1 entry categorized "Infrastructure"

February 28, 2008

Loose ends, February 2008

A few recent entries attracted useful responses, and several contemporaneous links opened up new angles on similar subjects. I thought I’d pause briefly to tie a few of these loose ends together.

The “Shinkansen to Melbourne …” story on the potential for a Very High Speed Train (VHST) link up and down the east coast of Australia generated a fair bit of buzz, and some extremely useful comments from readers. Several comments provided detailed reasons why it would be difficult, though none of them convinced that it shouldn’t happen. Have a read and let me know what you think - particularly if you have further insight or experience on large infrastructure projects of this nature. To me, it feels like a case of ‘when not if’, but a concerted effort is clearly required to help people here believe that.

Partly, this will be enabled by moves elsewhere - in that the road and air alternatives are not only being seen as increasingly out-of-step with the times, but shooting themselves in the foot (if indeed a transit system can have a foot to shoot itself in). Road traffic congestion in and around Melbourne is now reaching the breaking points also witnessed in Sydney and Brisbane (with some talk of congestion charging at last, even if not officially. It’s mildly instructive to read this piece from Mayor John So from only 2006, boasting of how ‘the car is welcome in Melbourne’, and then reflect on these subsequent and ensuing woes; and so different in tone to the Gehl proposals for Sydney’s CBD). The train service in Sydney is now being used so heavily that it’s at bursting point - almost necessitating the use of ‘push men’ - despite clear evidence of some years of under-investment. Ditto buses, which desperately need further investment but are still heavily used. This at least indicates that Sydneysiders are not that averse to public transport.

Moreover, Sydney Airport is about to close down one of its runways due to safety concerns (was due for April and now put back in the year, for reasons unclear). This will have a massive impact on the ability of the airport to service demand to Melbourne and Brisbane. Reports suggest that it’s already struggling with that. Closing this runway can only cause problems for that air corridor, and those who live along it, for that matter (I didn’t go into noise pollution in the piece I wrote, but it is of course an issue.) Meanwhile, oil prices 'surge past' 100 US dollars a barrel

The item also featured briefly in The Architects on Melbourne's Triple R (cheers Rory). It’s just good to hear this being discussed, and most fervently by those who have experienced the likes of the Shinkansen and TGV.  To be clear about the piece: I’m not anti-car or anti-plane. Far from it. I find the New Urbanist rhetoric that attempts to expunge the car from the urban memory to be wholly misplaced and not useful, and air travel can refresh the parts other modes of transport simply cannot reach. It’s a massive shift of balance that’s important, towards the likes of a tripartite framework for rail (VHST interstate, loca/regional and then inner-city); augmented by smarter bus networks (see Curitiba, Bogota and beyond), as well as an overlay of quality pedestrian and cycle networks. Ferries, monorails, integrated ticketing systems, the lot. This, augmented by minimised air travel, and car-use that is, primarily, recreational (as Iain Borden has recently suggested). It’s about redesigning the city for public transport, and redesigning public transport for the city (see also Mitchell Joachim) - and that includes rapid links throughout the spaces in-between the cities. Infrastructure is in the news a lot at the moment, not least due to China’s extraordinary expansion, and Infrastructure Australia has recently been announced (chaired, intriguingly by a former BA boss). So watch that VHST network-shaped space, I reckon, not least for an interesting debate.

“The Street as Platform” garnered even more attention, not least because William Gibson and Bruce Sterling both linked to it. (I think I just need RU Sirius and Rudy Rucker now, to complete my Mondo 2000 Panini sticker collection. Younger readers will have no idea what I’m on about.)

With startling serendipity, Adam Greenfield happened to post a piece at almost exactly the same time, detailing his ‘central dogma’, related to his forthcoming book, and discussing many of the same ideas and issues, but from a usefully different angle. Do go and have a read (and his follow-up, which is indeed ‘On the same side of the street’). Molly Wright Steenson has also started a useful blog, which looks like it will frequently cover the work of City of Sound pin-up Cedric Price, and specifically his Generator project. One of her posts reminds us of the fundamental importance of designing the social and operational frameworks around technological systems, a point I was very keen to make in "The Street ..." (see also recent Economist articles on e-government; this sense of redesigning the systems and organisations around technology, when designing a technological system, is a generally sound tenet.)

A piece earlier this year, The Personal Well-Tempered Environment (based on last year’s presentation at Interesting South) got picked up by USA Today and FastCompany amongst others and it’s also worth checking again for the many useful comments. I’d pick out Usman Haque’s work on XML schema for communication between objects and their environment, some research from the States indicating that basic feedback can seriously improve personal energy usage, and also note a follow-up post at Headlessness and a beautiful realisation of some related ideas by The Living in NYC. I’m collating links to do with these concepts at delicious/PWTE.

I’ve had very useful conversations around much of this, so watch this space for more developments on the ideas in “The Street…” and PWTE soon, I hope.

And finally, an update on the Best Urban Places project. James, Russell and I are knee-deep in good, honest production issues for the first issue now - we’ll give a further update on that shortly. In the meantime, the group keeps growing and the photos keep coming. Please do keep them coming in, ideally accompanied by your short introductions, as issue 2 is already being set up nicely.

Noted elsewhere

Donate!

Leave a tip

Tip Jar

Recent Comments

About this site

QR

  • qrcode

Advertisements

Job ads

Recent Photos

  • www.flickr.com

RECENT READING

  • Karen McCartney: Iconic Australian Houses: Three Decades of Domestic Architecture

    Karen McCartney: Iconic Australian Houses: Three Decades of Domestic Architecture
    Lovely book of modernist Australian architecture from 1950 to 1974. A coffee-table book but a wonderful one. Full notes here. (*****)

  • JG Ballard: Kingdom Come

    JG Ballard: Kingdom Come
    Ballard running on only one or two engines, but still chock full of wonderful ideas and observations, and with a few lines that will resonate forever. Curiously full of holes (no CCTV on the original crime?) but as a depiction of an England rotten to the core, timely and useful. (****)

  • Peter Jones: Ove Arup: Masterbuilder of the Twentieth Century

    Peter Jones: Ove Arup: Masterbuilder of the Twentieth Century
    Slightly haphazard biography of one of the great designers and leaders of the 20thC. The parts on building, design, organisation, context and practice are fascinating, and the portrait of Ove Arup himself is detailed and heartfelt. Some personal aspects are a little uneven and the writing is curiously disjointed in structure but it's a thoroughly good read overall, on one of the great thinkers and practitioners in architecture and engineering. (****)

  • Agustin Pérez Rubio: SANAA Houses: Kazuyo Sejima + Ryue Nishizawa

    Agustin Pérez Rubio: SANAA Houses: Kazuyo Sejima + Ryue Nishizawa
    Excellent book on the Japanese architecture firm. Full review here. (*****)

  • Nevil Shute: On the Beach

    Nevil Shute: On the Beach
    Absolutely fantastic read, if as thoroughly downbeat as a story about the end of the human race ought to be. Set in an Melbourne post-armageddon, as the last few people on earth live out their last months, it's a fascinating portrait of its time (1957) and Australia. (*****)

  • Elizabeth Farrelly: Blubberland: The Dangers of Happiness

    Elizabeth Farrelly: Blubberland: The Dangers of Happiness
    Architecture, urbanism, desire, happiness, beauty, obesity, greed, depression etc. A potent mix. A bit uneven, and journalistic in essence (which jars in this form) but good on Australia's architecture in particular, and with a beguiling speculative last chapter. (****)

  • Robert Hughes: Things I Didn't Know: A Memoir

    Robert Hughes: Things I Didn't Know: A Memoir
    Hughes is amongst the finest cultural critics and historians, and here focused on the first part of his own history and culture. So we get rich portraits of Australia, WW I and Vietnam, Italy, London, the 60s, art, food, sex, model aeroplanes &c as well as Mr. Hughes. Supreme writing applied to fascinating subject matter. (*****)

  • W.G. Sebald: The Rings of Saturn

    W.G. Sebald: The Rings of Saturn
    Jonathan Raban said "The finest book of long-distance mental travel that I've ever read" and I'm inclined to agree. A quietly majestic book, with peerless clear, evocative prose, drawn from immensely erudite research, and interspersed with simple ghostly photography. (*****)

  • Bruce Sterling: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets)

    Bruce Sterling: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets)
    A re-read, due to recent projects. Sterling, like the geeks he so admires, underestimates the richness of sensory information in the physical, when over-emphasising the new importance of the model, the map. The map has outgrown the territory only if you simply look at it. And yet there is no better guide to the map - of modeling, fabrication, the geoweb and arphids, and what this all means. Unlike most books in this field, it's as engagingly written as you'd expect and ultimately so thought-provoking and inspiring that you can forgive the oversight - which tends to come with, er, the territory. (*****)

  • Lebbeus Woods: War and Architecture (Pamphlet Architecture)

    Lebbeus Woods: War and Architecture (Pamphlet Architecture)
    Incredible radical response to the ruined Sarajevo. Must be read to comprehend the brilliance and bravery of his suggestions and visions, but essentially Woods suggests building in and around the 'scabs' and 'scars' of the shattered city, not simply in order to preserve or record history, but to also mitigate against further violence by creating a new heterarchical form of urban organisation. "Architecture must learn to transform the violence, even as violence knows how to transform the architecture." (*****)

  • David Peace: Tokyo Year Zero

    David Peace: Tokyo Year Zero
    Still dealing with this book. Reading this snapshot of a Tokyo in ruins, physically and psychologically, in 1947, after his shattering book on Brian Clough, feels like an odd change of gears initially. Yet the writing style - a kind of metronomic Ellroy-level intensity - pervades both, as does the startling ability to capture a sense of place and time. This is the more ambitious work, and may end up being one of the great modern evocations of Tokyo. (*****)

  • Peter Robb: Midnight in Sicily

    Peter Robb: Midnight in Sicily
    Perhaps the best book I've read in recent years, by Australian author Robb (see also 'A Death In Brazil') painting a portrait of southern Italy, filtered through history, food, literature, painting, architecture and principally the long-running legal cases against the Mafia. Absolutely extraordinary. (*****)

  • Geoff Dyer: Out of Sheer Rage: Wrestling With D.H. Lawrence

    Geoff Dyer: Out of Sheer Rage: Wrestling With D.H. Lawrence
    Genius. Only intermittently about Lawrence, and as much as Dyer's knees, childish Italians, Mexico, terrible Greeks, writing about place, horrible food, annoying English people, depression, travelling, and how dull Oxford is. One of the funniest books I've read, occasionally devastatingly sad, and also, accidentally/cleverly, brilliant on DH Lawrence. (*****)

  • Kerry William Purcell: Josef Muller-Brockmann

    Kerry William Purcell: Josef Muller-Brockmann
    Wonderfully detailed, carefully illustrated, and generally massive tome on the 20th century's greatest graphic designer. Essential. (*****)

  • Juhani Pallasmaa: The Eyes of the Skin: Architecture and the Senses

    Juhani Pallasmaa: The Eyes of the Skin: Architecture and the Senses
    One of those rare books that changes the way you think about everything. Already a huge influence, and one of the greatest books on architecture and urbanism that I've ever read. (*****)

  • Jun'ichiro Tanizaki: In Praise of Shadows

    Jun'ichiro Tanizaki: In Praise of Shadows
    A wonderful essay, from the early 20th century, on Japanese aesthetics. A perfect companion to Juhani Pallasmaa, but entirely pleasurable and enlightening on its own. (*****)

  • Christopher Woodward: In Ruins

    Christopher Woodward: In Ruins
    Unique book on the perception and understanding of ruins in western culture - specifically art history - by architectural historian Woodward. A bit too classically orientated - nothing on ruins in film, for instance - but some great stories and insights. (****)

  • Peter Carey: Wrong about Japan

    Peter Carey: Wrong about Japan
    Light (for Carey) but hugely enjoyable and interesting. Learnt few specifics - other than some interesting local insight on manga and anime - but gained a strong overall impression of Japan through Carey's eyes. (****)

  • Richard Williams: The Perfect 10

    Richard Williams: The Perfect 10
    Absolutely fantastic book on the great players in the most interesting, creative and challenging position in a football team. Puskas, Pele, Rivera, Mazzola, Netzer, Platini, Francescoli, Maradona, Baggio, Bergkamp, Zidane, all lovingly described by Williams. (*****)

  • Surveillance: Jonathan Raban

    Surveillance: Jonathan Raban
    I prefer Rabans's non-fiction - not that it's entirely 'non' - to his fiction, but he's such a good writer it's always entertaining and interesting. Ending a bit, well, open-ended - which is also interesting - but great, important themes here. (****)

Now playing

Recent Listening

  • Four Tet -

    Four Tet: Ringer
    An EP of 4 tracks, but a good size. Never mind the width though, feel the quality. Sidestepping his more abstract and Steve Reid-inflected recent work, Hebden delivers some beautifully pulsing techno, pilotis under a delicately arranged harmonic terrain. Fantastic stuff. (*****)

  • Themselves -

    Themselves: Them
    A few years after its release, I belatedly catch up with this album. A corker. Funny, lyrical and hugely enjoyable. (*****)

  • Goldmund -

    Goldmund: Two Point Discrimination
    Delicate, fragile and lovely. (*****)

  • Oren Ambarchi: Lost like a star
    The lad Ambarchi is one of the finest musicians around at the moment. Here, two long tracks of utterly gorgeous drone, with dynamics shifting from breathing to crashing, extracted from the guitar. Apparently available on vinyl, I picked up the mp3s from Boomkat.com (*****)
  • Burial: Untrue
    Believe the hype. At first 'glance' a perfectly reasonable but dated darkstep; with headphones on, another story. (****)
  • Klimek: Dedications
    Blurring analogue (esp. guitar) experimentation with digital, in the now time-honoured fashion. But quite lovely. Track titles give some sense of the mise-en-scéne: "for Zofia Klimek & Gregory Crewdson"; "for Jim Hall & Kurt Kirkwood"; "for Mark Hollis & Giacinto Scelsi"; "for Eugene Chadborne & Henry Kaiser"; "for Steven Speilberg & Azza El-Hassan" etc and so forth. (*****)
  • Atoms For Peace (Four Tet Remix)
    Thom Yorke: Atoms For Peace (Fourtet Remix) / Black Swan (Cristian Vogel Spare Parts Remix) / Black Swan (Vogel Bonus Beat Eraser Remix)
    The Four Tet mix of Atoms for Peace is quite the most beautiful thing I've heard for a while. Yorke's solo album wasn't all that, but this remix by Kieran is utterly gorgeous. The Cristian Vogel Spare Parts mix of Black Swan is top class too. (mp3s, exclusively available from Boomkat.com) (*****)
  • Wooden Shjips -

    Wooden Shjips: Wooden Shjips
    Can/Neu vs. psychedelia, with more than a touch of The Doors. Fear not, though, the vocals are a lesser concern than the searing guitar and metronomic Liebezeit rhythms. There's something absurd about this music emerging in 2007, but it's enjoyable absurd: like a long-lost The Mighty Boosh band. (*****)

  • The Whitest Boy Alive -

    The Whitest Boy Alive: Dreams
    Fantastic clipped sparse pop album from the great Erlend Øye, king of the convenient side project. Classy stuff. (*****)

  • Bruce Springsteen -

    Bruce Springsteen: Magic
    It's not all hybridised jazz and po-faced sound art round here you know. This is great stuff. Simply imagine you're Tony Soprano, thumping the steering wheel of his big black SUV as he smashes through red lights deep into the Jersey night. (****)

  • Bennie Maupin -

    Bennie Maupin: The Jewel in the Lotus
    Absolutely gorgeous album from 1974, just reissued by ECM (Herbie Hancock's only appearance on the label.) Beautiful tone-poems - a bit Zawinul - and fabulous understated playing. (*****)

  • The Necks: Townsville
    Of course, amazing and entrancing. A new live recording - from Feb 2007 at Thuringowa, Australia - by the world's most consistently brilliant band (?). No guitars or anything, as per their last ("Chemist"); just the familiar spiralling motifs, shimmering and floating, piano, bass, drums for 53 mins. (*****)
  • The North Sea -

    The North Sea: Exquisite Idols
    An album on free-folk label Type The North Sea is the recording name of Brad Rose, boss of associated free-folk label Digitalis Industries. It's great exploratory stuff, full of drones, banjos, odd percussion, tape manipulation and ambient noise, 15th century themes and 21st century formal experimentation. (*****)

  • Yuichiro Fujimoto -

    Yuichiro Fujimoto: Mountain Record
    Very pretty and gently experimental record, pitting Fujimoto's delicately angular musicianship against a) subtle digital manipulation, and b) ambient field recordings from a variety of locations. (****)

  • Dave Holland Quintet -

    Dave Holland Quintet: Extended Play: Live at Birdland
    Supreme modern jazz album by one of the best bands assembled in recent years, under direction of the legend Holland. Features the extraordinary Billy Kilson on drums, who is worth price of admission alone etc. etc. (*****)

  • Skallander -

    Skallander: Skallander
    Beautifully orchestrated pop album, in the avant-folky style that the TYPE label has defined (from a duo incl. Bevan Smith, who used to record sumptuous electronica as Aspen/Signer). Nice horns, smart arrangements, good songs. (****)

  • OOIOO -

    OOIOO: Taiga
    Quite brilliant, if quite insane, album from Japanese avant-pop band. Fantastic fun. (*****)

  • Stars of the Lid -

    Stars of the Lid: And Their Refinement of the Decline
    Absolutely beautiful. Almost too beautiful. One of the records of the year, for sure. (*****)

  • DJ Rupture: BTTB Hamburg Radio Show
    Fantastic mix from a couple of years ago, by DJ/Rupture: download it here (*****)
  • Nettle -

    Nettle: Build a Fort Set That on Fire
    Top stuff from DJ Rupture's band. Insistent jittery clattering rhythms kick the crap out of any notion of 'world music'. (*****)

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 08/2003

Measuremap

Analytics