24 October 2010
Underdome
Underdome: a project that identifies a range of positions on energy and public life and assigns to each a corresponding architectural icon.
"The guide’s taxonomy covers the political, spatial, and cultural dimensions of energy, and revolves around four main topics: “Power” asks how governments, corporations, organizations and individuals have the potential to restructure energy performance. “Territory” asks how energy transforms and is transformed by the changing networks of today’s metropolis. “Lifestyle” asks what kind of norms and behavior energy performance schemes imagine. And lastly, “Risk,” as a kind of meta-category that cuts across these other fields, asks how we weigh priorities among a diverse set of interests and contingencies."
interview here
19 October 2010
Small-House Utopia
The Home for the New Economy was announced at the International Builders’ Show. So interesting to see the building climate change in what seems like a blink of an eye.
Nice write up about it all by Andrew Rice here
16 February 2009
Dubai Slow Down

With the global economy slowing things down, what will come of Dubai? Will it be merely a 21st century urban glitch? Will it evolve to accept the slower economy? What sort of resiliency does a place like Dubai have?
"With Dubai’s economy in free fall, newspapers have reported that more than 3,000 cars sit abandoned in the parking lot at the Dubai Airport, left by fleeing, debt-ridden foreigners (who could in fact be imprisoned if they failed to pay their bills). Some are said to have maxed-out credit cards inside and notes of apology taped to the windshield."
"Last month, local newspapers reported that Dubai was canceling 1,500 work visas every day, citing unnamed government officials. Asked about the number, Humaid bin Dimas, a spokesman for Dubai’s Labor Ministry, said he would not confirm or deny it and refused to comment further. Some say the true figure is much higher."
full article
United Arab Emirates Aid Debt-Ridden Member, Dubai
The Green Zone

The New Green Zone, Baghdad, Iraq.
from The Guardian:
"The US military released the first tentative artists' impression yesterday. An army source said the barbed wire, concrete blast barriers and checkpoints that currently disfigure the 5 sq mile area would be replaced by shopping malls, hotels, elegant apartment blocks and leisure parks."
"American officials stress that final decisions about reconstruction and development rest with the Iraqi government. Karnowski added that as well as the benefits of renovating and demilitarising an important area of Baghdad, the blueprint would help to create a "zone of influence" around the massive new US Embassy compound being built on the eastern tip of the Green Zone. The $1bn project to move the embassy from Saddam's old presidential palace is planned for completion later this year."
Sandbag housing

MMA Architects and new housing strategies using sand filled bags, stacked...
related articles:
Treehugger
Dezeen
10 January 2009
Urban Omnibus
http://urbanomnibus.net/features-forum/
05 December 2008
Building Landscapes

Academy of Sciences Museum in San Francisco, CA
The rooftop mimics surrounding hills, while planted with native plants
Mounds reflect the planetarium and rain forest exhibits within.


09 November 2008
Seed Project

David Cohen's The Seed Project
This "art" project asks people to plant organic basil seeds anywhere and everywhere. Its invites one to take the element of nature and imposes it upon the more "unnatural" environments within our everyday lives.
In regards to our urban environment, existing visual cues of "natural" have become so urbane that many fail to even recognize it as plant life. This project shakes up your daily commutes, questioning place, location and purpose of plant life in our built environments.

In a time of extreme greenwashing, what are the new visual cues of true environmental action?
What locations, programs, buildings, forms of employment within a concrete jungle of a city can programmed for understanding basic living processes?
What new forms of urban gardening can harvest not only moments of contemplation, but todays lunch?
Similar movements:
Guerrilla Gardners
28 October 2008
Enclaves of Inclusion & Exclusion: Seeking Broader Perspectives in the Design of International Development
Below is my 2008 William Kinne Fellow Traveling Prize Research Findings
(available in PD
In the fall of 2008, with the support of the William Kinne Fellowship Traveling Prize, I traveled to the sub-Saharan country of Malawi (see attached proposal, Wading the Waters: Exploring Malawi’s Fragile Infrastructure of Water and Health). The intent of this trip was to explore the fragile relationship between the infrastructure of water and health. My three week travel itinerary included accompanying the non-profit, Child Dental Relief, in their ongoing efforts in promoting basic hygiene and oral health care at two established sites, the Home of Hope orphanage, near Mchinji, and Consol Homes in the town of Nimetete – both situated in rural western Malawi.
While the non-profit has been focusing on basic oral health care for Malawi’s orphans and impoverished population, their desire is to begin to address the broader understanding of the larger structures effecting communities – especially that of water and proper sanitation. My time was managed between these two sites, assessing the issues surrounding water sourcing, quality, use and its discharge. To gain a better understanding of these centers, time was given to document the local vernacular architecture and building technologies, village layout and community infrastructural pressures. This multi-disciplinarian collaboration allowed me to meet with medical doctors and dentists, interview local stakeholders such as nurses, local chiefs and teachers, local architects, and Malawi’s Ministry of Water.
By introducing urban design as a tool in addressing the greater issue of extreme poverty, it became apparent that the need for a greater perspective in understanding the complexities of these two sites was needed. In designing solutions to the complicated issues of poverty reduction, the need for new perspectives (regionally, annually, in varying scales) in viewing the problem is essential. In contributing to the wealth of work being accomplished, my findings ultimately are in the form of questions.
The intention is for these key questions to provoke more resilient design solutions that mitigate what I intend to explain as existing designs of inclusion and exclusion. In understanding the current international development strategies encountered with this grant, designs of inclusion appear as responses that are local and native. They are solutions that come from the site, of the site, respond to topography, culture; the physical natural environment. Inclusionary design opens to the direct community. Designs of exclusion on the other hand, are outsourced, foreign, and external. These solutions tend to be recommendations applied to a site with regard to direct goals.
As I hope to explain, ultimately it is a combination of both inclusionary and exclusionary design solutions that must address the boundless issues effecting sites in implementing design on many scales (technology, site layouts and site infrastructures) in the hopes of eliminating extreme poverty.
Two Sites: Dispersing and Collecting
In comparing the sites of Home of Hope and Consol Homes new perspectives can be gained in comprehending design as a strategy to end extreme poverty. Both sites are privately funded by foreign organizations, churches or governments, and both are situated within rural communities of need. But each begins to demonstrate examples of what can be seen as inclusive and exclusive relationships to their environment, creating varying degrees of enclaves of dispersion or collection. This new constellation of development work found throughout the country typically mediate their surroundings with a combination of dispensing vital needs (water, education, food) and collecting (staff, resources, funding). Through this understanding, new relationships with the diverse scale of design such as technology, site layout and infrastructure, become key in questioning current strategies of international development.
Technology:
The introduction of foreign financing inevitably introduces foreign technologies. To the benefit of the community, these new technologies advance potentials for new sources of energy, communication and ultimately health and well being. Home of Hope successfully makes use of a gravity fed water system, utilizing the steep slope it is built against to feed the numerous sinks and toilets, whereas Consol Homes depends upon tapping into its aquifer for sourcing its water. The latter’s strategy of a system comprised of complicated mechanics have, as of the recent visit, left all pumps inoperative due to its around-the-clock use. No local source of knowledge in repairing the pumps leaves the Center without water for weeks at a time.
Site Layout:
Topography, security and funding have all determined the site layouts and design of the two sites visited. Home of Hope while located upon a sloping grade makes use of a grid layout, with buildings located perpendicular to each other and the adjacent roadway. This is conducive to the natural flow of water into the site, as well as the flow of community into the site. Contradicting all this is the introduction of a perimeter wall enclosing the entire site, which restricts flow, but emphasizes security, cohesion and identity. Consol Homes, located within a spacious and relatively flat open field, is conceived as a radial layout with a central “green” and gazebo with surrounding buildings looking in upon itself. No perimeter walls are yet in place and numerous footpaths connect this site with area villages.
Infrastructure:
As discussed above, both technology and site layout have played a role in the current infrastructural strategies of the two sites. The present condition of local village water infrastructure is antiquated, with limited lines, most of which have collapsed. Home of Hope, making use of a naturally flowing spring, actually diverts a percentage of its water lines to its perimeter and beyond its site boundaries to neighboring villages. Home of Hope provides a reliable source of water to the immediate adjacent community. In contrast, Consol Homes, at the time of my visit depended upon the network and proximity of neighboring villages to bring the water in, add due to its failed pumps.
The observation of these two sites allows one to gain new perspectives through asking questions in the hopes of focusing the incredible amount of work already in place. Both Home of Hope and Consol Homes offer opportunities for creating new interventions and methods of site dispersion and collection. Through this lens of inclusion and exclusion, questions can be formulated to broaden the discussion of sustainable design development.
How can design begin to integrate sites with their surrounding environments?
Many times these privately funded initiatives are seen as closed systems with immediate solutions and goals. Rightly so, the breadth of poverty reduction is so vast, no single solution has the ability or finances to grasp the issue in its entirety. But how can these acts of development not be seen as operating only in isolation, but as a part of a greater infrastructure of the community, of the region? And how can these satellite enclaves of foreign financed infrastructures branch out, be plugged into or expanded? How can these centers of provide outreach and education thru a new infrastructure of utility?
How can new technologies mediate the local vernacular?
Appreciation and implementation of local technologies has become a focus in almost all forms of development work. “Less is more” when it comes to introducing foreign materials and technologies. How can development of improved infrastructures implement local methods while accessing new technologies? How can existing techniques be reinforced with new technologies? How can cultural conceptions of an “impoverished” material (mud) and a “developed” material (concrete) be mitigated with understandings and appreciation of tradition, environment and local knowledge?
How can a site’s resources be reworked through better design?
Single use” is a concept of the so-called developed world that has sadly been transposed onto cultures well versed in the ability of sustainably utilizing their immediate environment. Water, being one of the most valuable resources is underutilized. How can water be multi-programmed to fulfill numerous functions along its flow through a site? What are the seasonal, monthly and daily flows? What aspects of xeriscaping, permaculture, greywater, and rain water catchment can be incorporated into planning and architectural design solutions?
How can design perform at the scale of health?
There are immediate health concerns facing communities in poverty. From infectious diseases such as AIDs/HIV to mosquito carrying malaria and yellow fever and waterborne pathogens, design is just beginning to matter. There are a number of preventative strategies that can be achieved medically and thru better design of our living environments. What are the scales to consider when designing healthy environments? Scales of water (regional water shed, community infrastructures, personal use/discharge). Scales of disease (proximities to sources of breeding grounds, ceiling heights and beam spacing for ceiling hung mosquito bed nets, Scales of hygiene (locations of hand washing sinks, washing facilities).
Discovering Answers by Designing Questions
The two sites explored through this grant gave me the ability to compare and contrast the types and technologies of international development work occurring in Western Malawi. These sites exemplify the importance of creating varying degrees of enclaves of inclusion and exclusion that ultimately have altering relationships with neighboring communities, acting as points of dispersion and collection.
It is my intention and hope to share my discoveries in investigating the broad relationship of water and health by bringing questions to the discussion that help give new perspectives in addressing the issue of poverty reduction.
Related Articles:
Study Finds Pattern of Severe Droughts in Africa
21 October 2008
Poverty + Self Sufficient Housing
Yes, poverty is determined by access to clean water, food, health care....death rates, illiteracy...and the list can go on. And what of shelter? Access to shelter verses architecture?
Throughout the countryside of rural Malawi, people have access and the knowledge for creating their own shelter. Is it architecture? Does it matter?
As detailed below, the simple construction component of mud brick are procured, formed, cured, stacked, plastered and dwelled, all within or within walking distance of ones land.
How does agency to one's own housing solution help transform a community out of poverty? What preconceived notions of a nations "architecture" prevent it to sustain its local vernacular? (instead of resorting to concrete block, tile, heavy timber?)
What other elements of "poverty" could be re-considered in terms of self sufficiency and culture?
(All in perspective: Mud brick homes in Santa Fe, NM rarely sell for less than a million $US...hand plastered mud walls?... make it 1.5 mill)
Mud/clay procured from surrounding land in varying degrees of consistencies. Mud rarely mixed with a cellulose like straw for strength. How could these new mined out holes serve the community? water catchment? fish pond? subterranean cold storage/housing?
One of the only things purchased is the wood form used for casting the mud bricks
raw bricks are stacked on site into (rather ceremonial looking) mini ziggurats.
The stack becomes its own kiln, as it is covered in mud and fired by inserting wood into the bottom chambers. The villagers tells me they start the fire at 6pm and keep it roaring till the heat gets to the top of the mound. They estimate approx 12 hours of burning time. Issues of deforestation, quality of brick can't be forgotten.
From "kiln" to home, bricks are mortered with mud or if able, cement is purchased. Bricks can also be sold for approx. 2 Mk each (approx. 1.5 cents each). A house costs about 10,000 Mk (or about 80 USD).
Utilizing local sources of clays and muds of varying degrees of mineral content, personalized color and figurative pattens are adhered to the exterior and interior dwellings. The mud plasters help protect the structures (must be reapplied annually).
Public Space - Private Affairs

link: New York Times
The new Chanel Pavilion in Central Park opened recently, celebrating fashion thru architecture and public space - perhaps missing the mark completely, especially in such economic and environmental/social urgencies.
"Opening the pavilion in Central Park only aggravates the wince factor. Frederick Law Olmsted planned the park as a great democratic experiment, an immense social mixing place as well as an instrument of psychological healing for the weary. The Chanel project reminds us how far we have traveled from those ideals by dismantling the boundary between the civic realm and corporate interests."
What becomes of a public space composed of elite showings - with required previously purchased "free online" tickets? Where do the boundaries of open and closed, elite and common, spontaneous and prepared, fashion and environment meet in a city like New York, within a site like Central Park?
16 July 2008
Urban Food Chain
Urban farming. I have been seeing many more of these images lately. This urgent need for good food, close food and cheep food - especially in urban poor neighborhoods. These new models explore farming as architecture.
How does this concept work within the local/neighborhood/community? And what other sort of programming works within the field of farming? What are the schedules of the crops in relation to the local inhabitants, day v. night, seasonal? What sort of local wildlife (birds/pidgins/rats!) can become included/avoided within the activities of urban farming? How is energy created, used, processed, transfered (sun, light, electric, gas, oil?) Educational, social and cultural values?
How is it accessed, transportation? pick up? delivery?
Image by SOA Architects, from NYTimes article
25 June 2008
Station Infrastructure

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, as of 2002, there were 117,100 gas service stations in the U.S., of which 84,700 had convenience stores. That is just a bit lower than the number of grocery stores in the US (169,414 - http://www.manta.com/mb_34_B619B_000/grocery_stores).
As we enter peak oil, and the already decreasing use of automobiles (In March, Americans drove 11 billion fewer miles on public roads than in the same month the previous year, a 4.3 percent decrease — the sharpest one-month drop since the Federal Highway Administration began keeping records in 1942. from NYC see April 24th blog post below). What will become of our gas stations? Or what is the new infrastructure of energy going to look like, or how could it utilized the existing grid of our antiquated service stations? Hydrogen, solar....electric?
Outside of depots for transportation, how can this matrix of "energy centers" provide human energy? Growing stations? Water stations? fruit and vegetables? greenhouses?
Convenience stores for calories and not CO2!
19 June 2008
With the Water

In the lately is the flooding of the Mississippi in Iowa, now Missouri. These 500 or 100 year floods come more frequently now and begs the question, not "is our infrastructure big, strong and good enough?"....but is our infrastructure not resilient enough? When dealing with mother nature the only person we have to blame is ourselves. Pushing back the waters, preventing the waters from entering and steering the waters at our own whim, is outdated and as shown as recently in 1993 and now in 2008, a failure.
How can our cities and towns along major water bodies (especially inland rivers) reflect urbanistically that they are actually on a river? Current typologies (urban, planning, architecture) of river towns are just like any Midwestern town. How can topography of town allow the influx of water? How can the architecture of river towns accept the water (floating, stilts, anchored)? How can bridges serve more than just transport infrastructure?
(Image from www.boston.com/news/
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/20/us/20flood.html?hp