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Archive for the ‘Creativity’ Category

Flying Robots: 6 Stunning Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Projects

24 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Technology & Vehicles & Mods. ]

unmanned aerial vehicle flights

From the MIT Senselab quadcopter and ETH Zurich self-assembling multicopter to DIY drones mounted with paintball guns, toy rockets and automatic weapons, flying robots are quickly making their way from distant war zones to local city streets. The big question in the minds of many is whether this proliferation is a utopian or dystopian development. The following six examples (each with its own video) highlight extremes both positive and negative in the controversial and fast-paced evolution of unmanned aerial vehicles (or: UAVs for short).

Headline-Making Buzz as UAV Makes Surprise Flyby

Recently Angela Merkel made headlines as she was photographed close-up by a UAV, which then promptly crashed when its controller was approached by police and had to drop the controls. The Pirate Party claimed credit, stating they wanted to force the issue of urban surveillance and the domestic use of non-combat drones. At and it worked: her close encounter with a miniature UFO has sparked serious debate about the roll of UAVs in everything from front-line combat to city surveillance.

Self-Assembling Multi-Copter Flies in Raft Formation

self assembling multi copter

Before going further down the complex political and social implications of drone development, it is worth looking at the innovative upside and sheer technological achievement associated with UAV innovations, starting with the following Distributed Flight Array developed in a Swiss research lab. In this experimental project, a series of autonomous hexagonal copter pods assembles itself into a group on the ground using laser guidance systems. Once attached and aloft, each component copter within the larger composite ‘raft’ plays a roll in maintaining altitude and stability, rotating clockwise or counterclockwise to create lift and cancel torque.

self flying helicopter raft

From Gizmag: “As the united band of robots hovers and climbs off the ground, each robot module is using inertial sensors to detect tilt and roll – exactly the same sensors found in an iPhone or iPad to detect tilt. Each of the modules determines how to correct for pitch (forward and back tilting) and roll (side to side tilting) by making small adjustments to the speed of its propeller. The data link on the infrared light beams helps the robots decide which direction and axis is which.”

Flying Tour Guide Takes You to Desired Destinations

mit lab autonomous vehicle

Meanwhile, researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology have built a less playful and more purposeful autonomous quadcopter designed to help people navigate cities or to aid in remote search-and-rescue missions. The SkyCall from Senseable City Lab provides networked intelligence in physical form, and is more than just a prototype – initial versions are being deployed on MIT’s campus to give guided tours or take visitors to specific on-demand destinations when summoned by phone or via other mobile devices.

mit campus tour robot

From Dezeen: “UAV technology holds huge disruptive potential …. We want to harness this and specifically explore its value to the city and its inhabitants.” In this case: “Rather than the visitor diverting their attention to a map, the autonomous guide provides an intuitive navigational system of simply ‘following’.” Of course, not everyone has such a bright vision for these various new flying devices, as you will see below.

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Rise Of Drones 6 Sides Of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Debate

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Word Worship: Church Converted to Awe-Inspiring Bookstore

24 Sep

[ By Steph in Architecture & Offices & Commercial. ]

Converted Church Bookstore 1

This stunning 15th-century Dominican church is dedicated to much more than just one book – it contains thousands of them, in fact, stacked row upon row in a modern three-story addition. Located in The Netherlands, ‘Waanders In de Broeren‘ opened to the public in July, offering a large selection of tomes as well as an assortment of retail goods.

Converted Church Bookstore 2

The new converted church bookstore is highly reminiscent of Selexyz Dominicanen, a similar concept in Maastricht, Holland with a multi-level black volume sitting lightly within the church’s arches and vaulted ceilings. Where that structure was darker and more dramatic, this one is light and bright, complementing the original colors of the church.

Converted Church Bookstore 3

The three additional floors  were placed in the side wing of the church, between the original pillars. The central axis was left open so visitors can still appreciate the grand scale of the building, with views of the organ  and a modern stained glass window.

Converted Church Bookstore 4

Converted Church Bookstore 5

A central staircase routes customers through the merchandise display area a half-level at a time, ending right under the renovated church arches. Inspiration for the furniture was taken from Dom Hans van deer Laan, a Dutch architect who was also a monk. The addition is not secured in any way to the original architecture, so it can be easily removed without damage

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Submarine Structures: 7 Wonders of Underwater Architecture

24 Sep

[ By Steph in 7 Wonders Series & Global. ]

Underwater Buildings Submerged Hotels Main

Enjoy a luxurious lunch, spend the night gazing at deep sea creatures, take in museum exhibits or even catch a glimpse at an underwater stripper pole in these seven wonders of submerged architecture. Located from 20 to 50 feet below the surface, these real-life submarine structures (including a couple concepts currently under construction) would make for a swinging town for mermaids and mermen if they were all located in the same place.

Abandoned Underwater Strip Club, Israel

Underwater Strip Club 2

Underwater Strip Club 1

Once, this barnacle-covered underwater building in Eilat,  Israel was the Red Sea Star restaurant, bar and observatory. But when that didn’t work out, it became perhaps one of the weirdest submerged businesses of all time: a strip club. The entrance is above water; visitors crossed a 230-foot bridge and descended a flight of stairs to gain access, so no scuba suits were necessary. Surprisingly, the Nymphas Show Bar wasn’t a big hit. Since its closure, it has been abandoned. Marine biologist Gil Koplovitz captured a series of shots that peer inside, which can be seen at The Huffington Post.

Water Discus Hotel, Dubai

Underwater Hotel Dubai 2

Underwater Water Discus Hotel Dubai 1

If you’re skeptical that the Water Discus Underwater Hotel will ever really be built, you’re hardly alone – it seems like one of many fantastical structures in Dubai that get a lot of attention as concepts but never manage to become reality. However, the developer has announced that construction is about to begin. The hotel will consist of a series of discs, some underwater and some above the surface, with 21 two-guest rooms in the submarine space.

World’s Largest Underwater Museum, Mexico

Underwater Museum Mexico

It may not have walls, but the world’s largest underwater museum is impressive nonetheless, with a series of displays made of pH-neutral concrete that can only be seen by divers and tourists in glass-bottom boats. The sculptures were designed to attract algae and marine life, making them an ecosystem. A total of 400 structures are planned. The Cancun Underwater Museum is located off the coast of Isla de Mujeres, Mexico.

Ithaa Undersea Restaurant, Maldives

Underwater Restaurant Resort Ithaa

While many similar concepts have never gotten past the ‘impressive renderings’ phase, the Ithaa Undersea Restaurant at the Hilton Maldives Resort has been open since 2005. Made of acrylic with a 270-degree panoramic view, the restaurant seats only fourteen at a time, for an intimate and quiet underwater dining experience (that’ll cost you at least $ 120 per person – for lunch.)

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Submarine Structures 7 Wonders Of Underwater Architecture

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Chromatic Vortex: 3D Art from 4,416 Sheets of Photo Paper

23 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

chromatic storefront installation art

A site-specific installation in a New York City storefront, this twisting multi-colored tunnel was suspended in mid-air and held together with no less than 17,000 standard office bind clips.

chromatic reflective photo paper

chromatic hanging tunnel inerior

chromatic binder clip assembly

Composed of over 4,000 panels of high-gloss photographic paper, CHROMAtex from SOFTlab (photos by Alan Tansey) was designed to suck passers by right in (proverbially not literally, fortunately for pedestrians).

chromatic art intersection interior

Situated in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, this sculptural work was built from the outside in. As illustrated in the video above, it slowly took shape as it moved from the front of the empty shop toward the back, breaking out into various subsidiary tunnels along the way.

chromatic suspended art sculpture

chromatic art entryp oint

These twists in turn split and curve, morphing from circular tubes into square ports and providing other internal perspectives for those curious enough to enter the interior space in order to see more of the suspended sculpture.

chromatic tunnel installation entrance

SOFTlab itself is composed of “artists, believers, listeners, directors, geeks, architects, sketchers, dreamers, programmers” and above all: designers. It was created by Michael Szivos who has a degree from the “Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at Columbia University. The studio has since been involved in the design and production of projects across almost every medium, from digitally fabricated large-scale sculpture, to interactive design, to immersive digital video installations. As the studio adjusted to a wide range of projects, we began to focus less on the medium and style and more on ideas [and] we are able to approach every project from a fresh perspective to create rich spatial, graphic, interactive and visual experiences.”

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The Unloved Boats: 8 Abandoned Cruise Ships & Liners

22 Sep

[ By Steve in Global & Travel & Places. ]

abandoned cruise ships ocean liners
Call out “Abandon ship!” and what do you get? Abandoned ships. These 8 abandoned cruise ships and liners are all that’s left of what was left to Poseidon.

MS World Discoverer

abandoned cruise ship World Discover(image via: Panoramio/Darcy O’Shea)

The German-built and Liberian-registered cruise ship MS World Discoverer enjoyed a 25-year-long, mainly trouble-free lifespan as a mid-sized (roughly 225 passengers and crew) passenger liner plying the South Pacific with occasional sorties into the frosty Arctic and Antarctic oceans.

abandoned cruise ship World Discoverer(images via: Sometimes Interesting)

On April 30th of 2000, the World Discoverer was sailing through the Sandfly Passage in the Solomon Islands when she struck an uncharted rock or reef. Captain Oliver Kruess heroically nursed the listing liner into shallow Roderick Bay in the Florida Islands, where all aboard were safely evacuated. The World Discoverer, however, remains where it was beached in 2000, stripped of anything valuable by local islanders.

abandoned cruise ship World Discoverer(images via: Sometimes Interesting and GCaptain)

Looking like an outtake from Life After People, the World Discoverer‘s exploring days are over for good and unlike most other coastal shipwrecks it will probably remain where it is, slowly rusting and moldering away in its sheltered cove, for some time to come. There’s only one thing that worries environmentalists: sometime in the future the World Discoverer’s metal fuel tanks will finally rust through, releasing unknown amounts of poisonous toxins into the sea and onto the beaches.

Queen Elizabeth 2

abandoned QE2 ocean liner(images via: Seabreezes, Barcroft Media and Wikipedia/Dashers)

The jewel in the crown of Britain’s venerable Cunard Line, the ocean liner QE2 sailed the seven seas as both a transatlantic ocean liner and as a premium cruise ship from 1969 until her retirement on November 27th, 2008. Subsequently, the liner was purchased by Istithmar, the private equity arm of Dubai World, whose stated intention was to convert the vessel into a 500-room floating hotel to be moored at the Palm Jumeirah offshore resort in Dubai.

Due to the world financial crisis and its lingering effects on business in Dubai, virtually no work has been carried out on the ship and rumors have persisted the virtually abandoned QE2 would either be sent to Asia, either to be scrapped in China or converted into a floating luxury hotel, shopping mall and museum… and so it goes.

TSS Duke of Lancaster

abandoned Duke of Lancaster cruise ship(images via: HHV Ferry, Urban Montage and Associated Newspapers Ltd/Metro)

Launched in 1956, the TSS Duke of Lancaster was built at the Belfast shipyards of Harland & Wolff where the RMS Titanic was constructed almost a half-century earlier. The 4,450 ton, 1,800 passenger steamer operated as a passenger ferry on the Heysham-Belfast route and as a cruise ship calling at a variety of European ports from Spain to Norway for the better part of two decades. In November of 1978, the venerable Duke was retired from service on the seas… a new, landlocked career was about to begin.

abandoned cruise ship TSS Duke of Lancaster(images via: Wirral and Daily Post)

In August of 1979, the ship was moved to Llanerch-y-Mor near Mostyn, Wales to become a static leisure center known as “The Fun Ship”. Legal issues and turf tussles with the local council crippled the ownership group’s business model, however, and the Duke’s slab sides were gradually covered by rust and unauthorized graffiti. The latter must have given somebody an idea because surprisingly, there’s life in the old Duke yet: as the largest open air art gallery in the UK.

abandoned cruise ship Duke of Lancaster(image via: Mike (pentlandpirate))

Beginning in August of 2012, a commission was offered to Latvian graffiti artist Kiwie who spray-painted a large-scale artwork on the ship’s side. Kiwie’s work was augmented and complemented by a wealth of “bright and surreal” graffiti by acclaimed artists including Dale Grimshaw, Dan Kitchener, Snub23, Spacehop, and Fin DAC. The latter’s eye-popping “Mauricamai” covers most the Duke’s stern and has been breathtakingly captured above by Flickr user Mike.

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The Unloved Boats 8 Abandoned Cruise Ships Liners

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Reactive Light Sculpture Illuminates a Tunnel + Your Mind

21 Sep

[ By Delana in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

dutmala tunnel interactive light sculpture

Tunnels are typically scary places. The darkness is enough to give anyone the willies – and then there are the spooky, disorienting echoes. An example of an un-scary tunnel would be Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport’s Light Tunnel. Another can be found in the Netherlands.

knol ontwerp reactive tunnel moving sculpture

The Dutmala tunnel in Eindhoven was once cast in darkness. Amsterdam-based designers Knol Ontwerp illuminated the once-dim tunnel with a light sculpture called Transit Mantra. The interactive corridor reacts to the movement of passersby, a glowing escort through a formerly-gloomy tunnel.

reactive tunnel sculpture eindhoven

Each person who passes through the tunnel gets his or her own unique experience, as the sculpture produces both light and sound. The amount of walkers, bikers or joggers, as well as their speed, causes fluctuations in the patterns. Now every tunnel, underpass, aqueduct – even the Chunnel – seem boring.

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Gas Station to Sheep Pasture: NYC Urban Intervention

20 Sep

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

Gas Station Sheep Urban Art 1

Twenty-five silent, unmoving sheep gather on a carpet of lush green grass in the unlikeliest of places: an industrial gas station in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York City. This surreal pop-up landscape is a team effort between art collector Michael Shvo and Paul Kasmin Gallery, aiming to bring outdoor exhibitions to a broad audience.

Gas Station Sheep Urban Art 2

Found in the center of the High Line arts district, ‘The Sheep Station’ installation incorporates iconic epoxy stone and bronze ‘Moutons,’ sculptures by the late artist Francois-Xavier Lalanne. For Lalanne, the sheep symbolized a personal mission to demystify art.

Gas Station Sheep Urban Art 3

This unexpected pastoral scene, which will be in place until October 20th 2013, is just one of a series of rotating public exhibitions that will be hosted at the former Getty Station. The station has been reclaimed by Paul Kasmin Gallery as a way to bring art – and a sense of fun – to a wider array of people than those who might wander into a museum or gallery.

Gas Station Sheep Urban Art 4

See more pictures and stay on top of other upcoming exhibitions at GettyStation.com.

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NeverWet Graffiti: Invisible-Ink Street Art Shows Up in Rain

20 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

wet only graffiti

NeverWet has been making headlines as the silicon-based spray that repels liquids from clothes and electronics, but this off-book use shows another fascinating application that may be even longer-lasting: urban art invisible until poured upon.

neverwet graffiti stencil pavement

As part of a Home Depot competition, Nathan Sharratt decided to create stencils and spray NeverWet onto streets and sidewalks, resulting in areas of deflected moisture surrounded by soaked concrete. Like invisible ink, the sprayed areas remain hidden until another liquid is applied.

rain visible street spray

Given criticism of NeverWet when applied to shoes (apparently it can discolor or leave residue) and phones (touchscreen and durability issues have been reported), this may prove to be a more persistent, if unintended, long-term application of the product.

wet spray paint idea

And for any interested subversive artists, it could prove a unusual boon when bothered by police: how will the authorities justify arresting someone for spraying an invisible coating on a public surface? Meanwhile, best of luck to Nathan in the contest – a win here is surely deserved!

wet spray finished project

Short-form instructions for those looking to (officially: don’t!) try this at home or in the neighborhood: “Step 1: You need a stencil. You can do something simple or use an image that includes a fair amount of detail. I created my own stencils from cardboard, but there’s no reason you can’t use a ready-made or store-bought stencil. Just know that NeverWet will get sprayed on that, too. Step 2: Place stencil on concrete. I recommend that you only try this on light-colored concrete for best results. Step 3: Spray the NeverWet into the cut-out areas of your stencil according to the manufacturer’s instructions found on the label. I did two base coats and two top coats.”

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Constant Motion: Open-Plan, Puzzle-Piece Apartment Design

19 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

open 12

A small cubic condo with windows on only one side hardly seems an obvious candidate for a complex and dynamic plan, but from concept through execution, this design embodies its creator’s and clients’ visions for space in motion.

open 11

open plan concept diagram

As the diagrams by designer Alex Bykov illustrate, the layout started with a central kitchen, acting as a modern-day hearth and center of activity around which the rest of the mostly-open rooms revolve.

open 14

open 15

open 13

The raised-level library area, framed in richly variegated plywood, feels like a cozy and separate space, but also remains an extension of the main volume. Its shelving shapes play into the puzzle theme that inspired the overall plan.

open 7

open 5

open 6

The steps leading up to this little library serve two purposes, acting as stairs but also forming a corner breakfast nook on the main floor – another one of many turns and angles throughout the project that add to its dynamism.

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Constant Motion Open Plan Puzzle Piece Apartment Design

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Digital Grotesque: Intricate Full-Scale 3D Printed Room

19 Sep

[ By Steph in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

Digital Grotesque 3D Printed Room 1

Stacked sections of intricate 3D-printed columns of the most baroque nature imaginable make up a cube-shaped, full-scale room. Designers Michael Hansmeyer and Benjamin Dillenburger made ‘Digital Grotesque‘ out of eleven tons of sandstone, its outside smooth and flat, with an impossibly ornamented interior. It measures 16 square meters, and has 260 million surfaces.

Digital Grotesque 3D Printed Room 2

These complex, interwoven details and the ways in which the various layers of them join together wouldn’t be possible to craft by hand. Many elements look fractal in nature, repeating endlessly. One side is mirrored by the other in perfect symmetry. The architectural scale, for the designer, has been reduced from bricks to grains of sand.

Digital Grotesque 3D Printed ROom 4

This scale and detail is made possible by a new sand-printing technology that overcomes some of the limitations of 3D printing, enabling large-scale elements that can be layered into a whole. “The design process thus strikes a delicate balance between the expected and the unexpected, between control and relinquishment,” write the design team. “The algorithms are deterministic as they do not incorporate randomness, but the results are not necessarily entirely foreseeable. Instead, they have the power to surprise.”

Digital Grotesque 3D Printed Room 3

“Digital Grotesque is between chaos and order, both natural and the artificial, neither foreign nor familiar. Any references to nature or existing styles are not integrated into the design process, but are evoked only as associations in the eye of the beholder.”

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