Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Bowerbird Courtship
This is the sweetest courtship display. The female looks so lovely and excited by the male's dance. I couldn't resist posting here. What does it have to do with urban design? Well, if these adorable little things find beauty in the exotic and exciting, then why do we feel okay living in bland, depressing places?...or something like that...
Thursday, April 23, 2009
All the Single Ladies
Wow! My friend Jen Gamber sent me this video today. Spontaneous dancing in Piccadilly Circus, London. I love it, and I wish that I was one of these off-the-shoulder-leotard-clad dancers. More than wish...I am insanely jealous of these hot ladies. That's what I call Urban Revitalization. For anybody out there who is on the fence of joining my awesome Non-Invasive Urban Revitalization group, this is exactly the kind of thing I want to do, but instead set in an under-noticed area and not product endorsement (this is a promotion for some brand of gum). Come on! I'd look ridiculous out there alone. You know you want to dance in random places in Chicago with me! And if you're not a dancer...I'm also quite interested in public art, sports, whatever. The sky is the limit. The point is: public spaces are meant to be used for more than walkways and lunch spots -- they are stages with unlimited potential to brighten someone's day and challenge our understanding of place.
Monday, April 20, 2009
I Started a Group
I started a group that consists of creative types (dancers, musicians, urban planners, scientists, and so forth...) who would like to see Chicago's under-used spaces reinvigorated through non-invasive techniques. This group would brainstorm spaces we'd like to see re-invigorated, develop a cool intervention, and then follow through. This is not for pay, just for fun, and maybe something to put on your resume. :-)
Please read spiel below:
"There is un-tapped potential in Chicago's talent pool and its underused urban spaces.
Back in the Los Angeles drought of the 1970s, a group of teenage surfers, the Z-Boys, took skateboarding to another level by using drained swimming pools to practice moves when the waves were flat. In these pools is where aerial skateboarding was born.
McCarren Park Pool in Brooklyn, NY was abandoned and unused for years until choreographer Noémie Lafrance used it for a site-specific dance piece, "Agora". This performance brought attention to the space, which was then used for film screenings and music concerts. The Borough of Brooklyn saw the potential in this space, and decided to re-make it into a public pool. Of course some people would have liked to see it remain as an arts venue, but this in an important case study that suggests that bringing attention to a space can change it."
About me: I have my Master's degree in Urban Design (Landscape Architecture) and my undergrad degree in art, and am obsessed with cities and the details of place.
If you are interested, please email me with your background, why you are interested, and if you have any questions.
Please read spiel below:
"There is un-tapped potential in Chicago's talent pool and its underused urban spaces.
Back in the Los Angeles drought of the 1970s, a group of teenage surfers, the Z-Boys, took skateboarding to another level by using drained swimming pools to practice moves when the waves were flat. In these pools is where aerial skateboarding was born.
McCarren Park Pool in Brooklyn, NY was abandoned and unused for years until choreographer Noémie Lafrance used it for a site-specific dance piece, "Agora". This performance brought attention to the space, which was then used for film screenings and music concerts. The Borough of Brooklyn saw the potential in this space, and decided to re-make it into a public pool. Of course some people would have liked to see it remain as an arts venue, but this in an important case study that suggests that bringing attention to a space can change it."
About me: I have my Master's degree in Urban Design (Landscape Architecture) and my undergrad degree in art, and am obsessed with cities and the details of place.
If you are interested, please email me with your background, why you are interested, and if you have any questions.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Liam Finn -- Second Chance
Angus Sutherland directed the video below, for Liam Finn's "Second Chance". It's like a stereoscopic view of the past. I like posting videos with dream-like images, because we see our world through our memories and experiences, and react in the present accordingly. I think it can be devastating to return to a place we remember from our childhood to find it gone or severely altered.
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Biking Like a Grown-Up

I spend a lot of time thinking about bikes and clothes and clothes on bikes and the different postures we assume while riding our bikes. I have a hybrid (part road bike part mountain bike) that my family so generously pitched in to buy for me for completing my undergraduate degree. It's great, because the large wheels are suitable for city riding, and the frame/wide tires allow me to go off-road if I need to. The hybrid has never been a fashionable bike, because it's not great at one thing, it just has the potential to do everything at a mediocre level. This bike has always worked for me, first of all, because I think about how sweet my family is to have pooled their money together to buy it for me. Secondly, I don't care if I look cool on my bike. My concern, though, is that I now live in Chicago. Chicago, unlike other cities I have called home (Virginia Beach, Philadelphia, Tucson) doesn't have nearby trails that I would need the mountain bike part for -- and my back starts to hurt from being hunched over all the time. As you may have guessed already -- I want a Dutch bike. I want to sit upright; I don't want to worry about getting chain grease on my clothes; I want to wear a skirt without having to either tie it in a knot so it doesn't get caught in the chain, or have to wear pants underneath because I'm hunched over. I like to ride slowly through the city. There are too many chances to hit the door of a parked vehicle or to hit a pedestrian, so I take my time. The extreme hunched position of road bikes and track bikes (fixed gear) give the impression that the rider is a predatory cat, a puma. They balance on their wheels at stop lights, ready to pounce. These bikes are great for getting around the city quickly, and this is why bike messengers ride them. But people look so classy and relaxed on a Dutch bike. They are made for utility, not speed, and we are encouraged to wear our regular clothes on them (remember just jumping on your bike as a kid, without the spandex or special shoes?). The New York Times published an article about Dutch bikes (my friend Ben Raines alerted me to this), as the new status symbol of the recession. Seriously -- add up the cost of car insurance, parking, repairs, and gas, and the $1,500 price tag of a Dutch utility bike looks very appealing.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
William Forsythe

Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Happy Cycling
Some Philly cyclists/filmmakers made a video to the Boards of Canada tune, "Happy Cycling". It's nostalgic for me, because it's one of my favorite rides in Philly -- a real destination in itself. The Ben Franklin Bridge connects historic Philadelphia and Camden, New Jersey. As you may remember from history class, this is where Washington crossed the Delaware River. As of four years ago, when I lived in Philadelphia, Camden was not a safe place for a woman out biking alone. Why? Because it has been ranked "America's Most Dangerous City" more than once. As tough as I think I am, I always rode to the end of the bridge and then turned right back around, just before I got to the Riverfront State Prison. Nothing says Welcome to New Jersey quite like a prison. Sometimes I would ride into Camden with a group of fellow cyclists. Even then, there wasn't much to see in Camden, unfortunately. The City of Camden thinks the way to revitalize itself is with "its four main attractions, the USS New Jersey; the Susquehanna Bank Center; Campbell's Field; and the Adventure Aquarium", rather than creating amenities that Camden residents can afford. According to census data from 2000, the median income for Camden residents was $9,815.
Labels:
Benjamin Franklin Bridge,
Bikes,
Boards of Canada,
Camden,
Philadelphia
Monday, April 13, 2009
Lonely Lonely
Wow. I just found a video that Charles Bae made for Feist's Lonely, Lonely. It depicts my biggest fear: being trapped in suburbia.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Chicago: Style Destination?

Imagine my surprise and delight to see today, in the nytimes.com style section, that Chicago is, in fact, a fashionable city. The article, "IN CHICAGO, WHERE A NEWFOUND VITALITY IS FUELING A BOOMLET IN STYLE AND DESIGN, THE FUTURE IS NOW. BY GIOIA DILIBERTO" explains that Michelle Obama gave us the reputation of "stylish yet sensible girl-next-door". I'll take that. The images that accompany the article, by Raymond Meier, are of an angular blonde woman in geometric, architecture-inspired ensembles, posing on, against, and adjacent to Chicago icons like the el, Lake Michigan, and the Franklin-Orleans Bridge. I think this is an invitation to be inspired by our architecture and to get out and experience the gorgeous urbanscape.
Labels:
Architecture,
Chicago,
Michelle Obama,
New York Times,
Style
Friday, April 10, 2009
David Byrne

My new favorite blog, Bakfiets en Meer, lists that David Byrne not only has a blog (who doesn't these days, really?), but he is a bike activist! I spent many days singing Talking Heads lyrics to "Nothing But Flowers":
Once there were parking lots
Now it's a peaceful oasis
You got it, you got it
This was a Pizza Hut
Now it's all covered with daisies
You got it, you got it
...or lyrics to "Don't Worry about the Government"
It's over there, it's over there
My building has every convenience
It's gonna make life easy for me
It's gonna be easy to get things done
I will relax along with my loved ones
Loved ones, loved ones visit the building
Take the highway, park and come up and see me
I'll be working, working but if you come visit
I'll put down what I'm doing, my friends are important
I adore his deliciously sarcastic commentary about contemporary life. His blog sounds like something a friend would have written. It's straightforward, honest, and concerned about, well everything. I think that anyone who rides a bicycle or walks in dense urban areas has a heightened sensual awareness with which it is near impossible to ignore the goings-on: the beautiful, ugly, and everything in between.
David Byrne has been a fashion inspiration to me: I attribute my life-long obsessions blazers to him and long, one day, to have a Big Suit.
Check out his blog: it is definitely worth a read.
Monday, April 6, 2009
Mark Borthwick

Sunday, April 5, 2009
Bakfiets and Nature

What could be better than bakfiets full of adorable kids and bags of groceries from the farmer's market? Possibly bakfiets filled with "nature". Leave it to the Dutch to integrate cycling with land issues and celebrities. Read the story on the blog: Bakfiets en Meer.
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