30 May 2011

Michelle Hagewood







Michelle Hagewood
I love these images. They are detailed and nuanced. They are also fun, made up of the recognizable pieces of our modern built environment. They work at once as a purely formal experiment and as comment.

29 May 2011

Heaven and Hell


Watching commercial television in a community that is probably the most representative of America, I am struck by the number of advertisements for oil, coal, and natural gas. Even on the news programs, there is almost no discussion of viable renewable alternatives, and little discussion of climate change. Advertisement works, otherwise corporations wouldn't engage in it. This is what substitutes for education in this culture, a kind of saturation bombing of thought. Meanwhile there is no alternate voice. This distorts the issue. Instead of rational planning, it comes down to a matter of opinion, a war won by those with the money to put their viewpoint across.

A couple of thoughts...
I am an advocate of free speech. I would not want to place a gag on anyone. But in this case, the concentration of money effectively silences the voice of the majority. A gag on advertisement appears to have been effective in reducing smoking. Packages of cigarettes are likewise required to sport very visible information on the health consequences of use. Could such a gag be mandated for products that produce greenhouse gases? Since they have potential health consequences for many people.

Heaven and Hell have been effective tools used by the church to influence behavior successfully for two millennia. Could simple heaven and hell ads be effective at describing the alternatives? The anti-smoking ads appear effective. Why shouldn't we scare the crap out of people? It seems that the population is not nearly worried enough.

06 May 2011

Build, LLC


Build LLC is a design/build company in Seattle. They have a lot of good information and they communicate it well. Their top ten reasons Why Design/Build is so Good is pretty informative. They have a very clean modern aesthetic. There's nothing ground-breaking about it, but you can tell that they can deliver for a good price point. They have developed a system. I do have some issues with the suburban nature of the projects, but that isn't really about their work as the environment in which they do their work in general. Clearly they have their own cabinet shop. Their cabinet work is very tidy, and it really makes the projects. The horizontal grain bamboo looks great.

03 May 2011

Passive House - more observations


Passive House is a pretty rigorous system:
-annual energy consumption for heating and cooling is limited to 4,755 Btu per square foot;
-air infiltration is set at a maximum of 0.6 air changes per hour at 50 pascals of pressure;
-annual primary energy usage (energy consumed by appliances, lighting, and other devices not directly related to heating and cooling) is capped at 11.1 kilowatt hours per square foot.

There are also stringent standards regarding what is considered square footage. Only living space is considered in the calculation. Thus, larger houses with wasted space don't get to consider that waste in their energy budget.

A house in Maine (built by my cousins-in-law, actually) has R-49 walls, R-57 roof, and R-74 beneath the concrete-slab floors. I don't quite know structurally how you float a building on 16" of foam, but I'll talk to the engineers about that. I suppose that the conductivity of direct earth is a significant heat loss. It seems counter-intuitive somehow, since the ground can be a significant source of heat if the freezing can be isolated. In this case, the mass of the slab is being used to maintain the interior temperatures. I believe they indicated that there was no mechanical plant in the building.

02 May 2011

PV Roof


I know that the patterning is purely accidental - the product of the existing equipment on the roof. But it starts to resemble some of my drawings in an odd way. With the right tweek, it could actually have a really powerful effect.

11 April 2011

My Dinner's Journey






























1500 miles or 2400 km. This is the average distance that food travels to be on a table in the United States. I've been thinking about how to represent this. Right now I've run a few stats.

In some ways, this is an homage to Walter di Maria's Broken Kilometer.

I thought about string or thread. A spool of thread of 550 yards is 503 meters or about 0.5 km. That would be 4800 spools.

A 2x4 is typically 8’-0” long. Laying 2x4s on end would require 990,000 2x4s.

I did a CAD drawing on 8.5x11 paper. It was purely lines spaced very close together. Each line was 9 53/64” long, which is 0.25 meters. 4 lines was 1 meter. Each page hold
s 100 m. Thus 24,000 pages (12,000 sheets, double sided) are needed to represent 2400 km. A ream is 500 sheets. That means 24 reams.

None of these felt right. It should be food representing food. So I have arrived at spaghetti. Spaghetti has a consistent size, and the packaging works well with the modular method of display of the quantities. A randomly selected one pound box of thin spaghetti contained 728 pieces. Each piece on average is approximately 0.25 meters. Therefore each box is 182 meters. 13,187 boxes equals the 2400 km.