Blog Blurb

Blog Blurb


a matter of urban light is a design blog with the aim of exhibiting truly inspirational projects in landscape architecture and lighting within the urban environment. This blog will be created in tangent with my third year study of landscape architecture at Kingston University in London with the aim of hopefully moving into a career based on lighting in landscape architecture and the built environment.


i Hope the Blog is useful and interesting.


Aaron Carpenter


“Lighting design goes one step further, Setting moods and radiating aspirations.” Clare Lowther and Sarah Schultz


Precedents

Precedents

Tuesday, 30 November 2010

Miwa Matreyek's glorious visions






Video sourced from http://www.ted.com/talks/miwa_matreyek_s_glorious_visions.html


I found this video whilst searching on TED and I thought I would upload and share it as I found it really inspirational to watch. The performance is by Miwa Matreyek a performance and animation artist from Los Angeles California.

I am studying lighting at the moment within the context of landscape architecture for my dissertation, and am therefore very interested in the applications that lighting can be applied to. I felt the performance showed the adaptability of lighting projectors for performance and its ability to change perception of a space, person or object. Watching Miwa Matreyek performances makes me wonder how landscape could be very different if lighting was used more elaborately for changing the realization of a space and the factors surrounding it, such as a wall within or enclosing a space. Or the paving on which we walk on. The space could almost become a digital facade hiding and manipulating what is truly there.


Miwa Matreyek website with more performances http://www.semihemisphere.com/performance.html

Tiger Stone by Vanku b.v.








Video sourced from http://www.youtube.com/user/vankubv

The Tiger Stone Machine developed by in the Netherlands by machinery specialist vanku b.v. is a automatic brick paving layer. The machine is available in in 4,5 and 6 meter widths and the operators are able to lay almost 1000 square meters per day. It was developed to be more Ergonomic for the operators allowing them to be able to stand with comfort whilst placing the bricks into the machine without needing to bend and kneel in uncomfortable positions. It was also developed to have a higher productivity, whilst still achieving very high standards. The machine certainly appears that it will be able to transform residential street development especially as the developers would like to see it being produced for smaller functions in the future for rental purposes. But with its retracted size its hard to see it as a primary tool for large urban developments, but defiantly as a time and money saver for certain roles.

Monday, 15 November 2010

Guerrilla Lighting






Guerrilla Lighting in Douglas on The Isle Of Man. Buildings are lit by groups waving torches and mobile lights with colour filters at five separate buildings.


Sourced from http://www.youtube.com/user/GlennWhorrall


Find a Guerrilla Lighting to attend at http://guerrillalighting.net/



Guerrilla lighting is a group set up for “war on bad lighting, guerrilla lighting is a protest against wasteful use of light but most of all, guerrilla lighting is about having fun and raising the awareness of the power of light.”Guerrilla lighting aims to act against the uniformity of standard architectural lighting.

I agree strongly with with Guerrilla lighting as lighting for many buildings appears to be a statement carried out in a negative grandiloquent way, with not much considerations upon its surroundings. Lighting is a wonderful design tool that can make a space become a place that people can socialize in where their dreams and aspirations can be released. Guerrilla lighting is aiming that this can became a realization with every nocturnal landscape and building. The Guerrilla methods used involve organizing groups of people with hand held torches and coloured filters to illuminate areas with inadequate lighting. Creating very temporary lighting inspirations that can only be seen with a fleeting glimpse as the activists move to the next target.

“architectural lighting is not a competition – brighter is not better”

Saturday, 6 November 2010

Kew Gardens in Autumn









I made this short slide show as I had far to many pictures I wanted to share of kew gardens but these pictures really don't show its beauty during this time of year.

Friday, 5 November 2010

Access by Marie Sester






Video sourced from (http://www.youtube.com/user/scottmahoy#p/u)


Access by Marie Sester is a interactive lighting project that involves pedestrians within a space but also you at home can have play with their light environment. If you access the website for Marie Sester project you can actually choose who the light falls upon and watch their reaction from the web cameras. At the moment the project is based in SFMOMA San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in the USA from October 30, 2010 - April 17, 2011 and in ZKM Center for Art and Media In Karlsruhe, Germany which is a Permanent installation launched November 19, 2006. The project is really amazing to be involved in when in the comfort of my home I can change and play with different peoples experiences within in a space. It is particularly exciting when you can get a reaction from someone making them stop and look up at the light or change their direction to see if the light will follow them literally putting people in the lime light.

The website with the interactive display is http://www.accessproject.net/index.html

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

KMA



video sourced from (http://www.youtube.com/user/tlw999)


KMA (Kit Monkman and Tom Wexler) is a UK based digital media design team, their main aims their work promotes conveys the use of movement, function, play and interaction within a public space. Their main media for achieving these aims is the use of lighting that reacts with pedestrian movement. The light projected onto the floor often links strangers together with strands of light. The installations are modeled upon natural events such as swarm and large masses of animals, creating a moving digital sculpture. Although none of this could be achieved without the interaction and activity within the public spaces. KMA’s most well known instillation was in London’s Trafalgar Square. The instillation known as Flock took place in February 2007 transforming the 625 meter squared space into a ballet stage. The instillation projected ballet dancers on to the ground that would dance on the spot. The instillation was a great success as many of the pedestrians would dance with the ballet dancers throughout Trafalgar Square.

Total Cost: £45,000
Duration: 3 weeks
Lightings used: Christie Roadster s+20k-sxga+20000
lumen 3-chip DLP digital projector

John Pawson plain space design museum












John Pawson speaking on his ideals of plain space
second video sourced from (http://www.youtube.com/user/PhaidonPress)



This exhibition at the Design Museum celebrates the work of london based architect John Pawson. The exhibition is showing a great amount of John Pawson’s work through out his career highlighting his very minimalist approach to design. There are many models all at different sizes and stages of design development, the exhibition even houses a 1:1 room designed especially for the exhibition for the visitors to understand his approach in a even clearer detail. The whole exhibition is really quite refreshing to walk through particularly after walking along the cluttered london streets. Everything feels designed for functionality and it has a pure beauty to the models and images.

The exhibition is open until the 30 January 2011