Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
Saturday, June 23, 2012
put a bird on it
black and white photo by David Reamer
Portland is still overflowing with birds. In today’s paper the 2012 restaurant of the year is Little Bird. Their big brother restaurant is called ‘Le Pigeon’ and seen above and below is another Portland favorite, Cocotte. If you haven’t seen any of the Portlandia clips - this is a funny one to watch on youtube, called "put a bird on it". You can now see birds on a vast variety of objects - designers seem to be a bit obsessed with birds at the moment.
This made me wonder if any architects were 'putting birds on it'...and was this a spinoff from the Green movement? In architecture - designs continue to strive towards a sustainable approach to building that will protect the environment. This has created a renewed appreciation for nature.
In Ted Bowen's article, Form Follows Feathers: Bird-Friendly Architecture, he writes about bird driven architectural designs... “Santiago Calatrava’s 2,000-foot-tall Chicago Spire is a lofty experiment in bird-safe design. The residential skyscraper is rising in the midst of a large year-round bird population and in the path of a major migratory flyway on the shores of Lake Michigan, but its glass is designed to be visible to birds, which should help prevent fatal collisions.” While I love most of Calatrava’s work - this building does nothing for me and I am not surprised that it has not been completed. There is nothing natural looking about this structure. A giant drill bit piercing the sky, I would stay clear of it too if I was a bird.
Perhaps a more successful design is another Chicago building on the right by Studio Gang Architects (one of the few firms that is led and owned by a woman, Jeanne Gang). Unfortunately, it has also not been completed because of city budget problems. It included several bird-friendly elements in its design of the Ford Calumet Environmental Center, a 28,000-square-foot environmental education center. To reduce the possibility of bird strikes on the building’s south elevation, a porch was enclosed with a basket-like mesh with four-inch openings.
Architectural critic, Blair Kamin, showered this design with greatness....he said this would become one of Chicago’s most important structures of the 21st century if built. Studio Gang’s award-winning design was interesting. The design approach dubbed “Best Nest”, mimics the way that birds use local materials to construct their nests.
In the end -- my favorite building is the simplest one. It is the one that houses Cocotte above. Only two stories, it is affordable with a human scale....it does not occupy the skys -- so it does not present a problem for the birds in flight...and as a result it was built! This is another reason why I love Portland.
Architectural critic, Blair Kamin, showered this design with greatness....he said this would become one of Chicago’s most important structures of the 21st century if built. Studio Gang’s award-winning design was interesting. The design approach dubbed “Best Nest”, mimics the way that birds use local materials to construct their nests.
In the end -- my favorite building is the simplest one. It is the one that houses Cocotte above. Only two stories, it is affordable with a human scale....it does not occupy the skys -- so it does not present a problem for the birds in flight...and as a result it was built! This is another reason why I love Portland.
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Thursday, May 31, 2012
order in the garden.
planting a classical garden. Designers come in all types of packages. Some are like wild artists who throw their paint on the canvas all at once, thrilled to see what mysteries the universe will unveil. Others are more restrained.....you may not even know they have an artistic bent lurking under such a reserved exterior. My husband falls under the latter category. Just to assure you that every man has the power to get creative - I want to show you what he is doing in our garden.
This 2010 picture is of our driveway along the back side of our home when we moved in. The rhododendron bushes along the right side of the photo have been replaced in the photo above with trees and round boxwoods. He has been working on this for about 6 months and it is still a work in progress but you can see already how much cleaner and manicured the side yard is now. But he is not finished. This seems to be just the beginning of a new garden designer on the verge of exploding.
I am not sure but I think if we combined my design sensitivity with his we might end up with this Italian inspired garden shown above. It feels a little bit like ordered chaos if there was such a thing. Julien De Cerval spent 30 years developing this one. The Gardens of Marqueyssac are in France. Check out this webpage for a mini 3d view of the garden... Julien worked like a maniac on this garden...hopefully, ours will continue to grow in beauty too as the years pass by!
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