Monday, May 23, 2011


Necessity is the mother of invention. I don't remember when or where I learned that. But I'm wondering if apathy grows out of not needing anything. Or if people have stopped thinking they need to change things because they don't seem to have a problem.
That's why I don't think the way we build things is likely to change all that much in my lifetime. LEED certification and Zero Emission buildings are a nice start, but at times it feels like buildings are designed as they always have been and then later, after the initial design has been accepted (i.e. It doesn't look like a tree-hugger designed it), do the architects begin to “make it green.” And so they make a few changes, maybe add some solar panels, special cladding, and bam! They've achieved LEED status.
We don't REALLY want to change how we build things. We've got a good thing going here. Materials are cheap, they've all been safety tested, we know how long it'll take for them to burn, to melt, collapse. But what are we really doing to the environment? What have we been doing to the environment? Isn't there a better way?
I think there is. I think if we look to the places that have little resources to work with, where the intention is to build using only what is needed and use materials to their full potential, I think we can learn a lot. We live in the age of information. But that information is being wasted on people who don't care to change because they don't need to, except when they feel guilty about their lifestyle. There needs to be a better attempt to exchange information, not by making the have-nots jealous of what the wealthy, wasteful havers have. Not only by having the research centers of the northern hemisphere share what they know about how to improve how the southern hemisphere builds. But what if the north learned from the south how to make better use of our resources and to make wealth out of our waste? I think great progress could be made in the building construction industry if we rethought our priorities, and built what we need, not everything we want.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Who am I and what is it that I want to do?
I am an architect (the building kind, not the IT kind) trying to make connections between people, between opportunities, between resources, between ideas.
Let’s face it, I am an unemployed architect in a city that churns out at least 600 new architects every year who can work longer hours, travel at a moment’s notice, love to spend hours in front of the computer using drafting software to draw what someone else tells them to, and don’t yet have kids (I have 3!) that have to be picked up early from school when it’s flu season.
I can’t compete. I’m not even interested in competing.
According a press release by UN Center for Human Settlements, up to 100 million people in the world are homeless, the majority: women and dependent children. Even worse, there are at least 600 million people living in shelters that are life threatening or health threatening.
Sorry, got sidetracked trying to google how many unemployed architects there are in the world at the moment. Let’s just say a lot. (The UK lists about 7% of registered architects as unemployed).
The UN say that 5 million deaths and 2 million permanent disabilities could be avoided yearly if all housing could be brought up to a minimum standard.
Do you see where I’m going with this?

The technology is out there, qualified people are everywhere, materials, resources, ideas. We have everything we need, it’s just not getting to the right place at the right time in the way that makes it most useful. And that’s where my connections come in.