Showing posts with label Ashley Bennett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ashley Bennett. Show all posts

Monday, February 6, 2012

Music on a Landscape...

Structure in Kansas City, MO

The repitition of its material and form
reflects the many times of its being reborn

Each and every grey tone
making the form look like one big bone

The harmony and rhythm in each layer
adds to its scale making it not so bare

From pianissimo to fortae
it surely rises up high above the bay

... each and everyday.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

How Greensboro relates to the Roman city

Like the Roman city, Greensboro today has a similar city grid. In Roman times, there were two main streets that ran perpendicular to one another marking the center point. These streets helped one navigate throughout the city and know where they were. A great help in marking the landscape was seen in the Roman Coliseum. Though not within the city grid and off to the side, it alone would help one know where they were in relation to things around it. Today in our own city of Greensboro, we can see this same effect. Though the Greensboro Coliseum is not within our downtown city grid, it is still on the perimeter, making understanding the landscape and ones location in relation to it easy to understand and communicate with others. So, take a look around to the city's of today and just how many pull from the Romans ideas?


Roman City Grid

Greensboro City Grid




http://www.ledzepconcerts.com/information/cv.php?id=272
http://www.stub.com/greensboro-coliseum-tickets/
http://historylink102.com/italy/rf-coliseum-rome-1.htm
http://www.romanlife-romeitaly.com/ancient-roman-colosseum.html
http://www.ancientsites.com/aw/Places/Place/856202

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Design Food for Thought- Making the world a better place through using everyday material and objects

Have you ever heard of the saying, "One man's trash is another man's treasure"? As a designer, we can take objects and materials considered to some to be garbage and no longer usable and make into a piece of art, a structure, and a useable thing again. 

Below are some unbelievable facts about how much we as Americans waste a year... take a look!

"Americans represent 5% of the world’s population, but generate 30% of the world’s garbage."

"In a lifetime, the average American will personally throw away 600 times his or her body weight, which for an average adult would leave a legacy of 90,000 pounds of trash at the end of their lifetime."


"Of the garbage Americans throw out, half could be recycled, which is enough to fill a football stadium from top to bottom everyday."

In looking at American Waste facts, I want to emphasize the importance to recycle and reuse cardboard. Take a look at how much cardboard saves...

"Cardboard One ton of recycled cardboard saves:
•        390 kWh hours of electricity. •       46 gallons of oil. •         6.6 million Btu’s of energy. •       9 cubic yards of landfill space.
Cardboard and paper waste make up 41% of the municipal solid waste stream.
Recycling cardboard takes 24% less energy and produces 50% less sulfur dioxide than making cardboard from raw materials."

 As you can see, saving cardboard helps out in many ways. Recycling also....
 •  It saves money. •  It improves efficiency. •         It reduces energy use.
•        It reduces fuel use. •     It saves landfill space. •         It improves air quality. •   It  improves water quality. •    It reduces the rate of global warming

So what can we as designers make out of cardboard? How can we reuse and recycle this material to make something for someone else or our self? 

Here are somethings people have done with reusable/recyclable cardboard...








  To take a closer look below are the links as well as some more that are not shown. Hope this inspires you to take trash and make it a treasure!

http://www.greatinteriordesign.com/edge-cardboard-interior-in-greece/edge-cardboard-interior-in-greece/ 

http://architecturehomedesigns.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/interior-from-cardboard.jpg

http://www.designmena.com/inspiration/pictures-cardboard-office-interiors

http://inhabitat.com/the-pupa-pavilion-is-built-entirely-from-office-waste/

http://biosarch.files.wordpress.com/2009/06/cupwall-1.png?w=455&h=354

students.arch.utah.edu/courses/Arch4011/Recycling%20Facts1.pdf