Hyundai Turns Mongolian Desert into Grassland Through Green Zone Project Hyundai Sand Dunes affected by global warming As we know with Global warming the ice caps are melting faster, our sea levels are rising, and weather patterns are changing. We are experiencing more water shortages and we will see hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones increasing in ferocity and frequency causing horrible natural disasters. The deserts will expand and the world will ultimately have difficulty growing enough food to sustain our society. Without doubt, we have to change the way we live. Hyudai Moto Co. has teamed up with ECOPEACE ASIA to transform an infertile desert in Mongolia into grassland to prevent seasonal dust storms causing health problems and disruptions to Korea and Northern China. and hopefully generate a sustainable economy selling
Thats where Hyundai Green Zone project joined to cultivated "Suaeda grass" and harvested the local plant, which can prevent dust storms, but can be harvested for medicinal use.
Thursday 3 November 2011
2011-2012 Design Ideas for platform10
With Plat form based as eco designs. I wanted scrap the whole "organic" biomimicry only designs. It would be interesting to design a "FAKE" apocalypse scenario to base my designs. As discussed with tutor as a architecture after the Armageddon . To create a "Green Panic"
Interesting link from design boom. Natural Architecture
My next inspiration point. Using molding, repetition etc techniques to for design. Looking at what nature can provide and left overs of the existing abandoned city.
Interesting link from design boom. Natural Architecture
My next inspiration point. Using molding, repetition etc techniques to for design. Looking at what nature can provide and left overs of the existing abandoned city.
Monday 31 October 2011
Quotes and findings from t?f - the why factory - Green Dream. How future cities can outsmart nature.
Green Dream: How Future Cities Can Outsmart Nature
Winy Maas (Editor), Ulf Hackauf (Editor), Pirjo Haikola (Editor)The following work represents my personal ideas and findings on the issues discussed within the book.
There are certain quotes selected from the book.
This article is for generating and collecting research for an interior spatial design Course work. Hope it would also be a source of ideas for other.
The book presents first that Green is good. but Green is abused.
Green is also about calculating whether one design or material is worth the foot prints.
Issues on waste management, energy supply and transportation. Green is about to look at the whole package and wider perspectives.
"It is not only about energy but also about materials, biodiversity and land use. It is evolutionary; it is visual; it is accessible. And it takes different, even contradictory opinions into account."
LEED (Leaderhip in Energy and Environmental Design)
BREEAM ( BRE Environmental Assesment Method)
In chapter 2, Ulf Hackauf, pirjo Haikola, Winy Maas, Annaik Deceunicnk, Ryan Forster and Gonzalo Rivas explores on 22 Green bu ildings in present. Analyzing the failings , the contradictions and mised opportunities of these designs. Hopefully offering new improved ideas for future projects.
The first failings of the green design was, they are UGLY.
"What bugs me most about the fad for green architecture is the notion that virtue makes for better design. Ok, I suppose an ugly green building is better than an ugly non- green building - but it's still ugly"
Cathleen McGuigan, Newsweek, 6 September 2008
Norman Foster's : Hearst Tower in Manhattan"...much green architecture reflects a quality that Ford's Edsel Possessed: It looks like the futur e, but it doesn't look good.
Kriston Capp s, The American Proppect, 6 March 2009
Kriston Capp s, The American Proppect, 6 March 2009
Photo: © Neil
Cathlen McGuigan said in Newsweek: "the notion that virtue makes for better design."
Just because these designs are sustainable it doesn't mean that aesthetic is not an issue to consider. As humans are drawn to beauty, beautiful design lasts. As no matter how functional or sustainable the architecture is, if it lacks beauty it will more likely be unloved sooner.
Therefore it brings to the discussion about a stereotype "Green Aesthetic."
Green Aesthetic is basically the image we get from stereotypical green buildings. Exposed Bricks, Square, Small insulated windows and Colorful, and forceful addition parts of windmill, solar panels on the roof. It only seems the only green design that is easy on the eye are the green vegetation on the roofs of buildings.
" Green regulations come with restrictions. For energy efficiency, a building is better designed as a compact box than as an irregular shape. A facade ideally has about 35 percent of its window openings regularly distributed over the whole building to allow for maximum natural light while reducing heat loss."
The dutch governmental Institution "Agentschap NL' refers in its comments to the energy efficienct regulation 'EPN' (Engergie Prestatie Borm) to a standard reference office building that fullfills ithe regulations. http://senternovem.nl/epn.
"Utopias of abundance " & "Utopias of sufficiency"
Ebenzer Howards's Garden Cities:
Sir Ebenezer Howard (29 January 1850[1]– May 1, 1928[2]) is known for his publication Garden Cities of To-morrow (1898), the description of a utopian city in which people live harmoniously together with nature. The publication resulted in the founding of the garden city movement, that realized several Garden Cities in Great Britain at the beginning of the twentieth century. Billerica Garden Suburb,Inc.(1914), was the first housing in the United States on the Howard plan. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebenezer_Howard)
Ebenzer Howards proposed that all food sources should be close to the city, in order to avoid unnecessary long haul transportation of good.
People may say large cities create lots of pollution, although there is also another way of looking at Cities. They are compact, therefore it is easier for people to get around to their destination. Collective forms of Public Transports, carry large amounts of people at a single time. reducing private vehicles.
"Cities have to be seen as the potential solution, not the problem."
(further readings: Francis Bacon - New Atlantis. [now free on kindle for download.])
The idea and dreams of Utopias of sufficiency and abundance isn't the latest idea. In fact it has been dreamed of as long ago as 1516 expressed in Thomas Moore' s Utopia, on the best state of republic and on the new island of utopia. predecessors of all utopias.
"Green Hype"
According to the US Patent and Trademark office. "Green" was actually the single most trademarked term in 2007.
(Post temporary end at this chapter)
Sir Ebenezer Howard (29 January 1850[1]– May 1, 1928[2]) is known for his publication Garden Cities of To-morrow (1898), the description of a utopian city in which people live harmoniously together with nature. The publication resulted in the founding of the garden city movement, that realized several Garden Cities in Great Britain at the beginning of the twentieth century. Billerica Garden Suburb,Inc.(1914), was the first housing in the United States on the Howard plan. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebenezer_Howard)
Ebenzer Howards proposed that all food sources should be close to the city, in order to avoid unnecessary long haul transportation of good.
People may say large cities create lots of pollution, although there is also another way of looking at Cities. They are compact, therefore it is easier for people to get around to their destination. Collective forms of Public Transports, carry large amounts of people at a single time. reducing private vehicles.
"Cities have to be seen as the potential solution, not the problem."
(further readings: Francis Bacon - New Atlantis. [now free on kindle for download.])
The idea and dreams of Utopias of sufficiency and abundance isn't the latest idea. In fact it has been dreamed of as long ago as 1516 expressed in Thomas Moore' s Utopia, on the best state of republic and on the new island of utopia. predecessors of all utopias.
"Green Hype"
According to the US Patent and Trademark office. "Green" was actually the single most trademarked term in 2007.
(Post temporary end at this chapter)
Saturday 7 May 2011
Phillipe I Coffee Table From Casamania
Found this Casamania table design at homeedit.com
fantastic simplistic design.
Reminds of me of pocky snacks dipped in chocolate or milk.
Material: Lacqurered MDF coupled with the richness of walnut and limewood
Monday 21 March 2011
21 March. 3d Max Lesson
- Converting 3d objects to editable poly. this allows you to edit your shape.->(right click. convert to . converto editable poly.)
- selecting polygon . at the selection tool bar.---> allows you to select individual faces of the object.
- Material Editor.Blinn Basic Parameters . Blank box next to diffuse.
- After applying texture to object. you have to turn on 'show map in view port.'
- Ray trace. - Mirror texture. alter the reflect properties
- tool bar-Rendering. Environment and effects. to set environment of object.
- Importing background image to plot object.-->View. Viewport background. File. select file. enter
- browes premade material library. from mlt library in material/map browser.
Lighting
- Create- Light- Omni
3dvia - website with 3dmax samples.
Render scene. select file type as avi <--- large file. you can resize it with divx.
touch up in photoshop.
- add flare. for reflection.
pan camera.
Draw line. for the camera path. complete enclosed line. then create a target camera . select camera again . animation. constrants. path constrant.select path. press play.
compressing video.
DIVx.com-download software - and when exporting file. select divx as a way of compressing video.
Monday 14 March 2011
Permindar Kaur
What inspires me about Permindar Kaur's work is that in her work she alters every day objects in height or materials to alter/ magnify human feelings towards their surroundings. Also from using different locations the same object can displays different properties. For instance, the installation below shows vertically extended bunk beds in a white sterile warehouse gallery. The colourful Fabric on the mattress offers a something that says, soft hiding place. To observe people from above. There is only one way up . Being up on the top of the bunk bed almost feels like being in a child's imagination defending the castle against the monster from beneath the bed . Although if the same bunk bed was to be placed in a domestic bedroom. The whole image will change entire. The intimate, secure and illusion of security will change entirely. Into a trap, a claustrophobic space, a adventure turned sour into a nightmare.
(Above: My personal response to Permindar Kaur's Work. Manipulation in Photoshop.)
Conclusion: Altering an object's purpose and identity by altering shape, material & location.
If a Dining Table was to be padded with cushion and upholstered in fabric. Is it still a dining table?
If the mattress on a bed was to be replaced by a patch of chunk of grass and earth dug up from the back garden. It has the same properties, soft, comfortable to be on. Is it still considered a bed?
Comfort of little places(Above: My personal response to Permindar Kaur's Work. Manipulation in Photoshop.)
Conclusion: Altering an object's purpose and identity by altering shape, material & location.
If a Dining Table was to be padded with cushion and upholstered in fabric. Is it still a dining table?
If the mattress on a bed was to be replaced by a patch of chunk of grass and earth dug up from the back garden. It has the same properties, soft, comfortable to be on. Is it still considered a bed?
12th sept-18th oct, 1998
Permindar Kaur was born in 1965 in nottingham. She studied at Sheffield Polytechnic (BFA) and the Glasgow school of art (MFA). She lives and works in London.
Permindar Kaur: "I am interested in creating an environment which at first glance appears safe and yet is a distortion of that which is intimate and secure, an illusion of security."
Preface. cold comfort. Exhibition catalogue
Permindar Kaur removes the domestic and the familiar from their everyday surroundings and transforms them to produce disquieting results. The experience of her work can be unnerving, like visiting a deserted house or an abandoned institution. Feelings of containment and anxiety are explored through figures and objects, some of which are enticing in their sensual beauty while others produce feelings of entrapment.
She has always been particularly interested in relating her work to the site in which it is placed. Ikon Gallery, as part of its policy of giving artists opportunities to make new work, has therefore commissioned her to make a new installation for the gallery. The artist's response to the space reflects her continuing interest in the domestic environment. The tall bed structures, placed in the white walled gallery, subvert notions of privacy, intimacy and comfort. A thought- provoking twist is given to mundane domesticity.
The works on show at the Mead Gallery maintain a sense of subversion. They include work made in Spain last year as well as more recent work made on the artist's return to the UK.
Elizabeth A. Macgregor
Sarah Shalgosky
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About Loss but not childhood
Jose Lebrero Stals.
We should not be surprised therefore at her insistence on using her works to mark a place, to construct dwelling-places and to recreate spaces apparently intended for rest, but which nonetheless always seem disproportionately large or small.
Functionally deficient, symbolic of the domestic environment, these spaces fit ill with the canonic conventions of sculptures. The figures and objects, constructed by the artist, are deliberately crude, simple representations of human beings in whom personal identity is barely extant, Yet Kaur's subject is not childhood, rather she uses childish objects to invoke vulnerability. Innocence and ingenuousness expressed by an adult can also be read as gestures of rebellion.
What she deals with here is precisely the recreation of specific emotions, first manufacturing, then 'furnishing' these terrible, intimate, indistinct figures. For the view, the way in which this practice connects with their author's childhood experience is secondary; childhood is present here not as autobiographical jottings but as a repertory of rhetorical resources and an avenue of intellectual escape.
In her personal universe, the idea of 'home' is associated with (one's) own personal space' and related to (one's) 'own experience'. Home is security, but the manifest vulnerability in these works invites one to meditate on loss and deracination.
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