Friday, November 13, 2009

Not an entirely random post

Is this beautiful and magnificent what man has accomplished, or are we like an infestation of the Earth? Picture taken above Boston in a shuttle plane going to NYC.




The freakishly bright object is a stadium of some sort. From above it looks like some glowing bugs congregating in some sort of a crevice area on the ground and traveling to another congregation spot.

People in the cars don't necessarily need street light to see the road, thats what headlights are for! Street lights are for people, if the streets (freeways) have no people why need lights? Like Mike Stepner suggested, if the road sans people have no lights, cars would drive slower.

Potential Case Study(ies) by Leon Krier

Atlantis Tenerife 1987
New City of Poin, Bavaria 1983
Middle Farm Quarter, Poundbury, Dorsetm 1989

Leon Krier's Lecture at NSAD on Nov. 12 2009

It is sad to say, i wasn't able to pay attention to his lecture at all. I only managed to hear the beginning of it, only the part where he didn't need to use mass transportation system at all till age 20, 50 years ago he would not consider stopping in San Diego at all, something about the lintel and shutters. Some students have negative comments about his lecture, i really can't comment on it but i did buy his autographed book! Just flipping through it, reading some bullet points here and there and the diagrams are helping me rethinking about my project. It has been 30 minutes since i opened his book and i'm only 1/3 done!

Another thing he mentioned in the lecture that i just remembered. I think it was a rhetorical question? He said something along the lines that nowadays cities continues to grow and grow to satisfy the needs of a population that grows exponentially, even if we plan for it it still stops growing, when will we see the fruit of the seed that is urban planning, is it never going to stop, and never ending like this run on sentence/paragraph?

Cities should have a growth limit, but we already have that (green belt). Densities of cities slowly increase....when does density becomes overcrowding (i forgot where i heard/read that from)? when cities have reached "maximum" density do they turn people away? When all cities have reached their limit do we have a US version of favela or slums out in "un urban" areas, or would they try to take them in....which causes crowding of people?

Which brings back the question to the area i'm trying to develop for my thesis, should i plan for the maximum FAR of my site, which will allow x number of x people and x number of residents and x amount of visitors per day? Or build to a lower FAR so there are spaces for the place to evolve and grow in areas that it needs to? I think the answer is clear, but if i use the earlier said model, revenue and production can be easily calculated and stay constant, would it make for a boring area after a while? All these questions and no answers....yet. I need to develop a stronger theory and write it out, maybe a long long manifesto....or a guide book for the residents of my thesis.....gotta think more.

Update: been 1 hr and half way through....must stop....for now :)

Marina Quays Development

Wow! I am so sold and so ready to move there for retirement. I am only missing money, a boat, and more money.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7MDZLKDAIU

Monday, November 9, 2009

Site Planning


Comments from classmates and professors:
Who is funding this?
Why do i have to please everyone
Trading is a good idea

Unfortunately i had an emotional outburst i don't remember much, but basically do what i want to do with the site, i have all the components i need and i just need to work on it more. So here i come veterens day, more work!

Downtown 92101 yr 2030 forecast




Downtown 92101 yr 2000 cencus from SANDAG