Browser: Sutherland Lyall trawls the web to find architectural distinction. (View).Clunky mechanics, impeccable type With David Mackay David MacKay and David Mackay can refer to more than one person:
meat and bone meal. Arquitectes is the 25-strong Barcelona office run by Josep Martorell, Oriol Bohigas and David Mackay -- which he pronounces the Irish way as 'macki' with the accent on the first syllable. Unless you run two screens it is really irritating because, accompanied by a short group of electronic chords, the black page takes over your entire screen and you have to give MBM your undivided attention -- and have no way of changing the small type to something more readable. But this is a proper design job with its associated sounds and (slightly jerky jerky see biltong. ) opening and closing panels for each new page and impeccable and minimal graphics and typography. It has the usual sections: a profile of the partners, projects, a bit of news and contact details. The opening page has a white title panel with mug shots of the three partners adjacent to th e just-readable block of type describing the practice. The nice thing is that when you accidentally wipe your mouse across the partners' mugs the photo changes to reveal them as they were in the first flush It is well known in urban hydrology, that the constituents are normally more concentrated in the first part of runoff. This phenomenon was already described in the beginning of the 20th century (METCALF AND EDDY, 1916) as “first flush” or of their architectural youth, probably circa the mid '60s. The adjacent block of too-small type illustrates the importance of text editing The ability to change text by adding, deleting and rearranging letters, words, sentences and paragraphs. Text editing is the main operation users perform in word processors, which typically also handle graphics and other multimedia files. See text editor and word processing. . Because this text is long you have to do a clunky number involving a down arrow and what, you discover, is an erratic slider A block of material that holds the read/write head of a magnetic disk. See flying head. bar. But that is detail. A nice detail, which could well be emulated by other architectural sites as beautifully typographed as this, is that MBM have credited designer Marta Linas. The Great Work Arteyclopedia, at www.artcyclopedia.com/about.html, says its mission is to become the definitive and most effective guide to museumquality fine art on the Internet. In February it claimed to have 'indexed 1200 arts sites [and to offer] more than 32 000 links to an estimated 100 000 works by 7500 renowned artists'. This ambitious package is the work of Calgary-based John Malyon who is hoping 'to develop a system for commercializing the Arteyclopedia in such a way as to add value for visitors (by providing them with additional useful and relevant information), rather than subtracting value (e.g. through indiscriminate use of banners)'. It's an interesting idea -- although you worry about it being so successful that it monopolizes the field and starts charging lots of dosh for 'added value'. However perverse it might be, one of the pleasures of surfing is the difficulty involved in finding obscure architectural images. What Malyon has done is to search out myriad art/architecture collections, many of which have appeared here, and to make links directly to the relevant information. It's a discriminating, tailor-made search engine. In an open letter to sites, he says, rather cheekily I reckon, that 'What we do not do is drop visitors off at your "front door" so they can read a letter from your director, look at a photo of the facade of your building, or take a virtual tour'. Exactly what we all want. Yet quite a lot of sites have their visitor-meter on the home page (where else?) and bypassing it means that the extra visitors Malyon promises can't be verified or even counted. Often financial support for a site depends on verifiable visitor numbers. Still, it seems to work pretty well and architecture is well represented. Try it while it's still free. Strange, labyrinthine lab·y·rin·thine adj. Of, relating to, resembling, or constituting a labyrinth. labyrinthine pertaining to or emanating from a labyrinth. , compelling When you type in www.geocities.com/ateliermp up comes a black screen with the heading Archive-Grotto, a picture of a rococo, grottesque [subs sic.] architectural detail and the immortal words underneath 'Knowledge, knowledge, knowledge Boomboom, boomboom, boomboom' attributed to Tristan Tzara Noun 1. Tristan Tzara - French poet (born in Romania) who was one of the cofounders of the dada movement (1896-1963) Samuel Rosenstock, Tzara and dated 1918. Don't be put off. You click on the box at the top right hand corner labelled 'Yahoo movies exclusive' and you go to Today@Yahoo movies and an advertisement about how to lose 10 pounds. It's a box which appears to support most of the pages on the site so you put up with it. Fed up with this, you hit the Back button, click on the aforementioned grottesque picture and up comes a welcome page and a 'textual map of the site'. There are four main heads: Texts/documents, Projects (by Landscape Agency New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of who seem to be the directors of the site), Serious Real -- the Anti Journal -- and finally the Landscape Agency New York news New York News was a newspaper drama which was broadcast in the United States by CBS as part of its 1995 fall lineup. New York News was the story of the fictional New York Reporter and information service. There's a warning at the bottom: 'TRAVELLER'S ADVISORY: THE ARC ARCHIVE-GROTTO IS ALSO A LABYRINTH'. This is utterly correct. Still, despite all one says about the need for clarity on the Web, this is a wonderful ramble of a site which is not always very obviously about architecture or landscape but which is pervaded by an architectural sensibility and topicality and which offers links to a wonderfully catholic range of things, ideas and texts to do with those eternally fascinating topics. Quite a lot of the material is strange but, quite untypically Adv. 1. untypically - in a manner that is not typical; "she was atypically quiet" atypically for this kind of architectural outer-rim stuff, it's rarely pretentious or pompously sententious sen·ten·tious adj. 1. Terse and energetic in expression; pithy. 2. a. Abounding in aphorisms. b. Given to aphoristic utterances. 3. a. Abounding in pompous moralizing. . You will need to spend a couple of weeks roaming the labyrinth -- but the rewards are likely to be quite high. Regular reports One of Archive-Grotto's linked sites is to Archibot (www.archibot.com) -- which already sends this column a sort of weekly newsletter. The main headlines at the beginning of April were 'Is There a Gay Aesthetic?', Bruce Mau Bruce Mau (born October 25, 1959 in Sudbury, Ontario) is a Canadian designer. Mau is the creative director of Bruce Mau Design, and the founder of the Institute without Boundaries. Design, Three Moving Projects, Only Title 'Architecture' (Magazine) Will Stay, 'Safe Rooms' Come Out Of Hiding, Great-Looking Product (Too Bad Nobody Wants It) with the subhead sub·head n. In both senses also called subheading. 1. The heading or title of a subdivision of a printed subject. 2. A subordinate heading or title. Noun 1. 'why good design is not always good business' and Architect Prays 4 Churches, Builds 'God's Way'. These are links to news stories in a variety of US newspapers and magazines. There is a small forum, a Who's/What's your favourite, book reviews, the inevitable Amazon links to nice architecture books, a guide to sites, and a smart search engine. The authors of this site, whoever they are, have got together the sort of student-orientated news and update site you might have hoped for. Architectural ideas boot sale Noun 1. boot sale - an outdoor sale at which people sell things from the trunk of their car car boot sale cut-rate sale, sales event, sale - an occasion (usually brief) for buying at specially reduced prices; "they held a sale to reduce their inventory"; "I It's called E-Design Forum -- Environmental & Green Design and it's at www.designcommunity.com/e-design/e-forum.html. It's a bit of a disappointment because it is really a big chat room with offers to do very cheap Distance Architectural Designing, discussions around such headings as Airflow on the Beach (about touristic over-development) and quite a lot of things not really very related to either green or environmental design. It's actually closest to a virtual architectural boot sale except what's on offer are raw, not necessarily well-thought-out ideas and rather a lot of dross. But in there may be... Construction site A reminder that the great Dutch site, Archined, is being rebuilt and until practical completion the English version is to be found at http://www.classic.archined.nl/endex.html. Roses are red and snails are bred And finally something rather sweet. Because it's entirely virtual it's just the ironic thing to send that client who's tardy tar·dy adj. tar·di·er, tar·di·est 1. Occurring, arriving, acting, or done after the scheduled, expected, or usual time; late. 2. Moving slowly; sluggish. with the invoice payments. 'It's fast and simple!' enthuses the Make Me Happy.com website at www.makemehappy.com/. You choose a flower, add your message and send it off over the ether. You select from more than a dozen roses, a score of assorted flowers -- or a selection of oddities ranging from a Venus fly-trap through earthworms to mating snails. 'Browse the list of great gifts for girls'. Snails? you ask. |
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