Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Stilt City

This is the same building, before and after the ground was raised up around it.


The link below leads to a fascinating description of how the entire town of Galveston was raised up. In 1900, a hurricane and associated flooding killed 6000 people, prompting city leaders to ambitiously propose that the whole town be elevated. So, they propped all of the buildings in town up as much as 17 feet, and filled in the ground underneath with silt.

Pruned: Galveston on Stilts

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Serious Linkage



This is a long list of interesting, military-related links. Some are a little bit conspiracy-minded (like the hubbub about HAARP, pictured above).

Subtopia: Peripheral Milit_Urb 17

Friday, June 29, 2007

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Monday, June 25, 2007

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Roundup


How to tie useful knots. Link

The Architecture of the Pantheon coincidentally (?) echoes the arrangement of our solar system, even though it was constructed much early than that understanding. Link

Some of Manhattan was built on bombed London. Link

A long tradition of gardening in war. Link

Tunnel House. Link

Friday, June 15, 2007

Hyper Kids - A Renewable Resource

Harnessing the power of restless kids to pump water.

Pruned: The Hydrological Playground

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Street Level Views on Google


Google released a new feature today: Street level views in some locations. If you go to Google Maps and zoom into Denver, Chicago, New York, or a bunch of other cities, you'll see a button at the top for Street Level Views. Basically, you can walk down any street in downtown Denver, seeing the street trees, storefronts, with street names layed over the top of it. It's definitely worth a test drive.

Incidentally, the company that provided the imagery, which was collected while driving a truck equipped with a 12-sided video camera capturing a spherical, georeferenced viewpoint, licensed the technology to the military before this new partnership with Google. See the press release here.

Good stuff for map nerds.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Smart Shrinkage

Youngstown, Ohio (where we've done a bit of work) is dealing with a backwards, bizarro problem: trying to plan out how to best shrink the size of their city, emptying out old neighborhoods and converting them to green space.

Link

via Planetizen

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Architecture in Google Earth



Google has added two layers to their Google Earth interface from AIA. Check out the video above or find the layers in Google Earth. If you don't have Google Earth, you have to get it.

Link

Monday, April 23, 2007

Up Next: Planners Liability Insurance

The State of California is suing a county because their General Plan doesn't take Global Warming into account.

Link

Via
Planetizen

Monday, April 9, 2007

ArBITAT

A neat place to browse through the work of your favorite Architect, take a tour through your favorite building, and see what else is going on in the world of Architecture!!!


http://www.arbitat.com/

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Test Post

Q: How do architects in the jungle stop monkeys from swinging from trees onto the roofs of their buildings?


A: With very good de-tailing.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Version Control

This happens to us occasionally in planning: You give a document out for review, but someone forgets to turn on "track changes", and you want to know what changes were made. Here's an article that talks about a couple of strategies that would beat a manual word by word comparison:

Link

Via
Lifehacker

Related
Diff Doc - Another option

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

People like to drive

Interesting, unsurprising article about how people like to drive because it's generally cheaper, faster, and more convenient.

"If you want to know why so few people use mass transit, meet Sue, a college administrator in Minneapolis. If anyone would use transit, Sue would. She's single, she lives in a condominium, and she can afford any additional out-of-pocket expense. She could use her city's Hiawatha Line, a light rail route newly completed at a cost of $715 million. But she doesn't, although she feels guilty about it. That's because her car gets her where she needs to go. Faster."

Link

Via Planetizen

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

New Urbanism on Former Barracks in Canada

" At Currie Barracks, “every house is within four minutes’ walk of a bus stop and within two minutes of a park,” Hackman points out. Fourteen buildings and landscapes with “heritage” designations are to be preserved. Six airport hangars, some of which have been used as sound stages and other film-related production facilities, will probably be removed."

Link

Via
Planetizen

Related
"New Urbanism: It's in the Army Now"

Engines


Radial Engine powered motorcycle

Tank engine powered Mustang

Jet engine powered VW

Gasoline engine powered LP turntable

Pulse-jet powered shopping cart

Washing machine engine powered kid's tractor (and others)


Wood-burning turbine engine

Paper V-Twin Engine

Rocket powered car legend

A crazy helical engine design (and other good stuff)

Friday, March 16, 2007

Kalzip

Amy sent along some information about this roofing material. Looks like pretty amazing, versatile stuff, and a good deconstructable, recyclable product too.






Link

Star Wars Inspiration

Dan brought this to my attention:


previous post

Thursday, March 15, 2007

San Francisco Federal Building


"The building may one day be remembered as the crowning achievement of the General Services Administration’s Design Excellence program, founded more than a decade ago to remedy the atrocious architecture routinely commissioned for government offices."

Link

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

10 websites

Planetizen, a great source of news and commentary on every different kind of planning and a site I visit just about every day, recently did an article featuring their favorite 10 websites for architecture, design, and planning. Looks like a good list for lazy friday afternoon surfing.

Link

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

What You Missed From the Planners Roundtable Last Week


We talked about planning, of course. Lots of very professional, relevant, multimedia-enhanced talking about planning and productivity.

But we also discovered some interesting facts about Scooby Doo.

1. The show was originally called "Who's S-S-Scared?", and featured a rock band called the Mysteries Five and their dog named Too Much.

2. The producer got the name Scooby-doo from Frank Sinatra's "Do-be-do-be-do" at the end of "Strangers in the Night"

3. Casey Kasem is the voice of Shaggy.

4. The movie "Scooby Doo, Pirates Ahoy!" has recieved great critical acclaim from Tasha's kids.

Link