This Slashdot post asks the same question a lot of people do: “can libraries be saved from the internet?”
Slate has an interesting photo essay exploring the question of how to build a public library in the age of Google, Wikipedia, and Kindle. The grand old reading rooms and stacks of past civic monuments are giving [...]
March 5, 2008
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information . Tags: architecture, lib20, libraries, library 2.0, obsolescence . Author: Casey . Comments: 2 Comments
dcdead’s photo of the Central Station of Strasbourg, France reminds me of something I’d long wanted to do in (or around) my old house: put it in a dome. Apparently, this dome doesn’t fully cover the building, just enlarges it without obscuring the facade. Still, 6000 square meters of glass looks pretty good, eh?
Back to [...]
December 30, 2007
Categories: Warren . Tags: architecture, bubble, dome, energy efficiency, greenhouse, insulation . Author: Casey . Comments: 1 Comment
One hundred years ago the country was in the middle of a riot of library construction. Andrew Carnegie’s name is nearly synonymous with the period, largely due to his funding for over 1,500 libraries between 1883 and 1929, but architectural historian Abigail Van Slyck notes that the late 19th century was marked by widespread interest [...]
June 21, 2007
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology . Tags: 19th century, 20th century, Andrew Carnegie, architecture, Carnegie libraries, history, information architecture, libraries . Author: Casey . Comments: 2 Comments
APM Marketplace: news of a British model home. Highly insulated, carbon neutral, just 40% more$. Not just a demo, it’s going to be the law: all new UK buildings to must be carbon neutral by 2016. Economies of scale are said to reduce or eliminate the added cost by then.
carbon neutral, efficiency, architecture, environment
June 11, 2007
Categories: Dispatches . Tags: architecture, carbon neutral, efficiency, environment . Author: Casey . Comments: No Comments
Compact, modular, and Lego-like housing is nothing new. Buckminster Fuller’s Dymaxion House (now at the Henry Ford Museum), designed in the 1940s, was probably the first. But the Lustron House was actually sold commercially in the years after World War Two. Though it didn’t turn out to be a commercial success, the house did show [...]
October 6, 2005
Categories: Style, Fashion and Food, Technology . Tags: architecture, buckminster fuller, capsule houses, capsule housing, capsule tower, compact housing, dymaxion house, habitation, home architecture, houses, lego house, lego housing, lego-like, legos, loftcube, lustron, m-ch, micro compact home, modular housing, pre fabrication . Author: Casey . Comments: No Comments