Monday, January 31, 2011

Monday, Monday

My weekly page update:

This week's dose features Korean Church of Boston in Brookline, Massachusetts by Brian Healy Architects:
this       week's  dose

The featured past dose is CHA Competition in Chicago, Illlinois by Brian Healy Architects:
featured      past   dose

This week's book review is Commonplaces: Thinking About and American Architecture by Brian Healy:
this week's book    review

american-architects.com Building of the Week:

Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens by Leeser Architecture:
this week's Building of the Week

Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:
Daily Architecture
"We are dedicated to bringing you daily architecture from around the world in the form of stunning photos with links to tell you more." (added to sidebar under blogs::aggregate)

Green Building
"Are cities the best place to live? Are suburbs OK? A fight grows in urban planning, with Harvard at the center."

HowdyHeidi
"If Switzerland is on your radar, or you simply love everything Swiss, you have come to the right place. HowdyHeidi ... is a buzzing visual archive pointing you to all things swiss." (via Build Blog)

Stuck in Studio
"A website made for architecture students." (added to sidebar under architectural links::education)

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Today's archidose #470



, originally uploaded by LNSM_.
Fasano Las Piedras in Punta del Este, Uruguay by Isay Weinfeld, 2009.

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Culver City Contemporary

With the recent completion and press coverage of Samitaur Tower by Eric Owen Moss Architects, I felt compelled to take a look at the projects he has created for Frederick and Laurie Samitaur-Smith (Samitaur Constructs) in Culver City. Looking at the web pages of the architect and client, I counted a dozen buildings and small interventions in an old industrial area south of National Boulevard on either side of Hayden Avenue, aka Hayden Tract. It is a unique and amazing assemblage of industrial reuse uniting one architect and one client.

Yet not having visited the area, and with most coverage focused on individual designs, it was hard to get an overall idea of the 25-year (and counting) project that is transforming the once-blighted area into an area with "creative work space, restaurants, grassy parks and — with the addition of Samitaur Tower I — exhibit and performance space for the many dimensions of culture." So I decided to map the various buildings and installations to get a better handle on the ongoing project. Be sure to click on the image below for a better graphic.

moss-sm.jpg
[Click image for larger, expanded view with thumbnails of projects | aerial source]
1. 8522 National Boulevard Complex
2. 3520 Hayden Ave
3. The Box
4. Samitaur (east of aerial)
5. 3535 Hayden Ave.
6. What Wall?
7. The Umbrella
8. Slash & Backslash
9. Stealth
10. Beehive
11. 3555 Hayden Ave
12. Samitaur Tower
13. 3585 Hayden Ave (under construction)
 The image above and accompanying larger, expanded view are based primarily on the project list on Eric Owen Moss's web page, ordered chronologically, from 1986 to present.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Book Briefs #3

"Book Briefs" are an ongoing series of posts with two- or three-sentence first-hand descriptions of some of the numerous books that make their way into my library. These briefs are not full-blown reviews, but they are a way to share more books worthy of attention than can find their way into reviews on my daily or weekly pages.

BB03-1.jpg

1: Morris Lapidus: The Architecture of Joy by Deborah Desilets | Rizzoli | 2010 | Amazon
While the architecture of Morris Lapidus was not appreciated by contemporaries, a growing appreciation for his work has occurred in the last couple of decades. He is best known for the curving balconies of a number of hotels in Miami Beach, which are collected here in coffee-table-book style in large color and black-and-white photographs. Most of the book is just that, photos of a small number of Lapidus's many buildings, with appreciative text coming at the back of the book.

2: Guastavino Vaulting: The Art of Structural Tile by John Ochsendorf | Princeton Architectural Press | 2010 | Amazon
Grand Central Terminal's Whispering Gallery, and the Oyster Bar Restaurant which it fronts, are popular yet hidden destinations for tourists. The auditory and spatial qualities of each can be attributed to the Rafael Guastavino family, who "oversaw the construction of thousands of spectacular thin-tile vaults across the United States between the 1880s and 1950s." Many are in New York City, and they and others are highlighted in this history of the family's techniques and art that created such memorable and long-lasting spaces.

3: Stickwork by Patrick Dougherty | Princeton Architectural Press | 2010 | Amazon
I first became familiar with artist Patrick Dougherty with another PAPress title, Natural Architecture by Alessandro Rocca; one of his "stickworks" actually graces the cover of that book. Here his amazing outdoor and gallery installations fill a whole book. His stickworks resemble oversized bird nests, manipulated into unnatural yet organic shapes and containers that one can step inside. I've yet to experience once of Dougherty's installations in person, but seeing the body of work in these pages makes me hope that day comes soon...and this will be my best bet.

BB03-2.jpg

4: Beyond 3: Trends and Fads edited by Pedro Gadanho | SUN Architecture | 2010 | Amazon
The third volume of the "bookazine dedicated to urban fiction and experimental architectural writing" continues in the vein of the first two, asking writers to respond to a theme. Trends and fads are addressed in a long reprinted essay on fashion by Georg Simmel and new contributions by Kieran Long, Jimenez Lai, Mockitecture, and Oren Safdie. The last is part of The Bilbao Effect, a play that puts "starchitecture" on trial. Commentary on buildings by famous architects is found in other places here, among numerous other diverse contributions.

5: Sustainable School Architecture: Design for Elementary and Secondary Schools by Lisa Gelfand with Eric Corey Freed | Wiley | 2010 | Amazon
Sustainable architecture is becoming a given on just about any project, but it is particularly important in primary and secondary schools, where a design's eco-responsibility can be a strong influence on the students. This title in Wiley's Sustainable Design series discusses the various steps in a project, from planning to occupation. Chapters focusing on the various parts of a project -- planning, design, daylighting, structures, HVAC, landscaping, furnishings, cost and bidding, construction, operations, maintenance -- lay out various considerations, strategies, and case studies, geared towards giving architects the tools and thinking for creating responsive green schools, whatever the circumstances may be.

6: Human Settlements edited by Kelly Shannon | SUN Architecture | 2010 | Amazon
According to the United Nations, "Human settlements means the totality of the human community - whether city, town or village - with all the social, material, organizational, spiritual and cultural elements that sustain it. The fabric of human settlements consists of physical elements and services to which these elements provide the material support." This book looks at the evolution of the discipline of human settlements, especially in reference to urbanism, since the 1970s. The canvas is broad, global (Pakistan, Vietnam, India, Peru, Brazil, etc.), and aided by numerous illustrations of various case studies.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

The Photography of Ezra Stoller

The Photography of Ezra Stoller: Iconic Images of Iconic Architecture

esto1.jpg
[© Ezra Stoller / Esto. Seagram Building, Location: New York NY, Architect: Mies van der Rohe with Philip Johnson]
AIA CES LUs 1.5
When: 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM MONDAY, JANUARY 31
Where: At The Center
  
Mid-Century Modernism as seen through the master's lens
Four Case Studies: Seagram Building, TWA Terminal, The United Nations, The Guggenheim Museum
Moderator:
James Sanders
Panelists:
Kenneth Frampton, Assoc. AIA
John Morris Dixon, FAIA
Brook Mason
Erica Stoller

In conjunction with the retrospective of Ezra Stoller’s photography, currently on view at the Yossi Milo Gallery, the AIANY Historic Buildings Committee is pleased to present a forum that reviews these iconic images.
The program will review, through four case studies, important architectural masterpieces of the period and the images critical to their iconic stature within the public realm. While the buildings themselves are seminal works, the experience for many is via the two dimensional image rather than the architecture itself. The discussion will trace the complex relationship between the architect /architecture and its translation through the photographer’s message.

Columbia University professor, Kenneth Frampton, will discuss the work in the context of the modern movement, joined by John Morris Dixon, editor emeritus of Progressive Architecture who is contributing to an upcoming book on Ezra Stoller, along with Erica Stoller of ESTO. Brook Mason, New York correspondent for Britain's The Art Newspaper will discuss the relationship to evolving mass culture. James Sanders, architect, and author of the award-winning book, "Celluloid Skyline" will moderate.
The event is scheduled as follows:
6:00 pm Event opens at Tafel Hall with wine and cheese for participants and attendees.
6:30 pm Welcome comments regarding events at the Center and upcoming Committee events. Four case studies will be presented by James Sanders with discussion by the panelists.
7:35 pm Moderator and audience begin a question and answer period
8:00 pm Event ends, wine and cheese continue to be served.
Free for Members; $10.00 for Non-Members

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Half Dose #82: Slipstream Public Exchange

The following text and images are courtesy Höweler + Yoon Architecture for their competition-winning design -- Splipstream Public Exchange -- of the Boston Society of Architects Headquarters. The 154-year-old organization will move from 52 Broad Street to Atlantic Wharf.

Slipstream Public Exchange by HYA

SLIPSTREAM maximizes the BSA’s engagement with a larger public by creating a series of interfaces, both physical and informational. The physical design of the new headquarters introduces a "cloud" ceiling that capitalizes on the viewing angles between the sidewalk and the second floor, to create a highly visible signature feature that doubles as gallery ceiling and supergraphic signage. The information interface utilizes wireless technologies to deliver site specific content to visitors, while also creating a BSA application for smart phones and location-aware hand held devices.

Slipstream Public Exchange by HYA

BROADCAST
Drawing the public up to the second floor, a grand stair drops down from the ceiling above, and provides a fluid transition between floors with a single gesture. The stair and ceiling form the primary figure of the physical interface. Information technologies are also embedded in the "cloud" ceiling, allowing its edge to broadcast messages through an LED sign band, while projectors display a digital wayfinding entrance mat, and wireless transmitters stream video feeds. "Public Exchange" consoles are located throughout the space, allowing the public to access curated information about the built environment, construction billings index figures, and databases of designers, products, and services.

Slipstream Public Exchange by HYA

PERIMETER
The contoured media surface wraps around the perimeter of the space, creating a continuous gallery and event circuit. Program areas are held back from the edge, allowing the public circulation to flow along the perimeter. The gallery program is conceived as a series of fluid paths and not as a discrete room. The content of the exhibitions produce the programmatic "current" to the flow of the gallery. Placing the gallery along the edge reinforces the cognitive parallax between the contents of the exhibitions in the foreground and the city in the background. This is consistent with the BSA’s core mission to support the active engagement between the process of design and the resulting product of the built environment.

Slipstream Public Exchange by HYA

PODS
Conference rooms are distributed within the free-flowing gallery zone. The conference rooms form an archipelago of program distributed within the flows of public gallery, maximizing the contact between the BSA members, visitors, stakeholders, and members of the general public.

Slipstream Public Exchange by HYA

SLIPSTREAM
The new BSA produces "Public Exchange" through its organizational and material logics, as well as through its network and media strategies. The fluid spaces of the linear gallery parallel the constant streams of broadcast information. The archipelago of programs and exhibitions will create a smooth mixture of audiences and content within the flows and eddies of the BSA's slipstream configuration, resulting in the productive discourse that is BSA's mission.



Design Team:
Höweler + Yoon Architecture: J. Meejin Yoon, Eric Höweler (Principals in Charge), Ryan Murphy, Parker Lee, Liu Xi, Thena Tak, Cyrus Dochow.
Structural Engineer: ARUP
MEP Engineer: AHA Consultants

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Today's archidose #469



2 - 4 - 6 - 8, originally uploaded by ken mccown.
An oldie but goodie: The 2-4-6-8 House in Venice, California by Morphosis, 1978.

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose

Monday, January 24, 2011

Monday, Monday

My weekly page update:

This week's dose features Building of Control CCS in Ferrol, Spain by Diaz and Diaz Architects:
this       week's  dose

The featured past dose is Lisbon Harbor Control Tower in Lisbon, Portugal by Gonçalo Sousa Byrne:
featured      past   dose

This week's book review is eVolo Issue 03: Cities of Tomorrow edited by Carlo Aiello:
this week's book    review

american-architects.com Building of the Week:

J-Tea in Eugene, Oregon by Atelier Waechter:
american-architects Building of the Week

Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:
Architerials
"Investigating architectural materials since 2010." (added to sidebar under architectural links::new york city)

Land Reader
"A news website that gives summaries of the recent news and topics of interest for built environment professionals and students." (added to sidebar under architectural links::news)

One Prize
"An Annual Design and Science Award to Promote Green Design in Cities." Deadline is April 30.

The nest and the spider web
"Difficult architecture," a blog. (added to sidebar under blogs::architecture)

Zapp Urbanism
"A little independent magazine founded in 2001 [that] is like a mosquito buzzing in the ear." (added to sidebar under architectural links::online journals)

Friday, January 21, 2011

Today's archidose #468

Here are two photographs of MBO Gildeopleiding in Venray, Netherlands by BRTA, 2010. Photos are by Klaas Vermaas.

venray roc gilde opleidingen 05 2010 brt arch (dunantstr)

venray roc gilde opleidingen 01 2010 brt arch (dunantstr)

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Book Review: Four Monographs

A Landscape Manifesto by Diana Balmori
Yale University Press, 2010
Hardcover, 272 pages

Agenda: Can We Sustain Our Ability to Crisis? by JDS Architects
Actar, 2010
Paperback, 544 pages

small projects by Kevin Mark Low
ORO Editions, 2010
Hardcover, 398 pages

Thomas Phifer and Partners by Stephen Fox and Sarah Amelar
Skira Rizzoli, 2010
Hardcover, 350 pages

So in 2011, with Kindle, the iPad, and architecture blogs, among other game-changing pieces of computer technology spreading information, what is the state of the architectural monograph? Are they evolving in response to new ways of reading? Are they scaling down as people learn about architecture online? Are they providing content different from the traditional monograph? These four books from 2010 embody the diversity of the genre, featuring architects and landscape architects from the United States, Europe, and Asia. They also map different approaches to monographs, ones which are dependent upon the format being in print to varying degrees.


book-4monographs.jpg

The Manifesto. Instead of a formal presentation of built and unrealized projects, as most architectural monographs are wont to do, Diana Balmori opts for a manifesto, 25 points toward "a new definition of landscape, bringing together ideas from biology, evolutionary theory, and ecology." These 25 statements veer from observations ("Emerging landscapes are becoming brand-new actors on the political stage.") to suggestions ("We must put the twenty-first-century city in nature rather than put nature in the city."). Some points are fairly obvious, and others don't seem to take a strong enough stance, but their sum total is what is important; they encapsulate a direction that thinking about landscape and the city needs to take in order to make attempts at sustainability more beneficial. How we relate to nature is at the core of the manifesto, and how that point of view affects the design of landscapes is the focus of Balmori's projects that are interspersed amongst the explications of the 25 points.

In design the book does not veer greatly from traditional monographs, except it is structured around the 25 points, rendered in large type on a gray background, like signposts along the journey through the book. The project illustrations basically float on the pages in between, making the captions extremely important, since ideas and themes set up the format, not the projects themselves.

Balmori:
US: Buy from     Amazon.com CA: Buy from     Amazon.ca UK: Buy from     Amazon.co.uk


The Diary. Dane Julian de Smedt was one half of PLOT, with Bjarke Ingels, who went on to form BIG and presented his work in the form of an archicomic. This monograph on JDS Architects similarly veers from conventional monographs, but it is more in line with OMA/AMO's Content from 2004: both use lightweight, magazine-quality paper, are interspersed with the occasional advertisement bringing the cover price down a bit, and a bold graphic design that layers information. In this case a timeline -- the year in the life of JDS that starts with the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 and structures the book -- runs along the top of most pages, intersecting with projects, interviews, essays, critiques, and other content below. As the book's title suggests, and the start of the timeline reiterates, responses to crisis permeate the book. Occasionally JDS asserts that the economic crisis passed without any structural change or taking advantage of the opportunity, but two years later, regardless of optimistic assertions, the crisis has hardly passed. And the potential for change arising from these difficulties has not passed.

A project that occupies the greatest real estate on these pages is the Holmenkollen Ski Jump, which recently opened in Oslo, Norway for the FIS Nordic World Ski Championship. (There is even an app for the ski jump!) It is one of the few post-PLOT projects to be realized, and its scale and design are impressive. It's one of those projects that has the potential to make the designer known, just like his old partner at PLOT.

JDS Architects:
US: Buy from     Amazon.com CA: Buy from     Amazon.ca UK: Buy from     Amazon.co.uk


The Sole Practitioner. Kevin Mark Low's smallprojects was featured on this blog back in 2008, showing Low's adeptness at tackling everything from a house to the kitchen sink...or at least the dish rack above the sink. Needless to say the Malaysia-based architect's rigor and sense of craft are impressive, making for a consistent body of work, even as he makes the jump in scale to office buildings. Low is reminiscent of Australia's Glenn Murcutt, who works alone yet has built on a larger scale with an associate architect, and Kansas' Dan Rockhill, another sole practitioner who actually does fabricate the kitchen sink, as well as the gutters and just about everything else on his residential commissions. Low's sense of craft and control extends to this monograph, which he also designed and set, dealing with everything from fonts to page size and layout.  Additionally the majority of the photographs are by the architect. It is an extension of a sole practitioner, an expression of his design sense, not just a presentation of his architecture. In addition to the extremely thorough documentation of 25 projects, a few essays by Low are included and appendices with academic and professional work before starting smallprojects. The text accompanying the projects is as thorough as the photos, drawings, and sketches, including the captions, which tell a story in and of themselves.

The tactile quality of this monograph should be noted. From its gray linen cover to the matte, lightly texture pages, the experience of moving from page to page is well considered. The paper type does mean that the images have strong blacks and whites with a fairly flat zone in between, but this hardly detracts from the photos; instead it fits with Low's designs that embrace the myriad textures of life.

small projects:
US: Buy from     Amazon.com CA: Buy from     Amazon.ca UK: Buy from     Amazon.co.uk


The Art Book. Equally well considered and crafted as smallprojects, this monograph on New York City-based Thomas Phifer and Partners is also the opposite in many ways: glossy instead of matte, minimal in layout, reduced in terms of information given. After a title page and photo of the office, the projects start; no introduction, no filler. This minimalism extends to the rest of the book: no captions, no page numbers, a couple essays interspersed among the projects and photos. Flipping through the pages is like looking at an art book, where each photograph (most by Scott Frances, never more than one per page, and in a couple instances actually stretching over three pages in pullouts) becomes the focus, in some cases over the architecture. This is no more true than in the photos of the recently completed North Carolina Museum of Art, because the people in some of Frances' photos look Photoshopped. While they're probably not post-production effects, while their saturation and blend of crisp and blurry figures is most likely a technical feat worth appreciating, and while I've lamented the lack of people in architectural photography in the past (please take my word on that, as I can't find that blog post right now), the surreal, rendering-like quality detracts from the architectural design.

To aid in understanding the buildings and projects (most are completed, but a few in-progress designs are included) some plans and sections are included in the rear of the book, equally minimal (no labels, no scale, etc.) and at a safe remove from the photos that make up the bulk of the book. But like Low's monograph, the presentation suits Phifer's buildings to a T. His light and crisp Modernism requires an ascetic life as much a presentation (photos, book, even his web page) free of clutter. Maybe this is why the people in the North Carolina Museum of Art photos are so unsettling.

Thomas Phifer:
US: Buy from     Amazon.com CA: Buy from     Amazon.ca UK: Buy from     Amazon.co.uk

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Taschen NY Warehouse Sale

Had your eye on one of Taschen's giant books but didn't want to pay full price? This weekend is your chance to snag a display copy of possibly Coop Himmelb(l)au or a slightly damaged copy of Ando's Complete Works or some slightly burnt Sears activewear (oops! wrong sale!). Details are below.

taschen-sale.jpg

Friday, January 21 to Sunday, January 23, 2011.
Taschen Store New York
107 Greene Street

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Today's archidose #467

Today's archidose is a special Carport Edition. In a time of eight-car garages, it's great to see carports making a comeback of sorts.


[Autohaus in Chicago, Illinois by Brandon Pass Architect, 2010. Be sure to check out the time-lapse video of the architect building the project, complete with Benny Hill soundtrack.]

Solar Array Carport
[Solar Array Carport in Tucson, Arizona by Tectonicus Constructs.]

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose

Monday, January 17, 2011

Monday, Monday

My weekly page update:

This week's dose features Steigereiland Kavel 114 in Amsterdam, Netherlands by Architoop:
this       week's  dose

The featured past dose is Wall House 2 in Groningen, Netherlands by John Hejduk:
featured      past   dose

This week's book review is The Liberal Monument: Urban Design and the Late Modern Project by Alexander D'Hooghe:
this week's book    review

american-architects.com Building of the Week:

The East Village in Austin, Texas by Bercy Chen Studio:
american-architects Building of the Week

Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:
The Launch Box
"Building the 2nd Avenue Subway in New York City." (added to sidebar under architectural links::new york city)

Design Revolution Australia
"All kinds & types of creative work, activities, competitions and urban trends coming from Down Under." (added to sidebar under blogs::design)

Architects USA
"Connecting architects and clients since 1997..." (added to sidebar under architectural links::architect profiles)

Co.Design
Fast Company's web page that tries to "bridge the fuzzy border between design and business." (added to sidebar under blogs::design)

Urbanized
A documentary film by Gary Hustwit, maker of Helvetica and Objectified.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Today's archidose #466

Here are three views of Operation Co-Ordination Center of Brisa in Carcavelos, Portugal by JLCG Arquitectos (Joao Luis Carriho da Graca), 2004. Photographs are by TheManWhoPlantedTrees.

LonesomeLine

PhotovoltaicSkin&Grass

IntoTheCourtyard...

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Museum of the Moving Image

Museum of the Moving Image

The Museum of the Moving Image reopens on Saturday, January 15, after doubling its space in an expansion by Leeser Architecture. For some background on the design, check out my weekly dose on the project and a blog post on its exterior addition. Much attention on the design, here and elsewhere, has focused on the triangular metal panels of the rear addition, but it's clear from a visit on the occasion of a press preview that it's all about the interior. Below is a photo tour of the addition/renovation, mostly of the inside, since the rear addition and courtyard won't be complete until the Spring.

Museum of the Moving Image

The museum is located on 35th Avenue, spanning from 36th Street to 37th Street, with the main entrance halfway down the block on 35th. Since the existing building is a protected landmark, the entry design is minimal, three bays of storefront in the old facade with small triangles of mirrored glass and the museum's name written in clear glass outlined with bright pink lines. In reality the glass is all the same, but a film applied to it creates the various effects of translucency and transparency. (The top photo is actually from inside the lobby, flipped so the name of the museum can be read.)

Museum of the Moving Image

This first interaction with the building may seem like applique, yet it fits in with the rest of the design, not just because it is composed of triangles but because it is one of a number of ways the architecture tries to relate to film, one of the media that is the museum's focus. Here notions of sight and reality are brought to the fore, a complex plane of glass the visitor breaks through by entering the museum.

Museum of the Moving Image

As the second email illustrates, just steps within the front door, angles predominate. The walls angle back in section and in plan, the ceiling follows roughly perpendicular, slipping past a ceiling sloping another direction.  A video installation is projected on the long wall opposite the gift shop and ticketing; the wall's subtle angle seems to highlight it as something special, something to be looked at (a long canvas) not just stood in front of. This wall leads back to the cafe that overlooks the courtyard (still under construction) and access to the main areas of the building: the galleries (up the stair above), the main theater (behind the photo), and the education area (down the corridor in the middle of the photo). In effect the building on the first floor is a double-loaded corridor, extending from the front door to the rear courtyard with the program spaces flanking on both sides. It is a simple parti activated spatially by the angled walls.

Museum of the Moving Image
Museum of the Moving Image

Access to the galleries is via the centrally located stair with a gentle rise that brings visitors to a gallery/screening area with a ramp that zigzags between benches (left in below photo). This is a stopover between the lobby and the two types of galleries: permanent and temporary; the former occupies two floors in the existing building and the latter is on the third floor, up the stairs in the below photo. At the moment this second floor space is home to a film and installation by artist Martha Colburn, occupying the opposite walls of the long space. There is great potential in this space, and future commissions will no doubt exploit this.

Museum of the Moving Image

Like the main entrance, the stair from the second floor to the third floor is articulated like a portal, with the walls apparently cut from a solid container. The contrast when entering the dark space upstairs is jarring. The first exhibition in the museum's gallery for changing exhibitions is Real Virtuality, six installations that "create simulated worlds that extend, augment, or disrupt the physical environment of the museum space."

Museum of the Moving Image

One of the six installations (below) is RealTime Unreal by Belgium's Workspace Unlimited. Visitors don 3-d goggles and immerse themselves, visually and physically, in a virtual model of the museum that turns, breaks, and reconfigures itself in relation to the visitor's movement around the screen. The planes of the digital environment overlap with the surrounding reality as live video is fed into the model. More than one person can occupy the space around the screen, but only one person at a time "drives" the interaction with the virtual model, something that needs to be experienced to be appreciated.

Museum of the Moving Image

Back downstairs in the lobby, opposite the stair to the galleries is a blue portal that leads to the main theater, below. Both the floor and ceiling in this area slope, the latter as the underside of the theater.This ramp gives the impression that the space is cutout from the white container, so inside is blue; it also looks very sci-fi, as if it is an entrance to a spaceship. The first impression though is fairly accurate, since the inside of the theater is lined with the same "Yves Klein blue."


Museum of the Moving Image

Of the new spaces the main theater is easily the highlight. Over 1,000 triangular panels cover the walls and ceiling. They are composed like the exterior addition (last two photos) into larger triangular areas. Here they curve to follow the space but also peel away for lighting and other fixtures, since the theater is set up for performances as well as film screenings.

Museum of the Moving Image

The curtain by Cindy Sirko is a perfect foil to the blue panels. Color seems to leap from the fabric towards the audience, radiating from the center. Below, architect Thomas Leeser gave a few words to the press, though he admitted that with the building (basically) done he didn't have to say much, the architecture could speak for itself.

Museum of the Moving Image
Museum of the Moving Image
Museum of the Moving Image

Just as entry into the theater is like entering some unique sort of world, leaving it is a slow acclimation in reverse, back to the museum's white walls. Yet these spaces with video projections, splashes of color, and angled walls aren't completely overwhelming. It as if a visit to the museum is an adventure, a respite from "reality," an immersion into the world of film and other moving images. So once inside the spaces are varying degrees of reality, immateriality, image, and so forth. It's a carefully controlled series of spaces that work together fairly seamlessly without being repetitive or direct in cinematic references. It's a great start to 2011 in New York City.

Museum of the Moving Image

Outside, the light blue triangular metal panels now seem subdued, especially relative to the main theater. The addition's opposition to the existing facades is still striking, but it can be read as a solid wrapper to the interior spaces free of natural light. Their geometric regularity recalls a wireframe, as if the elevations are a canvas for something else, perhaps a metaphor for the production of moving images in digital environments.

Museum of the Moving Image

When the courtyard is complete in the Spring an outdoor theater will accompany the three spaces inside the museum. (The slope in the bottom right corner of the last photo is the rake of the seating, with the screen to be installed perpendicular to the facade.) A light blue artificial turf will echo the metal panels and tie it to the floor inside.

Museum of the Moving Image

Behind this last photo is a new facility for the Kaufman Astoria Studios, what I thought was an unfortunate situation architecturally when I saw it initially. Yet earlier tonight I learned that their presence on both sides of 36th Street has led them to work with the Department of City Planning towards decommissioning the one-block stretch of the street north of 35th Avenue. The plan is to use the street as a lot for the studio, to film exterior scenes for movies and television, like a Hollywood backlot. If this happens, it would be great for the museum as well, knitting it with the Studios into a two-block campus of sorts for making and celebrating the moving image. What better way to visit the Museum of the Moving Image than to see filmmaking in action?