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You might want to check the new website-proposal: http://easa.x42.at

EASA Architects


I just got my diploma yesterday so I am done wohooooooo Joined the group of EASA Architects now :-) greetigns to all xoxoxo :-) Tina



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INCMoscow website !!!


www.easarus.com



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greetings from elefsina


... 2 links to elefsina:

video.google.com

and

video.google.com

[the videos of (brighton/budapest)'s presentation]

kisses e.o.f.



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Architectsjury- design competition


ArchitectsJURY.com is a new site for students of Architecture all around the world. You can see/vote/comment on architecture-related computer images, and you can upload your own renderings and get your work rated. More and more students put their work to the site, so now there is a huge competition, and now a Macbook Pro is the prize for the best work. It definitely worth it, if not because of the prize than the inspiration.

Check at www.architectsjury.com



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"Cities, architecture and culture" - Venice architecture Bienalle 2007


Cities, architecture and culture is the theme of this years architecture bienalle (supposedly the largest and most important architectural event / exhibition in the architectural world) in Venice, Italy

I would like people to view a short 4 minute film from Kibera, which is a part of Nairobi city in the African Country of Kenya, to see what is the reality that we are dealing with.

Kibera is one of the largest slum areas of Africa with over 1 million people living in an area with only 5 toilets, which you have to pay to use with the result that people use "flying toilets" whereby people do their business in a bag and throw it in the street or in the pile of already thrown bags, you can imagine the level of live sewage this leads to. Streams of live sewage flow through the streets. there are only 3 schools in the area and huge levels of disease and crime. Watch the film and see what you think.

I make reference to this example as on arriving to the Burrida social centre 2 days ago, where I am now living here in Genova, I met Pastor Nick Macharia, the program director of Pepkag (prison extension programme of Kenya association of Gaoled [underpriveleged people in society] ) and we had a discussion about the situation in the slums of Kibera which can be heard here : Kibera slums, Tenderfeet and a vision of hope for Kenya and Africa

I introduce the theme of this years Bienalle in this way as I have just returned after some days spent in Venice, ironically enough I ended up living in the French Pavillion for that time. I have a few observations on the Bienalle having seen the set up there;

(As there still seems to be no adaquate means of experiencing the Bienalle or accessing the information on show I will try to update people here as time allows.)

1 - Overall, there is a poor attendance at the Bienalle, it seems it is mostly architects that attend. Perhaps this is due to the entry fee of perhaps it is due to a lack of interest in architecture and this years theme from the wider community? Perhaps an open day or week might make it more widely recieved.

2 - This theme "cities, architecture and culture" is a truly massive, complex and important topic or question to raise, personally i feel it is the topic we, as a species, have to fully address so we can live in the future in the most just and sustainable state. But who today is taking part in this discussion, who has been invited to participate in the discussion? it seems it is still the professionals who discuss and make the decisions, is this fair? should all people not be able to contribute to this discussion? if so how could this happen? A possible solution might be to attempt something similar to the widening the discussion project for this years World Social Forum in Kenya. Each of the choosen 10 cities highlights 4 projects to demonstrate what they are doing for positive change.

3 - A lot of valuable research has been carried out for this years exhibition, 10 global cities were looked at in detail; growth rates, ethnic makeup, movement trends, health and welbeing, etc.... At present this information can only be seen on the walls of the exhibiton or in the exhibition catalogue, which is a 2 volume series of @ 300 pages and costs a whopping 60 Euros. This information should be made freely accessible to all, be that simply on the website (which now has no links to this information) or printed in cheap newspaper form for those attending the conference. I am unaware of what is planned for after the exhibition ends.

4 - There is a Blog up and running at present www.venicesuperblog.net for people to add their views, videos, interviews, photos. This is a healthy move but it could be more open.

I'll leave you with a post from it, The Giardini: the micro tour, and a notion about what is the point of this architecture stuff: self praise or a true wish to build a better world followed by practical examples of that wish turned into action

Apology and disclaimer: if some reviews seem cursory and superficial, it is because they are.

France

Some good looking people live in an atomised house, its elements spread about the pavilion, including a sauna on the roof. Not 100% original but put a smile on the face. ****

Germany

Decided like the French to expand onto the roof , in this case to make a point about adapting cities. One hates to confirm national stereotypes but the German roof has more efficient circulation than the French, and less joie de vivre. ***

Britain

Steel town of Sheffield gets the Calvino treatment. Nice try but a little too friendly. Music at the opening by the electrifying Long Blondes. ***

Canada

Exercise bicycles powering movies. Something to do with the environment. I’m afraid I just didn’t get this. **

South Korea

Tongue-in-cheek celebration of residential real estate. ***1/2

Japan

Fujimori and friends show how to save the world by building in charcoal, thatch etc. Appealing, and a nicely reflective atmosphere in the din of the Biennale, but perhaps a little too cute. Hello Kitty goes eco. And conservative. ****

Russia

Went into ground floor. Saw a lugubrious film about a project. Went no further. My apologies. Unfair to rate.

Venezuela

Most resonant and inspiring statement in the Giardini. “Understand this: our cities are born from a different society. We cannot imitate them. Ours (the third world) is different. It has different roots and another fate. Your recipes, which are the recipes of entertainment, are useless to us. Let us mend our errors our way, and the consequences your outrage. Do not judge us without understanding us. In the future we may even be able to teach you something.” Aerial photos of Barrios (see also Sara Muzio’s film in the Biennale). Venice is crackers about Caracas this year. ***1/2

Denmark

Projects by young Danes for developing China in a sustainable way. Serious. Are the Chinese listening? ****

Nordic pavilion

Svere Fehn’s pavilion, an exercise in sophisticated tree-hugging, on its own makes it worth coming here every two years. The exhibit was about very northern and cold cities and looked thorough and thoughtful, but it was one of those that should have been a book. **1/2

Switzerland

Dominican Republic + history of slavery and sugar planting + Bernard Tschumi = “elliptical” city. I’m sorry, I didn’t get it. **

Czech Republic

Work of students hung on scaffolding. Not sure what the message was. *1/2

Australia

Responses to Australian urban/suburban conditions. Some projects nice enough. Not gripping. **

Spain

Women speaking about cities out of pristine glass boxes: Almodovar meets Clinique display. The technology made it hard to find out what they were all saying. ***

Belgium

The Beige Badge of Boringness or, Sing if You’re Glad to be Ordinary: a celebration of Belgian neutrality. The whole country laid out in a single photograph, which is impressive, and intriguing labyrinthine installation, plus a film of wilful tedium: glass office blocks with nothing happening etc. ***1/2

Netherlands

Dutch visions of future cities since early last century. Nice to have a little of the perspective of history, but I didn’t understand the many timber slats of the installation. ***1/2

Finland

Some fairly interesting residential projects, straightforwardly presented. Not much to do with the Biennale theme, and oblivious to the prevailing mood of looking beyond the architectural object. **

Hungary

Colourful installations resembling artificial flora that sing when touched. Apparently something to do with China. But very, very baffling, and a little kitsch, like a weird variant on the Venetian mask/glass/paper shop. **1/2

Israel

The biennale’s most controversial pavilion, probably inadvertently. A study of Israeli memorial architecture which has upset some by failing to acknowledge that others suffer too, including Palestinians (see Charles Jencks Superblog interview). Complexity, they say, is denied. The critics quite possibly have a point, but these superficial and cursory reviews are not the place to rush to judgement on issue such as this, so no rating.

Brazil

Another variation on the dominant Biennale idea of showing cities as case studies, using the formula of data + films of City Life = architecture. In this case Sao Paulo. **1/2

Austria

Takes on the city by Kiesler, Hollein and Gregor Eichinger. As with the Dutch Pavilion, it’s nice to go into the past, but a bit terse and short on explanation. ***1/2

Serbia

A big nearly empty space with quite a lot of noise and some average projects. It might have been easier to fill this room when it represented the whole of Yugoslavia. *

Egypt

Doors locked. The only permanent pavilion representing either Africa or the Arab world was unable, for whatever reason, to exhibit.

Poland

A film of Warsaw in which an imaginary elevated glass tube takes pedestrians and cyclists through the city in hygienic serenity. Would this actually be nice? Or a bit chilling? ***1/2

Romania

Make your own city using large dice-like objects. ***

Greece

The Aegean Islands as a case study in places made by tourism, seasonal fluctuation and the movement of people. Thought provoking, but too many words: another one that is too book-like. ***

MAXXI (not a country)

Rome’s new Hadid-designed museum of contemporary art combines photos of its construction with other Roman projects under construction. Nicely presented. ***

USA

Katrina. How shocking it was. Some suggestions (how plausible?) about what to do about it. Question: if you were being rehoused after a flood, would you want your home to be a commentary on the flood, or just a home?


Italian Pavilion

The best part of the Biennale, where different institutions pick up the Cities theme and play with it. Highlights include:

Domus magazine’s study of Pyongyang, North Korea, culminating in proposals for the 1000-foot high, pyramidal, never-completed Ryugyong hotel, the concrete shell of which is the city’s most conspicuous and embarrassing landmark. Brilliant, witty and serious. Real research and real discovery for the viewer, which is not often to be had in the Biennale. Teeters on the edge of being too ironic and stylish in relation to the extremely grim subject of North Korea, but stays on the right side. Communicates, through projected images, in 3-D and with few words, which is what you want in the Biennale. *****

Ireland

A study of the Super Rural, or how to create urbanism in the countryside. ***1/2

Royal College of Art

Humming, gaudy, multimedia study of London that is an antidote to the statistics in the Arsenale. The city as lived and made, with the capacity to exhilarate and terrify. ****1/2 and ***** for the wonderful video Driving with the Joneses.

C-Photo

Super-charged photography glitteringly displayed. Close at times to straying into catastrophe chic. ****

OMA/AMO on the Gulf States

Rem’s two offspring do their now familiar operation of treating spectacular but derided phenomena with respect. Facts, especially perverse ones, are assembled. Deadpan provocations are made. Bien pensant assumptions are challenged. Your perception of the world is shifted. Does Rem like this stuff or not? As always, he won’t say. ****



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Estonia - still lost country?


Hi there,

Ruta, former Lithuanian nc is writing. As far as I rememeber, Estonia used to be a lost country for some time. I wonder if somebody managed to find anyone there? Because i have some friends there who promised to help in finding some students who would be interested in participating in the easa life.

ruta



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Text on wall of French pavillion occupied by EXYZT collective reads in Italian, French, Albanian, English:

The occupation of a palace

By a jubilant crowd is a common image of revoluionary excesses. It has been witnessed in various forms throughout the ages, depending on the historical context. The fact that the image keeps recurring makes it a ritual and necessary representation, an ingredient of the revolution itself. It embodies the hope for justice through the fair redistribution of space. Occupation is the architectural expression of a social vision.

Metacity / Metavilla attempts to put this collective movement into practice. This event is to a classic architectural exhibition what implementation is to a concept. The public can experience the architectural design displayed there, and particularly assess the practical ideal being presented, not just as a utopian theory but as a concrete action that needs to be accomplished. In occupying this national emancipated pavilion and opening it up to the public in this unusual way, an architectural act is being performed.Probably the only such act that can be made in these times of insecurity and underlying tensions of war. The welcome of strangers, implacably "other", is more than ever a relevant act. Happily the joyful city on show in the pavilion really does exist, here and elsewhere. This exhibition is just a pointer.

OCCUPATION OF A PALACE: the writing is on the wall

Audio interviews arising out of the French pavilion at the Venice architectural Biennalle 2006

1 - Welcome to Metavilla; the French pavillion, Hospitality, Tilli and Robins adventure in Mali 2 - The writing is on the walls : The Occupation of a Palace 3 - the French Pavillion is the best and the craziest says the German girls 4 - This place is about la vie, its amazing, Argentinian Martin 5 - Kevin - there is more than just architecture 6 - architecture just for weekends? 7 - Un autre lieue est possible = Another place is possible 8 - impressions of the Bienalle so far, from the pirate ship METAVILLA 9 - Ozzy Laura's views on the bienalle ; make it more accessible

visit 2 - widening the discussion, RESIDENTMETA and Moments d'Architecture avec Lucien Kroll

1 - Patrick Bouchain - last words from the last 2 - Nantes architect student David about life in METAVILLA and improved communication mechanisms 3 - arky spass chat in sun near cuban temp pavilion 4 - el pavilion de Cuba (audio shortly) 5 - France says ciao to Cuba (audio shortly) 6 - Viva Cuba : a summary of the day 7 - What is METAVILLA? - our German neighbours become METAmedia workers for the day

infos

----------Venice Biennale Architecture...

IMC-ie dunk has been onboard METAVILLA for some days, he has travelled over land and sea to get here, visiting and living in various other places that perhaps toward which the "exhibition is just a pointer."

he prevoiusly lived and worked out of la condition publique, which is anotherplace Patrick Bouchain and his crew berthed some time ago.

he is amongst other things an architect, eco activist, gardener, land squatter, community media worker, street partier, wanderer, dreamer and do'er. In Ireland he worked with a group to attempt to turn Dublin into an eco city, last years art bienalle talked a bit about that; The Irish at Venice - Monks Garden

He came to the Bienalle not expecting much from the "architectural world", as he feels there is room for much impovement there. He was not aware of EXYZT's occupation of the French Pavillion beforehand, but on meeting old friends on arrival he was made to feel immediately at home, in fact he was invited to live there, to participate in the communal activites of cooking, cleaning, washing; eating, drinking, sleeping.

He Thinks Metavilla is something super as it points to the "other" world. But it is still closed, as is the Bienalle, people only enter if they pay. This should change, it should be open and free, so all people could come and participate in what should be an even greater jubilant crowd occupying this city. And who knows what that could lead to....

Writing in Cities, radical urbanism, sqatting, social centres On Sep. 04, 2006, he stated;

At the moment there is an ever growing radical network of autonomous spaces and ways of living that are about inclusivity, action for improved living conditions, DIY, self organisation and more: social centres, squatted villages, squatted city industrial space turned into organic food gardens, radical radio centres, reclaimed streets.......

We are wondering whether these ideas will be discussed in Venice, there was no mention at the london exhibiton (Future city: experiment and utopia in architecture 1956 - 2006). For a long time there has been walls put up against this "alternative" world but perhaps now it is getting to the time when the "architectural" world will have to listen to this new world of autonomous spaces and living, for many the "architectural" world has become sterile and lifeless, perhaps now it will have to be seriously confronted, perhaps Venice will be the meeting ground.

Who knows, maybe the "architectural" world will find that it is in this "alternative" world that the critical edge of architecture has been happening for the last while.

Perhaps we are on the virge of a new age, as the anthropologist David Graeber said "But then, the anarchist century has only just begun."

un autre lieu est possible - another place is possible Tilli gives METAVILLA the thumbs up

Ive added a cluster map, which will register the hits this story gets from people around the world, we will see how the discussion is widening. Locations of visitors to this page



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easa007/////the world is not enough


helloooooo !

home=working hard/organizing easa007/introducing easa to elefsina>exhibition+party/.... ...many reasons to disappear !

and just to remind u some happy moments from budapest...check it out:

video.google.com

many many kisses from hot hot greece e/o/f



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