Showing posts with label domestic architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label domestic architecture. Show all posts

Friday, October 15, 2010

look closely....

what could this be?


mmm... curious!


I do like reading about those with funds to do so putting it towards something both inspiring and eco-future oriented!


designed by Make Architects
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Bolton Council in the United Kingdom may soon see the construction of its first zero-carbon underground home. Designed by Make Architects for green enthusiast and British football star Gary Neville, the one-story, nearly 8,000 sq ft structure has been designed to be beautiful and functional while keeping energy consumption to a minimum. Text and Images from INHABITAT.COM - a lively e-mag exploring Design that will save the world!





interior


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proposed site




Far from classification as a drab bunker, this thoughtful design not only considers its eco-impact, but keeps in tune with the tranquil and expansive meadows and hillsides which surround it. The positioning and orientation of the property was carefully thought out, building materials will be locally sourced, and traditional building methods will be used where possible. A ground source heat pump will provide the heating and photovoltaic panels and an on-site wind turbine will generate renewable energy.
Almost all of the home will be constructed into the hillside, which, according to the design firm, “enables the surrounding moorland to seamlessly flow across the roof.” The layout takes the form of a flower, with the “petals” hosting areas to eat, relax, entertain, work and play, all around a central kitchen. When lit at night, the house will leave a distinctive, glowing floral impression on the darkened landscape. Amusingly, some have compared the structure to the famed Teletubby house, which admittedly shares some aesthetic value. However, the architects at Make contend their inspirartion arose from Skara Brae, a neolithic underground settlement in Orkney.

text and images: inhabitat.com

Read more: Gary Neville's Underground Eco Home Blends Into the Earth | Inhabitat - Green Design Will Save the World 

I have added the images below from the cited inspiration for this architecture as I had the great pleasure of visiting this site on the Orkney Islands in 1986. A few of us hired old push bikes and went on a somewhat rainy hike across hill and dale to see what was a most amazing neolithic underground settlement. I did drawings of this place and then of artifacts found here that were housed in the local museum back in the village (if my memory serves me well!).
I found Skara Brae utterly enchanting and could not stop imagining what it would have been like to live here for a longtime afterwards. So very sculptural ... the grass and shape of the earth around the rock walled remains was quite voluptuous in appearance!
 The design above is perhaps missing some of that quality.... still ...an interesting find this morning from Inhabitat.



File:Orkney Skara Brae.jpg
from Wikipedia: Skara Brae






 These images found here at an article on the Prehistoric village of Skara Brae at Phenomenica.

Off to work now...
Ciao!

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

touring and detouring via the blogosphere...

A recent visit from J at the enlightening Sydney-City blog prompted a wander to the world of daily photo blogs based in various locations around the globe. So...for a little touristic journey I hopped on board and soon ended up in the Greek Islands, Spain .... and then Beirut... where I chose to stop for a bit and look around. Blogger Mary Ann I discovered living in Beirut fed my curiosity about this city I would love to travel to......also Damascus and various other parts of that region.

I will come back to Mary Ann... but first a detour inspired by her blog to one of the well-loved books on my bookshelf  which is called Saha - a chef's journey through Lebanon and Syria by Greg and Lucy Malouf.  This book is the reason for my increasing desire to travel to that region - and I cant resist sharing these recipes below which are to be found on the chef's website - the book itself is such a treasure - evocative photography and tales told through close exchanges with people in all the places they ventured...including family connections.





Grilled flat chicken with broad bean crush
This flattened chicken dish is cooked under the grill and served smeared with the earthy and spicy broad bean crush. The crush is also delicious on toasted bread, served as a canape with drinks before dinner.
Ingredients
2 x 500g free-range chickens or poussins
salt and pepper
Broad bean crush
1 clove garlic
1/2 teaspoon salt
125g broad beans, podded, blanched and peeled
1 shallot, very finely diced
1/4 cup coriander leaves, finely chopped
50ml extra virgin olive oil
pinch of cayenne pepper
freshly ground black pepper
juice of 1 lemon
Method
Preheat your grill to its highest temperatuire and line the tray of the grill with foil to make cleaning up easier.
To prepare the chickens, cut them down the back and splay them open. Season them with salt and pepper and place them under the grill, skin side down, making sure they are about 3cm from the heat source. Cook for 5 minutes, then turn and cook for a further 5 minutes, or until the skin starts to blister.
While the chickens are grilling, prepare the broad bean crush. First, pound the garlic and salt to a smooth paste. Next add the remaining ingredients to the mortar and pound them one by one or tip everything into a food processor. Either way, what you are aiming for is a sludgy, rough texture.
When the chickens are cooked, smear on the broad bean crush and cook for a few more minutes. Serve with Arabic bread, lemon wedges and a soft leaf salad.
Serves 4

Loved this one too:

Dukkah eggs
3 tablespoons Malouf’s Classic Egyptian Dukkah spice mix
4 eggs
Plain flour for dusting
Vegetable oil for deep-frying

Soft boil the eggs for 3 minutes. Cool down under running water and peel carefully. Dust them in plain flour and then deep fry, or shallow-fry the eggs in vegetable oil for one minute, or until golden brown. Remove from the oil and immediately roll them in Dukkah. Serve on buttered toast with sea salt.



And Labneh (pictured below) is something I've enjoyed making also after reading this book... Click here and take a look - this link is a serious treat!!

labna2

The chef's website linked to a story written about the influence on Melbourne's lively food culture from the Middle East -  and is seems Morrocco across to Persian cuisine in Iran. ...read here at The National - Malouf is quoted as suggesting:


 Melbourne has embraced Middle Eastern food more than any other city globally, outside the Middle East and north Africa. “Melburnians like exotic things and they like to travel and they are not afraid to experiment at home or go out and try new flavours and dishes. We have a strong Middle Eastern community here and that’s evident in a lot of the restaurants,” he says.
In 2007, a restaurant reviewer for the city’s The Age newspaper noted that “for a time, it seemed just about every new restaurant in Melbourne had some kind of culinary umbilical to chef Greg Malouf”


I spent a month in Melbourne early last year and was surprised to see this very noticeable change from when living in Melbourne. Many years before when resident there I was lucky to have a house guest from interstate who was Lebanese and  a very good cook. So good in fact that he was welcomed back by the household when he needed a home away from home. The  Arabic parts of the city were soon demystified and my cooking repertoire was never the same. I still cook dishes Samir showed us and remember the stories about hospitality and cuisine.


Well ...  I did get way off track... my original intention was to tell you why I liked visiting Mary Ann's blog Beirut Pursuit

Reading her post on 17.6.10 called Plan prompted a flash back. Her post describes how as a young person floor plans had fascinated her... and why. This took me back to my own craze for drawing house plans when I was 13 & 14... dreaming of studying architecture, imagining living spaces ... however that emerged. Here Mary Ann photographs floor plans for residential developments in a city where new constructions abound.




The curios thing is this revealed quite a lot about the lifestyles of the well-to-do in this city and led to a very lively discussion in the comments which revealed so much more than a typical travelogue and the usual photographs of a city under focus. Click above on 'post on 17.6.10' to read more.




Images above and below Mary Ann describes as so evocative of the city - telling as they do of times past....and present.




PS I was delighted to hear from Mary Ann who I emailed about her blog.... revisiting a day after posting this I am very pleased to have included her story and images and you may wish to pop over and see what is happening there too! It was for me almost like wandering the streets with her discovering interesting details in the everyday! Thank you Mary Ann!!

Dont know whether the funds will materialise to travel there in person... but going via the blogosphere is a treat never-the-less!!!
As for those house plans/designs ... recent geometric paintings seem to refer to those I found myself thinking.... Maybe yearning for a home to call my own.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

home and hospitality via the selby

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see more great images here of Dan Martensen and Shannon Glick at home in the country via The Selby.
This was found through Kim at her wonderful www.littlesomethings.blogspot.com !

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

From Brisbane to LA to Mexico and back...


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A big thank you to Laure, a French-American Freelance writer and designer based in Venice, California who contacted me yesterday about posting something from my blog. My rudimentary knowledge of posting images, altering image sizes and other useful tasks in no way matches her professional journalistic competancies - Laure contributes to Apartment Therapy and Dwell.  What came of the exchange is shown here. With thanks to Laure!

Images from laure's blog at home at home that caught my eye... Below are Lithops, unusual succelents that I've not seen before with a reference to a post Laure did on Apartment Therapy about the California Cactus Centre on October 8, 2008.


And now... to speak further of  Geninne... you can visit my post from June 7 here where homage is paid to this wonderful creative spirit and the life she creates around her art studio. Best wishes to Geninne!

Monday, July 20, 2009

out for a walk...



a walk in my neighbourhood takes me past old and new places...but I am most partial to the older Brisbane homes which feel so right for the climate. The top house is probably less characteristic in that it does not have open verandahs or much garden surrounding the house...but it is across the road from an extremely popular park and picnic spot. Below it is this second white house in a suburb of many white houses. Not so many have such an imposing staircase leading to the front door though! This verandah was meant for afternoon teas with china tea cups. Sadly there were no signs of life when I have walked past!