Monday, November 23, 2009
New Design Process: Business Minded
Overall, Shedroff’s speech was an effective one. He successfully proved his theories by providing cross reference with the world’s economical data and graphs which coincided with his effort in convey business strategy into the design process. As a designer himself, Shedroff had effectively demonstrated in his lecture that there is no sustainable design but only a more sustainable design by integrating the economy into design thinking.
Objectified Design And Contemporary Design
Later in the film, by showing how new contemporary design objects are developed on the market, Hustwit pinpointed the problem within each of the steps while the objects were being designed, manufactured, packaged, shipped and disposed. Hustwit depicted that these are the new problems that contemporary designers face today, which designers in the post-industrial age were not confronted. In other words, “design is about mass production” as said by a designer in New York. Because mass production has satisfied people with their desire for the new products, old products are being replaced and sent to waste. And products in the past decades were designed for profits. Rob Walker, the author in New York Time Magazine, says that new products were designed to have new looks but were not meant to last. Designers were to make products that are “used to be new, look like then, and people would buy the new now.”
These are the major problems that Hustwit argues that contemporary designs and designers have to solve. And in order to solve them, Hustwit presented many sustainable designs and solutions around the world. Contemporary designers today not only have to design the product itself but also have provide better shipment methods and recycle solutions for products after disposed.
The Benefits of External Solar Shadings
As reducing energy consumption and utilizing natural resources becomes essential in today’s agenda due to global climate change, solar shading systems have become more common in modern architectures because they deliver low energy consumption without affecting the conform, usability and aesthetic of architecture. In a recent article from Levolux (a well known solar shading company), 30% of energy is wasted in UK primarily due to global environmental problems, such as energy consumed from the change in climate that cost the nation billions of pounds. Based on the article, the air conditioning, which once was the summer savior, is the major drain of energy. It consumed over 50% of many buildings’ energy cost. And followed by light and heating, which consumed approximately ten to fifteen percents.
To reduce the waste in energy consumptions, Levolux’s solar shadings are designed to fit the government’s plans for energy conservation by controlling and diffusing sunlight which maximize the use of daylight in buildings. The solar shadings are made by the recyclable materials like aluminum, steel, timber and glass, and they could be anodized or powder coated to blend with the external architecture. The primary external solar shadings are called aerofoil fins and they could be installed in horizontal, vertical, in an angle or along curves. These aerofoil fins are designed to provide shadings but not obtruding the views. With the external solar shading placed in the south facing windows, it would reduce heat, excessive light and glare throughout the day, and in which it would ultimately cuts the energy consumption in air conditioning. This design is extremely beneficial for today’s society, as energy efficiency and consumption have always been a major concern for architects and interior designers. These external solar shadings are also used in many other modern buildings such as the Devonshire Building in the University of Newcastle. It has also became the landmark in the heart of the university.
Color Theory and Josef Albers
Since I was a child, I learned to mix water colors based on the three main colors, red, yellow and blue. Later, I learned that they are the commonly known primary colors, RYB. Without knowing it, I owe debt to Josef Albers for his contribution to color theories in the 1800’s. The color theory was never really understood until the studies and investigation of blending physical colors in the 18th century. It has made clear especially when Sir Isaac Newton put colors opposite one another on a hue circle, which later known as color circle, then came the primary colors, secondary colors, tertiary colors, cold and warm colors, complementary colors, analogous colors, monochromatic and achromatic colors, etc. These categorized colors are differed by different levels of hues, saturation, shades and tints. Josef is the foremost American artist who played with colors by painting the same color with different context to show radical differences. For example, if we place five different saturations of the same color in order, we would begin to see a continuous airbrush effect, because the colors are very close to each other which would soften the edges. On the other hand, a different effect would happen if a heavy saturated color is placed to a mild saturated color. This would make the heavy saturated color stands out and the less saturated color would fade into the background. Color plays an important role in our society from every object that we manufactured based on our daily usages to everything we see and have interactions with. Color is especially essential for interior designers, who have to deal with color matching from ceilings to floors and from walls to furniture. But thanks to color studies like Josef’s Homage to the Square, our society has been able to use color more effectively to integrate them into our daily lives.
Conserving A Chapel Means A Lot...
The design team chose to keep many of the original features like the high gothic stained glass windows and the original choir organ. To allow more light to enter the space, they cut a Mondrian-inspired glass window into the front of the house facing the street. The entire living area has been whitewashed, while the private spaces above were painted dark. In conclusion, this place might be controversial, but it suggests a different approach in conserving the old fashion and culture to our society, and yet, it is very modern and stylish.
A House From Another Planet
Sunday, November 1, 2009
African-American Quilt - The Unrecognized Contribution to Design
McPherson said that "the African-American contribution to American culture has been crucial, even definitive, in music and dance, and inceasingly vital in literature and theater, but not as well apperciated in the Black contribution to the visual art." In Avis' Piano Keys, I can clearly see the most important design theory elements of Gestalt. Influenced by African-American culture, this quilt pattern is bold. The pulsalting color theme gives it a off balance symmetry with the heavy blue color being contrast with the light yellow, which, at the same time, it creates an instant focal point at the red at the center. The design grabs attention like how modern American pop-art style does with its bold simple color theme. The Gestalt unity does not stop here. The few fragments of blue stripe at the bottom create a continuation out of the frame, which leading the audiences' eyes back on the top. I found the rest of that collections happen to have the same similarities of modern American arts, mainly in their simiplicity and boldness.
The Frame Hotel, A Tree Building Dream Comes True
Also, the building is going to have scattered patios on the different floors. To walk around this building among different vegetation planted inside is going to be like living among trees. The skin of the structure is made of plant-like material. The skin is solar protected dark glass that not only protects the structure from sun and wind. The black prism becomes almost transparent at the hotel zone for tourists, and it would only reappear at a certain designed angle. This design maximizes the concept of a true nature environment.
I still remember from an environment awareness course, the ideal sustainable building and city are a building that looks and functions like a tree and a city that like a forest. Could the Frame Hotel become the ideal sustainable building?
Sunday, October 25, 2009
HappySlip. Social Media Bloom
A New Design for Space Saving. 90 Degree Vertical Parking
Designed by Baita Bueno, a vertical parking system has emerged which allows you to park your electricity powered vehicle in a 90 degree angle. Compared to the space used by a horizontally parked vehicle to the vertical parking system, the new system would allow up to three vehicles parked within the same space. The space saved is even better than the two stories lift-up parking system, which has a mechanism that simply lifts up a vehicle on top of another one.
In addition, the new design of the vertical parking system would provide green energy through solar panels to power future electricity vehicles. With safe clamps to the four wheels, the vehicle is designed to fit securely while sitting in a 90 degree angle. While a vehicle is parked, it will be charged at the same time. The vertical parking system is very much a necessity driven by limited city space. Since being the greener and space saver, I believe it would be very beneficial to packed societies.
Juxtaposted Ad - Google Chrome
Found this familiar? Yes, this is Scott McCloud's comic book, and it is a comic book that was drawn to describe Google Chrome. This is definitely a new monumental stage for information management. Before, I might have to read an instruction manual, and it could be a nightmare or the most boring thing to do; but now, I can actually read through the 39 pages of Scott's Google Chrome comic book. The format of this Google Chrome comic book is very much the same as Scott's other comic book - Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art, as the humor narrator walks you through the ideas and the concepts behind the product. The sequential visual art approach is much more interesting than reading couple hundreds of lines of boring text. As each juxtaposed window of image leads your eyes from one to another, it grabs your attention with not only the figure's body language but also delivers the informative more accurately. It delivered the information more efficiently by explaining the theory step by step. Also by pictures of product comparison (Internet Explorer vs. Firefox), the better product easily stood-up from the rest. The new Google Chrome comic book guideline by Scott McCloud is definitely reshaping the way the society is receiving overloaded information on the internet.
Narcissistic Pop-Culture
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Frank Gehry...Artist Inspired
Not to mention other great buildings Gehry had designed (Exhibition Center in Columbia, Edgemar Retail Complex in santa Monica, Frances Howard Goldwyn Library in Hollywood, and more). But what has been the driving force behind Gehry's inspiration that propelled him into such success?
Reading from a Seattle Post, "The Creator: Frank Gehry builds on his experience - Striking an artistic chord" by Regina Hackett (intelligencer art critic), I realize, like many other successful designers and artists, Gehry's inspiration comes from nature. For instance, the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao was inspired by an aquatic creature that has a lot of fish scales on it, and the Walt Disney Concert Hall was inspired by simply the concept of iron. Interesting, Gehry is also inspired by the natural forms in shells, spider webs, lilies, artichokes, Grand Canyon, and the nature list goes on...
American Victorian...The American Dream Home Fading Away?
The abominated cumbersome interiors of unnecessary ornaments, excessive gables, wasted spaces that happened to be found in early American homes, are the designs of a common recognition of the old-fashioned Victorian style. This common recognition is usually misunderstood due to the fact that American Victorian is eclectic combination of styles.
For an untrained eye, it is also difficult to distinguish that the Victorian as a style of interior architecture, a type of home, a selection of furniture or even an imitation of styles from the past, as opposed to other assumptions that the Victorian is the imitations of many different architectural styles and was actually the ideal homes and interiors in American’s Golden Age (18th c.).
Inside the American Victorian houses, the style evokes the vision of the rich and splendid society by providing a way of life that existed in America for the 18th century. Victorian refers not only to a style, but to a period of time as well. As in all eras, the Victorian was held together by its own interpreted values, beliefs and codes of behavior, where they were defined by an eclectic series of revivals that derives from classical, medieval, Renaissance, and seventeenth century European forms and designs.
Regardless of how loathsome it may be to certain modern tastes or that it may be fitting to only unique perceptions, I believe American Victorian’s interior furnishing style had contributed to the modern architecture and should be appreciated for its concepts and designs that were drawn from the eclectic series of revivals. Modern Victorious style is surviving in American society, and it is transforming as its eclectic series of revivals gains modern Minimalism while dumping the unwanted excessive ornament.
Here are some Modern Victorious interior photos: