Saturday, October 05, 2002

Cottage, 700 sq. ft. This one is smaller. Here is a simple design. Elaborate, but not in the sense of modern and big.
McMansions and an account of why they are so much fun. Well some like em porky. Many principled articles, but not too many little cottages, and even those, $50,000.

Thursday, September 26, 2002

These proposals for WTC are decent.
Here are the six (6) designs for the World Trade Center that went nowhere.

Tuesday, September 24, 2002

“Do you want to work on sandcastles for money?”

“No.”

Thursday, September 19, 2002

"Never work for doctors and lawyers."

For one thing, what kind of contract? What is the exit strategy?
The fix for WTC is harder than making another box. In "Mourning and Modernism After 9/11, Can Function Follow Form?" Casey Nelson Blake in The Nation, September 23, 2002, describes ways last summer's proposals failed because the Port Authority commission's 11 million square foot program was unworkable, and the idea of a "modern" skyscraper is thirty years outdated anyway.

Tuesday, September 17, 2002

move brick building
'r' lawyers
we goats
be the goat
Hopland
ranch > 50 acres rented
single wide
Volkswagen bus
$200 / acre
gates
fear
qorvis
defunct
uebergieser
unter
So what's a raft of willows
soil nailing
pressure grout
how much does this cost?
what do they want?
landscape?
brook?
garage?
make 11 x 17
cough cough cough
birdbath
no
he won't produce much
we have to

Monday, September 09, 2002

There must be a way to automate terrain adjustments.

Wednesday, September 04, 2002

Make fog for fun.

Friday, August 30, 2002

Redo, redo, redo all!

Monday, August 26, 2002

Out of control lists:

Gorse and pampas grass, poison hemlock and yellow star thistle, Scotch broom and German ivy, red-apple aptenia and blue-gum eucalyptus

giant thistle cardoon, and fennel

broom, pampas grass (both the Cortaderia jubata evildoer and the less-invasive C. selloana), fountaingrass, water hyacinth

Reasons...

Another article and web sites

-- Ailanthus altissima (tree of heaven);

-- Arundo donax (giant reed);

-- Centaurea melitensis (tocalote);

-- Cirsium vulgare (bull thistle);

-- Cortaderia jubata (jubata grass, miscalled pampas grass);

-- Senecio mikanioides (cape ivy);

-- Spartium junceum (Spanish broom);

-- Tamarix chinensis, T. gallica, T. parviflora, T. ramosissima (tamarisk, salt cedar).

-- Red-apple aptenia (Aptenia cordifolia);

-- Licorice plant (Helichrysum petiolare) -- these two are not widespread, yet, but show potential;

-- Pennyroyal (near wetlands);

-- Water hyacinth, parrot's feather, and elodea or anacharis if you're next to fresh water;

-- Periwinkle (Vinca major);

-- Capeweed (Arctotheca calendula);

-- Cape or German ivy (Delaira odorata or Senecio mikanioides);

-- English ivy (good old Hedera helix);

-- Ox-eye daisy, or marguerite;

-- Foxglove (if you're near a damp area or stream);

-- Purple loosestrife -- illegal to sell in some states;

-- Fennel;

-- Woolly mullein;

-- Fountaingrass (Pennisetum setaceum);

-- Pampas grass;

-- Broom of all sorts;

-- Gorse;

-- Tamarisk;

-- Myoporum;

-- Russian olive;

-- Ailanthus;

-- Blue gum eucalyptus;



Friday, August 16, 2002

Some criticize the neighbors for moving walls on a daily basis, going through contractors one, two, three and making the price of construction go from $400,000 to $1.3 million.

Monday, August 12, 2002

Paradox. Architects create space, all of it empty at one time. There is no future in storage. Yet, these words are stored.

Julia Morgan threw her drawings away on retirement, not before. So when she was looking for something in her last years, no problem. It was already gone.

Friday, August 09, 2002

And more on Kennedy Center
Ed Stone arranged to pick Jackie's favorite colors for presentation.
Practice issue. Never allow anyone to broker the architect to the client. For example, an Australian that's been around the client about a month calls up and says, "What have you been doing on the client's job? Tell me, and I'll tell the client."

Architect should say "Nothing doing," and contact client directly, not through broker, ending professional relationship at this point, if necessary. Broker will always find architect wrong.
The catenary is the locus of the focus of a parabola rolling along a straight line.
CATENARY (from Lat. catena, a chain), in mathematics, the curve assumed by a uniform chain or string hanging freely between two supports. It was investigated by Galileo, who erroneously determined it to be a parabola; Jungius detected Galileo’s error, but the true form was not discovered until 1691, when James Bernoulli published it as a problem in the Ada Erudiorum. Bernoulli also considered the cases when (I) the chain was of variable density, (2) extensible, (3) acted upon at each point by a force directed to a fixed centre. These curves attracted much attention and were discussed by John Bernoulli, Leibnitz, Huygens, David Gregory and others.