Small and simple. This project has nice little touches. More here.
NOTE: Greta and I got our booster shots on this day.
Small and simple. This project has nice little touches. More here.
NOTE: Greta and I got our booster shots on this day.
After Ai Weiwei’s father's poetry in the late 50’s distressed the Chinese government, he and his family were sent to a labor camp when Ai was one - where they would spend the next 16 years surviving brutal conditions. Only after Mao's death in 1976, would his family returned to Beijing where he helped form his first arts collective.
Between 1981-1993, Ai studied English and Art in the US. When he returned to China, he was an outspoken critic of the corrupt government. His work often incorporates themes of global refugee crisis, government surveillance, political prisoners and freedom of speech. His ideas and actions have led him to be arrested and harshly detained multiple times by the Chinese authorities.
When asked if he is ever scared for his life (for his actions), he responded, he is more scared of doing nothing.
See an elegant interview he gives here with Trevor Noah.
14,000 salvaged Refugee life vests wrap the columns of Berlin’s Konzerthaus (Concert House)
Industrial designer and former paramedic, Nathalie & Greg Kupfer designed/built a 100sf, solar-powered dwelling from recycled and repurposed materials for about $50. More inspiring photos and story here.
Where did those components come from and where will they go (eventually)? Probably a question we should all be asking ourselves with any purchase. Architect, Joseph Grima, proposes a new type of non-extractive architecture that does not exploit the planet in his manifesto. Find it not at Amazon here.
This tightly controlled residence is a hair more minimal on the interior than I prefer but I’d give it a strong grade on modern simplicity meets solid craft. More here.
This impressive landscape firm collaborated with various practices to connect multiple banks created by the convergence of these four Shenzhen rivers with a series of paths and elevated promenades.
The Rainbow Bridge, which crosses two of the rivers, was completed by German practice Schlaich Bergermann Partner and the Flora Trellis Cafe was designed by LAAB Architects, and features glass curtain walls sheltered by a white rhombus-coffered canopy.
More here about this project.
In 2003, this became the first municipality (in Japan) to pursue zero waste, with 45 recycling categories. Today, the village reuses nearly 80 percent of the garbage it generates.
The facility is comprised mostly of upcycled materials, including 700 donated windows. More about this impressive undertaking on the architects website here.
This progressive villa was originally completed in 1958 and was recently restored/updated by Studio Petra Majantie and Oopeaa, with some lovely touches. More here.
So great how NASA has embraced the art of origami to maximize space.
What really is a museum but a large storage facility? Love how the reflective cladding mirrors the city in a beautifully metaphorical way. More here.
This pavilion was built by local tradespeople with sustainable materials from the region. More here. Also, love the small surrounded structures too.
This Danish firm has unexpected material choices with surprising applications. More here.
Really looking forward to seeing this one.
Today is the last day to drop-off your ballots in Colorado. The League of Women Voters CO is an excellent source for pro/con info. around issues that impact your state. If you live outside of CO and are a US citizen, look up the LWV for the state in which you live.
Interesting forms, colors, overhangs and courtyard in this South American home that has some heavy 60s nods. More here.
Be safe out there, things might get strange ;)