Wat Rong Khun (white temple) – Chiang Rai – Thailand
Wat Rong Khun (white temple) – Chiang Rai – Thailand
Reframe by Adam Scales, Berthelimeau Peter and Paul Van Den Berg.
Note:
By moving around the cube, a series of constant visual changes and surprising experiences of the court reveal. At one point, Reframe is a cube and a series of plates and then disappear. At another time he focuses on details of the environment wall. A dynamic poetic and sensitive develops between contemporary architecture and heritage. discovery of this object animates and activates the existing architecture. ‘Reframe’ proves to be not only an amazing interior / exterior, but also a vector of receptivity visitor revealing details of facades and architectural elements.’s other attraction of this approach concern the visitor himself experimented constantly changes. ‘Reframe’ becomes a through playful interaction between visitors. Approaching, recoiling or turning around the object the visitor moves from position to see that to be seen. From the position of the control to be destabilized and intentionally or not, he engages in an endless game to surprise and be surprised.
Around the world Kathryn Gustafson is feted as a leading landscape architect. But in Britain she is still the woman behind a much-derided memorial to Princess Diana.
“kiyotz” © by Teehouse in 十日町市 (Tōkamachi-shi), 新潟県 (Niigata-ken), Japan
Image © さんは (Sadao Hotta).
(Source: designboom.com)
This strikes me as some place Bruce Wayne might spend a holiday.
NYC Underground: A Journey To The Freedom Tunnel
Forget the streets: If you want to find some of New York’s best graffiti art, you have to dig a little deeper. While much of the city’s graffiti has been washed away, some of the more provocative tags still exist miles beneath the sidewalks, in nooks and crannies invisible to the pedestrian eye. I discovered these spray-painted secrets on a recent trip to the Freedom Tunnel, a legend among street art aficionados and underground urban explorers alike…. READ MORE.
The MareNostrum supercomputer housed in the deconsecrated Chapel Torre Girona at the Polytechnic University of Catalonia, Barcelona, Spain.
From Simon Norfolk’s photographs of Supercomputers. (Via Tom A)
National Centre of the performing arts China