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TAKOTRON NEWS
Monday, 22 September 2008
BAG
Topic: Miscellaneous

I will use a recent blog request to catapult this page out of more than a year of utter neglect.  Do my bag's mundane contents imply that I have an unexciting soul? 

• An underutilized date book.  What few entries exist are commonly followed with a question mark to indicate their lack of urgency or my lack of confidence that they will be dealt with.

• Orbit wintermint gum

•  A 2GB jump drive from Microcenter

• A crumpled wad of pay stubs

•  Walgreens "Original Eye Drops."  They claim to be both "original" and comparable to Visine.  How contradictory.  My eyes get dry at work because the computer of the person who sits across from me has a powerful fan unit that blows warm air up at me from beneath my desk.  I assume my computer does the same to him.  Unlike Visine, store brand eye drops are not locked up at Walgreens.  I don't know why you would lock up eye drops anyway, except that maybe stoners use Visine, and they assume stoners to be shoplifters who shun generic imitations.

• Staedler pigment liner.  I prefer the Papermate Flair, Ultrafine  

• Sanford uni-ball ONYX.  I prefer the Pilot Razor Point II

• A 2GB ipod nano 

•  Various medicines denoting their owner's easily upsettable stomach and sensitive sinuses

• The crumpled sheath of a folding umbrella.  I have bought this same $5 umbrella from Walgreens on 3 occasions since I never have it when it rains.  

• An SF novel lent to me by Nik.  It's awesome.  The gods' home on Mount Olympus is actually Mons Olympus on Mars.    

• My bag is a fairly anonymous nylon model from Banana Republic. When I put it under my desk at work I gain pleasure from feeling its magnetic clasps bond to the side of the filing drawers.  


Posted by thenovakids at 1:03 AM CDT
Updated: Monday, 22 September 2008 1:25 AM CDT
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Monday, 18 June 2007
SPACE BRAIN/FRAME
Topic: Music
I recently heard Guns n Roses' ode to extreme intoxication, "Nightrain," which employs several metaphors to describe various feelings and degrees of inebriation:

Loaded like a freight train
Flyin' like an aeroplane


Then I got excited, because I thought the next line was:

Feeling like a space frame

Wow a reference to 3-dimensional truss structures! But then it turns out the actual line is space brain, which is still pretty cool, if it's a reference to an episode of Space: 1999, but the most logical reference is just to being high and spaced out which is boring and predictable. Actually, 'Flyin' like an aeroplane" is pretty quotidian, although the old-fashioned version of the word makes it alright. The first metaphor gets my vote.


Posted by thenovakids at 9:48 AM CDT
Updated: Monday, 18 June 2007 9:49 AM CDT
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Saturday, 16 June 2007
ANIMAL CROSSING
Topic: Video Games
Though not nearly as obsessed as Kei, I, too, have been playing Animal Crossing for DS almost daily since the winter. The main reason is my close friendship with my moody squirrel neighbor, Static. 

Posted by thenovakids at 11:55 AM CDT
Updated: Thursday, 31 July 2008 8:49 PM CDT
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Sunday, 1 April 2007
NORTH AVENUE BRIDGE
The 1907 trunnion-post bascule bridge on North Avenue over the Chicago River is being replaced with a new cable-stay/suspension hybrid span. In the meantime, traffic winds around a maze of ad hoc asphalt and over a temporary steel bridge by McHugh Construction, who is carrying out the project. Da Vinci had some interesting temporary bridge solutions that might have worked, too, but I figure they had this modular steel x-truss scheme worked out with an efficient budget.

Leonardo Scheme 01
Leonardo Scheme 02

Posted by thenovakids at 1:40 AM CDT
Updated: Sunday, 1 April 2007 1:41 AM CDT
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Tuesday, 27 March 2007
MOTOPIA
Topic: Architecture
I was going to name my town in Animal Crossing "Motopia," but then remembered it's the name of this preposterous, car-culture urban fantasy by Geoffrey Jellicoe from 1961. It's also too similar to "Joetopia," a town I like to visit DS to DS. So, I named my town "MouMachi," which translates to Mo-town.

Motopia

Posted by thenovakids at 10:14 AM CDT
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Thursday, 15 March 2007
SPERTUS EXPANSION
Topic: Architecture / Chicago
The Spertus Institute of Jewish Studies is expanding their facilities to what was an adjacent, empty, mid-block site. Krueck & Sexton Architects designed the new building with a prominent faceted glass frontage. The design is in the contemporary "funky-form" vein (led by people like Daniel Liebeskind and Zaha Hadid), in that it makes use of engineering to create a sculptural form, but there is no architectonic expression in the design. That is, it's not about how it's structure works, but the end result of that structure. Last weekend I walked by and took these shots of the facade being installed. You can see the complicated folded form is put together with a rather simple steel frame extending from the irregular outer edges of the floor slabs.

I think the overall effect will make a nice addition to this part of Michigan Avenue. With a narrow mid-block site, it's really only the facade that you have to make an architectural statement, and I think this exploits that notion successfully. According to the Spertus Institute, the forms are reminiscent in proportion and orientation to the windows found along the avenue. And there will be a Kosher Deli! Hell yeah, pickles and pastrami.

Krueck&Sexton|Architects
Spertus: New Building
Large Renderings

Posted by thenovakids at 4:23 PM CDT
Updated: Thursday, 15 March 2007 4:29 PM CDT
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Tuesday, 27 February 2007
OMOTESANDO HILLS
Topic: Architecture / Travel
One of Tadao Ando's most recently completed projects, and one of his largest commissions, is Omotesando Hills, a high-end shopping complex on Tokyo's boutique-lined street, Omotesando. It supplants the famous Aoyama Apartments, a landmark of early Japanese modernism, that were controversially destroyed before the new construction began. Ando has kept the shell of a portion of the original structure, erected in 1927 by Doujunkai, a governmental design bureau. I think this small gesture, combined with his attempt to echo some of the forms and proportions of the original, doesn't really exude a full-fledged historical sensitivity, but rather exposes a certain architectural guilt. Ando has a deep understanding of architectural history, as well as a firm rootedness in his national culture, and I'm sure it is only with profound reluctance that he participated in the replacement of a local landmark with a luxury shopping mall.

If only it didn't fall so flat. The rich textures of the old Doujunkai apartments (creeping ivy on rough concrete) have been replaced by Ando's (admittedly beautiful) signature smooth cast-in-place walls, but also layers of steel structure and slick glass. It's all a bit too common. There are of course some wonderful Andoan (?) moments, where shadows meet a running stream of water that separates the front facade from the sidewalk, but then once entered the space is overrun with gaudy lighting effects, decorations, and an open atrium that really seems like an oversized, conventional mall space.

I feel that Ando has made so many great smaller commercial and residential buildings (and some large museums and religious spaces) that display a powerful sense of monumentality in their materials and spatial experiences. It's a shame that a larger commission like this doesn't present an opportunity for those traits to really shine. There's a plan for a Tokyo Tower II for which Ando is listed as a supervisor. This is another apparently-conventional large scale endeavor, and while I understand the importance of a highly accomplished architect to progress and evolve, I worry that his talents should be focused on more sensitive, contemplative, or experientially interactive programs .





Official Site (ENG)
Video: Digital Facade
More Images
Interview with Ando re: Omotesando Hills (ENG)
Specs, Details and Images (JPN)
Tokyo Tower II

Posted by thenovakids at 9:54 PM CST
Updated: Thursday, 15 March 2007 4:24 PM CDT
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Sunday, 18 February 2007
RIDDING THE MIND OF WASTE
Out on Long Island there happens to be a wonderful college radio station, there to rescue those seeking alternative airwaves. WUSB is SUNY Stony Brook's station, 90.1 FM, and every other Saturday night/Sunday morning they broadcast an amazing show, "Ridding the Mind of Waste." The show's DJs play primarily electronic and industrial songs, but often mix in humorous, creative audio montages and samples that they seem to put together. The DJ who speaks does so with a parody of a smarmy Oldies station host and refers to himself as "Tommy Edwards, filling in for 58 and Barney," though several years ago I remember him calling himself "58 filling in for Barney."

So the mysteries run deep. Please leave a comment if you have any information about these amazing fellows. You can listen to the show from anywhere through WUSB's website: WUSB.FM .

In my college years I, too, was a DJ, and made a number of station IDs and montages to keep the vibes going, loosely inspired by "Ridding the Mind of Waste." You can listen to some of mine: Takotron Sounds

Posted by thenovakids at 2:16 PM CST
Updated: Sunday, 18 February 2007 10:59 PM CST
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Sunday, 4 February 2007
SUPER BEARS
Topic: Chicago
Chicago is in full-throttle Bears mode, ready for a thrilling Superbowl victory. Skyscrapers display encouraging messages in the form of office lights, while cultural landmarks are submitting to crass gestures of support. And that's awesome. The Art Institute's lions are wearing helmets, and Chicagoans are causing traffic problems just to see them (in -20 wind-chill weather, no less). Meanwhile, the Field Museum's outdoor life-size Brontosaurus sculpture is wearing a Brian Urlacher jersey, and a Picasso sculpture a Bears hat. The victory parade's going to be amazing...

Posted by thenovakids at 12:58 AM CST
Updated: Sunday, 18 February 2007 1:50 PM CST
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Wednesday, 20 December 2006
MASSACRE AT THE AIC
Several weeks ago I visited some of the Art Institute of Chicago's popular European Painting galleries. My intention was to take photos of people looking at art (right), which I use to collage into architectural renderings for school. While on the prowl I came across a gory relief sculpture by the Baroque Venetian sculptor Francesco Bertosa entitled The Massacre of the Innocents from 1700. It depicts a scene from the Gospel of Matthew in which King Herod orders the massacre of all of Bethleham's male children to prevent the rise of a new King of the Jews. It looks like a Cannibal Corpse album cover, what with the severed baby heads and limbs rolling around. I usually associate such "Metal" scenes like this with the Old Testament, which is of course full of regicide, patricide, suicide, infanticide, and general spurts of sex and violence.

Posted by thenovakids at 12:11 AM CST
Updated: Sunday, 18 February 2007 1:53 PM CST
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Saturday, 25 November 2006
MIES' BASILICA
Topic: Architecture / Chicago
In his popular book, The Language of Post-Modern Architecture (1977), architectural historian Charles Jencks makes a number of cheeky, provocative, humorous, and often enlightening observations about high-Modern and contemporary architecture. In his first chapter, "The Death of Modern Architecture" (which occured at 3:32PM in St. Louis on July 15, 1972 with the demolition of a notorious housing project), Jencks includes a rather sarcastic analysis of IIT's campus. He calls the Boiler Plant a cathedral, since it is divided into 3 long sections with a smokestack/tower--"a central nave structure with two side aisles expressed in the eastern front....there are clerestory windows on both aisle and nave elevations. Finally, to confirm our reading that this is the campus cathedral, we see the brick campanile, the bell tower that dominates the basilica." He goes on to (mis)read the plain campus chapel as a boiler house and the architecture school's Crown Hall as the President's Temple.

He caustically attributes the unexpected employment of these forms to solemn old Mies van der Rohe's "stunning wit." I came across this book in a used section of the Prairie Avenue Bookshop, Chicago's fabulous architectural bookstore. It seems to have been owned (and discarded) by an offended Miesian who wrote several angry comments in the margin (which abruptly end halfway through the first chapter). I found Jencks' analysis to be irreverently hilarious, but there are reasons why Mies is still interesting and relevant today. His forms are ambiguous, and depending on their function might communicate a number of conflicting ideals: do the open glass ground floors of his Federal Center in the loop denote a transparency and honesty of government, or a higher pure order of authority? Does an empty glass house place its inhabitants in the midst of nature, or do its materials, in their climactic insuitability and bird-killing invisibilty betray a complete disregard for the environment? There are no right answers, but to get the most out of Mies, it's important to ask all the questions, and I think that's something Jencks does well.

Posted by thenovakids at 3:38 PM CST
Updated: Saturday, 25 November 2006 4:22 PM CST
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Saturday, 28 October 2006
DON'T DITCH THE BLACK
Topic: Baseball
In other baseball news, a campaign started by a sports writer, Paul Lukas, aims to do away with the Mets' use of black in their on-field attire. I am excited that someone is playing such close attention to "athletics aesthetics", approaching cultural analysis through the scrutiny of icons and uniforms.

However, I completely disagree with his conclusion regarding the Mets recent color theme. He's worried that black will replace the dominance of blue and orange, and cites numerous examples of the team's on-field apparel and a more recent (not universally adapted) black logo. But generally the black is just a replacement for the previous base color, white. It's true that some of the solid blue color schemes seem to be getting phased out, but this is part of contemporary style that should be accepted. Other teams have done similar things, and it looks sharp. Notice the shine on

I love the Met's orange and blue theme, and the depth of its meaning: colors derived from New York's two preceding NL teams (Giants and Dodgers); New York City's flag. But let's not get carried away. I would even go so far as to suggest a black-on-black alternative road uniform, and/or employment of a Mr. Met alernate logo. Because the Mets iconography is just that deep! They are now old enough that they can have "throwbacks," like the traditional blue cap or the belovedly unpleasant pajama-style 80s v-neck with side stripe.

Posted by thenovakids at 1:09 AM CDT
Updated: Tuesday, 31 October 2006 1:41 PM CST
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Friday, 27 October 2006
WAINWRIGHT OF ST. LOUIS
The St. Louis Cardinals, despite my desperate plea for otherwise, won the World Series tonight. Detroit's fielding was horrendous, and Pudge couldn't hit a thing. The Cardinals continued their pesky, wormy ways, sneaking in revenge-runs after every inning Detroit laboriously managed to score.

The Cardinal's rookie closer, Adam Wainwright, has been incredible this postseason, filling in for the injured star, Jason Isringhausen (formerly a mediocre Mets starter). Wainwright pairs his mid-90s fastball with an impossible 75mph curveball. Brandon Inge struck out on 3 pitches in the 9th tonight. Similarly, he froze Carlos Beltran with his 3rd pitch to end the NLCS. See my Fox Trax approximation of the curve that killed the Mets (right).

There is however, a more important Wainwright of St. Louis: Louis Sullivan's Wainwright Building (left). Erected in 1890-1 in St. Louis, this landmark represents the architect's discovery of a 'solution' to the problem of the skyscraper (commercial base, offices above, mechanical at top).

Posted by thenovakids at 12:01 AM CDT
Updated: Tuesday, 31 October 2006 1:30 PM CST
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Friday, 20 October 2006
2006 METS
Topic: Baseball
The 2006 Mets postseason ended last night in an exciting game against the Cardinals at Shea. It was a major disappointment for the organization and their fans, but it's important to realize this was the greatest mets team since 1986. If you act entitled to a trip to (and victory in) the World Series people will start mistaking you for a Yankees fan. Newsday ran a headline today, "Heilman couldn't get it done," but the bullpen was close to impeccable this postseason, including last night. If anyone couldn't get it done it was the middle of their lineup--Beltran, (who struck out looking on 3 pitches with 2 outs and the bases loaded in the bottom of the 9th!!!), Delgado, and Wright, all of whom failed to get that big hit the team desperately needed. But let us rejoice in the wonderful season the tenacious and pesky Mets had, stealing bases, playing small ball, and being postseason contenders despite losing 2 of their big starters. They finally have a lineup that can build a dynasty, that they can keep more or less the same for the next several years. One thing that was lacking, to my knowledge, as an estranged Midwestern Mets fan, was a peppy campaign song like this one from 1986. Watch it to the end for the cameos by New York celebrities partially obscured by the poor digitized quality. Please leave a comment if you figure any out. So far I am able to discern Mayor Ed Koch, Twisted Sister, and Cameo.

Posted by thenovakids at 11:01 AM CDT
Updated: Thursday, 31 July 2008 9:15 PM CDT
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Sunday, 1 October 2006
AMAZIN'
Topic: Food/Sports/NY

It is now October, a month of great importance for the 2006 New York Metropolitans.

GO METS

Posted by thenovakids at 1:26 AM CDT
Updated: Sunday, 1 October 2006 10:44 PM CDT
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