Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Judgement day

Judgement day.

Judgement is another aspect of life that i discovered. A simple person might not be as simple as he or she look like. It back to the simple rule that everyone
did have their mask. Mask to reveal the true side of them. These mask are terrible weapon as we cannot judge how the true and false side
of a reality. It get pretty scary at times. Not pretty but really scary. And it felt horrible when you thought you understand someone but actually, you didnt.
Not at all. Things doesnt turn on the way it supposed.

Upset to the most. Back to the basics rule. You may be high at the wheel and down at the next minutes. You might hate someone for today, forget them tomorrow. And hate them
again the next day. But when it come to someone with faces, it became hard. You will never know when the face is true and when is false, and you
just get mad for not able to judge that. You angry with yourself because of poor judgement.

Guess finally i understand why it is easier to get along with people of same key. Good people stay in group and bad people in their group.
Bad people like me is worth to be hate anyway. It is punishment after all. Honest and simple people often mistaken for their faces. And i
terrible did mistakes with my naked eyes. Sorry for being so. Sad for being blind all the time.

People have right to be what they suppose to be. Everyone did. But at certain limits, they should be true to themselves at least. Nothing should be
a reason to the deed behind everything. Well, maybe there is some reason. Affection is not a least item. Who will said no to love? Bear in mind even you want to
appear the best in front of someone you like, be yourself. Do not change yourself for that someone. After all, poor judgement lead to many misunderstanding and regret that you cannot retrieve at the
end of the day. To call off the day, be true to yourself, my friends.



Signing off
Under the cloud.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

SECOND REVIEW





























































UN studio project just caught my eyes. Browsing through the web and discover some design. It is not extreme yet it stands for its purpose in a striking way. From buildings to chairs just like the Barcelona chair by Mies Van Der Rohe. The different is the chair design and name. MYchair does has it purpose as a seat just like Barcelona. The fact is when you are an architect, you never run away from designing anything useful in daily life. Anything not only buildings.

MOMEMA in Dubai by UN studio is a more tender idea compared to Frank Gehrys. The exploration of space is a great. Its interior somehow is not that expressive as the exterior. It tends to adapt another style. A style more to Daniel Libeskind. Yet to said, the MOMEMA does stand great in Dubai along with other vertical growing buildings.

UN studio also has the Star facade in Taiwan - Technically acting as a sunscreen and weather barrier the curved facade is fully glazed and combines the curtain wall glazing with horizontal lamellas and vertical glass fins. The position and size of each of the façade elements are derived from a twisted frame system, which is related to the interior organisation of the building. The concave front of the building displays different fluent forms when seen from varying distances and directs the visual field of the customers traveling on the spiraling escalators. Edge-lighting for the vertical glass fins spreads soft colours onto the façade by night. The lighting intensity and colour effects are digitally controlled and choreographed adding another layer of fluidity to the building’s skin.
That was the review of the facade of the building. The building depends on the exterior to make it tally with other buildings. It still represents Taiwan in a new way. The idea is there.

UN studio make its debut in the labratory. Science is no longer the same with this building. Some of Zaha Hadid first impression as in the Montepelliar building. It looks familiar to one of the building in final project either.
The research labroratory - The facade is constructed from flat, vertical aluminum slats, which, in places, are twisted outwards in bowed forms. Tall, vertical undulations are generated, which present an open or a closed aspect depending on the angle under which they are viewed. On the lower level the colour yellow is used, which gradually changes to green towards the top of the building. In the interior, two internal vertical voids allow daylight to enter the interior functioning as a form of internal facade. The two voids have the geometry of asymmetrical truncated cones which mirror each other vertically. Shared walkways surround these internal voids, creating a clear organisation whereby dark corridor systems can be avoided. On the ground floor, where daylight is at its lowest, yellow is used. Per floor this colour then deepens through to orange and finally to red on the uppermost level.

The next project : The design for the Theatre Spijkenisse focuses on the placement and orientation of the building in the urban location, whilst simultaneously providing architectural solutions for programming needs and public access. The placing of the programmes within the building aims for efficient routing through the theatre, coupled with a logical relationship to the surroundings, whilst the design and placement of the various volumes make use of the natural variations in the levels of the site. The two main theatre spaces are positioned to receive the visitor flow directly from the foyer and the public square. From the foyer, a sculptural stairway forms the binding element towards the entrances to the theatre rooms. The theatre cafe is located adjacent to the nearby water and is designed as a third theatre, in the form of an amphitheatre.

The building is structured to combine a unit-based volume (the black box of the theatre) and a series of movement-based volumes (foyer and public circulation). Because this organising principle is made constructive, a fluent internal spatial arrangement is actualised, efficiently connecting spaces to each other. The multipurpose auditorium can seat up to 450, and that is adaptable to a great variety of performances. The free-flowing space of the foyer is made possible by a spiraling constructive element that connects the entrance to the auditorium and to the music rooms above, thus welding together ‘with a twist’ the three levels of this side of the building. This twist forms a 3D interpretation of the repetitive pattern, executed in the muted tones of stage make-up, which is applied to the facades and then enveloped by a glittering mesh.

Colourful just like a building in Kuching by DNA. The Boulevard shopping centres that look simple during the day and lighting make it alive at the night. Brilliant idea for sharp effect and minimalism cost. Credit to Mr. William. Haha.

Rhino facade strip from UN studio is not a bad idea after all. The moving lines do potray every single space well. As it is unique that a megayacht shipyard allows publicity regarding their design and manufacturing process.

The Burnham Pavilion in Chicago is not a bad term either. The shape is smooth and it just looks nice from the picture itself.

Out There: Architecture beyond Building
There is a distinct dystopian thread running through Out There: Architecture Beyond Building that leaves you more concerned about the mental health of the exhibitors than the world they attempt to critique.
Its curator and director of the Architecture Biennale Aaron Betsky tasked around two dozen international architects to produce a piece — not of architecture, but about architecture — to explore how the profession can domesticate technological systems to make people feel “more at home in the modern world”.

The majority of the exhibitors are showing in the Arsenale, a 300m-long, 10m-high linear procession of large rooms in what was the city’s old rope works. The scale and character of the installations they have produced suit this windowless space well, but those expecting the shock of the new may be disappointed. Many of the pieces, knowingly or otherwise, have a space-age rhetoric that has become instantly recognisable.

Moving through the first space, David Rockwell’s and Jones/Kroloff’s Hall of Fragments, is a bit like going through a kaleidoscopic egg timer. Projected onto two large screens that in plan curve towards each other are fractured images from a hundred classic films, from Hitchcock’s North by North-West to Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. These filmic fragments follow your progress as dynamic shards, even coalesce around you if you pause for a moment, but melt into nothing once you leave your seat.

Other architects explored interactivity such as Barkow Leibinger’s Nomadic Garden, where laser-cut tubular steel pieces of various heights can be reconfigured by visitors throughout the duration of the biennale. Its description as an “ephemeral version of poché” chimes with other gaming metaphors in the show such as the computer game that models interactive planning processes by MVRDV, and the installation organised on a giant chessboard by Penezic & Regina. Here, the rigid logic of a game, with its necessary abstractions and clear-cut rules, hints at the dehumanising approach to architecture that is one of the show’s major themes.


One of the high points is Nigel Coates’ Hypnerotosphere which, taking the obverse approach, puts human experience at its centre.
A suspended screen creates a circular enclosure, inside which are fleshy pieces of furniture, loosely suggestive of a domestic interior. Projected onto the screen are two interacting male dancers interspersed with images of the Corviale, the doomed mile-long housing block on the outskirts of Rome. The suggestion is that architecture should amplify, not disrupt, such lines of human desire.

But elsewhere, images of domesticity have a darker agenda. UN Studio’s installation of three interconnected white chambers, for example, aims to evoke feelings of emptiness and alienation, The pessimist undertow really reaches full strength with Matthew Ritchie’s and Arand/Lasch’s “anti-pavilion” which “inverts the obsolete technocratic optimism usually associated with pavilions.” Its creators suggest that the truncated polyhedral shapes, which can be scaled up and down and attached together in limitless different ways, could be multiplied across the universe.

This notion of infinity is extended by Patrik Schumacher, who wants us to imagine an urbanism where “there are no more landmarks to hold onto, no axis to follow and no more boundaries to cross.” Both these practitioners, with their emphasis on multiple centres, reveal their profound interest in the network society. And yet these endless, amorphous propositions seem far too literally inferred from the immense scale of emerging global communication systems.

Betsky’s view, that we are controlled by technology and imprisoned by architecture, is certainly popular within a certain wing of the architectural intelligentsia, but is it true?

Technology will increasingly marginalise architecture as the means to connect people in the 21st century, and it would have been great to see a show that explored more convincingly how the profession can help shape the merging of virtual and real worlds in a positive way. But in deliberately ducking the thorny question of building, the show fails to place architecture firmly, materially, and imperatively on this territory. The ideas are too frequently so tentative, so ungrounded in reality, as to offer little insight.

At the end of the main Arsenale exhibition hall, out to the left, are a handful of pavilions for nations too new or too small to yet have a place in the Giardini. One of these, the Croatian Pavilion, has as its motto: “We are positive we can destroy our world, yet we do not easily give up the idea that we can improve it. Into the sea of possibilities we jump and swim.” You can’t help wishing that more of the exhibitors had grabbed their trunks and dived in too.



Thursday, June 11, 2009

Fresbies

DNA, made up of juicy vegetable and fruit that everyone will want to dress their salad up. Under one roof, the open concept office is well portrayed. You sit in the corner and your working area is just in front of the boss. Doors are not welcomed in DNA. It restricted the flow of people or to be known as roadblock. DNA never stand for the deoxyribonucleic acid or the ribonucleic acid. It stand for the bunch of architects that will never called themselves nerd or the other way. Well, or course, the bosses are not nerdy at all.

DNA by the four main tress partner was establishes in 2000. The most happygolucky is Wong Kiong. His word can be heard from one end to another. He doesn’t look like someone who can judge but his voice is. From the senior, Wong Kiong expected a lot from trainees too. It might turn out to be a nightmare of long working hours to people who work under him.

The humorous, the cute boss. He can joke well when he know you are joker like him. Haha. This man is not simple at all. Although he might look simple at times, but when come to work. He can be the controller. He knows how to bring a scene to alive with his free hand sketches. Amazing. And of course, he looks like a dad to us over the time. The poor kids from west Malaysia tend to get his attention and to certain, it is a bit unfair to the rest. But we did enjoyed.

The next is the enthusiasm and cool boss known as William. Cool when you find out that he can talk about movie with you all the time. Even the alien vs monster of his version to the terminator nor startrek. Music is a must to him. You will notice the boss did the youtubing during work. Only for the sound. His drawing is another thumb up. You will be stunned to be standing in front of him looking every single line he drawn. A prince charming for some. Quoted.

And the lastly, the legend How. Legend as we rarely in contact with him. But we do hear stories about him. Someone that look quiet but indeed was told social able. He likes to go for movie. If anyone interested in movie, tag him along. And his birthday is on May. There the legend goes.

Under the trees, bunch of fruits are blooming.

To be continued.

Review 1

A life without motive is senseless. Images flowed from one side to another. The world will evolve even without any of us. This is the sense of reality. To live in an invisible world was not a matter of desire but the belief. Survive and well adapted to the surrounding.

Just like buildings. Buildings come in many shape and form that make their identity. Thanks to the architects and partners. A sustainable building is not all about the love at first sight. It takes time to get on to know a building well. Just like how you get to know your friends.

But there is a fact that, when you are famous, everyone will look high upon you. Talk about Norman Foster, Kengo Kuma, Daniel Libeskind , Tadao Andao or our own lady, Zaha Hadid. They sort of becoming brand nowadays. Brand that everyone go onto like NIKE, ADIDAS, PUMA or REEBOK and etc. As a Adidas lover, the Japanese architect became my favour. Simple and elegant without fuss.

Grab a book on Kengo Kuma today. His design well, there is a scheme at least. He prefers to indulge all bamboo and natural things in his building. Well, it turned to be aesthetic but the book don’t only show the picture but the story. It tells about how hard the bamboo are cultivated, preserved, and maintained. If the bamboo was such a hard case, why choose it at first hand? This is a lesson learnt from the book and the architect. We should not choose a simple or easy way from the beginning. When everyone thinks it is impossible, then it is a sign to possible. This lives our life to the fullest.

Read my sister tiny little blog today. She has grown up a lot. Not the little girl i used to cheated on. Definitely different. Of course, felt ages flow like running tap water.

Signing off.

Relief.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Ignorance

Define selfish.

I really wanted to know it so well.
It is an act that ignoring others as long as the mission accomplished.
And the result is : The selfish one is happy without guilt.

The one being left out have another different experiences and perception toward the selfish one.
It became a lesson to judge people. Just an act and you know your friends around. Through it is hurt at that moment but it just teach you to see people differently. Thanks for teaching me that.
i dont learn from trance but you guys. Grateful perhaps.

review of someone

The architecture never end there as easy as what expected.

Talking about architecture that became part and parcel. It actually change my whole lifestyle. weekend no longer the same when you were an architect. Talking and topic of conversation is no longer the same. The way one try to capture the moment in life is different. Taking photos became a hard task. You only want to capture something worth the news. You see things differently. You interpret things more different than anyone else.

Boss Wee showed us the picture he took during the trip to China. It is all about buildings. Human just became the scale of the picture. And architect enjoyed seeing those picture. A normal person might get bored over all the pictures of building. Of course, i am still thrilled to listen to
that as the curiosity to know the building that an architect would bring back for us. There is whole lot of pictures. The iconic bird nest, water cube, CCTV that look like dragon peeking in between building and the national theatre. The concept of the whole museum is like a diving process. You enter and walk under the water and reach a cave, breath and there is the void of spaces. What a building.


Kengo Kuma style is what impressed the boss that always have the Bali style. The hotel that look simple managed to get attention. Any idea of interpretion played well when it come to architecture. The architecture language. And they managed to find the old style of kengo kuma which they describe it as the poor detailing. There were also places in China that showed the modern part. Typical apartment and shopping centre show the different part of China.


It wasnt normal for me to talk about architecture as it is simply another language.