Archive for December 21st, 2005

Karl Schroeder, “Cyberspace, R.I.P.”

Great Quote I thought I’d put on since I was recently asked what the relationship between cyberspace and interactive architecture is.

Cyberspace, RIP by Karl Schroeder from Future Now

“It’s this overlay of the virtual over the real that makes the cyberspace metaphor obsolete. Cyberspace, after all, is conceived as something like the astral plane–a digital reality that exists “elsewhere.” But it’s precisely this “elsewhere” that’s being eroded by applications like Davison and Reid’s augmented reality system. Increasingly, the digital world is being married to the real world, with surprising results.

My personal theory is this: when the only way to use a computer was to sit still and look through a little window (the screen) into a virtual space, the cyberspace metaphor worked best for us. But with cell phones, PDAs and geographical applications such as store-finders and the proposed “taxi” key for cell phones (which simply summons the nearest cab when you press it), we’re no longer staring through a window into cyberspace. The window’s been broken, and the cyber world has spilled out into our own space.”

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Peter Marino - Tokyo - Chanel

With a 10-floor palace of glass at the ritziest of all Tokyo addresses, Chanel launched its biggest boutique in the world. The store opened December 4, 2004. This lavish building in the Ginza district features a concert hall, a restaurant by celebrated French chef Alain Ducasse, and 1,300 square meters of shopping space featuring designer items sold nowhere else.

Designed by American architect Peter Marino, the 56-meter high building is set to dominate the architecture of the elite Chuo-dori avenue. It has a massive curtain wall of glass that encapsulates a nest-shaped block of aluminum in Chanel handbags’ signature tweed pattern.

The glass facade will light up Ginza each dusk to dawn with 700,000 embedded light-emitting diodes. The interactive system consists of over 6 kilometers of control cables, 5 floors of industrial control closets, 3 master control computers, and 65,000 micro computers processing over 32 trillion instructions per second.

An innovative system of 1,120 square meters of canvas roll blinds and state-changing electronic privacy glass allows office workers to see out by day but provides a black background for the display at night. The first of its kind in the world, the facade of a building becomes a giant television screen that delights passers-by.

From inside and outside the LED technology appears transparent, allowing the office worker a clear an unobstructed view of the world during the day. The street view presents the worlds largest black and white video wall at night. What I like is how thisinteractive architecture has intergrated within the chanel branding to bring something new to its aesthetic.

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