Browser: Sutherland Lyall perspicaciously trawls the architectural cyberwaves. (View).Ah, research in its time Australian architects It may never be fully completed or, depending on its its nature, it may be that it can never be completed. However, new and revised entries in the list are always welcome. have the built environment division of the CSIRO CSIRO Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organization (Australia) and Britain its BRE (Business Rules Engine) Software that automates policies and procedures within an organization, whether legal, internal or operational. The use of a rules engine (BRE) requires placing the company rules in an external repository that can be easily reviewed rather than , the Building Research Establishment. Once an independent government body, BRE is now owned by the Foundation for the Built Environment, a not for profit company limited by guarantee which involves 500 firms and bodies to do with construction and building. BRE has been the primary source of serious building research for 80 years in the UK and although it has gone a bit commercial (and has an associated pay-for testing organization, BRE Certification) it is still the best in Britain. It's at www.bre.co.uk. CSIRO is Australia's once, and perhaps still, wonderful Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization and it's at www.csiro.au. It was wonderful because it used to research really arcane stuff and publish it blithely. Its site has plainly been designed by a scientist with nationalistic yellow and green headline strips. And it's pretty clunky and unhelpful: you are advised to click on Current Research whe n you want to know more about Our Capabilities, there's just one customer story which is about 82 per cent customer satisfaction -- really up-to-date December 2000. Recent Achievements are represented by five little reports to do with transport and Barry Little BA, MBA MBA abbr. Master of Business Administration Noun 1. MBA - a master's degree in business Master in Business, Master in Business Administration is the entire contents of the People page. Er that's enough please. Mind you, I tried a search for 'effect of daylight on unpainted timber' a topic on which I know BRE has done work -- and drew a blank. So too CSIRO. Whingeing but not Poms Lingering in the far antipodes Antipodes, islands, New Zealand Antipodes (ăntĭp`ədēz), rocky uninhabited islands, 24 sq mi (62 sq km), South Pacific, c.550 mi (885 km) SE of New Zealand, to which they belong. there is the site In The Mind of The Architect (www.abc.net.au/ architecture/default.htm) which is not just an exposition of the creeping Teutonic capitalization of non-proper nouns but seems to be a web version of an Australian Broadcasting Commission programme called In The Mind of The Architect. I can't make out whether this was a programme about a bunch of people letting off self-important steam around the peripheries of the idea of architecture or not. It's largely text, with a few perfectly relevant pix and some rather amateur animation fronting inarticulate inarticulate /in·ar·tic·u·late/ (in?ahr-tik´u-lat) 1. not having joints; disjointed. 2. uttered so as to be unintelligible; incapable of articulate speech. professions of both faith in the sacred art Sacred art is imagery intended to uplift the mind to the spiritual. It can be an object to be venerated not for what it is but for what it represents; Roman Catholics are taught that such venerated objects are more properly called sacramentals. and deep distrust (even before it was finished) of that amazing close-uppable timber slat beach house by Sean Godsell (AR December 2000). You get the early impression that OzArchs feel really beleaguered be·lea·guer tr.v. be·lea·guered, be·lea·guer·ing, be·lea·guers 1. To harass; beset: We are beleaguered by problems. 2. To surround with troops; besiege. : I always thought it was the Poms who were the whingers and took themselves far too seriously. Odd then that there are so many terrific buildings to be seen, almost incidenta lly, on this site otherwise maxed out on words, From the mug shots it's clear that the really en-vogue hair style for antipodean an·tip·o·des pl.n. 1. Any two places or regions that are on diametrically opposite sides of the earth. 2. (used with a sing. or pl. verb) Something that is the exact opposite or contrary of another; an antipode. architects is a number one razor cut. You still see them in trendy London eateries. But not as often as before. A Holmes in every house There's that British architect-artist society over whose exhibitions the London architectural press has an annual snigger. The mild ridicule is the outcome of a sweet little illusion among many architects that if they really put their minds to it they would inevitably emerge as not half competent artists. You, I and the press know better. Happily there are some exceptions and one of the stupendously stu·pen·dous adj. 1. Of astounding force, volume, degree, or excellence; marvelous. 2. Amazingly large or great; huge. See Synonyms at enormous. obvious ones is the gentle SuperRealist, Andrew Holmes, who doubles as visiting prof at Berlin and legendary unit tutor at leading UK school, the Bartlett. Holmes paints those extraordinary trucks which snort across the great highways of the US: bright shiny paint, gleaming chrome, intricately perforated radiators and hard reflections. And he does it all with Derwent coloured pencils and the odd bit of airbrush airbrush Pneumatic device for developing a fine, small-diameter spray of paint, protective coating, or liquid colour (see aerosol). The airbrush can be a pencil-shaped atomizer used for various highly detailed activities such as shading drawings and retouching for the flat skies. Obsessive-compulsive, you might say. Even perverse. But the final images are of incredible power. Take a look for yourself at www.realisticpictures.co.uk. Holmes is also a brilliant phot ographer and a bunch of his photos are for sale along with prints, drawings and several videos. But download for your own use free. Plug In, Walk that City With the announcement that seminal British group, Archigram, is to get this year's British Royal Gold Medal The Royal Gold Medal for architecture is awarded annually by the Royal Institute of British Architects on behalf of the British monarch, in recognition of an individual's or group's substantial contribution to international architecture. there has been a small torrent of harrumphs and snorts of indignation from retired colonel architects resident in Tun-bridge Wells plus of course the architectural Creationists. There has been an exhibition touring the world for some years, most recently in Rotterdam, but although there's quite a lot (3000 plus entries) on the web it's mostly fairly bitsy bit·sy adj. bit·si·er, bit·si·est Bitty. [Alteration of bitty.] . There is a Rice University site, www.owlnet.rice.edu/%7 Emdbader/arch346/archigram/archigram4.html which is a bit patched together and partly lifted from Peter Cook's 1974 book. But in its rough old way, this site is quite good. It has some links to excellent recent articles but not, I think, Eleanora Louis and Tony Stooss's introduction to the travelling exhibition catalogue (at www.ati.ufg.ac.at/%7 Eworkcult/e3l5ar.htm). There are also some Archigram images at www.arcspace.com/architects/archigram/ -- and there's a very useful review of the Rotterda m show at www.archined.nl/endex.html at the excellent Dutch architecture site Archined about which we have earlier delivered enthusiastic encomiums. Under construction is another Archigram site at www.archigram.net and there's an extremely sad Japanese architectural firm which has appropriated the name. Mind you nobody looking at its architecture would mistake it for the real thing. Last resort I'm sure this has tremendous prospects in the office of the future. It's the [pounds sterling]3000 Cye, a floor crawling two wheeled robot which you can link up with a trailer to form a four wheel coffee or mail wagon -- providing you like coffee and post delivered at ankle level. You can link up with a vacuum cleaner to robotically cleanse the office or use it as a spy camera platform from which to observe intruders. Pranksters will equip it with spikes and drive it into the lower shins of office rivals. For all that it actually looks quite innocent, if a little wacky and all the details are at www.personalrobots.com. Mind you, for another five grand you could buy a Segway (www.segway.com) which has a similar two wheel configuration but, unlike the Cye, has big proper rubber wheels and is kept upright by gyroscope gyroscope (jī`rəskōp'), symmetrical mass, usually a wheel, mounted so that it can spin about an axis in any direction. When spinning, the gyroscope has special properties. magic and will take you and your attache ATTACHE. Connected with, attached to. This word is used to signify those persons who are attached to a foreign legation. An attache is a public minister within the meaning of the Act of April 30, 1790, s. 37, 1 Story's L. U. S. case down the long office corridor and off home along the pavement at a respectable 14 mph. Should you want that. The high price of digital words One interesting oddity on the UIA UIA Universidad Iberoamericana (México) UIA Union of International Associations UIA United Iraqi Alliance UIA University of Antwerp UIA Union Internationale des Avocats site may represent a trend. It is probably based on information providers realizing that it's much, much easier to illegally replicate multiple copies of a slab of electronic text than a ditto of printed text -- or images for that matter. UIA has a price of 55 euros post paid for its printed list of world-wide architecture schools. The price of a Word file of the same on diskette The official name for the floppy disk. See floppy disk. diskette - floppy disk (shows how long it is) or as an email attachment is, yes really, 230 euros. Join the rush at http://www.uzaarchitectes.org/texte/summary/p2b1.html. Don't forget the biro. Some of these urls [web addresses] are long and complicated. With your browser activated, go to www.arplus.com, click on the title and look in Directory and then the alphabetical list in General Architecture Sites. Click on the relevant url underlined in blue and you will be transported to the site. |
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