Making in Architecture

“Making in architecture has been defined as the process of conception, creation and realization of a building design. In the early part of the twentieth century, ‘Making’ has been mediated by the presence of a modern consciousness that responds to a new reality.”

From this point on, this paper will be about this paper. The intent of this paper is to discuss the new reality in the terms of Architecture of the early twentieth century. This is a Modernist thought process; the reality of this paper is that the past must be referenced to validate the content. The early twentieth century brought about a new thought process in Architecture, Modernism, which included styles such as futurism, constructivism and purism. This modern consciousness changed the reality of ‘Making’ in architecture, but what was this new reality? How was this new work conceived, created and realized? What were the factors behind these changes?

We are looking at a shift in the way the world thought. This shift was made possible by asking the right question: How? This question alone brought about consciousness in reason, the laws of nature and the order of the universe. Man had discovered that, “though one cannot know the truth, man can at least know what he makes himself”. By asking How instead of What, homo faber (man the maker) proceeded down a path of discovery and development by discontinuing the linear nature of the past to the present. This Modern movement dealt with a self-referential nature in architecture, looking onto itself for answers. By architecture referencing itself and not history, gave intent to the ‘Making’ of architecture as well as giving it a direction. The break from history, self-referential signs, progressive experience of a building by movement and volume in architecture all show the language of this new reality.

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Mass production and standardization of the Industrial Revolution brought the Purism, the Bauhaus and the International Style into the vanguard of this new reality in ‘Making’. The industrial revolution influenced the Bauhaus that based the work of ‘Making’ as a team-work effort or an industrial production. A statement from the Bauhaus talked of this, “Building should be the result of a collective effort and that each artist-craftsman should contribute his part with full awareness of its purpose in relation to the whole building”. Conception of design for the French Purists like Le Corbusier contained principals of Architecture as a volume rather than a mass and regularity rather than axial symmetry for means of ordering. Purism by definition breaks down to the reduction of all buildings to the basic geometric shapes of rectangle, plane surface, cube and cylinder. The Bauhaus thinkers also used the universal truth or pure geometry and object type, although abstract painting influenced and not the cubism of the Purists. The Bauhaus thinkers with the influence of constructivist design dealt with structure and the space it occupies. In contrast, Mies van der Rohe used walls as a device for direction and to define space instead of using them as a load bearing piece of a building as seen in Classical Architecture.

Creation for the International Style dealt with the following main objects: pilotis, continuous strips of fenestration, glass walls and flat roofs. “More than a revolution in building technique, though its characteristic effects of hovering volumes and interpenetrating planes admittedly relied on the machine-age materials of concrete, steel and glass”. The thin Pilotis we used to show they did not have to support a heavy mass from the volume above, usually a concrete geometric shape, like as seen in Poissy, France with Villa Savoye. The ribbon windows were created to show that the wall was a non-load bearing object and acted more as the tightly wrapped skin around the structure. These principals were used as an exaggeration of the idea, to drive the point home. The Bauhaus statement regarding creation stated, “We aim to create, organic architecture whose inner logic will be radiant and naked, unencumbered by lying facings and trickery; we want architecture adapted to our world of machines, radios and fast cars…with the increasing strength of the new materials – steel, concrete, glass – and with the new audacity of engineering, the ponderousness of the old methods of building is giving way to a new lightness and airiness”. The Bauhaus had to deal with ruins of a defeated nation in Germany as well as the financial effects of the war, Walter Gropius said of this, “The benumbered world is shaken up, the old human spirit is invalidated and in flux towards a new form”. The new form was a horizontal layering of space and the expression of hovering planes, the building as a whole being formed on cantilevered trays on pillars with brackets. The use of marble, steel and glass with the design of a recessed column line eliminated the vertical corner line and expressed the horizontal nature as well as showing a continuation of material.

The realization of Architects like Le Corbusier was that the “vast imaginative world included a vision of the ideal city, a philosophy of nature and a strong feeling for the Classical tradition”. The Modernists of this time were based in thought of a self-referential nature, but the past can be seen as the reference for aspects of most designs of that period, including Le Corbusier use of the golden section and human scale ordering. The modern use of these principals can not be critiqued in a traditional manner to understand, one must see the intention behind the idea. Modern architecture is also a style that cannot be totally realized without the movement of the observer. The progressive experience of a building is accomplished only by movement of the observer. One must move through spaces to fully understand it as the building reveals itself or as in a panoramic operation. The constructivists realized that with mass production becoming the overriding force in construction that “efficiency for its purpose” became their motto. They also realized that buildings had a formal relationship between structure and the space it occupies.

There was a new reality in the early twentieth century in terms of ‘Making’ and the new reality it created. By discussing what caused this movement, what factors went into changing the world’s views and showing how different styles of Architectural thought in that period all used similar aspects for ‘Making’. It can be said that the Modern movement in the early twentieth century can be defined as a method of thinking that breaks away from history, uses self-referential signs, shows progressive expression of a building by movement and has a notion of volume. To end with a quote of Mies van der Rohe which is commonly misused, “Less is More”, the truth and purity of this paper is completed by the lack of that which is not essential.

Encyclopedia of Modern Architecture. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1964.
Curtis, William J R. Modern Architecture. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1987.
Gardiner, Stephen. Le Corbusier / Stephen Gardiner. New York: Da Capo Press, 1988.
Stevenson, Neil. Architecture. New York: DK Publishing Inc., 1997.
Trachtenberg, Marvin and Hyman, Isabelle. Architecture: From Prehistory to Post-Modernism. Netherlands: Harry N. Abrams, B.V. 1986.


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Hundreds of ways to save money!!

In these times we need to find ways to make ends meet.
Here is a list of hundreds of ways to save money.

Grocery
Re-use plastic shopping bags (or paper bags) as trash bags
Use a water filter, bottled water is for suckers
Use coupons
Buy generic
Do not buy things from vending machines
Buy in bulk
Don’t buy pre-packaged foods
Make your lunch, brown bag it, fast food is for rich people
Cook for multiple days
Serve smaller meal portions
Grocery shop with a list
Make your own coffee at home
Take note of unit prices on items
Don’t grocery shop at convenience stores
Plan a few meatless meals per week
Walk off the beaten path at stores, you will find deals
Grow your own vegetables

Home
No cable, if anything get satillite
Wash dishes by hand
Don’t use disposible plates or silverware
Use candles, or just turn off the lights when not needed
install solar tubes, they bring in free sunlight
Turn off or unplug unused appliances
Use Compact Fluorescent bulbs
Use natural light
Open the windows, do you really need the air running 24-7?
Insulate your water heater
Turn down the heat
Use the cold setting on your washer
Check for drafts in your openings
Use a programmable thermostat
Low-Flow toilets
Fix leaky faucets
Run full loads of clothes
Run full loads of dishes
Don’t water your lawn, Mother Nature takes care of that
Collect rain runoff with a cistern
Bundle services
Cancel your home phone if you have a cell
Buy appliances from scratch and dent retailers
Throw away (or recycle) retail catalogs
Buy refurbished computers
Limit magazine subscriptions to ones you actually read
Shut vents in unused rooms
Pass on extended warranties
Buy energy efficient appliances
Use drapes over windows
Caulk and weatherstrip
Insulate your walls and ceilings
Wash your clothes less often
Keep your refrigerator full
Shorten your showers
Turn the water off when brushing your teeth
Use craigslist
Use cloth napkins
Research how to fix things yourself
Plant a tree in your yard
Change your furnace filters
Buy generic ink cartridges or buy a refill kit
Sell old unused items
Have a garage sale
Check out yard sales
Stop by the Salvation Army


Finance
Use paypal for purchases
Keep extra money in high yield savings instead of checking
Automatic savings plan
Pay bills online
Reduce interest rates
Pick up pennies
Open a money market account for your savings for higher interest rate
Don’t use debit cards or atm cards that charge you fees
Don’t pay late fees, ever!
Send in manufacturers rebates
Take advantage of a work sponsored 401K plan
Use rebate or cash back credit cards
Pay off your credit card balance, every month!
Pay attention to your credit report
Make a personal budget
Make a larger down payment when taking out a loan
Don’t take out home equity loans
Don’t take out interest only loans
try going a couple days without spending money
Avoid going into stores
Make sure your work W-4 is up to date

Transportation
Take the bus or walk
Buy a used car
Buy a sipper not guzzler
Call your car insurance company to find ways to cut your premium
Drive safely and don’t get tickets
Be a defensive driver
Don’t overpay for gas, shop around
Combine errands into a single trip
Car pool
Don’t lease vehicles you can’t afford to buy
Properly inflate your car tires
Try and live close to work
Buy new tires from warehouse clubs
Don’t drive with a lead foot
Don’t rabbit start after a red light
Don’t carry things in your car you don’t need

Travel
Shop around for the best travel deals
Use a bargaining site to get hotels
Travel out of the busy season
Vacation closer to home
Try camping
Join a frequent flyer program
Purchase tickets in advance
Do you need the car rental insurance?

Personal
Get organized
Make lists…and stick to them
Use the library
Order free samples online
don’t smoke, or if you have to roll your own
Don’t drink alcohol, or at least cut back
Use community centers, you already pay for them in taxes
Play outside, its free
Do your homework, there is plenty of information out there for everything
Use generic prescription drugs when possible
Shop around online before heading out to the store
Use craigslist
less stuff = less maintenance

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History of Live-Work Developments

With the onset of the industrial revolution and concomitant advances in transportation technology, commuting to work over some distance became the rule rather than the exception. Technology and the intense urbanization gave rise to movement for social improvement and the introduction to zoning. The primary mode of land use regulation, which continues to the present day as the mainstay of modernist city planning: today mixed-use development is the exception rather than the rule and primarily a remnant to earlier times. Commuting is hell – on our time, our money, the environment and our childcare. The introduction of the Internet, fax machines and teleconferencing make travel to face-to-face meetings less necessary. Affordability of a single home and workplace, less transportation money and the elimination of childcare are all advantages. Artists have done this for years, using their homes as working space and living, mainly due to the fact they get the urge to produce at various times of the day. Today Americans aspire to telecommute, to run a small business at home, or to simply enjoy the flexibility, light and space afforded by urban loft living.


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