Thursday, August 14, 2008
Water wrongs
Monday, August 11, 2008
You too can speak French
Thursday, August 7, 2008
The above picture has nothign to do with this post, but it is wicked sweet.
We had another Lunch and Learn today, my last one of the summer, where we talked about noise control in high end condos. The best thign that I got out of the presentation was that designers need to think about where noise is coming from during the conceptual stages of design and not wait unti people have moved in and start complaining and calling their lawyers. So if you are interestd in noise control building products go to www.kineticnoise.com for more information.
Wasatch Community Garden
Monday, August 4, 2008
New Post Monday,
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Paper toys
LunchandLearn landscape forms
Monday, July 28, 2008
Soda Springs
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
An exercise in futility
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Lagoon
Thursday, July 17, 2008
A Green Car Dealership
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Holy Ice Cream Batman!
Monday, July 14, 2008
Soccer and French Food
Ok, I went to the Real game this last Saturday and woohoo! It was a great game. Real is now number one in the Western Standings. The first goal was scored in minute 3. Anyways it was a blast. The other thing I wanted to talk about first thing on Monday morning is how to make a yummy and easy french dessert. Here is what you will need. 4 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup flour, 1 tsp vanilla, 1 1/2 cup milk, and a pound of cherries or other fruit like berries.
Instructions:
Preheat your oven to 350. Crack open the eggs and mix them up with 1/2 cup of the sugar. Then whisk in the flour making a nice thick batter. Next pour in the vanilla, and the milk, but pour the milk in 1/2 of a cup at a time stirring the batter until all of the milk is incorporated. If you have ever made crepes you will have a thin crepe like batter. Now take your fruit and toss it with the remaining sugar to coat it and make it all delicious. Put the sugar coated fruit into a pan. Any sugar that didn't end up stuck to the fruit can be discarded, I like to sprinkle it on cereal. I can't tell you exactly what pan to use, I used a tinfoil one that had store bought cinnamon rolls in it. I think that if you use a brownie pan you should be just fine, or a 9x13 but this will be a little too big. Anyways, after you have the fruit int he pan pour the batter into the pan, and place the whole thign in the oven. Bake for 40-45 minutes until the cake looks sponge like. Take it out and let it set for about 5 minutes and then spoon it up and eat it. It will not look like a cake it will look like a custard but it will be delicious. Good luck.
Friday, July 11, 2008
Soccer Game
Last Thursday we had an office party, so IBI paid for me and my family to go to a soccer game! Hooray it was fantastic fun. The game itself was a dirty ugly game with little ball control and only a few shinning moments, but the crowd was so into it. They fed us to, Famous Dave's, it was good. The game ended in a tie but I just might be a Real fan and I think that when I get back to Manhattan I would like to take myself and any others interested to a KC Wizards game. I was honestly worried that the game may go to long and my sons would be ready to leave but since soccer only lasts two 45 minute halves they were not balling at the end. get the pun? Anyways after the show they had a fireworks display in honour of Independence Day. God Bless America. My baby boys both loved the fire works, whenever I ask my oldest what he thought of the game he just mentions the fireworks. The next day we drove down to Provo to attend a big wonderful parade. It had big balloons, and WWII Veterans, a whole bunch of guys dressed up in Star Wars outfits, Tongans doing the Hakka, marching bands, politicians, and a tank. Yup, that's right a real functioning WWII Hellcat tank. That was my oldest son's favourite, I am glad he didn't say the cheerleaders because he is turning into a 3 year old flirt. Oh, well. I guess I am going to have to have "the talk" soon. I mean the talk about tying his own shoes, right now he has Velcro ones but someday he will be wearing laces. The last thing I wanted to mention in this entry was we also visited a pioneer village over the weekend. Everyone dresses up in pioneer clothes and they have old buildings and a train to ride on, and horse rides. A step back in time. Anyways, the 2 coolest things were, ringing the anvil and the candy cannon. The ringing of the anvil means they take one anvil and put it on the ground. Then they put a pound of black powder on the anvil. Then they put a second anvil on top of the powder. Then they light it, and THEN the second anvil shoots 30 ft into the air! Super cool. The Candy cannon was a little cannon that they filled with salt water taffy, add a little black powder, mix in a crowd of sugar crazed kids and you have a recipe for success. Anyways, I hope to go out and visit a New Urbanist development called Daybreak this weekend. http://www.daybreakutah.com/ http://www.calthorpe.com/ I am also going to the Real game tomorrow, I'll tell you how it was.
Parking Day, Sept 19, 2008
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Brown Bag Concert
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Mid-Internship Review
Monday, June 30, 2008
Everyone should see this movie.
Friday, June 27, 2008
http://www.hamiltonpartners.com/location_overview.php?region=UT&type=office&id=68
Now that you have seen where I work, I can talk about what I really want to talk about and that is our site visit last Wednesday. We were able to visit the LDS Conference Center’s Rooftop Garden. We were also graced by the presence of Eldon the Head Gardener and Steve the Head Maintenance guy who both offered wonderful onsite insight to the really cool gardens. I tell you, the garden was so cool that I was giddy during the whole 2 hour tour.
To start off Eldon told us that National Geographic recently photographed the garden for an rooftop garden article that will published sometime next year. National Geographic will visit many of the world’s best rooftop gardens so keep your eyes peeled. Then Eldon explained that while the rooftop garden was the focus of the tour he wanted to stress that the entire site is technically a rooftop garden. The ground floor plaza is actually built on top of a parking complex, therefore all the street level planters and trees had to be built on a roof. Eldon then told us that the planters are filled with expanded shale which is light weight but structural strong enough to support trees. This expanded shale has organic matter mixed in but due to the deadline of the project many trees were planted without any organic material. These trees are easily noticed because they are all yellowy, chlorotic? Steve then pointed out a couple of trees that were also suffering because the architect had selected trees not suitable to Utah’s basic soils. After that we went up to the top of the Conference Center and got to visit the gardens.
Wow, I have to admit that when I think of greenroofs I often think of a tundra landscape. Mosses and low growing grasses dotted with red and brown lichen. This roof top garden has 30+ foot trees growing on it. The overall design of the garden is a representation of when the Mormon Pioneers arrived in the Salt Lake Valley. The northeast corner is planted with pine trees, broadleaf evergreens, aspens, elderberries, and an impressive range of forest flowers, representing the Rocky Mountains. The southwest is planted with a mixture of grasses, flowers, bristlecone pines, and shrubs to make it look like the valley did when the pioneers came down from the mountains. Also to the east is a fountain which symbolizes the mountain streams. This waters source turns into a series of rivulets that lead to the very edge of the building and pour down a multitier waterfall to the street level below.
At this time I need to thank KSU for teaching me to appreciate a prairie ecosystem, because the meadow part of the roof was beautiful. Utah has ahad a wet cold spring and so the normally mustard yellow summer meadow was alive with purples, and blues, pinks and yellow and all sorts of urban birds flying around and eating stuff. It looked really cool. Yet, iot took a lot of hard work to maintain. Steve said that the meadow was especially difficult to maintain because it needed frequent weeding. Invasive and noxious weeds are regularly deposited due to birds, and wind. The birds pose another problem too. Around the perimeter of the rooftop there is a planter known as the eyebrow. Think of the hanging gardens. The planter hangs out from the wall and forms a ledge where the cascading plants grow. During the springtime this planter is full of juniper berries and other avian delicacies, so what happens when birds eat? They poop, all over the sidewalks below. I guess every design has some flaws and offers us something to think about.
The last treat of the tour was that we got to go inside and see some paintings that were done by one of our LA’s father. They were three beautiful portraits of the Apostles. All in all, the site visit was wonderful and today I learned that there is a rooftop garden of note on top of the new city Library. I guess I have to go visit that too. Now, I did not take a working camera and so I do not have a lot of images.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Great Pizza
Monday, June 23, 2008
Green Rating, not Green Washing
In the news article it also noted that the City Creek Center is participating in a new Pilot LEED program for Neighborhood Development. Well, I have spent the last couple of weeks reading that Pilot program and trying to understand and summarize it for the office. It is a very interesting rating system, and there are a number of developments across the U.S. that are participating, so if there is one close to you, investigate and tell me all about it. For a list of the projects go here: http://www.usgbc.org/ShowFile.aspx?DocumentID=3546
To view the LEED Rating System go here: http://www.usgbc.org/DisplayPage.aspx?CMSPageID=148
But the USGBC is not the only one attempting to come up with a rating system. In fact the Sustainable Sites Initiative is an organization backed by the ASLA, the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, the United State Botanic Garden, and others. They are also in the process of creating a rating system for landscapes. For details and a very interesting amount of information visit: http://www.sustainablesites.org/ I would write more but the office actually has some work for me to do this afternoon. Peace out!
Thursday, June 19, 2008
LunchandLearn
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Details, beautiful details.
Guy: Hey Intern can you use CAD?
Me: Yes,
Guy: Have you ever done details before?
Me: Yes
Guy: Good put all of these hand drawn details into CAD.
So what details did I draw you ask? A paving pattern, an asphalt walkway, a wooden structure, and a retaining wall. Sounds kinda like a construction assignment not so long ago…. The best thing was that I finished the details in six hours, they were red lined the next day, and I didn’t even have to worry about when progress was due. Hooray!
Friday, June 13, 2008
Market Station Party
Well, it turns out that the main investor in the project has a daughter who was discovered by Elite Models last year, http://www.elitemodel.com/. This investor was so happy that his daughter was joining a modeling agency that he decided to build a development with Elite Models as one of its anchors. With such a posh company involved there was bound to be a great groundbreaking party. I was excited to see a finished space and to see how it performed during a large event I was excited to see landscape architecture at work!
I attended the event with: my sister and four of her friends. When we got to the location I was disappointed to see the plaza space I was imagining was really a street hemmed in by one finished apartment building and a chain link fence. So nothing was finished, nothing no buildings to define space just some port-o-potties. Anyways the event was hilarious they had a fashion show, and then the city council got out and dug up some dirt with shovels that were spray painted gold. Then they had a half pipe with some skateboarders, and then they picked the fashion show winner and then all the cool people with VIP bracelets got to go inside. Being but a humble intern I did not get a VIP bracelet. Oh well.
During the fashion show all of the models were wearing these wrist thingies, and so after the show we approached one of the ladies holding a bunch of these wrist thingies and we started talking to her. It turns out that she makes them herself and sells them at http://dtut-cuffs.blogspot.com/. Now these are not my kind of power bands but cool nonetheless. Maybe I will get some for the fall, or the winter when it is absolutely freaking cold in Seaton Court. All in all it was a fun evening, mostly due to my sister’s presence. I am just crossing y fingers and hoping that all the ground breaking I attend will have super models.
The second first entry.
Aside form being an intern I have been exploring the local culinary scene and I am not disappointed. There is a wonderful array of foods and sweets to sample here in SLC. I also went to a groundbreaking ceremony with skateboarders and supermodels. My kind of people. Narf! But that is another story for another time.
Ciao!