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Posts Tagged ‘architecture’

Caturday Visits Japan: Custom Cat-Friendly Home

by 1389AD ( 24 Comments › )
Filed under Caturday, Japan, Open thread at September 24th, 2011 - 2:00 pm

A Purrfect House for Cats

Taishido House, interior views

Does it make sense to design homes to cater to the enjoyment of cat and dog pet owners? Several design firms are grabbing the pet-friendly home idea by the tail and running with it.

The demand is there, at least in Japan, claims Fauna Plus DeSIGN and its director, Keiji Hirose, a firm known for designing a custom home for 16 cats. The heart of the home features a cat-climbing tree that serves as a spiral staircase leading up to a catwalk on the second floor of the unit.

The catwalk forms a zigzag design and can also be accessed via steps that protrude from the wall, similar to House Taishido’s shelves. Several of the steps are next to small holes in the walls that lead to other rooms.

Does it make sense to design homes to cater to the enjoyment of cat and dog pet owners? Several design firms are grabbing the pet-friendly home idea by the tail and running with it.

The demand is there, at least in Japan, claims Fauna Plus DeSIGN and its director, Keiji Hirose, a firm known for designing a custom home for 16 cats. The heart of the home features a cat-climbing tree that serves as a spiral staircase leading up to a catwalk on the second floor of the unit.

The catwalk forms a zigzag design and can also be accessed via steps that protrude from the wall, similar to House Taishido’s shelves. Several of the steps are next to small holes in the walls that lead to other rooms.

Other cat-friendly features of that home include:

  • a cat-accessible loft that features skylights and windows;
  • a multistage cube of shelves with cat beds; and
  • a floor-to-ceiling scratching post column, wrapped in hemp rope.

According to Fauna Plus DeSIGN estimates, the cost to design a two-story, detached wooden home built to cat specifications ranges from 3.2 million yen (about $42,000 in U.S. dollars) for a 20-square-meter space (about 215 square feet) — on up to 13 percent of the total construction costs for a space measuring more than 50 square meters (about 538 square feet), the company reports.

Cats on stairs in Taishido House

If 16 cats weren’t enough, the residence also houses five dogs, which are separated from the cats via a glass door. To house the dogs and allow them outside access, Fauna designed a rooftop garden.

Read the rest.

More details and photos at InmanNEWS.

Taishido House, exterior view


Saturday Lecture: Pitt’s Cathedral of Learning

by coldwarrior ( 65 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Open thread, saturday lecture series at November 13th, 2010 - 8:30 am

For today’s Saturday Lecture series, I would like continue with some architecture and introduce our readers to the University of Pittsburgh’s Cathedral of Learning. I spent many, many hours in that building nose in the books, of course.  It is still one of my favorite places to visit when I am in town. Without a doubt the single best place to take a class is in the Honor’s College which is located on the 36th floor of the Cathedral. The view is breathtaking and would often get in the way of paying attention to the lecture!

So, grab you lecture coffee and take a tour of a beautiful building. Be sure to check the links at the bottom of the page for pictures that will add to the Travel Chanel video below.

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From Pitt’s Website:

The Cathedral of Learning, a historic landmark, is the second-tallest education building in the world—42 stories and 535 feet tall. It is also the geographic and traditional heart of the campus.

Begun by Chancellor John Bowman in 1926 and dedicated in 1937, the building was realized with the help of contributions from men, women, and children throughout the region and the world. During the peak of the Depression, when funding for the project became especially challenging, school children were encouraged to contribute a dime to “buy a brick.”

In addition to the magnificent three-story “Commons Room” at ground level, the Cathedral of Learning also contains classrooms (including the internationally renowned Nationality Classrooms), the University’s administrative offices, libraries, a computer center, a restaurant, and offices and classrooms for many liberal arts departments.

Trivia tidbit: The Cathedral of Learning has 2,529 windows.

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From the Travel Chanel:

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A Slide Show from the Post Gazette

The Nationality Rooms interactive website.

Wiki has an excellent entry on the Cathedral

I certainly hope you enjoyed this virtual visit to my Alma Mater’s most famous building.

Saturday Lecture Series: Frank Lloyd Wright’s ‘Fallingwater’

by coldwarrior ( 97 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Art, Open thread, saturday lecture series at September 25th, 2010 - 8:30 am

This morning we are going to visit the Frank Lloyd Wright designed Fallingwater (1935).  I have visited there in the fall with the leaves changing, it is stunning.  So grab a cup of coffee and lest take a trip, 50 miles south east of Pittsburgh, PA and enjoy some architecture.

The House’s website

The Wiki website, looks accurate.

Casa de Coprolite

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 289 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Climate, Education, Humor, Open thread, Science, Technology, Weather at July 29th, 2010 - 10:30 pm

[More info and images here via here.]

It’s a house. It’s a very ugly house. It’s a very ugly house created for a competition by people who have no concept of aesthetics, let alone standard construction practices. Here’s a partial description justifying the brilliance of the design:

DISTRIBUTED INTELLIGENCE
Faced with the typical house model of a “box construction” made up of standard industrialized components, we chose to build a clever house with systemic logic components, rising into what we call a distributed intelligence. This means that each component of the prototype contains the same level of technology, energy, structural, etc… With this we say that the logic of all is found in each of the parts, and not vice versa.

That is, distributed intelligence can be understood as the development in fusion research systems and materials, implying a change of procedures, multi functionality in the construction field. Opening the possiblities of digital parametric design from the traditional assembly of standardized industrial components of the home-computer.

In other words, they’ve not only designed one of the ugliest dwellings ever imagined, they’ve invented a brand new lexicon to justify it. Archibabble at its worst. Phew.

To be fair, the design is clever in one respect, that the shape was generated based upon solar tracking, that is, a computer model engineered a shape that maximizes the amount of surface area that receives direct sunlight throughout the day and throughout the year, thus determining the configuration of the solar panels. WIN.

Unfortunately, the maximum efficiency is compromised by site orientation, its global latitude, and, um, unpredictable cloud cover. And it’s ugly. FAIL.

Since this was previously posted here, it’s only fair and  proper to have an Overnight Open Thread. WIN!