May 4, 2013
rmgdesign:

City Texture/城市肌理 by Brady Fang on Flickr.

Shanghai

rmgdesign:

City Texture/城市肌理 by Brady Fang on Flickr.

Shanghai

April 12, 2013

rainwood:

Indigenous people of Brazil trying to prevent their eviction from an old indigenous museum which they have been living in for the past 7 years.

On March 22nd all of the inhabitants and their supporters were forcibly removed or arrested.

The building is being destroyed to make a parking lot :(

(via monanotlisa)

April 11, 2013
Surrealistic paintings by Rob Gonsalves

By Rob Gonsalves. I like the DIY eclipse in the first, and how it’s unclear in the second whether the buildings are protective or malevolent.

March 19, 2013

theartofanimation:

Tubi Du

(via topaz119)

March 4, 2013

The Dragon Building in Wat Samphran, Thailand by Jorge Macedo

The Dragon Building in Wat Samphran, Thailand by Jorge Macedo

(via soemily)

February 2, 2013
nprfreshair:

Klimt in Syria
via Montana Wojczuk

nprfreshair:

Klimt in Syria

via Montana Wojczuk

(via soemily)

February 1, 2013

ckck:

The European Space Agency and architect firm Foster + Partners are exploring the idea of building a Moon base using 3D printers and lunar soil.

December 17, 2012
Oh God I miss NYC so much. 
eyeheartnewyork:

“Enter Rest and Pray” - seen in the UES

Oh God I miss NYC so much. 

eyeheartnewyork:

“Enter Rest and Pray” - seen in the UES

November 28, 2012
good:

Thoroughly Modern Carriage House: Pop-Up Homes (and Jobs) for Homeless Londoners- by Adele Peters
How can a city add affordable apartments to a neighborhood with no room for new buildings? London architects Levitt Bernstein recently won a Building Trust competition with their new solution: pop-up modular homes inside unused parking garages. 
In Hackney, a low-income neighborhood in northeast London, it’s less and less common for residents to own cars. Public transportation has improved in the city, and cars are expensive. Rows of garages sit empty, making the streets look lifeless and encouraging crime. 

The design calls for pre-fab units that slip easily into unused garages and become temporary homes for homeless Londoners. The simple construction of the homes will become part of an apprenticeship program, giving some residents the unique opportunity to help build their own homes. 

The design includes a bedroom and bathroom, with communal kitchens, dining, and laundry in every fifth space. By using passive building techniques, no heating or cooling is needed. 
The homes are also designed to be temporary, because the neighborhood is changing and the garages may be removed for new buildings in a few years. Thanks to their modular design, the homes can easily be removed from the garages and reinstalled somewhere else.
Levitt Bernstein’s next steps will be working with local planning commissions and partnering NGOs to make the project real. In the meantime, a similar project is taking shape in Australia, where Mulloway Studios is transforming underused parking lots in Adelaide to homes for at-risk youth. Mulloway won an honorable mention in the Building Trust competition. 
Images 1 and 3 via Levitt Bernstein; Image 2 (cc) flickr user M&G

good:

Thoroughly Modern Carriage House: Pop-Up Homes (and Jobs) for Homeless Londoners
- by Adele Peters

How can a city add affordable apartments to a neighborhood with no room for new buildings? London architects Levitt Bernstein recently won a Building Trust competition with their new solution: pop-up modular homes inside unused parking garages. 

In Hackney, a low-income neighborhood in northeast London, it’s less and less common for residents to own cars. Public transportation has improved in the city, and cars are expensive. Rows of garages sit empty, making the streets look lifeless and encouraging crime. 

The design calls for pre-fab units that slip easily into unused garages and become temporary homes for homeless Londoners. The simple construction of the homes will become part of an apprenticeship program, giving some residents the unique opportunity to help build their own homes. 

The design includes a bedroom and bathroom, with communal kitchens, dining, and laundry in every fifth space. By using passive building techniques, no heating or cooling is needed. 

The homes are also designed to be temporary, because the neighborhood is changing and the garages may be removed for new buildings in a few years. Thanks to their modular design, the homes can easily be removed from the garages and reinstalled somewhere else.

Levitt Bernstein’s next steps will be working with local planning commissions and partnering NGOs to make the project real. In the meantime, a similar project is taking shape in Australia, where Mulloway Studios is transforming underused parking lots in Adelaide to homes for at-risk youth. Mulloway won an honorable mention in the Building Trust competition. 

Images 1 and 3 via Levitt BernsteinImage 2 (cc) flickr user M&G

(via merisunshine36)

November 26, 2012
eyeheartnewyork:

The Bank of America building reflecting against the Met Life building

eyeheartnewyork:

The Bank of America building reflecting against the Met Life building

October 31, 2012
cabinporn:

A salvaged window house in Christiania, Denmark.
From Tiny House Blog:

A town within a city, a rebel neighborhood within a well-ordered society. This is Christiania (Freetown), Denmark, a small community smack dab in the middle of Copenhagen, Denmark. Within this community are tiny houses, built by hand and with whatever materials are within reach. Christiania began in 1971 as an occupation of disused army barracks in the southern portion of Copenhagen near a lake. The 900 or so freethinking individuals who inhabit the area are a self governing community who refuse to pay taxes to the Danish government, run their own businesses and schools, live without cars on unpaved roads, build their own houses, restaurants and civil buildings and even have their own currency.

cabinporn:

A salvaged window house in Christiania, Denmark.

From Tiny House Blog:

A town within a city, a rebel neighborhood within a well-ordered society. This is Christiania (Freetown), Denmark, a small community smack dab in the middle of Copenhagen, Denmark. Within this community are tiny houses, built by hand and with whatever materials are within reach. Christiania began in 1971 as an occupation of disused army barracks in the southern portion of Copenhagen near a lake. The 900 or so freethinking individuals who inhabit the area are a self governing community who refuse to pay taxes to the Danish government, run their own businesses and schools, live without cars on unpaved roads, build their own houses, restaurants and civil buildings and even have their own currency.

October 11, 2012
cabinporn:

1920’s Hunting Camp in Northern Wisconsin restored by Patrick McGuire.
Submitted and photographed by Matthew Allen.

cabinporn:

1920’s Hunting Camp in Northern Wisconsin restored by Patrick McGuire.

Submitted and photographed by Matthew Allen.

September 17, 2012
Artists’ studios in London

Artists’ studios in London

(Source: fatbrides, via soemily)

September 13, 2012
allthingseurope:

Helsinki Cathedral, Finland (by marronnier)

allthingseurope:

Helsinki Cathedral, Finland (by marronnier)

(via soemily)

September 10, 2012
fromeuropewithlove:

Budapest, Hungary

fromeuropewithlove:

Budapest, Hungary

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