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Adidas Originals Stan Smith Woven Brown (2007) #adidas #originals #stansmith #illustration #flatdesign #shoes
Thought via Path
LFCTV Interview about Gerrard's plan to leave Anfield at the end of the season that every Liverpuldian have to watch. Damn it's really sad as if it's a drama series. Here's couple of questions that you'd see his shaky voice and him trying not to break his tears. Of course the most touchy one is when the interviewer offered to read some of the tributes from his teammates to him, Gerrard welled up, shaking his head, telling her, “It’d break me.” ... Have you read much of the reaction? "I can't at the moment. I keep switching the TV over. I'm replying to messages and stuff, but it's tough. I didn't realise it would be as big as this. But I've got to move on. The important people here are the supporters, they are the key to any football club. I'm lucky enough to play in front of the best ones in the world. Some of the things that I've seen already and will probably see in the future, it's tough to move on." ... When you finally pack up your locker here at Melwood and you drive out of those gates for the last time, how do you think you'll feel? Is it possible to anticipate that? "Not at the moment. But I'm sure it will be tough. The last couple of weeks will be probably how the last 24 hours have been - very tough. But I'm really proud of what I've done and hopefully I can write a few more chapters with the team from now to the end. But the last game and the last couple of training sessions are going to be torture, because it's so tough to say 'goodbye'. But hopefully it's more of a 'see you soon' rather than a 'goodbye'." The interview concluded with Gerrard left speechless by a tribute from Hillsborough Family Support Group chair Margaret Aspinall who said, “To the city of Liverpool, Steven Gerrard is more than a footballer.” See the full video: http://youtu.be/vVYvuPzB35c – Read on Path.
see, observe! .1 The soldier positioned himself covering half of his body to avoid risking his vital spots (in case of potential threats from North Korea). Unfortunately, left side is where the heart is. "You see, but you don't observe. The distinction is clear." -SH
Thought via Path
"More Open Space for what? For muggings? For bleak vaccums between buildings? Or for ordinary people to use and enjoy? But people do not use city open space just because it is there and because city planners or designers wish they would." - Jane Jacobs in The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961) One of the excitement reading this book as Whyte stated,"... The research apparatus is not pretentious -it is the eye and the heart- but it has given us a magnificent study of what gives life and spirit to the city." Yet she is not even a designer! (In tribute to my beloved teacher ARTS, one of the way to continue his legacy by learning what he loved most, Urban Design!) – Read on Path.
Sherlock, the hit BBC One drama produced by Hartswood Films, will return to screens for a Special, followed by a series of three new episodes.
The last series saw Sherlock’s life change a lot – he returned from the dead, his best friend John Watson married Mary Morstan and he met his...
Pesan Hidup
"Rendahkan hati, tinggikan cita, jadilah anak yang berguna", "Jaga nama baik dirimu, keluargamu, agamamu, bangsamu, dan negaramu" kalimat-kalimat yang hampir selalu Opa tekankan untuk cucu-cucunya, khususnya Saya. Entah Saya yang baru tersadar atau bukan, pesan opa itu baru benar-benar Saya rasakan manfaatnya ketika beranjak dewasa, rentang waktu kuliah lebih tepatnya. Mungkin sedikit cerita mengenai kedua pesan tersebut bisa menjelaskan kesan Saya untuk Opa.
"Rendahkan hati, tinggikan cita, jadilah anak yang berguna."
Kalau Saya pikirkan baik-baik, banyak sekali orang-orang yang berpesan hal yang sama, walau bentuk pesannya terpisah-pisah. Namun ketika mencoba mengamalkannya, ketiga hal itu terkadang saling bertentangan dan atau sulit untuk diamalkan secara bersamaan. Bagaimana merendahkan hati tanpa merendahkan cita, atau bagaimana meninggikan cita tanpa meninggikan hati. Dan terlepas dari itu, bagaimana untuk tidak hanya melakukannya untuk diri sendiri, tetapi juga untuk orang lain – menjadi anak yang berguna. Hal-hal inilah yang alhamdulillah selalu Saya coba terapkan, terutama selama masa perkuliahan. Sulit memang, namun sangat Saya rasakan manfaatnya. Setelah dicoba untuk dijalankan sendiri dan Saya mengamati, ternyata sangat jarang Saya temukan orang yang mampu.
Tiap-tiap pesan opapunya makna dan interpretasi sederhana tersendiri buat Saya. Rendahkan hati, bagaimana untuk tetap menjaga hubungan baik dengan sesama, dengarkan pendapat orang lain, banyak berdiskusi, namun tetap berpegang pada prinsip diri sendiri. Tinggikan cita, kenali kemampuan diri sendiri, kenali lingkungan, selalu berusaha semaksimal mungkin, berpikir positif, dan lewati batas diri sendiri. Menjadi anak yang berguna, mencoba untuk selalu memikirkan orang lain, tidak hanya diri, tapi juga keluarga, agama, masyarakat dan bangsa.
"Jaga nama baik dirimu, keluargamu, agamamu, bangsamu, dan negaramu."
Ketika itu Saya sedang menjalani lokakarya Arsitektur di Tokyo, Jepang mewakili ITB bersama dua teman Saya, dan peserta-peserta lain dari berbagai negara. Lokakarya ini diadakan saat bulan Ramadhan selama seminggu penuh dan cukup melelahkan. Hari itu hari Kamis, Hari Raya Idul Fitri, di mana setelah merayakannya (Shalat Ied dan berkunjung ke Kedutaan Indonesia, hanya diberi waktu sekitar 4 jam) Saya harus kembali bekerja di kampus. Sewaktu shalat Ied pun, keyakinan Saya digoyahkan karena perasaan “kangen rumah” pertama kalimerayakan Hari Raya Lebaran tidak bersama keluarga. Selain cukup jenuh, lelah, dan kebingungan karena kondisi tim yang kurang kondusif pra-presentasi terakhir, minat Saya pun menurun untuk melanjutkan pelatihan dengan serius. Namun seketika semangat Saya berkobar ketika Opa menelfon dan berpesan, ”… Pesan Opa hanya satu ca, Jaga nama baik dirimu, keluargamu, agamamu, bangsamu, dan negaramu”.
Seketika Saya berpikir bahwa tidak hanya nama baik Saya ataupun keluarga, nama baik agama dan negarapun harus Saya jaga. Walaupun ini terkesan sepele dan hanya masalah mudah yaitu menyelesaikan sisa tugas lokakarya, pesan opa bermanfaat. Insya Allah, pesan Opa ini selalu Saya ingat, terapkan, dan sebarkan baik di kantor dimana orang-orang akan menilai (bagaimana Saya, keluarga Saya, agama Islam, lulusan Indonesia) dari performa dan tingkah laku Saya, di kampus dari pergaulan Saya, di lingkungan pertemanan Saya, ataupun di kesempatan-kesempatan lainnya. Insya Allah.
Terlepas dari segala pesan Opa, tidak pernah terlupakan baginya mengingatkan Saya untuk selalu menjaga hubungan Saya dengan Allah SWT. “Opa selalu doakan di tiap doa Opa untuk anak cucu opa”, insya Allah kita semua selalu dalam lindungan-Nya. Terima kasih Opa atas pesan-pesannya, insya Allah akan selalu Saya ingat dan amalkan.
Tertanda,
Reza Ambardi Pradana
Halfway done! Feel free to come, Kota Tua Creative Festival at Kota Tua Jakarta, June 21-22! with Prathito and Abdul – View on Path.
Thought via Path
The City at the Eye Level Plinth Strategy "A building may be ugly, but with a vibrant plinth, the experience can be positive. The other way around is possibly as well: a building can be very beautiful, but if the ground floor is a blind wall, the experience on the street level is hardly positive." "The entire urban environment shapes this atmosphere, but plinths play a key role. The ground floor may be only 10% of a building, it determines 90% of the building’s contribution to the experience of the environment." stipo.info – Read on Path.
Thought via Path
Parent's Wisdom 3 things I learned after sharing my accidentaly first 8 hours non-stop director level meeting (imagine you're an architecture student trying to fit in an economy class) with my parents : + Consider being someone good in both design skill and logical (money) thing as the ultimate achievement if you want to be the leader in the future + Just think that your boss love you so much that he believes your skill as a designer is pretty good that he wants you to learn more and more + If you think that this is something really hard to do, try to think the other way around: think that this is once in a life time chance to shine, take it, or leave it! – Read on Path.
The Fear Sustaining Sustainable Urbanism
‘Habitat of Homo Economicus’, a piece for ‘The Competitive Hypothesis’, Storefront for Art and Architecture in New York, 2013. Image Courtesy of Ross Exo Adams and Ivonne Santoyo-Orozco
In this article, originally published on the Australian Design Review as “Longing For a Greener Present“, Ross Exo-Adams examines the fear that lies behind the trend toward sustainable urbanism, and finds that the crisis we find ourselves in might not only be confined to an ecological one.
Over the past decade, architects have found themselves increasingly commissioned to design districts, neighbourhoods, economic free zones and even entire new cities: a phenomenon that has been accompanied by a commitment to ‘sustainability’, which now seem inseparable from urban design itself. While ‘sustainability’ remains a vague concept at best, it nonetheless presents itself with a sense of urgency similar to that which galvanised many of the great movements of modern architecture vis-a-vis the city. Underlying such urgency is a rhetorical reference to a collective fear of some palpable sort, whether it be fear of revolution (Le Corbusier), fear of cultural tabula rasa (Jane Jacobs, Team X) or our new fear: ecological collapse. It is obvious that the myriad ‘eco’ projects that have popped up all around the world would not be viable if not for the fact that they appear against a background of imminent catastrophe – a condition of terrifying proportions. Yet the essence of this fear is far from clear. Indeed, in light of ecological catastrophe and amidst any fetish for windmills or vegetation, architects have cultivated what seems to be a curious nostalgia for the present – a pragmatism whose lack of patience for the past seeks a kind of reconstitution of the present in imagining any future. So if not for climate mayhem, what is the true nature of fear that lies at the core of today’s urban project, ‘ecological urbanism’?
Find out after the break
Fresh Hills, a runner up in a design competition for Freshkills Park in Staten Island, NYC by Matthew Rosenberg, Matt Melnyk, Emmy Maruta and Robbie Eleazer;. Image Courtesy of LAGI
Future: Ecological Urbanism
Of course, to speak of sustainability today means to speak of a projected future while avoiding at all costs the pretensions of planning it: in the world of sustainability, the future appears as an array of data, statistics and targets, which themselves objectively respond to impending ‘tipping points’, benchmarks and other universal registers of approaching catastrophe. It is a future not to be planned, but rather to be managed. Designing within this world is a delicate play between the perils of this future and the promise of salvation, all transcribed in the objective language of fact. Urban design integrates the future as a scientific projection of the present. If such projections are architecturally vague, this is offset by the sturdy economic projections around which the urban project truly bends, sustaining a future not only on ecological grounds, but also on economic grounds.
Indeed, to give such projects their force, the rhetoric of sustainability mobilises a new sense of morality in regard to ecological catastrophe. In this way, the discourse on sustainability bears an implicit yet unavoidable humanitarian call-to-duty. Because such ideals feed off an economy of good intentions, they remain beyond scrutiny, shrouding the project in a silent suspension of judgement. The language of sustainability plays a crucial role in the propagation of such work, for, far from radically transforming the city, the task of urban design today ultimately remains to equip the otherwise ordinary design with a rhetorical supplement of moral goodness. Thus, the project of sustainability unfolds as a promise for a future apprehended only in its statistical consistency, while never to be considered in its material concreteness.
To speak of the design of such projects is itself a convoluted task, since a truly ‘ecological’ project, rather than resulting from an architectural formalism, must instead emerge from the multiple systems of nature that prefigure it: it is now the task of the architect to identify spatial systems of nature. The suspension of judgement also helps to grant the urban project a kind of formal liberty, whose indeterminacy reflects the new complexities of reality that ecological urbanism must now make use of. Various organisations of nature are mapped onto the site to provide the basic structural discipline to which the urban shall now humbly submit. Complementing gestures like this, so-called ‘green corridors’ are planned, which gently percolate through the urban, ‘reconnecting’ the natural passageways that the city would have otherwise blocked. Building roofs are now dense forests and urban walkways appear as woodland paths. As a material and formal entity, architecture must disappear: it is but an unfortunate necessity of the city that it has not yet been able to do without. Instead, it must compensate for its burden to nature with an overuse of glass – architecture’s triumphant act of self-annihilation.
Peruri 88 by MVDRV. Image © RSI Studio
Past: Liberalism, Nature, Urbanism
Despite all of the apparent methodological newness of contemporary (ecological) urbanism, its novelty is questionable. If we can trace the birth of the term ‘urbanism’ back to the nineteenth century – a category ideologically tied to the emergent politics of liberalism – we can observe several important connections with the present notion of urbanism and urban design. Nearly a century after the physiocrats’ discovery of the ‘naturalness’ inherent to social and economic relations, the transformations of the state would begin to realise the full potential of this ‘nature’ through a nineteenth-century program of political liberalism. And just as liberalism has its roots in physiocracy (the ‘government of nature’), so too did urbanism materialise a pseudo-scientific discourse of nature, which, instead of impeding the inherent ‘naturalness’ of society, sought to make use of its contingencies, realities and natural phenomena. By the nineteenth century, planners had fully reformulated the city as a ‘biological organism’, whose naturally ‘functional parts’ were enabled through strategies of infrastructural connectivity. The focus of city planners and politicians turned toward optimising systems of circulation to unleash the supreme capacities of a society left to its own nature — a ‘naturalness’ to be realised through a massive deployment of modern infrastructural systems. Furthermore, envisioning the city through a scientific lens assisted in draining it of its political consistency. In doing so, urban form was rendered independent from the actual organisation of the city, which became rather an expandable system of circulation and dwelling. Principled in this way, the city’s form, whether rigidly composed, or loosely ‘organic’, would increasingly belie a common indeterminacy at the heart of the city’s organisation. This condition only intensified during the twentieth century, from Howard’sGarden City, to modernist experiments in functionalism, to the Metabolist movement and countless other fascinations with natural systems.
As even a cursory recollection of the basic schema proposed by ecological urbanism makes clear, the new ‘sustainable’ urbanism sits comfortably within this history of urbanism. At a fundamental level, the operative locus of any ‘sustainable’ design remains faithfully within systems of infrastructure and the strategies of their deployment in space. Furthermore, indeterminacy and interchangeability play an even stronger role in the category of ‘mixed use’ – a category of commercial development that displaces all decision from the realm of design to the whims of the market, guaranteeing the schism between urban form and organisation. As such, an ecologically designed city optimised by considerations for pweather and wind patterns, light, water drainage, etc. can just as conveniently be ‘sustainable’ as one paying homage to a client by patterning itself as an extruded corporate logo. Lastly, the ‘scientific’ claims accompanying sustainability are, by and large, a simplistic rehashing of the same metaphors that were applied to the nineteenth century city, re-proposing the same adherence to a dogma of positivist, infrastructure-based urbanism. This history of urbanism is perpetuated through its reproduction into the present, whose presence is immediately covered over by the novelties and spectacle of technology. As such, ecological urbanism is nothing more than the product of the centuries-old program of liberal urbanism, whose novelty now includes infrastructural strategies for the distribution of nature. This novelty attempts to render the opposition between nature and city obsolete, since the city now appears as a kind of provider of nature’s salvation. Yet to say that ecological urbanism is simply the current iteration of modern urbanism would reveal little else about the ideological objectives of such design. Firstly, the incorporation of nature within the domain of infrastructural control is new insofar as it produces a rhetorical inversion in regard to the inherent virtue of the urban: no longer the source of ecological catastrophe, the urban appears now as its remedy. Secondly, due to the neo-liberal climate in which sustainability has matured, the city as a whole has become an object of private investment, creating for perhaps the first time in modern history the possibility of the private city. This shift has attained its apogee thanks in part pto the emergence of ecological urbanism, exposing purely capitalist urban development to a discourse laden with notes of salvation. Just when it was becoming clear that the history of modern urbanisation coincided with the history of ecological disaster, the figure of the city was radically transfigured into a technological structure of redemption, granting a kind of eschatological urgency for large-scale real estate development. Fear, mobilised by ecological crisis, will remain at the heart of this urgency.
The design for Cornell’s new campus on Roosevelt Island. Image © Cornell University
Present: Crisis, Fear, Reform
Bound between an unknowable, unplanned future and a perpetually forgotten past, our present moment has become one given over to and over determined by crisis. ‘Crisis’, at the end of the eighteenth century, became a ‘structural signature of modernity’, according to Reinhart Koselleck. Through the modern concept of crisis, its expanded meaning has lent itself as a motivational historical force, legitimising the categories of reformist ‘progress’. Crises, from the nineteenth century, would be seen as a cyclical register of history, whose flip side would be reform. Planners and architects alike have made use of this crisis-reform cycle to generate political and economic force behind projects. Le Corbusier’s famous maxim, ‘architecture or revolution’, is precisely such a cry for reform. And, in its more contemporary proliferations, Koselleck tells us: ‘[t]he concept of crisis, which once had the power to pose unavoidable, harsh and non-negotiable alternatives, has been transformed to fit the uncertainties of whatever might be favoured at a given moment.’
The lack of determinacy evident in the discourse of sustainability and reproduced in the practice of ecological urban design is only explainable by the apparent indeterminacy of the very nature with which ecological crisis is treated. Yet, if the very consistency of ecological crisis is so vague, what is the true source of our fear? Examining any of the hyperrealist renderings that have become commonplace representations of such projects, it becomes apparent that, rather than approaching the true depth of ecological catastrophe, such projects address an altogether different anxiety. Because the appeal to sensation remains so prominent in such images, they often conceal a clear reading of the image’s actual content. For within the saturated ambiance and the lack of a distinction between foregrounds and backgrounds, there lies an implicit injunction to view the image with a kind of melancholia, as if it is a ‘snapshot’ of a life that seemingly ‘once was’ – an image which, indicating neither past nor future, asks not what could be, but what should be. Compounded by the rhetoric of climate disaster embedded in ecological urbanism, we can view this imagery as a kind of visual catalogue of all that is threatened and must be preserved. Far from a concern for the annihilation of nature – for nature in such images appears not as an endangered wilderness, but as an abundant and manipulable surface, an (overused) accessory to the urban – such imagery makes visible another far deeper and indeed politicised fear. What is conveyed is the fear of loss, not of a threatened nature and its capacity to sustain life, but the loss of the conditions that sustain a threatened liberal utopia. By simply stripping the technological and vegetal accessories from such imagery, this fear of loss becomes clear: the compositions propose little more than a liberal nostalgia for the present – a present that is ethereal, simulated. The moral echoes in this rhetorical structure ultimately serves to discipline the architectural imagination, reducing it to a pathological reinterpretation of the present.
If, over the course of modernity we have cultivated a perception of the future as something to be planned, today we bear witness to a new attitude toward the future, which purports instead to manage it. The effect of this change is a rather odd paralysis of the present, which is then to be perpetually monitored, adjusted and re-administered continuously into the future. In this way, perhaps the real crisis the profession faces is the persistently liberal treatment of ‘crisis’ itself, for, as Koselleck states, such a ‘tendency towards imprecision and vagueness […] may itself be viewed as the symptom of a historical crisis that cannot as yet be fully gauged’.
Ross Adams holds a Master of Architecture from the Berlage Institute in Rotterdam, NL, and a BS in Biomaterial Science from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He has worked as an architect and urban designer in offices such as MVRDV, Foster & Partners, Arup and Productora. Currently, he is completing his PhD at the London Consortium.
Source : http://www.archdaily.com/477888/the-fear-sustaining-sustainable-urbanism/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
Terima Kasih!
Sherlock: The Network is out now to purchase on the UK iOS App Store!
In addition, it has been announced the App will debut on the USA App store a week today on January 27! Watch the Official Launch Trailer.
Watercolor!
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Paragraph 1: Personal
The first paragraph is where you get personal with the reader. This is when you write about the moment you realized you wanted to pursue architecture. Where did the inspiration come from? What was that moment of realization like? Were you that kid who built tents out of...
From Us to You, terima kasih banyak semuanya, terutama Meskhi!
New Metro Blog - The Empty Hearse: Was it everything we had hoped for?
Here’s our latest blog post for Metro UK, where we dive deeper into The Empty Hearse now it has aired on UK TV.
Please note the article contains SPOILERS.
Read the Blog on the Metro UK website.
Outside St Bart’s Hospital