Palace of Assembly. Capitol Complex, Chandigarh. Perspective. Architect: Le Corbusier. 1953

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Palace of Assembly. Capitol Complex, Chandigarh. Perspective. Architect: Le Corbusier. 1953
Secretariat Building. Capitol Complex, Chandigarh. Elevation. Architect: Le Corbusier. 1953
Open Hand Monument. Capitol Complex, Chandigarh. Section Perspective. Architect: Le Corbusier.
BOAC Building. Buchanan Street, Glasgow. External Perspective. Architects: Gillespie, Kidd & Coia. 1970.
Cripps Building. St John's College, Cambridge 1966-67. Stairs perspective. Architects: Powell & Moya.
Site Security.
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Preston Bus Station. External perspective. 1969. Architects: BDP. Engineers: Arup Associates. For more information and resources: http://gate81.tumblr.com
John Player Factory. External Stairs. Arup Associates 1971, Nottingham.
IBM Building. Partial Facade. Boca Raton, Florida 1968-74. Architects: Marcel Breuer & Robert F. Gatje.
Penguin Warehouse. Partial elevation. Harmondsworth, London 1969. Architects and Engineers: Arup Associates.
Hudson Beare Lecture Theatre. Mayfield Road, Edinburgh 1960. Architect: R. Gardner-Medwin. Engineer: Blyth & Blyth.
push button and wait
Repost of a film I made with some friends for a uni class.
The theme was ‘the city at work’.
Synopsis
A dramatic exploration of the communication barriers between the city’s infrastructural interfaces and its inhabitants; the objectivity conventionally ascribed to the former is questioned through the negative space resultant from the removal of the latter.
The film depicts what is assumed to be any normal working day of an unseen individual. The protagonist’s reflexive circadian rhythm is mapped by the mundane malevolence of the machine whose checkpoints and informants have permeated every level of both the physical and incorporeal city.
A certain ambiguity allows for divergent interpretation; are the machines conspirators in a premeditated plot, or merely mute witnesses to the commonplace?
Concurrent humour and disquiet portray an ambivalence pertinent to society’s simultaneous dependence on and distance from technology.
Fundamentally the film seeks to challenge preconceived notions of convenience, spatial liberty and the social consequences of exponential technological development.
The machines portrayed can be categorised in the following ways:
The archetypal architectural manifestations of automation: lifts, escalators, automatic doors
Labour-negating systems: self-service checkouts, ticket machines, ticket barriers
Indispensable infrastructural coordinators: train signals, traffic signals, pedestrian crossings
Personal mobile technology: smart phones, laptops, portable media devices
push button and wait
Ross Brown, Alastair Cassell, Peter Cassidy, Chao Nie
Assistance is futile…
Bakkehaugen Kirke. Olso ~1959. Betongtavlen prize 1961. Architect: Erling Viksjø. Engineer: Sverre Jystad.
Equity & Law. 47 Castle Street, Liverpool. Architects: Quiggin and Gee 1970.
Variations on a Triangle. Fairydean Stadium in Galashiels. Architect, Peter Womersley. Engineers, Ove Arup. 1963-65.
Wolfson Centre for Bioengineering, University of Strathclyde. Morris & Steedman 1971.
John Player Factory. Partial elevation. Arup Associates 1971, Nottingham