Friday 9 May 2008

Tate Modern, Material Gestures exhibition





The current exhibition at The Tate Modern is Material
gestures, within Landscape Architect and designing in
general materials can make or break a design.
The exhibition is very eclectic with 9 different artists
work appearing clearly from this you could gain a
sense of how materials meant different things to a different
personality, some used projection as a means to inform,
others sculpture some painting.

There is a clear message resonating through all the work
on display and that was that you could you any colour tone
media to create a expression in your work but it must have
a context to why it exists the reasoning behind it.
The exhibition is helpful in defining how you must engage
with the work and context to really appreciate the work on
display and this lesson is what I value most from the work
on display.

Thursday 8 May 2008

The Scoop and Surroundings, London







This space is the flagship site in London with constant
media attention lavished here. The Scoop at More
London is an outdoor sunken amphitheatre with seating for 800.
The Scoop is designed so that in the summer months it can host
on variety of performance events. The events as described by
More London are free films, free music and free theatre
to local community events and activities.
The design at this site is very eye catching not for reasons such
as bold colour, because the site is rather underststed with Dark
blue granite featuring predominantly through the site. What it
does stand out for is the quality of work which has gone into
sculpting the stone into different geometrys which breakup the
site while revealing each design aspect subtly.
The Scoop for me isnt the best part of this landscape but rather
the baron landscape created from using only one material it
celebrates the pure space of the space. This is a must see just
to see how so many elements can fit together to create such a
contemporary site.

Old Qubec Street, London




Old Qubec Street has undergone somewhat of a
facelift from its original through way into a oasis
site in the Oxford Street, Regents Street Bond Street
development plan. The first thing that strkes me when I
looked at this space is what has been done this site is
very poor it offers no oasis that I can see and I would'nt
want to sit here and relax.

To best describe the space is to say its grey bland and a
definate oasis for concrete. The space has no real identity
and the only obvious plan for developing the site has been
to create a paved area.
The only people using the space are the ones living in the
doorways along the street there is no vibrance and there is
certainly no oasis to this site very disappointing.

Parliament Square, London






Parliament Square strikes me as a rare island of
tranquility in the very symbolic centre of London.
To best describe the Square, I would say it is a very
traditional english space for this part of historic London.
The spacwe fits in very well with its surroundings but
does look rather tired and under used.
The Square provides a real island persona because there
is a river of traffic surrounding it on all four sides and no
crossing designed for people to reach the cente.
Whilst the square does not obscure the hustle and bustle
surrounding it, there is a sense of seclusion, there are no
plantings to create barriers just the vastness of the roads
creating a makeshift moat.
For such a prime space in London oppersite the Houses of
Parliament this site is servely understated however this
understatement and seclusion give Parliament Square its
real personality, the real reason to like the space.

Putney Wharf, Visit





Putney Wharf is a very generic form of urban
space it serves its purpose as a waterfront site but
doesn't really inspire. There are very clean straight lines
used throughout the space and small terraces built up
to define differing uses for the spaces along with durable
solid material use.
Overall the space lacks any real personality to describe what
Putney Wharf was, now is and will be in the future.
There is no celebration of the space it most likely serves its
purpose very well on a sunny day when people flock
to the river front, but this space is just a very generic
design almost out of catalogue.

Potters Fields Park






The space here is defined as Potter's Fields Park but
the space has been designed to flow into the surrounding
landscape with some success immediately adjacent to the
London Assembly it has alot to compete against. The main
emphasis of this site is the enjoyment of the surroundings
namely the Thames River and there has been detail
devoted solely to this such as the seating with water patterns
built into them.
The level changes on site have been delt with by subtle terraced
seating interspersed with green space overlooking some of the
best views in London.
What doesn't seem to work with the space is how rapidly it has
become worn away and there is a lack of definition and quality
to some parts of space, such as the tarmac used, considering the
prime location of the park I would expect a high quality finish
throughout.
This is a nice addition to the SouthBank Landscape which could
have been so much better defined.

St Pauls, Visit






This space was a nice compliment to the very formal
historical St Pauls Cathedral, the space is is designed
with a series of terraces which are cut by a ramp for disabled
access and also focuses the sightline toward St Paul's.
There is a simple use of material and shape and the
tourist information centre also has this designed into it.
What would have been nice here would be more maintainenance
of the lawned areas but otherwise a very solid design if not
a little conservative, but it does work well for the space.