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Sutherland Lyall nimbly steers his magic carpet through the nebulous and confusing post-modern clouds of the internet.


History as bunk

Here in Britain we would eventually have come across Complexity and Contradiction ourselves but the defining moment was actually a short series of lectures which Santa Barbara Santa Barbara (săn'tə bär`brə, –bərə), city (1990 pop. 85,571), seat of Santa Barbara co., S Calif., on the Pacific Ocean; inc. 1850.  architectural historian, David Gebhard, gave at the Regent Street
This article is about the Regent Street in London. For other Regent Streets see Regent Street (disambiguation).


Regent Street is a major shopping street and thoroughfare in London's West End.
 Polytechnic and the Architectural Association in the early 1970s about the book and the then-startling propositions of the Scott-Brown/Venturi/Moore connection. PoMo in England followed and the rest is history with Venturi venturi

a tube with a decrease in the inside diameter that is used to increase the flow velocity of the fluid and thereby cause a pressure drop; used to measure the flow velocity (a venturimeter) or to draw another fluid into the stream.
 and Scott Brown Scott Brown may refer to:
  • Scott Brown (DJ)
  • Scott Brown (Scottish footballer)
  • Scott Brown (English footballer)
  • Scott Brown (Welsh footballer)
  • Scott P. Brown, a Massachusetts state senator
 as its imperial couple. It's odd then, that the 'who we are' page of the Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates site at www.vsba.com has what looks like a revision of the familiar history. It comes in the form of a callout from a 1998 piece in Architectural Record which reads thus: 'In some ways it would have been better if they hadn't written about it. They might never have been credited with unleashing Postmodernism, a charge comparable to calling Thomas Edison the father of disco.' Then, when you click on a big, somewhat Gilbert and Georgian button containing the mug shots of the pair and the heading 'In your face' (Oh, sorry it's a fruit machine display), there is a report of a Scott Brown lecture in which she 'debunked the many misconceptions about the firm's work, including the widespread perception of the couple as the parents of postmodernism.' So, just when you thought you knew the history you had just been through, it turns out to be bunk.

The site is a mix of visual jollity jol·li·ty  
n. pl. jol·li·ties
Convivial merriment or celebration.


jollity
Noun

the condition of being jolly

Noun 1.
 and heavy seriousness. Keep your volume up and click on 'projects'. Bomp, bang, klud, and down drops a set of categories, 'academic', 'civic', 'planning', 'exhibitions', that sort of thing, all in different versions of the same sans serif Short horizontal lines added to the tops and bottoms of traditional typefaces, such as Times Roman. Contrast with sans-serif.

 typeface. Click on 'residential' and clunk-clunk, up comes thumbnails of various past schemes which scroll past right back to the beginning of the practice and circa 1960. There is nothing cool and discreet about this site, praise the lord, although the need to slide sideways in the 'highlights' section is really irritating--but doubtless extremely good for us. You always want sites, especially ones as big as this, to have a good search engine. But, as here, there will always be some wretched reviewer who types in such words as pomo (no result) and postmodern for which there is one result. It is on the sub-site for the Vanna Venturi house--but actually in connection with 'many postmodern high-rise buildings'. Odd that. Or, in view of the above, perhaps not. But hey, don't miss it.

Musical chairs

One site difficult to miss (because his PR people mailed practically everybody in the world, including the president of the Royal Society The President of the Royal Society (PRS) is the elected head of the Royal Society of London. The position is now awarded to a member of the scientific community of the British Commonwealth for a period of five years, and is one of the highest honours that can be bestowed upon a ) is that of Rafael Vinoly Architects at www.rvapc.com. It's another horizontal slider A block of material that holds the read/write head of a magnetic disk. See flying head. . In fact, there are two sliders sliders

a species of tortoise kept as pets. They have a black shell and a red stripe behind the eye. Called also Chrysemys scripta elegans, red-eared sliders.
 on the home page whose speed and direction you control, rather uncertainly, with your mouse. It's quite mesmerizing mes·mer·ize  
tr.v. mes·mer·ized, mes·mer·iz·ing, mes·mer·iz·es
1. To spellbind; enthrall: "He could mesmerize an audience by the sheer force of his presence" 
 in the way that very bright lights randomly flashing in your face is mesmerizing. When you put the cursor arrow on one of the images, up comes the name of the project and off the strip judders, now unreadably, in the opposite direction to the one it was travelling in initially. Maybe it's not quite like that, but you don't necessarily want to go back to check any more than you want to check on the precise sequences of your last game of musical chairs. One way to stop the sliding is to click decisively on a thumbnail and the strips vanish and a nice big image of the scheme pops up. You click on one of the arrows in the 'images box' and up comes a new illustration. All this stuff has the unlooked-for result of concentrating your attention on the technique and not the architecture, leaving you hoping Vinoly might get things calmed down--as soon as possible.

A nano brick in the wall

There was an article in Wired a couple of months ago entitled 'Smart Bricks or a Dumb Idea'. At the time of writing it was still at www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,59319,00.html. It reported how Dr Chang Liu, a nice looking young bloke (there's a mugshot on the site) is an assistant professor at the University of Illinois' Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. His smart brick comes with sensors which measure such boring but important aspects as temperature, vibration and movement. What you do is build a smart brick into your wall and when the earthquake rumbles or the wall seems set to fall down or whatever, you, er, know about it or as Liu puts it, you get a 'holistic, real-time picture of the strength of a building'. One grumpy engineer-critic points out that 'For one, bricks are now used as a facade rather than a load-bearing element.'

I guess he has a point. But all the stuff discussed in this story--including smart dust, smart lofts (inevitably), smart houses and the like--are topics about which architects are soon going to have to be cognisant. A warning though. Kris Pister coined the definitive phrase 'smart dust'. He says. 'It was entirely tongue-in-cheek, but it caught on and I'm stuck with it. There's something important underneath it, but I don't think anyone can tell you what a smart building will be.'

Merry Munich munchkins

Time for a revisit and the lucky site is www.amatter.com. Actually it's the visitor who is lucky because this is a terrific site, chock full of goodies both of architectural and related matters such as the Venice Biennale Venice Biennale

International art exhibition held in the Castello district of Venice every two years and juried by an international committee. It was founded in 1895 as the International Exhibition of Art of the City of Venice to promote “the most noble activities of
, Alessi architecture, mysteries made of paper and cardboard by Thomas Demand Thomas Demand (born 1964 in Munich, Germany) is a German photographer. He currently lives and works in Berlin. Education
  • 1987 - 1989 Akademie der Bildenden Künste, Munich
  • 1989 - 1992 Kunstakademie Düsseldorf
  • 1992 Cité des Arts, Paris
, the work of architects Benedikta Scheibenzuber, Rolf Kretschmer and Jonas Schmidt Jonas Schmidt is a Danish actor, famous for portraying the fictional character Dolph.

Jonas Schmidt has appeared in numerous roles, mostly comedy however. He first gained fame, portraying the nerdy carseller Bruce, in the Danish Toyota commercials.
 and the issue of fashion as sculpture, to mention just a few. The site is based in Munich but is written in English and you can subscribe to a free monthly email update. It's great.

Clever convolutions

I'm indebted to Architects' Journal reviews editor Andrew Mead for www.coleccioncisneros.org which has just won an Industrial Designers Society of America Industrial Designers Society of America (IDSA) is an organisation of professional industrial designers in the United States. It was formed in 1965 by merger of three American designer associations: American Designers Institute (IDI), American Society of Industrial Design  award. As the convoluted title hints, this is a site for specialists--and for Spanish, Portuguese as well as English speakers. Be prepared for a slowish start even with broadband and turn the volume up. It's not a site for emulation but I think you'll like it as much as the IDSA IDSA Infectious Diseases Society of America
IDSA Industrial Designers Society of America
IDSA Interactive Digital Software Association
IDSA Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses (India)
IDSA International Dark Sky Association
, Mead and I did.

Sutherland Lyall is at sutherland.lyall@btinternet.com
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Title Annotation:Browser
Author:Lyall, Sutherland
Publication:The Architectural Review
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Sep 1, 2003
Words:1076
Previous Article:Service and light in Jyvaskyla: as Rogelio Salmona received the Alvar Aalto Award, speakers at the Jyvaskyla symposium pondered on the morality and...
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