Showing posts with label Urban fabric. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Urban fabric. Show all posts

Oscar Niemeyer

A Vida É Um Sopro "Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007). Documentary directed by Fabiano Maciel e Sacha

"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)

'Once I had a dream that Rio de Janeiro had never been settled. That the city had grown inland back from the hills. I saw exactly what Cabral saw when he first arrived. The stunning nature, the birds, the animals, all that. With the city further back facing inland. It would have been a paradise frozen in time. That's why one day I suddenly thought...maybe the world would be better off without people.' - Niemeyer
 "Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)

This documentary is a brilliant uncovering of Niemeyer's fascinating Architectural practice and his wonderfully witty and opined character. Perhaps most intriguing is Niemeyer himself (who is 104 years old) and is therefore like a living relic of the modernist era. Specifically; his utopian aspirations (to be attained through Architecture and Urban Design) and love of reinforced concrete. I was struck by Niemeyer's oratory style and eloquence, he is one of the more quotable architects I've come across.

"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)

I had no idea that Le Corbusier used and adapted Oscar Niemeyer's original plan and idea for the United Nations headquaters in New York.

Once, in Brasilia, late at night, we went to look at the Alvorada Palace which had just been finished. Seeing it at night, we were stunned by how lovely it was. Like a sculpture. As if it had no purpose other than its own beauty. I said "This is when true architecture is born." A shape that's new, different, that takes you by surprise. That's architecture.

"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)

Beauty is important, look at the pyramids. They make no practical sense. But they're so beautiful, so monumental, that you forget their purpose. You just admire them.


"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)"Life Is A Breath Of Air" (2007)


What matters to us in every sense is freedom. A sense of fantasy, something out of the ordinary, that's what counts. What stands the test of time is not well-kept little houses. It's cathedrals or monumental forms with a sense of balance.




(Apologies for the lacklustre poor-resolution screenshots)

More urban fabric: Chad Gerth's empty lots of Chicago

Various observations from Cairo, Beirut and Uganda

A selection of images from the blog Future Perfect by Jan Chipchase. Fascinating observations and various fleeting glimpses into everyday life, urban fabric, graphic design, technology, micro enterprises and other particular subtle details witnessed in Cairo, Beirut, and Uganda.

Cairo

Cairo

17736 - Cairo

'Phone number for sale in the electronics market. 50 Egyptian Pound (6 Euro) premium for an easy to remember number sequence, and an additional 25 Egyptian Pounds premium for older operator prefixes that suggest the person has been ‘mobile’ for a while (the operator ran out of numbers, was allocated a new prefix).'

Run Don't Walk - MarsaMatruh
Run don't walk

Monopoly, Reverse Engineered - Beirut
Monopoly, Reverse Engineered

Chair Storage Norms - Beirut

The Man From Iran - Beirut

Privacy Extensions - Beirut

Don’t Worry. Don’t Be Happy - Beirut

When the Worst is Good Enough - Kulu

You’re a road-side vendor offering phone charging services – what are the pre-conditions for investing in a solar panel for your business? A lack of mains electricity or very poor mains electricity; cost to buy, maintain; versatility; risk of theft (for smaller panels); effectiveness (speed of charging, discharging); weather conditions; an ability to purchase said solar panel; and ultimately a willing consumer base in range of a cell tower.

Are you going to invest in a solar panel if its likely the grid to extend to your neighbourhood. This isn’t an environmental investment, its cost driven.

On this trip I’ve seen off-grid road-side charging services using a single solar panel to charge phones. The photo above actually shows a solar panel for sale – the owner stall was recently connected to the grid – his business undercut.

Cost of a car battery recharge? ~1,500 Shillings (~0.6 Euro)
Cost of a phone battery recharge? ~500 Shillings (~0.2 Euro)

For people of the grid power don’t come cheap.



Threaded - Kulu
Phone charging stall

Influencers - Kulu

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