The global architectural and civil engineering group MVRDV, evoking follies of artificial ruins with the remnants of pillars and pylons, has transformed the sub-basement foundations of parking garage of an abandoned mall in the centre of Tainan into an aquatic public square and park. This sort of intervention that restores some greenery and gathering to a municipality rather than replacing one commercially zoned space with another is quite refreshing and breaks up the frenetic monotony of the cityscape.
Saturday, 14 March 2020
urban lagoon
catagories: ๐น๐ผ, ๐, ๐ฑ, architecture
el tratado herrรกn-hay
Negotiated earlier in January of the same year between US Secretary of State John M Hay and Colombian chargรฉ d’affaires Tomรกs Herrรกn y Mosquera, the eponymous treaty was ratified by the US Senate on this day in 1903.
Had the terms also been acceptable to the Colombian government—historians felt that Herrรกn’s deal undervalued the potential economic boon for the country and that they had a commanding bargaining position since he had acted without legislative or business oversight, the US would have been allotted a hundred-year renewable lease of a strip of land crossing the isthmus of Panama with permission to excavate a canal linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The Colombians rejected the ten million dollar down payment plus a quarter million in annual rents, payable in gold bullion, especially considering that the US had already intimated their willingness to invest quadruple that amount in the project, which had been started back in 1881 by the French engineers that had built the Suez Canal to the Red Sea but later abandoned as unworkable. The US refused to renegotiate the treaty and instead provoked civil unrest in the region and lent military support for eventual Panamanian independence, acquiring the rights to proceed with construction under similar terms what was originally agreed upon. The American crews experienced the same hardships and toil as the French had encountered and the canal’s building—finished more than a decade later—was the origin of the phrase “another day, another dollar” for the low wage that workers were paid for this gruelling labour.
Friday, 13 March 2020
kapp putsch
On this day in 1920, Wolfgang Kapp and Walther von Lรผttwitz with the support of the disbanded military staged an attempted coup aimed to undo the November Revolution and reinstate the monarchy since replaced by the duly elected government of the Weimar Republic—a historical designation and never used in official parlance with Germany retaining the name Deutsches Reich in use since 1871 due to its constituent states and better translated as realm rather than empire. Shock troops occupied Berlin and Kapp declared himself chancellor of a provisional regime with the government in temporary exile in Dresden.
Though initial resistance and opposition did not materialize, civil servants and other representatives refused to collaborate with the putschists and held counter-rallies and a general strike, which while paralyzing the country and causing the take-over to collapse after four days there was bloodshed and unrest. Although attesting the art movement’s political neutrality, Walter Gropius created a monument to the March Dead (Denkmal fรผr die Mรคrzgefallenen) to memorialise workers killed during the event erected in the central cemetery of Weimar. The Nazis demolished it in 1936 when they outlawed the Bauhaus school as subversive and promoting degenerate art but has been since restored. While the suppression of the coup and restoration of the legitimate government was mostly recognised as a victory for the republic and public confidence in their ability to rule, the Kapp Putsch stirred other, more violent uprisings in other regions.
Thursday, 12 March 2020
march madness
serafina
Sick and bed-ridden, though the aesthetically-minded Fina dei Ciardi (*1238 - †1253) of San Gimignano insisted on being laid up on a wooden pallet for the remainder of her short life after catching a paralytic disease, the subsequently venerated patroness of the Tuscan town reported that the day—today—and hour of her death was prophesied to her by a vision of Pope Gregory the Great, with which the suffering but uncomplaining girl conceded.
Wednesday, 11 March 2020
7x7
inside out & upside-down: hundreds of posters from CalArts students ranging back to 1980
r360: how the coupe and microcar informed Mazda’s design
area rug: custom parametric carpets informed by their settings that really bring the room together
the floor is lava: advice for keeping the cat off the kitchen counters plus an assortment of more humourous tweets
noodles and pandas: innovative ways to discuss the pandemic without attracting the attention of the authorities
happy mutants: Cory Doctorow’s daily curated links—via Waxy
white russians: contemporary fermented dairy drinks
able baker or radiotelephone spelling alphabet
Prior to standarisation efforts in 1959 that resulted in the NATO phonetic alphabet, telegraph operators, wire-services and civilian and military authorities employed a range of some two hundred jargon alphabets for clarity over airwaves that could often come across as garbled or muffled. While many syllabaries contained over-lapping elements, communication between agencies was fraught for confusion assuredly with no definitive source out there.
Tuesday, 10 March 2020
when you gonna give me some time, corona?
Via Boing Boing, following the very practicable and effective admonishment to wash one’s hands for at least twenty-seconds and accompany the act with various suggested tunes to gauge the duration, a clever developer and designer called William Gibson has created a poster-generator that allows one to use their song of choice with the measured lyrics outlining each step as vetted by public health authorities and follow the bouncing ball. What song would you choose to help wash the germs away? Covid-19, oh I swear what he means. At this moment, you mean everything. With you in that dress, my thoughts I confess verge on dirty—ah Covid-19.