“The most unexpected of these views is in the laundry and community room on the third floor. Conceived as the building’s domestic heart, the room overlooks a section of the elevated freeway through a long horizontal window. The window is made of acoustical glass, so that even at midday the noise is reduced to a soft hum. But it is so close to the passing cars that at rush hour, when traffic is barely moving, tenants and drivers can make direct and prolonged eye contact. Late at night, when the freeway is nearly empty, the cars flow by in a dreamy rhythm …
“[Mr. Maltzan’s] idea of progress is incremental — the kind that can be tested through careful observation of everyday experiences.”
via Southern Cross Fibre
What an elegant, ingenious technique! I’ve been wanting to give it a try ever since I came across this tutorial.
Russell Lee. School children singing. Pie Town, New Mexico, October 1940.
From Bound for Glory: America in Color, 1939-1943
An intriguing project (using balsa wood!) from Elsie Marley.
Nicolai Ouroussoff’s review of a residential tower by Jean Nouvel (March 14, 2010)
Some polaroids by Andrei Tarkovsky. Source > Source