Discovering Perspective

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Off to London for the holidays

Might not be posting too much for the next week and a half. I'm off to London with Mekki to enjoy all my mom's amazing baking. Mmmm... cookies. I mean, off to London to visit my family and celebrate the holidays. This will be the closest I've gotten to celebrating all of Hanukkah at home. And the first time I will be leaving before it ends. This is the latest I can remember ever celebrating. That lunar calendar is pretty funky if you ask me. There will also be some Christmas get togethers with Mom's family and lots more food there. And I'm assuming Aaron and Dad will be preparing our traditional-New-Year's-men-only-in-the-kitchen-chicken-cordon-bleu-feast! Maybe Mekki will get recruited.

As always, I'm disappointed that I will be missing out on the festivities with all of you here in Ottawa but there will be a Latke Party upon our return. Details to come soon.

Happy Hanukkah everyone! And Merry whatsitcalled.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

I hate these but some days just bored enough not to care

You Are 50% Weird

Normal enough to know that you're weird...
But too damn weird to do anything about it!
How Weird Are You?



Your Eyes Should Be Violet

Your eyes reflect: Mystery and allure

What's hidden behind your eyes: A quiet passion
What Color Should Your Eyes Be?


You Are 40% Boyish and 60% Girlish

You are pretty evenly split down the middle - a total eunuch.
Okay, kidding about the eunuch part. But you do get along with both sexes.
You reject traditional gender roles. However, you don't actively fight them.
You're just you. You don't try to be what people expect you to be.
How Boyish or Girlish Are You?




In a Past Life...



You Were: A Ditzy Astrologer.



Where You Lived: Chile.



How You Died: Typhoid fever.

Who Were You In a Past Life?

Your Hair Should Be Orange

Expressive, deep, and one of a kind.
You pull off "weird" well - hardly anyone notices.
What's Your Funky Inner Hair Color?

Monday, December 19, 2005

I'm finished

Return to a Foreign Home: Creating Space/Place for a Jewish Identity in Mandate Palestine. I managed to finish it. As always, though at the cost of a night's sleep. Feel free to download it and take a peak though I doubt it is of specific interest to most people. Unless, of course you have a soft spot for early zionist architecture.

Saturday, December 17, 2005

Online Calendar Search

Hello readers. I know some of you out there have cool online calendars/team organizing accounts with various online tools. Can you recommend any that you've found useful and well designed?

I'm working on a website for my studio group next semester and ideally would like something that can be integrated into the design (would need to be really simply achieved because I'm not that well versed in web coding) but don't mind just linking to an online service.

Requirements:

-calendar of events (possibly publically readable but updatable by members/admin)
-a forum/blog would be nice
-15 people in the group who might want to contribute plus three or four administrators (the profs and me) plus some opportunity for public comments
-possibly a photo album

Any suggestions? Thanks.

Friday, December 16, 2005

I've got 602 out of 4500

Time for a break right? I feel better now that I have at least some of the words towards my paper written down instead of floating around in my head/on tiny bits of paper that are masquerading as organized notes. Ha! Organized!

I'm trying to figure out my system. The indexing and so on. What is the best way to keep notes organized? Especially when you know you probably won't use them this paper but they could be very useful in the future. I'm hoping this paper will be relevant to my thesis next year and that a lot of the work I've done over the last few months can be recycled.

After today's crit, I'm feeling more confident that I'd be much happier and satisfied and interested in pursuing an academic career. I admit I need time to digest whether my dissatisfaction with design work the last while is due to the structure of studio or because my interest now lies elsewhere. It's been a challenging semester of trying to resolve theory with practice. The theory can be so intense that I don't think anyone can really figure out what to do with it. Maybe it is one or the other. I'm looking forward to thesis next year where I get to control the structure a lot more and see if that is what I need to rekindle my interest. And because of the research and writing which I am really starting to love. Even if I do procrastinate.

Thursday, December 15, 2005

JCC and metro station final presentation


JCC and metro station final presentation
Originally uploaded by brunelleschi.

Another studio project comes to an end. The panel is currently at the printer. $150! I'll try to post some detail images later. The original file is huge so it is massively compressed here.

Here's the write-up if you're interested. Just note that I wrote it late last night in a rush to finish. So be kind.

------------------------

The site of Saint-Laurent and de Maisonneuve acts as a micro-scale city containing elements of public, private and shared space, specifically the metro, residences and JCC, which channel into and from the greater city-scale. This is done in such a way as to allow the community to take ownership of the site while still taking part in and contributing to the overall urban fabric.

The introduction of a Jewish Community Centre on the site is appropriate given the historical connection they share and the precedent of the Main as a place where communities gather before extending into the larger fabric of Montreal. Combined with a residence, the JCC provides the Jewish community of Montreal with a place to gather and celebrate, to educate, to exhibit local and traveling art and gallery shows, and to share in their customs and traditions.

The metro station is the hub that connects the underground network to the urban network and directs the flow between the two, the termination of one and beginning of the next. The experiential quality of the metro is inherently one of the collapsing of space and time. The moment of departure becomes the moment of arrival, in between is no-time and no-space. This places the demand on the architecture of these spaces to reorient the travelers, giving reference to their location in relation to the rest of the city and to the new district they are about to enter in the ascent back to street level and into the city.

The characteristic of any junction is one of potential collision, overlap and failure, however, these conflict present opportunities for the architecture, otherwise anonymous and invisible, to express itself and the character of its surroundings, to define public, private and shared space.


Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Oh yes! It hurts!


Oh yes! It hurts!
Originally uploaded by brunelleschi.

This is a dramatization!

...but it looks pretty close. I just had other things on my mind than taking a picture when it happened. Photoshop is good that way.

Now that the adrenaline has passed, it hurts! But shock is fun. The weirdest things go through your mind. You're just so non-chalant: "Oh look, I've got a push pin stuck in my palm. I bet that should hurt."


Friday, December 02, 2005

My first years were studying online

Yesterday was the quiz for the drawing class. My blog counter shows a hit for "Perspective as Symbolic Form" (one of the readings) at 11:42 Wednesday night. I don't think it is a coincidence.

I love blogcounters.

Environmental Friend or Foe

Last night's lecture was about the environment and our responsibility as future architects to protect the planet and the future by taking responsibility for our choice in construction materials, etc.

I have a pet peeve about being lectured on the environment. Frankly, I don't think there is enough proof/support to know what the effects of one decision over another will be for our children and our children's children and.... "Someone please think of the children!"

Many environmentally friendly intentions have backfired. There are always unknowns. Among the unknowns is will someone five years from now be able to deal with the potential problem we've created? Of course you can't rely on this indefinitely but is it that unreasonable to think that this generations garbage is the next generations treasure?

The prof mentioned a nightmare he has of future generations mining plastics from the bottom of our landfills. Couldn't this be a good idea? Maybe someone will find a way to refine/recycle "raw plastic" making it worthy of mining.

The other pill I couldn't quite swallow was that Canadians use 350L/day/person versus the European 40L/day/person. And on top of that that not leaving your tap running when brushing your teeth (do people do that?) is the solution. Even if the statistic is true... we got a whole lot of water and it's not like it disappears. Isn't that grade 2 science? Water falls from the sky, is absorbed into the ground, finds its way to a body of water, evaporates, forms clouds, falls from the sky. I still have the somewhat disturbing diagram stuck in my mind which included a deer or something relieving itself to continue the cycle after drinking from the lake. Yes, water consumption is wasteful in the energy/byproducts of its purification but is this really significant?

The difference between Canadians and Europeans is not that they are more environmentally aware but that we got more water per person than we know what to do with so suburbs are filled with swimming pools, and lawns that "NEED" to be watered (lawn rant to come another time), and dishwashers, etc. I don't think we waste water because we have those things. We have those things because we've got water to waste. I do see the value in dividing potable and non-potable sources and uses. I don't need to be able to drink the water in my toilet (though you may have to introduce dog safety devices) or the water I use to wash the floors, or the car, or whatever else. I only need to be able to drink the water I drink. But this is more of an economic issue. Water falls from the sky onto my property. Why do I pay the city to give me water and to get rid of the water I get for free?

And then there is the paper and wood issue. Waste, waste, waste. There is a poster in the bathroom at school that says something along the lines that it requires an entire tree to make a roll of toilet paper. I thought they were trying to make me feel bad for using toilet paper. Sorry, that is not going to be removed from my habits. I didn't see the fine print that the point is to buy recycled t.p. They don't point out that sometimes it can be more environmentally detrimental to recycle. More energy is wasted in the recycling process than in the original processing. Besides, they farm trees like they farm potatoes. Does anybody ever rally and tie themselves to a potato?

It's not as clear cut (pun intended) as it is usually made out to be.

There was the one case where a type of plastic was no longer being recycled and the citizens revolted that the city was not doing its part and didn't care about the environment. They were shipping the plastics to CHINA! Transporting truckloads of plastic half way around the world cannot be good for the environment.

I'm not against being conscientious of the decisions you make and the impact it might have but you can't take responsibility for the unknowable. You don't really know the impact most of your decisions will have. Only time will tell. Of course there is no need to be stupid when you can avoid it.

Only from within the US

Very disappointed. I went to look up a reference to a Bullshit episode and found the following message when I clicked on the website.

"We at Showtime Online express our apologies; however, these pages are intended for access only from within the United States."

What is that supposed to mean?