the blog posts

houses in a garden

The brilliance of designing houses that truly fit into a garden is exmplified by this design in Mexico of Alejandro Sanchez Garcia Arquitectos. The development, Casa Chipicas, comprises four townhouses set in a wooded garden setting.

image: alejandro sanchez garcia arquitectos

As outlined in this piece from freshome, "Private Garden in Mexico Accommodating Four Wooden Houses", these houses look like "gorgeous little vacation resorts".

Residents enter via a shared landscaped access area but largely blank facades present towards the pathways and, in that way, preserve privacy. Each has a yard onto which the living rooms spill over with carefully selected and tended trees and shrubs providing picturesque green barriers between the houses. The three storey structures ensure necessary habitable space is achieved without sacrificing the garden. 

The ambience tends towards tamed wilderness but these houses appear to be located within a developed area. The defining characteristic, therefore, is the fantastic garden. 

image: alejandro sanchez garcia arquitectos

The equivalent in Bermuda could be a wooded area where a stand of, say, Fiddlewood or Spice trees might be sacrificed for the house footprint and the houses themselves constructed upwards rather than outwards. Dedication to intelligent garden design is required, along with a preference for a yard the size of a postage stamp instead of a football field. It's possible and, given the island's limited land mass, ought to be preferable.

bunker planning

With all the talk about drone warfare, this article posted at the Smithsonian.com, "Imaging a Drone-Proof City in an Age of Surveillance" by Jimmy Stamp, struck a note with me. Imagine having to plan a city so that it provides the best possible defense against drone attacks? This is a considerable step up in sophistication since the days when big thick walls with burning arrows raining down from on high provided sufficient deterrence and adequate defence.

What do you do to disguise your body's thermal heat signature? Your house among many? Your streetanti-drone burqa by adam harvey in the grid? Well, for a start, forget the grid. Then install coloured glass block windows through which surveillance is made more difficult. Finally, you can purchase (for between $500 and $2300) a stealth cloak that combines a burqa-like style with fibres that reflect heat, thereby masking a person's heat signature. I kid you not. The fashion term is Stealth Wear and Adam Harvey creates it with designer Johanna Bloomfield

But back to urban planning.

Asher Kohn is a law student who is investigating what is necessary, from a planning, design and architecture point of view, to counteract the surveillance techniques and strategies so prevalent these days. His ideas include spires and minarets that interrupt flight patterns and systems that create visual confusion for drone tracking systems.

A conceptual of map of his drone-proof city, Shura City, is below.

image: asher j. kohn

In the words of Kohn, "What this project proposes is a new way to think about space. Drone warfare proposes that every inch of land is (and all of its inhabitants are) part of the battle space.” 

This is not to be confused with the architecture favoured by survivalists who, generally speaking, are anticipating the end of the world. In that alternative reality, homes are "...equipped with a generator, 2,500 gallon water tank, a composting toilet, a one year supply of food, two AR15-variant rifles with 1,000 rounds of ammunition each, and a safe room," outlines Stamp. Of course, any Bermudian can tell you that a 2,500 gallon water tank will not get you very far but that's another story for another time.

For now, I will rest easier knowing that someone out there is studying how to keep us safe from drones. Until that is perfected, for those who are engaging in activities that attract the attention of drones, I suggest you purchase an anti-drone burqa.

architectural plagiarism?

It seems to me that dreamers become architects because they like invention, innovation and uniqueness. As that is the case, wouldn't you feel odd if your built legacy consists of projects 'lifted' from others? That this is happening in China strikes me as quite peculiar. 

The most recent architect to have design ideas stolen is Zaha Hadid. Obviously, copying is not new but, really, entire buildings?

Wangjing SOHO, image: weburbanist.comHadid's office and retail complex, Wangjing SOHO, is currently under construction in Beijing. The copycat version is underway in Chongqing. Honestly, they didn't even bother to change countries.

Read more about this freakish imitation situation  - entire village replication, anyone? - at Weburbanist.com, "Pirated Architecture: Chinese Copies of Famous Buildings." Truly odd.