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space junk

junkland

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public pianos


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Unlike many avant-garde artists of the New York school, the painters most centrally identified with the cool style in California don’t seem to have been trying to revolutionize their medium. An early label for the work of the four best-known practitioners — Karl Benjamin, Frederick Hammersley, Lorser Feitelson and John McLaughlin — was “abstract classicism,” which overstates their conservatism but highlights the formal equilibrium they sought.

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opium bed


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man do i hate PO-MO (permission to bulldoze it all granted - is that so wrong?)


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An exhibition opens this week that celebrates one of the unsung heroes of 20th century design: the structural engineer. The show, titled Unseen Hands: 100 Years of Structural Engineering, will be at the V&A museum in London until September as part of the Institution of Structural Engineers’ 100th anniversary celebrations.

Sarah Buck, IStructE’s president, says: “Generally, galleries focus on aesthetics, but this exhibition is very definitely about the principles and techniques that make world-class structures actually work.” Unseen Hands is a mix of photographs, models, original drawings and videos centred around three themes: building high, enclosing space and spanning voids. Here’s a sneak preview …

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Moisei Ginzburg's constructivist masterpiece, Narkomfin, has been attracting international attention ever since it was built in 1930. A classic example of a utopian vision of communal living that slowly backfired into state housing, the principles of its sleek design, where form followed function, were taught in architecture schools worldwide.

In the late 1980s, Narkomfin entered the world stage again, but for reasons less optimistic. The walls were crumbling and the smooth, ship-like facade had faded into an aging mess, where cladding fell away from different parts of the exterior and exposed its steel skeleton.

The building is in an even worse state today, but an exhibition of Ginzburg's work, at the Shchusev Museum of Architecture, opened with good news for preservationists. It was announced that MIAN property group would be restoring the building to its former glory and turning it into a boutique hotel. They will be working closely on the project with Alexei Ginzburg, grandson of the original designer.

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lucy leave

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stair down


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IBM building 25 destroyed by fire


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Until now, it looked like the Arizona desert would swallow a mid-century modern house designed by Phoenix architect Alfred Beadle.

Last month, Lynda Maze, owner of the 1958 White Gates House, convinced a Phoenix court to give her time to renovate her blighted property, which she had considered razing two years ago. The city retracted two blight citations that neighbors had filed against the house.

"I didn't realize it would take possession of my body," Maze says of the White Gates House. "I'm not a historian, but I just got the house, spent some time up there and decided, 'I've got to do something.'"

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yesterday i noticed the first blossoms on our forsythia popping on a low lying branch. not much change today with the rain and all. last year i posted this on march 31st.


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HVAC links thread


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63.02 house

more tokyo reports
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biketree

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Leonard A. Lauder, the cosmetics executive and chairman of the Whitney Museum of American Art, said on Tuesday that his art foundation would give the museum $131 million, the biggest donation in the Whitney’s 77-year history.

The bulk of the money — $125 million — will go toward the Whitney’s endowment, boosting it to $195 million from $70 million, Mr. Lauder said in a telephone interview.

The Whitney called the gift one of the largest donations ever to a New York museum’s endowment. Mr. Lauder said that the money required the museum not to sell its Marcel Breuer building on Madison Avenue at 75th Street for an extended period, although he declined to specify how long.

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louis kahn esherick house for sale


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Basic Photography for Architects


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urban archeology made bathroom sink counters tops from 30" x 58" carra marble slabs salvaged from the abbey aldrich rockefeller sculpture garden renovation at moma. from todays nyt design magazine. sounds like a few loose slabs got sold off as is for gardens, etc. (those i covet)


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odd take on a murphy bed

entire apartments furniture in a box

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A mountainside house being auctioned in Tennessee is perfect for anyone tolerant of gawkers and fascinated with outer space: It's built like a flying saucer.


The home "landed" on a twisting road leading to Chattanooga's Signal Mountain in 1970 -- just after television executives grounded the run of the original "Star Trek" series. It will be sold to the highest bidder Saturday.

The circular house -- ultramodern when it was built -- is ringed with small square windows and directional lights and perched on six "landing gear" legs. It has multiple levels, three bedrooms, two baths and an entrance staircase that retracts with the push of a button.

Terry Posey, an agent with Crye-Leike Auctions of Cleveland, Tennessee, said the current owner has had the property only four months and didn't want to comment. Posey posted an e-Bay ad and said he already has a $100,000 bid.
SOLD $135K

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american experience: the carter family will the circle be unbroken

poor valley clinch mountain
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ovation tv's harry smith page

old weird america
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poop-freeze

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