One of many good reasons to plant trees everywhere (including trees between the pavement and the road, trees in parks, in gardens, along the façades of houses, in backyards, on roofs, in parks and out of windows): The beautiful shadows they sometimes cast in the sunshine. This picture of a young oak tree was taken in the Palace Park in Oslo in July.
Monday, 16 August 2010
Sunday, 15 August 2010
COOL STUFF YOU CAN DO WITH IVY
Cover a lamp post with it! (Took this picture less than an hour ago, literally just around the corner from where I live.)
Friday, 13 August 2010
A BUILDING I LIKE
I like this building, but I'm not quite sure why. It's really supposed much too boring and square for my taste, and not at all coherent with the principle of open form.
Could be the Filippa K shop on the ground floor, but I don't think so. There's something about the façade, perhaps the verticality of it, which is established by the french balconies that replace the windows. The height is also quite good, very well-adapted to the building's neighbours. And of course the mixed use, with both space for retail and apartments. Still... Hm.
The girl in the picture is my dear friend Hildegunn, who is moving to Bergen with her lovely boyfriend, Ole Christian, in only a few weeks. Joy!
Wednesday, 11 August 2010
GUERILLA GARDENING AGAIN
Another form of guerilla gardening, I suppose. The artist is Dolk. Speaking of guerilla gardening, I think we'll be planting bulbs around the city quite soon. Let me know if you'd like to join.
Tuesday, 10 August 2010
CARDBOARD BOXES + ARCHITECTURE STUDENT =
Yeah, this is what happens when you hire an architecture student to unpack a load of cardboard boxes filled with books. Apologies to my boss, who had to pick them down.
Sunday, 8 August 2010
LIFE IN THE CITY
This is what life in the city can be like. The girl in the picture is my sister, Ane Regine, and it was taken in Copenhagen in July by a friend of hers, Marita Moen.
Wednesday, 4 August 2010
MEANWHILE, IN NEW YORK
So you think there's no urban trend going on? So you want to build pretty, grey houses out in the country, where you can escape the noise and life of the city? So you think the city centre is a place to live only when you're young and studying? Think again.
As some of you (I'm quite intrigued by the fact that there actually are people reading my blog) may I have noticed, I have passion for townhouses. This urban version of the single-family house, existing in different incarnations all over the world have, in my opinion, the potential of replacing the detached house. While the suburban detached house is known for causing overuse of resources and energy, destroying natural and agricultural landscapes by the way of suburban sprawl, not to mention very high emissions of greenhouse gases and local pollutants because of people driving their cars everywhere (gasp!), the townhouse takes up less space and can fit into almost any kind of urban situation, while still giving people the feeling of living in their own house.
I'm not the only one who likes them though. While reading the Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten online yesterday, I discovered that the richest man in the world, Carlos Slim, had just bought the townhouse in the picture (Although they called it a villa. Amateurs.). According to the Forbes magazine article they link to in (where I didn't steal the pictures, I found them on Wikimedia Commons, thankyouverymuch), the house is only 9 meters (27 feet) wide, but around 33 meters (100 feet) long. Located at 1009 Fifth Avenue, it's just across the street from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in the middle of New York City. Although a house of this kind is far to big to be a sustainable alternative for everyone, I find it very interesting that a person like this chooses to live in the city, and buys a townhouse to live in, instead of just driving to work from some gigantic suburban villa every days. More of this! (Only a bit smaller.)
Friday, 30 July 2010
DON'T TEAR IT DOWN
I know. This picture I took while walking home from work today, is ugly. Really ugly. Buttfuckingly (and not in a good way) ugly. In fact, I think it's one of the ugliest photos I've published on this blog (so far).
However, there is a reason why I'm bothering your pretty blog-reading eyes with this. These houses have been remodelled, added to and re-used. In a not very charming way, but still. They're still standing there, proving that even a stupid food shop can be fitted into old buildings.
You don't have to tear down old buildings that been built in an environmentally friendly and solid manner. You don't even have to tear down newer buildings that don't seem to work any more. Tearing down and rebuilding requires enormous amounts of energy, and produces extreme amounts of waste, and thus, you can almost always gain from redesigning an existing building on a site, pushing it around and squeezing something inappropriate into it. It's still better that it survives, perhaps secretly hoping of being restored one day.
Saturday, 24 July 2010
MURDEROUS LIBRARY
I took this picture while I was on a boat trip in Copenhagen today. Why do I feel that the Black Diamond, the addition to the Danish National Library, designed by the Danish architects Schmidt Hammer Lassen, is sneaking out from behind a corner and wants to murder me? It looks so scary.
Wednesday, 21 July 2010
TREE HOUSE
Last week, I visited my friend Øyvind at his parents' house in Hurum. (They're moving to the village of Montségur in France this summer, but that's another story.) While we were walking along to the road to Holmsbu to buy some ice cream, we stumbled upon this wonderful tree house. I don't know who built it, but I bet my teachers would have loved it. I'd actually like to live in a house like this, perhaps just with taller ceilings and some insulation and windows. And a bathroom. And a kitchen, and maybe some space for a sofa. You get my point!
Sunday, 11 July 2010
SMELLS LIKE ARCHITECTURE
A week ago, I was walking around by myself in Copenhagen, taking pictures of houses, walking into other people's backyards and smelling the roses, when I passed this door. Discovering that there was a window in it, I just had to lean really close and look through it, to find out what was on the other side.
As I was looking through the glass (in which you can see a reflection of my finger taking the picture, by the way), however, I noticed that the window was not only beautiful and solidly carved to the shape of a laurel wreath, it also had a very nice smell. I'm not sure what kind of wood this is, but it looks a bit like oak. It could also be pine, which smells very nice as well.
Anyway, I decided to take these pictures so I wouldn't forget that architecture isn't just about images or giving your stuff a cool look. I think its different elements have to stimulate as many senses as possible, including doors that give away a lovely smell in the summer sunshine when you lean close to them.
Wednesday, 7 July 2010
MULTI-STOREY CAR PARK THAT DOESN'T RAPE ITS SURROUNDINGS
Can you the multi-storey car park? It's there, in the background, standing shoulder to shoulder with the yellow brick building. This friendly feature of downtown Bergen, located only a few meters from Bryggen is actually my favourite building of that kind, of course excepting the ones who are underground.
It's not the most beautiful or interesting building I've ever seen, but it blends very well into its surroundings. Usually, multi-storey car parks are like really ugly UFOs which have landed in the middle of the city, buildings without any relation to the environment around them, neither in size, materials or shape. In this way, they draw all the attention to themselves, without the quality of the design usually justifying that.
This building, however includes many features from the buildings around it, including the brick walls, the arched openings, the angle of the roof and the overall size. I don't know who the architect is, but I'd like to give him or her a hug.
PS. I'm sorry about the blog being in a kind of holiday mood, with not too many posts. I'll try to speed up, and I'll be back with lots of new stuff when year two of my time at BAS starts 1st September.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)











