Tag Archive | "fun"

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Where is the future?

Posted on 26 August 2010 by Eric Corey Freed

Where is the future?
Originally posted here

I turned 40 last week. As friends were asking, “How does it feel?” I was reminded of a drawing I did when I was 10 years old. The year was 1980 and I was living in a dense urban block of Philadelphia. I had already been obsessed with Architecture since I was eight, but now at 10, I had asked my parents for some real drawing tools, and they obliged with a set of pens, pencils and paper. I spent hours dreaming up a future of curvy, organic buildings that defied gravity. Ink smudges covered my fingers from sketching visions of the future.

July-5-2010-destination-time

My mother was 40 when I was 10, and I clearly remember thinking how I would turn 40 in the oh-so-distant year 2010. What kind of buildings would we be building in 2010? Surely the world would be unrecognizable. The boxy, lifeless and grey blocks of my neighborhood would be replaced with things I couldn’t even imagine.

Little did I know that we would still be building with skinny sticks of wood, held together by nails and with punched openings for windows. My younger self never would believe how I now spend my time having to convince clients not to put toxic materials in their home or fighting to get a building inspector to approve the use of recycled water.

Would my 10-year-old self be disappointed in how ordinary and un-revolutionary the majority of todays’ buildings really are? Where is the future we expected?

back-to-the-future

In the 1985 hit film, Back to the Future, the character Marty McFly travels back in time 30 years to find striking differences in fashion, automobiles and music. The buildings, however, were relatively unchanged. If Marty were to go back in time today, he would return to 1980. He would be confused by our skinny ties, long cars and the sounds of Devo, but the buildings would go by unnoticed.

hillvallweynew

In the sequel, Marty travels ahead 30 years to 2015 to a world full of imagination. The future they present is exciting and very different from the present. But as intriguing as some of their predictions are, they clearly overestimated certain developments.

fusionindustries

Is it safe to expect the next five years will bring us hoverboards, self-drying jackets or Mr. Fusion? Not likely. But you aren’t expecting those things. However, the buildings they showed (which don’t seem so far-fetched) are out of reach to us. What slows the innovation in our built environment?

In order to move forward, we must embrace our own long-term economic success. We need to rebuild our aging infrastructure, update those outdated systems and stop clinging to a romantic vision of old Architecture that embodies wasted resources, energy inefficiency and poor quality environments. Let’s rebuild our buildings and save ourselves in the process.

hoverboard

And this is the reason I am so excited about the upcoming West Coast Green Conference. Of the 40 or so conferences I attend each year, it is my favorite if only because of their focus on innovation. (Disclosure: I am on the Advisory Board). Hundreds of the top thinkers in architecture, planning and sustainability join together for three days to share ideas and develop solutions on how to design our future. You can hear more of my thoughts on this here.

Incidentally, the entire Back to the Future Trilogy is available in a special 25th Anniversary Edition on Blu-Ray on October 26th.

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MORE INFORMATION:
West Coast Green Conference
September 30 – October 1, 2010
http://www.westcoastgreen.com

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Eric Corey Freed is an architect and author of four books, including Green$ense for the Home.

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50 most loathsome people in America

Posted on 28 January 2009 by Eric Corey Freed

I came across this great list today: 50 MOST LOATHSOME PEOPLE IN AMERICA

My favorite? The person at #43:

43. You

Charges: You think it’s your patriotic duty to spend money you don’t have on crap you don’t need. You think Hillary lost because of sexism, when it’s actually because she’s just a bad liar. You think Iraq is better off now than before we invaded, and don’t understand why they’re so ungrateful. You think Tim Russert was a great journalist. You’re hopping mad about an auto industry bailout that cost a squirt of piss compared to a Wall Street heist of galactic dimensions, due to a housing crash you somehow have blamed on minorities. It took you six years to figure out what a tool Bush is, but you think Obama will make it all better. You deem it hunky dory that we conduct national policy debates via 8-second clips from “The View.” You think God zapped humans into existence a few thousand years ago, although your appendix and wisdom teeth disagree. You like watching vicious assholes insult each other on TV. You support gun rights, because firing one gives you a chubby. You cuddle falsehoods and resent enlightenment. You think the fact that 43% of whites could stomach voting for an incredibly charismatic and eloquent light-skinned black guy who was raised by white people means racism is over. You think progressive taxation is socialism. 1 in 100 of you are in jail, and you think it should be more. You are shallow, inconsiderate, afraid, brand-conscious, sedentary, and totally self-obsessed. You are American.

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Cathy Comics

Posted on 05 September 2008 by Eric Corey Freed






My mother-in-law often sends us clipped Cathy comics. They arrive without a note, as if the commentary in the strip was enough.

Here is a recent series of strips which, I think, really capture the issue with the consumerist green movement:

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PSFK Conference Video Recap

Posted on 05 August 2008 by Eric Corey Freed

I spoke at the PSFK Conference last month. The theme was on trends, inspiration and creativity and I was enjoying myself so much at the event I was already looking forward to the next conference.

Some incredible speakers and brands were represented: Starbucks, Good Magazine, Current TV, fuseproject, NASA – and that’s just a handful of them…

Ken Fisher conducted interviews during the event, and the first compilation video is now available. I am in the video speaking about the need for innovation.

Watch the video here.

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The Eliphante Art House

Posted on 19 February 2008 by Eric Corey Freed


The Eliphante Art House

The Eliphante Art House is the home of artist Michael Kahn and his wife Leda Livant built from found materials. Located in Cornville, Arizona, it represents a fine example of folk art home building.

An excerpt:


ANY fool can hire an architect to draw up a plan for a house, but it takes a truly inspired fool — which is to say, an artist — to start building and see where the earth and driftwood and shards of broken pottery take him, and an equally impassioned fool — say, a woman in love — to go along and carry the rocks on her back.

The Eliphante Art House Website

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The Mushroom House

Posted on 18 February 2008 by Eric Corey Freed


The Mushroom House is the home of Canadian artist Zube, who has worked on it for over 22 years. Located in Whistler, Canada, the Mushroom House was inspired by glacial rock formations.

The site has a wonderful virtual tour of each room (click on the red dots on the site map).

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The Onion: Plot of Greenspace

Posted on 10 February 2008 by Eric Corey Freed


A little humor for a chnage:

Onion: 3-By-4 Plot Of Green Space Rejuvenates Neighborhood

An Excerpt:


Notorious for its abandoned buildings, industrial warehouses, and gray, dilapidated roads, Detroit’s Warrendale neighborhood was miraculously revitalized this week by the installation of a single, three-by-four-foot plot of green space.

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Reindeer Greetings

Posted on 17 December 2007 by Eric Corey Freed

Reindeer Greetings is a project from the great folks at Urban Re:Vision and has reinvented the greeting card. Rather than sending a paper card (with the wasted resources of paper, ink, postage, and fossil fuels), a Reindeer Greeting costs the same price but sends an electronic greeting card. Proceeds from the sale of these beautifully illustrated cards benefits a different organization each season (Architecture for Humanity is currently the receipient).

visit Reindeer Greetings

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Inhabitat Holiday Party Photos

Posted on 16 December 2007 by Eric Corey Freed


The lovely ladies of Inhabitat: Piper Kujac, Sarah Rich, Jill Fehrenbacher, Emily Pilloton

One of my favorite blogs, Inhabitat, shares office space with my favorite community organization, Architecture For Humanity, and my favorite design competition, Urban Re:Vision. Friday night was their collective holiday party.

This is why I love San Francisco: here you can find a room filled with the greatest people doing the most interesting things on the planet. In attendance: Michelle Kaufman, Allison Arrief, Cameron Sinclair, Sarah Rich, Jill Fehrenbacher, Emily Pilloton, Stacey Frost, Willem Maas, Bill Cahan, the gang from Ecolect, the gang from Branch and the gang from Worldchanging… plus so many friends and interesting people. (Google any names you don’t recognize!)

Perhaps the most interesting thing is how connected these various groups have become. They’re all friends, all working to change the world and all full of hope for our future. Hard to believe that the truly most influential people in design today are a handful of young, hip bloggers (like those pictured). Women seem to be leading the charge. There are noticably more women than men in this group. I don’t know what this indicates, but it’s something to consider.

Full story via Inhabitat

Flickr gallery of photos from the event

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Book Launch Party

Posted on 12 December 2007 by Eric Corey Freed


Last night nearly 550 people packed into the Temple Nightclub in San Francisco for the book launch party for my new book, “Green Building for Dummies”.

Temple touts itself as a green nightclub and generously donated the venue for the event. As usual, the hardline green people kept coming up to me with their nitpicky “helpful” suggestions:
“Why are the cups plastic and not corn based PLA? You should tell them to change that.”
“Why aren’t these bulbs compact fluorescents? You should tell them to change that.”
“Why didn’t they serve organic chocolate? You should tell them to change that.”

(Very helpful indeed. For the record, I don’t run the nightclub!)

We sold out all of the books, though my hand still hurts from all of the signing (I’m typing this with my left). It was a great evening and thank you to all those in attendance. There was even a special surprise announcement. (If you weren’t there, ask someone who attended!)

Photo and a review of the evening courtesey of: Greenerati (Thanks, Keith!)

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