January 29, 2008

Economic outlook

 Architecture Firms Struggle with the Economic Outlook for 2008, according to AIA.

January 22, 2008

New forms of communications

I will be speaking at the NCCJ’s BRT on New Forms of Communications. Here is the flyer. The presentation is on 14th February from 8:00 to 10:00 am, at the Deshima Lounge at the Dutch Embassy.  Register here

"A powerful global conversation has begun. Through the Internet, people are discovering and inventing new ways to share relevant knowledge with blinding speed. As a direct result, markets are getting smarter—and getting smarter faster than most companies."
From: The cluetrain manifesto.

Communication is a process of transmitting and/or exchanging information. Today, due to rapidly changing technology this exchange of information is reaching, literally, new heights. We only have to think of the rise of the use of email, blogs, social networks, newsgroups and chat.  The changes that the new technology brings with it is having a significant impact on the way we do business.  We will need to change the way we talk to not only our customers, but our subcontractors and employees as well.
Martin van der Linden, the Communications Committe Chairman of the NCCJ, will during this presentation show some examples of these new forms of communication technologies. Finally, he will present case studies of how these new forms of communications can have a positive impact on your business.

January 15, 2008

Chess, Design and the Jury.

In 1990 while waiting for a river boat to take me into Guatamala, I played a game of chess with a Danish guy who was waiting as well. The setting could have come straight out of a Werner Herzog film, the borderpost was nothing more than a wooden hut with a covered veranda in front and a couple of gringo’s  playing chess.  Somehow, I was confusing my Danish opponent at the beginning of the game, as he kept proclaiming: " that’s an interesting move." He was a keen chess player and was very, very hard looking for patterns. Alas, I play as patternless chess as my grandmother bought shoes (sometimes too small, sometimes too big). I left him little time to remain confused, as my pattern is one of no pattern. I  think that design is somehow similar to playing chess, some see patterns while others can’t seem to find them, however hard they look.

The reason I bring this up, is that one of the award wining projects of The Great Indoors was won by Item Idem. The award went for their design of the Bernhard Willhelm flagship store in Tokyo for Bus Stop Co. The project seems to be following my chess playing pattern in their design. The jury’s report says absolutely nothing: " [the] interiors illustrate a refusal to acknowledge the existence of the immediate surroundings". (Could be said of any interior in Tokyo). I think Item Idem are trying to fabricate an anti-design, anti-pattern by creating a seemingly disorder while disorganizing the products within the space. (OK, that can be said about anything in Tokyo).

But hold on, the road here leads into two directions: a jury or a client reading something that I suspect was never intended in the first place by the one initiating it (but because the game did not have to be "played all the way" could get away with it.) And then there is the deliberate choice of selling shit as shit not unlike Piero Manzoni or Marcel Duchamp did. Nothing wrong with either approach. The video on You Tube reveals a lot of the Bernard Willem’s shopkeepers, the Japanese girls don’t understand questions in Japanese so they answer in English, but that does not matter. 

The question really is whether Item Idem consciously tried to go patternless? (Let’s call it "The Guatamala Opening Move") Or is it the jury who has been lost in the game? Not unlike my Danish opponent who was completely at lost with my anarchistic chess moves? Will we ever know? My mind goes back to that game on the sunset drenched Guatamalan riverbed which, to my shame, lasted only 15 minutes or so. But imagine our boat had arrived 5 minutes in the game, today I might be a chess legacy in Denmark.

January 11, 2008

Russian shop windows

This is just one of many

January 7, 2008

Chinese Design

This is a picture on the front page of the Financial Times of last year. I think it is absolutely fantastic, the carpet, the painting on the wall, the sofa’s…

Why is Tokyo so ugly, but how can it still generate such fantastic architecture?

The question for 2008, and here is my (easy) answer:

1. Japan has the highest pro-capita rate of architects, of the 1.2million registered architects world-wide Japan has over 300,000,

2. There are very few aesthetic regulations: anything goes,

3. In the chaos architects work hard to make their buildings stand-out,

4. Tokyo has some of the world’s most daring and cash-rich clients,

5. Japanese construction companies (not only the major ones) are the world’s most advanced,

6. Buildings have an average life-span of around 30 years,

7. The city has been destroyed many times over (and most likely will be again soon).