Friday, April 23, 2010

Safe Trestles Competition April 2010




Above are images from my submission for the competition "Safe Trestles" hosted by Architecture for Humanity and Open Architecture Network, two groups that are making a difference in the world with their design as a tool. The program called for a safe crossing over, under and/or through a fragile wetland ecosystem and railroad. The site is the Trestles an exemplary surfing spot, from most reports. Below is my text for the design:

Conflict and contradiction exist at the site. The tampered and precious natural wetlands must be restored by building an unnatural and man-made safe crossing. Nature must be enabled to heal itself. We must allow it to do so. The design must be part of the site and work as counterpoint to it. It must work with the conflicts inherent in the site and the program and make something that is as poetic and powerful as nature itself. It must enhance and improve the site and provide non-intrusive ways to enjoy it.

Inspiration derives from the site. At the Trestles, nature has provided a canvas made by the wetlands with its grasses. Slashing through this canvas is an unnatural man-made railroad. Both these elements coexist. The bridge must draw from these inspirations. It must be a part of it. Also the design must capture the dynamism of the surfing sport. It must be bold. It must soar. In contrast to how the railroad cuts through the site, the safe passage will be a bridge, flying over it. Human foot traffic will be removed from the wetlands. From this bridge the wetlands can be observed. Views will be created. The bridge will be a place that will enhance the site, provide access to it and provide a sanctuary on high, literally, to worship the play of the waves, the setting of the sun, and the sway of the wetland grasses.

Through prefabrication technology, the bridge will be made of components, molded off-site, delivered as modules and assembled at the site by crane. In this way there will be minimal impact to the construction site. The technology of fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) composites and structural grade plastic lumber (SGPL) shall be developed to provide Green modular bridge components that are both resilient and recyclable. The bridge shall also create energy by harnessing wind. Solar panels shall also be installed to provide energy for any information points and lighting. Restrooms shall be provided underground and work with composting technology. Finally, the whole of the bridge shall be accessible.

The whole of the design is laid out on one spine. As the railroad cuts a line through the site, so will this bridge. The path starts some fifty feet above the Trestles at the drop-off point. An observation point to view the beach and wetlands from this height is provided. This point will also be a low-key point of orientation. Only a bench, drinking fountain, and educational plaque will be provided. From here a ramp will lead northeast then doubles back upon itself southwest delving underground where public restrooms will be provided. Moving towards the shore, the bridge emerges from the hillside and runs straight as a bullet towards the shore. On the left the bluff stands with the wetlands on the right. The webbed and woven structure of the bridge is intermittently broken by observation points with information about the wetlands and the Trestles. The criss-cross concept of the bridge structure derives from the mesh of the wetland reeds and grasses. The bridge stretches out and over the sea from which surfing events, and the surf itself, can be viewed. From here another ramp is provided down to the Trestles snaking around a main structural wall and enclosed in a metallic and reflective screen. A landing is provided at the beach, level with it, as another point of orientation. You have arrived at the Trestles.

Bridge Component 1

Bridge Component 2

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Why Chicago Needs Another Green River

Chicago's Eisenhower Expressway
Present





 
Chicago's Eisenhower Expressway
After





"Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet ..." - Agent Smith THE MATRIX




Some years ago I started this blog with a proposal to make a high place for Chicago. Not a high place for religion or height. Although it could be. Not a high place of government. Although government would have to be a player. Not a high place of business. But who would pay for it? Lincoln Park, Grant Park, and so on would not exist if it were not for the philanthropy of Chicago's big business Olympia. Not a high place, or state, of being. This is not enlightenment. On the contrary, this can be a very real place for the City and for the non-City. Chicagoan and non-Chicagoan. Human and non-Human. It is for the better.




"Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men's blood and probably will not be realized" - Daniel Burnham




The idea of burying our highways is not new. Boston did it with its Big Dig, realizing a plan a quarter century in the making. Chicago has done it with Millennium Park, an expensive but priceless gift to the City. This proposal follows in the footsteps of these two great plans. It is not a little plan. It is a big plan that places a green roof over the entire interstate highway system of Chicago. These roofs will become a natural habitat. It's tendrils will connect all of Chicago's natural preserves creating a green network where there were six lanes or more of asphalt. The plan is a great grandchild of Burnham's boulevard system. Here, instead of a green that is Parisian manicured splendour, prairie grasses will be allowed to grow free. The roof will be designed with an exhaust filtering system that is more catalytic than mechanical. Cars will be put in their place. Thereby, creating a Green-network where forest preserves bordering the City and the Lake are interconnected.  Flora and fauna can once again migrate throughout the whole of Chicagoland. And Chicago will have a new Green River.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Tulip Days 2008


This is a design for a kinetic sculpture on Chicago's Magnificent Mile, Michigan Ave. The theme for the year called for celebrating architecture in the Windy City. I was part of a team from VOA Associates, Inc. that came up with this final design. The concept was that the City is not a static thing. It is always changing, growing, evolving. Our sculptural skyline was built with parts that responded to the wind. Solar powered lighting illuminated the whole from within. Good times.


Sunday, September 13, 2009

All I Want for Christmas is the Empire State Building


In the 9/2009 issue of Architectural Record it suggests, "Ask architects what their favorite toy was growing up, and LEGO will likely rank among their top picks." Well it was true for me. I clearly remember tinkering with LEGOs for endless hours on end in my family's Rogers Park home in Chicago. I was in kindergarten or 1st Grade or so. An immigrant Filipino boy learning the Pledge of Allegiance in Mrs. Sterling's class, learning how to chicken fight on an asphalt playground without cracking my head open and learning how to cross Pratt Blvd with the help of an angel in the form of a yellow raincoated crossing guard, again, without cracking my head open. It was around 1974.

Well, LEGO, sparked by a bright, brilliant and colorful idea by Illinois, USA architect Adam Reed Tucker, has added more models to its year-old architectural line. Now kids and kids in their 40's can build their own Empire State Building, Falling Water and the Chicago John Hancock for starters. Tucker, in the above photo from his website, is an artist in his own right. LEGO is his medium. And he uses it to "Imagine - Invent - Inspire". So much so, his work is displayed in an exhibit in the Museum of Science and Industry of Chicago. Thanks LEGO and thanks Adam.

Oh ...

... Santa?

... in case you're listening ...

I have been a very good boy this year.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Live Forever - The Michael Jackson Monument Design Competition


This is my entry to Live Forever - The Michael Jackson Monument Design Competition. The competition is being hosted by Archinect and Bustler. Two great architecture/design websites. I love these competitions because they help me keep my design-chops limber. My description and photo source credits follow:
_____________________________

Inspiration
Michael Jackson’s “Heal the World”

Concept
A single reflective orb centered in a field of grass. The 30 foot sphere represents the world. Visitors at the field’s edge are beckoned to touch the reflective surface. Crossing the field is an act of coming together. Once the surface is touched, the world is healed. Upon seeing their own reflection, people realize that together they are healing themselves.

Location
Gary, IN, USA on reclaimed industrial shoreline.

Healing
The location shall be an example of how we can heal the world, a fitting tribute to Michael.

photo sources:
Flickr users “Claudio.AR” and “fakebook” with last.fm user “Fish777-ka”.
_____________________________

Another inspiration came from Chicago's Millenium Park "Cloud Gate". But looking on YouTube, Michael Jackson's Superbowl 1993 Performance must have been somewhere in my psyche. As far as Jackson's legacy, I do hope all the controversy rusts away and the message of this song remains.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The Art Institute of Chicago's Modern Wing

Chicago has a new glass house ...




 




I walked around a bit. My mood was delighted by the floating Grand Stair. It appeared weightless in complete contrast to the grounded Grand Stair in the classical original building.






 

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

The LORD said, "Nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them."

An artist's concept of the biblical Tower of Babel below:
Athanasius Kircher, Turris Babel 1679
Genesis 11: 1-5

Now the whole world had one language and a common speech. As men moved eastward, they found a plain in Shinar and settled there.
They said to each other, "Come, let's make bricks and bake them thoroughly." They used brick instead of stone, and tar for mortar. Then they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves and not be scattered over the face of the whole earth."

But the LORD came down to see the city and the tower that the men were building. The LORD said, "If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them.


Ground breaking for the Burj Dubai was 9/4/2004. There is a similarity between the Kircher drawing of 1679 and the under construction photo by photographer Calajava. People have been writing, blogging, taking photos of the new tower being built in Dubai for years now.
And I would think there have been people writing about the Tower's similarity to the Tower in the Bible.

The story of Tower of Babel has always been a stickler for me. Why would God deliberately divide us so that we can not reach our potential? Despite all the answers that I've studied and listened to, such as the Babel Tower was not for God but for Man's Pride, there is still a question in my heart as to why would an infinite God (or a god) be so threatened by the finite Human that this God would deliberately act to put us in our place by messing us up? Even human parents wish and give everything so their children can excel.  Why would a Father in Heaven be any different to his own Children?  Puzzling ...

Well, Bible or not, God or not, messed up or not, the Dubai Tower is almost finished with a delayed opening in 12/2009. Just in time for Christmas! Even before its december opening, the Burj Dubai stands as a 818 meter (2683.73 feet) symbol of what we can accomplish. God went on the record saying, nothing will be impossible for us. And it makes me think ...

What is next on the to-do list?

Friday, July 03, 2009

Chicago: Beanstalk City


02.02.2009: Humanity has grown to not only live off the planet but dictate how it will develop. With our abilities of controlling the environment, lengthening our life spans, our ease at circumnavigating the globe, we have pioneered the earth to find that it has its limits. Our suburbs and farms have taken away earths natural habitats. The wild is becoming increasingly difficult to find. And the wild we find, we cage into preserves. We can not continue on this course.

“Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet …” Agent Smith from The Matrix


We now have a responsibility to give back what we have taken. We need to create a habitat for ourselves. Abandon our suburbs. Contain our sprawl. Concentrate our lives and allow the earth to heal itself. Our cities shall be our habitat, our preserve, as in Chicago above. Our cities will use completely solar, wind, geothermal and other new sources of energy that do not make our atmosphere sick.

Similar in diagram to our own neural cells, our cities will house mega-populations in superstructures interconnected by a vast network of underground tunnels. Through which resources such as food will be transported, information and energy shared. Our concentrated way of living will relieve the earth of its burden to grow our food by constructing our own farms within the mega-structures of our cities. Farm land will be given back. Resources will be more conveniently shared by our proximity to each other. Our cities will be located throughout the world, like outposts, beanstalks to the sky, living among the wild life. We will allow the earth to self-sustain as we sustain ourselves in our cities.

We will use our earth-shaping abilities to save it, saving ourselves. We will be blessed to witness the resurrection of the earth’s natural habitats. By bounding ourselves, nature will grow beyond the fences we have constructed to allow lost ecosystems to replenish and redevelop. The entire earth will be a wildlife preserve. It is our honor to be stewards of how the earth develops. Let us step up the challenge.

When Architecture = Art

These models were being exhibited at MoMA in New York City in December 2008. I like the way they blur the boundaries between architecture and art.






Sunday, May 17, 2009

Angels in the Architecture May 2009

I took this photo from the top of the Howard L Platform ...

Friday, May 08, 2009

Bungalow 2006

This is my take on the Chicago bungalow ...


Friday, May 01, 2009

Painting March 2009

Here is a painting I did over the past couple months. Acrylic on canvas 30x40. It is the Chicago Red Line crossing over Montrose looking south. I've always loved while living in Uptown on the northside of Chicago in the late 1990's.


Monday, April 27, 2009

New York December 2008

While visiting the family in Bergen County, NJ in Dec. 08, I was able to take some pics with my camera phone of New York. Magnificent!





























Michigan in April 2009

After my most recent lay-off, a couple of friends wisked me away to southwestern Michigan. I was treated to a Grand Tour. Gracias, Jesus and Rolando.


Grand Rapids Arts Museum





Grand Rapids Storefront
 





Michigan State Building - Dome
Grand Rapids Storefront
Michigan State Building

Monday, January 12, 2009

Back to Architecture and the Circle Interchange

And to get back to business, there this great competition for you architects who have been practicing for 10 years or less. Go to http://www.metropolismag.com/nextgen/



I have some ideas of my own but I'm too old. It involves my favorite subject of getting rid of our dependence on cars. Let's bury the Circle Interchange!





Go Obama!