Shared posts

13 Sep 20:57

11 Untranslatable Words From Other Cultures

by Ella Sanders
The relationship between words and their meaning is a fascinating one, and linguists have spent countless years deconstructing it, taking it apart letter by letter, and trying to figure out why there are so many feelings and ideas that we cannot even put words to, and that our languages cannot identify. Visit Maptia for more interesting posts.

The idea that words cannot always say everything has been written about extensively – as Friedrich Nietzsche said:

Words are but symbols for the relations of things to one another and to us; nowhere do they touch upon the absolute truth.

No doubt the best book we’ve read that covers the subject is ‘Through The Language Glass‘ by Guy Deutscher, which goes a long way to explaining and understanding these loopholes – the gaps which mean there are leftover words without translations, and concepts that cannot be properly explained across cultures.

Somehow narrowing it down to just a handful, we’ve illustrated 11 of these wonderful, untranslatable, if slightly elusive, words. We will definitely be trying to incorporate a few of them into our everyday conversations, and hope that you enjoy recognising a feeling or two of your own among them.

1. German: Waldeinsamkeit

1-web

A feeling of solitude, being alone in the woods and a connectedness to nature. Ralph Waldo Emerson even wrote a whole poem about it.

2. Italian: Culaccino

2-web

The mark left on a table by a cold glass. Who knew condensation could sound so poetic.

3. Inuit: Iktsuarpok

3-web

The feeling of anticipation that leads you to go outside and check if anyone is coming, and probably also indicates an element of impatience.

4. Japanese: Komorebi

4-web

This is the word the Japanese have for when sunlight filters through the trees – the interplay between the light and the leaves.

5. Russian: Pochemuchka

5-web

Someone who asks a lot of questions. In fact, probably too many questions. We all know a few of these.

6. Spanish: Sobremesa

6-web

Spaniards tend to be a sociable bunch, and this word describes the period of time after a meal when you have food-induced conversations with the people you have shared the meal with.

7. Indonesian: Jayus

7-web

Their slang for someone who tells a joke so badly, that is so unfunny you cannot help but laugh out loud.

8. Hawaiian: Pana Poʻo

8-web

You know when you forget where you’ve put the keys, and you scratch your head because it somehow seems to help your remember? This is the word for it.

9. French: Dépaysement

9-web

The feeling that comes from not being in one’s home country – of being a foreigner, or an immigrant, of being somewhat displaced from your origin.

10. Urdu: Goya

10-web

Urdu is the national language of Pakistan, but is also an official language in 5 of the Indian states. This particular Urdu word conveys a contemplative ‘as-if’ that nonetheless feels like reality, and describes the suspension of disbelief that can occur, often through good storytelling.

11. Swedish: Mångata

11-web

The word for the glimmering, roadlike reflection that the moon creates on water. TC mark

Uber is a mobile app that hails cabs for you. Click here, sign up, and get your first ride with Uber for free.

This post originally appeared at MAPTIA.

image – NAME


    






05 Sep 13:15

Space-wasting "vanity" skyscrapers revealed

by Amy Frearson

News: the world's vainest skyscrapers have been revealed in the latest report from the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, which reveals the unnecessary "vanity space" added to the top of the world's tallest buildings. (more...)

05 Sep 05:49

10 "How It's Made" Videos

by Chris Higgins
A. Kachmar

How it's made heaven

The Discovery/Science Channel show How It's Made is endless fun. It does exactly what it says: shows you how stuff is made. It's often as simple as visiting a factory and explaining the zillion-step process involved in manufacturing a particular object. There's something oddly satisfying about seeing all the thought and effort (even when it's automated) that goes into an everyday object. Tonight, some of my favorite clips from the show.

Highlighters

"When it comes to highlighter pens, drab colors are a writeoff!" Yuk yuk yuk. The surprise for me in this one was the inclusion of glitter.

Pasta

I never knew that much rotini could be made so fast. See also: the spaghetti harvest.

Mirrors

I am so glad I don't work around gigantic mirrors.

Hammocks

Now I want a hammock nap.

Contact Lenses

From the first How It's Made episode ever! I also enjoy how the clip keeps going after the contact lens bit is over. "Who can resist it? I can't."

Potato Chips

Fifteen minutes from raw potato to processed chip? Not too shabby.

Office Coffee Machines

I'm still skeptical about these things. I see them in offices or in the hallway at convention centers...and they just make me want to leave and get human-made coffee.

Butter

A goopy classic with plenty of "churning" jokes.

Wigs

Behold, the Wig Master!

Guitar Strings

I always wondered how wound strings were made. Neat!

05 Sep 05:19

Carefully Painted Rooms Give Illusion of Horizontal Stripes in Photos

by EDW Lynch

Painted Stripes by Benedict Morgan

To achieve the striped effect in his series “Painted Stripes,” photographer Benedict Morgan had the sets painstakingly painted to give the illusion of straight gray lines across the finished image. According to Morgan, he took his inspiration from darkroom test strips—test prints in which the image is exposed to varying degrees across the print, giving a striped appearance.

Painted Stripes by Benedict Morgan

Painted Stripes by Benedict Morgan

images via It’s Nice That

via It’s Nice That, PetaPixel

04 Sep 18:56

A Compilation Video of Cats Saying ‘Yum Yum’ and ‘Nom Nom Nom’ as They Eat

by Kimber Streams

Mr888Funny888 has created a compilation video of cats and kittens saying “yum yum” and “nom nom nom” as they eat. Some of the cats are a little grumpy and others are just plain adorable.

submitted via Laughing Squid Tips

04 Sep 10:58

Human Urine Used to Prepare Traditional Egg Delicacy in Chinese City of Dongyang

by Helen Morgan

virgin eggs, china, pee power, pee reuse, sustainable design, green ideas, adaptive reuse, food ideas

Pee power is often heralded as a sustainable design solution that can yield plant fertilizer or even power your cell – but using urine to prepare a delicious springtime snack is a whole different story. Chinese delicacies are renowned for being inventive, and these so called “virgin eggs” are no different. This snack has a long tradition in the city of Dongyang, where generations of people have prepared the eggs (or tong zi dan) using urine. While it may sound unappetizing, the virgin eggs are believed to provide essential nourishment and help boost resistance to illness. But they sure take a lot of work to prepare, and they involve collecting urine from boys under the age of 10.

virgin eggs, china, pee power, pee reuse, sustainable design, green ideas, adaptive reuse, food ideas virgin eggs, china, pee power, pee reuse, sustainable design, green ideas, adaptive reuse, food ideas

Read the rest of Human Urine Used to Prepare Traditional Egg Delicacy in Chinese City of Dongyang


Permalink | Add to del.icio.us | digg
Post tags: adaptive reuse, china, Chinese delicacies, cooking with urine, food ideas, green ideas, Pee Power, pee reuse, sustainable design, tong zi dan, urine eggs, virgin eggs, weird food


    






04 Sep 09:07

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

by paul0v2
Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

If you are fan of nice cars and good movies, chances are you have seen these cars on the movies before. But now they are completely illustrated by Spanish graphic designer Jesús Prudencio. Enjoy!

For more from Jesús Prudencio visit behance.net/jesusprudencio.

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

Car Illustrations from Famous Movies

04 Sep 05:06

Coming back to work after 14 days off.

03 Sep 11:30

It's Okay to Be Obese As Long as You Have Good Bacteria

by Hamilton Nolan

It's Okay to Be Obese As Long as You Have Good Bacteria

A ray of hope in the global battle against obesity today, courtesy of "The Flemish Gut Flora Project," one of Scandinavia's most respected gut flora projects.

Read more...


    






02 Sep 11:58

Lifelike Metal Bonsai Tree Sculptures by Kevin Champeny

by EDW Lynch

Metal bonsai tree sculptures by Kevin Champeny

Artist Kevin Champeny has handcrafted a series of beautiful bonsai tree sculptures out of metal wire and foil, without any glue or welding. For more photos check out “Rusted Oak” and “Copper Winter Grove.” We’ve written about Champeny’s wonderful sculptures several times in recent years.

Metal bonsai tree sculptures by Kevin Champeny

Metal bonsai tree sculptures by Kevin Champeny

submitted via Laughing Squid Tips

02 Sep 11:30

Bringing Historic Photos to Life

by AoiroStudio
Bringing Historic Photos to Life

Going through history is such a beautiful learning experience and also very fascinating. We've found some old black and white photos going through some bequtiful treatment, all of them are done by artists that use a mix of historical reference and of course some really good judgement for the colours. Hope you will enjoy them!

London 1945 | Original Photograph by Toni Frissell & Colorized by HansLucifer

All Rights to Toni Frissell

All Rights to Toni Frissell

May 6, 1937 | Colorized by Dana Keller

Circa 1860 | Colorized by Jordan J. Lloyd

Civil War, 1864 | Colorized by Sanna Dullaway

Circa 1939 | Colorized by zuzahin

Washington D.C, 1921 | Colorized by Sanna Dullaway

Los Angeles, 1953 | Original Photograph by Bob Willoughby & Colorized by traquea

All Rights to Bob Willoughby

Long Island, NY 1939 | Colorized by Edvos

Audrey Hepburn | Colorized by Dana Keller

1939 | Original Photograph by Dorothea Lange & Colorized by Jordan J. Lloyd

All Rights to Dorothea Lange

All Rights to Dorothea Lange

1933 | Original Photograph by Time & Life Pictures & Colorized by zuzahin

All Rights to Time & Life Pictures

1893 | Original Photograph by Napoleon Sarony & Colorized by Dana Keller

All Rights to Napoleon Sarony

1923 | Original Photograph by National Photo Company & Colorized by zuzahin

All Rights to National Photo Company

All Rights to National Photo Company

1939 | Colorized by BenAfleckIsAnOkActor

1880 | Colorized by Sanna Dullaway

1887 | Colorized by Dana Keller

Circa 1900 | Colorized by zuzahin

1956 | Original Photograph by Frank Worth Photo & Colorized by malakon

All Rights to Frank Worth Photo

All Rights to Frank Worth Photo




02 Sep 10:46

Build Your Own AdventurOS

by Ben Barrett

The basic concept behind AdventurOS is one that has fascinated me for years: build a game that interprets a computer’s file structure as level code, thus creating a unique but repeatable and controllable experience for everyone. Evelend Games have taken this and fitted it naturally within a fantasy metroidvania mold. Each room is built from a folder with doors used to go deeper into sub-folders, while monsters, chests and other oddities are spawned from the files within. Trailer with a more intricate explanation past the jump.

(more…)

02 Sep 05:34

Amazing Anagrams

by Miss Cellania

An anagram is when you rearrange the letters in a word or phrase to get a new word or phrase. Sometime the new phrase is a fitting commentary on the original phrase; sometimes it's just funny.

(Image credit: Flickr user yum9me)


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA becomes... DINE OUT: TASTE A 'MAC, FRIES.

TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA becomes... HUGE WATER TALE STUNS. END HAD YOU TENSE.

THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS becomes... THE CON BITES MALE FLESH.

THE AMERICAN DREAM becomes... MEET A DEAR, RICH MAN.

RUDOLPH, THE RED-NOSED REINDEER becomes... DEPLORED, HE IS THE ODDER RUNNER.

WALTER CRONKITE becomes... NETWORK RECITAL.

THE IRS becomes... THEIRS.

MADAM CURIE becomes... ME? RADIUM ACE.

NEW YORK YANKEES becomes... SNEAKY OWNER KEY.

RICHARD MILHOUSE NIXON becomes... HIS CLIMAX RUINED HONOR.

ROMEO AND JULIET becomes... ONE JILTED AMOUR.

MICKEY AND MINNIE MOUSE becomes... KID MICE MEAN MONEY IN U.S.

THE GREAT DEPRESSION becomes... OH, DO I SEE GDP SHATTERER?

THE PILLSBURY DOUGHBOY becomes... HI! BEHOLD BURLY GUY'S POT!

SLURPEE becomes... REPULSE.

SPAM LUNCHEON MEAT becomes... MEANS CHUM ON PLATE.


This list was reprinted with permission from the Bathroom Institute's book Uncle John's Heavy Duty Bathroom Reader. Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute has published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts.

If you like Neatorama, you'll love the Bathroom Reader Institute's books - go ahead and check 'em out!

02 Sep 04:37

A Backyard Room: Kenjo Outdoor Cottage

by Caroline Williamson

A Backyard Room: Kenjo Outdoor Cottage

Swedish company Kenjo is back with a new prefab called Friluftsstugan, or Outdoor Cottage. The new cottage was designed by Johan Svartnäs and comes complete with a movable roof. The upper roof slides out over the exterior wooden deck to make way for a covered outdoor space.

A Backyard Room: Kenjo Outdoor Cottage in architecture Category

Above you’ll see the roof halfway extended revealing the folding glass doors that slide out of the way to create an open room. Whether closed or open, you always have the deck available.

A Backyard Room: Kenjo Outdoor Cottage in architecture Category

The cottage comes preassembled and is lifted into the position you desire. It’s 15 square meters (or 161 square feet), plenty of room to fit a decent amount of furniture in. When the roof is extended, the covered space more than doubles.

A Backyard Room: Kenjo Outdoor Cottage in architecture Category

The interior of the enclosed room and underneath part of the roof is covered in untreated, white wood panels giving it a cozy look. The walls, ceiling, and floor are insulated for year-round use and the cabin is also outfitted with power so you can use the cottage for whatever you like.

A Backyard Room: Kenjo Outdoor Cottage in architecture Category

Photos by Jacob Nyremark, Jappz Productions.








01 Sep 12:43

I Can't Stop Staring at These Mesmerizing Robot Arms

by Eric Limer

I Can't Stop Staring at These Mesmerizing Robot Arms

Forget playing with toy cars; I just want to watch robots do it. In this GIF. For the rest of my life.

Read more...


    






30 Aug 20:44

Designing and Building with Bacteria Could be the Future of Architecture

by Lidija Grozdanic

Building With Bacteria, David Benjamin, The Living Thing, Columbia University biological research, scientific research, biofuels, fossil fuels, Cambridge University, bacteria houses, glucose economy, Living Foundries Program, biomimicry, bioengineering

The rate at which science has been evolving for the last few decades suggests it won’t be long before we’re able to build houses with bacteria. Manufacturing processes are close to replacing traditional factories with biological ones, where the tasks performed by digitally controlled machines will be taken by living, breathing and potentially even intelligent organisms.
Building With Bacteria, David Benjamin, The Living Thing, Columbia University biological research, scientific research, biofuels, fossil fuels, Cambridge University, bacteria houses, glucose economy, Living Foundries Program, biomimicry, bioengineering Building With Bacteria, David Benjamin, The Living Thing, Columbia University biological research, scientific research, biofuels, fossil fuels, Cambridge University, bacteria houses, glucose economy, Living Foundries Program, biomimicry, bioengineering Building With Bacteria, David Benjamin, The Living Thing, Columbia University biological research, scientific research, biofuels, fossil fuels, Cambridge University, bacteria houses, glucose economy, Living Foundries Program, biomimicry, bioengineering Building With Bacteria, David Benjamin, The Living Thing, Columbia University biological research, scientific research, biofuels, fossil fuels, Cambridge University, bacteria houses, glucose economy, Living Foundries Program, biomimicry, bioengineering Building With Bacteria, David Benjamin, The Living Thing, Columbia University biological research, scientific research, biofuels, fossil fuels, Cambridge University, bacteria houses, glucose economy, Living Foundries Program, biomimicry, bioengineering

Read the rest of Designing and Building with Bacteria Could be the Future of Architecture


Permalink | Add to del.icio.us | digg
Post tags: bacteria house, bacteria houses, bioengineering, biomimicry, Building With Bacteria, Cambridge University, Columbia University, Columbia University biological research, David Benjamin, fossil fuels, glucose economy, Living Foundries Program, scientific research, The Living Thing


    






30 Aug 20:36

Southern States Outlaw LEED Building Standards

by AD Editorial Team

The US Green Building Council’s federally adopted LEED certification system has come under legislative siege with lobbyists from the timber, plastics and chemical industries crying out, “monopoly!” Mississippi, Georgia and Alabama have led efforts to ban LEED, claiming the USGBC’s closed-door approach and narrow-minded material interests have shut out stakeholders in various industries that could otherwise aid in the sustainable construction of environmentally-sensitive buildings.

Most recently, Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi slipped in a last-minute amendment to both the Housing and Urban Development and Department of Transportation appropriation bills stating no tax money may be used to require implementation of any green building certification system other than a system that:

1) is based on voluntary consensus standards that have an American National Standard Institute (ANSI) designation ore were developed by an ANSI- audited designator, and

2) only excludes a building material if the exclusion is based on robust scientific data and risk assessment principles.

In accordance to Senator Wicker’s legislative rebuttal to a universally-accepted green building standard another, more industry-friendly alternative to LEED, made up of alliances such as the Society of Plastics Industry, the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers and the Society of Chemical Manufacturers and Affiliates have united to form the American High-Performance Buildings Coalition.

“The danger,” says coalition member, Mark Colltaz, “in endorsing LEED as the single acceptable green building rating system for the federal government is it can lead to the USGBC’s further monopolization.” Consensus-based processes and voluntary building standards, claim the coalition members, would make up for the “scientific shortcomings” LEED has espoused by not awarding additional points in its 100-point rating system to the use of plastics and timber, among other materials.

However, earlier this summer, the USGBC — made up of 13,000 members from 46 countries and territories, including a diverse pool of industry representatives from manufacturing, education and construction — affirmed LEED’s continuing prominence as the green-building industry standard by voting to implement the newest version to the rating-system, LEED v4. The final tally was a resounding 86 percent in favor of the update. While this may not be a “voluntary consensus” according to Senator Wicker, 86 percent is a resounding victory for LEED.

Where do you stand on this issue? Take a look at the pros and cons of LEED and let us know what your thoughts in the comment section below.

Reference: USGBC, Building Green, Conversational AlabamaAmendment, American High-Performance Building Coalition, Inhabit, The Atlantic Cities

29 Aug 15:28

Does Low-Fat Yogurt Make You Fat? [Video]

It sounds like an oxymoron but low-fat yogurt may be more fattening than you think--at least for some people under some conditions. That is just one of the counterintuitive ideas behind new research to study the effects of a physiological condition known as insulin resistance in driving weight gain and obesity. Depending on what investigators find, some pretty conventional beliefs about what ultimately is fueling the current global epidemic of obesity--calories or carbohydrates--may need a bit of readjusting.

[More]
29 Aug 10:37

This Bill Watterson Tribute Has All the Life Wisdom You'll Ever Need

by Whitson Gordon

This Bill Watterson Tribute Has All the Life Wisdom You'll Ever Need

We share a lot of life advice here at Lifehacker, but this comic pretty much sums up everything you need to know, courtesy of Zen Pencils and Bill Watterson's famous 1990 Kenyon graduation speech. It's the best thing you'll read all day.

Read more...

28 Aug 19:21

This Titanium Watch Can Tell You When It's Losing Accuracy

by Andrew Liszewski

This Titanium Watch Can Tell You When It's Losing Accuracy

To watch collectors and aficionados, mechanical movements are particularly desirable since they best represent the fine craftsmanship and precise engineering that has gone into watch and clock making for centuries. But ironically, even with today's technology, mechanical movements don't keep perfect time. They gain and lose seconds as they lose power, so Urwerk has created a watch that's smart enough to know when it's not accurate, letting you make adjustments as needed.

Read more...


    






28 Aug 11:59

The most mysterious radio signal in the world

by Rob Beschizza


The most mysterious village in Russia.

At The Kernel, James Cook writes about UVB-76, a "numbers station" emanating from Russia at 4625 kHz, broadcasting weirdness so perfect as to invite disbelief. One recent thrill: "Command 135 initiated," uttered on January 24, 2013.

The modern popularity of UVB-76 can be traced to /x/, 4chan’s non-archiving message board devoted to discussion of paranormal activity and unexplained mysteries. Just as 4chan created memes like Pedobear and Rickrolling, the online image board served to bring UVB-76 before the eyes of a host of internet users. Online chatter about the signal increased in 2010, as bizarre broadcasts were issued on an almost monthly basis. Snippets of Swan Lake were played, a female voiced counted from one to nine, a question mark was transmitted in Morse code and strange telephone conversations were overheard by the receiver.

I hope that it's somehow a performance, an art-hoax that's gone on for decades. But evidence points to Russian intelligence, going about its business.

    






28 Aug 11:49

Yuuichi Ito's Amazing Latte Art

by John Farrier

Yuuichi Ito, a barista who works at an Italian restaurant in Ichinomiya City, Japan, is an impressive latte artist. He's created a vast portfolio of works featuring Disney, Peanuts and anime characters--many of them in 3D. You can view more at the link.

Link | Photos: IT Media

28 Aug 10:16

New Software Makes Skype Chats Way Less Awkward

by Adam Clark Estes

New Software Makes Skype Chats Way Less Awkward

Everybody who's ever done a video chat has felt the frustration. You call your pal using Skype or whatever so that you can see their face and they can see yours, but whoops, you're not even looking at each other. You're looking at the screen so your eyes are slightly off-center. Annoying! But maybe not for long.

Read more...


    






28 Aug 09:31

GIF | Tumblr

by jacobhuff
28 Aug 09:31

Ω

by mccluskeykat
28 Aug 07:22

Scientists Say They've Confirmed A New Element

The super-heavy element with atomic number 115 has not yet been named. Scientists in Sweden say they have confirmed earlier data from Russian scientists.

» E-Mail This     » Add to Del.icio.us

27 Aug 11:47

Кинокадры в GIF (Интернет-журнал ETODAY)

by kirill
26 Aug 18:22

So You Want to Learn About: The Basics

by John Hill
The "So You Want to Learn About" series highlights books focused on a particular theme: think "socially responsible architecture" and "phenomenology," rather than broad themes like "housing" or "theory." Therefore the series aims to be a resource for finding decent reading materials on certain topics, born of a desire to further define noticeable areas of interest in the books I review. And while I haven't reviewed every title, I am familiar with each one; these are not blind recommendations.

It's late August, meaning that students are heading to architecture schools, either returning or going for the first time. The books collected below are geared to the latter, though it's a long enough list that all architecture students in their early years should find something of value. With sufficient interest, architecture can take hold of a person for a lifetime. Therefore it's beneficial to start off on the right foot with some quality books establishing architecture's basics.

Classics:
about03-1.jpg

Architecture: Form, Space, and Order
By Francis D.K. Ching
Wiley, 3rd edition 2007 (Amazon)
The form and layout (from landscape to portrait, and from handwritten to a Ching-like font) may have changed since the first edition since 1979, but the focus on "the basic elements, systems, and orders that constitute a physical work of architecture" remains. Like Ching's Building Construction Illustrated, this one is indispensable for beginning students in architecture.

Experiencing Architecture 
By Steen Eiler Rasmussen
MIT Press, 2nd edition 1964 (Amazon)
Ideally a good architecture book for students is intelligent and accessible. In the preface Danish architect Steen Eiler Rasmussen states, "I have endeavored to write the present volume in such a way that even an interested teenager might understand it." With depth of history and clear prose, he ultimately promotes deriving pleasure form architecture, something all architects should try to achieve.

A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction 
By Christopher Alexander, et. al.
Oxford University Press, 1977 (Amazon)
When I was in undergrad architecture school in the early 1990s—they heyday of Deconstructivist architecture—Christopher Alexander's bible-like Pattern Language was out of fashion. Many architects still find the book overly prescriptive, but the methodical insight into people's use and appreciation of architecture at all scales is still influential, giving students an understanding of the impacts of design and space on people's emotions and actions.

Precedents:
about03-2.jpg

Key Buildings of the 20th Century: Plans, Sections and Elevations 
By Richard Weston
W. W. Norton, 2010 (Amazon)
Considering that architects reappropriate rather than invent, it's important to learn as much as possible from historical and modern precedents. Norton's Key Architecture Series presents modern and contemporary buildings as photos but more importantly as the two-dimensional drawings architects still depend on for learning and for expressing their designs: plans, sections, and elevations. Each book also comes with a CD-ROM for looking at the drawings in PDF and CAD.

Precedents in Architecture: Analytic Diagrams, Formative Ideas, and Partis 
By Roger H. Clark
Wiley, 4th edition 2012 (Amazon / Review)
Early architecture studios teach analysis, not just rote redrawing of precedents. This book is like an analytical cheat sheet as it compares historical and modern buildings via circulation, hierarchy, symmetry, geometry, and so forth. It would be great if the diagrams were larger, but the breadth of buildings in one place makes up for that deficiency.

Buildings Without Architects: A Global Guide to Everyday Architecture 
By John May
Rizzoli, 2010 (Amazon / Review)
Ideally architects are influenced by buildings that fall outside of the traditional confines of architectural culture—prehistorical buildings, vernacular architecture, aboriginal dwellings, what can be called buildings without architects. (Bernard Rudofsky's earlier, visually rich Architecture Without Architects is of course also valuable in this vein.) May's guide is set up like a dictionary or encyclopedia, with clear drawings highlighting the myriad of examples around the world we can learn from.

History/Theory:
about03-3.jpg

Understanding Architecture 
By Juhani Pallasmaa and Robert McCarter
Phaidon, 2012 (Amazon / Review)
Even though many schools of architecture have reduced history classes, learning about what became before us is crucial, as is learning about architectural history beyond authorship, dates, and other rote memorization. Pallasmaa and McCarter focus on a thematic approach to architecture rather than a chronological one, prioritizing experience over everything else; this is accentuated by the way the photos are keyed to plans, so readers can get a sense of how one moves through the buildings.

Thinking about Architecture: An Introduction to Architectural Theory 
By Colin Davies
Laurence King, 2011 (Amazon / Review)
Architectural theory (or what has come be known by that phrase) can be incredibly dense, often to the discouragement of students and professionals interested in architectural ideas. By focusing on the ideas rather than the people expressing them, Davies made a highly accessible introduction to different ways of thinking about architecture's relationship to people and the earth we occupy.

What Is Architecture? An Essay on Landscapes, Buildings, and Machines
By Paul Shepheard
Museum of Modern Art, 1994 (Amazon)
What follows from the apparently simple question of "What is architecture?" is typically more questions. It is the type of philosophical question that prompts discussion more than a definitive answer. Shepheard wrote the book when the prevailing answer to the question was, "everything," but he opts for an alternative through a fresh and intriguing narrative.

The Elements of Architecture:
about03-4.jpg

Chambers for a Memory Palace 
By Donlyn Lyndon and Charles W. Moore
MIT Press, 1996 (Amazon)
One way of understanding architecture is through elements—physical constructions that exhibit similar formal and spatial tendencies. This book explores architecture through the correspondences of Lyndon and Moore, as they discuss how architectural elements make places memorable, and how we use our imagination to structure our own environments for remembering.

How Architecture Works: A Humanist's Toolkit 
By Witold Rybczynski
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013 (Amazon)
In this forthcoming book, Rybczynski (pronounced Rib-chin-skee) presents a layperson's guide to architecture, moving from the general (ideas and the setting) to the specific (details and taste). The author embraces all types of architecture, though his favored positions can be hinted throughout and are made clear in the last two chapters. Regardless, he gives readers a toolkit for understanding and appreciating the buildings around us.

Opening Spaces: Design as Landscape Architecture
By Hans Loidl and Stefan Bernard
Birkhauser, 2003 (Amazon / Review)
Defining space through elements is hardly the sole purview of buildings, and this graphically rich guide to landscape architecture is particularly helpful in explaining how space is abstractly defined both inside and out. It's a hard to find, out-of-print book worth searching for, but one that the publisher should really consider publishing again, 10 years after its release.

Series:
about03-5.jpg

Architectural Drawing 
By David Dernie
Laurence King, 2010 (Amazon)
Many publishers gear books specifically to students, presenting them in series that tap into various practical areas. Laurence King's Portfolio Skills series touches on modelmaking, CAD, landscape architecture, and drawing. The titles benefit from clarity, helpful step-by-step illustrations, and a variety of examples illustrating how to do this or that.

Model Making 
By Megan Werner
Princeton Architectural Press, 2011 (Amazon / Review)
PAPress's Architecture Briefs series runs the gamut from philosopy and writing to sustainable design and material strategies. Megan Werner's title on making models is particularly good example, highlighting how different materials can be shaped to achieve different ends. Computer renderings be damned! Architectural models are still an integral part of architectural education and expression.

The Fundamentals of Architecture 
By Lorraine Farrelly
AVA Publishing, 2007 (Amazon / Review)
AVA's Fundamentals series focuses on the process of architecture, how a project moves from concept to design development and beyond to completion. The books look at architecture but also landscape architecture and urban design. Since spring 2013 AVA's books are published under Fairchild Books, an imprint of Bloomsbury Press.
26 Aug 18:14

Whoa, This Sofa Balances On One Leg Thanks to Spacecraft Technology

by Michael Hession

Part of what artists are great at is re-contextualizing technology in weird and often amazing ways. That is exactly what artist Jacob Tonski did for a recent installation that involved balancing a 19th century sofa upright on one leg. The result is Inception-like wonderment.

Read more...


    






25 Aug 09:40

Alleged Pimp Arrested Wearing an "I Make Pimpin' Look Easy" T-Shirt

by Gabrielle Bluestone