In these days of Google and Wikipedian certainty, it may seem like our world has few mysteries left. We know how henges were built and there aren’t many Aztec ruins being discovered in forgotten forests, but today we got word of at least one slightly mysterious find. Carved into the hot, calm Nazca desert of Peru are hundreds of enormous, ancient drawings without a clear purpose. Among them is a 300 foot hummingbird. These geoglyphs date from between 500 BCE to 500 CE and have been studied for nearly a century. This week, the world learned that several new forms, never seen before, have been unearthed by a sandstorm.
The early Nazca people created these odd single-line drawings by removing the thin layer of dark red pebbles and rock that covers the desert plain, exposing pale contrasting clay underneath. The lime filled clay hardens with a day’s cycle through cool mist and hot sun, and the desert site is reliably hot and windless, leaving the drawings baked into the landscape for hundreds of years without disruption.
At this point, pigeonholing Ghostly International as a record label is beyond antiquated. Headquartered in Ann Arbor, Michigan (and with a strong presence in NYC), the multi-platform creative house simultaneously delves into product design, fashion, visual…
Nothing will put a stop to your day of running around the city faster than a dying phone battery! CityCharge gives users who are on-the-go a place to sit and relax while their devices charges. Powered entirely by solar energy, it features 6 charging cables that can accommodate most smartphones and tablets. A success at their new home in Bryant Park, NYC, the design is round, easy to move, and also has a communal table that encourages social interaction!
Designer: Ignacio Ciocchini
– Yanko Design Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world! Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design! (Social Solar Charger was originally posted on Yanko Design)
Partenaire de l’ASP World Tour, la marque Samsung a décidé de mettre en avant la beauté du surf dans une jolie publicité réunissant plusieurs surfers professionnels comme Kelly Slater, Mitch Crews ou encore Gabriel Medina. De belles images réunies sous le nom de « Everyday Day is Day One » et réalisée par Mark Molloy avec l’agence hollandaise 72andSunny.
Opinion: officials are racing to bring big architectural names like Zumthor, Gehry and Piano to Los Angeles’ Museum Mile, but the lack of an overarching masterplan is leaving the street itself sad and neglected, says Mimi Zeiger.
This is a tale about a blob in a park. Or, this is a tale about a blob in a park with a bridge. Or the tale of a blob in a park, a bridge, and a tower designed by LA’s most famous architect. Or, it’s the tale about a city and a blob in a park, a bridge, a tower, a lacklustre sphere, and a subway stop. It’s a cautionary tale.
In late June the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) released Peter Zumthor’s revised design for its new museum building. His earlier preliminary design, a self-described “black flower” raised some 30-feet above the ground on oversized glass footings, oozed a wee too close to the La Brea Tar Pits that inspired its undulating form. Leadership at the Page Museum, which actively uses the pits for research, expressed concern and asked Zumthor to back off. Squeezed in and smooched out, the new Schmoo-like scheme maintains the approximately 400,000 square feet required to display museum’s extensive collection, but it does so by stretching across Wilshire Boulevard to a piece of property that is currently a LACMA parking lot.
And as if a bridge spanning Miracle Mile wasn’t eyebrow raising enough, a week later LACMA director Michael Govan, in a story written by Los Angeles Times architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne, divulged plans for a mixed-use tower across the street from the museum, above a planned Metro subway stop. Govan’s dream architect for the job? Frank Gehry.
A decade ago, LACMA engaged Piano to develop a masterplan for the campus as it embarked upon the first phase of its self-proclaimed transformation. In it, you can see the glimmers of the spine that connects the Pereira buildings to the May Company Building – identified as LACMA West – and the new Piano addition, then identified as the Broad Contemporary Art Museum. Phase II, launched in 2008, saw solidification of an axis through the site — let’s call it a kabob approach — and the addition of the Lynda and Stewart Resnick Pavilion, also designed by Piano. By this time, Broad had moved his own museum to Grand Avenue.
In many ways, the aspiration of the Zumthor design is to demolish, declutter, and reorient the inward looking vestiges of Piano’s planning to the street. Yet without an overall urban approach, the scheme reproduces the problem on city scale.
In a sweeping assessment in The Los Angeles Review of Books, New York-based architect and critic Joseph Giovannini makes the case for Govan to turn the museum design over to Gehry, an overdue masterwork in the architect’s hometown. My mission, however, is not to overturn the Zumthor plan per se, nor is it to lobby for any one of the many talented architects in Los Angeles capable of taking on such a grand commission. I’m arguing for something more meta: a civic assessment.
As a critic who often covers urbanism and, often, the “tactical” and “DIY” sides of cities, I hesitate before making a case for larger scale urban planning. Daniel Burnham may have said “make no little plans,” yet my own predilections have been for the discrete and iterative. The field is still shaking off Twentieth Century missteps and overreaches, while at the same time the rise of “placemaking” suggests a gentler approach to neighbourhoods and communities.
In a phone conversation, Govan evokes the High Line when describing the glazed promenade that follows the perimeter of Zumthor’s undulating form and continues as a bridge over Wilshire. “It’s a continuous veranda,” he explains eagerly. “It’s higher than the High Line in New York and offers a perspective on the streetscape and there’s a beautiful view of the park.” He also reiterates his admiration for Gehry’s 8 Spruce Street, a 76-story skyscraper in Lower Manhattan. Each project, however, has a uniquely ambivalent relationship to the street. Although the tower is defined by sexy undulations, crimps and folds rendered in stainless steel and glass, the building’s base is an unremarkable exercise in orange brick. The High Line’s largest impact at ground level is to increase real estate value and the number of surrounding condos and cultural buildings.
“By reimagining our streetscape, we can create transformative gathering places for Angelenos to come together, whether they travel by foot, transit, bike, or car,” said Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti as he announced the city’s Great Streets Initiative in early June. That project pledges $800,000 in seed funding to study fifteen corridors around the city.
Getting Angelinos to use the LACMA campus as a public space is one of Govan’s biggest successes. Families gather under the museum’s grand canopy. Across the street food trucks pull up to the curb. Impromptu picnickers fill the spotty lawn in front of a bland office building. The users are in place, more will come with the Metro stop, but where’s the more ambitious approach to the street itself?
Govan is betting on Zumthor’s track record for making beautiful, impeccably detailed buildings to carry the design forward. He’s dreaming of a Gehry tower that not only houses the museum’s architecture and design collection, but also Gehry’s own archive.
But a collection of signatures does not make a text. The cost of only Zumthor’s design has been estimated at $650 million to upwards of $1 billion. Surely there’s some incentive to make a public and transparent study of the LACMA scheme, the impact of a high-rise over the Metro stop, and the linkage to the additional museums in relationship to the whole Wilshire Boulevard cultural corridor.
Mimi Zeiger is a Los Angeles-based journalist and critic. She covers art, architecture, urbanism and design for a number of publications including The New York Times, Domus, Dwell, and Architect, where she is a contributing editor. Zeiger is author of New Museums, Tiny Houses and Micro Green: Tiny Houses in Nature. She is currently adjunct faculty in the Media Design Practices MFA program at Art Center. Zeiger also is editor and publisher of loud paper, a zine and blog dedicated to increasing the volume of architectural discourse.
…I can’t deny that I hate pulling the bags out of the large garbage can I keep in my studio. To conserve bags, I wait until they’re fully laden, and the suction effect seems to add 20 pounds to the already-heavy load.
I probably wouldn’t buy the “Can-Air” solution, partly because I hate the commercial, and partly because I assume one could easily build whatever their device is made out of. (Notice they’re careful not to mention what it actually is, which makes me think it’s a rebranded piece of something you find in a hardware store.) Meanwhile, a common hack is to drill holes in the bottom of your garbage can for airflow, but since people in the studio are fond of throwing full cups of coffee and sharp, broken plastic hangers in there, I’ll forgo that solution too.
This is site is run by Sascha Endlicher, M.A., during ungodly late night hours. Wanna know more about him? Connect via Social Media by jumping to about.me/sascha.endlicher.