Thursday, 10 July 2014

Midtown STL Installations

After lunch in Midtown St. Louis yesterday, I ventured up Washington Street to check out a couple installations.

First, there's Lots, the site-specific installation developed by Freecell Architecture for PXSTL at 3713 and 3719 Washington Blvd (across the street from the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts), on display until October 5, 2014:

[All photographs by John Hill]



Second, there's Michael Jantzen's M-velope at Bruno David Gallery, right next door to Lots:

[Model view]

[Installation view]

[Installation view]

Tuesday, 8 July 2014

Building at Laumeier

On a visit yesterday to the great Laumeier Sculpture Park I noticed some construction adjacent to the old house where the museum shop is located:

[Photo by John Hill]

My first thought was, "Hooray! They're finally building the Aronson Fine Arts and Education Center designed by Brooks + Scarpa with Eskew+Dumez+Ripple":

[Rendering: Brooks + Scarpa]

But after parking the car I saw a billboard that showed a much different building:

[Rendering on billboard at Laumeier]

The project under construction goes by the similarly named Adam Aronson Fine Arts Center, but it is now designed by Trivers Associates, an architecture firm with offices in St. Louis and Granite City, Illinois. Although the building under construction doesn't look bad, per se, it's not as exciting – as "sculptural" – as the Brooks + Scarpa design. I don't know the story behind Laumeier's choice in architect and design, the scale of the project (cut in half) and its new design point to severe budget cuts. Whatever the case, it's great to see them building at Laumeier.

Monday, 7 July 2014

Viral Voices III: Globalization

Mark your calendars for the third Viral Voices panel discussion being held at the Center for Architecture at 6:30pm on Monday, July 14, one week from today. More information is below; if interested be sure to RSVP for the free event.


The AIANY Global Dialogues Committee has dedicated this year to “(dis)Covered Identities.” The theme aims to explore ways by which cultures, cities, and voices define or refine their identities through a global exchange of ideas and conversations covering multiple topics, perspectives and trends of our time. "Viral Voices" will specifically explore the impact of social media, technology, and device culture on our design process and the way we practice. How do we shape a global conversation?

Greg Lindsay, contributing writer for Fast Company and co-author of Aerotropolis with David Basulto and David Assael of ArchDaily will come together for a lecture discussing the relationships between social media and the profession. Following the lecture, Robyn Peterson from Mashable, Jaime Derringer from Design Milk, Diana Jou from the The Wall Street Journal, Rafi Segal from MIT Architecture / Architect/Blogger, Mark Collins from The Morpholio Project | The GSAPP CloudLab, and Kyle May from Clog will join the speakers for a panel discussion. Visit http://aianyglobaldialogues.blogspot.com/ for further information.

Moderator:
Sammy Medina
, Metropolis magazine
Speakers:
Greg Lindsay, Fast Company - NYC
David Basulto and David Assael
, ArchDaily - Chile
"Viral Voices" Panelists:
Robyn Peterson, Mashable - NYC
Jaime Derringer, Design Milk - San Diego via Skype
Diana Jou, Wall Street Journal - Hong Kong via Skype
Rafi Segal, MIT Architecture / Architect/Blogger - NYC and Tel-Aviv
Mark Collins, Cloud Lab | Morpholio Project - NYC
Kyle May, Clog - NYC

Sunday, 6 July 2014

Heron Pond Viewing Blind

Earlier today I ventured up to the Riverlands Migratory Bird Sanctuary to check out the Heron Pond Viewing Blind designed and built by students from the Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts at Washington University for the Audubon Society and US Army Corps of Engineers. The spring 2013 digital fabrication project was led by Andrew Colopy and Robert Booth of Cobalt Office.

Heron Pond Viewing Blind

The building sits at the south end of Heron Pond, and it is approached via a gravel road that snakes through some farmland. From a distance it looks like a pine cone or some other sort of "natural" object sitting on the ground, but each step closer reveals the materiality of the construction.
Heron Pond Viewing Blind
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

What looks to be a fairly solid object is discovered to be made from thin sheets in brown, gray, blue and red that layer over each other like feathers on a bird. This is an appropriate technique for camouflaging the building into its context, "tricking" birds into not seeing the structure and therefore allowing people inside to watch the birds without fear of scaring them off.
Heron Pond Viewing Blind
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

The side of the building on the approach from the small parking lot is primarily closed (views above and interior view below), with small cuts allowing natural light and ventilation.
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

When entering the bird blind from the side, the interior opens up to the pond on the other side (left) through larger, diamond-shaped openings:
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

The below view is looking the opposite direction from the photo above, seen from the platform at top. The bench allows bird watchers to sit down and look out the windows to see the birds over the pond, though the diamond shape allows for standing and even for children to look through the openings:
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

Here is the view when looking through the opening as in the above photo:
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

Here is the triangular flooring on the raised platform:
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

The view through the opening at the top of the raised platform:
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

That same opening from outside showing the perforated ceiling inside:
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

And that same opening (on the far right) from farther away:
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

Up close the bird blind looks somewhat alien, but from a distance it nestles itself into its pond context:
Heron Pond Viewing Blind

More on the project's design and construction from Washington University:

Saturday, 5 July 2014

Book Review: [storefront]

[storefront] Olson Kundig Architects 2011-2013 by Olson Kundig Architects
2014, Paperback, 104 pages



By the time I heard of Olson Kundig Architects' [storefront], what the Seattle architecture firm describes as "an experimental workspace focusing on the firm’s collaborations, research, community projects, prototypes, exhibits, and installations," it was already too late. When I met OKA principal Alan Maskin (who co-directed [storefront] with fellow OKA principal Kirsten R. Murray) in October 2013 and he told me about it, [storefront] had already been closed for a few months. It ran from June 2011 to June 2013 in a storefront at 406 Occidental Avenue, in Seattle's historic Pioneer Square.

[storefront]'s two-year run started with artist Mary Ann Peters using the space as a studio to create a custom mural for an exhibit on OKA principal Jim Olson at the Museum of Art at Washington State University, and it ended with DabbleLab, a tent-like installation in the storefront where workshops on urban farming, bike safety, and even fly fishing took place. In these two projects there is an evident shift from OKA-centric to community-centric, from being closed off (if visible) to welcoming the public inside the space (and only working if people come in at all, really). In the 17 other pieces occupying [storefront] for typically one to two months at a time, there is a mix of these two extremes, but for the most part the bulk falls into the community-centric side.


[Record Store. Photo: Benjamin Benschneider, courtesy of OKA]

This diverse mix of projects is a little surprising, given that most architects occupying storefronts use the once-retail spaces for offices (OKA's office is on the sixth floor of the same building). Yet in a survey I compiled for World-Architects in 2012 of architecture firms occupying storefront spaces, there were some noticeable if small efforts to use the sidewalk exposure for more than inexpensive office space or highly visible publicity for the firm. Architects share storefronts with artists or they set aside part of the space as a gallery (rotating their work and other architects/artists). Yet setting aside a storefront space explicitly for interacting with the public through various experimental programs is a pretty novel idea, and one that justifies this self-published book documenting the 19 projects that occupied the space over 24 months.


[Mushroom Farm. Photo: Alan Maskin, courtesy of OKA]

Some of the projects I would have loved to have visited include: Record Store (December 2011), which functioned as a "cultural commons" with listening parties inspired by "Theaster Gates: The Listening Room"; Mushroom Farm (February 2012), a, well, mushroom farm that gave OKA the chance to explore BIM and CNC technology, and that incorporated a table for community meetings; Hardware Store (May - June 2012), which looked at old hardware and new designs by OKA principal Tom Kundig; Skid Road (August 2012), which looked frankly at the homelessness and lack of employment that has long existed in Pioneer Square; Table Talk (November 2012), which tackled difficult topics (death, in particular) through dinner conversations on an OKA-designed table, broadcasting the conversations on the Internet and to passersby; and The Free Book Incident (January - February 2013), which looked at the sharing of ideas when books were de-commodified.


[The Free Book Incident. Photo: Joe Iano, courtesy of OKA]

The publication naturally comes after the completion of [storefront]'s two-year run, but it also comes when many architects are stoked to do something beyond just designing private commissions or spinning their wheels on competitions. Socially engaged architecture is hardly a fad or a means of gaining commissions by "looking good"; it is a way of interacting with more people more directly and of exploring how to make a difference through more than form-making (it is also cheaper and quicker than traditional architecture). [storefront] is but one way of doing it, something that arose from the particular circumstances and context of OKA. It is not a formula to be replicated, but nevertheless the book offers lessons (partnering with community group and sponsors, for example) for those interested in similar endeavors. Personally I'd love to see more architects using storefronts or other public/semi-public spaces to engage the broader public in numerous ways. Hopefully then [storefront], through this book, is hopefully just the start of more experimentation to come.

Thursday, 3 July 2014

Tuesday, 1 July 2014

Today's archidose #762

Here are some of my photos of the Architecure to Scale: Stanley Tigerman and Andrew Zago exhibition now at the Art Institute of Chicago.

See what I wrote about the exhibition (and Chicagoisms, also on display) in the World-Architects Daily News.

Andrew Zago:
Architecture to Scale

Architecture to Scale

Architecture to Scale

Architecture to Scale

Architecture to Scale

Stanley Tigerman:
Architecture to Scale

Architecture to Scale

Architecture to Scale

Architecture to Scale

Architecture to Scale

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose