Friday, March 01, 2013

February 2013 Reading List Recap / Public Transit for the WIN

I know most of the time these "hey, look what I just read list" come across as self aggrandizing attempts to gloat about perceived intelligence and I'm not expecting to write many very amazing reviews unless a particular tome intrigues me, however I have a lot of new commute time on my hands and if I can prove that there is a great value in a relaxed commute, then perhaps some value can be extracted from my (hope to be) monthly asides.

A little backstory. I hate commuting to work. Sort of. I hate driving to work. I commute from Lakewood (on the near West Side of Cleveland to Shaker Square, on the far East Side of Cleveland, typically at 25-35 minute drive, depending on weather, local traffic, construction, level of aggression, etc. The only way to really access Shaker Square is through some particular neighborhoods that the city and/or ODOT don't really care about the smoothness of the roads. There are some crazy potholes. I don't particularly like my car, but I think attempting to drive it around/over such large road obstacles is stupid on my part. So I started taking the public transit, which typical consists of a 10 minute bus ride, 10 minute train ride and a 15 minute light rail ride (with around 10 minutes wait time) which equates to a standard 45 minute one way trip. Double that to come home and I now have an extra hour and half to finally read all the books stacking up on my desk. I was amazed at how much I tore through.

I need to come up with a rating system, suggestions are welcome.

Feb. 2013
In order of been read:

Walkable City: Jeff Speck
Overall this book typically preaches to the choir and while the most interesting and useful portions are not why a walk-able city is important, it is how to attempt to accomplish the goals of a walk-able downtown (whether dense enough to be a major city or a suburban downtown). And the foot notes. I love good foot notes, it basically creates another reading list to go through. I already ordered a couple books mentioned in Walkable City to read. Most of the arguments are good, but should be common sense. 7/10

CLOG 4 - Renders 9/10
CLOG 5 - National Mall 9/10
I am a huge fan of most journals. Usually. CLOG is excellent. I cannot stress this enough, whether it is due to the editors selecting such great content or how the journals are organized around a singular topic, CLOG seems to be a ridiculous success. Damn you Kyle. Great job.

Writing About Architecture - Alexandra Lange
An attempt to exercise instruction of critical writing about architecture doubles as an interesting traipse through classic criticism (Mumford, Olmsted, Jacobs) and dissection of technique. While it will probably not make you a great architecture critic overnight it may just give you a better array of tools for understanding buildings, if you are into that sort of thing. It is a quick read, makes you want to pick up more Mumford and will probably help you with writing overall (maybe, I am admittedly not exhibiting much improvement). Easy to read in short bursts I was capable of picking up and putting the book down during natural break points (when my train reached my stop).  8/10

LOG 23
Log, an architecture journal. At times obtuse and difficult to get through, however my first exposure to Kwinter (swoon!) so I continue to order and read (I am behind by 5 issues or so) to discover more great essayists. At times extremely self referential and long winded (Hays, I'm assuming you are paid by the word) it is still a nice diversion into theory and, at times, absurdity. 7/10

The Landscape Urbanism Reader - Charles Waldheim, editor
You know that book you know you should have read forever ago that is sitting on your shelf mocking you? Yeah, this was mine. I finally finished it, having read it in fits and starts over the course of five years. It is a great primer on what should have been a basic understanding of site investigation/articulation in architecture school (but wasn't). I wish I hadn't put finishing this book off as long as I had, you should pick it up and read it (over the course of half a decade or so). 9/10

Refabricating Architecture: How Manufacturing Mehodologies are Poised to Transform Building Construction - Kieran/Timberlake
The thought of being clever enough to plan for the rapid design and deployment of prefabricated design units seems like a rather clever (albeit tried and admittedly failed) however an entire tome dedicated to this idea, comparing buildings to aircraft manufacturing seems not only a stretch but at times attempts to remove the entire "soul" of architecture. While it takes a long warm-up to get to the pitch (specific examples Kieran/Timberlake have attempted to deploy) the results ring shallow (how about those mixed metaphors?). There is what seems to be very little product for the amount of research going into what is basically prefab systems added to what seems to be repetitive points and imagery. Corb did it better. 5/10

LTL: Intensities - Lewis, Tsurumaki, Lewis
Continuing on their trajectory of putting together writings that make rigorous, tactile, craft-centric designers hate their desk jobs, LTL follows up Opportunistic Architecture with a piece showcasing more detail, more thought and more work. If you are not happy in your job, do not read this book. DO NOT GET THIS, it will depress you, that somewhere out there, all the thoughtfulness and care you wish you could take the time to put into the project, is being done, not by you. I borrowed this book, read it, and immediately unfriended the guy who let me borrow it. Not really. It is a great book, a fine example of what really succinct and clever design solutions could look like, if only given the chance. I digress, buy this book, show it to your boss, make them read it, ask them why you aren't allowed to question everything, the program, the process, the assembly and intent. If they can't answer you, quit and find a better job, or start your own firm. Life is too short to pretend you don't care. When I grow up, I want to be LTL. 12/10

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Cleveland Colectivo - 2013.02.28 "Pitch for Change Event"


2013.02.28
Shaker LaunchHouse
5.30-8.30pm

Straight from their webbernet site since I am way too busy to type something legible during lunch (like eating lunch):


Cleveland Colectivo 2013 Project Presentation Instructions
Do you have an innovative idea to make Cleveland even better than it already is? Do you need a small grant to make it happen? We invite you to share it with us on Thursday, February 28, at our fast pitch presentation event at Shaker Launch House, 3558 Lee Road, from 5:30-8:30pm.
Here are the rules:
  • All interested applicants must pre-register online with your name and your project name in order to be a presenter at the event. Registration will begin on Monday, February 25, at noon. At that time, please visit www.clevelandcolectivo.org for the link to the registration form. The first forty registrants will have an opportunity to present their project for a chance to be awarded funding. Registration will close as soon as we have reached forty, the limit of presenters.
  • Each presenter will be assigned a number and must present in that order – number one will be our first presentation and number forty our last.
  • Each presenter will have two minutes to pitch their project idea to the crowd. A timekeeper will stop you at the two minute time limit. You can use that time as you like, but we recommend including the following information:
    1. A one sentence “elevator speech” about your project, plan or idea that includes: who will do what, when they will do it, where, and how.
    2.  Why are you doing it? Explain what the need or opportunity is, what you and other people involved bring to the table, and how this project will create “real,lasting change” in the community. Projects must be based in Cleveland or the inner-ring suburbs.
    3. The full amount requested and whether your project will work with partial funding.Cleveland Colectivo grants range from $500 to $5,000, with an average grant size about $1,500. Please keep in mind that projects selected for funding, may receive partial funding.
  • We encourage you to be creative in your presentation, but audio-visual equipment will not be available or permitted as part of your presentation.
  • The audience will vote that night for one winner, who will receive the donations collected that night. The top three crowd favorites will automatically be invited to join round two which includes a written application and a Q&A session with Colectivo members.
  • Members of the Cleveland Colectivo will select additional projects to partipate in round two from the remaining presenters. Projects that are invited to submit an application will have one month to complete a full application and participate in the Q&A session.
  • Funding for grant recipients will be distributed by May of 2013. Please ensure your project idea works with this timeline.
Questions? Concerns? Email info@clevelandcolectivo.org for more information.
To attend the event, RSVP Here



Monday, February 25, 2013

Public Meeting - Bridge Project + 2012 Cleveland Competition Exhibition Closing



5th Street Arcades
530 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio
5.30-7.30pm


On February 27th, 2013 from 5:30-7:30pm The Bridge Project + the Cleveland Design Competition will co-host a Public Meeting to unveil a variety of ideas and recommendations for the future use of the Detroit-Superior Bridge Lower Level. Representatives from The Bridge Project will summarize the community planning process that has taken place over the past few months and unveil their recommendations for the repurposing of the Lower Level of the Detroit-Superior Bridge. The co-founders of the Cleveland Design Competition will summarize the ideas produced for the 2012 Cleveland Design Competition – Transforming the Bride and briefly discuss potential next steps for how to engage with the submitted designs. 
This meeting is open to the public and will include a public question and answer period. 

Light refreshments and a variety of cupcakes/desserts from nearby Colossal Cupcakes will be provided. Please feel free to invite any friends, colleagues or interested community members who might enjoy seeing the ideas and hearing the discussion around the opportunities that exist within the Lower Level of the Detroit-Superior Bridge.”

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Gall Caskey Winkler Lecture - KSU CAED

Gall Caskey Winkler
Capricious fancy, draping and curtaining the historic interior, 1800-1930
Monday, February 25th, 2013
Kiva, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio
7pm



winkler (2)
Presented by: Gail Caskey Winkler | February 25th | 7:oopm Kiva
Gail Caskey Winkler: http://www.winklerandmoss.com/
Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison: History of Design
M.S. University of Wisconsin-Madison: Interior Design
M.A. University of Wisconsin-Madison: English Linguistics
B.A. Beloit College: English Literature

Gail Caskey Winkler teaches in the Graduate Program in Historic Preservation at the University of Pennsylvania and is responsible for a two-semester course entitled the ‘History of the American Interior.’ Prior to joining Penn Design faculty in 1985, she taught interior design at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. From 1991 through 1993 she also taught the history of the 19th-century American interior in the Winterthur Program in Early American Culture at the University of Delaware.
Winkler passed the NCIDQ examination if 1979 becoming a professional member of the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID). She was a member of the Research Committee of the Foundation for Interior Design Education and Research (FIDER) from 1986 to 1996 and served on the Board of Directors of the Pennsylvania East Chapter of ASID and as vice president in 1995-1996. She was elected a Fellow of ASID in 2000.
She is the senior partner of LCA Associates, a Philadelphia firm that specializes in historic furnishing plans and recreating historic interiors for museums, public structures, and government agencies throughout the United States. Projects include the House and Senate Chambers in the United States Capitol, the capitols of the Commonwealths of Pennsylvania and Virginia, Philadelphia’s City Hall, the Superintendent’s Headquarters at the United States Naval Academy, the home of President Rutherford B. Hayes in Fremont, Ohio, and the Summer White House of Abraham Lincoln.
Winkler’s professional interests are also evident in her writing. She is the author of Victorian Interior Decoration (1986), Floor Coverings for Historic Buildings (1988), which received the Joel Polsky Prize from the Foundation for Interior Design Education and Research, and the Award of Excellence from the Southeastern Library Association, The Well-Appointed Bath (1989), and An Analysis of Drapery (1993). In 1994 she received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to serve as curator of an exhibition, ‘Capricious Fancy: Draping and Curtaining, 1790-1930’ and a book by the same name was recently published by UPenn Press.