鄧詩慧/ Children Reclaiming the City

seen from Brunei

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from Yemen
seen from Singapore
seen from Malaysia

seen from China

seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from Brazil
seen from Iraq
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from South Korea
seen from China

seen from United States
鄧詩慧/ Children Reclaiming the City
Our first Ground Up Project
For the first time we are working on a free standing building, which means it's not an addition or a fit-out; it is a completely brand new, ground-up building! It will be just beside the East Providence AAA dispatch center we worked on as well -it is currently under construction. It's exciting to address this portion of the Wampanoag trail in East Providence so comprehensively and to be the creative directors and orchestrators of such a large site. We are letting the character of the dispatch center-to-be inspire the new free-standing building, emphasizing exaggerated awnings and a flat, elongated geometry.
From the Ground Up
From the Ground Up
It isn’t always blue sky and rainbows. Sometimes our day consists of grinding it out only to look up at the clock and see its been 10 minutes since the last time we looked. I’m not sure how many clocks have been replaced over the years by people who are convinced theirs have stopped working. It must be either a time warp or a clock manufacturer’s conspiracy to keep us guessing. Well, maybe not.
View On WordPress
ground-up Türkçesi nedir? ground-up ne demek?
ground-up Türkçesi nedir? ground-up ne demek? ground-up Türkçesi nedir? ground-up ne demek?
RL #1
Erin E. O’Brien. The Politics of Identity: Solidarity Building Among America’s Working Poor. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2008.
It does not show the entire article, but what is shown is a preview in which the article is about.
The author talks about solidarity in relation to politics and also maps out what is going to be talked about in each chapter. In chapter one he talks about solidarity and how the working poor developed it. The next chapter is about the difficulties this working class faces and chapter three talks about the bond formed between these workers due to coalition solidarity. In this chapter the author say coalition solidarity happens because, “the workplace is the means by which one group discovers the struggles and obstacles faced by another group” (185). And the fourth chapter talks about people who aren’t coalitional solidarity. The author brings up his next point, collective work solidarity in the next four chapters where he goes into great depth about people who take political stances and relate that to their own lives, how some people don’t do this, and how this could help or not help people. The author also relates America to other countries to see how solidarity may differ or be the same.
O’Brien brings up a good point about different types of solidarity there is and that it isn’t just one type. I find that to be important because politics, just like people, have their own ways of doing things and solidarity is definitely an aspect of that. At one point he had said, “being a worker doesn’t mean a thing” (185), and I could not agree more because he is saying just because you are a working poor this doesn’t mean you can relate to either collective or coalitional solidarities, it depends on if you want to partake in that act.
I found this article to be very helpful; it brought up many good points about solidarity in politics especially the fact that there is more then one kind.