Saturday, February 2, 2013

Washington DC - January around town

Potomac River

Skating at the Washington Harbor

Phillips Collection - opened in 1921, first museum of modern art



street planting everywhere


Georgetown - M St Bank

M St

National Gallery of Art - East building. The NGA is an immense gallery displaying western art from the Middle Ages through to the 20th century, Renaissance works, Dutch masters, French Impressionists and all ages of American Art. John Russel Pope designed the Neo- Classical West building in 1941 and IM Pei the East building in 1978.

Chuck Close

 
National Gallery of Art - East building by  IM Pei


Monday, January 28, 2013

NYC Center for Architecture Foundation Education programs

The Center for Architecture, located just off Washington Square Park, offers a project based approach to teaching topics on the built environment in and outside the classroom.
Throughout the year they offer programs that include guided neighborhood walks, discussions, drawing, 2D design challenges and 3D model making.

For K -12 students they offer
LEARNING BY DESIGN : NY - Customized in-school residencies taught by design educators in collaboration with classroom teachers.

STUDENTDAY@THECENTER - Two hour practical workshops for school groups visiting the Center for Architecture.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT - Full and half day workshops for classroom teachers and administrators on built environment education teaching strategies, activities and curricula.

The Center also runs programs for families, after school, summer programs and week long design studios.

www.cfafoundation.org


Student work from recent workshops:








NYC Center for Architecture - The Edgeless School: Design for Learning


The Edgeless School: Design for Learning
  
Met with Catherine Teegarden, Director of Education at the Center for Architecture Foundation, AIA New York Chapter and viewed the current exhibition, The Edgeless School: Design for Learning, October 1, 2012 - and now extended to May 25, 2013.

The exhibition focuses on how technology is impacting on  the way in which architects and educators are approaching the design of learning environments.

What do you remember most from school: a favorite teacher, a great book, a singular moment of discovery? And what is the setting of that memory? Do you think the design of the space affected the learning experience?

The exhibition presents nineteen 21st century school buildings from across the US that blur distinctions between learning needs, approaches and environments.

Interview with Thomas Mellins, curator

www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nryHy_K66A














NYC - January around town

the Tick Tock Diner


Washington Square Hotel - Greenwich Village



The WSH was home to Bob Dylan and Joan Baez in the 60s

Washington Square Arch

WSH elevator tiles


MOMA Architecture and Design

MOMA Architecture and Design - sound panels 



perfectly good Xmas trees out for collection

specialty Popcorn Shop Greenwich Village

24hr Doggy Daycare and Gym, Biscuits and Bath
Greenwich Village Clock Tower


Church in Harlem

Sylvia's Soul Food Harlem
Sylvia



Sunday, January 27, 2013

Empowerhouse Passive House Design - Parsons The New School for Design


The Empowerhouse December 2012

Students of Parsons The New School for Design entered a design-build competition in the 2011 Solar Decathlon, with their entry, the Empowerhouse. The team won the affordibility section of the competition, with the passive house design costing $229, 000 US to build.
They went on to partner with Habitat for Humanity of Washington DC and the Department of Housing and Community Development to build the home specifically for the Washington DC neighbourhood of Deanwood. The house became a home for a family selected by Habitat for Humanity of Washington DC in December 2012. I plan to visit this project in the coming months.

“When we first entered into the Solar Decathlon competition, it did not make much sense to us to expend all the effort in designing and building a model house if it would not have a real impact,” said Orlando Velez, who went from working on the project as a student at The New School to being hired as the Operations Director full-time after graduation.
“All of us worked hard to make a house that’s amazingly energy efficient. It’s a really robust opportunity to teach the community about a whole host of environmental issues — green gardening, stormwater management, getting tax credits for using solar power, and more. It’s one of a kind. How could we just pack it up after the competition?”

See more at their website
http://parsit.parsons.edu/our-house/