Via ibฤซdem, we are directed to the ensemble housing estate of Ivry หข/ Seine, a Parisian suburb just southeast of the capital, designed by architects Renรฉe Gailhoustet and Jean Renaudie constructed between 1969 and 1975, happily still standing though in need of some care and attention.
The name of the mixed-used complex with forty residential units for social housing with commercial and office spaces refers the stellar rays of the triangular points of exposed concrete and whilst the overall style could be described as Brutalist (see also here and here), the open form structure with staggered verdant terraces and ramps and platforms connecting public and private spaces has an element of social engagement and spontaneity of interaction not found in all projects of the genre. See more photographs and floor plans from Architecture Lab at the link above.
Saturday, 13 June 2026
les รฉtoiles d’ivry (13. 511)
Thursday, 26 September 2024
9x9 (11. 874)
must contain the characters #@^*!: US regulatory body that sets standards for government agencies issues guidance that urges the end of vexing password compliance rules
landscape of faith: church-to-residential development is in some places easing the housing crisis
ertunet crater: planetoid Ceres may harbour potentially life-sustaining oceans like Europa
hippopotami: the phenomenon of Moo Ding seems likely the natural conclusion of art history—see also
regency era: unofficial Bridgerton Ball Experience leaves attendees feeling scammed—drawing parallels with another disappointing and pricey event
outrรฉ west: eight radical architectural works from western America (see previously)
huaca de la luna: brilliantly painted throne room of a seventh century Moche female leader discovered in northern Peru
the creepy hallways of the built environment: American suburbs are a horror show
universal media disc: the challenges of conserving good data in the age of AI and shuttered, zombified outlets—via Damn Interesting’s Curated Links
Sunday, 15 September 2024
inspeccionando las tropas (11. 847)
Via Super Punch, we discover Mexico’s newly elected president, Claudia Sheinbaum, visiting one of the country’s military academies and addressing an audience of cadets and alumni ahead of her inauguration ceremony scheduled for next month.
Though by far the most interesting story is victory of this progressive individual with little significant dispute from her competition and the peaceable transfer of power, but the venue is also worth noting with those hulking modern buildings that look like something built by the Galactic Empire, the Heroico Colegio Militar’s Tlalpan central campus, completed in 1976. Located just south of the capital, it was designed by famed sculptor, poet and architect Agustรญn Hernรกndez Navarro, recognised internationally for his monumental and futuristic ensembles, with references to pre-Columbian heritage, the Brutalist abstraction of the main hall is meant to invoke the Mayan god of rain Chaahk, also associated with warfare.
Sunday, 1 September 2024
9x9 (11. 807)
city corridor: Metropolitan Museum of Art to exhibit the built and unbuilt visions of architect Paul Rudolph—see previously
move over miss marple: German television mystery series imagines what the former Chancellor is doing with her retirement
batteries not included: peruse the complete catalogues of Radio Shack produced over its six decades of business—plus this theme song
mizzenmast: experimental solar sail prepares for its first voyage—see previously
a copy of a copy: AI’s synthetic data is its downfall—via Damn Interesting’s Curated Links
marshmallow test: the heuristic for delayed gratification and executive functions is fraught with bias and harmful assumptions—via Hyperallergic
preowned platform: IKEA launches a second-hand marketplace to become a circular company within the decade—via Nag on the Lake
substantially worse than random chance: seemingly counterintuitive probability puzzles are perplexing social media—see previously
cerceri d’invenzione: the aesthetic and romance of imagining ruins of foregone civilisations
Friday, 23 February 2024
10x10 (11. 374)
walden 7: photographer Sebastian Weiss captures the epic nature of an outstanding apartment block in Barcelona
shootball: January Sixth themed pinball machines and other Republican swag at the Conservative Political Action Conference—see previously
swimming with sharks: an overview of the hidden terror that’s haunted, informed humanity for millennia
google blobs: the animated emoji character set that ought to be brought back—via Web Curios
38°n: a news source on North Korea rex melly: the riches of Mansa Musa of the Mail Empire—adjusting for inflation and other factors, possibly the wealthiest person in history
shift to socials: Vice Media is folding, laying off hundreds of journalists—via Waxy—see more
pale usher: introducing a blog mini-series on Moby Dick with a curious etymology
every sperm is sacred: following the ruling in Alabama that grants personhood to frozen embryos—and the subsequent suspension of IVF treatment for fear of legal implications—conservative think tank forming Trump’s policy wants to end recreational sex
batpole: homes with alternate stairwells—see previously
Saturday, 3 February 2024
flakturm iv (11. 317)
Reminiscent of the transformation of the Colossus of Prora into luxury vacation properties, we learned that there has been a similar rehabilitation effort in the works for a decade to crown the one of the landmarks of the past of Hamburg, the air-defence bunker in Heiligengeistfeld in St Pauli (see previously), too difficult to demolish and built as nearly impenetrable, with an extension in the form of a boutique, green hotel with a lush rooftop garden. The accommodations open in April, which includes an in-house memorial and information centre about the indestructible structure’s Nazi past, after a three year delay in construction.
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links to revisit plus Crocodile Rock (1973)
two years ago: more links to enjoy plus more on Tulipomania
three years ago: more links worth revisiting plus a Bauhaus chessboard
four years ago: Setsubun, the Benelux (1958) plus antique school notebooks from all over the world
five years ago: The Day the Music Died (1959)
Wednesday, 20 December 2023
telharmonic hall (11. 197)
To round out the podcasting year, 99% Invisible presents a selection of choice minisodes on a variety of topics ranging from practising architecture without a license, decimalising the clock, ghost kitchens and fascinatingly the primordial streaming service, dial-a-song, subscription-based amenity patented by Thaddeus Cahill in 1897. For a monthly fee, people could listen to an entire electric orchestra over the telephone lines. The massive analogue instrument that synthesised the immersive experience was called the telharmonium—also a product of Cahill’s genius—and was the precursor to the Hammond organ and other electronic keyboards. As popular as the novelty was—including live concerts—by 1907, streaming subscribers turned toward the medium of radio. Much more at the links above.
synchronoptica
one year ago: snapshots of war, Harold and Maude plus more shibboleths
two years ago: assorted links to revisit
three years ago: more links to enjoy, It’s a Wonderful Life, Missus Martin Luther, new plant species discovered, 2020 in review plus human hiberation
four years ago: the Battle of the Bastonge (1944) plus Brexit passes
five years ago: a new edition of Euclid’s Elements, typewriter art plus a reminder that when the service is free, you are the product
Sunday, 22 October 2023
11x11 (11. 070)
post-amazon era: monopsonic retailer’s workers’ are writing about the dystopian company to fight back—via Slashdot
sublet: tech startups are relinquishing office space office space back to their landlords
stop making sense: negative manifestos, rule-breaking and by defined by what one is not
deci-lon 10: an outstanding collection of slide rules curated by the analogue computer’s appreciation society—named after their seventeenth century inventor, William Oughtred of Cambridge—via Web Curios
dancing delicacies: 3-D printed plate and nano technologies promise interactive meals
primer simposium tecno: a 1981 electronic music concert in Madrid
piramida: updated plans for the restoration of Tirana’s Brutalist landmark
destroilet: an automatic combustion plumbing solution popular in the 1960s and 70s
down in the underground: agencies of the subsurface
fiver: a new adaptation of Watership Down as a graphic novel
proposition m: San Francisco passes a punitive tax of vacant housing speculation
the faanmg index: the blush has worn off Amazon’s rose—via Nag on the Lake’s Sunday Links (lot’s more to explore there)
synchronoptica
one year ago: brittle egos bristling at Karen’s Garden plus modern sundials
two years ago: the International Meridian Conference of 1884, The Last Picture Show plus an early alternative currency
three years ago: the father of psychophysics, red food dye, another failed doomsday prophecy plus the Humument series
five years ago: the US Gun Control Act of 1968, the WWII bombing of Kassel, the spread of disinformation, anticipatory libraries for other worlds plus RIP to the inventor of the Little Library
Monday, 9 October 2023
7x7 (11. 047)
haus zum walfisch: explore horror film shooting locations of 1970s and 1980s classics, including Suspiria filmed in a townhouse in Freiburg im Breisgau
concrete feats: a tour of Italy’s Brutalist architecture
rapid electric vehicle retrofits: an Australian student wins James Dyson Award for an inexpensive conversion kit to make gas-powered vehicles hybrid earthshapes: fantastic geography from pilot Joseph N Portney
larva convivialis: the miniature dancing skeletons of Roman banquets—via Strange Company
jungian individuation: the Swiss psychoanalyst on the predictive power of Tarot cards
tune-on: veteran television producer and director on the revival of his Laugh-In spin-off five decades afterwards
31 days: a month long celebration of the Spooky Season from Laura E Hall—via Waxy
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links to revisit, World Postal Day plus to slander one’s good reputation
two years ago: more links to enjoy, happy birthday John Lennon, Karl-Marx-Stadt, drag queen tarot plus a visit to the Osterburg
three years ago: The Watcher in the Woods, more Phantom plus more links worth revisiting
four years ago: major military exercise in Germany planned by US forces plus other European trade colonies in China
five years ago: Trump’s legacy of failed businesses, more on the fight to save an ancient woodland plus moving Tokyo’s historic fish market
Wednesday, 20 September 2023
9x9 (11. 010)
⏈: play around for a moment with the Water web toy—via Miss Cellania and the Everlasting Blรถrt
green new deal: modelled on FDR’s Civilian Conservation Corps, US president Biden creates a federal jobs training and climate protection force
won’t someone think of the children: UK passes Online Safety bill—see previously
piramida: architectural photographer Danica O Kus documents the newly-repurposed monument in the Albanian capital of Tirana nine-man morris: archeologists discover a board game carved in the ruins of an ancient Polish castle
qed: a tiny Irish child has a brilliant solution to the trolley problem—see previously
the mascot of ascot: the magnificent millinery modelled by Gertrude Shilling—via Messy Nessy Chic
once i played a tanpura: electronic music from India from the early 1970s—via Things Magazine
written on water: physicists using an ionic pen and Brownian motion can draw lines and letters in liquid
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links to revisit
two years ago: the Global War on Terrorism declared (2001), photographer Charles Cylde Ebbets plus more links to enjoy
three years ago: St Eustace plus running out of hurricane names
four years ago: an AI names mushrooms, exploring a local wayside chapel, more links plus Randy Rainbow for the Emmy
five years ago: retro web bumpers, a then-and-now of New Zealand’s government, modern-day occupations plus the board game Careers
Tuesday, 29 August 2023
7x7 (10. 971)
pagerank: Google has lost the quarter-century battle over overindexing versus useful search results—via Waxy
1 346 000/km²: a tour of what was once the most densely populated area in the world, a largely ungoverned Chinese exclave within the territory of Hong Kong—see previously here and here
corner suite: a visit to a unique corporate headquarters in Czechia with an office in an elevator—see previously
lunar codex: an archive and time capsule of human creativity launched to the Moon—see also
motor overflow: sticking out our tongues during complicated manual tasks reveal truths about our brains’ connections—via Damn Interesting
gone to pasture: an abandoned luxury development in China overtaken by farmers and livestock—via Messy Nessy Chic
cryogenics: Wordpress offers to archive one’s digital estate for a century
synchronoptica
one year ago: another MST3K classic plus assorted links to revisit
two years ago: the chemical element meitnerium, the founding of Greenland, white-winged doves and saguaro cactuses plus introducing Nirvana (1991)
three years ago: mystic Manly Palmer Hall, Wuppertal’s Schwebebahn, inventor Otis Frank Boykin, liturgical cheese plus Netflix (1997)
five years ago: Trump lashes out against perceived social media bias against him plus Keith Houston on the history of emoji
Saturday, 26 August 2023
vernacular architecture (10. 967)
Midcentury Modern embassies and consulates commissioned by the US State Department between the
years 1948 and 1962 at the height of the Cold War were not only outposts of ideology, as an interview with historian David B Peterson for an upcoming retrospective on the architecture of democracy, diplomacy and defence reveals but also host to quite extensive outreach programmes and to project culture and the values of progressive and open societies—though considering American’s own practises of apatheid, it’s a rather hollow image. Numerous star architects and luminaries of the day were involved and most compounds had a publicly accessible area for lectures, libraries and exhibition spaces. The chapter on the embassy of New Delhi designed by Edward Durell Stone (the MoMA, Radio City Music Hall and the Kennedy Centre) looks particularly interesting. More from designboom at the link above.
Tuesday, 15 August 2023
die bauhausausstellung von 1923 (10. 946)
Opening on this day in Weimar and running for the next six weeks, the exhibition was the first public presentation of the art and architecture movement founded in 1919, and advertised in around one-hundred
train stations with Oskar Schlemmer’s Bauhaus logo (the event delayed due individual presenting workshops wanting to prefect their items in accordance with the shift from handwork to industrial production and the poster stickered over), attracting around fifteen-thousand visitors. The first week included lectures by Walter Gropius and Wassily Kandinsky, ballets and concert performances and a procession with lanterns and fireworks. Installations included a model home, ceramics and various painting and building designs by contemporary figures such as Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier. Occurring during the height of the Great Depression, the exhibition became of symbol of the culture war simmering in Germany with praise and enthusiasm on one side for the school’s creative and educational goals and roundly rejected by conservative leaning critics who felt strengthened in their position by the relative financial failure.
Saturday, 27 May 2023
mรคusebunker (10. 768)
So called because of the Brutalist (Nachkriegsmodern-Stil) structure’s resemblance to war-era defensive
bulwarks, the facility designed by architects Gerd and Magdalena Hรคnska in 1971 for the Frei Universitรคt of Berlin for animal research (Zentrale Tierlaboratorien, received with controversy at the time for such a grandiose concrete pyramid being built for the purpose of animal testing) and later for microbiology, pathology and experimental human medicine by the city’s Charitรฉ research hospital, vacant since 2020, has happily been spared planned demolition and been declared a historic monument for preservation. Owning to a vigorous campaign to conserve this icon, bastion of 1970s and others, an exploratory committee has been formed to find possible uses for this structure. More photos from organiser Felix Torkar and SOSBrutalism at the link above.
Thursday, 4 May 2023
flatiron (10. 717)
Although the iconic and photogenic building constructed in 1902 and towered over by neighbouring skyscrapers never stopped captivating the public, the drama and controversary of its recent sale at auction has brought the Flatiron Building, prised out of an triangle of unused real estate, known as “Burnham’s Folly” in it early year, has brought this twenty-two storey structure back into the headlines. Learn more about the Beaux-Arts building conceived as a vertical neo-Renaissance style palazzo through all its owners and iterations in the video below—via Damn Interesting’s Curated Links.
Wednesday, 22 March 2023
8x8 (10. 628)
springfield, usa: a map of places in America with the same names with a locus of which locality most likely meant—via Kottke
koลciรณล: modern and Brutalist churches of Poland
panspermia: researchers studying samples from the Ryugu asteroid find traces of a RNA component, supporting theories that the building blocks of biology were incubated in space before karen, there was nellie oleson: the propagandising of homesteading in Little House on the Prairie
gemรผths- und augen-ergรถtzung: the microscopic illustrations of Martin Frobenius Ledermรผller
reliable sources: Microsoft and Google’s chatbots are using each other as professional references, calling into question the ecosystem of the internet’s information
quo vadis: a monastic brotherhood outside St Stephan’s in Vienna has set up a tattoo parlour—see also
bracket: a more relatable March Madness
Wednesday, 4 August 2021
8x8
westward ho: a publication that captured Southern California’s aesthetic with the help from Milton Glaser and others
strangers on a plane: the all-star cast of the first in the disaster franchise Airport 1970—see previously
tilt-shift: Little Big World explores the Erzgebirge—see also
flowers of ukraine: a Brutalist greenhouse in Kiev that escaped the wrecking ball—via Things Magazine
backwards compatible: a look at the development of plug-and-play technologies and its very forward-looking, consequential decisions
going up: the explosive innovations investment in a space elevator (see previously) could bring about—via Kottke’s Quick Links
gimme some starlight: the original lyrics to Thriller before being workshopped
all signs point east: a branding and tourism campaign aims to inspire discovery, wonder and frolic
Friday, 28 May 2021
tbilisoba
We enjoyed exploring the gallery of the visual essay about the endangered Brutalist monuments and buildings of the Georgian capital of Tbilisi (previously here and here) including a quite arresting 1976 of the city’s vocational college bas-relief (nicknamed the Soviet Batman) that fronted one of the main thoroughfares that was slowly and unceremoniously scavenged for scrap metal and now is no more and the better looked after and protected Chronicle of Georgia (แกแแฅแแ แแแแแแก แฅแ แแแแแแแ, not to be confused with this other set of pillars), the post-and-lentil colossal structure depicting the culture, history and heroes of Georgia above and Gospel stories and various hagiographies below. Created by Zurab Tsereteli in 1985, a few panels have yet to be completed, the complex commemorates Georgia’s embarking on its fourth millennia and should inspire preservation of all architectural treasures.
catagories: ๐ฌ๐ช, ๐, ๐ข, libraries and museums
Tuesday, 13 April 2021
capsule house k
Though familiar with his iconic Nakagin capsule hotel in Tokyo, which was also happily conserved and revitalised, until learning about efforts to save Kisho Kurokawa’s (้ปๅท ็ด็ซ ) retreat in the woods of Karuizawa completed in 1974 we had not appreciated the philosophy behind the movement called Metabolism (ๆฐ้ณไปฃ่ฌ, shinchintaisha—a literal translation of the biological process of a more poetic concept of the exchange of energy between the interior and exterior world) that attempts to harmonize skyscrapers and other monumental architecture and civil engineering with organic growth, embracing the principles of sustainability, human-clustering, modularity, mobility and transience. Learn more at the links above.
Monday, 29 March 2021
casa sperimentale
Though ostensibly informed by the Brutalist movement, this experimental vacation home, a concrete treehouse in the seaside town of Fregene outside of Rome, was meant as a statement about organic architecture and a statement of co-existence.
Also known as Casa Albero, it was built by a family of architects, Uga de Plaisant and her husband Giuseppe Perugini with the assistance of their son over the course of seven years in the late 1960s, the structure has been abandoned and fallen into ruin, tragically. Explored by a group of urban spelunkers, here’s a short drone fly-through of the property. Hopefully this extra attention will inspire someone to save it. Much more at Things Magazine.






