Friday, March 11, 2011

Collage Review


Thank all of you for your comments last studio.  You gave me some great ideas (“great” as in, “Great, that’s just more to think about!”).  But seriously, I appreciate the feedback and am excited by everyone’s projects.  Since Evangelos mentioned that we should post our work each week, I thought I would post my collages.  I hope to build on these main concepts, but since we are focusing this week on structure, I will have to let these ideas percolate.  I would like to use this as a chance to record a few concepts that inform my atmospheric collages: 

Search & Display:  The future of information holds new ways on not only collecting data, but displaying it as well.  A future library will need space to display data, real time, as it is collected and produced.  Imagine downloading a group of statistics on a research subject; the future library could not only display that information, but allow you to manipulate it, sort it, and/or edit it without a keyboard, mouse, or touchscreen.  This will require a new kind type of library space.

Interactive “Floor-Light”: This feature is site-specific, considering the building’s proposed situation over a major sub-surface roadway.  The inverse of the “skylight”, the floor-light opens a window to an urban reality, while gathering the trace light and reflections (and noises) of an urban element which typically belongs “outside” of the building.  In addition, this glazed surface can be augmented with an interactive display which shows useful data (route-finding, entertainment, query services). 

Street Book Wall:  The street-oriented book wall is a strategy which speaks to a need to increase access to public information.  By turning the library inside-out, the print collection is literally made public, a gesture which makes this new library a progressive alternative to tradition (consider the opaque and introverted condition of the Boston Public Library).  Transporting “book sushi,” the book wall moves its cargo at the pace of the pedestrian, bringing the book back to the street.

Self-Organizing Corral:  With new RFID technology and personal mobile devices, the need for antiquated cataloging and sorting systems is being replaced with decentralized, efficient book tracking methods.  The self-organizing corrals are organisms with the program which collect people and books who, theoretically, sort themselves over time.  In others words, when technology allows the book to live anywhere, the users themselves will organize the collection.  The corrals, based on the types of books they have collected, will reveal how our culture intuitively sorts media.

Open Screening Room:  The library must remain a social node in the community, and as our tastes for information delivery evolve, so does our need to share in its consumption.  The screening room represents public information on a large scale and , as it turns out, is a traditional role of the library.  Along with the screening room (which is itself a borderless area within the library), other diverse program elements can be included, e.g.: a bowling lane, a bike path, a moving sidewalk, or a basketball court.  (Thanks to you studio geniuses for those great ideas!)

1 comment:

  1. I would like to take this chance to mention that Matthew's collages were perhaps the most successful in class in creating a spatial impression rather than just act as a set of reference images, nonetheless leaving a lot to for interpretation and further investigation. I hope we will all move in a similar direction.

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