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Amsterdam on Electric Scooter

Alessandro Della Bella - Frentic Zurich


Frenetic Zurich from Alessandro Della Bella on Vimeo.
Lesen Sie auf deutsch bitte weiter unten weiter...

Zurich is Switzerland’s biggest city and worldwide known for its high quality of living (and just happens to be one of the most expensive cities worldwide too!). A picturesque old town, great shopping facilities, a large variety of cultural attractions, a beautiful lakeside and lots of green areas make a visit to Zurich a multifaceted experience. With its international airport the city is a good base to start discovering the country.

Besides that, it’s a cool playground for time-lapse photography. Footage has mostly been shot for testing purposes and shows impressions of a pulsating and electrifying city in winter time. Enjoy!

For the "making of" information and photo gallery check out the project website www.helvetiabynight.com.

About:
‘Helvetia by Night’ is a time-lapse project about Switzerland by night. Short videos of long nights present you the stunning beauty of the Swiss Alps and show you the magic of a spectacular nighttime sky. Imagine watching a slide-show at fast speed or looking at a flip book. It is photography turning into a movie. Everything in the videos is real and happening out there while most of us are sleeping.

The three videos ‘Helvetia’s Dream’, ‘Frenetic Zurich’ and ‘Nuclear Power (and Cows)’ are my first footsteps on the road of time-lapse photography. It is a most exciting road to follow with lots of testing, trying and learning every night I spend photographing in the Swiss mountains. Right now, 3D motion control is my biggest challenge. More time-lapse videos of existing footage will be published soon.

Helvetia is the female national personification of Switzerland. The name is a derivation of the ethnonym Helvetii, the name of the Gaulish tribe inhabiting the Swiss Plateau prior to the Roman conquest. Identification of the Swiss as ‘Helvetians’ became common in the 18th century and Helvetia appears on official federal coins and stamps (Source: Wikipedia).


Alessandro Della Bella grew up in Arosa, a small paradise in the mountains of eastern Switzerland located 1800m above sea level. Inspired by such great scenery, photography has become his passion early in life. Since 2005 Alessandro work as press photographer for the Swiss press photo agency KEYSTONE in Zurich. Time-lapse photography became a favorite hobby of his in the year 2011. Besides that he is doing some other private work which can be found here: www.dellabella.ch







Zürich, die grösste Stadt der Schweiz und weltweit an vorderster Stelle in Bezug auf Lebensqualität (und -kosten), beeindruckt auf vielfältige Weise.

Eine malerische Altstadt, grossartige Einkaufsmöglichkeiten, ein breites kulturelles Angebot, sowie eine wunderschöne Seepromenade, viele Parks und Grünflächen garantieren einen abwechslungsreichen Aufenthalt. Mit dem internationalen Flughafen in unmittelbarer Nähe bietet Zürich eine gute Basis, um die Schweiz zu entdecken.

Zudem ist die Stadt ein optimaler Spielplatz für Time-Lapse. Die Bilder für diesen Film sind mehrheitlich zu Testzwecken entstanden. Geniessen Sie winterliche Impressionen aus der pulsierenden und elektrisierenden Stadt an der Limmat.

Eine Fotogalerie und mehr Informationen über das "making of" gibt es auf www.helvetiabynight.com




‚Helvatia by Night‘ ist ein Zeitraffer-Projekt (Time-Lapse) über die Schweiz bei Nacht. Kurzfilme zeigen die atemberaubende Schönheit der Schweizer Bergwelt und einen spektakulären Sternenhimmel, wie Sie vielleicht erst davon geträumt haben. Alles was hier präsentiert wird, ist jedoch absolut real. Schnell aneinander gereihte Fotos werden zu einem Film, wie in einem Daumenkino.

Helvetias Traum, Frenetisches Zürich und Atomkraft (mit Kühen) sind meine ersten Time-Lapse Filme und damit der Anfang eines spannenden Projektes. Mit jeder Nacht in den Bergen gewinne ich neue Erfahrungen und lerne Wertvolles dazu. Bald werden weitere Kurzfilme aus bestehendem Material hier aufgeschaltet.

Helvetia ist die vom Volksstamm der Helvetier abgeleitete neulateinische Bezeichnung für die Schweiz und eine allegorische Frauenfigur, welche die Schweiz versinnbildlicht. Auf Briefmarken und Münzen wird bis heute ‚Helvetia‘ als Landesbezeichnung verwendet (Quelle: Wikipedia).

Einige Worte zu meiner Person:
Ich bin in Arosa aufgewachsen, einem kleinen Paradies in der Bündner Bergwelt auf 1800 Metern über Meer. Inspiriert durch die beeindruckende Berglandschaft habe ich schon früh die Fotografie als meine Passion entdeckt. Seit 2005 arbeite ich als Pressefotograf bei der Schweizer Bildagentur KEYSTONE in Zürich. Die Time-Lapse Fotografie ist seit 2011 mein Lieblingshobby. Weitere private Arbeiten gibt es auf www.dellabella.ch

Viel Vergnügen beim Schauen der Time-Lapse Filme!
Alessandro Della Bella

Mayeul Akpovi - Besançon and Franche-Comté, France

Mayeul Akpovi - Paris in Motion


Paris In Motion (Part I) from Mayeul Akpovi on Vimeo.
Timelapse and Stopmotion Photography. 3000 pictures in 5 days.
Music: Massive Attack / Angel


Paris In Motion (Part II) from Mayeul Akpovi on Vimeo.
Facebook: http://facebook.com/mayeul.akpovi

Paris In Motion (Part II) - Timelapse Photography - 3500 pictures & You can realy enjoy it !

Music:  Massive Attack / Teardrop : http://itunes.apple.com/fr/album/mezzanine/id17641181
Massive Attack website : http://massiveattack.com

Mayeul Akpovi Photographies - http://mayeul.com



Making Of - Paris In Motion from Mayeul Akpovi on Vimeo.

Héctor Fernández Elorza - Genetics Laboratory

Already Alive - NYC Dark



NYC Dark from Already Alive on Vimeo.

Seeing lower Manhattan without power is a surreal experience. This is traditionally a city that never sleeps. One in which the lights are always on. One that is always bustling with people. When the lights went out it was wholly different. This piece is meant to capture and relay the feeling of what it was like to walk around the darkened streets of lower Manhattan.

See all of Jared's photos here: http://www.jaredlevy.me/gallery/hurricane-sandy-lower-manhattan/

Stills / Voice: Jared Levy http://jaredlevy.me
Timelapse / Music: Michael Marantz http://michaelmarantz.com
Creative Direction: Jason Oppliger http://jasonoppliger.com

Produced by Already Alive http://alreadyalive.com
Original Music by Michael Marantz: http://soundcloud.com/michaelmarantz/nyc-dark

Madison Avenue

Medison Avenue Market by Raúl Rausa
Madison Avenue is a north-south avenue in the borough of Manhattan in New York City, United States, that carries northbound one-way traffic. It runs from Madison Square (at 23rd Street) to the Madison Avenue Bridge at 138th Street. In doing so, it passes through Midtown, the Upper East Side (including Carnegie Hill), Spanish Harlem, and Harlem. It is named after and arises from Madison Square, which is itself named after James Madison, the fourth President of the United States. Since the 1920s, the street's name has been synonymous with the American advertising industry.
Madison Avenue was not part of the original New York City street grid established in the Commissioners' Plan of 1811, and was carved between Park Avenue (formerly Fourth) and Fifth Avenue in 1836, due to the effort of lawyer and real estate developer Samuel B. Ruggles, a graduate of Yale University who had previously purchased and developed New York's Gramercy Park in 1831, who was in part responsible for the development of Union Square, and who also named Lexington Avenue.

Madison Avenue carries one-way traffic uptown (northbound) from 23rd Street to 135th Street, with the changeover from two-way traffic taking place on January 14, 1966, at which time Fifth Avenue was changed to one way downtown (southbound)


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Advertising industry 

The term "Madison Avenue" is often used metonymically for advertising, and Madison Avenue became identified with the American advertising industry after the explosive growth in this area in the 1920s. According to "The Emergence of Advertising in America" by the year 1861 there were twenty advertising agencies in New York City, and in 1911, the New York City Association of Advertising Agencies was founded, predating the establishment of the American Association of Advertising Agencies by several years. Among various depictions in popular culture, the portion of the advertising industry which centers on Madison Avenue serves as a backdrop for the AMC television drama Mad Men, which focuses on industry activities during the 1960s. In recent decades, many agencies have left Madison Avenue, with some moving further downtown and others moving west.[2] Today, only a few agencies are still located in the old business cluster on Madison Avenue, including Young & Rubicam, StrawberryFrog, TBWA Worldwide and Doyle Dane Bernbach. However, the term is still used to describe the agency business as a whole and large, New York–based agencies in particular.


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Deconstructed Paris trough Street View?



Given a large repository of geotagged imagery provided by Google Street View, five scholars from Carnegie Mellon and the École normale supérieure found local visual elements, such as street signs, windows, or balconies, that are most distinctive for a given locale, such as the city of Paris.


Carl Doersch
Saurabh Singh
Abhinav Gupta
Josef Sivic
Alexei A. Efros

http://graphics.cs.cmu.edu/projects/whatMakesParis/

Mirazozo Luminarium



Assembly Festival - Edinburgh Fringe 2011 - Featuring interview of Alan Parkinson
Filmed by Christian Herrmann and Christopher Coope
Edited by Christopher Coope

Tiago Ribeiro - À Grande e à Francesa

Tiago Ribeiro - À Grande e à Francesa 
 Music(a): A Quai by Yann Tiersen

China / Construction and Economy Boom

Two extracts from movies about China produced by UK production Journeyman Pictures. This production has very interesting catalog of movies worth purchasing. The first clip is about China's construction boom and the second filmed by ABC Australia and distributed by Journeyman Pictures is on the China's economy boom. Thanks to blog Trzisno resenje for introducing me to this footage.


Behnisch Architekten - Europäischer Hof Redevelopment, Baden-Baden



The Europäischer Hof is one of the most renowned and historic hotels in Germany. Constructed in 1892, this five star hotel currently has 128 rooms and suites. The hotel is built in the style of Belle Epoque and provides a full service spa, conference facilities and a renowned restaurant. The hotel was the founder hotel of the Steigenberger chain with a long tradition and history. The redevelopment concept by Behnisch Architekten allows for properly combining the historic elements via a glazed atrium resulting in up to 156 bedrooms and a full upgrade to the existing environment. Pixel Enlargement produced this short video just in time for the 2011 MIPIM event in Cannes.

Behnisch Architekten - Unilever-haus, Hamburg

Photo: Adam Mork

The new Unilever headquarter building for Germany, Austria and Switzerland is located right by the river Elbe, prominently positioned in Hamburg's HafenCity. It marks the end of the route out of the town centre to Hamburg's new attractions: the cruise ship terminal and the promenade on Strandkai. Here Unilever's new building opens itself up to the city and its inhabitants.

The central element and heart of the design is the generous atrium, flooded by daylight, which, on the ground floor, gives passers-by the opportunity to get to know the company better while browsing in the shop stocked with Unilever products, sitting in the cafe or relaxing in the spa.

The atrium is also the central location for people to meet and communicate. As in a city, bridges, ramps and steps connect central spaces with each other. Here people can meet, talk and enjoy the inspiring ambiance. Vibrant and communicative interaction evolves, thereby fostering a feeling of togetherness among the employees. The workplace is no longer a separate department. The building itself reinforces the identity of the company.

The building follows the principles of holistic, sustainable architecture. While implementing technologies that help save resources, the energy concept adheres to the principle of avoiding technical solutions wherever possible. The office area is cooled by means of thermally activated reinforced concrete ceilings. A single-layer film facade placed in front of the building's insulation glazing protects the daylight-optimized blinds from strong wind and other weather influences.

The building's primary energy consumption during operation will be under 100 Kwh/a m2. A newly developed SMD-LED system has been deployed both for the building's general lighting and for workplace lighting. This system is up to seventy per cent more efficient than conventional halogen or metal halide lighting. The Unilever building received the newly established HafenCity EcoLabel in gold.

http://behnisch.com

Television Headquarters


While CCTV Headquarter is widely famous for OMA's iconic building here is how other television comapnies' headquarters look like.

CNN

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BBC

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"Lost" Filming Locations

Here are few of the "most prominent" Lost filming locations:


Mokule'ia (Army Beach)

The part of Mokule'ia Beach filmed for the Pilot episode was slightly to the east of later filming locations on this beach. Before the last entrance to Dillingham Airfield (which is the best access point to view the fuselage storage area), you will see Army related structures on your right. The beach here is the general area of Mokule'ia that was filmed for the pilot. The tree marks the arbitrary border along the Mokule'ia coastline between this "east" or "army" beach, with the "Tiger beach" beyond it to the west that was used for subsequent episodes. Even further out is the beach beyond Camp Erdman, used for the tail-enders' scenes. The road was covered with sand during the filming.







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3XNielsen - Muziekgebouw Concert Hall, Amsterdam



Muziekgebouw aan 't IJ (English: "Music Building on the IJ") is a concert hall for contemporary classical music on the IJ in AmsterdamNetherlands. The building opened in 2005 and is located above theIJtunnel, a ten-minute walk from Amsterdam Centraal station. The building was designed by Danish architects 3XN. The Bimhuis is part of and partly integrated in the Muziekgebouw aan 't IJ.
The first director was Jan Wolff (2005–2008); Tino Haenen has been artistic director since June 2008. Haenen was previously director of the Belgian contemporary music festival Ars Musica.

Shohei Shigematsu (OMA) and Bjarke Ingels - On Generations



Shohei Shigematsu, partner in charge of OMA's operations in the Americas, talks to his former OMA colleague Bjarke Ingels

Madrid Rio Project

 (Pete Carr)
Photo by Pete Carr

The Madrid Río project originated when the section of the M-30 ring road running parallel to the Manzanares River was moved underground, resulting in an area of parkland 10 kilometres long. The river bank has thus become an integral part of the city centre, and now offers Madrilenians and visitors an area surrounded by vegetation and filled with wide a range of sports, leisure and cultural facilities. The redeveloped area covers 649 hectares in six districts: Moncloa-Aravaca, Centro, Arganzuela, Latina, Carabanchel and Usera. The Madrid Río project will create a large area of environmental, sporting, leisure and cultural interest.

The restoration process has affected the course of the river itself, both banks and nearby streets. Now that the area has been freed from traffic coming from the M-30, Madrid residents and visitors to the city can once again start enjoying the Manzanares. Moreover, the project has meant removing an obstacle which has separated the districts from the centre and south-east of the city for so long. To achieve this, 17 new walkways have been built, among them the Matadero and Invernadero walkways, whose arches are decorated with mosaics by Daniel Canogar, the Puente del Principado de Andorra bridge, and the bridge designed by Dominique Perrault, which crosses over the new Arganzuela Park and links Paseo de Yeserías with Avenida del Manzanares. Some of these walkways are destined to become new landmarks in the city. Other existing pedestrian bridges have also been rehabilitated, including the Puente de Segovia bridge, which has recovered the splendour of Juan de Herrera's 16th-century design, and the old dams have been transformed into walkways.

http://www.esmadrid.com/en/madridrio

Copenhagen



From a small fishing village that hardly anyone had ever heard of to a position as the dazzling capital of the Danish Empire and to its current position as one of the world's most talked about as well as sung of cities is a colourful history.

Copenhagen, in those days called "Havn", meaning the harbour, was of little strategic or political importance. Most of the people in "Havn" earned their daily bread by fishing for the plentiful herring in the Øresund. In the next two centuries fishing and trading turned the small fishing village into a flourishing town. And in 1343 King Valdemar Atterdag made Copenhagen the capital of Denmark - today the seat of the government and the hometown of the Danish royal family.

Copenhagen of today is one of the most dynamic cities in Europe and the second largest city in Scandinavia. With 1.1 million inhabitants in the Greater Copenhagen area (and more than 1,8 million when other close municipalites incounted), the city definitely holds the position as The Glittering Capital of this part of the world.
Copenhagen is one of the world's leading destinations for international conferences and congresses. Since the Øresund Bridge between Malmö and Copenhagen opened in 2000, the two cities offer more than 22.000 hotel beds. Scandinavia's largest conference centre, the Bella Center in the outskirts of the city, is well known for its international fairs and other arrangements. 

SANAA - The New Museum, New York





This is how architectural review should look like in 2012 - slick, qucik, pop and with a lot of great music!
Just like this one from Great Spaces  on SANAA'a the New Museum.

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/greatspacespage
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/greatspaces
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The New Museum, founded as the New Museum of Contemporary Art by Marcia Tucker in 1977, is the only museum in New York City exclusively devoted to presenting contemporary art from around the world. On December 1, 2007, the New Museum opened its first freestanding, dedicated building at 235 Bowery.

The building, designed by Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa/SANAA with Gensler, New York, serving as executive Architect, is expressed as a series of six asymmetrically stacked aluminum-clad rectilinear boxes shifted off-axis around a central steel core. Sejima + Nishizawa's inspiration came from the traditional set-backs exhibited by some of the city's earlier skyscrapers.

The facade is shrouded in 3,270 square meters of expanded aluminum, originally developed in the United Kingdom as a means of reinforcing roads. It was the first time this medium has been employed in the United States. The basement of the New Museum features a 188-seat theater.



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UN Studio - The New Amsterdam Plein and Pavilion, New York



The New Amsterdam Plein and Pavilion is a gift from the Netherlands to New York in honour of 400 years of friendship. The project was conceived by the Battery Conservancy to create an extraordinary 'outdoor living room' for spontaneous and scheduled activities, public markets, seating and shade, and a gleaming white, state-of-the-art pavilion for visitor information and delicious locally grown gourmet food. UNStudio's design creates a 5,000 square-foot, carefully programmed space located within Peter Minuit Plaza. This highly sculptural pavilion stands as a gateway to the park and waterfront, with an expressive, undulating roofline and curving walls; a compact building with the authority of a major landmark, evoking a flower opening to its surroundings.

 Today the park is the largest and most dynamic public place in Lower Manhattan. The New Amsterdam Plein & Pavilion is made possible by a grant from the government of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to The Battery Conservancy and was developed in collaboration with the Parks Department and the Department of Transportation. The pavilion was designed by UNStudio, with Handel Architects LLP (New York) serving as associate architect. The Peter Minuit Plaza forms a rare park/transit meeting ground and defines a new era in public space design and construction. It weaves together trees, gardens, art, sculpture, food, and information with ferries, subways, buses, bikes, and pedestrians and forms an iconic, recognizable spot for residents and visitors alike. The new pavilion forms the centerpiece of the plaza.

UN Studio

Miniatur Wunderland, Hamburg





The official video about Miniatur Wunderland Hamburg, the largest model railway in the world, and one of the most successful tourist attractions in Germany. On the 1.300 m² large layout, far more than a thousand trains, aircrafts, cars and ships move about. A wonder of the world in miniature. Please, find more information on http://www.miniatur-wunderland.com

Bjarke Ingels on The Next List.


Bjarke Ingels on Sanjay Gupta's CNN The Next List.

Georg Riha - Impressions of Vienna



Georg Riha and his team will present this city never-before-seen perspectives, using a unique tracking shots and stunning time-lapse shots.

These stunning photographs framed the gala ceremony of the 40-year anniversary and 35 years OPECinventory OPEC in Vienna at the Vienna City Hall.

Musically, the visual impressions are accompanied by the sound worlds of the artist NOISIA.

Sherlock Holmes - 221B Baker Street / The Reichenbach Falls





221B Baker Street is the London address of the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, created by author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. In the United Kingdom, postal addresses with a number followed by a letter may indicate a separate address within a larger, often residential building. Baker Street in Holmes' time was a high-class residential district, and Holmes' apartment was probably part of a Georgian terrace.
At the time the Holmes stories were published, addresses in Baker Street did not go as high as 221. Baker Street was later extended, and in 1932 the Abbey National Building Society moved into premises at 219–229 Baker Street. For many years, Abbey National employed a full-time secretary to answer mail addressed to Sherlock Holmes. In 1990, a blue plaque signifying 221B Baker Street was installed at the Sherlock Holmes Museum, situated elsewhere on the same block, and there followed a 15-year dispute between Abbey National and the Holmes Museum for the right to receive mail addressed to 221B Baker Street. Since the closure of Abbey House in 2005, ownership of the address by the Holmes Museum has not been challenged, despite its location between 237 and 241 Baker Street.

Driving Around New York City in 1928



How did the streets of New York look like in 1928, altogether with then a railroad, and now a famous park - High Line.

BIG - The Wave, St. Petersburg Pier





As one of three shortlisted proposals for the St. Petersburg Pier International Design Competition, the Wave tries to connect the water and the city of Petersburg by emphasizing the possibility of achieving unity through physical contact. Its undulating form creates a narrative that merges the pier structure with the entire bay area. BIG’s project is divided into three parts: Tributary Park, Wave Walk and the Wave. The first phase of construction will include The Wave and Wave Walk. Tributary Park will be realized in the second phase. Source: Evolo

BIG's hour and a half presentation could be found on this link

Walter Gropius - The Dessau Bauhaus



Sivasparch channel on YouTube has a set of 23 great half an hour documentaries on the most famous and significant architectural pieces. Great work for providing this stuff.

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Staatliches Bauhaus commonly known simply as Bauhaus, was a school in Germany that combined crafts and the fine arts, and was famous for the approach to design that it publicized and taught. It operated from 1919 to 1933. At that time the German term Bauhaus, literally "house of construction" stood for "School of Building".

Pavillon-Arsenal, Paris


Paris, Guided Tour #00 - Introduction by Pavillon-Arsenal

http://www.pavillon-arsenal.com

Created in 1988 the Pavillon de l’Arsenal is the centre for information, documentation and exhibition for urban planning and architecture of Paris. It is a unique place, where information concerning urban development and architectural realisations in Paris is available to everyone.

The main activities of the Pavillon de l’Arsenal are to exhibit Parisian architecture and urban-planning; to give visitors the most accurate documentation possible; to publish reference books on topics affecting the day-to-day life of Parisians and to provide a forum for the individuals and authorities involved in shaping the city.

The Pavillon de l’Arsenal aims to allow a large public to understand the evolution of Paris and its projects. In order to preserve the balance of the Parisian cityscape, today’s planners must use an urbanism centred on proximity issues involving dialogue and concerted actions.

The main hall of the Pavillon de l’Arsenal presents three types of exhibition.
On the ground floor, the permanent exhibition « Paris a guided Tour; the city, past and present » explains on 800 sqm the architecture of the city and shows how Paris was built over the centuries as well as its actual and future projects on various scales, from the Parisian metropolis, through the city, the neighbourhood, to the street.

The 1st floor welcomes on 600 sqm three main temporary exhibitions a year, centred on a particular theme. The thematic approach is diverse: the architecture of the concrete, housing in Paris, the Paris of Haussmann, the Paris of private homes, or more recently the 454 projects for Paris 2012. Since it’s opening the Pavillon de l’Arsenal has presented more than forty exhibitions to the public.

Topical galleries, exhibitions dedicated to French and international architecture are organised on the two galleries situated on the second floor.

In addition to this, the Pavillon de l’Arsenal proposes to the public a documentation centre, a photographic library, a bookshop-boutique, a newspaper bar and a video library.

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Pavillon de l'Arsenal also has Dailymotion page with more then 30 short movies on the development and architecture of Paris

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From the plaster model of Paris built on a 1/2000 scale in the 1990s to the digital model enabling visitors to truly discover the area.


Aleksandar Grkinic - The City: Moments of New York City



Aleksandar spent a month in NYC in summer of 2011 and he's taken video sequences combined into one short view on New York City. Truly amazing video that captures the spirit of people of New York.

Music: Foals - Blue Blood

Benthem Crouwel - The New Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam




Once again, Stedelijk Museum extension presented trough interview of  Mr. Mels Crouwel in short feature by in60s.


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City Talk - High Line Section 3 / CUNY TV



City Talk is CUNY TV's forum for politics and public affairs. City Talk presents lively discussion of New York City issues, with the people that help make this city function hosted by Professor Doug Muzzio, co-director of the Center for the Study of Leadership in Government and the founder and former director of the Baruch College Survey Research Unit, both at Baruch College's School of Public Affairs.


Returning to City Talk once again are Joshua David and Robert Hammond, co-founders of Friends of the High Line, to discuss the plans for the last section of the park in the sky. Joining them is Dan Barasch, co-founder of the Delancey Underground, who explains his vision for turning the space, which was once a trolley terminal beneath Delancey Street, into a subterranean public park.

Guest List

Dan Barasch Co-Founder, The Delancey Underground
Joshua David Co-Founder, Friends of the High Line
Robert Hammond Co-Founder, Friends of the High Line
Prof. Douglas Muzzio Political Analyst, CUNY TV, Professor, School of Public Affairs, Baruch College/CUNY

Original tape date: December 12, 2011.
First aired: December 28, 2011.

Google Street View Bicycle Ride




This is called an invention! Since the arrival of Street View a number of people have had the idea of connecting exercise bikes to computers to create virtual bike rides. Instructables show you how you can hack your own exercise bike so that it controls Google Maps Street View.
 

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