cover photo



blog archive

main site

artwork

bio






Schwarz



View current page
...more recent posts

dirty frank

And maybe he’s right. He did indeed live though an interesting time in Chicago’s history, evidenced by the recent surge of literature tracing the era. Not only "Loving Frank" and "Death in a Prairie House" open those doors—Erik Larson’s "The Devil in the White City," of course, is the definitive take on 1890s Chicago, and Karen Abbott’s "Sin in the Second City," about the Everleigh Club, the brothel of brothels, is causing quite a stir this year.

[link] [add a comment]

The [canal] flushing is necessary because, while most of Amsterdam’s 2,800 houseboats have running water, electricity and gas heat, few are connected to sewerage systems and continue to spill their waste into the canals.

The houseboats’ lack of toilet training is their dirty little secret, one that sits uncomfortably with a new generation of wealthier, more demanding owners who are leading a gentrification of the houseboat scene. In the process, they are displacing the less affluent boat people, many of whom are relics of the 1960s and 1970s era of flower power now struggling to pay the upkeep on their boats.

[link] [add a comment]

today in concrete :



George Caria feels quite safe in his new offices at 149 N. Stone Ave., where the city of Tucson has restored a former bank building to its 1950s concrete-bunker glory.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~


There is no doubt that modernist architecture can be hard to love, and hard to defend. Few people miss the sink estates, the monolithic offices on podiums that mercilessly broke up the ancient street plans of our city centres, the rain-stained concrete or the brutal multi-storey car parks.


~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~


Mill House Marco Gorini of Strato Cucine

[link] [add a comment]

mexico 6 x 40' container house in progress

links to more pics / so far pretty fugly. hope it takes a turn for the better
[link] [3 comments]

group photo


[link] [6 comments]

quarry resort

via bc
[link] [add a comment]

sinkhole via jz


[link] [1 comment]

calder and braniff


[link] [1 comment]

bump


[link] [add a comment]

johns newest after calder mobile


[link] [2 comments]

dylan theme time radio hour


[link] [add a comment]

Sherrie Levine’s After Cézanne


[link] [add a comment]

nest d and d


[link] [add a comment]

school house electric company


[link] [add a comment]


We’ve seen shipping containers used for prefab housing before, and now here’s another function to add to the list for the reclaimed industrial wonder units: deployable digital datacenters. SUN Microsystems, a tech company committed to a forward-thinking corporate eco responsibility program, has launched Project Blackbox, a virtualized, mobile, easily-deployable datacenter that delivers a slew of resources- energy, space, and performance efficiencies- to locations as diverse as deserts, disaster zones, even Mars.

Project Blackbox applies Sun’s trademark innovation, network computing infrastructure and HPC expertise to engineer out complexity and provide a better datacenter. The container is essentially a prefab tech center that offers rapid deployment, high-density computing, flexibility, scalability, and economic stimulation at a low cost and maximum efficiency. So far Blackbox has been employed in a variety of contexts- from oil rigs for seismic modeling and windmills to underdeveloped rural areas to offsite corporate locations.

Sun has proven their commitment to both green and humanitarian-focused technology and design initiatives, from their partnership with Architecture for Humanity on the Open Architecture Network to their own corporate commitment, called Eco Responsibility. Here’s a tech company that is on the cutting edge of innovation, striving to be both forward-thinking and responsible.

[link] [1 comment]

If you are an Eichler fan, and I know you are, you will certainly dig this long lost footage of the Universal International News from the 1950's. It features Joseph Eichler's X-100 steel prototype home, a mid century marvel with all the modern bells and whistles from 1956.

[link] [add a comment]

say wat?


[link] [add a comment]

Riot on Sunset Strip: Rock'n'Roll's Last Stand in 60s Hollywood with author Domenic Priore and special guest Michael Stuart-Ware. At Booksmith Sanfrancisco, Ca 7/6/07

Priore shows how this legendary scene (the Byrds, Doors, Buffalo Springfield, Mothers of Invention, etc...) came together, burned briefly but brilliantly, and then fell apart after the Summer of Love. Domenic Priore's remarkable new book evokes a raucous, revolutionary time in American culture. Joining Priore for this special event is Michael Stuart-Ware of LOVE, one of the Los Angeles bands profiled in the book.

priore with gaylord fields on wfmu (stream)

the book on amazon


[link] [2 comments]

mimeo. custom printers located in memphis, they take online digital orders up to 10pm eastern time and FE for 8 am next day delivery (international!).


[link] [add a comment]

castig

Toio, Archille Castiglioni

[link] [add a comment]

1171. Modern “Kiva” Fireplace, c.1960s, white enameled sheet steel, metal trim band marked “Preway”, 41”w x 30”d x 97”h, very good condition 900-1200
nice orange one on ebay
[link] [3 comments]

fugar fireplace


[link] [add a comment]

The band takes center stage, the fans surge forward and the sheer power of the crowd’s excitement amplifies the sound of their favorite songs — providing enough energy, in fact, to move a train.

It could happen in the Crowd Farm, a conceptual design by two graduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that seeks to milk the mechanical movement of hundreds or thousands of assembled people to produce electrical power.

In principal, a large-scale version of the setup could harness the collective energy of commuters bustling toward subway stations, shoppers marching through mega malls or fans dancing at a rock concert. Already, the students have shown how the simple act of sitting on a stool can generate enough power to turn on four LED lights.

[link] [1 comment]

Wendy O' Williams and Lemmy circa 1982 - Stand By Your Man (MP3)


[link] [add a comment]