Archive for May, 2010

DETROIT IN ‘D MINOR’

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

COVER_Detroit in D Minor

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DETROIT IN ‘D MINOR’.  British singer/songwriter Imogen Heap gave an inspired performance at the Fillmore Theatre on May 22nd.  Best known for her use of manipulated electronic sounds, personal lyrics, and funky style, Heap is using her current tour to endorse multiple charitable causes.

While promoting her new Album, Ellipse, Imogen has decided to try and raise $54,000 for local charities on her North American tour. Each night she will perform a completely improvised piece of music, unique to that city.  The audience gets to choose the tempo, key, and time signature for the song.  The Detroit audience requested a song in D minor, with a ¾ time, and a medium tempo; hence ‘Detroit in D Minor’. Following the performance, each city’s song will be made available for purchase through her website.   Making the charitable cause even more specific to each city, the audience also suggests the charitable organization to receive any and all proceeds.  Based on Detroit fan suggestions,  Imogen selected the Detroit Metro organization, Urban Farming, to receive all charitable donations collected through the purchasing of “Detroit in D Minor”.

Not yet posted on her site, Detroit will soon have another original song to call its own.

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DETROIT / FLIP IT

Friday, May 21st, 2010

DETROIT FLIP IT

Detroit – Flip It

Flippin’ (or to Flip) is the process of manipulating and fashioning a sound into a beat. Sometimes this sample is manipulated so much that you can’t even tell where it came from. Still, there are other cases where a sample can be flipped, even while it contains its original identity. Flippin’ can also be the reinterpretation or reconceptualization of an established style, sound, practice, and/or theme.

Recent research initiatives at HAA revealed the necessity for a new approach, one that can more successfully address some of Detroit’s most notable challenges. This new approach should not only acknowledge our existing circumstances, but seek to leverage and then “flip” them into figurative and literal assets.  Since past conventional practices have contributed to our current situation, should we rely on these same practices to resolve our current conditions?  Further aggravating the perceived confusion, many in the national media still focus on perpetuating negative perceptions.  As designers, we have an immediate opportunity to shift these perceptions toward a more positive frame of mind, utilizing innovative design strategies that (re)present negative attributes as previously unrecognized positive opportunities.

Put simply, a negative perception can truly become positive.  Previously negative language implications can be transformed into provocative drivers for positive socioeconomic outcomes.  When applied on multiple fronts, these “flipped” perspectives can emerge into a clearly unified view of Detroit. (more…)

SUMMER IN THE CITY OPEN HOUSE

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

SITC OPEN HOUSE ANNOUNCEMENT

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SUMMER IN THE CITY. This Friday evening, the non-profit volunteer organization, Summer in the City (SITC), will be hosting an open house from 7pm until 10pm at the Burton School on Cass Avenue.  This family friendly affair (I’ve been told there will be decorative painting and drawing on their classroom walls) will celebrate the following:

  • The Object Show. Summer in the City has teamed up with the American Society of Media Photographers to host  The Object Show.  Dozens of Detroit artists have donated their work for a silent auction.  All proceeds go towards SITC volunteer efforts.

  • Summer Season Kick-Off. Meet the 2010 SITC Crew and find out about their upcoming volunteer season.

  • Housewarming. SITC has their first official headquarters – an old classroom in the recently reprogrammed Burton School.

This non-profit organization has been working around the city of Detroit for the past nine summers and will be showcased during the next lecturesHAA event on June 15th, “VOLUNTEERISM IN DETROIT: A (Re)Generation Strategy”.

For more details on the SITC Open House, please click here.
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ARTIST X: Brian DuBois

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

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Artist X. As part of this blog’s ongoing mission to raise the level of design discourse, rogueHAA has created a new series of posts entitled, “Artist X”.  This series will highlight local artists, showcasing unique and innovative projects found within the city.  By presenting multiple creative disciplines, we hope to build community relationships, spark Detroit specific design dialogue, encourage multi-disciplinary collaboration, and ultimately, strengthen the existing Detroit creative class.

Brian DuBois is currently the owner of 2:37am studios, a multi-disciplinary studio that he started in 1999. His shop focuses on design/build/models that range in small to medium scaled projects. His belief within his shop is that you should understand the materials, details, and production techniques before you design, which in the end will help the design process and overall construction budget.

He was born and raised in River Rouge, Michigan (a small factory town near southwest Detroit) and received his 5-year B.A. Arch. from the University of Detroit Mercy.  Currently, he is working towards his M.F.A. from Cranbrook Academy of Arts, focusing on furniture/product design.  He has worked in a variety of trades that range from carpentry, electrical, roofing, managing the architecture woodshop at UDM, and auto show/retail exhibition designs.

In 2006, Brian ventured beyond the typical architectural products by creating his :2:37am: clothing line.  With his clothing line, he showcases the industrial aspects of the Detroit metropolitan region while collaborating with local and international talent.

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HAA ANNOUNCES LECTURESHAA – EVENT 07

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Volunteerism in Detroit Lecture Announcement

Volunteerism in Detroit Details

lecturesHAA is dedicated to creating a broader creative discourse through open and collaborative dialogue. The program includes lectures and discussions throughout the year that will consider important contemporary design issues associated with the urban environment.

The 2010 program for is titled, “Challenging Detroit: (Re)generating Urbanism.” This program provides an important platform for consideration of innovative, multidisciplinary strategies designed to help the city not only create reinvestment and redevelopment, but also begin to regenerate the social, economic and environmental attributes that define it. Now, more than ever, we need to come together to understand how we can effectively participate in the thoughtful, creative regeneration of Detroit. (more…)

Christian Unverzagt Lecture Discussion

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Christian-Unverzagt_Detroit: The Grotesque from HAA on Vimeo.

Detroit: The Grotesque (and other projects).

On April 13th, local designer and University of Michigan professor, Christian Unverzagt, gave a compelling lecture summarizing his Detroit design work.  Divided directly down the middle, Christian inadvertently described his work using a split personality analogy, first illustrating his architectural pedagogy through multiple student projects and then following with his professional work through M1/dtw. (more…)

STOOP AS MIDDLE GROUND 01

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

New-Orleans-Stoop-Design-Concepts

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New Orleans Stoop House

The United States Green Building Council has initiated a nationwide design competition for a LEED platinum, single family home for the Broadmoor district of New Orleans, LA.  This competition, entitled USGBC’s 2010 Natural Talent Design Competition, targets innovative design solutions from students and emerging professionals, while challenging designers to create an inexpensive (under $100K construction budget) contextually sensitive home.

A small group of HAA designers have challenged themselves to create the new archetypal home in New Orleans – a home that engages the existing neighborhood and city infrastructure from the elevated platform of post-Katrina housing.  Four winning designs will be constructed by the Salvation Army, measured and verified during a designated sustainable testing phase, and then only afterwards will a final winner be selected. (more…)

DETROIT : Scale of crisis = scale of intervention

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

DRIWR 01: Detroit Metro Contaminated Sites

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HYBRID URBANISM.
Landscape Urbanism advocates a purposeful discourse between ecological systems, human activities, and the post-industrial landscape, ultimately manifesting in the deliberate celebration of the urban void.  This celebration glorifies the interstitial, so that the void is inevitably romanticized by, and is necessary to, the burgeoning Landscape Urbanism profession. Reliance on the void introduces a basic set of dilemmas:  In order to focus on the space between buildings, there must be buildings; planning creative programming between infrastructural systems requires existing infrastructure; implementing a proposed hybrid ecology between urban eco-systems and human eco-systems requires human eco-systems.  All of these very specific examples result in a single common statement:  In order to have an urban void, there first needs to be an urban, or rather a recognizable urban density.

What if the relationship between building density and void are reversed and the void is now the primary urban component?  What does it mean to reclaim a contaminated post-industrial site within a post urban city, a city whose built fabric has devolved into vast stretches of rural landscape?  Operating within the current design process parameters, Landscape Urbanism succeeds primarily in high-density urban fabrics such as New York City, Boston, and Chicago.  In these cities, individual brownfield sites are easily identifiable as precious, rare interstitial spaces. These voids are ultimately reclaimed, remediated, and creatively stitched back into the dense urban fabric to be utilized by their host city.  In post-industrial cities such as Detroit however, the urban condition (building density) has dissolved as the metropolis has decentralized. Neither the city nor the suburbs sustain the density required to find the contaminated land valuable, and thus lack a desire to stitch these abandoned outposts into their community.  Combine all of these individual outposts together and the metropolitan region is scarred by larger swaths of contaminated land, further compartmentalizing dissipated downtowns from their thriving suburban counterparts. On the national scale, we can recognize a larger post-industrial megalopolis landscape: shrinking cities left to die back into a growing contaminated terrain.  For the City of Detroit, the void is now the majority on a multiplicity of scales. This presents the fundamental challenge of practicing a type of Landscape Urbanism appropriate to Detroit’s post urban condition.

With the Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge Gateway, Hamilton Anderson Associates (HAA), seeks to broaden the Landscape Urbanism discourse by implementing a strategic, multi-scalar design process that reexamines urban and redefines the void. (more…)