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Lordy lordy

This month's practice site is that of the Foster office at www.fosterandpartners.com. It's a fast download and once you click past the orangey red of the home page you get into the white text on black of the rest of the site. It's fast because it's mostly text: you click on small thumbnails to get more details about a project and, once you are on the more detailed page, you click again to get a bigger image. Anywhere on the site you know when you can get further and better particulars In pleading, further and better particulars refers to additional information required to provide sufficient accuracy with respect to a set of pleaded facts in an earlier document.  because the name is underlined and in yellow. That means you can't see quite a lot of the oeuvre complete which is, of course, more intriguing.

Fast, with text whose size can be changed to suit your eyesight and with mostly intuitive navigation, it's a really efficient site and of course the buildings include some of my lord Foster's greatest hits. Still the acid test is the Millennium Bridge Several bridges are known as the Millennium Bridge:
  • in the United Kingdom:
  • Millennium Bridge in London
  • Lune Millennium Bridge, in Lancaster, England
 across the Thames. Inaugurated in May 2000, it began to wobble wobble /wob·ble/ (wob´'l) to move unsteadily or unsurely back and forth or from side to side. See under hypothesis.

wob·ble
n.
1.
, noticeably but not life threateningly, when people walked over it. It was hurriedly closed. Arups were the engineers and their site is reasonably open about the problems and solutions. The bridge is lengthily featured on the Foster site. But not a word about wobbling wobbling Vox populi Ataxia, see there  there. Then another little disappointment because the heading 'animation' has got you excited. You download an iPIX plugin for Explorer (although it doesn't seem to check if you have a later version already installed) and after a bit of random clicking you get the idea of how to get the animations running. It's a bit of a letdown: less animation than QuickTime home movie and one hilarious sequence in which Foster sits at his desk and presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 explains how he designed the Fusital door handle. I say presumably because there's no sound. The above infelicities are probably the consequence of the practice having spent a lot of time and money on developing a really good site and then, exhausted, not being yet prepared to think too much about maintenance. Sadly for my trade even text gets old and tired.

Great Buildings of Fire

At least the site doesn't have ads. Browsing the Great Buildings site www.greatbuildings.com which we looked at in November 1999, and keeping in mind last month's student manifesto about hating ads, I suddenly found myself in the middle of a TWA TWA Time-weighted average, see there  ad when I thought I was looking at an item on the Maison Carree. Then on the more detailed page which tells you among other things, but not many, that it is a 'well-preserved Roman temple. Corinthian columns' located in Nimes, Provence, France, you have the opportunity to read a Lufthansa ad, an ad for 3D Design Workshop, an ad for the S150 Great Buildings CDROM See CD-ROM.  (GBC GBC Game Boy Color
GBC Global Business Coalition
GBC Green Building Council
GBC George Brown College
GBC Great Basin College (Nevada)
GBC General Binding Corporation
GBC Greater Baltimore Committee
GBC Goldey-Beacom College
 CD-ROM CD-ROM: see compact disc.
CD-ROM
 in full compact disc read-only memory

Type of computer storage medium that is read optically (e.g., by a laser).
) available from Amazon, Barnes and Noble and CADOutpost, a link to the RIBA RIBA Royal Institute of British Architects  library catalogue, a link to Google with Maison Carree already entered and the first screen waiting up there for your inspection, and then another reference to Amazon where you can buy books listed in the resources section. I immediately checked back with www.modernarchitecture.com, last month's Calvinist student site, only to find a kind of chat room containing messages about buying houses in the Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  region and a badly spelled plea from a British student about working in the US for a bit. I blushed for England. Yes, there's quite a lot more than that but not quite what was promised at the beginning of the year. Still, there are no ads.

On the other hand Great Buildings has quite a few buildings, and the above miscellany of ads littering every page. One hopeful theory I've heard is that, as in magazines and with cars in the street in front of buildings you've just photographed, you unconsciously filter out the visual interference. Still with all that ad revenue you might have expected Great Buildings to have at least mentioned that Maison Carree is a hexastyle hex·a·style  
adj.
Having six frontal columns in the portico, as in some Greek temples.



[Greek hexast
 Corinthian temple.

Castaways

There's a warning on the current Royal Institute of 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.  site about a design competition for three detention centres for the quaintly named Immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important.  and Multicultural Affairs department. 'The conditions of entry do not comply with RAIA Ra´ia   

n. 1. (Zool.) A genus of rays which includes the skates. See Skate.
 policy.' The site is at www.raia.com.au/ and professes to have the biggest database of architects and building designers in the country. You hope it would. For some reason the database is behind a secure connection which slows things down a lot but probably makes the RAIA web people feel important. It's no better than the RIBA's list of architects and, worse, it's a guide only to practices, not names. You have to be a member with a password to access much of interest and it's pretty slow. Still it recognizes one of the most significant structures ever built in Oz, the almost unknown Sydney Myer Music Bowl, Melbourne. It is a large tension structure in a park using aluminium faced plywood panels fixed to a series of prestressed cables attached to a catenary c able stretched between two masts. It should be in all the books because it's so early: 1957 and predates Frei Otto's built work by nearly a decade. Engineers were W. L. Irwin, architects Yunken Freeman. Nice to know they know. Nice to know they care.

Rendering FAT

Fun site of the month belongs to that terrific London group London Group is an art society based in London, England founded in 1915 when the Vorticists came together to encourage and support young avant-garde artists to exhibit their work.  FAT (Fashion Architecture Taste: www.fat.co.uk/architecture) whose four members propose irony, humour and narrative as things for architects to think about. It's the FAT Channel, architecture for the airbag generation. In its not un-autobiographical advice on how to be a famous architect is says: 'Now it's time to develop your mystique. This is all important, because it is what you are selling. Remember, you won't have to design a building for at least ten years... Mystique is what you say, and the way that you say it ... Mystique should suggest revolutionary politics and French philosophy. Don't talk about these things directly as it never makes good copy and will only confuse you.'

Sur real

I nearly clicked on through Mikael Askergren's web page at http://w1.861.telia.com/ [sim]u86107051/index.html and missed these great headings: 'Albert Lilienberg - the City Planner from Hell', 'Survival of the Fattest', 'Lethal Architecture' and '3 Tableaux inspired by the Film Last Year at Marienbad'. This bloke is an architect (at least I think he is) and clearly needs watching. Although with a url like that you're probably condemned to everlasting electronic obscurity.
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Title Annotation:architectural Web sites
Author:Lyall, Sutherland
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2001
Words:1102
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