Saturday, January 05, 2008

Local Music Store T-shirt Design Competition

Here at the TOIstudio I fervently keep watch for interesting design competitions. Why? Because I get so bored so quickly and also because half the fun is seeing what other bored people come up with too.

So, in the grand spirit of the New Year (Happy New Year to YOU) I am proud to announce (or pass along the message that...) Music Saves is holding a t-shirt design competition.

The rules are simple:
2 colors max (0 colors min?)
front or front and back designs
you may specify shirt colors if need be
you must include the Music Saves logo and represent it in a complimentary fashion (Awww, no Calvin peeing on logo's?)

Submission is due MIDNIGHT (EST) JANUARY 31st
Submission:
Full size 300 dpi flattened TIFF in RGB mode
Template showing design position on t-shirt
Email submissions to team@musicsaves.com

Submissions will be posted online February 1st so that people may vote on them. Winners to be announced February 15th.

Winner will receive 2 t-shirts, $75 gift certificate and group hug!

Friday, January 04, 2008

The sweet smell of fuel independence...smells like fries

There is something to be said for those that instead of arguing about the practicality of certain ideas, decide to tinker with the mechanics until they get it to work and then use a functioning example of their argument. I would find it hard pressed to argue with Stephen Merrett of Oberlin, Ohio who, at the ripe old age of 24 has not only converted over 100 diesel vehicles to run on waste vegetable oil but who also owns and operates the Full Circle Fuel Station on Main Street in Oberlin. Full Circle is one of the few waste vegetable oil stations in the country although the number of stations that are selling biodiesel appear to be rising.

Fresh out of college Merrett attained various grants that allowed him to work with Ray Holan, another proponent of waste oil recycling and biodiesel conversions who has worked with local Cleveland businesses (such as the Great Lakes Brewing Company)to develop biodiesel vehicles for the company's use.

Typically one can get waste vegetable oil (WVO) from restaurants but would have to store and strain the oil before using it in a vehicle. Biodiesel fuel stations are able to supply the waste as a fuel at a reduced rate (compared to traditional petroleum fuels) because the restaurants give away the waste oil instead of having to pay to have someone remove it.

Typical automobile conversions can cost upwards of $1,500.

Resources:
Biodisel.org Retail Fueling Station locations, USA
Good Grease WVO site
Big Green Bus
Balanced Living Magazine article on GLBC and Ray Holan
Plain Dealer article

What color would Cleveland be? Emotional Cities

What if the city could physically represent the emotion of its inhabitants?

What color do you think we would be?

Could different areas have a different color?

An artist named Erik Krikortz has launched a website where one can, among other things, vote on how they are feeling that particular day. Accumulated votes are tabulated and then represented by being projected as a color wash upon a series of buildings in Stockholm.

Visitors may also post in a diary about how they are feeling however the entries are not visible to any other user. While currently only in Stockholm Krikortz plans for more installations in more cities, hopefully in public spaces, that can be run concurrently with scientific studies in order to corroborate the relationship between media/expression and mood.

The cynic in me figures the current governmental body would jump on this as a way to demonstrate the 'terror alert level' or some other relatively useless information (to the general public that is. Really, if the terror alert is 'high' what are you going to do about it besides be scared and eventually indifferent?) however the link between color theory and design has always intrigued me as a viable communication tool and I hope that these installations and studies move forward.

I would be intrigued to discover if specific cultures have a different emotional responses to the different colors of the color scale and if that would affect voting preferences, or how if the city is portrayed as 'happy' or 'depressed' through a major lighting installation the affect upon those that live/work in the area. Would they notice? Could this be used to test cognitive dissonance and self-perception theory on a large urban scale? Could we alter our own perception of where we lived based upon some pretty lights?

Stranger things have happened.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Back of the Envelope Bush Library Design Contest

Not to insult Robert A. Stern (Yale School of Architectural Dean and proposed designer of President Bush's library) but the Chronicle of Higher Education is currently hosting a contest for Bush Library Design Proposals that are to be sketched on the back of a size-10 envelope as if you were just conversing with the President and quickly jotting down some ideas.

Design proposals cans be 'serious, humorous, adventurous, or all of the above' and the grand prize is a iPod Touch.

Rules.pdf

Apartments: What's in a name?

This may not only be a Cleveland occurrence, the construct of attached housing units eschewing the name 'apartment' for 'loft' or 'condo' in order to appeal to those of more financial mobility but tossed in the face of the new development around the city I start to question the legitimacy of our labeling.

Granted many of the most fearsome atrocities are committed by those in marketing and real estate, where a ranch can be a Victorian ranch if you squint hard enough in just the right light, where Tudor and Two-door are interchangeable without a second thought. It seems a shame however, when a noble idea such as the apartment is tossed aside for seeming, well, normative.

Some brief research (not from Wikipedia!) led to the suggested facts that apartment buildings are actually a rather new invention (as far as building typology goes) first being seen in the United States in Boston's Hotel Pelham (by Arthur Stone) in 1857 (and demolished in 1916). Previously those that could not afford their own townhome or detached structure would typically rent out a room (tenement) or section of a divided house (a flat) or live above their retail shops (merchant quarters) but would still share meals and restroom facilities with those in adjacent 'units' similar to a boarding house. Also in fashion was the renting of hotel suites as a permanent address. These suites typically were lavish and even had quarters for servants. It wasn't until urban centralization (based upon the industrialization of manufacturing) was it questioned to create better living arrangements for the middle class to fulfill the current shortage in housing.

In the early 1880's, after decades of cautious experimentation the apartment building finally reached its goal as a functional yet familiar domicile typology and started to grow taller thanks to the advent of steel building skeletons and the elevator. In the 1920's the apartment building reached the point where speculative development based upon client niches were created. Here specialty suites were begun to be introduced to the humble apartment building. Penthouses, servant's quarters and extended, multifamily subunits within a larger unit were combined with an increase in ornamentation to not only appeal to the upper class whom were looking for a convenient way to move back into the city but also to mark the structure as a higher class establishment to passersby.

It was during the social engineering period of urban gentrification from the late 1800's to the 1960's that began to give the apartment the negative connotation with the development of 'projects' or centralized urban structures for low class citizens that had been displaced from their ethnic communities by cities attempting to revitalize their cores with new business districts or to appease manufacturing tycoons. These apartment buildings were cheaply constructed and poorly thought out as the main purpose of the design was to re-engineer the social structure of the community. These hyper concentrated areas of poverty typically were not offered the infrastructure that would connect these new communities to places of work, worship or schooling and instead alienated entire city blocks of people.

However the failure of the 'projects' cannot be entirely placed upon the apartment building living style and many rather successful apartment structures are still being constructed. I suppose the whole purpose of this conversation is to question why rentable spaces are being marketed as 'lofts' or 'condos' when they are in actuality, apartments? Why is the term apartment such a dirty word? Is apartment living truly antithetical to the American dream?

Monday, December 31, 2007

2007 Cleveland Architecture Milestones (as witnessed by TOIstudio)

TOIstudio 2007 Year in review - noticeable milestones:
-I don't want to call them 'awards' persay, as I have nothing to really give anyone. Regardless, the overarching plan was for BOTC, Design Rag and TOIstudio to collaborate on some notifications and appreciations for a job well done. If only we would have planned to actually get this done more then a week ago. Anyway, here are the results for the city as Dru from TOIstudio sees it.

Best Building completed in NEO in 2007:

Cleveland Institute of Music Expansion - Mixon Hall:
Architect: Charles Young
Cost: $32 million
Particulars: Total of 34,000 sf of new space including a 250 seat venue with 43' high glass backdrop, new entry from Wade Oval and practice rooms.

A particularly fine example of meshing programmatic restraints with the reimagining of what the concert experience can be. By creating a glass backdrop to the performers overlooking a small park (and the soft sculptural form of the east addition) the experience of listening to fine music can only be punctuated by the spectacle that nature can present. Whether winter concerts with a snowy background, soft diffuse light and the chance to shiver at both the weather and the captivating melody of a fine quartet to a hot summer night filled with dramatic lighting, the excitement of University Circle and the blood boiling crescendo of a full orchestra. Even without the amazing program the form and materiality of the structure is finely detailed, clean and exact and only improves with the many layers of acoustic and environmental control added to make the structure function. There is little addition of superfluous form as there is little room for it. A fine example of solving the given problem first and solving it well.

Worst Building Proposed in 2007 (I think this category was changed to something less insulting):

Cleveland State University's new student center by Gwathmey Seigle and Associates
Cuyahoga Community College/Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Rock Archive by Robert P. Madison International


Best Urban Design Strategy Proposed in 2007:

Wolfstein's Flats development:

Whether you can state that this proposal was made in 2007 (it wasn't, it has been on the books for a while) is true, however the ball is moving and I find this one of the best hopes for the city to be close to achieving reality. A massive influx of people and entertainment mixed with the types of 'regular day' infrastructure (grocery markets, drugstores, etc) could jump start a 24 hour culture downtown recalibrating the city to accept a rank as a convention city. If only there could be a way to improve the school system to move families back downtown...

Medical Mart:
When was this one first mentioned? Mid 90's? Regardless, another project that is 'on the horizon' that could work in conjunction to some other proposals to activate the city.

Worst Urban Design Strategy Proposed in 2007:

E120th RTA station being relocated off from Euclid to Mayfield Road
which manages to complete a number of dubious tasks. The current plan relocates a major public transportation nexus away from the Euclid Corridor instead of creating a multi use transit node that could service pedestrian, rail, bus and bike traffic in a centralized and safe location. It moves the station away from a major corridor and away from the front of what would be the Cleveland Institute of Art, MOCA and the 'front' of the northern complex of University Circle including CASE, CIM and CMA which could be used to consolidate the station traffic as a grand entrance and enforce the pedestrian urban model along a main artery instead of shunting it to the rear. Overall the location decision smacks of more public transit systems being designed by people who don't use it for people who wouldn't use it anyway (see practicing what you preach comments for a theme this year).

Best Lecture that Pissed People Off:

Robert Breugmann:

Granted the topic of sprawl is hotly contested, hard to define and difficult to argue without falling back to discussions of semantic purity, however when there appears to be a promise of a well thought out and lively discussion on how to deal with sprawl one expects, well, a well thought out lively discussion dealing with sprawl.

I think I made most of my points regarding this already right here: Earlier post on TOIstudio

Best Lecture that Inspired:

Bruce Mau:

It could be my kinship towards other "men of gravity" that are bearded, or my belief that architects have an inherent responsibility to increase the well being of the world that I found his lecture inspiring, captivating and informative. There is something about informing the public and going out and actually accomplishing things (research or practical application) that I find extremely more enjoyable than all the eye candy computer renderings in the world. Something about practicing what you preach.

Steve Badanes:
Same reasoning as above minus the beard and "men of gravity" comment.

Best Advocates for Design (Large Institution):

University Circle Inc.:

Just for being receptive and positive to the many groups and institutions wanting/willing to experiment with architecture and form within the enclave. It is University Circle that will set the benchmark for design for the rest of the city. Again.

Best Advocates for Design (Small Institution):

Cleveland Artist's Foundation - Jim and Nina Gibans for Cleveland Goes Modern
Green City Blue Lake - Susan Miller and Marc Lefkowitz for Greening the Modern Preservationist Movement - Ameritrust Tower Preservation Movement

Both groups did a bang up job of getting the general public interested and involved in Cleveland's architectural past and for that I personally thank them.

Best Net-roots Activity for Design:

Ingenuity Fest - What Would YOU Do with the Breuer Tower
:garnering international attention to our historic tower.
Cleveland Design Competition -2007 Annual Competition :more international attention for Cleveland as a place wanting to harvest ideas (even though they never did get around to posting all the entries that were received *cough cough*)

Emerging Architecture and Urban Design to eagerly anticipate in 2008:

FOA - new MOCA building
MVRDV - new CIA addition
Euclid Corridor Project Completion
Cleveland State University Urban Affairs Lecture series
(typically pretty dang good)
Kent State University Spring and Fall Design Lecture series (always a good excuse to go down to Kent)
Case Wester Reserve University Baker Nord Lecture series (even if they did bring Breugmann...)