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Monday, March 30, 2009

The Twentieth Century Is Over

29ouro_500.jpg

THAT'S THE IMAGE that accompanied Nicolai Ouroussoff's article Reinventing America’s Cities: The Time Is Now. It's Le Corbusier Ville Radieuse from the Great Depression, updated with the latest in architectural gimmicks and stupid style. Has Ouroussoff learned nothing from the last 70 years?

Cities are about public life. That happens in the spaces we make between the buildings — our streets and squares. In his Ville Radieuse plan, Corbusier proposed tearing down the historic streets of Paris and replacing them with towers in parks and futuristic transportation. We see the outcome in America in all the towers in parking lots we built during the Urban Removal period. Ouroussoff apparently wants us to continue that.

March 30, 2009 in Architecture, Current Affairs, New York, Urbanism | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack

Monday Morning

This reminds me of the Budhead, who suffered from living in houses and apartments without rugs for scratching his back and head. He was always delighted when he found a good rug.

March 30, 2009 in Music, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Saturday, March 21, 2009

15 Days To Go

March 21, 2009 in Baseball, Jokes, New York, Sports, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

NYC-Architecture.com

Not in Kansas anymore  

Manhattan from Blimp

America

From Brooklyn
from Brooklyn
Before Moses Ruined It II
before Moses brought Urban Removal
ParkRow
Park Row
Herald Square 
Herald Square
Bus in Washington Square
In Washington Square
Photo_streetcars.jpg
Streetcars in the East Village
Penn Station II
Penn Station
Penn Station III 
Penn Station
Under West Side Highway
Under a New York oxymoron - the elevated subway
Times Sq
Times Square
Flim Flam
flim flam
Kosher

Harlem Night

Cleopatra Jones
Cleopatra Jones

NYC-Architecture.com

March 21, 2009 in Architecture, Classicism, History, New York, Urbanism, Weblogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Glass Schmass Redux

Abbot NYC skyline

IN TODAY"S NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE, Jim Lewis writes, "New York is the capital of glass, the city of windows. Other cities get their gravitas from marble or stone." Lewis (who seems to be from Texas), has it backwards.

New York has long been a wonderful city of stone and masonry buildings but has recently gone through a spurt of glass tower development that makes some (like me) pull out sarcastic references to "Houston-on-Hudson.

Some of this unfortunate development has come in the name of "green building." But at a European real estate convention in Cannes last month, the former designer behind many of Norman Foster's glass towers, Ken Shuttleworth, said that glass walls were a thing of the past, because they are environmentally unsustainable. Despite all the LEED Platinum glass towers, this is what the experts like atelier ten have been telling us, and what other traditionalists like the Prince's Foundation and I have been documenting for years.

All the glass towers in New York, Houston, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Dubai are about style. But in architecture, as in so many other fields, it's time for change we can believe in. Peak oil and global warming are here to stay, and we have to stop fiddling while Rome burns. Or, to use a nominally more erudite Roman reference,

There is a tide in the affairs of men
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
On such a full sea are we now afloat,
And we must take the current when it serves,
Or lose our ventures. (Julius Caesar - IV.ii.269–276)

We don't have time for this anymore
The Brompton & the Lucida
Glass Schmass
What's So Good About This?
All the best blocks in New York
Cities Need Both Richness and Order
Egotecture to be branded as Ecotecture
The New World Order — Houston, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Dubai

March 15, 2009 in Architecture, Classicism, Current Affairs, New York, Urbanism | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack

Monday, March 09, 2009

Obamabashing

WALL STREET SEEMS TO BE UPSET that people other than those who work on Wall Street are getting bailout money. Or is it that Obama will let Bush's tax cut for the top rate will be allowed to lapse, so that the rate goes back to what it used to be? Hoover Institute fellows opine on this every other day in papers around the country, and now it seems they think bailing out Bear Stearns and the like was a mistake, even though they were for it at the time.

Charlie Gasparino speaks for a lot of them when he says, "The Dow closed today at its lowest mark in 12 years, and now it's becoming clear even to Obama supporters on Wall Street that his reckless agenda will make a bad situation worse." Never mind that Obama was elected because the Dow was plunging after eight years of Bush 43 and 6 years of a Republican House and Senate.

Hypocritical Republican statements seem to bring out the best in Jon Stewart and the Daily Show staff. The video above is almost as good as their Presidential election coverage. If only Wall Street were as clever about cleaning up their mess.

Related Bonus Video: Bill Maher's Ode to Government:

Bill Maher Ode to Government

March 9, 2009 in Current Affairs, Jokes, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Sunday, March 08, 2009

The Way We Live Now

StarbucksIF I GET OUT OF THE SUBWAY at Brooklyn Bridge - City Hall on my way to the office, I pass a Starbucks about 200 feet after I leave the station. In the winter, when the leaves are down in City Hall Park, I can see another Starbucks on the other side of the narrow park, about 400 feet away.

If I stay in the Subway until the next stop and leave the station at the southern end of the platform, there's a Starbucks as I exit the station, and another one 200 to 300 feet farther down Broadway.

When I get to the office, there's another outlet directly across the street, at the corner of Fulton and Nassau. Another Starbucks is a few hundred feet down Nassau, and from that Starbucks you can see one on the corner of Liberty and Nassau streets.

At home, there's a Starbucks on the end of my block, less than 400 feet away. Four hundred feet further north on Lexington Avenue is another. One block west and one block south is yet another.

When I was a kid in New York, most coffee outside home and the office came from carts and Greek diners, and it was usually mediocre. You never saw people walking down the street with large cups of coffee, as you routinely see now. What Starbucks calls a "Tall" cup, was the norm. Plain and simple, people drank a lot less coffee, and kids I knew weren't allowed much Coke, because of the caffeine. I don't think it's coincidence that Red Bull and all the other "energy" drinks came along after years of Starbucks changing our coffee habits.

Now, two blocks down Fulton Street from my "office Starbucks" is a new Italian espresso bar called Zibetto. It serves Italian-sized portions, which is to say half the size of Starbuck's "tall." Even the Italian sodas come in little Italian sodas. It's worth a trip to 102 Fulton Street.

Zibetto
Zibetto

March 8, 2009 in Culture, Food and Drink, New York | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack