Friday, October 23, 2009

Solar Decathlon


Illinois' entry. All photos of the Decathlon homes by Jim Tetro, U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon

You can read more about my (rainy! cold!) trip to DC for this year's Solar Decathlon by clicking here for my Metropolis blog post. One thing I mention in that post is that the second place team from Illinois (pictured above) used a vernacular architecture for their decathlon entry. They channeled a classic gabled design that would feel right at home on the prairies of the Midwest.

Some other designs in the competition felt derivative as well...

The entry from Cornell:



Reminded me of the waste water treatment plant In Dundalk, Maryland:




The entry from Missouri:



Looks an awful lot like Shutter Shades:




The Arizona house, below, reminded me of the sloped glass sunrooms attached to some Wendy's restaurants, but I couldn't find the right image of a Wendy's online. Maybe I'll go snap a photo of the one on York Road near Belvedere Square...

Friday, October 16, 2009

Building Science Research


Team California's design for the Solar Decathlon.

Tomorrow I will brave the cold and the rain and head south to D.C. to see the prototype houses set up on the National Mall for the Solar Decathlon. (Germany just edged out Illinois for first place in the overall rankings.)

The Decathlon is an event that advances building science research and encourages universities to examine high efficiency home design. But overall, the U.S. and the building industry are simply not investing enough sustained capital into research and development in spite of the fact that buildings are our biggest energy sink.

My latest feature article in Architect magazine looks at how much money is invested into the science of designing better buildings and where that money is going:



Shaky Foundation
Taming the economic, environmental and geopolitical cost of energy has emerged as a natinal imperative. So why are research dollars for building performance so scarce?

When McKinsey & Co., a global management consulting firm, released a report on energy efficiency in July, it caused quite a stir among building science researchers. Called “Unlocking Energy Efficiency in the U.S. Economy,” the report concluded that an upfront investment of $520 billion in efficiency measures could shrink this country’s non-transportation energy consumption in the next decade by 23 percent, or $1.2 trillion. That’s a considerable return on investment.

There is, of course, a catch. To realize such savings, the United States would need to rally around a national agenda. “Energy efficiency offers a vast, low-cost energy resource for the U.S. economy—but only if the nation can craft a comprehensive and innovative approach to unlock it,” the report states.

When it comes to building science research in this country—including everything from seismic and safety issues, to materiality and performance, to indoor air quality and moisture—we don’t do “comprehensive.” American building science research is, at best, piecemeal; at worst, it’s barely funded. There is no federal agency that spearheads research endeavors, and no dedicated funding stream that supports scientists. The building industry itself—architecture, engineering, manufacturing, construction, and maintenance—is a $1-trillion-per-year business employing some 1.7 million people, but it simply does not invest in R&D the way that, say, pharmaceutical companies do. The building sector spends one-tenth as much on R&D as the national average for other industries, according to Mark Frankel, technical director of the nonprofit New Buildings Institute (NBI). READ MORE.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Tonight: Meet Maurice Cox from the NEA


T
onight, AIA's Urban Design Committee hosts a free forum on The Role of Design Centers in Urban Regeneration. Maurice Cox, Director of Design for the National Endowment for the Arts, will join Gary Gaston, Director of the Design Studio at the Nashville Civic Design Center, to talk about the formation of a community design center and the place for design in a city like Baltimore. I'll moderate a panel discussion after their presentations and we'll all get a chance to talk about Baltimore's efforts to form its own D:center Baltimore. I hope you can stop by.

The 411:

Thursday, October 15, 2009
Time: 6:00 – 8:30 p.m.
Location: RTKL, 901 S. Bond St., Baltimore, MD, 21231, Fells Point
Cost: FREE
1.5 AIA/CES Credits

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Support Pie Lab




What is Pie Lab? It's a fantastic experiment in community building and design in Greensboro, Alabama. And the designers who started it need your help. If they raise $10,000 by November 1, they will realize their goal of building a new center for design, community—and pie—on Greensboro's historic Main Street. You can learn more about the project by watching this video.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Design Convo 12: Bikes


Click on image for a larger version.

This Thursday, October 8 join D:center baltimore for Design Conversation 12: Bikes. This month is an open discussion on frame building, bicycle design, bicycle infrastructure, bike collectives, bike lanes, and all things cycling. A/V system available for impromptu presentations. As always, the event is free. Cash bar. For more details, click on the above invitation and spread the word. The more the merrier! Also note that DC 12 has been shifted from the usual first Wednesday of the month to the first Thursday.

The 411:

Thursday October 8 2009
The Windup Space - 10 W North Ave @ Charles Street
6:30 pm - 8:30 pm

Questions? ben.stone@gmail.com | thewindupspace@gmail.com | blog.dcenterbaltimore.com

And speaking of bikes, I just got back from a weekend in Philadelphia and that city is lousy with cyclists. Bikes everywhere. Here are a few snapshots:




Spotted outside the Standard Tap.



Spotted in the Northern Liberties Neighborhood: Metal bike racks with glass-enclosed marketing signs for local businesses. This one was advertising the music line up at a local club.



Spotted in Rittenhouse Square: Tons of bikes, no place to park them. Cyclists ignored the official signs about not locking their bikes to the fence. Philadelphia needs what DC just created: a garage for bikes.




The new Mobis bike station in D.C.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Building for the Better




The October issue of Urbanite magazine hit the streets today and it focuses on the built environment. I wrote a piece about the evolution of social design and how it's playing out in the city...

It’s November in Greensboro, Alabama, and a rare cold snap has brought frigid temperatures to this southern town. In a modest two-story house on the edge of Greensboro’s main street, five graphic design students and two professors from Maryland Institute College of Art are waking up.

There’s no furnace, just space heaters, so the MICA team is encased in sleeping bags in a room full of bunk beds. The scene resembles something from a sci-fi movie: frozen bodies cocooned in nylon, plumes of breath rising in the ash-gray light. Someone ventures to the kitchen to make breakfast. A carton of eggs left out overnight has frozen solid. READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Event: Baltimore Architecture Week Panel




Baltimore Architecture Week kicks off in less than two weeks and among the events is a panel discussion moderated by yours truly. The topic is the role of design centers in urban regeneration and the creation of a comprehensive design center in Baltimore. Gary Gaston of the Nashville Civic Design Center will be here to talk about that city's successful formula for a center and Maurice Cox, architect and Director of Design for the National Endowment for the Arts, will discuss the rise in community-centered design and the ways to bring design to all. The panel will be followed by a Q&A with the audience, so it promises to be an interesting and enlightening evening. And it's FREE.

The 411:

Thursday, October 15
6-8:30 PM
RTKL
901 S. Bond Street



Friday, September 25, 2009

Park(ing) Day in Pictures


Floura Teeter's parking space turned cafe and croquet court.


As I mention in the post below, I didn't make it to Park(ing) Day celebrations around Baltimore and reader Joe McGinley of Floura Teeter landscape architects was kind enough to forward photos. Floura Teeter took over three spots on W. Franklin Street and turned them into a café seating area with a croquet lawn.

Thanks for the photos, Joe!
















Morgan State's landscape program also created an installation for the front of Brewers Art in Mount Vernon. Here are some sketches from their concept (and if anyone was there, send pictures):






UPDATE: Ask and ye shall receive. UP reader Gerritt Shuffstall forwarded photos from Morgan's installation on Charles Street:



The Rules of the Road



I missed national Park(ing) Day activities in Baltimore last Friday. I had heard that a new boutique hotel in the central business district (the Kimpton chain finally came to town) was going to participate. Coincidentally, that same day, friends dropped off an article from the February issue of Scientific American (thanks Lisa and Kerr!). The story explains how street closures and shared roadways can actually increase efficiency. The author describes what is known as the Nash Equilibrium, where an individual driver does not fare better than other drivers by seeking out the fastest route. Since most drivers take a selfish, individualistic approach to the road, the theory continues, most everyone is changing their strategy to reach the route perceived to be the most efficient. Which more often results in traffic jams.

Conversely, roads designed to force an unselfish approach seem to function more efficiently. The writer points to the concept of shared streets. "The practice encourages driver anarchy by removing traffic lights, street markings, and boundaries between the street and the sidewalk. Studies conducted in northern Europe, where shared streets are common, point to improved safety and traffic flow."


A Baltimore Share Lane.

Baltimore does not have shared streets, per se, but we are seeing an increase in "share lanes," which include large symbols of bicycles on the asphalt meant to encourage drivers to yield to cyclists. I didn't immediately grasp what this was when I first encountered one in my neighborhood. (If you want to talk more about cycling and the city, come to the D:Center's next Baltimore Design Convo on Wednesday, October 7 at 6:30 PM at The Wind Up Space. The topic will be biking.)

So back to parking. The story included a sidebar about San Francisco, the city where Park(ing) day was born. Planners in the United States in the 1950s believed that a few free parking spots downtown were paramount to attracting people into the city, a strategy now understood to be counterintuitive. It ignored the basic economic truth that lower prices increase demand, thus spurring an insatiable desire for more car parks. "Now limited urban space and concerns about global warming are inspiring city planners to eliminate these requirements," the article states. In San Francisco, a city that once required all development to include parking, planners now limit parking to no more than 7 % of a building's square footage. That's not a lot. The result: while employment has increased in the city, traffic congestion has gone down as people walk, bike, and take transit.

Ask the folks at the Downtown Partnership in Baltimore (where my brother works, FYI) and they will tell you that parking is a major issue in this city. Take it away and you risk a business relocating elsewhere. The challenge here is that many of the people coming into downtown do not live in walking distance. They cannot realistically bike in from the suburbs and regional public transit options are abysmal. Look at the places where share lanes and street closures work: New York, Portland, San Francisco...places with public transit and people living and working in close proximity. But even if you don't live nearby, see what happens in a place like New York. The distance from Queens to Manhattan is about 11 miles. The distance from Towson, Maryland to Baltimore city is about 14 miles, a negligible difference. You can get from Queens to a job in Midtown without needing a car. Not as easy a commute from Towson to the city.

So what's the answer? How do you take those cities where transit is limited to cars (most American cities) and attempt to transform them? I think I'll pose this question at the next Design Convo....

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Book Panel: Spirit of Place




This Saturday at noon, I'll be moderating a panel at the Baltimore Book Festival about the book Spirit of Place. You can learn more about the book itself by reading the post I wrote last year for Metropolis magazine. The panel will include the authors as well as several of the people featured in the book, including J. Michael Flanigan, an antiques dealer and appraiser on Antiques Roadshow and Vince Peranio, film and TV production designer for John Waters' films and The Wire. There's a book signing after. It takes place in the Literary Salon at noon. Learn more here.