Jersey architecture office and was hired as a draftsman on the spot.” Years later, Wells was chosen to design electronic giant RCA’s entry into the 1964 World’s Fair. Then it hit him: In two years the structure would be destroyed, and for what?

Underground House

The Hess house and the Locust Hills project (next) nestle deeply into the earth. Though these structures are almost fully submerged, natural light is a key component.

From that day forward, he decided to stop being a “destroyer” and instead devote his life to building with nature, not against it. The earth-shelter movement, of which he’s considered the godfather, reached its apex during the energy crisis of the late ’70s/early ’80s, but then, says Wells, bitterly, “Ronald Reagan became president and tore the solar panels off Jimmy Carter’s house.” Despite this setback, it is estimated that there are more than 2,000 underground structures in the U.S., and even more in Great Britain, Australia, and the Czech Republic.

Underground House

The Locust Hills project.

Though still active, Wells is slowing down. Wells, who retired in 2004 after a stroke, lives by correspondence, receiving and writing letters (always by hand; he’s too old-fashioned for computers) to fans as near as the local diner and as far as India and Egypt. And while he is no longer designing per se, he hasn’t given up the fight and remains reassuringly optimistic about the future. “Just wait till you’re my age,” he says. “You’re going to see a green America.”

Source

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Grow Up
by Katy Purviance on 07/07/08 @ 04:32:47 pm
Categories: Articles | 276 words | 1070 views

Since I’m starting grad school soon, my thoughts have turned to two things:

1. My upcoming poverty
2. My resourcefulness for dealing with said upcoming poverty

So I’m considering growing my own food. Right in my little apartment.

I’ve been looking at the AeroGarden (As Seen on TV!)

But how easy is it?
AeroGarden

“Plug in?”

“Select your plant type?”

So I’ve also been looking at Oh My Apartment’s “Tips for Starting an Apartment Garden”

and Nancy Wolcott’s Start a self-sufficiency garden even in a cramped apartment

You are sitting there in your recliner chair in your small city apartment desperately longing for the day when you can escape to the country and become a homesteader and become more self-sufficient. Well, don’t just sit there. Get a head start. Bloom where you are planted until you can actually make the big move. Don’t waste valuable time in pointless dreaming. Begin making your dreams a reality, now.

Now.

And then I came across this article on vertical farming that I had to share with you.

Vertical Farming, which has been discussed for years, would involve building high rise multi level “Farmscrapers” where farmers would employ sustainable farming practices in a controlled environment. Dickson Despommier, professor of Environmental Health Sciences at Columbia, and one of the true pioneers of this idea, thinks this could ultimately ease the world’s food, water, and energy crises. Despommier argues that the technology to build vertical farms currently exists and that it could be an economical and sustainable solution to a number of problems.

Dickson Despommier was even on the Colbert Report.

Read the whole article. And wish me luck in my quest.

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Anti environmental architecture
by Katy Purviance on 07/03/08 @ 01:45:44 pm
Categories: Articles | 987 words | 1944 views

I just read this blog post by George Marshall called “Anti environmental architecture.” It’s from 2006 but is even more relevant today.

I watched the Stirling Awards for Architecture on Saturday with a deep despondency.

These awards are the Booker of Buildings. Although all manner of croneyism, politics and fashion determines who makes the short list they are as good a reflection as any of what the architecture and arts world see as the cutting edge of new design.

Watching it I can only conclude that architects exhibit a particularly interesting and complex form of denial. Architects are, in my experience, aware people with progressive politics. As a profession they have a huge responsibility for causing climate change (the energy consumed by buildings and their materials are the single largest source of greenhouse gases) and a huge opportunity to develop the forms and structures of a low carbon economy. And, to be fair, they do talk about climate change a fair bit in magazines and conferences and books.

But the people at the top of the profession who get the Stirling and Pritzker prizers and the Gold medals and the gongs and the big fancy projects are not building anything that remotely reflects the realities of climate change.

This is an extremely interesting period for architecture- the most inventive and expressive in thirty years- and that expression is being achieved through technologies and materials that are the antithesis of a low carbon sustainable economy.

Take concrete for example. Cement has horrible CO2 emissions- very high temperatures are needed to slake the lime which produces yet more carbon dioxide as a by product. Cement manufacture accounts for 5% of the worlds greenhouse gas emissions. If we were serious about climate change it would be used very sparingly indeed.

And yet the bookies favourite to win the Stirling prize was Zaha Hadid’s extraordinary Phaeno Science Centre. It is is a symphony in ‘compacted concrete’ – the concrete floors sweeping up and around the museum to create one organic whole. It creates a thrilling new language for concrete that will be imitated widely. But it pays a high price. It used 27,000 cubic metres of concrete which produced nearly 10,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide. Given that a sustainable level is probably not much more than one tonne of carbon dioxide per person per year, that is a huge footprint.

Architects adore reinforced concrete because it combines strength with immense sculptural potential. Another Stirling shortlist was a ‘brick house’ by Caruso St John, the most striking quality of which, despite its name, is the neo-expressionist crumpled lines of its concrete roof slab. There’s an awful lot of concrete in that house. It pays clear homage to Louis Kahn and the formal language he developed 40 years ago, a long time before we knew of the impending collapse of the world’s weather system.

The winner of the Stirling Prize is Richard Rogers’ Barajas Airport. An airport wins the prize! A parking garage for the fastest growing cause of climate change! The top architects probably spend half their lives in airports and are especially subject to the near universal denial about the impacts of flights. Yet, if we are going to deal with climate change this building type needs to become as obselete as the bear pit.

One reason that people don’t see planes as polluting is that it doesn’t feel dirty. There are no smokestacks or piles of coal. Planes feel (and feelings count more than reality when we assess impacts) very smart and white and clean. Rogers and his team have concentrated their creativity on creating an airport that extends that feeling- all open and bright and fresh.

But the openness and brightness of the interiors is made possible by large expanses of plate glass (and a lot of steel to hold it up). What we don’t see in the pictures is the huge cooling and heating plant which keeps it at a tolerable temperature. No doubt Rogers, who speaks often about climate change (his shortlisted Welsh Assembly building appears to have made a serious attempt to be green), has achieved a very high energy design by using lots of clever technology and design to keep the energy load manageable.

This is the nub. Modern energy saving technology is not being used to create buildings with zero emissions but is enabling increased transparency and expressive potential. This is exactly what is happening in the car industry where the main market for LPG and fuel cells is for sports utility vehicles- the heaviest cars ever built.

And one could expand on this point endlessly. All around the world the best and most creative architects are using new technologies to push the expressive potential of their buildings. Gehry faces his buildings with sheets or stainless steel and titanium (the most energy intensive metal of all). Rem Koolhaas has built a new library in Seattle with entirely glass walls and roof. Work was suspended on Herzog and de Meuron ‘s Olympic stadium in Beijing because of the costs of the 80,000 tonnes of steel involved in its construction. That’s 152,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide- an incredible indulgence…and so I could go on. None of these designs are models for a sustainable future. All the architects have won the Pritzer award- the highest award for architecture.

As you can tell, I love architecture but despair of what is being done with it. Modernism arose from an entirely valid critique that traditional building was not able to meet the needs and opportunities of the modern world. In fifty years time, as the seas are rising and the hurricanes are crashing every month into Florida these buildings will appear pathetically dated- the last decadent rococo flourish of the carbon age. So why, when all the scientists agree on the problem, are they still be built and lauded?

Go to the source to read the comments. They’re good.

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Zoka Zola's Zero-Energy House
by Katy Purviance on 07/03/08 @ 12:59:58 pm
Categories: I love this building | 829 words | 7140 views

Zero Energy House

The dining terrace connects the passer-by to the garden and canopy tree in it. The building’s façades are draped with ivy. Windows on both the North and South walls give the building a porous feel.
A layer of mosses, herbs, and grasses cover the building’s roofs. The accessible green roofs encourage bio-diversity and absorb water runoff, while insulating the interior and protecting the roof from thermal shock and ultra violet deterioration.

We divided the house into four zones. Bathrooms are stacked and ventilated as an isolated area of higher moisture and heat. The kitchen is ventilated as an isolated area of higher moisture, heat, and odor. The living and dining spaces are located on the west side of the building where one can enjoy the last rays of the evening sun after work. The detached Multi-Use space is employed as part of the garden and is occasionally heated and cooled.

Zero Energy House

In the summer, the operable windows allow cross ventilation. The tree in the south garden gives beauty and summer shade.

In the winter, warm sunlight floods the shallow rooms through large south-facing windows. These windows provide a multitude of views to the outdoors.

Active systems: Electricity generating

The natural partnership of an auroturbine and photovoltaic panels will provide power for this building. We will provide structure and infrastructure for the future installation of these two renewable resources, which will be installed in two to three years.

Auroturbine:

The auroturbine is an innovative wind-electric generator designed by Bill Becker that is ideal fo this residential urban setting.

It works well with the variable direction and turbulent winds of Chicago, generating 1500 watts at 30mph. It is self-regulating and generates power in wind speeds between 3mpg and 120 mph. The auroturbine will be placed with its axis running north/south, to harness prevaling winds.

It uses safe high-torque / low speed rotation that prevents machine “runaways". Snow and ice are slid out of the turbines instead of propelled. This turbine is quiet because of its sinuous movement.

Since its first installation, the auroturbine has a record of zero animal deaths.

The auroturbine will cost $7,500. This will decrease with time as its popularity increases. We will wait two years for a more advanced and affordable model.

Photovoltaic (PV) Panels:

PV panels are used in conjunction with the auroturbine because sunshine and wind have complientary peak periods, i.e., wind is strongest during the months when sunshine is often weakest and vice versa.

Energy from the sun is the most abundant energy source on the planet. The photovoltaic process converts solar energy directly into electricity. A PV cell consists of two or more thin layers of semi-conducting silicon. When the silicon is exposed to light, electrical charges are generated and this can be conducted away as direct current. Multiple cells are connected together and encapuslated to form a panel.

PV equipment has no moving parts and as a result requires minimal maintenance. It generates electricity without emitting harmful gases, and its operation is virtually silent. The photovoltaic system will cost $5,000.

We will provide the structure to install the PV panels at their optimum working angle of 55 degrees.
south elevation

Active systems: Water heating and cooling

Both the geothermal system and solar-heat panels will be installed to head and cool the house.

Geothermal System:

The geothermal system will provide the main source of heating and cooling for this house. Installation involves six fluid-filled loops embedded into 4-inch diameter holes in the earth. These holes are drilled to the bedrock.

Closed loops utilize polyethylene piping buried or drilled into the ground filled with a water/anti-freeze solution. The loop fluid circulating in this closed piping system absorbs heat or rejects heat into the surrounding earth.

During the heating process, warmer temperatures in the earth are absorbed and transferred to the loop fluid. The heat in the fluid is used for a radiant floor heating system.

During the cooling process, warmer temperatures in the home are removed and transferred to the loop fluid. The heat in the fluid is deposited into the earth while the fluid is cooled by the cold earth temperature. Closed loops are virtually maintenance free.

The geothermal system will cost $12,000 more than conventional gas furnace heating but monthly utility bill savings are calculated to be greater than the monthly mortgage payment for this portion of construction costs.

Solar-Heat Panels:

The solar heat panels will work in unison with geothermal heating to provide hot water for baths, showers, cleaning dishes, laundry, and radiant floor heating.

Solar collectors trap the sun’s heat under a glass cover. The system switches on when the collector is hotter than the solar storage tank. Water is heated as it is pumped through copper tubes in the collector. A heat exchanger transfers this heat into a storage tank. The water in this tank can be used for daily hot water needs.

The solar-heat system will cost $10,000, but the State of Illinois will give a 50% rebate for its installation.

Check it out

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Why don't the rest of us like the buildings the architects like?
by Katy Purviance on 07/03/08 @ 10:33:42 am
Categories: Articles | 56 words | 669 views

I just read this essay by Robert Campbell called “Why don’t the rest of us like the buildings the architects like?”

He wrote it after learning that Harvard’s highly-lauded and much beloved Peabody Terrace is an eyesore to the general public.

Here’s the pdf:
Why don’t the rest of us like the buildings the architects like?

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Sorry, out of gas
by Katy Purviance on 07/02/08 @ 02:43:43 pm
Categories: News, Observations, Events | 85 words | 718 views

It’s too late to go see the “Sorry, out of gas” exhibit at the Canadian Centre for Architecture, but it’s not too late to take a look at the flashy companion web site. It’s just like using a ViewMaster. It’s cool.

Take a look

You’ll see photos taken over thirty years ago of innovative techniques that spelled viable answers to the oil crisis.

These same innovative techniques that people are calling for en masse in the face of today’s oil crisis.

Seriously, you goota look

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When everything is seeking the "Wow" response, then nothing can attain it.
by Katy Purviance on 07/02/08 @ 02:29:37 pm
Categories: Applying to Grad School | 167 words | 543 views

Harvard sent me a copy of the Harvard Design Magazine not too long ago. I’m just finishing it now. In it are notes from a meeting of their Practioneers’ Advisory Board, and I read a remark that I wanted to share with you. It’s something to think about.

“…our moment in history has encouraged the production of spectatular and strange tall iconic buildings that often emphasize novelty for its own sake. In that respect these designs are boringly homogeneous.

When everything is seeking the “Wow” response, then nothing can attain it.

Part of this striving has to do with the pressure to stand out in international design competitions, part with the fact that unprecedented building shapes are enabled by CAD, and part with the presence of huge amounts of capital now looking to make big splashes in real estate.

On the other hand…the huge amounts of capital going into buildings as investments also produces risk-aversion that makes the majority if new high-rise production conventional and lifeless.”

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Another way to generate power from the sun
by Katy Purviance on 07/01/08 @ 10:16:23 am
Categories: Observations | 287 words | 1166 views

There’s this homeless man I know. He has a very peaceful spirit about him, and he’s incredibly well-read, so every time I see him, we end up talking for a while.

One of the last times we ran in to each other was at a Starbucks. I was waiting for someone, so he took a seat and started telling me what he would do if he were king of Los Angeles.

He told me about Stirling Engines. I hadn’t heard of them before. If he were king, he said, he would require every flat roof in LA to be covered with them to generate power.

He drew a picture of how it would work. It was so simple. And it is an example of what I want to do as architect: I want to use the properties of physics to heat, cool, ventilate, and power homes.

For you, I found an animated gif that explains the concept.

Stirling Engine

Can’t see the whole thing? Click here.

Air in the engine is cyclically heated (by an alcohol burner) and expands to push the power piston (shown in blue) to the right. As the power piston moves to the right, the yellow linkage forces the loose-fitting, red “piston” (on the left half of the machine) to displace air to the cooler side of the engine. The air on the cool side loses heat to the outside world and contracts, pulling the blue piston to the left. The air is again displaced, sending it back to the hotter region of the engine, and the cycle repeats.

The Stirling engine cycle can also be used “in reverse", to convert rotating motion into a temperature differential (and thus provide refrigeration).

How cool is that?

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places where you could probably learn more about designing and building in just a few days than I did after a year of grad school

Know of some others I can add here? Let me know. Have you already visited some of these places...or planning on it? Let me know and I will feature your story and your photos here!

I am starting a new kind of architecture school. Unlike most architecture schools, you wouldn't have to submit GRE scores or good grades or letters of recommendation. You wouldn't have to put the rest of your life on hold for 3 to 5 years. You wouldn't have to accrue tens of thousands of dollars in debt. At my architecture school, anyone could come for a few weeks and learn how to build a house with their own two hands. My teachers would take skills and concepts from some of these other workshops I've listed above... except classes would be held year-round to make it easy to fit into your schedule. I would have a number of different campuses around the country that would teach building designs appropriate to the local climate. And I need your help. Can you donate land for a campus? Can you dotate books for a library? Can you teach a workshop? Can you provide start-up capital? Let me know.

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