OOZcollections :: real estate and design

November 14, 2009

Architize

Filed under: Architecture, Design, Innovation — Vivian Chen @ 5:53 PM
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Architize is for the architects, architecture lovers, and people related to the field of architecture. Whether you are in real estate development, interior design, landscape architecture, or just like to admire beautiful pieces of architecture, this is the place to absorb architecture in its glory. 

Source: archidose.blogspot.com

http://archidose.blogspot.com/2009/11/architize-me.html

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Architize Me

 

Monday was the official beta launch* of Architizer, “a new way for architects to interact, show their work, and find clients…an open community created by architects for architects.” Developed by Marc Kushner, Matthias Hollwich (both of HWKN), Ben Prosky (Columbia University) and Alex Diehl (KREATIVEKONZEPTION*), the site is being referred to as “Facebook for architects” by many, what with its social networking framework, but it’s actually closer to LinkedIn’s focus on professional relationships. Comparisons aside, at first glance Architizer is a sharp-looking page that is almost guaranteed to be popular with its intended audience.

architizer1.jpg

The three main categories on the page are ProjectsPeople and Firms. Just about every architectural publication, blog, etc. is focused on projects, and architecture offices are listed on sites like world-architects.com, where I work, and others. But the inclusion of “people” between these two is where the novelty and potential of the site exists. Returning to LinkedIn, one could say that people already have a networking tool describing their positions in firms, but Architizer does this and combines pretty pictures with it, linking individuals to the projects they worked on.

architizer.gif

But will Architizer be the exclusive domain of OMA, other well-known architects and their former employees? Or will it embrace the diversity of architecture all over the world, even projects produced by more lackluster firms? Too much of the latter runs counter to the high-quality projects and name-brand architects that stocked the site before its launch (guidelines for the direction of the site?), but the opposite condition would turn the site into just another page where architects can look at cool projects.

Most likely the site will evolve into something between these two extremes, full of all shades between the good and the bad, though the former will rise to the fore in the mix. This will happen via the filters for each of the three main categories, mainly “featured” and “most viewed.” The first is the default, which I’m guessing is controlled by the administrators, and it’s pretty much a sure bet that the most viewed projects, people and firms will be the best of the bunch; no painted concrete condos or suburban strip malls at the top of these lists.

Architizer also features SchoolsJobsCompetitions and a Blog. These are certainly secondary to the main bread and butter of the site, though the school feature has great potential, visually exhibiting the strengths of alumni, and therefore the school, more directly than anywhere else. It also looks like the $$ will come from “the window manufacturer [that] sponsors a page for their product used in [a] project” and advertising, though I think the latter will run the risk of cluttering the site, which has a nice legibility to it, rounded corners and all.

*Check out Guest of a Guest for photos from the beta launch party at Storefront for Art and Architecture on Monday.

November 5, 2009

Fairmont Bab Al Bahr, Abu Dhabi, UAE

Filed under: Architecture, Design, Hotels and Resorts, Real Estate — Vivian Chen @ 1:36 AM
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I was first introduced to the world of Dubai after seeing top professional tennis players dueling out at an exhibition on top of the seven-star hotel, Burj Al Arab. What’s interesting was the view from the top and the fact that each player were hitting against each other with each from different surfaces on the different ends of the court.

The next great memory I have of Dubai was from a book I picked up at the bookstore few years ago. I started reading the business thriller and finished it within 3 days. This is rare for someone who hasn’t been an avid reader of anything until the last year of college. (Now I read constantly…The Economist, WSJ, Foreign Policy, Malcom Gladwell, etc.) The book was Ben Mezrich’s  RIGGED – the true story of an Ivy League kid who changed the world of oil, from Wall Street to Dubai.

Since then, I have heard, seen, and read many aspects of this vastly emerging region. As a business student, there is no doubt that Dubai is part of the curriculum. With the way this world is spinning, every corner of the globe has to be covered.

Tonight I spent hours sitting as a member of the audience of several business & investment presentations/proposals in international finance. Dubai was one of the focused regions. It is predicted to be the next important financial and business center of the world, joining New York, London, and Tokyo. Its free zones and business or investment incentives are highly favorable for foreign investors. Although Abu Dhabi is a lesser known city in the UAE than Dubai, it is equally important and just as significant with strong growth opportunities. Just take a look at the grandeur and the scale of the Fairont Bab Al Bahr and its presence in the region. The designs are refreshing and the architecture is bold. The location is carefully selected, truly a desert oasis.

Source: hotelsmag.com

http://www.hotelsmag.com/article/CA6700338.html

Fairmont Bab Al Bahr
– Hotels, 10/5/2009 1:49:00 PM
Fairmont Bab Al Bahr, meaning “Gateway to the Sea,” is Fairmont’s first property to open in the capital of the UAE, on the Abu Dhabi Creek. Positioned at the mainland gateway of the city, the hotel sits directly on the beachfront, offering guests the best of both urban life and beach experience.

Located in ‘new’ Abu Dhabi, an area destined to become one of the most exciting mixed-use developments in the city, the hotel benefits from spectacular views of the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque, with easy access to Abu Dhabi City Centre and Corniche, and is in close proximity to Abu Dhabi International Airport.

Picture 1
Fairmont Bab Al Bahr boasts 369 guestrooms, a variety of world-class restaurants, 27,000 sq. ft. of function space, a private sandy beachfront, a Willow Stream Spa and two outdoor pools. Fairmont Bab Al Bahr includes the first Marco Pierre White Steakhouse & Grill outside of the UK, serving the choicest cuts of beef and one of the largest selections of wine in the city. Frankie’s Italian Restaurant and Bar has been created by renowned UK Chef White and famed jockey Frankie Dettori.

The new properties all offer Fairmont Gold, the brand’s exclusive lifestyle offering featuring warm and personalized service with amenities such as a private reception desk and a comfortable guest lounge, where guests may enjoy an honor bar and cocktail hour canapés, as well as a complimentary deluxe continental breakfast.

Fairmont will continue on its Silk Road journey in 2010 with new properties planned for Makkah, Jaipur and the Fairmont Peace Hotel, a Shanghai landmark for over a century. Fairmont currently has more than 20 new properties in development, including London’s The Savoy, which will re-open within the next year following an extensive restoration program.

Click here for the full slideshow of Fairmont Bab al Bahr

October 4, 2009

Inhabitat >> Beautiful Atherton Residence Sustainably Connects With Nature

Filed under: Architecture, Design, Real Estate — Vivian Chen @ 12:28 PM
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Surround yourself in nature and forget the frustrations of the overcrowdedness and the stress of urban life.

Source: inhabitat.com

http://www.inhabitat.com/2009/10/02/beautiful-atherton-residence-sustainably-connects-with-nature/

denim insulation, residence, fly ash, fly ash concrete, solar panels, photovoltaic, solar hot water, radiant heating, bay area home, residence

It’s always a pleasure to see a stunning home with sustainable features, but isn’t pretentious about it. This beautiful residence in Atherton in the Bay Area is such a house – gorgeous, with an obvious connection to the outdoors and sustainable features that could go undetected by the casual observer’s eye. Featuring many green design elements, this home designed by SF-based Turnbull Griffin Haesloop Architects, includes solar power, environmentally friendly materials and passive heating and cooling.


denim insulation, residence, fly ash, fly ash concrete, solar panels, photovoltaic, solar hot water, radient heating, bay area home, residence

The original 1950s Bay Area home on the lot was torn down due to structural problems. In its place, this structure was erected around the site’s existing pond. To take advantage of the scenic views of water, the home was built as four buildings, the main house, study, pool house and garage, that all come right up against the water’s edge. Large sliding glass doors from the buildings open up towards the pond, providing an immediate connection with nature as well as a good dose of natural ventilation.

Beyond the stunning exteriors and clean and simple interior, the home is greener than it appears. On the roof, solar photovoltaic panels and a solar hot water system give the home some green cred. An effective combination of stone floors and a radiant floor heating system provide heating during those cooler months in the Bay Area. Additionally, the home utilizes high fly-ash concrete, formaldehyde-free casework and denim insulation.  And despite the warm temperatures during the summer on the South part of the peninsula, the home has no air conditioning and relies on natural ventilation from operable windows and doors, shading from the large roof overhangs and the versatile stone floors to help keep things cool.

Even though the home is built just outside of San Francisco, it design helps it feel as though it were in a secluded location — providing a relaxing getaway for both the owners and their guests. With eco features and an interior that opens up and blurs the boundaries between indoor and outdoor, this beautiful home breezily achieves a sustainable elegance that is simply stated and integrated with sophistication.

+ Turnbull Griffin Haesloop Architects

September 9, 2009

Vertical Farm World

There’s a side effect after eating junk food or fast food: you eventually become sick and tired — the sweet too sweet, the salty too salty. We begin to forget that food is supposed to taste like in its original natural state. Around June of 2009, I was introduced to the new concept of Vertical Farming. Since then, I have had an increasingly growing interest about this topic. It is a merging concept and application of design, architecture, real estate, and environmental science. It is obvious that the world has been changing rapidly for quite some time, and I believe that we as humans we have come across something cool and useful. As we face the many challenges the future brings us, we have two choices: move forward or fall behind. If the vertical farm has the possibilities – to keep food natural, promote healthful living, avoid overuse of pesticides, fight poverty in developing countries, and etc. – then why not give it a chance? Although it requires strategies and is heavily resourced, I believe that if successful, the benefits will outweigh the disadvantages and the marginal benefits greater than the marginal costs.

-Vivian

 

Dickson Despommier talks to Next American City at his Columbia University office about what vertical farms would mean for cities and for the globe.

Source: americancity.org

http://americancity.org/daily/entry/1769/

Revisiting Vertical Farms

Next American City | Mon, Aug 24th, 2009 | Category: Interviews | Tags: next american city, hamida kinge, dickson despommier, vertical farms, columbia university

In perhaps the most public airing of his views and ideas to date, Dickson Despommier wrote an op-ed for Sunday’s New York Times about his “vertical farms” concept. In February, Hamida Kinge conducted a lengthy interview with Despommier, which appears below:

The way skeptics see it, Dickson Despommier has a lot of explaining to do: He’s got big plans for the future of farming. By 2050, the planet will have to feed three billion additional mouths, and traditional farms, which threaten food security by deforestation, the use of fossil fuels and ecosystem destruction, will not be able to hack it. Dr. Despommier, an environmental health scientist at Columbia University, believes the answer lies in the vertical farm, a glass-walled structure that can be designed as tall as a typical skyscraper, and can be located inside city bounds or around city limits.

It sounds quixotic at first, and Despommier readily admits that there is much he cannot answer until he secures funding to build a prototype. But he asserts that every process used in a vertical farm, from the agricultural to the mechanical, has been implemented in some capacity elsewhere, so there are no new mechanics or science involved. Still, vertical farms would be incredibly complex to build and operate, and consequently carry an enormous price tag, which is the main complaint of critics. The farms would also require accessory structures, like labs and seedling nurseries. Despommier intends the energy used by a vertical farm to be self-generating: Plant and waste-water solids would be incinerated to generate electricity. The host city’s gray water would be remediated and infused with nutrients to grow crops, a soil-less process called hydroponics. If the gray water plan works, it could save a city like New York – which dumps a billion gallons of remediated gray water into the Hudson each day – a lot of water and, consequently, a lot of money.

Furthermore, vertical farms would require plenty of staff—which would mean plenty of jobs, grins Despommier. He is fairly confident that, if a few vertical farms are successful, the government will begin to provide tax incentives to encourage their construction. Several cities and countries have expressed interest, including New York City, Shanghai, Masdar City (a zero-carbon solar city under construction in Abu Dhabi) and the country of Jordan. And Despommier believes it’s an especially good sign when a Nobel Prize winner likes your work: At last year’s World Science Forum, his concept won the praise of Steven Chu, the new head of the Energy Department. And anyway, Despommier wonders, with the stakes high for the future of food, is there really an alternative for the future of farming?

Next American City spoke with Despommier at his Columbia University office about what vertical farms would mean for cities and for the globe.

A New York Times article last year suggested that investments in vertical farms in areas of prime real estate would not be likely because other businesses would yield more of a profit. What’s your take on that?

Despommier: I don’t think you’d have a problem convincing developers that this would be a good idea because [vertical farms] would generate money, jobs, and become tourist attractions, I think. But for the most part, I don’t think you’d put [a vertical farm] on 5th avenue and 42nd street.

We took this idea to [an environmental justice] group called WE ACT. Five of our students had [to determine] what would happen if you placed a vertical farm inside Harlem. They showed [WE ACT] some of these designs and said, “We’re thinking about vertical farming inside the city.” And they asked, “What’s a vertical farm?” so that sat down and told them. And WE ACT said, “We’ll show you a place. Put it right here.” That’s how positive they were about it. Even [Manhattan Borough President] Scott Stringer, and Rosemonde Pierre-Louis, who is his deputy mayor for the borough, both have really strong feelings about wanting this to happen inside Manhattan. Where? I don’t know. But I can identify some other places. What about Floyd Bennett air force base? That’s 25 square miles of property that is unused. What about Governor’s Island? I would [also] like this retrofitted into schools, hospitals, senior citizens facilities, on the tops of apartment houses, maybe three of four stories.

If those real estate costs are high, and if the vertical farm employs several people, how would you keep food costs low?

There is no packaging in the vertical farm, so you can eliminate that cost. There’s no storage – [produce is] sold fresh daily. What you don’t sell, you recycle through the energy recapturing system because you don’t want it to rot. You could probably sell [leftovers] to value-added food processing. There’s no shipping. There’s no pesticides or herbicides or fertilizers used so there’s none of those costs. There’s no extra costs added for loss of crops due to weather and crop failures. And you get more than one crop per year because you’re continuously farming inside, so all of these things tend to lower the cost.
Give me an example of a country that is interested – one where it seems promising that they might fund a prototype.

One of the requests we have that we think will actually result in an initiative is from the country of Jordan. I’ve had an inquiry from two separate [US AID representatives from Jordan]. They want me to come visit Jordan to explore the possibility of working with Hyatt hotels to produce vertical farm-like settings inside the hotel so that they’re carbon neutral. You can integrate food production into the hotel as well as energy recapture and all these other things, because, remember, it’s a desert. You’ve got wonderful sun. You don’t have any water, but if you drill down deep enough you’ll have water too. So we can accomplish a lot. If you’re constrained by New York City building codes or something like that, you might not be able to do this. If you go to Jordan they will give you an open invitation to try whatever you like.

With crowding, congestion and traffic already an issue for cities, and the trend of populations moving back to cities, how would trucks pick up massive amounts of produce inside a city?

Maybe they do at it night, or you restrict them to times. I think that by locating the farms at the periphery [of a city], you can alleviate the (traffic) problem. 

But is it also possible to put them in dense areas inside the city?

If you’re talking about big commercial ventures like a 30-story building, that’s probably not going to be in the center of the city because getting enough light into the building would be a problem. But if you’re talking about integrating a vertical farm into a restaurant, a new restaurant or a new school or something else, then the answer is wherever you’d like one.

You support the systematic abandonment of the traditional farm. If that happens, every bit of the food they once produced would need to be replaced in a vertical farm, plus more because of population growth. What amount of acreage would one vertical farm replace for one traditional farm?

It’s an interesting statement you just made: “If we have to abandon our farms.” I hate to tell you this, but we’re already doing it. And they have to do it, not because of vertical farming but because farming is failing. The climate change issues now have determined that what you used to be able to grow, you can no longer grow. [Also], overuse of pesticides have worn out the soil and created terrible situations.

The food and agriculture organization for the World Health Organization has repeatedly said that if we could just put trees back to where they used to be, you could slow [climate change] down. So the answer to the question to the ratio of land indoors to outdoors—that would depend on the crop, but the number that I’ve been given from the world expert on indoor farming – his name is Gene Giacomelli [of the University of Arizona Center for Controlled Environment Agriculture]  is that on average, for one acre of indoor land you save four to six acres of outdoor land. That was for tomatoes. For other crops you can make that ratio go way up. There was a guy who raised barley, which he used to feed his animals. So he decided to do it inside of a big shed. He saved 200 acres by just stacking them all up inside. Then he let (the outdoor land) go back to natural grasslands. And the government sent him a check for that because he was restoring the environment. And he still fed his animals. So when you present farmers with these options, they start to think, “I don’t have to raise corn to raise money, I can raise trees to raise money. I’ll become a carbon farmer.” I don’t want to put [traditional] farmers out of business. I just want them to grow something else. 

Let’s talk about the science side of food security. How will indoor farms reproduce the natural processes of cross-fertilization that keep species strong and biologically diverse?

If you make seed banks…[you ensure] the ability to maintain [hybrid vigor]. In other words, you don’t get stuck with inbred strains of plants because they become highly susceptible to diseases. So [the vertical farm would have] some buildings that would grow crops just for seeds. Outside I think it’s more difficult because you can get big losses due to weather events and to pests and this sort of thing. Indoors you can control all of that. [Keeping diseases out] is an easy thing to do because we know how to do it with people. It’s how you treat people in the ICU of a hospital so I want to treat my plants the same way. It adds an expense to the building, but it’s worth it, because outside, you lose 50% of what you grow before it gets to the market.

Moving to the developing world: Your website says the vertical farm could be the answer to hunger in poor countries. How would the food be affordable to people who might survive on just a few dollars a week, if that?

It depends on the altruistic nature and stability of the country. So, for example, in India, the middle class gains about 25 million people per year. So what do you do about somebody who makes two dollars a day? How do you feed them with the concept of a vertical farm? And the answer is you don’t. I can’t use this as an example and I don’t pretend to do that. What I want to happen is: Prototypes will eventually lead to versions of the vertical farm and the people who can afford them first are the same people who can afford [a cell phone]. I can take you to India – everybody has one! How can you afford that? And the answer is: Because you know what it does and it connects the entire country, without the need for infrastructure.

So would philanthropists who have an interest in a developing country’s population be the primary investors in the vertical farms in those countries?

[Yes]. I know an organization in Duluth, Minnesota. A Nigerian physician has organized Nigerian physicians in this country and wants to go back to Nigeria and build a large school/hospital complex with a vertical farm. I haven’t heard from him in a while but what I suggested to him was to organize the Nigerians in this country – and Hakeem Olajuwan was one of those people. That’s a very wealthy person with deep interests in Nigeria (etc, etc). But a country’s [successful immigrants] can do a great deal of good.

Clearly the world’s rising population plays a role in our myriad environmental crises. How many people is too many for the planet, and if there is an amount, how to keep the population below that number?

That’s a loaded question! As long as they have all the essentials – clean water, safe food, clothing, shelter. There is no upper limit as long as we can ensure these things. Joel Cohen is a world expert on population and he refuses to address that question and so do I.

http://americancity.org/daily/entry/1769/

September 1, 2009

under30ceo.net – a place for young newpreneurs

Filed under: Innovation, Lifestyle, Personal Development — Vivian Chen @ 12:58 PM
Tags: , ,

Today, while waiting to go to class and sitting in front of my computer in the computer center, I started my own 15 Things in the Next 15 Years. The list will be posted to my website http://www.ChenVivian.com when I finish the final draft. 

I’ve been reading like crazy. The real studying begins towards the end of / after college. 

Source: under30ceo.com

http://under30ceo.com/2009/07/29/7-things-i-learned-as-an-entrepreneur-in-the-past-6-months/

7 Things I learned as an entrepreneur in the past 6 months

July 29, 2009

 

Alexander_the_Great*This is the first post in series about ‘Entrepreneur lessons and mistakes’. Aside from being a person who has committed atrocious stupid mistakes in life, I also made numerous missteps in the past 6 months I’ve been out of college trying to successfully launch 2 start-ups at the same time. So far the only thing I have to show is plenty of gray hair at 21 which is why I decided to write this series to help fellow entrepreneurs learn from my mistakes. It is said that “only a fool learns from his own mistakes, a wise man from the mistakes of others.” What are you? A fool or a wise man/woman?*

These are the lessons I learned.

1. This sh*t is hard – Entrepreneur is not a job, but a lifestyle. Get used to late hours, 14 hour work days and best of all, getting absolutely nothing in return. Ask any Entrepreneur you know and they will tell you they wouldn’t have it any other way.

2. People are going to say NO to your idea and NO to you, A LOT – They are not evil people or even bad people, just people who don’t see the potential in your idea. I’ve been told no plenty of times and it doesn’t get any easier.

3. Your best ideas come when you are not thinking about it-  You know the story about Archimedes finding the Law of Buoyancy while taking a bath and running through streets shouting “Eureka,” naked? I’m not saying we should all take baths while trying to solve a problem, but it helps sometimes to stop thinking about the problem. You want to run the streets naked shouting “Eureka,” but I think there is a law against that behavior.

4. Read like crazy, especially when you are busy – If you haven’t figured it out already, the amount of knowledge needed to run a successful start-up is exponentially greater than the amount of knowledge you currently possess. Sure you can’t replace experience with reading, but that’s no excuse to making a stupid mistake which could have been avoided by simply reading a book.

5. There are two types of books you should read – Ones that teach the right attitude and the ones that teach the right skill. ‘7 Habits of Highly Effective Men’ by Stephen Covey falls in the first category and ‘Getting Things Done’ by David Allen and ‘Effective Executive’ by Peter Drucker falls in the latter category.

6. Hiring is a herculean task – Picking your team is more important than almost everything else in business. You can have a killer product, no competition in sight and millions in funding, but if you don’t have a good team, you are going to ultimately fail. Even when you have all those things going for you, it will nearly impossible to find the right person; think of when you have none of it going for you.

7. Its easier to be a great leader than a good follower – Hannibal led his soldiers from the front, Caesar’s mere presence in the battlefield caused his men to fight harder and Alexander was nearly killed fighting in the front lines. What are you going to do? Are you going to be in the sidelines shouting orders or are you going to get dirty in the field?

senthil 

This post written by contributor Senthil Nambi, check out his projecthttp://twitlens.com. He writes a blog “chronicling the life of a twenty something entreprenuer who just recently learnt how to spell entreprenuer.”

 

*So many familiar examples I saw in the article that I learned over the summer at a Business Strategy course. (Archimedes-eureka, Alexander the Great, Hannibal…=)

August 31, 2009

The Shard – Renzo Piano – London

Filed under: Architecture, Design, LUXURY/SERVICES, PLACES, Real Estate — Vivian Chen @ 9:29 AM
Tags: , , ,

This is going to be amazing!

source: archdaily.com

http://www.archdaily.com/33494/the-shard-renzo-piano/#more-33494

The Shard/Renzo Piano 

by Karen Cilento (August 29, 2009)

 

 

1251465989-shard

Renzo Piano’s latest project, the Shard, has recently moved to the construction phase.  The 1,016 ft high skyscraper will be the tallest building in Western Europe and will provide amazing views of London.  The mixed use tower, complete with offices, apartments, a hotel and spa, retail areas, restaurants and a 15-storey public viewing gallery, will sit adjacent to London Bridge station as part of a new development called London Bridge Quarter.  Replacing the 1970’s Southwark Tower on Bridge Street, the Shard is a welcomed addition to the London skyline, and its central location near major transportation nodes will play a key role in allowing London to expand.

More about the tower after the break.

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Known for his elegant, light and detail oriented building, Piano’s Shard consists of several glass facets that incline inwards but do not meet at the top.  Inspired by the towering church spires and masts of ships that once anchored on the Thames, the Shard’s form was generated by the irregular site plan and open to the sky to allow the building to breath naturally.

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Planned as a “vertical city” to address the city’s growing population and need to maximize space, the Shard’s program varies to provide a functional central structure for London. The ground level will include a public piazza with restaurants and cafes, in addition to areas for art installations.  The 50,000 sqm of office spaces include naturally ventilated winter gardens while the 195 hotel rooms and exclusive apartments located on the upper floors showcase beautiful views.  While the Shard offers luxurious spaces sure to be coveted by companies and residents, the building also caters to the public with  viewing platforms on floors 68-72.   Accessed directly from an entrance on the ground level, these viewing galleries are expected to attract over half a million visitors each year.

1251465995-the-shard-by-renzo-piano-5

The mixed program is attractive to many and will allow the Shard to help London’s future development.  The Shard is due for completion in 2012.

As seen on Inhabitat.

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http://www.archdaily.com/33494/the-shard-renzo-piano/#more-33494

 

August 30, 2009

End of Summer 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Vivian Chen @ 9:09 PM

I have just gotten back from a long sailing trip in Canada and Alaska. These beautiful places and the adventures there have inspired new ideas which I plan to implement into my future projects.

This summer has been the most productive and the busiest summer of my life so far. Many more accomplishments to come in the future.

Yiju Vivian Chen

August 17, 2009

Cutting-Edge Hospitality Designs

Source: hdmag.com (hospitality design)

http://www.hdmag.com/hospitalitydesign/content_display/projects/e3i0d287909ecf291eb1aa42ff1bfdd58c4

What’s the Big Idea?

Feb 11, 2009 

By Rachel Long 

A hotel fashioned from an oil rig. One that delivers a truly urban experience. Another that achieves complete energy independence. And a fourth that is literally for the birds. All of these concepts took honors in the second annual Radical Innovation in Hospitality Awards, sponsored by the John Hardy Group and Hospitality Design (HD) magazine.

The finalists were selected from more than 40 entrants by an industry jury of John Hardy, president/CEO, the John Hardy Group; Claude Amar, principal, the John Hardy Group; Michael Medzigian, founding partner, Watermark Capital Partners; Pamela Parsons, senior vice president design and construction, Host Hotels & Resorts; Simon Turner, president, global development, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide; and James Woods, principal, Keen Partners, LLC. 

First prize, which included $10,000 in addition to bragging rights, was ultimately voted on by Hospitality Design Boutique Exposition & Conference (HD Boutique) attendees in Miami and went to Morris Architects for Oil Rig Platform Resort & Spa. Other finalist concepts included e | merse by WATG; the Wind Tower by Richard Moreta Architecture and MRA Design; Extreme Birding by Morris Architects; and a special prize, Pagoda by Danielle Meyer, a student (at the time) at the Art Institute of Colorado (she is now at Denver-based firm Box Studios).

John Hardy, who co-founded the competition in 2007 with Michelle Finn, vice president of Hospitality Design Group, praised the entrants for their creativity and futuristic concepts. “Last year’s competition was great, and this was a step forward. More people understand what we are trying to accomplish. One of our judges, Simon Turner, summed it up by saying, ‘It’s really similar to what you would see in a fashion show in Paris. You might not buy that dress on the runway, but it affects what happens down the line.’”

rig hotelThe Rig Hotel 
The quantity of abandoned rigs (4,000 to be decommissioned within the next century off U.S. shores) begs ideas for reinvention. Consequently, the Houston office of Morris Architects set out to create a self-sufficient, eco-friendly, high-end hotel experience in its own backyard—the Gulf of Mexico.

“Think of the sheer numbers. What do you do with this dead technology? That’s the sustainable proposition,” says Douglas Oliver, the firm’s director of design. Reclaiming rigs eliminates razing them (current practice), and retains their lush aquatic habitats (coral and sea life averaging 20,000 fish per rig). As hotels, they offer a rare opportunity to go beyond historic form. “Thematics don’t have to express an architectural past, but can embrace new technologies,” he says.

“The Rig is much like the ICEHOTEL. It’s that kind of unique experience. We were trying to create a hospitality experience that is unique and fully rounded, and interesting enough that people are interested in doing it. The work with the Rig is not to make it a one-liner, but to prove it as a serious proposition—really investigating it,” Oliver says. That included the use of alternative energy sources, and novel design around a core of water, which allows light to penetrate the rig’s center.

As for entering the competition (and placing two in the top four), Oliver recounts, “We were just slammed because of project commitments. The majority of this was on our own time. It gave us a really good way to stretch. It was a benefit to our mainstream hospitality work that we could work conceptually at this level.”

What led to thinking differently? According to Oliver, “When you really use sustainability as a catalyst, as part of the DNA of the architecture, it leads to innovation.”

emersee | merse 
Forget themed restaurants, exotic spas, and luxurious pools. The radical innovation team from WATG acknowledges that what works for traditional guests may not always entice Generation X and Y travelers. Enter e | merse Network, designed to deliver an authentic urban experience by meshing a hotel with its surroundings. 

According to Matt Page, designer at WATG, the idea emerged from a thinktank comprised of the firm’s Generation X and Y employees in the Irvine, California, office. The group explored their preferences in travel experiences to create the perfect hotel concept. “We wanted to experience a city by having the city become our hotel,” he says. Purposely limiting internal hotel amenities makes way for links to urban businesses, with interactive maps (thanks to personal GPS [global positioning system] technology) to help guests explore their site and activity preferences. 

Using a guest profile, completed before arrival, the hotel can help travelers find local businesses, restaurants, and clubs to fit their needs; network with other guests; and provide feedback on places they’ve visited and activities they’ve experienced. All e | merse locations will be linked to allow users ease of transfer, and the brand can even facilitate baggage being moved from one location to another. 

The multi-faceted nature of e | merse embraces several critical ideas, says Raj Chandnani, WATG vice president, strategy. Among them are urban renewal and revitalization, technology, and sustainable design and adaptive reuse in a scalable concept.

wind towerThe Wind Tower 
In what the architect and interior designer call “a new icon,” the Wind Tower aims to achieve energy independence (even adding to the grid), create eco diversity (in layered vegetation and water catch-basins), and contributing culturally (the building facade is a chromatic clock).

Three areas mattered most to Richard Moreta, principal of his Miami practice, for architecture: photovoltaics, aeolic energy, and water retention. His search for aeolic (or wind) efficiency hinged on the Venturi phenomenon, essentially the acceleration of a mass of air between two volumes. As a result, what was originally set to be two buildings became one, to take full advantage of the effect.

The Wind Tower’s aerodynamic lines promote catching rain; the south facade is dedicated to solar-energy absorption; an e-glass (e for emissivity) facade helps stop the penetration of ultra-violet and infrared rays, aiming to curb heat gain/loss.

John Naranjo of MRA Design in Miami, who collaborated with Moreta on the project, traces concept inspiration and building shape to a tropical flower. “We approached it like nature; it maintains life through absorbing sun, water, and wind,” he says. “Predominant is the wind. Physically, we wanted to create aspects that are seen working. Guests will feel good about the experience.”

Says Naranjo, “You cannot have technological and radical innovation without thinking of sustainability. It pays off, but it’s going to cost more up front. Economically, I think it’s going to be the future.”

extreme birdingExtreme Birding 
With the tagline “It’s all about the view,” Extreme Birding promotes birdwatching as a concept that can be sensory and exciting—and perfect for anybody interested in a luxurious, natural retreat experience.

Morris Architects conjured two birding hotels, one on a coastal cliff in Alaska, the other in a forest canopy in Costa Rica, to test how a birding retreat translates for environmental extremes (the former cold and dry, the latter hot and humid). Viewports, patios, or treehouses offer supreme views; a “habitat merge” allows birds to circulate laterally and vertically throughout the hotels. Guests can track bird information and migratory patterns on their in-room, video touch-screen systems.

Morris Architects’ Oliver notes, “I like the subtlety of Extreme Birding. As a concept, it sneaks up on you. Something as passive as bird-watching, and almost banal, ends up being this exciting and engaging thing.”

www.radicalinnovationinhospitality.com
 

http://www.hdmag.com/hospitalitydesign/content_display/projects/e3i0d287909ecf291eb1aa42ff1bfdd58c4

August 5, 2009

Bangkok – hub, retail, Ritz-Carlton, public square, Marriott International, Ian Schrager

Filed under: Architecture, Design, Hotels and Resorts, LUXURY/SERVICES — Vivian Chen @ 2:37 PM
Tags: , ,

Source: Hotelsmag.com

http://www.hotelsmag.com/article/CA6673916.html?nid=3457&rid=14152487

OMA’s Ole Scheeren Designs Bangkok’s Tallest Building

MahaNakhon will feature public gardens, a major transportation hub, retail, Ritz-Carlton Residences, a new public square, and The Bangkok Edition, a hotel collaboration between Ian Schrager and Marriott International.

Nicholas Tamarin — Interior Design, 7/31/2009

While Office for Metropolitan Architecture founder Rem Koolhaas generally snags most of the firm’s headlines, partner Ole Scheeren is taking a bow of his own with his design for MahaNakhon. When completed in 2012, the 77-story tower will stand as Bangkok’s tallest building.

Construction begins this fall on the tower, which will feature stacked surfaces, terraces and protrusions designed to create the impression of digital pixilation. The 1.6 million-million-square-foot skyscraper will be chock full of amenities, with a landscaped outdoor public plaza, 110,000-square-feet of retail space, gardens and terraces spread over several levels for restaurants, cafes, and a 24 hour marketplace.

Also in the works for the tower are The Ritz-Carlton Residences, 200 customized single-level and duplex condos, as well as the Bangkok Edition, a 150-room hotel from Marriott International in collaboration with boutique hotel trailblazer Ian Schrager.

Scheeren, who recently gained fame for his CCTV Tower in Beijing, joined Koolhaas at OMA in 1995 and became partner in 2002. He is now director of OMA Rotterdam and OMA Beijing and is in charge of the firm’s work in Asia.

Renderings courtesy of OMA/Ole Scheeren.

http://www.hotelsmag.com/article/CA6673916.html?nid=3457&rid=14152487

July 17, 2009

Vertical Farming

Filed under: Design, Green Development, Lifestyle — Vivian Chen @ 3:05 PM
Tags: , , ,

I am not liberal, but I do care about living well. That includes eating well and putting the best foot forward, la bella figura. The future of food and food systems can be downright scary. Are we eating the real things, or just what look like the real things? What you put into your body can potentially stay in there for a lifetime. Pesticides, genetically altered nutrients, chemicals…are we humans or are we lab rats? Do you really want to risk not knowing what you’re eating and waiting to see the effects unravel over the years and end up paying for it later? Think about it.

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source: verticalfarm.com

Advantages of Vertical Farming

Year-round crop production; 1 indoor acre is equivalent to 4-6 outdoor acres or more, depending upon the crop (e.g., strawberries: 1 indoor acre = 30 outdoor acres)
No weather-related crop failures due to droughts, floods, pests
All VF food is grown organically: no herbicides, pesticides, or fertilizers
VF virtually eliminates agricultural runoff by recycling black water
VF returns farmland to nature, restoring ecosystem functions and services
VF greatly reduces the incidence of many infectious diseases that are acquired at the agricultural interface
VF converts black and gray water into potable water by collecting the water of
evapotranspiration
VF adds energy back to the grid via methane generation from composting non-edible
parts of plants and animals
VF dramatically reduces fossil fuel use (no tractors, plows, shipping.)
VF converts abandoned urban properties into food production centers
VF creates sustainable environments for urban centers
VF creates new employment opportunities
We cannot go to the moon, Mars, or beyond without first learning to farm indoors on
earth
VF may prove to be useful for integrating into refugee camps
VF offers the promise of measurable economic improvement for tropical and subtropical
LDCs. If this should prove to be the case, then VF may be a catalyst in helping to reduce or even reverse the population growth of LDCs as they adopt urban agriculture as a strategy for sustainable food production.
VF could reduce the incidence of armed conflict over natural resources, such as water
and land for agriculture

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