Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
River Pointe Church Student Building- Studio RED Architects
The design for River Pointe Church Student Building by Studio RED Architects won the Solomon Award for Best Special Project by WFX Magazine. The Student Building is praised for its relational...
By: StudioRedVideos
View original post here:
River Pointe Church Student Building- Studio RED Architects - Video
Category
Architects | Comments Off on River Pointe Church Student Building- Studio RED Architects – Video
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
The Shadow of Doubt - Architects - Zach Ziomek (Studio Quality Drum Cover) New 2015
Business inquires Zach.ziomek@yahoo.com. For anything, band try out, collab, or drum tracks. Hit me up! SUBSCRIBE IF YOU WANT MORE! I #39;m Zach, 19 years old! Fell in love with Architects recently...
By: Zach Ziomek
Read the original:
The Shadow of Doubt - Architects - Zach Ziomek (Studio Quality Drum Cover) New 2015 - Video
Category
Architects | Comments Off on The Shadow of Doubt – Architects – Zach Ziomek (Studio Quality Drum Cover) New 2015 – Video
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Architects - The Shadow of Doubt [B-Side]
#39;The Shadow of Doubt #39; is taken from the deluxe version of Architects #39; album #39;Lost Forever // Lost Together #39; - Out March 27 via UNFD! Pre-Order #39;Lost Forever // Lost Together (Deluxe Edition) #39;:...
By: UNFD
More:
Architects - The Shadow of Doubt [B-Side] - Video
Category
Architects | Comments Off on Architects – The Shadow of Doubt [B-Side] – Video
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Pier Solar and the great Architects #59 - Die Eishle
Nix mehr verpassen: http://goo.gl/iYz3bn Playlist: http://goo.gl/mZJVbh VLogs: http://goo.gl/EGdeMp ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------...
By: ByteMe
Original post:
Pier Solar and the great Architects #59 - Die Eishle - Video
Category
Architects | Comments Off on Pier Solar and the great Architects #59 – Die Eishle – Video
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Not many architects can claim to have spearheaded a major design movement. Michael Graves played a prominent role in three.
Graves, who died Thursday at 80 of natural causes at his home in Princeton, N.J., was a pioneering figure in postmodernism in the 1980s and '90s. He added historical ornament and bright color to prominent and often controversial buildings like the Portland municipal building in Oregon, the Denver Central Library, the 26-story Humana tower in Louisville, Ky., and the Disney Studios in Burbank.
As a product designer, creating chess sets, stainless-steel colanders and dustpans for Target and tea kettles for Alessi, Graves brought high-design housewares to a broad public, paving the way for the later success of Design Within Reach and Ikea and arguably setting the stage for the ascendance of new stars like Apple's in-house design guru Jonathan Ive.
Late in life, after complications from a sinus infection left him in a wheelchair, Graves became a leading voice calling for reform in healthcare design, arguing that hospitals and medical products were not just thoughtlessly made but often soul-sapping for patients.
If there was a thread connecting that disparate work, it was a deeply felt populism, a philosophy embodied in the slogan Target attached to his products: "Good design should be affordable to all."
His architecture, similarly, represented an effort to bring back all the crowd-pleasing details columns, gables, gargoyles that dour modernist architects, with their emphasis on flat roofs and functionalist dogma, had banished. Though many of his buildings had a limited, scenographic quality more effective as eye-catching billboards for innovative design ideas than as built space and haven't aged well, they were always full of vitality and humor.
Graves was born in Indianapolis on July 9, 1934. After earning a degree in architecture from the University of Cincinnati in 1958, he enrolled at Harvard's Graduate School of Design, a place very much still in thrall to the ideals of strict modernism. After finishing at Harvard and spending two years at the American Academy in Rome, Graves settled in New Jersey, joining the Princeton University faculty, where he would spend his entire teaching career, and opening his own practice.
Early on, Graves' architecture reflected the influence of his time at Harvard. He was a member (with Richard Meier, Peter Eisenman, Charles Gwathmey and John Hejduk) of the so-called New York Five, a collection of young architects who produced abstract designs reminiscent of the French modernist Le Corbusier.
But the group was always a loose-knit one philosophically; they first came together almost by chance, having been invited by Museum of Modern Art curator Arthur Drexler to meet in 1969 to discuss their work and contemporary design. The 1972 book "Five Architects" nearly cemented their reputation as a coherent group.
But only nearly. And it was Graves who broke from the pack and proved how flexible its bonds had always been by beginning to look to history and ornament as sources of explicit inspiration. In fact an important early project, the 1972 Snyderman House in Fort Wayne, Ind., was completed the same year "Five Architects" was published, while undermining some of its modernist principles.
View original post here:
Michael Graves dies at 80; pioneering figure in postmodern architecture
Category
Architects | Comments Off on Michael Graves dies at 80; pioneering figure in postmodern architecture
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Growing cities around the world have nowhere to go but up, leadingto taller and taller buildings. But while mega-skyscrapers are the most efficient wayto build new homes,they also cast long shadows, drawing the ire of people living and working below. One solution: a pair of buildings that work together,reflecting sunlight to minimize shade.
About 250 skyscrapers are slated to redraw Londons skyline in the near futureeach with its own darkimprint on the streets below. So architects at the firm NBBJ in London decidedto see if they could come up with an entirely shadowless building. They used computer modeling to design a pair of buildings, one of which works like a gigantic, curved mirror. The glass surface of the northernmost building reflects light down into the shadow cast by itssouthern partner. And the carefully defined curve of that glass allows the reflected light to follow the shadow throughout the day. Note that the reflected light is diffusenot a focused death ray that could fry an egg or burn tourists. The relationship between the sun and shadow is the relationship between the two buildings, says Christian Coop, NBBJsdesign director.
To come up with that shape, the architects entered various building requirementslike footprints for office and living spaceinto design software called Rhinoceros. Then they told the program togeneratedesigns that maximize the light reflected onto the ground. The computer tests out every possible shape and spits back the best ones. Some are bonkers, Coop says, so to get a more practical design, the architects have to adjust the requirementslike more space on the lower levels. Then they run the program again. After several iterations, they finally gota shape they liked. Its a bit like working with clay, Coop says. The final design, with a thin base expanding as it climbs, reduces shade by up to 60 percent.
The architects designed this particular concept as a potential pair of towers in Greenwich, England, right on the Prime Meridian. But Coop points out that the software can be used to build any skyscraper anywhere. All you need to do is change the inputs: when and where the sun passes overhead at your location. The approach could be helpful inplaces like New York, where residents have resisted the construction of several new skyscrapers that they say will plunge Central Park into shadow. And itll be useful in developing countries like China and India, where new skyscrapers are going up at a rapid pace. More skyscrapers is something of an inevitability, says Daniel Safarik, a spokesperson at the Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat. Were not going back to an agrarian lifestyle.
Although the idea of reflecting sunlight to brighten up shadows isnt new (its even been used to light up an entire town), more of thesekinds of designs are still needed. Sydneys One Central Park has moveable mirrors that reflect light onto shaded areas below or block the sun during the hot summer. And in November, the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitatnamed the 363-foot high structure the best tall building in the world. Its definitely high time for this type of design to be baked into the building so it can play well with the environment, Safarik says. It should be standard practice. Maybe soon, everytall building will brighten up your day.
Read the original post:
The Plan to Build a Skyscraper That Doesnt Cast a Shadow
Category
Architects | Comments Off on The Plan to Build a Skyscraper That Doesnt Cast a Shadow
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Not many architects can claim to have spearheaded a major design movement. Michael Graves played a prominent role in three.
Graves, who died Thursday at 80 of natural causes at his home in Princeton, N.J., was a pioneering figure in postmodernism in the 1980s and 90s. He added historical ornament and bright color to prominent and often controversial buildings like the Portland municipal building in Oregon, the Denver Central Library, the 26-story Humana tower in Louisville, Ky., and the Disney Studios in Burbank, Calif.
As a product designer, creating chess sets, stainless-steel colanders and dustpans for Target and tea kettles for Alessi, Graves brought high-design housewares to a broad public, paving the way for the later success of Design Within Reach and Ikea and arguably setting the stage for the ascendance of new stars like Apples in-house design guru Jonathan Ive.
Late in life, after complications from a sinus infection left him in a wheelchair, Graves became a leading voice calling for reform in health care design, arguing that hospitals and medical products were not just thoughtlessly made but often soul-sapping for patients.
If there was a thread connecting that disparate work, it was a deeply felt populism, a philosophy embodied in the slogan Target attached to his products: Good design should be affordable to all.
His architecture, similarly, represented an effort to bring back all the crowd-pleasing details columns, gables, gargoyles that dour modernist architects, with their emphasis on flat roofs and functionalist dogma, had banished. Though many of his buildings had a limited, scenographic quality more effective as eye-catching billboards for innovative design ideas than as built space and havent aged well, they were always full of vitality and humor.
Graves was born in Indianapolis on July 9, 1934. After earning a degree in architecture from the University of Cincinnati in 1958, he enrolled at Harvards Graduate School of Design, a place very much still in thrall to the ideals of strict modernism. After finishing at Harvard and spending two years at the American Academy in Rome, Graves settled in New Jersey, joining the Princeton University faculty, where he would spend his entire teaching career, and opening his own practice.
Early on, Graves architecture reflected the influence of his time at Harvard. He was a member (with Richard Meier, Peter Eisenman, Charles Gwathmey and John Hejduk) of the so-called New York Five, a collection of young architects who produced abstract designs reminiscent of the French modernist Le Corbusier.
But the group was always a loose-knit one philosophically; they first came together almost by chance, having been invited by Museum of Modern Art curator Arthur Drexler to meet in 1969 to discuss their work and contemporary design. The 1972 book Five Architects nearly cemented their reputation as a coherent group.
But only nearly. And it was Graves who broke from the pack and proved how flexible its bonds had always been by beginning to look to history and ornament as sources of explicit inspiration. In fact an important early project, the 1972 Snyderman House in Fort Wayne, Ind., was completed the same year Five Architects was published, while undermining some of its modernist principles.
Continue reading here:
Michael Graves, pioneering figure in postmodern architecture, dies at 80
Category
Architects | Comments Off on Michael Graves, pioneering figure in postmodern architecture, dies at 80
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
NewsChannel 5 has obtained video of a Palm Tran bus that crashed in to a West Palm Beach house andcaused an estimated $100,000 damage
WPTV
Cleanup has begun at the West Palm Beach home which was damaged when a Palm Tran bus crashed into it Thursday evening. A restoration company estimated damage at between $80,000 and $100,000. West Palm Beach police say the driver hit a pole and slamme
WPTV
Cleanup has begun at the West Palm Beach home which was damaged when a Palm Tran bus crashed into it Thursday evening. A restoration company estimated damage at between $80,000 and $100,000. West Palm Beach police say the driver hit a pole and slamme
WPTV
Cleanup has begun at the West Palm Beach home which was damaged when a Palm Tran bus crashed into it Thursday evening. A restoration company estimated damage at between $80,000 and $100,000. West Palm Beach police say the driver hit a pole and slamme
WPTV
Cleanup has begun at the West Palm Beach home which was damaged when a Palm Tran bus crashed into it Thursday evening. A restoration company estimated damage at between $80,000 and $100,000. West Palm Beach police say the driver hit a pole and slamme
WPTV
See original here:
WATCH: Exclusive dashcam videos of Palm Tran bus
Category
Home Restoration | Comments Off on WATCH: Exclusive dashcam videos of Palm Tran bus
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Okinawa Defense Bureau resumed the boring survey Thursday morning, on the seabed off Henoko. The survey is necessary for the construction of the V-shaped runways for the replacement facility of MCAS Futenma.
The move drew immediate response from Okinawa Governor Takeshi Onaga who called the re-start of the survey utterly deplorable. Onaga was elected governor on a pledge to block the construction and prevent the transfer of MCAS Futenma to another location within the prefecture. I will use every possible means to realize my campaign pledge of not allowing the construction of the replacement facility in Henoko, Onaga told reporters in Tokyo.
However, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters at a separate press conference that the government would carry on with the survey without delay making sure that the environment is protected.
About 100 local protesters opposing the construction work held a sit-in rally in front of the gate of Camp Schwab criticizing the Defense Bureau for bulldozing the work plan through. The riot police that have been stationed at the gate cleared them off, but the chaotic situation continued. On the ocean, Japan Coast Guard rubber boats and protesters boats faced each other.
The boring work was started for the first time since last September when the work was suspended because of bad weather and in consideration of the November gubernatorial and December Lower House elections. This is also the first time the work has resumed since Takeshi Onaga administration took office. Governor Onaga has issued an order to Okinawa Defense Bureau to stop the construction work outside of the off limits area. However, the national government insists that they are not violating instructions from the prefectural government.
The Okinawa Defense Bureau was scheduled to complete the drilling survey before the end of March, but it seems impossible to finish in time, and is expected to take longer. However, Japans Defense Minister Gen Nakatani has said that the government wants to start the landfill in he summer as scheduled.
The Okinawa Defense Bureau is planning to conduct the boring survey at 12 points on land, shallow seabed and deep areas.
See the rest here:
Boring into Henoko seabed re-started on Thursday
Category
Cabinet Replacement | Comments Off on Boring into Henoko seabed re-started on Thursday
-
March 14, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Quarterback Jake Locker retired from the Tennessee Titans and the NFL on Tuesday.
Locker, the eighth pick of the 2011 NFL Draft, made $12.5 million and played in 30 games in his four seasons. Though he lost his starting job in 2014 and was a free agent, his retirement announcement caught some by surprise.
Locker, 26, said he had lost "the burning desire necessary to play the game for a living" in a statement announcing his retirement.
Bob Condotta of The Seattle Times found Scott Locker, Jake's father, and got an idea of what Jake planned to do in retirement.
Locker lives in Ferndale, Wash., which is 16 miles from the Canadian border. According to Condotta, Locker plans to remodel his house (which he bought from his grandparents in 2011), spend time with his family and spend time at Locker Room Fitness, a local gym he bought with Tampa Bay Buccaneers punter Michael Koenen in 2014.
While his house is being remodeled, Locker is living in his childhood home with his parents, according to Condotta.
Scott Locker also offered Condotta further explanation for his son's retirement.
"For most of us, it would be a thing where you would probably continue to go down the path he was on," Scott Locker said. "But that's the difference between Jake and most people. He's got a way about him that's different.
"There will be a lot of people that will not agree with the decision that he's made. But you're got to be pretty proud of a guy that can stand up and say he's not feeling it anymore and able to walk away from it. It would have been easier to just come back and sign on with a team and play rather than make the tough call to say, 'I'm going to walk away and find myself something that makes me happier than this is, right now, anyway.' "
Sending a message
Link:
Now ex-NFL QB tells dad prepare room
Category
Room Remodeling | Comments Off on Now ex-NFL QB tells dad prepare room
« old Postsnew Posts »