Saturday, October 22, 2011

The View from St. Michaels, MD

So I'm in DC this weekend visiting my friend Susan, who I've known for going on twenty years, and this afternoon we drove out to St. Michaels, MD with her 2.5 year old daughter Helena. Her parents own a house here situated at the end of a creek which eventually connects to Chesapeake Bay.

This is the view I'm looking at right now, and it reminds me how important it is to get out of the city every so often if only to reconnect with environments I so rarely get to experience. Susan told me that the covered bridge is new - there didn't used to be anything there, but the city recently expanded its walk and bike trails and built the bridge to connect the nature preserve (off in the distance) with the town (which extends out off to the left of the photo).

It's comforting to know that communities all over -- not just urban ones -- continue to expand the ways that allow people to travel by means other than motorized ones. Just now, as someone was biking over the bridge, another person was going underneath it in a kayak. And a couple stopped to admire the blue heron, which according to Susan has made its home here for some time.

What a lovely day.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Bosco Verticale in Milan

Just came across this project, and it immediately made me think about last night's question regarding design of the built environment for all the senses. Imagine a vertical forest and what it would afford: something lovely to look at (especially at the changing of the seasons), something to smell, something to hear (various wildlife that will move in, rustling of the branches in the wind), something to touch, something to even taste if you really want to go there. Technically challenging, I imagine, but lovely!


Monday, October 17, 2011

Module 3


Mine was the first headphones generation. Sony introduced the first Walkman personal cassette player in the United States in 1980, and throughout that decade it became the preeminent way to carry your music around with you. People were no longer subject to whatever song came on the radio; wherever you were, armed with a pair of headphones, you could become your own radio station and disappear into your own little world.

In the autumn of 1989, at the start of my sophomore year of college, I went to Greece to study art history and archaeology for a term. We traveled for ten weeks, barely staying in one place long enough to unpack, and so there was a lot of down time spent mainly on buses. I had brought my Walkman with me, and I used it to carve out some personal space and dull the demands of constantly being around the same twenty people day in and day out.

My professor Dale, a septuagenarian who was far more sprightly and energetic than most of us twenty-year-olds, would constantly bemoan the fact that I and my fellow classmates would don our headphones at every available opportunity. “You should be listening to your surroundings,” he would tell us, “to get a sense of what the ancient Greeks heard in these very same places. But not only that: you have to smell, taste and touch everything, too.”  He was completely serious, and now – more than twenty years later – I also know that he was right.

In the introduction to their Auditory Culture Reader, Michael Bull and Les Back argue that the primacy of the visual sense has resulted in the subjugation of the others, thereby limiting our ability to understand the full meanings of an entire range of human behaviors, attitudes and emotions. They encourage thinking with a “democracy of the senses,” where no one sense has primacy over the others and each plays an important role in delineating the experience of a thing or of a place, such as the built environment.

Their focus, as evidenced by the title of their volume, is sound. They encourage cultivating the practice of “deep listening,” where layers of meaning are revealed through repeated listenings and the relationships between ourselves, others and the spaces where we interact are constantly being reevaluated. In this manner, we can begin to understand how sound connects people together in ways that seeing does not or how the same exact sound can spark completely different reactions among peoples of differing cultures, genders or ages.

And then there is the relationship of sound to the modern metropolis. Later in the same volume, Fran Tonkiss suggests that where vision in a city is about “action and spectacle,” sound is often relegated to the background as “atmosphere.” But sound has played a functional and historical role in the development of cities and especially the built environment, where acoustic manipulation serves to either shut noise out or enhance its quality in such a way as to make it more palatable to hear. The cacophony of the city is enough to drive you insane, so we have developed ways to shut out noise and allow social interaction to occur within the confines of regulated space.

The newly-opened September 11 Memorial Plaza in downtown Manhattan, for instance, eliminates urban noise through the creation of natural sound. Two large basins, which occupy the footprints of the original World Trade Towers, are constantly filled with the rushing waters of eight waterfalls, creating a sound which is loud enough to drown out all other ambient city noise such as vehicular traffic, honking horns and loud shouting. If you stand near enough, the rushing water can even mask the conversation of the people standing on either side of you. In this manner, individuals are afforded the opportunity to grieve or reflect in a way that’s personal, effective and immediate.

During the transition from an agrarian to urban way of living, sound also played an increasingly important role in human cultural evolution. In his book The Soundscape, R. Murray Schafer argues that it was primarily sounds which augured the development from small towns to increasingly complex urban spaces through things like the ringing of church bells, the hourly chiming of town clocks, the grinding of the local mill and the clanging of the blacksmith’s tools. These sounds began the regulation of time, which had previously been divided into sunup and sundown, and catapulted urban life into the complexities of the industrial revolution.

As artificial sources of light slowly crowded out the night, the hours at which people were able to travel and conduct social business steadily grew.  Those individuals that were bothered by hooves on cobblestones all evening long or the hourly shouts of the nightwatchman in the middle of the night and had status began to exert political influence. Soon enough, regulations began to privatize what had once been public; for instance, in Weimar Germany the making of music was forbidden unless conducted behind closed doors. Something which once serviced the delight of many became captured by a select few.

Sound is not the only sense which relates to the built environment. In a personal history published in The New Yorker, David Owen investigates the relationship between one’s sense of smell and the process of remembering. Back in his hometown of Kansas City with his sister, they decided to take a tour of places from their childhood in order to discover if they still smelled the same. While their research showed that most did not, it motivated him to think further about the conventional wisdom which states that smell is the sense most intricately tied to memory and whether the loss of a place’s scent is meaningful.

Upon visiting his childhood home some years later, Owen descends into the basement and finds that it smells exactly as he remembered it. Although certain things no longer looked the same, he was able to be transported back in time – as if “childhood itself had been hiding out down there, miraculously still alive.” Owen consistently links scent to vision, but he doesn’t necessarily exert the primacy of one over the other. When an art museum gets remodeled and loses its damp and musty aroma, one could easily argue that the indoor air quality has been improved. But when something from the past looks but doesn’t smell the same, has something even deeper been lost? If strong scents invoke vivid memories, what will lack of smells afford us as we go about our lives?

Considering the sense of touch, Lisa Heschong posits that thermal comfort and, by extension, discomfort are an extension of (yet separate from) touch in her book Thermal delight in architecture. She argues in part that, since people seek out temperature extremes for recreational enjoyment – Caribbean vacations, winter ski trips to Vermont – we need to consider the notion that a “steady-state” model of indoor temperature control robs us of what she calls “thermal delight.” While some may find this ability to revel in marked temperature changes delightful, its implication in the built environment is fraught with potential complications. Installing a sauna is one’s home seems reasonable, but throwing open the windows in an office on a hot and humid summer day would most likely cause much more stress than fun.

More cogent is her discussion of places that serve a thermal function and how they act to create strong associations of affection and well-being. In some respects, the modern regulation of residential indoor air temperature has indeed eliminated the need for shared space dedicated to keeping either warm or cool, and family dynamics have suffered as a result. When the heat is kept at a constant 68 degrees in the middle of winter, people can comfortably exist in isolation whereas, in the past, they needed to come together to share in the experience of warmth. In this manner, modern HVAC systems have robbed the family unit of a certain level of shared social experience.

Addressing thermal comfort standards, Kwok and Rajkovich take a more pragmatic view of steady-state models. They argue that, given global climate change, we need to define a broader zone of indoor comfort – which they call the “mesocomfort zone” – which exists somewhere between steady-state levels and those which start to cause physical discomfort. If we can begin to define these so-called “acceptable levels” for occupancy type, building type and climate, we can be better prepared for adaptation to the rapid environmental changes that will continue to occur. In this manner, maybe Heschong’s notion of incorporating temperature extremes into the built environment will move one step closer to fruition.

Given the amount of sensory stimuli that we encounter on a daily basis, it’s amazing that we don’t consistently get disoriented or lost. When assessing how individuals successfully navigate the built environment and what sensory information they rely upon to do so, it is helpful to understand the concept of cognitive maps. Jon Lang defines cognitive maps as a process through which people “acquire, code, store, recall and decode” information which allows them to move through complex environments by noting locations and attributes. These maps – in Lang’s view, created mostly through visual stimuli, it seems – are useful in a variety of ways, including wayfinding.

Wayfinding is essentially the method by which one is assisted in creating a successful cognitive map through sensory cues. In their discussion of wayfinding, Carpman and Grant outline why effectively finding one’s way is important, for whom it matters most, and how to create an interconnected system which affords individuals the best chance at wayfinding success. Like Lang, they focus mostly on the visual sense – painting specific sections of a hospital different colors, for instance, or installing something notable like a statue which can serve as a memory trigger upon a return trip. But why limit wayfinding markers to things that can only be seen?

Considering what we know about the other senses, it seems a shame to insist that people remember a specific path through sight alone. Installing a fountain instead of a statue would add the element of sound and make it even more likely for someone passing through to remember it when coming back. Creating a tropical micro-climate could serve these same ends, or pumping in specific smells at certain locations. When we force people to rely solely on their sense of sight in navigating the built environment, we are limiting our ability as shapers of these spaces to give travelers the proper tools. It’s like handing them a toolbox that contains only a hammer.

Very little modern architecture incorporates senses other than the visual and, to a lesser extent, touch. But there have been experiments, like Diller & Scofidio’s Blur Building made almost entirely of mist, Arup’s SoundLab, London Metropolitan University’s Musarc and Sweden’s Ice Hotel, which push the boundaries of what the built environment can encompass. We experience our world in a multi-sensory way, and architecture and design should strive to incorporate the myriad ways we interface with our surroundings.

REFERENCES

Bull, M., & Back, L. (2003). The auditory culture reader. Oxford; New York: Berg.

Heschong, L. (1979). Thermal delight in architecture. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Kwok, A., & Rajkovich, N. (2010). Addressing climate change in comfort standards. Building and Environment, 45(1), 18-22.

Lang, J. (1987). Creating architectural theory: The role of the behavioral sciences in environmental design. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Co.

Owen, D. (2010, January 25). The Dime Store Floor. The New Yorker, pp. 33-37.

Schafer, R. M. (1994). The soundscape: Our sonic environment and the tuning of the world. Rochester, VT: Destiny Books.

Stokols, D., & Altman, I. (1987). Handbook of environmental psychology. New York: Wiley.

Tonkiss, F. (2003). Aural postcards: Sound, memory and the city. In M. Bull & L. Back (Eds.), The auditory culture reader (pp. 303-309). Oxford;  New York: Berg.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Violating the Norms (in My Mind)

The other week, when Stefanie and I were working on our "sustainable design" definition via Google Docs, I happened to be sitting at the Argo Tea near campus. A woman came in talking extremely loudly on her cell phone, which she had on speakerphone for some reason, so everyone in the room could hear both sides of the conversation.

Via chat, I jokingly suggested to Stefanie that I should go over and sit down at the table at which the woman was sitting. My thought was that, if she asked me what I was doing, I would tell her that I hoped having me sit right next to her would cause her to lower her volume. Stefanie suggested this would be a good way to violate norms, and I nervously vowed to do so.

Needless to say, she hung up shortly thereafter and left almost immediately. To be honest, I was rather anxious about doing this and probably wouldn't have followed through if given the opportunity. Which made me think this: why, when this woman was violating norms which clearly affected nearly everyone in the room (as evidenced by all the glares she was receiving - to which she was seemingly oblivious), was I unwilling to violate a norm in order to stop her? This probably says more about me than it does about her.

So, in a nutshell, three words: norm violation fail.

Holly Whyte Way Dedication

The dedication of the Holly Whyte Way, sponsored by Friends of Privately-Owned Public Space [F-POPS] and Open House New York, occurred on Saturday morning at 11am. It was a festive affair, complete with a ceremonial watering (see below) and marching band. It marks the 50th anniversary of the NYC Building Code, which required developers to provide public space in their buildings in exchange for higher air rights. There are approximately 850 of these public spaces in NYC totaling 82 acres.
The dedication, which started at the AXA plaza on 51st Street between 6th & 7th Avenues, consisted of the watering of a brass plaque depicting a tree on a grid, which is the logo that can be found at all POPS spaces in the city.
Here is what the plaques look like - though they won't always be wet, of course. The HWW runs from this plaza north to 57th Street along a series of thru-block plazas and then turns to back south through another short series back to 54th St. A self-guided tour map can be downloaded here.
Currently, in order to cross from plaza to plaza you have to enter the street mid-block without the benefit and safety of a crosswalk. F-POPS have received permission from the local community board to have mid-block crosswalks (and hopefully stoplights) installed along the HWW, and the DOT is currently studying the proposal.
There was a surprise waiting at 53rd Street - kids on scooters!
 "Scoot Here" indeed.
Some of the plazas have ample public seating, others a limited amount with most seats attached to restaurants or other establishments, and several don't look like plazas at all.
Like this one, which resembles a lobby-turned-public corridor and functions solely to shuttle pedestrians from one block to the next. I don't quite understand how this qualifies as a "plaza."
Another problem is that many of the POPS aren't clearly marked. Unless you knew what you were looking for, you might easily miss the logo and lettering in white on the right.
Or here, where no mention of the POPS inside can be seen.
This, with the rope and sign, hardly invites you to come inside. Coupled with the lack of seating, I have no idea how this can be considered a "privately-owned public space." I can walk through without getting hassled, it seems, but that's about it. I should have sat down on the ground underneath the circle and seen what happened...
This the termination of the HWW - at the other side of the plaza is the Ziegfeld Theater. Even open plazas in NYC are subject to the vagaries of construction, like shade-inducing scaffolding. But all that said, Midtown would be a much more depressing place without these plazas.

Friday, October 14, 2011

FIT Campus Maps




So here's my first attempt, which is probably the best of the bunch. I zoomed right in and focused on 27th Street, which is really the only part of the campus that I frequent. I realize in retrospect that there are buildings on 26th St. too, for instance, as well as off-campus dorms. I think the layout is fairly accurate, if rudimentary, and although it's missing some stairs and doors I think it's a reasonable effort.



I start to lose the plot on the second map. Maybe because I was too focused on details, like adding all the revolving doors for some reason, I neglected to notice that the B building is not, in fact, where the cafeteria is (something I neglected to point out in my first map above, I now realize) and the scale of the buildings is just all wrong.


Now I've really done it. My attempts at even more detail--which I must have thought I needed, since by now I should be an expert on the layout of the campus, right?--led me straight back to the error of the second map (wrong labeling of B bldg) plus I'm pretty sure this one took me significantly longer than the others because I had to draw and redraw all the pathways to make sure they were correct. Which they're not. 

Module 3 Draft


Here's a draft of an essay I worked on for Module 3, focusing on the readings for the first part. I plan on incorporating the rest of the readings into this piece, which I hope to post by Monday:

Mine was the first headphones generation. Sony introduced the first Walkman personal cassette player in the United States in 1980, and throughout that decade it became the preeminent way to carry your music around with you. People were no longer subject to whatever song came on the radio; wherever you were, armed with a pair of headphones, you could become your own radio station and disappear into your own little world.

In the autumn of 1989, at the start of my sophomore year of college, I went to Greece to study art history and archaeology for a term. We traveled for ten weeks, barely staying in one place long enough to unpack, and so there was a lot of down time spent mainly on buses. I had brought my Walkman with me, and I used it to carve out some personal space and dull the demands of constantly being around the same twenty people day in and day out.

My professor Dale, a septuagenarian who was far more sprightly and energetic than most of us twenty-year-olds, would constantly bemoan the fact that I and my fellow classmates would don our headphones at every available opportunity. “You should be listening to your surroundings,” he would tell us, “to get a sense of what the ancient Greeks heard in these very same places. But not only that: you have to smell, taste and touch everything, too.”  He was completely serious, and now - more than twenty years later - I also know that he was right.

In the introduction to their Auditory Culture Reader, Michael Bull and Les Back argue that the primacy of the visual sense has resulted in the subjugation of the others, thereby limiting our ability to understand the full meanings of an entire range of human behaviors, attitudes and emotions. They encourage thinking with a “democracy of the senses,” where no one sense has primacy over the others and each plays an important role in delineating the experience of a thing or of a place, such as the built environment.

Their focus, as evidenced by the title of their volume, is sound. They encourage cultivating the practice of “deep listening,” where layers of meaning are revealed through repeated listenings and the relationships between ourselves, others and the spaces where we interact are constantly being reevaluated. In this manner, we can begin to understand how sound connects people together in ways that seeing does not or how the same exact sound can spark completely different reactions among peoples of differing cultures, genders or ages.

And then there is the relationship of sound to the modern metropolis. Later in the same volume, Fran Tonkiss suggests that where vision in a city is about “action and spectacle,” sound is often relegated to the background as “atmosphere.” But sound has played a functional and historical role in the development of cities and especially the built environment, where acoustic manipulation serves to either shut noise out or enhance its quality in such a way as to make it more palatable to hear. The cacophony of the city is enough to drive you insane, so we have developed ways to shut out noise and allow social interaction to occur within the confines of regulated space.

The newly-opened September 11 Memorial Plaza in downtown Manhattan, for instance, eliminates urban noise through the creation of natural sound. Two large basins, which occupy the footprints of the original World Trade Towers, are constantly filled with the rushing waters of eight waterfalls, creating a sound which is loud enough to drown out all other ambient city noise such as vehicular traffic, honking horns and loud shouting. If you stand near enough, the rushing water can even mask the conversation of the people standing on either side of you. In this manner, individuals are afforded the opportunity to grieve or reflect in a way that’s personal, effective and immediate.

During the transition from an agrarian to urban way of living, sound also played an increasingly important role in human cultural evolution. In his book The Soundscape, R. Murray Schafer argues that it was primarily sounds which augured the development from small towns to increasingly complex urban spaces through things like the ringing of church bells, the hourly chiming of town clocks, the grinding of the local mill and the clanging of the blacksmith’s tools. These sounds began the regulation of time, which had previously been divided into sunup and sundown, and catapulted urban life into the complexities of the industrial revolution.

As artificial sources of light slowly crowded out the night, the hours at which people were able to travel and conduct social business steadily grew.  Those individuals that were bothered by hooves on cobblestones all evening long or the hourly shouts of the nightwatchman in the middle of the night and had status began to exert political influence. Soon enough, regulations began to privatize what had once been public; for instance, in Weimar Germany the making of music was forbidden unless conducted behind closed doors. Something which once serviced the delight of many became captured by a select few.

Sound is not the only sense which relates to the built environment. In a personal history published in The New Yorker, David Owen investigates the relationship between one’s sense of smell and the process of remembering. Back in his hometown of Kansas City with his sister, they decided to take a tour of places from their childhood in order to discover if they still smelled the same. While their research showed that most did not, it motivated him to think further about the conventional wisdom which states that smell is the sense most intricately tied to memory and whether the loss of a place’s scent is meaningful.

Upon visiting his childhood home some years later, Owen descends into the basement and finds that it smells exactly as he remembered it. Although certain things no longer looked the same, he was able to be transported back in time – as if “childhood itself had been hiding out down there, miraculously still alive.” Owen consistently links scent to vision, but he doesn’t necessarily exert the primacy of one over the other. When an art museum gets remodeled and loses its damp and musty aroma, one could easily argue that the indoor air quality has been improved. But when something from the past looks but doesn’t smell the same, has something even deeper been lost? If strong scents invoke vivid memories, what will lack of smells afford us as we go about our lives?

Given the amount of sensory stimuli that we encounter on a daily basis, it’s amazing that we don’t consistently get disoriented or lost. When assessing how individuals successfully navigate the built environment and what sensory information they rely upon to do so, it is helpful to understand the concept of cognitive maps. Jon Lang defines cognitive maps as a process through which people “acquire, code, store, recall and decode” information which allows them to move through complex environments by noting locations and attributes.

REFERENCES

Bull, M., & Back, L. (2003). The auditory culture reader. Oxford; New York: Berg.

Lang, J. (1987). Creating architectural theory: The role of the behavioral sciences in environmental design. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Co.

Owen, D. (2010, January 25). The Dime Store Floor. The New Yorker, pp. 33-37.

Schafer, R. M. (1994). The soundscape : Our sonic environment and the tuning of the world. Rochester, VT: Destiny Books.

Stokols, Daniel, & Altman, Irwin. (1987). Handbook of environmental psychology. New York: Wiley.

Tonkiss, Fran. (2003). Aural postcards: Sound, memory and the city. In M. Bull & L. Back (Eds.), The auditory culture reader (pp. 303-309). Oxford;  New York: Berg.

Holly Whyte Way

On Saturday, there's a tour - part of OHNY - of the newly-named "Holly Whyte Way," a series of mid-block shortcuts in the Upper Theater District called an "artifact of an optimistic era of city planning" here. I'm going to try to get there early enough to check it out, and I will be sure to bring my camera to see if there is anywhere to sit down!