Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta california. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta california. Mostrar todas las entradas

sábado, noviembre 12, 2016

IMPOSTOR

Gary Fleder, 2001



Classroom/Laboratory/Administration Building 
California State Polytechnic University, Pamona

Antoine Predock, 1992

Altered landscapes result inevitably from human settlement and successive transformations. In Pomona, the scenery shifts from that of the dry, Rancho San Jose, to the romantic, verdant ranch of WK Kellogg as well as to the superscale freeway interchange, producing a panorama of cultural depth and visual intensity.
The Classroom, Laboratory, and Administration (CLA) Buildings, completed in 1992, create a symbolic gateway for the Cal Poly campus, a threshold between the desert to the east and the city of Los Angeles to the west.
A sense of boundary exists that distinguishes functional pieces. There is a layering of doorways, patios, outdoor courtyards, rooftop gardens, bridges, balconies and paseos, which accommodate pedestrian paths that once existed on site.
Extremely energy efficient, the egalitarian tower presents multiple opportunities for social and business interaction by virtue of its mixed functional occupancy: students, faculty, and staff.
Serving as a symbol of transformation for the campus, the CLA Building is anchored by pervading historical atmospheres and the spirit of the Pomona Valley. Coming into view from the LAX flight path, the building appears as an abstract geologic form in the unfolding landscape of basin, foothills and mountains. Each vertex of its triangular organization points toward these salient landscape features





sábado, mayo 14, 2016

THX 1138

George Lucas, 1971





Edificio para la administración pública y oficinas judiciales del Marin County Civic Center
San Rafael, California
Frank Lloyd Wright, 1957


We know that the good building is not the one that hurts the landscape, but is one that makes the landscape more beautiful than it was before that building was built. In Marin County you have one of the most beautiful landscapes I have seen, and I am proud to make the buildings of this County characteristic of the beauty of the County.

Frank Lloyd Wright



                  Frank Lloyd Wright & the Marin County Civic Center








domingo, noviembre 29, 2015

CONQUEST OF THE PLANET OF THE APES

, 1972






University of California, Irvine
William L. Pereira 1962-ca. 1977

William Pereira, UC Irvine’s first architect, chose the Brutalist style for the original eight buildings on the UCI campus. Brutalism derives its name from the French term béton brut, which literally means “raw concrete”; its premise was to stretch the technical limits of “brute” materials. Pereira’s buildings consist of large concrete boxes in three-dimensional castconcrete panels which float in a sea of open space and rise starkly from the landscape. He took advantage of mid-20th-century technical advances in the use of reinforced and pre-cast concrete, thus creating a consistent appearance across all of the early structures on campus. Throughout the 1970s Brutalist-inspired buildings were erected at UCI by other architects as well.