Sundance Film Festival 2018: New Frontier Immersive Works: VR, AR and more developments in the future of storytelling

Sundance Film Festival 2018: New Frontier Immersive Works


With more than two dozen virtual and augmented reality projects, as well as exhibitions and more traditionally formatted filmic work, New Frontier commenced last week at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. In its 12th annual iteration, New Frontier……

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Link About It: "Mudbound" Cinematographer Rachel Morrison Makes Oscar History




The first female director of photography to receive an Oscar nomination, Rachel Morrison has shattered another glass ceiling in the film industry—one that’s held for 90 years. Called out for her work on “Mudbound,” Morrison has already won the New……

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Preston Scott Cohen creates jagged-roofed building for Michigan architecture school

Ironspot brick and a sawtooth roof define the exterior of this new wing for the University of Michigan‘s architecture and planning college, designed by US studio Preston Scott Cohen.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

Located on the university’s campus in Ann Arbor, the Taubman Building adjoins the existing Art and Architecture Building – a low-slung, brick-and-glass structure that opened in 1974 and was designed by Robert Saarinen Swanson, the grandson of Eliel Saarinen. It houses the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, along with the Stamps School of Art & Design.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

In 2009, the architecture and planning department set out to expand and upgrade its facilities. Preston Scott Cohen – an architecture studio based in Cambridge, Massachusetts – was chosen for the project, which entailed creating a new 36,000-square-foot wing (3,344 square metres) and renovating 11,000 square feet (1,022 square metres) of existing space.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

One of the greatest challenges was giving the new addition high visibility and connecting it to Bonisteel Boulevard, a major artery running through campus. The goal was to make the wing “act is if it is the centre of the school, in order that it will serve as the nexus of circulation for all students and faculty”.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

In response, the team envisioned a linear building placed at an angle, with the north end gesturing toward Bonisteel. The building is topped with a distinctive sawtooth roof and is wrapped in two tones of grey ironspot brick, which is glazed to help the surfaces become impervious to water and dirt. Exterior walls are punctuated with windows of varying shapes and sizes.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

“The facades combine modest vernacular and cultural building character,” the studio said. “The brick pattern, which weaves running bond and soldier’s coursing, is composed to formalise implicit shadows or folds that extend from the sawtooth profile to the windows.”

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

The southern portion of the wing is lifted up on pilotis, forming a sheltered area at ground level for bike parking and an outdoor gallery for student projects. The covered area connects to an existing courtyard.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

Raising this part of the wing solved several problems. “It permitted the courtyard between the existing and new buildings to remain open to the valley and a retention pond to the east, and it allowed the new building to create a path through, between the existing and the new,” the studio said.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

“It also resolved the disparity in height between the new plenums and the existing building, and thereby established an ascending and continuous sequence of interior spaces.”

Inside, the ground floor houses a large classroom and faculty offices. Interior finishes include concrete floors and white paint, which were used throughout the school.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

The second floor contains a range of programmatic elements – studios, offices, meeting rooms, reading rooms, and a lounge. The central feature is a double-height atrium ringed by ramps and stairs.

“The main space, called the commons, is composed of two pairs of ramps linked by a spiral-like suspended stair,” the team said. “The solid parts of the railings are kept low to enable viewing of the central space from afar and to articulate a remarkable scale effect.”

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

Designed to be highly flexible, the commons can accommodate jury reviews, dinners, lectures and other special events. It also can serve as a work area for large fabrication projects.

The third level – a partial floor that overlooks the commons – contains a large studio space with tall windows and “bays” formed by the sawtooth-shaped roof.

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

“The ceiling combines the loft-like lighting and spatial proportions of a gallery with the Midwestern factory-like workspace environment,” the architects said. “This combination will give the school a feeling that is very rare, very exceptional.”

Taubman College by Preston Scott Cohen

Overall, the building was imagined as a fluid procession with clearly defined moments. “The entire sequence of the building is experienced as a promenade composed of distinctive architectural episodes,” the studio said. “Wayfinding becomes an architectural narrative.”

Founded in 1989, Preston Scott Cohen is known for creating buildings with complex geometries. Other projects by the studio include the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, which features faceted concrete facades, a triangular plan and a spiralling atrium.

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Register your interest for Dezeen Awards 2018

Dezeen is launching its first ever awards programme to identify the world’s best architecture, interiors and design. Register your interest now ›

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Amazon Go store swaps cashiers for sensors to remove queues

Long checkout queues are a thing of the past at Amazon‘s new app-enabled store, which allows shoppers to simply walk out with their groceries.

The Amazon Go store in Seattle welcomed its first customers yesterday, 22 January 2018. This marked the debut of the company’s sensor technology that detects items taken off the shelves and keeps track of them in a virtual shopping cart.

Amazon Go

The sensors – similar to those used in self-driving vehicles – automatically notice when items are removed or put back on the shelves, in proximity to the shopper’s smartphone.

Once they leave the store, a receipt is sent digitally and their Amazon account is billed.

Amazon Go

“We created the world’s most advanced shopping technology so you never have to wait in line,” said a statement on Amazon’s website. “With our Just Walk Out Shopping experience, simply use the Amazon Go app to enter the store, take the products you want, and go! No lines, no checkout.”

Amazon Go

The first store is located near the corner of Seventh Avenue and Blanchard Street, just north of Seattle’s Downtown area. Covering 1,800 square feet, it offers ready-to-eat dishes, grocery essentials, snacks and meal kits.

Sales advisors are on hand to provide assistance and re-stack shelves, while on-site chefs prepare food and products fresh.

Amazon Go

The Amazon Go app is compatible with recent iPhone and Android phones, and free to download. Once used to enter the store, the device can be put away while shopping.

“We asked ourselves: what if we could create a shopping experience with no lines and no checkout?” said Amazon. “Could we push the boundaries of computer vision and machine learning to create a store where customers could simply take what they want and go?”

Amazon Go

The company is investing heavily in ways to enhance the retail experience for customers. It recently announced Amazon Key, which allows delivery people to enter a home and drop off a package while the customer is out.

Amazon is also experimenting with delivery drones, and has filed patents for ideas ranging from flying warehouses and underwater depots to a highway network designed to stop self-driving cars crashing.

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"Housing isn't an architectural problem, it's a policy problem"

Readers debate global housing issues in this week’s comments update, in response to a proposal by James Law Cybertecture for stackable micro homes in Hong Kong.

Put that in your pipe: readers don’t think the OPod Tube Housing concept, which would see 2.5-metre-wide concrete water pipes transformed into low-cost apartments, offers the answer to Hong Kong’s affordable housing problems.

Ryan Gadz had a bone to pick with the design choices: “Make micro apartments even smaller by wasting the space between units and overly thick concrete with no shared walls? I guess it’s good for soundproofing.”

“A cylindrical space wastes a lot of volumes. For occupants, I’m certain every inch of space would count,” agreed Distiller.

Eric felt the designer was fighting a losing battle: “The biggest factor in the housing prices of Hong Kong or other high-cost cities is the value of land, which no amount of architectural creativity can solve.”

“The housing problem isn’t an architectural problem. It’s a planning and policy problem,” stated NYCBK123, simply.

“Can’t architects stop promoting inhuman habitations just frankly to serve those in the top 0.1%?” fumed Vincent Ip

“The question we should ask ourselves is why is there a housing crisis, rather than trying to make people live in smaller and smaller ‘apartments’,” reflected Hanna Hais.

“The matching question is why almost no-one is prepared to discuss the stupidity of people having more than two children in an age of climate change and access to reliable contraception,” responded HHGeek.

This reader felt their own tiny home was a better solution:



Would you live in a micro home constructed from a concrete tube? Have your say in our comments section ›


Boris bridge: news that UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, an advocator for Brexit, had proposed a bridge to connect the UK to France to the French government was met with ridicule and shock by readers.

“Funny idea to come from a country that’s desperate to sever as many ties as possible to the continent,” sighed Bunkermentality.

“Perhaps another Heatherwick commission?” joked Z-Dog, in reference to Johnson’s failed Garden Bridge project in London.

“I suppose he expects France to pay for it?” wrote Keith Dougal, comparing the idea to Donald Trump’s border wall.

“Johnson only made this comment to distract from the fact that Macron had just said that the UK will not get special access for financial services to the EU, making Brexit financially disastrous for the UK,” explained Nick.

But HughAdd was willing to give Boris a chance on this one: “I’m no fan of Johnson’s, but this is really a great idea which would help to resolve some of the difficulties regarding Ferry and Channel Tunnel customs.”

This reader thought there may be an undiscovered medical condition to blame:



Read the comments on this story ›


Identity politics: a new brand identity for Russia’s tourist board, which references the graphic style of suprematist artworks, brought out reader’s political side this week.

Trent wasn’t sold on the design, or the country: “Now that they have a lovely logo, let’s see them work on their human-rights record.”

“Russia successfully keeps ‘borrowing’ its history and identity from the countries it used to colonise,” added Qael.

AmyE was happy to just focus on the aesthetics: “Aside from the politics, I think this is really visually striking and the use with photos really works. Hats off to the designers.”

One reader also felt that the logo failed to address Russia’s recent history.



Read the comments on this story ›


Ahead of the curve: Pezo Von Ellrichshausen’s recently completed semi-circular house perched on a hilltop on Chile’s Chiloe Island, left commenters delighted this week.

“Finally, a home that isn’t designed for aquarium fish, and a wonderful curved expression that Corbusier and Niemeyer would happily approve,” gushed an impressed Duckusucker.

“This is just perfect but this project didn’t come out of the blue. All Pezo Von Ellrichschausen projects have an obsessive research on “geometry” and connections between spaces,” revealed Mik.

“These guys remain at the top of their game,” wrote an approving Threefloatingorbs.

One reader was still demanding more:

Read the comments on this story ›

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CityWood – Minimal 3D Wooden Maps

Beautiful, minimalist 3D laser cut wooden maps that tells a story about a city you love.

Quickly unclutter any room in your house

It’s January, but here at Chez Dave we’re already thinking about storing the winter clothes (hats, gloves, etc.), and tools (shovels, ice scrapers, etc.) and pulling out the spring items. It’s an unenviable task but one that can’t be avoided. It’s also a good time to take stock of what we own and identify what can stay and what should go. That process is made so much easier by asking one simple question: If I went shopping today, would I buy this?

Before putting something into storage or taking it out, just pause. Hold an item up and honestly ask the question. If you were standing in a store with that item right now, would you pay full price to bring it home? If the answer is yes, then you’ve found a keeper. If not, then you have a reason to consider your relationship with that item. Is it actually something you want or need?

You can apply this simple technique to any room of the house and nearly every item (not the pets, please):

Kitchen

  • Tools (any unitaskers there?)
  • Plates
  • Flatware
  • Serving bowls
  • Dish towels

Workshop

  • Tape measure
  • Stud finder
  • Hammer
  • Wrenches

You get the idea. If any items are non-functional, obsolete, rarely used, etc., put them aside and consider if they really have a place in your home. Good luck and happy purging.

Post written by David Caolo

The Song ‘Africa’ by Toto Played on 64 Floppy Drives, 8 Hard Drives, and 2 Scanners

Polish musician and engineer Paweł Zadrożniak performs a fantastically geeky cover of Toto’s 1982 pop classic, “Africa,” on his computer hardware orchestra, aka “The Floppotron,” which features 64 floppy drives, 8 hard drives, and 2 scanners…(Read…)

Breakdown of the Amazing Practical and Visual Effects in ‘The Shape Of Water’

Visual Effects and Animation studio MR. X presents the VFX Breakdown for Guillermo del Toro’s, The Shape of Water…(Read…)