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100 shipping containers exhibit kaohsiuns city



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steel this house




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The Great Exhibition at the Crystal Palace




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my archive is now complete going back to the flood




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dead media




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Les Amours de la Pleuvre by Pierre Henry - Musique Concrete soundtracks to experimental short films Vol III comp




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melted men





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berm




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get hugged




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Kahn man




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man ray



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that's mr. duchamp




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Maya Lin talks about the Ground Zero tribute.



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"When Ludwig Mies van der Rohe came to London in 1959 to receive the Royal Gold Medal for Architecture, he was asked if he would like to visit some British buildings. His hosts imagined the great man might like to see the iconoclastic work of rising stars such as James Stirling or Alison and Peter Smithson. But Mies, the son of a Prussian stonemason, was keen to visit just the one building, in rural Wiltshire."

Weald and Downland open air museum




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the equivalents stieglitz





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major thread in the dymaxion newsgroup on shipping container housing




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sean godsell's australian shipping container future shack




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3 story (eleven 40' units) shipping container office building




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praticio pouchulu




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"Mysterious chalk symbols have appeared almost overnight in London, believed to be created by a gang of nerds set on revealing the city's wireless hot spots.

"Warchalking", as it is known, derives from the practice of tramps in 1930s depression-hit America leaving chalk messages to each other to indicate where they could get food and shelter.

Today, the set of symbols tells other geeks, or "Wibos" as they are known, where they can get a free wireless internet connection.

Symbols written on the pavement indicate whether the wireless network is open, closed or encrypted. Above the symbol is the network's Service Set ID (SSID), which is used to identify the particular wireless Lan to be accessed. Below the symbol is the amount of bandwidth on offer."



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raging slab




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house buses and house trucks





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museum of plagiarism




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sears mail-order bungalo home preservation




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