The Woolworth Building

Officially opening April 24th, 1913 (108yrs ago, today), this is an early American skyscraper designed by architect Cass Gilbert and located in lower Manhattan, New York. Amazingly, it was the tallest building in the world from 1913 to 1930, with a height of 792 feet (241 m) and still remains one of the 100 tallest buildings in the US.

Bonus points go to the one that can name (in comments below) which famous skyscraper stripped the Woolworth Bldg of title in 1930…no cheating.

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Carpenter Center for Visual Arts (Cambridge, MA)

Completed in 1963, Corbusier’s only US project. He would never visit this project due to ailing health and would die in 1965 at 77. I can only imagine he had his most trusted people overseeing its execution, as It is beautifully three dimensional and complex and holds up to the test of time.

Also, worth checking out are Transparent Drawings by Kurt Ofer - a way of thinking about drawing/painting that embraces space.

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Filmmakers Miranda July and Mike Mills

Known for their very different styles, this couple can each make a thought provoking film.

July: Kajillionaire, The Future, You and Me and Everyone We Know

Mills: Thumbsucker, Beginners, 20th Century Women (one of my favorites)

Side note: Greta (16) got her 2nd Pfizer shot today.

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Salk Institute - Louis Kahn (La Jolla, CA) 1960

This is one of those places that is bigger conceptually than I had ever imagined (having only looked at photos and having read about it for years). First of all, it’s important to note that Jonas Salk is the person that developed the vaccine for polio in 1954. It’s believed Polio had killed over 500,000+ people worldwide (over a 50 year period) and left tens of millions with debilitating paralysis or physical deformities.

The institute is situated on the edge of the Pacific Ocean and in a grand gesture both frames the wide optimistic sky above and opens it’s arms to the teaming-with-life sea below. Kahn somehow captured the weight of Salk’s accomplishment and gracefully honored it with these mirrored stacks that house tiny wooden monk-like cells for devoted academics, encouraging them to reach high. A channel of water runs along the center uniting a public space for researchers to congregate and share ideas (there are even slate boards at the base of each stack for chalked ideas to freely be displayed, discussed and debated) with clear pools (of metaphorical knowledge) that tier at the West end and return the water back to the start of the fountain.

It’s a sacred place that remarkably blends the spiritual and scientific. It felt more like a cathedral than any cathedral I’ve visited. If you ever get the chance…go experience it.

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Garden Studio (London)

Strong and appropriate material palette on this tiny backyard studio, especially like the terrazzo clad exterior and polished concrete floor and patio. Looks like it could exist in the American West nicely. More by Sonn Studio here.

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