My building concept deals with the ideas of conditional transparency and opacity. Glass is transparent at all angles, and concrete is opaque, but by constructing planar elements of thick concrete, thin aluminum and glass vertically and horizontally, moments of "gray", essentially experienced translucency, can be achieved.
Though this strategy could work with nearly any program in theory (as any solid concept should) my concept is particularly suited to a program with a blend of introverted and extroverted spaces. Experienced, free flowing transparency is important for all areas of public meeting and interchange, where as a lab space should experience internal transparency, folded inward away from the outside. And finally, office spaces should feel completely private for discussions and feel open and inviting during office hours. Day lighting an extroverted space is fairly straightforward, as a lot of literal transparency of materials is necessary. Composing an introverted space, on the otherhand, with a pleasing relationship with the exterior poses more of a challenge.
Suppose two parallel opaque walls of equal length. When inside that space, views outward are only forward and back, but are otherwise uninhibited. Passing by this space, however, prohibits any experience of the interior space until one's right on top of it. Therefore, anyone inside the space experiences pleasant exterior views coupled with experienced privacy and intimacy with relatively few gestures.
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Running a day
I thought up a pretty awesome way to have a productive way. All I needed was a stop watch and a notepad.
Say I have 3-4 important things to get done, Call them Task A-D. I wrote down, in hour blocks, one particular task for each hour. If something takes more than an hour, I allotted multiple blocks. I structured it based on what I would want to do most after the previous task.
12-1 A
1-2 C
2-3 B
3-4 A
4-5 D
5-6 A
6-7 C
And so on...
The key here isn't to make sure you do the task at that time, but to NOT do the other tasks at that time; I literally don't allow myself to touch any of the other tasks. This offers a real relief, because often my work suffers because I spend so much energy worrying about everything else I have to do. If I'm hopping from island to island, and I can take solice in knowing the other tasks will get their block, I can really focus.
I'm writing this on a recreation block.
Say I have 3-4 important things to get done, Call them Task A-D. I wrote down, in hour blocks, one particular task for each hour. If something takes more than an hour, I allotted multiple blocks. I structured it based on what I would want to do most after the previous task.
12-1 A
1-2 C
2-3 B
3-4 A
4-5 D
5-6 A
6-7 C
And so on...
The key here isn't to make sure you do the task at that time, but to NOT do the other tasks at that time; I literally don't allow myself to touch any of the other tasks. This offers a real relief, because often my work suffers because I spend so much energy worrying about everything else I have to do. If I'm hopping from island to island, and I can take solice in knowing the other tasks will get their block, I can really focus.
I'm writing this on a recreation block.
Monday, March 8, 2010
Favorite scores
Edward Scissorhands
Back to the Future
Star Wars
Jurassic Park
Star Trek (2009)
Lord of the Rings
Harry Potter
Memento
Did I miss any? What are yours?
Back to the Future
Star Wars
Jurassic Park
Star Trek (2009)
Lord of the Rings
Harry Potter
Memento
Did I miss any? What are yours?
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