Wednesday, 6 November 2013

http://osse.ssec.wisc.edu/k12/wise/spark/Volume2/Bumblebees/Bumble_Bees.html

Internet article on colour learning. Flight cages

Monday, 16 September 2013

_MICROSTATION_

Curve formulation:

- Creating a simple geometry via commands in the 'Curve by Formula' interface
-> Enter -> Curvecalc -> Display [this will bring up the curve by formula interface]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbkUSQWnr2c
_PHOTOSHOP_

- Making text along a path.
- Masking
- Other shortcuts

Also note: 
Filter -> Sketch -> Half tone pattern


_MICROSTATION_

Text Masking

- Useful for marking out contour labels
- Also could be useful for labelling generally without having numbers or words being lost within the lines (can probably set the transparency around the label area to allow some drawing lines to come through)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdlGFZCN6o4



Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Still by Apollo Architects

Still by Apollo Architects
& Associates

| 8 comments
This house for a surgeon in Chiba, Japan, by Apollo Architects & Associates contains courtyards with elevated wooden walkways and glass walls behind its thick concrete exterior (+ slideshow).
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
The residence was designed for a busy street in Yotsukaido City, so Apollo Architects & Associates used chunky slabs of reinforced concrete to create a soundproofed barrier around the interior spaces.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
"[The client] requested privacy and quietness for his wife and three children to lead healthy lives," explain the architects.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
The largest of the three courtyards sits beyond a sheltered driveway and contains a grass lawn and a central tree, while the second is positioned past the entrance and accommodates a pebble surface and a small maple tree.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
The smallest court is tucked away at the back to offer a small outdoor area for the main bedroom and bathroom.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
"The family can enjoy different atmospheres in these courtyards," say the architects.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
Two staircases lead up to the living room and the children's room on the first floor. One is indoors and built from wood, but the second is a series of concrete treads that rise up from the grassy courtyard.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
Wooden balconies overlook the courtyards from above and residents can look into different rooms through glass walls.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
The house is named Still and was completed in spring 2012.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
Tokyo-based Apollo Architects & Associates is led by Satoshi Kurosaki. The studio has designed a number of houses since launching in 2000, including Lift in Sendai with a pointy overhang and Damier in Tokyo which has a chequered facade. See more houses designed by Apollo Architects & Associates.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
Photography is by Masao Nishikawa.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
Here's some more information from Apollo Architects & Associates:

Still
The client acquired the 330 m2 orthogonal property located along the road in pursuit of a space to rest his body and soul exhausted from his work as a surgeon. He requested privacy and quietness for his wife and three children to lead healthy lives. The building is set back from the frontal street where heavy vehicles pass by regularly. Parking space is secured for three cars. Reinforced concrete structure is chosen for its soundproofing ability. The opening is kept to a small horizontal ribbon window to block the noise and automobile emissions.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
The client purchased this property sized over 300 m2 for a purpose of creating courtyards with tall symbolic trees. There is a compact court with a maple tree in front of the entrance. Across the central corridor is the main court. And, toward the back of the site is a narrow bathroom court. The family can enjoy different atmospheres in these courtyards.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
The master bedroom and bathroom are located in the quiet area far from the street so that the residents can relax while viewing the garden. Each space offers its unique ambience. For example, in the study adjacent to the bedroom, the residents are able to carry out their professional work, or in the Japanese room facing the entrance court, they could relax and enjoy the space while sitting on the floor.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates
The family space on the second floor is a single space surrounded by full-height glazing. Across the central corridor, the children's room/study space is located. The space can be separated into individual rooms in the future. The other characteristic of this house is that the residents can experience the circulation space as they cross between inside and outside, thanks to the central corridor and roof balcony connecting the main building and annex. It is the ultimate luxury to lead a slow-paced life and enjoy the changing seasons.
Still by Apollo Architects and Associates

Thursday, 14 February 2013

Musashino Art University Library
by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Photographer Edmund Sumner has sent us these photographs of a university library in Tokyo by Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto that has an exterior of timber shelves covered by planes of glass.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
The massing of the two-storey library at Musashino Art University is composed entirely from the shelves, which will hold the books.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Circulation routes spiral around both ground and first floor between apertures cut-out of the shelving.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
The library also includes a closed archive, which is located in the basement.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
More architectural photography by Edmund Sumner on Dezeen »
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
More projects by Sou Fujimoto Architects on Dezeen »
More about Edmund Sumner on Dezeen »
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
The following information is from Sou Fujimoto:

Musashino Art University Museum and Library
This project is a new library for one of the distinguished art universities in Japan. It involves designing a new library building and refurbishing the existing building into an art gallery, which will ultimately create a new integration of the Library and the Art Gallery.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
The project described hereinafter is the plan of the new library which sits within the first phase of the total development.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Acting as a huge ark, a total of 200,000 units, of which 100,000 will be out in an open-archive, while the other half within closed-archive, rests within this double-storey library of 6,500 ㎡ in floor area.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Library made from bookshelves
When I thought of the elements which compose an ultimate library, they became books, bookshelves, light and the place.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
I imagined a place encircled by a single bookshelf in the form of a spiral. The domain encased within the infinite spiral itself is the library. Infinite forest of books is created from layering of 9m high walls punctuated by large apertures.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
This spiral sequence of the bookshelf continues to eventually wrap the periphery of the site as the external wall, allowing the external appearance of the building to share the same elemental composition of the bookshelf-as-the-library.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
One’s encounter with the colossally long bookshelf within the university landscape registers instantaneously as a library, yet astonishing in its dreamlike simplicity.
The library most library-like.
The simplest library.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Investigation and Exploration
Investigation and exploration are two apparent contradictions inherent in the design of libraries.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Investigation is, by definition, a systematic spatial arrangement for the purpose of finding specific books. Even in the age of Google, the experience of searching for books within the library is marked by the order and arrangement of the physical volume of books.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
The opposing concept to Investigation is the notion of Exploration. The significance of library experience is also in discoveries the space engender to the users. One encounters the space as constantly renewed and transforming, discovers undefined relationships, and gains inspiration from unfamiliar fields.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
To achieve the coexistence of the two concepts, spatial and configuration logics beyond mere systematics is employed.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Here, the two apparent contradictions inherent in libraries are allowed to coexist by the form of spiral possessing two antinomic movements of radial path and rotational movement. The rotational; polar configuration achieves investigation, and the numerous layers through the radial apertures engender the notion of Exploration through an infinite depth of books.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
One can faintly recognise the entirety of library and at the same time imagine that there are unknown spaces which are rendered constantly imperceptible.
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
SOU FUJIMOTO
Musashino Art University Museum & Library
Tokyo, Japan
Design: 2007-09
Construction: 2009-10
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Architects: Sou Fujimoto Architects-- principal-in-charge; Sou Fujimoto, Koji Aoki, Naganobu Matsumura, Shintaro Homma, Tomoko Kosami, Takahiro Hata, Yoshihiro Nakazono, Masaki Iwata, project team
Client: Musashino Art University
Program: University Library
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Click above for larger image
Consultants: Eishi Katsura, adviser;
Jun Sato Structural Engineers--Jun Sato, Masayuki Takada, structural;
Kankyo Engineering--Takafumi Wada, Kazunari Ohishima, Hiroshi Takayama, MEP;
Taku Satoh Design Office--Taku Satoh, Shingo Noma, Kuniaki Demura, Inoue
Industries--Takafumi Inoue, Azusa Jin, Yosuke Goto, Hideki Yamazaki,
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Click above for larger image
Furniture & Sign; Sirius Lighting Office--Hirohito Totsune, Koichi Tanaka, lighting;
CAMSA--Katsuyuki Haruki, facade;
STANDARD--Keisou Inami, skylight
General contractor: Taisei Corporation--Tsukasa Sakata
Structural system: steel frame, partly reinforced concrete
Major materials: wood shelf, glass, exterior; wood shelf, tile carpet, polycarbonate plate ceiling, interior
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Click above for larger image
Site area: 111,691.93 m2
Built area: 2,883.18 m2
Total floor area: 6,419.17 m2
Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects
Click above for larger image