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Berlin in pieces; cartography-based artwork by French artist Armelle Caron (via Landscape+Urbanism) |
Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Shape of Berlin
Border Protection
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U.S./Canadian border, Haskell Library, VT. (photo via The Center for Land Use Interpretation.) |
ANYTHINK

This is a new library organization idea from Colorado I discovered in Library Journal a couple of months ago. It has sparked a growth in library use in the community. (http://www.libraryjournal.com/lj/ljinprintcurrentissue/887538-403/in_the_country_of_anythink.html.csp)

SHAPE

Reflecting back upon the site study I completed this week, shape was initially influenced on immediate contextual surroundings. On Parcel 13 I am drawn to connect the old MBTA entrance with the BAC studio space in the old ICA building. After constructing a nolli plan I feel I need to revisit the massing of the site and reflect a larger context of the way blocks are formed in the neighborhood. I think the central void could, similar to the city blocks in the Back Bay, create additional gathering space for students of different arts to converge and collaborate. In addition to the nolli map, Somol's "12 Reasons to Get back into Shape" defines shape as Boyant, among other things. I think that buoyancy could be particularly interesting on the Parcel 13 site because the buildings are "floating" above the Mass Pike. I have not yet resolved how to incorporate this.
Thursday, February 24, 2011
MM
Hi all! I finally caught up with all the readings and would like to make a few comments on some of them.
I really enjoyed the interviews, especially one of them – with Dominique Perrault. Perhaps this is not going to be a library-related comment, but rather a very generic one, but I absolutely loved how he said that “architecture is a violent action”. Specifically, he talks about walls and how placing a wall that would separate a space is a “violent action” and almost an intrusion into privacy. I think this statement is absolutely astonishing. Quite often, in studios we tend to forget the importance of a plan. We are often too engaged with the conceptual design and at the end we merely disperse the programmatic elements based on the principle “what can fit where”. I love plans and often become obsessed with its perfect organization. I think that every wall, every door, etc if it’s placed somewhere – there has to be a specific reason why. Only then it would be possible to create a meaningful space that would work both inside and out!
I also loved how he talked about facades and materials (materials, especially). He said that everything in architecture can be considered a material – the client, the site, the context. I think that we tend to forget about this too. It is extremely hard however, to remember all the parts of the design and their importance and incorporate them into the final scheme.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
http://feltron.com/
i am sure you have all seen this (his) work at some point, but i find myself going back to it pretty often. so many different ways to interpret information and they look so good! make sure to check out the blog too.
Somol's "Shape"
Monday, February 21, 2011
The Wall and the Wall Library
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The Garden Library for Refugees and Migrant Workers, Tel Aviv. Yoav, Meiri Architects |
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Architects on Architecture
Friday, February 18, 2011
The Library Index
The members of the informative platform(s) studio team present: the Library Index.
The material presented in this catalogue was collected and analyzed on the occasion of the studio. The pool of the selected 40 projects of this critical research is not meant to necessarily represent the most typical examples of built and unbuilt libraries of the last 150 years, but rather showcase a selective cross section of the evolutionary history of the library typology since the mid-19th century. Thus, the projects were selected for inclusion primarily on the basis of their contribution to the challenging of the typology in one way or another.
Each member of the studio researched individually five precedents, collected the visual material, outlined the main concepts and innovations, provided keywords and even “assessed” each project in more contemporary and ill-defined terms as “iconicity”. Following a series of collective presentations, redistribution of material and constant feedback between the team, a series of diagrams was produced in order to visualize comparative analyses on a series of aspects (such as scale, structure, materiality, circulation and geographic location among others) in an communicative and engaging way.
In that sense, the Library Index is a result of a purely collective effort and as such its raison d’être is not limited to that of a reference book for the design part of studio, but rather invite both designers and the public to re-imagine together the new role of the library.
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The Library Index, QR code hyperlink to the full online edition. |
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Caption contest
Dear Library exprets,
this is your time to show your undeniable eloquence when it comes to talking libraries. Make a caption for this evocative photo a knowledge-thirsty "red army" marching through the dizzy-fying, high-techy Biblioteca Vasconcelos in Mexico City (architect: Alberto Kalach), today's Editor’s Pick on Architizer,
You can participate with your captions here by tomorrow (Feb 18).
p.s. The Library Index is baking... compiling the last pieces left out.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Library Science
Here is an article about the digital art display of library statistics at the Seattle Library. (http://www.spl.org/default.asp?pageID=about_news_detail&cid=1126554289343 ) I agree with the following quote; "People tend to gaze at it for minutes at a time," Hoetzlein said. "They seem to be mesmerized. Some people are really excited that it's real data." When I visited there was a group of people just watching the data change on screen. I am pretty certain that library statistics have ever been exciting before this installation.
Credibility of Information
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Library Science
The Reader-User-Patron Variants
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Variations of the 5 Laws of Library Science, 1931-2008 |
Monday, February 14, 2011
Bruce Mau's Incomplete Manifesto for Growth
One more thing. The link included in this post is to designer Bruce Mau's "Incomplete Manifesto for Growth". You may have seen it. Its a list he's compiled over the years that I find to be very motivating and inspirational. I hope you find it helpful as we move forward with our own designs.
Enjoy!
Also, here's a link to Bruce Mau's website, in case you are curious. Website
Updated Timeline_First Page

Hi everyone,
I've uploaded the first page of the updated timeline...I've tried to incorporate everyone's feedback as best I could...or at least as I interpretted it. Let me know what you think and if you have any suggestions. Please understand that at this point, I can't make major changes...I have to move on to other tasks and just don't have the time.
Also, for the bibliography, please make sure you have all your sources uploaded to dropbox as soon as possible.
Thanks!
Sunday, February 13, 2011
The Origin of Species
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Ben Fry, On the Origin of Species: The Preservation of Favoured Traces, 2009 |
"Ben Fry, well-known for Processing and plenty of other data goodness, announced his most recent piece, On the Origin of Species: The Preservation of Favoured Traces, made possible by The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online.
The visualization explores the evolution of Charles Darwin's theory of, uh, evolution. It began as a less-defined 150,000-word text in the first edition and grew and developed to a 190,000-word theory in the sixth edition.
Watch where the updates in the text occur over time. Chunks are removed, chunks are added, and words are changed. Blocks are color-coded by edition. Roll over blocks to see the text underneath."