11 February 2009

Google's Power Meter












Kicking the smart grid into motion perhaps is the doing of Google, which introduced new software service online that helps homeowners track their energy use. This requires additional hardware that would plug into your main circuit breaker and would "talk" with your computer, downloading your energy patterns. The Google platform would then map it, graphically showing your energy use...thus prompting many to limit and adjust their use...saving money and surges on our energy grid. Google foresees implementing this into a social network interface...your daily energy use on facebook anyone?


related articles:
New York Times
Bits


09 February 2009

McDonalds CycleCenter

















Privately owned public resource: McDonalds Cycle Center located in Chicago's Millennium Park. its a heated and air conditioned indoor bicycle parking facility built by the city of Chicago and now sponsored by McDonalds. In addition, the station provides space for a Chicago Police Department Bike Patrol Group.

McDonald's Cycle Center offers the following services:
  • Secure Bicycle Parking: The Cycle Center offers 300 secure bicycle parking spaces.
  • Lockers, Showers and Towel Service: To make your bicycle commute comfortable we provide lockers and showers (for Members only) so you may refresh before you go to work.
  • Bicycle Rental: Bikes are available for rent by the hour, day, or week.
  • Bicycle Repair Shop: Professional bicycle mechanics are available full time at the bicycle station during the summer from 10am to 6pm and part time during the winter.
  • Guided Bicycle Tours: Memorial Day to Labor Day, guided bicycle tours are offered daily at 10am and 1pm.
  • IGO Car Sharing : IGO cars are available for rent from Millennium Park. IGO is a not-for-profit car sharing program developed by the Center.
from website

from a treehugger blog post:

"I have a membership at the bike station and find it very convenient - it's clean and only 4 blocks from my office, which is closer than any gym. It's not fancy, but it doesn't need to be - and it's used almost exclusively by commuters, not tourists. I don't mind the McDonald's name if it saves taxpayer money - besides, anyone who's traveled much knows that the bathrooms at McDonald's are always the cleanest."

Also see:
Millennium Park
Wikipedia

08 February 2009

Mapping Prop 8












Through the internet our actions are becoming increasingly exposed and now our attitudes toward social issues can be to. This new Prop 8 Map takes publicly available data of people who financially supported California's Prop 8 measure and maps them into a google map mesh up.

Donor information is accessible by clicking on the red markers. Results have included hate mail, calls and boycotting.













related article: New York Times

Virtual Deputies



















Virtual Deputies is a new private/public program through the The Texas Border Sheriff's Coalition and BlueServo. In the past several months a network of surveillance cameras have been set up along the Texas/Mexico border. Now in the comfort of your own home, people can log in to the site and partake in the act of spotting illegal aliens with real surveillance video. Operating 24/7, the greater public can now survey and report directly to the Coalition any suspecious activies.

Groups can also form to turn the cameras on their own communities with the local Virtual Neighborhood Watches...

Sustainable Cities

also see eco-countries

Perhaps during a recession, as things slow down a bit, is the best time to reflect on the Eco-Cities and Resorts (whats the difference these days?). Below are the latest ones I have found:
















Monterrey Bay Shores, California
from Inhabitat: (http://www.inhabitat.com/2009/02/04/monterey-bay-shores-eco-resort/)

The site for the Monterey Bay Shores eco-resort is situated on a defunct sand mine, which had been operating for over 60 years. The sand mine considerably damaged the natural ecosystem, stripping away important topsoil layers and allowing invasive species to infiltrate the area. As part of the resort development, MBS will also restore 85% of the 29 acre site to native flora and fauna. Over 6.7 acres will be dedicated as an endangered species habitat and restored coastline. Additionally, 5 acres will be built as a living roof, leaving only 4% of the site as impervious surface, which is great. All parking is below ground, and even the fire lanes will be constructed from a grass paver, rather than asphalt.















Masdar: Abu Dhabi
from website:
"Welcome to Masdar City - the world's first carbon-neutral, zero-waste city. Currently under construction in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Masdar City will feature all of the modern conveniences, services and benefits of living in one of the great cities of the world, but in a carbon-neutral environment.

Masdar City, soon to become home to 40,000 residents and 50,000 daily commuters, is being built around pedestrians, where open public squares intersect with narrow shaded walkways and connect to homes, schools, restaurants, theatres and shops. The architecture of the city is inspired by the traditional medinas, souks and wind towers of the Arab world

The City is a free zone clean-tech cluster. Academics, researchers, students, entrepreneurs and financers and more than 1,500 visionary companies will have offices, research centers and operations within city walls, benefiting from 100% foreign ownership, zero taxes, zero import tariffs, zero restrictions on capital movement and among the strongest intellectual property protection in the region.

Masdar City is more than a concept - it is happening. Phase One of Masdar City has now begun - The Masdar Institute of Science and Technology is underway and Masdar City will be home to 100 students and faculty by fall 2009.











Dongtan, China

from website: Dongtan will produce its own energy from wind, solar, bio-fuel and recycled city waste. Clean technologies such as hydrogen fuel cells will power public transport. A network of cycle and footpaths will help the city achieve close to zero vehicle emissions. Farmland within the Dongtan site will use organic farming methods to grow food.

Dongtan will be a vibrant city with green ‘corridors’ of public space ensuring a high quality of life for residents. The city is designed to attract employment across all social and economic demographics in the hope that people will choose to live and work there.

Dongtan demonstrates to the world China’s ability to work closely with the environment and has provided a methodology for sustainable communities across China and beyond.





















Logrono Montecorvo Eco City, Rioja, Spain
from website: The long, snaking line of interconnected buildings will feature volumes of different heights, skins and window arrangements. But each unit will have an identical or virtually identical layout.

To take housing blocks as an example, a ten-storey northern unit will include three storeys of underground parking, a ground floor for the public and six storeys of apartments. To the south of that, another building will provide one storey of underground parking and three storeys of housing. Bridges will connect the northern and southern buildings. The same layout applies when the buildings serve other functions.

Each unit will have a view to the south, enabling residents to see LogroƱo and other parts of La Rioja. Given the steepness of the hill, the southern buildings will not block views from the northern buildings.

At its highest point, a funicular will terminate at a museum and viewing point hidden in a research and promotion centre for renewable and energy-efficient technology. This centre will be hidden in the top of one hill. It is unclear how far down the hill the funicular will go, or how many funiculars will serve the city.
















Carbon Neutral Zira Island, Azerbaijan
from website: "Zira Island is a 1,000,000 sq meter island In the Caspian Sea that will soon be developed into an incredible eco-community and sustainably built resort. Master-planned by Denmark-based Big Architects, the carbon-neutral eco-island is based on the seven peaks of Azerbaijan and its mountainous ecosystems. Located in the bay of the capital city Baku, Zira Island is a ferry ride away from a growing metropolis and will stand as an example to a region so dependent on oil, that it is possible to live off the wind and sun."
















Green City/Green Mountain, Libya
from article:

The declaration basically says everything the world would want to hear: sustainable development; archaeological conservation; eco-tourism; renewable energy; environmentally responsible town planning; micro-banking; education; biofuels; even production of "the finest quality organic food and drink". In essence, it was a declaration that Libya are now more interested in saving the planet than bankrolling terrorists, and that one day soon the Green Mountain region would be a very nice place to come on holiday - a sort of cross between St Tropez, the garden of Eden, and Waitrose.

To achieve these daunting ambitions, Saif al-Islam has created the Green Mountain Conservation and Development Authority, a curious coalition of international experts in green technology, conservation, agriculture, architecture and whatever else, with responsibility for a 5,500 sq km area littered with Greek, Roman and Byzantine ruins and with 220km of largely unspoilt coast. And leading the whole plan is Britain's ubiquitous architectural troubleshooter, Norman Foster.

13 January 2009

...Crowded...














Hot, Flat and Crowded by Thomas Friedman.

The case is made, the need is clear...the only thing missing (beside the actual leadership and money) is the tools, frameworks and designs.

While new batteries, better cables and technologies I will leave for the scientists, what is the role of architects and urban designers?

-Understanding the infrastructures (energy, transportation, data/information) on multiple scales, relationships, schedules and performance.

-Creating new relationships on the scale of the dwelling by representing the systems, the needs and the opportunities.

10 January 2009

Urban Omnibus

new urban forum/blog/newsletter

http://urbanomnibus.net/features-forum/

New Suburban Landscape















Interesting article in the Times recently.
with the downturn in economy and thus home sales, a new urban landscape has been discovered by the skateboarding types. Within the suburbs of many a California town, homes are left empty with tempting swimming pools in the backyards, yearning for some kind of playful activity again.

Skateboarding frontiersmen have staked out neighborhoods, "mapping" different finds, usually going to the point of cleaning out the pools themselves. Activity is limited in time and noise, and the code follows to not enter the empty homes, litter or tag.

While this network plays out, others continue...and opportunities seem ripe for their intersection. Local government need to keep these pools free from waterborne insects and the like and work day in and out, seeking out pools that are risking public health. All the while, local pool businesses are suffering with less occupied homes and less homes with the ready cash for clean up.

What opportunities could arise when the three networks come together?
What work/health/community opportunities could arise?
How can the shifting state of suburban living create new frameworks for work/play/health?

29 December 2008

Grounds for Free Speech





























image credits: Thailand's Suvarnabhumi International Airport + the Acropolis of Greece

Recent news headlines have been displaying images of public spaces in connection with locally occurring protests. In Thailand, its the Democratic Alliance Against Dictatorship protesting Mr Somchai's People Power Party, locating themselves finally in both airports Bangkok, disrupting travel amoung other things. In Athens Greece, protesters asking for mass protests across Europe in responce to a local teenager shot by police, unvail banners on the walls of the Acropolis.

These are peaceful acts of communicating distaste for local governments, inaction by governing bodies. People are coming together to show and express their opionions. These acts culimate in public places, national/city gathering grounds. Space to express, to rally...and to disrupt.

These two examples highlight the changing arena of our new grounds for free speech. They are not sites of governmental policy making, not capital steps, houses of parliments... They are very visual public spaces...and most interestingly they are sites of international attention, places of high tourism and visability.

They are globalized sites. Local displeasing actions are now fed directing into global conversation. Using sites of recongnition (airports, monuments) that identify nationality (who and where it is) or homogenity (could be anywhere).

08 December 2008

Seal Infrastructure

















Sea Lions/Seals? taking a break along the pier in Santa Cruz.
What is the infrastructure of nature? How can the infrastructure of humans enforce natures infrastructure? Who are the stakeholders of a site? What materials, shapes, colors, sizes, shapes influence multiple programming for multiple users?

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.
















03 December 2008

Water Wars

















www.bluegold-worldwaterwars.com/

label it like it really is
















Where it goes, not what it is....

Smart Bus Stops





















This bus stop shelter in San Francisco offers the rider detailed information on where they are and how long they will be standing there for the next bus to arrive.

visualized information...efficiency, safety....all aspects promoting the use of public transportation.

what other means of informing users of public infrastructures be communicated?
mobile devices, light displays, audio, spatial?



01 December 2008

Traces of Transportation

















A web of electric bus lines in downtown San Francisco.
Traces of mobility woven above the streetscape. Visual reminders of paths, networks and vital infrastructures. Like the determined paths of subways and skytrains, the bus lines become determined, not limitless like the urban grid it floats upon. Visual cues alert travelers of crossing the path of a moving object...follow the line to find the next stop.

How can these visual cues disclose path type (color, shape, coded). How can they inform schedule, time table or final destinations? What other functions can this web bring to the city?