Saturday, July 24, 2010

Well Hung

Sometimes I think my weekend warring shall never end, but I do sense that last weekend served as the last major overhaul of work to be done in the Shanty, i.e. work that requires at least two people to complete. Last Saturday, my father and I spent the majority of the day heaving, hauling and hanging drywall.

I definitely started the day as a novice, timid and uncertain how to do anything. I was scoring and snapping the drywall, but it wasn't breaking cleanly. I kept mishandling the drill as I screwed the panels into place, which left me with little phillips head shaped dings in the fresh wall coverings. However, as the day progressed and my skills became more refined, I was able to snap a clean break of drywall, and cleanly screw it into place. I don't know if I would say it was fun, because it was not only physically taxing, but mentally exhausting since there are a great many unique geometry problems to be solved when it comes to my customized little Shanty.

I shall have to post some photos soon, though I have taken none yet, so that you may observe the fruits of my labor. I would also like to say that I recognize that spackling that B is going to be another grueling task, but mind you, one I can do with my own might.

Today I purchased some lengths of poplar which I shall trim and size to my windows tomorrow, to serve as a (modest) finished sill. I have developed a strategy for window coverings that will hopefully not encourage egg sacks (I have found that spiders are still finding their way inside the Shanty, despite my attempts at sealing it, and they are very quick to employ any fold of fabric as an egg depository). For this, I have purchased some wood dowels. More on that one later.

I also bought some more expandable foam sealant, to hopefully finish the roof sealing job. Lastly, I got some weather stripping for the windows, I'm not sure how easy it will be to install, so I only picked up 10' of it for now. Photos of my successes/failures to come tomorrow, methinks.

I probably owe 90% of my motivation to finish out the Shanty to the book I am just about finished. I mention it all the time now, but it is so crazy how similar the story is to my own story with the Shanty. I don't want to sound like a complete idiot to the architect at work who recommended it to me, so I am not sure how many parallels I shall disclose to him.

In conclusion, I do believe my drywall, with all its little mars and footprints is pretty well hung.

Just got out to take some photos this afternoon. I ended up not working on the sills as I had planned, in part to an onslaught of precipitation in the afternoon.




You can see it's pretty dark for being close to 2 o'clock in the afternoon, thank you, Cumulonimbus:






View towards the NE corner. Still thinking about how I may finish the door:






Here you can see all the in-swinging casements in action. Local critics suggest a classier alternative to the blue jump-rope looking hoists I've implemented:






These poplar boards will become the aforementioned sills. With time:

Monday, July 19, 2010

Coming Soon

I'm posting this in the hope that I will peer-pressure myself into expanding it later.

Over the 4th of July Weekend, Jo Feb, and a few friends of ours (alias names: Seaward, K-Mask, Hellomaa and Professor Garbage-face) visited the Philip Johnson House in New Canaan, CT. Man, such a great time.

Stay tuned for the following:

Review of a complex man's eccentric paradise
Pictures!
Gossip (hint. Andy Warhol is involved)
A Comic.

The comic, I have to say is what I enjoyed the most, mostly because I use Philip Johnson A LOT in comics. In fact he has now officially more cameos than Louis Kahn)

http://chillicheesefries.deviantart.com/art/Comic-Book8-122101491?q=gallery%3Achillicheesefries+sort%3Atime&qo=111

http://chillicheesefries.deviantart.com/art/Comic-Book9-122101627?q=gallery%3Achillicheesefries+sort%3Atime&qo=110

http://chillicheesefries.deviantart.com/art/Comic-Book10-122101715?q=gallery%3Achillicheesefries+sort%3Atime&qo=109

I think Philip Johnson is my favorite character for two reasons: 1. His chin is so much fun to draw. 2. He was so blindingly intelligent, absurdly rich, ruthlessly power-hungry, conniving, manipulative, handsome, honest, cruel but above all else, political. Long story short; He was interesting, very interesting.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Seeing and SITE

SO, Even though it was always a hot and uncomfortable topic while we were in school, I'm still in love with James Wines and SITE. (Sculpture In The Enviornment)

Especially the BEST Stores from the late 70s/Early 80s. Are they one-liners? Yes. Are they arrogantly, almost painfully postmodern? Yes

But are they architecture? For two reasons:

1. They make you actually think about a Vernacular that is often taken for granted. "Big Box Building", AKA The Walmarts, K-Marts, etc. for better or worse ARE a part of our culture. Maybe not the most charming or unique aspect, but they exist for a reason, and much like the deep-fried Oreo, you don't admit you enjoy them, but you do. On top of that the Big-Box one-liners are instantly likeable because is a self-depricating humor, something that an arrogant field like architecture does not typically take to. It's a pretty great thing that James Wines took a vernaular that is universally and naturally homogeneous, and made each one original. There's method in the meshugas.

2. Structure. I know it sounds podantic, but it takes a lot of engineering to get a brick to peel.

I found these videos on A Daily Dose of Architecture, and thought to share them here too.

Part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxPuM4w3c2g&feature=player_embedded

Part 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCImIgZWVdw&feature=player_embedded

Part 3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_m5jDFJDl0Y&feature=player_embedded


Now, the real tradgedy is that some of SITE's structures have been either taken-down or abandonned. The "Tilt" Building in Towson, MD and the "Peeling" Showroom in Richmond VA being the two main examples. However, If you're interested in seeing them in person below are the addresses for a few of them.





Best Forest Showroom
9008 Quioccasin Road, Richmond, VA 23229

Best Notch Showroom
1901 Arden Way, Sacramento, CA 95815

Best Hialeah Showroom
5310 West 20th Ave Hialeah, FL 33016

Best Notch Showroom
1901 arden way sacramento ca 95815

Best Hialeah Showroom
5310 West 20th Ave Hialeah, FL 33016

Intermediate Façade Showroom
Alameda-Genoa Shopping Center, Kingsport Rd & Kleckley Drive, Houston, TX 77075
port Rd & Kleckley Drive, Houston, TX 77075








Sunday, June 27, 2010

Love Letters to Dead Architects: Convivial and Conniving

My Sovereign Majesty, Queen Cleopatra,

Greetings from the future. I have sent this letter to the afterlife with great difficulty, as postage through the valley of suffering is ridiculous, but it is worth it for you. It might do you well to know that your beauty is still revered ages after you have shed your mortal coil. However, you and I know that you were actually not too much to look at, but de-tagging yourself in all those vasebook pictures really paid off.
However, while I would love to go on about your posterity, I must get to my goal of discussing your cleverness at the Edfu Temple of Horus. I’m speaking of course about the design you took to make sure that no-one stole your precious artifacts (how are those working out by the way? I saw the solid-gold spinning wheel, very nice). By making your private temple, open to the public, it allowed perpetual security and unlike Imhotep, who created (through the Pyramids of Giza) a fossil; easy to covet and even easier to steal, you created a perpetual maiden. Your palace sits, celestial in her orb, and untouchable by unclean hands but democratic to the faithful. How like you; mind of the killer, hide in plain sight.

May your wicked deeds by lighter than a feather when you finally reach Osiris.
Eternally yours,
Retly Corm

Dear Charles,
Don’t trust your Brother, he only made you move to California because he knows about the gold in them there hills. OUR gold. He may have claimed that he was weary of the stuffy Victorian rules for houses: the more layers the better, why not add more decoration when the shapes themselves lack substance, pastels, pastels pastels, etc... He said he yearned to be in a place devoid of these prescriptions and that your parents had conveniently found a quaint little town to escape to. He keeps telling you that the clean lines are the future, but then he muddies them with unnecessary structural backing. You know as well as I that those stone planters will hold. Now, I’m no mathematician, but the actions and the numbers: they don’t add up.
I stole the map from under his pillow, we could leave tonight. I know the way. Meet me by the Stained Glass Tree at midnight.

Yours,
R. C.

Dear Henry,
I’m writing you this to alert you to a terrible plot being forged by those closest to you, in particular your brother. He claims to have followed you here only as a means of architectural expression, but he knows about the treasure of Casa Verde and will stop at nothing to possess it. You know when he has independent means he will return to the unhealthy obsessions of fantasy. Gravity will never allow those pylons to stand, just look at those planters out-front, absurd. He refuses to think through his actions and I’m afraid you will be the one to suffer for it.
We have to move tonight. I saw him searching your room, so I took the map for safe keeping. Meet me by the tree-inspired Carpet tonight at midnight.
Yours,
R.C.
Dear Messers. Greene and Greene,
I can’t say I’m entirely surprised; people who speak to loudly of their allegiances at dinner parties are always the quickest to mistrust. Yes, you both grew quite accustomed to your laid-back lifestyle in the land of wake and honey. Not I, no, not I. Though my skin has become sun-kissed and my hair blonder, my heart is still as sharp, steely and eastern as it was when I left New York. You may wonder what I will do with the treasure of Casa Verde, never you mind, my Dewey-eyed companions. Oh, and don’t try the car, I removed the crank-shaft, by the time you get to town, I will be in Hawaii, or Alaska, or Peru.
Cheers,
Retly Corm

Dear Charles and Ray Eames,
The answer is YES! I would love to stay the weekend. I look forward to bringing PJ and riding our separate bicycles built for 2 (would this make them bicycles built for 4?, I hope so!). I have truly enjoyed our time together. It’s so nice to be part of a couple’s circle, after being alone for so long. I am also truly enamored of your home/studio (does it make it a “some” or a “hudio”?). That place is so like the two of you, a partnership of program, open and comfortable, yet ever-changing, ever-evolving, ever-in-style (or should I say ever DeStyle?).
Ray, you must show me your charming designs for a chair, I was quite taken with Corby’s model a few years ago, but as I sit in mine and pen this letter I can’t help but think “my god this is uncomfortable”. And so dreary.
Charles, PJ says he intends to DESTROY you at tennis.
With Love,
Retly Corm


Dear C n’ R,
Sorry for last night. I think it was the liquor talking. Can we still be friends?
Retly Corm.
P.S. Don’t worry about hurting PJ’s feelings, he doesn’t have any.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Shanty Musings

First allow me to address the fact that I am typing this as I sit isolated in the "shanty." Since my laptop battery died last summer, I have been reluctant to attempt any computer activities out here, as such activities now mean hoisting & hauling extension cords into position. While this is not itself an entirely time-consuming activity, it does act as a sort of buzz kill for the spur of the moment initiatives I previously quenched with a spontaneous jaunt out to the shanty.


I write to you now to update you on my current book, A Place of My Own. I've only made it through the first chapter and a handful of pages of the second chapter, but I can assure you, it's a good read. Maybe more so for me, as I have also created a place of my own. In fact, as I was reading this book moments ago out in the sun, it got me pumped to head out to the shanty. And that brings me to here typing this.


And I just realized I am able to pick up the internet out here - this wasn't so last summer, which may actually have been a good thing, since it's a sort of solitude out here.


Anyway, this second chapter describes site selection - a process often overlooked in American development, but so critical and crucial to a building's inception. As I think about my current residence, it was vastly under-contemplated, regarding sun orientation. Its only apparent orientation is to the street. I've often regretted the layout of our house, with regard to daylighting and glare.


At PhilaU, it always seemed such a simple concept, orient your building to coalesce with the sun's arc... yet some folks always seemed to fight the sun, purposely defying its existence. While in the real world, as I can now attribute over a year's worth of experience, neither is the case. Developers aren't interested in coalescing with or defying the sun. They just want to cram a load of stuff into a small space with a hefty price tag. How did we come to think this way, as humans? Valuing short term price over long term value?


I feel as though I have become distracted from my original idea for this entry... which was perhaps just to note that I am enjoying my book and I reaffirm its recommendation to readers elsewhere.


Cormy, you may even find some personal delight in it, especially after your 50-some "hideouts."

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Oooopdates

So I turned in my cocktail napkin sketch to the arch record competition- I would have posted them as well, but my scanner wasn't working and it seemed unethical to use my work's scanner. Though the thing that I found interesting was that the competition parameteres did'nt specify as to whether or not the sketch had too be based off of your idea, or of a famous building. I figured I would my bases and turned in 3 based off of buildings and 3 based off of my own design. The buildings I based my sketches off of are as followed:


Monday, June 21, 2010

A Place of My Own, by Michael Pollan

First, allow me to acknowledge my absence of late. The weather has been too gorgeous for me to mull about in blog entries. However, I would like to plug some nuggets your way in the future, especially with the coming of our first annual architectural road trip!

Today's nugget is a book recommendation. As you may recall, last summer I designed and constructed a small studio space for myself in my parents' backyard. It is made of modest materials, save the corrugated transparent roof to the North. It not only provides me glorious atmospheric conditions for painting, but also some privacy and resolve from the day to day. The reason I am reminiscing about my structure is because this book is about someone who did something very similar to what I did, and for similar reasons. While I have only yet read part of the preface, I did scan it briefly and I expect that it will be an excellent read. I would also like to note that a gentleman at work recommended it to me after I shared with him some memorable photos of the "shanty" during the snowstorm in February.

I just received my "used" copy from Amazon today and I am quite excited to begin reading it. Looks like I paid $7.40 for it (including shipping), which is not half bad for an essentially brand new book.

Take a peek at its reviews online and let me know what you think! I'll keep you updated if I can make it through this summer... I've been spending a lot of time volleyballing, though, so we'll see!