:

DE sign:
(Deconstructing in-order to find new meanings)

A blogging space about my personal interests; was made during training in Stockholm #Young Leaders Visitors Program #Ylvp08 it developed into a social bookmarking blog.

I studied #Architecture; interested in #Design #Art #Education #Urban Design #Digital-media #social-media #Inhabited-Environments #Contemporary-Cultures #experimentation #networking #sustainability & more =)


Please Enjoy, feedback recommended.

p.s. sharing is usually out of interest not Blind praise.
This is neither sacred nor political.

Saturday, April 24

Urban Villages replacing Slums

Urban Villages replacing Slums
Acupuncture architecture; urban villages., in Stockholm | Pecha Kucha for Haiti




I was so happy to see this clip on pecha kucha especially after publishing an article in 2009 about the subject & for being in discussion with friends regarding the building resolutions of the ever growing slums around Damascus back then I suggested going vertical instead of horizontal could be one way to solve it! Who knows! 
But sure not on cracked mountains. 


It's amazing sometimes to see how close our experiences on this planet could be. It's also great to see at least one succeed in making their contribution a reality.

Thursday, April 8

Five Points To Green er Cities

Five Points To Greener Cities
05 04 2010 . Damascus . The Syrian British Org
as mentioned by Mr. Peter Ross . "a Solution"



. Define with Honest Definitions the problems!
. Protect The Parts/ Areas of Certain value/s
. Penetrate The Protected green
. Provide multi-centers "that do the job"
. Connect The centers and you'll have a "Green Network" 







+ Design For Positive Change +‏

+ Design For Positive Change +


Competition copied of http://www.na.sappi.com/ideasthatmatterNA/index.html

A decade ago, we launched Ideas that Matter, the industry’s only grant program aimed at helping designers contribute their talents to the charitable activities that they care about most. Sappi believes that the creative ideas of designers can have an impact beyond the aesthetic and that those ideas can be a powerful force for social good. To date, Ideas that Matter has awarded $10 million worldwide in grants supporting causes that range from youth centers and health care awareness to wildlife protection. Working together with our customers, we aim to make a difference.   


Who may apply
Ideas that Matter is open to individual designers, design firms, agencies, in-house corporate design departments, design instructors, and individual design students and design student groups.

What kinds of projects may be submitted
All
communication projects that support the needs of the nonprofit and meet the conditions and requirements of the program will be considered. At least a portion of the project should be printed. Additional elements may include a variety of communication mediums such as outdoor signage, t-shirts, banner advertising, print advertising, websites, html campaigns, or other media. What budget items may be submitted
Grant awards, ranging from $5,000 to $50,000 per project, may be used for implementation and out-of-pocket costs, including photography, illustration, paper, printing, mailing and related expenses. Your grant cannot be applied toward the designer’s time, hardware or overhead elements, such as computers or rent.

Selection process
Applications are reviewed by an independent committee comprised of leaders in the design industry. Evaluation of project concepts and design will be based on creativity, potential effectiveness and practical plan for implementation. All requested information and materials can be submitted on the official entry forms or reformatted in a separate presentation. If your entry is reformatted, please make sure to include all information in the order in which it is requested. The decisions of the judges are final.


Conditions & restrictions
  • All grant monies must be used within six months of receipt.
  • No charity may cite Sappi or Ideas that Matter as a supplier of a grant without prior written permission from Sappi.
  • Sappi employees and family members and agencies conducting business with the company are ineligible.
  • Grant recipients who find they are unable to execute the chosen program may enlist the help of the non-profit organization to complete it.
  • Submitted concepts not awarded a grant will remain the intellectual property of the applicant. However, Sappi reserves the right to keep and show any of the concepts unless the applicant requests otherwise in writing.
  • Sappi reserves the right to reproduce and promote the funded campaigns as case histories.
  • Grants are not paid out as a lump sum, but as they are implemented. As expenses are incurred, either the designer or the nonprofit should submit a request for payment on official letterhead, along with the invoice(s).
  • Applicants who want their materials returned must include a written request with their submitted proposal.

Publication rights
Sappi reserves the right to publish and promote the completed work made possible by the Ideas that Matter grant. Grant recipients may also be asked to participate in Sappi educational seminars and conferences, or to share their programs with others in the graphic arts community. Sappi reserves the right to reproduce any design submissions, along with pertinent case histories, in materials produced to promote and support the Ideas that Matter program.

Application needs
Your application must include the following:
  • Mission statement of the benefiting non-profit organization
  • Written description of the proposed project, including a list of elements within it
  • Brief description of the project’s objectives
  • Visual presentation of your proposed idea
  • Project timeline and proposed budget
  • Summary information about the applicant
  • Resume of applicant
  • Samples of applicant’s previous work
Where to send entries
Send your completed application form and requested supplementary materials to:

Ideas that Matter
Sappi Fine Paper North America
89 Cumberland Street
Westbrook, Maine 04092


Deadlines
Application deadline is July 16, 2010. Grants will be announced in September 2010. Ideas must be fully implemented within six months of receiving awards.
For more information
For more information, call 800-882-4332.

http://www.na.sappi.com/ideasthatmatterNA/index.html
http://www.na.sappi.com/ideasthatmatterNA/learn.html#who
http://www.twitter.com/ideasthatmatter

Monday, April 5

2010 Pritzker Architecture Prize

2010 Pritzker Architecture Prize
March 29 marked the announcement of the 2010 Pritzker Architecture Prize recipients. Awarded yearly to "a living architect whose built work demonstrates a combination of those qualities of talent, vision and commitment, which has produced consistent and significant contributions to humanity and the built environment through the art of architecture," the prize is considered to be the highest award in the architectural profession. 



This year, the partners of the Japanese firm SANAA, Ryue Nishizawa and Kazuyo Sejima, were honored with a shared prize. The official ceremony is scheduled for May 17.
Kazuo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa were praised for their "simultaneously delicate and powerful, precise and fluid" works, built in Japan, the US, and across Europe. Among them are the O-Museum in Nagano (Japan), the New Museum of Contemporary Art (NY), and the De Kunstlinie Theater and Cultural Center (the Netherlands).


Recent Pritzker honorees include Switzerland's Peter Zumthor (2009), Jean Nouvel (France, 2008; see his Institute du Monde Arabe in the ArchNet Digital Library); Richard Rogers (UK, 2007); and Paulo Mendes da Rocha (Brazil, 2006).


More information on the Pritzker Prize, including the press kits, can be found at www.pritzkerprize.com.




Article sources:
Pritzker Prize Media Kit, http://www.pritzkerprize.com/laureates/2010/textmediakit.html (accessed March 30, 2010).
Photograph of the de Kunstlinie Theater and Cultural Center, Almere, Netherlands, 2007. Photo by Hisao Suzuki, courtesy of SANAA.  


Contributed by Ophelia Celine






http://www.archnet.org/news/view.jsp?news_id=18621