Saturday, March 19, 2011
USBank Plaza Abstraction with flock of granite
Just as I snapped this a very polite guard said no pictures were allowed. I explained that I was waiting for permission to take photos in the atrium and was just doing some studies for a larger format camera. The guard wished me luck.
This is a view of Loren Madsen's "Birds in Flight" sculpture. It was created in 1981 of 276 suspended granite blocks, polished on the bottom and rough on top. It fits the triangular theme of the entire magnificent 8 story atrium. The wires look like a new wave harp, and it would be interesting to have contact mikes picking up live vibes from the unique instrument.
Friday, March 18, 2011
Find your SO on the skyways?
Ctrl+Alt+Repeat from Architecture Minnesota on Vimeo.
A "product concept" that has to happen...social media app that lets you know someone who has read Freud but won't stalk you is coming down the TCF feeder into your zone, and you guys can duck into Dunn Bros with an introduction courtesy of the cyber yenta. How you do on a first date chaperoned by the zillion speed walkers skywaying by is not affected by technology, dude.
When Britt Aamodt interviewed the skyway habitues for her KFAI documentary, one of the first questions she asked was about dating on the skyways. It seemed possible, without the meat market ambiance of local bars, the group concurred. I am a senior citizen and happily married, but I couldn't do justice to the skyways without acknowledging the libidinous frisson that characterizes urban passage. I acknowledge it, and amble on.
As I am typing this, "Bones" is on in the other room. There was an episode a couple of years back that hinged on a smartphone app for locating other members of a dating service who were within a dozen yards or so of you. The zeitgeist demands that this product get made, and helps a generation of iPad heatseekers and seekerettes find their SOs in the skyways.
See this video and 23 other Videotect skyway contest entries here.
As far from Minnesota as you can get and still be on the skyways
Dan Yudchitz and Aaron Squadroni have listened to electronic experimental music and studied extreme graphic design deconstructivism. They benefitted from it as few people do then went and produced an edgy AND upbeat piece that is hardcore formal exploration AND affect-laden interpretive video.
I recognize many spaces here, and I have moved through them myself. They reflect me, and ultimately our skyways, in ways it would be hard to talk about at the Chatterbox Cafe. Very creative and also an exploration of the innate formalism that almost makes the skyways unbearable, in a bearable way. Enjoy.
A video interpretation of the way of the skyways...
Jeff Beddow from Architecture Minnesota on Vimeo.
This is my entry in the skyway video contest sponsored by AIA Minnesota magazine. It is a distillation of a year's worth of photographing the skyways, soundtracked by some electroacoustic ocean sonar riffs. The skyways are a trip. It takes a lot of left and right brain to get your head around them.
You can go here to vote for it, or something else you like. But if you think the skyways are a cut above the norm, or a floor above the street, check out these videos and vote.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Coming and Going -- Qwest Women sponsor a craft sale today
Ann Johnson, with Annies Home Made Mixes, restrains her enthusiastic lawn ornaments.
These ladies are selling their wares on the corner of the Qwest building arcade as you head through the 5th Street Skyway. They are there today and next Friday. Unique pottery and lawn ornament designs, great prices, check it out.
Vested interest in Girl Scout cookies
It's that time of year again. Like Robins on the lawn, girl scouts in the skyways herald the coming of spring This accomplished young lady shows off her merit vest, her mother, and her hand written sign in the pursuit of support for her Scout troop. Karen and Nikki, Troop 11450, 501 Marquette Skyway level, St. Patrick's Day, 2011.
The old Lady poses for her portrait
Happened to catch the light just right walking across the 3rd Ave. skyway this morning. I am scouting vantage points to shoot the best of the old buildings downtown with my view camera, and this is a study for that project.
Municipal Building, Minneapolis.
Cub Foods Gas Main fire from Downtown Minneapolis
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
5 comments on 5 Videotect entries
Here in no particular order are my comments on some of the Videotect Skyway Video entries.
In brief, the premise is to present a point of view about skyways, and in particular their relationship to the streets, in a 2 to 4 minute video. The contest was launched at the end of last year, and all entries are posted on the Architecture Minnesota Vimeo site.
I entered a video myself, and believe myself to be mature and objective enough to respond to the entries without too much crazy self-absorbed obvious flaming egotistical bias. My interest, here and elsewhere, is to encourage and stimulate a conversation about the whole phenomenom of skyways, in particular the Minneapolis System.
1. Adam Ferrari
In brief, the premise is to present a point of view about skyways, and in particular their relationship to the streets, in a 2 to 4 minute video. The contest was launched at the end of last year, and all entries are posted on the Architecture Minnesota Vimeo site.
I entered a video myself, and believe myself to be mature and objective enough to respond to the entries without too much crazy self-absorbed obvious flaming egotistical bias. My interest, here and elsewhere, is to encourage and stimulate a conversation about the whole phenomenom of skyways, in particular the Minneapolis System.
1. Adam Ferrari
Adam Ferrari from Architecture Minnesota on Vimeo.
Adam has selected and illustrated a very clear argument from Jane Jacobs. To my view, Jacobs represents a valid if somewhat archaic vision of cities as bad rural communities, different in density but not in essential human character. She doesn't see much hope for American cities, based as they are on convenience, shallow status display, and simplistic planning goals that maximize the prerogatives of indifference and exploitation. I think someone needs to pull the patches out of Jacob's quilt and resew it into a pattern that can accommodate the simultaneity of optic fiber and Glee reruns, the collapse of the American Federal model of global conquest, and the resurgence of chastity among urban teens. If that seems murky to you, you can understand why I didn't try to gloss Jacobs in my video.
Recommended. Well, all the videos are recommended. You can watch the whole group in an hour, give or take.
2. Dustin Rehkamp and Matt Gerstner
Dustin Rehkamp and Matt Gerstner from Architecture Minnesota on Vimeo.
This video starts with a Chris Marker feel,evoking La Jetee, using the skyways as a metaphor for the unconscious psychic geometries that keep us isolated in the urban landscape. The ending is a goof. I like the "husky" business guy and the winsome gal. It is an O Henry story told in the idiom of YouTube.
3. IDE[A]
IDE[A] from Architecture Minnesota on Vimeo.
A deconstruction of the experience of movement through the skyway, achieved with fluent manipulation of the plasticity of video time and space. It feels like a distracted conversation, with glances away, lulls, a pleasant background. The time flow stutters and spirals around, the spatial flow bunches up and skips, like sparse lunch crowds in the skyways themselves. This is very slick, sophisticated use of the medium and will impress everyone. For me it captures the skyways as kaleidoscope: fragmented but symmetrical, gem-like in their rough urban setting, too abstract to inspire fondness but earnest enough to admire. The skyways, I mean.
4. Sammy Sarzoza
Sammy Sarzoza from Architecture Minnesota on Vimeo.
This video has actually earned a few "likes" on Vimeo, which is unusual for this set of videos. Maybe over time some others will garner this onsite approval. The soundtrack sets a bouncy, retro, drive-in movie concession break mood. You have to like it, really. The message is simplistic to the point of loony irony without spoiling the enjoyment of the entire package. It will grow on you.
5. Alan Polk
Alan Polk from Architecture Minnesota on Vimeo.
Readers of this blog have already encountered Alan in his role as inventive skyway videographer. I have to confess a bias in favor of anyone who can strap a Sony to a Unicycle and push it through the maze. More to the point, Alan is the first to directly oppose the rural to the urban, and pry out the outlandishness of building walkways in the sky contrasted to the down to earth sentiments of a "real" Minnesotan. If the protagonist was forking silage, I would say Alan had created a straw man argument here. But he has done better than that, he has seen the skyways through the eyes of Lake Woebegone, and found them wanting.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Skyway detail
Most of the skyways...well, actually all of them, are fairly severe in their design and finish. I have made reference to the doo-dad school of design which results in a few post-modern jollities affixed to the otherwise dour face of the skyways. But they are not a rollicking lot. They do not party-on dude. The blandness of their visible structures, the flat industrial finishes and minimal patterning of their carpets contribute to the disorientation most people feel from one skyway to the next. Add to that the inability to see landmarks from most skyways, and the tendency to be completely disoriented is almost complete to newcomers.
I suspect that that is really a strong subtext in the lack of affection we feel for these modest footpaths stapled as afterthoughts to most of our harum-scarum city architecture.
Why do I like them more all the time? I don't know. I like difficult teachers and I like convoluted stories. I like discovering new things in the familiar, and familiar things in the new. I have grown to distrust sheer spectacle, and have grown to depend upon the dependable, not the brilliant, for getting from day to day.
So maybe it takes more than an open eye to see the skyways in their true virtue. Maybe it takes an overlay of imagination that sees mischief and possibility where there is really only practical response to a harsh enviornment.
Maybe it takes more than eyes to see the virtue of Minneapolis. Maybe it takes imagination to see a possible life here, and many happy accidents to make one so.
In Caelum ego, Et in Arcadia Ego
"In the sky I am, and in paradise I am also"...a paraphrase of Poussin's famous painting title.
"I am death, and I am of the sky today."
Gravestones, black bird, and moon in the branches of a tree at Lakewood Cemetary, Minneapolis. The spirits, the birds and the moon really invented the skyways of all cultures. Our spirits imagine flight in our dreams, and we speak of departed spirits flying. The birds know the intricate subtleties of the way of the sky. The moon defines the counterpoint to day and night in the month-long cycles that give rise to mood and tide alike. But do we really know the skyway? Do our jumbo jets and space shuttles give us command of the skys? Do we walk through the skies as habitants, or as dreamers only?
Today the skies are ribboned with the faint pulse of radioactivity from Japan, and the keening grief of thousands of victims slashes the wind above the battered island. Modern technology and ancient ambitions collide. In the cemetary it all comes to the same end.
But from the place where it all ends, we lift up our eyes and see new beginnings. It is a cycle, not a straight path. That is the true way of the skyway.
Speaking of breathtaking atriums downtown
The Hennepin County Government Center was built in 1974 by John Carl Warneke and Associates. He had designed the Honolulu State House and the JFK Memorial. Warneke had a grand vision of the gravitas of government, and wanted the new county court house to hold its own with Long and Kees spectacular City Hall/Courthouse across 5th Street. He also wanted it to be the anchor point in a civic square which in turn reestablished a focus for the whole downtown area...a focus once imagined in the early years of the 20th century but was lost to the vicissitudes of aimless development.
The interior of the court house has a 350 foot high ceiling, which was the highest in the Western Hemisphere when it was built. The building is comprised of two towers joined by a set of magnificent glass panes that are 13' on a side, and which had to be custom made and then completely redone when the seals on the double panes didn't stand up to the extremes of Minnesota weather.
These days we can look back on the ambition of local politicians to house their doings in a setting that recalls the grandeur of great governments, great dreams. I watch people scurry through the Public Service Level, their heads bent and eyes glued to their phones, and wonder if we will ever elevate the practice of government to such levels implied by this magnificent atrium. I hope so. I bet my life and career on the prospect of a civil service that was in fact a noble calling, not a mean one, and not a calling at odds with the very citizenship that it serves.
Militant fountains in the Government Center
City's shortest skyway contest continued
Monday, March 14, 2011
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