Submit Response » architecture http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog Tue, 10 May 2011 01:19:15 +0000 en-us hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.8.1 Today’s Links (23/11/08) http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/11/23/todays-links-231108/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/11/23/todays-links-231108/#comments Sun, 23 Nov 2008 08:00:49 +0000 http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/?p=1420 The link to the ‘BNP proximity search’ has been removed after a series of threatening emails. It may or may not be reinstated pending legal advice.

<— http://www.fishmech.net/bnp/ —>

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Today’s Links (02/10/08) http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/10/02/todays-links-021008/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/10/02/todays-links-021008/#comments Thu, 02 Oct 2008 14:12:25 +0000 http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/?p=1367
  • John Harris on council housing and the consequences of Right to Buy | Society | The Guardian
  • Get More Out of Google Analytics
  • Griffin Technology: AirCurve
    ‘AirCurve looks like a simple, elegantly minimal stand for your iPhone. But inside is a cleverly designed coiled waveguide that collects the sound from the built-in speaker of your iPhone, amplifies it, and projects it into the room.’
  • languagehat.com: WHAT.
  • Caravan - Your home folder on the go
    FTP client for iPhone. Shame it doesn't let you email files from the ‘Phone as well (my personal holy grail feature).
  • Pork barrel - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • The Hyperwords Company
    Interesting Firefox add-on that lets you highlight text on a web page and do stuff with it - search, translate, convert currency, &c.
  • Google - 2001
    "In honor of our 10th birthday, we've brought back our oldest available index. Take a look back at Google in January 2001." It's actually sort of spooky.
  • When Shipping Container Architecture Goes Bad…Apocalypse Bad
  • Sweetcron - The Automated Lifestream Blog Software
    Looks interesting, and keeps archives (unlike Action Streams for MT).
  • When Shipping Container Architecture Goes Bad…Apocalypse Bad
  • Sweetcron - The Automated Lifestream Blog Software
    Looks interesting, and keeps archives (unlike Action Streams for MT).
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    Today’s Links (12/05/08) http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/05/12/todays-links-120508/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/05/12/todays-links-120508/#comments Mon, 12 May 2008 12:38:45 +0000 http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/05/12/todays-links-120508/
  • Heresy Corner: Blasphemy: the last rites
    "Few people seem to have noticed, but the law of blasphemy was repealed yesterday…"
  • Jonathan Glancey on the influence 50s comicstrip Dan Dare has had on modern architecture
  • Instant Rimshot
  • "Mark As Unread" Doesn’t Work For Me Anymore | Ask Metafilter
    Email tips.
  • Life Without Buildings: Art From Disaster: an architecture blog
    "…New Orleans homes still bear the spray-paint markings used by rescue workers… some residents have installed a metal sculpture permanently memorializing these new urban hieroglyphics."
  • tms [fernLightning]
    "Allows basic cvs style operations on Time Machine volumes." Great for quickly checking what Time Machine has been up to.
  • Goodreads | get book recommendations from people you know
    I just signed up to this very pretty and slick site to keep track of what I’m reading/want to read. Not sure I’ll use the social aspects, but if anyone’s already using it, let me know.
  • MovableType.org - Home for the MT Community
    I’m well impressed with the current version of Moveable Type. (I used it for many years before switching to WordPress, and it used to be a total nightmare.)
  • Nisus Thesaurus
    I’m just hoping this app will give me another word for show/exhibition/exhibit/installation.
  • Creating an image in our likeness - The Herald
    My review of the Elipssis show at DCA.
  • The World of Fashion: Pixel Perfect: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker
    Fascinating profile of Pascal Dangin, who retouches photos for advertising and fashion editorial.
  • One week of the Guardian: Monday // Designing The News
    "…a series that takes the news from one week of the Guardian newspaper, and visually represents it as a series of static visualisations."
  • Information Architects » Blog Archive » Web Design is 95% Typography
  • John Resig - Processing.js
    Wowsers.
  • PowerBook Guy
    Ooh, you can get a lovely old Powerbook for about £150.
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    Today’s Links (05/03/08) http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/03/05/todays-links-050308/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/03/05/todays-links-050308/#comments Wed, 05 Mar 2008 12:30:56 +0000 http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/03/05/todays-links-050308/
  • The libTorrent and rTorrent Project - Trac
    There are some nice web UIs for rTorrent.
  • Photonic: A Flickr desktop client for Mac OS X
    Very nice. Defo worth the tenner if you use Flickr a lot.
  • Robin Hood Gardens is not the same as a digital model of Robin Hood Gardens
    Indeed not. Good thorough post on the RHG campaign.
  • Uncle Dirty
    Amazing photo-essay about an elderly, very eccentric bodybuilder. (NSFW)
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    Flatpack Housing For Drumchapel http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2005/09/11/flatpack-housing-for-drumchapel/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2005/09/11/flatpack-housing-for-drumchapel/#comments Sun, 11 Sep 2005 02:38:15 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=977 From the Herald:

    YOU have built flatpack furniture – now you can live in a flatpack house. Ikea, the Swedish furniture giant, is to create a series of prefabricated homes, for sale or rent, in Glasgow.

    The company will build up to 100 easy-to-assemble homes in Drumchapel as part of the area’s £100m renaissance.

    The prefab BoKlok homes, which roughly translated means smart living, are hugely successful in Scandinavia and are lauded for their flexible open-plan layout, high ceilings and large windows.

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    Carbuncle Awards http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2005/09/02/carbuncle-awards/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2005/09/02/carbuncle-awards/#comments Fri, 02 Sep 2005 12:15:04 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=967 Prospect magazine are after nominations for the Carbuncle Awards 2005, which celebrate or, rather, condemn, the worst in Scottish town planning and architecture.

    Here’s a little snippet from the email Tim, who works at Prospect, just sent me:

    So please cast your mind back over the last three years to that moment when you drew up in a strange town, got out of the car and then… got straight back in again. Then put your foot to the floor, taking the speed bumps laid out on the otherwise empty high street at full pelt. Or that time when you stopped dead in your tracks by the sheer goddawfulness of some new building or housing estate.

    Early contenders for the Plook on the Plinth include Kilwinning and Ardrossan. But who do you think should win? Have you been to Nitshill, Boghall or Harthill? Do you know anywhere worse? Which town has left you shuddering at the sight of grey estates stretching out into the distance? Which town’s windswept car parks have left you breathless? Have you seen the new SMG building in Glasgow? Seen anywhere worse?

    The thing is, when faced by the sort of place nominated for awards like this my reaction isn’t to flee, it is to wander around taking photographs, enjoying all the concrete, litter and vandalised signage. Which is probably an even worse reaction than setting up an award to rub salt in the wounds of folk who find themselves living in failing small towns (which is what this feels like to me, however much Prospect spin it as a positive call for better built environments). So, I think my vote will go to that slutty piece of eye-candy on the other coast, Edinburgh. It’s so needy, that place, like a not-quite-pretty-enough bridesmaid in too much make-up, dancing on her own at the wedding of History and Beauty, desperate to bag that rich American uncle holding court at the bar. Or something.

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    Architecture Week http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2005/06/15/architecture-week/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2005/06/15/architecture-week/#comments Wed, 15 Jun 2005 17:23:53 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=918 Spooky - I was just in the middle of gathering together a post on Architecture Week 2005, which begins this Friday, when I noticed that Rob has already done a Brum round-up, and Dan Hill has picked his highlights in Manchester and London.

    Anyway, here’s the good stuff in Glasgow, in no particular order:

    • Cinema City: During Hollywood’s golden era , Glasgow was home to over 130 cinemas- more than any other city outside America. This exhibition celebrates Glasgow’s historic reputation as Cinema City and explores the internal and external architecture of its city centre ‘Picture Palaces’ from yesteryear and today.
    • Strathbungo Architectural Walk: An architectural walk around the Strathbungo conservation area, former home of Alexander Greek Thomson and Charles Rennie Mackintosh, as part of the Strathbungo Society’s annual Bungo In The Back Lanes midsummer event. The walk looks at the origins, growth and architectural features of Strathbungo.
    • Tales Between Two Cities - A Cummuting Exhibition: Tales between two Cities draws attention to the built environment of the “in between” of Scotland’s two major cities and will provide information on origins or purposes of buildings and artefacts, their architectural or engineering merits, their socio-economic histories or environmental impacts. The exhibition takes place in the Glasgow-Edinburgh commuter train.
    • Performance and the built environment: Minty Donald works site - specifically, using projected imagery and sound to explore our relationships with the built environment. She will be discussing the work she made during her Creative Lab residency at CCA, and her plans for its development in a three year research programme.

    I was hoping there’d be a talk on or guided walk around St. Peter’s Seminary at Cardross, but no such luck. (There are, however, tours of both the CCA and the Lighthouse, the two most profoundly depressing buildings/conversions in Glasgow’s recent history.)

    Finally, since it sounds like one of the best Architecture Week events in Scotland, here’s one for the Dundonians:

    • The Public Realm Of The Senses: A series of talks initiated by artist Apolonija Sustersic that looks at the various factors shaping Our Surroundings. With the aim of looking across the disciplines of art/architecture/planning/landscape and the use of the public realm in the context of current developments in Dundee.
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    Architectural Eavesdropping http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/04/28/architectural-eavesdropping/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/04/28/architectural-eavesdropping/#comments Wed, 28 Apr 2004 14:21:22 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=603 A criticism often levelled at weblogs is that they tend toward the circle jerk (or echo chamber, if you’re feeling scientific; orouboros, if you’re feeling pretentious). This is often horribly true, but the same characteristics of weblogging that promote useless iteration and reiteration more often enable wonderful little flurries of thoughtful, fascinating activity. So far, so meme-spready, but here’s an example of a particularly pleasing run of posts I’ve followed in the last few days:

    First, Things:

    The plan form of the NatWest building famously reproduces the bank’s interlocking logo, but are there other buildings designed with such graphic simplicification in mind, so they can be easily distilled into a logotype? The Gherkin lends itself well to this approach, but there must be many more.

    This spurred a question at Rodcorp:

    “How simply (or in how few lines) and recognisably can we draw buildings?”. The question tends to privilege strong silhouettes and bridges, but so be it. Here’s a list… and some drawings from unreliable memory.

    Next, Dan Hill shares his rather beautiful sketches of the Guggenheim in Bilbao at City Of Sound:

    I’m not going to apologise for the hasty, impressionistic style of the sketches. Having tried and failed to draw the thing vaguely accurately, I decided the only possible response was to let go.

    Dan’s post was in part following the discussion on buildings as logotypes, and the drawing of them, but also responds to Peter Lindberg’s thoughts on the contextual nature, or otherwise, of the Guggenheim at Tesugen:

    Salingaros has claimed that Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim Bilbao completely ignores context, and yet Gehry himself calls it very contextual. And my impression… is that this building has meant a lot for the city of Bilbao, and that people living in Bilbao feels it has given the city a boost in self-confidence. But Salingaros says it’s nothing more than a tourist attraction.

    Seeing loose discussions like this unfold (and fold back on themselves - Peter’s post is in response to an earlier post of Dan’s about Peter’s writing) more than make up for having to scroll infuriated past a hundred ‘Me too!’ entries in my aggregator.

    Of course, this post is itself a little echo slapping off the back wall of the webloggers’ cave. Sorry about that, but I know sod all about architecture and can’t draw for toffee.

    Update: Peter just dropped me a line to point to another response, this time from Deconstructor, bringing talk of shared conceptual images of common shapes to the table, and much else besides. (And to gently chide me for my misspelling, now corrected, of his weblog’s title. There’s something about the word Tesugen that demands an extra ‘n’ before the ‘g.’ That’s my excuse, anyway.)

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    ARTitecture http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/02/18/artitecture/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/02/18/artitecture/#comments Wed, 18 Feb 2004 16:15:00 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=574 ARTitecture 2004 looks good.

    The aim of ARTitecture is to encourage a broader public awareness and appreciation of architecture through the work of fifteen artists who explore and interpret aspects of both individual buildings and our urban environment, through various media.

    The dynamic and often challenging artwork is intended to introduce visitors to the aesthetic value of architecture while creating for architects, both new and established, a renewed focus on the many sensual experiences which the built environment can, and should, offer.

    As well as a group show at the Collins Gallery, Glasgow, there’s a one-day conference on the relationship between art and architecture, film screenings and lectures. And workshops too, the best of which looks to be The Sound Of Architecture, led by Thomas Witzmann.

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