Arch. Myriam B. Mahiques Curriculum Vitae

Monday, August 9, 2010

Postales antiguas de Buenos Aires

Ayer recibí un email de una amiga con estas postales, salvo por las que tienen logo, desconozco el autor de las fotografías y el autor del email que las recopilaba. Pienso que tal vez hayan sido bajadas de google images. De todos modos, vale la pena compartirlas. Es la imagen del Buenos Aires de nuestros abuelos, la mayoría de ellos inmigrantes italianos y españoles.







Saturday, August 7, 2010

Terrazas del Portezuelo, San Luis, Argentina

Foto de Clarin.com
En un post anterior, yo ya dí mi opinión sobre la faraónica obra del gobernador puntano ¨Terrazas del Portezuelo¨, siga el link
Hoy me limito a mostrar la obra terminada, según el artículo de Daniel Moya para Clarin.com

"San Luis es otro país”, es un slogan que repiten los puntanos, tal vez, en referencia a las obras de autopistas, viviendas y a la reciente ley de inclusión digital que reconoce el acceso gratuito a Internet para todos en esa provincia. Quizá de esta afirmación también cuenta la nuevacasa de gobierno, inaugurada en las afueras de la capital. Un conjunto que por su escala monumental , materialidad y morfología vanguardistas, se distancia a pasos agigantados de la arquitectura tradicional de la ciudad; y parece acercarse a las estrategias urbanas y arquitectónicas empleadas en Brasilia para representar al poder.
Emplazado sobre un cerro de 20 hectáreas y en un entorno agreste, el nuevo conjunto se organiza en una sucesión de terrazas escalonadas . En el perímetro de la base del cerro se disponen cuatro bloques que albergarán a los distintos ministerios provinciales. Por rampas que atraviesan las terrazas, se sube hasta la parte más alta, en la que un zócalo gigantesco alberga un nivel gastronómico y cultural. Sobre su cubierta, se desarrolla la última terraza, una gran plaza seca convistas a la ciudad. Aquí, el conjunto se corona con tres edificios triangulares que, en conjunto, componen una especie de pirámide fragmentada en tres tajadas de vidrio y acero oxidado. Estos bloques, que ya albergan a la residencia del gobernador y a las oficinas de la gobernación, iluminados causan impacto por su contraste material con el entorno. Aunque, conceptualmente, el conjunto pareciera inspirarse en su estructuración jerárquica , en los históricos zigurat: una tipología que data de la antigua Mesopotamia, típica en las culturas sumeria, asiria y babilónica. Los zigurat también remataban una sucesión de terrazas escalonadas, en lo más alto, con un fastuoso templo piramidal, reservado sólo para los nobles; y su propósito era acercar el templo al cielo, al cual se accedía desde un nivel “más terrenal”.
Proyectada por el arquitecto Esteban Bondone, la nueva casa de gobierno puntana fue bautizada Terrazas del Portezuelo, por su locación: el posible punto fundacional orginal de San Luis; una “puerta” de entrada a la ciudad, conformada entre las serranías. El megacomplejo, que costó 350 millones de pesos y alcanza los 90.000 m2 de superficie construida, es presentado también como un Conjunto de Descentralización Administrativa de San Luis. Pero, en realiad, de lo que se trata es de la mudanza desde el centro a la periferia de la casa de gobierno, con todas sus competencias y autoridades.La nueva casa es la apuesta del gobierno puntano para festejar el Bicentenario y viene a reemplazar a la antigua, inaugrada en el primer Centenario.
Otras inauguraciones
El 25 de mayo se inauguró en La Punta, una localidad a 20 km de la ciudad de San Luis, una réplica del Cabildo de Buenos Aires, como éste lucía en 1810, sin sus posteriores cercenamientos. Se alza junto a otra copia, la de La Plaza de Mayo con su Pirámide. Su costo: $ 13,8 millones. 
Junto a la nueva casa de gobierno se está construyendo el Obelisco Puntano: una torre de 130 m de altura que alojará un mirador y 200 estaciones con imágenes de la historia, en homenaje al Bicentenario. Este nuevo hito está valuado en 37 millones de pesos.

Instant cities and attractors: the example of San Cayetano

Attractor. Generated by Myriam Mahiques
Attractor. Generated by Myriam Mahiques
¨An attractor is a set towards which a dynamical system evolves over time. That is, points that get close enough to the attractor remain close even if slightly disturbed¨. This is a simple definition from Wikipedia. The geometric result of the attractor image is a fractal.
Conceptually, some cities or neighborhoods have ¨attractors¨, in which inhabitants are a complex system and no matter what, they keep close to a certain attractor. We can imagine a monument, a place of reunion that has a special meaning for the system, like our Plaza de Mayo. But the strongest I¨ve seen, at least in my country, is Luján Cathedral where thousands of parishioners gather for some special dates, and the one that most impresses me is San Cayetano church, in the neighborhood of Liniers, Buenos Aires.
Picture from La Nación
San Cayetano´s day is today. He is the saint of bread and work. To access the church today, parishioners coming from afar, build an instant city in a couple of days, with tents. The streets full of them. They share their experiences and food with other ¨neighbors¨ and keep on waiting till the church is open. After the event is finalized, everybody picks up their stuff and get back home.
A clear example of an instant non regulated ¨city¨ getting closer and closer to an attractor, San Cayetano.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Descubren la entrada a un túnel olvidado debajo de Teotihuacan

Teotihuacan, foto de http://www.destination360.com/
TEOTIHUACAN.- Investigadores del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH) de México descubrieron en esta "ciudad de los dioses", ubicada 45 km al nordeste de la ciudad de México, un túnel a 12 metros de profundidad que conduce a galerías debajo del Templo de la Serpiente Emplumada.
Sergio Gómez Chávez, director del proyecto Tlalocan, explicó que tras ocho meses de investigación se determinó que el conducto fue cerrado hace más de 1800 años por los teotihuacanos [que precedieron a los mayas y los aztecas], por lo que los arqueólogos serían los primeros en ingresar en él dentro de unas semanas, cuando reinicien la exploración.
Acceso al túnel. Foto de la nación.com
Detalle del templo de la Serpiente Emplumada, de Wikipedia
Un georradar detectó a la mitad y al final del túnel tres cámaras de gran tamaño; las hipótesis establecen que pueden tener dimensiones de 100 metros cuadrados. El pasaje tiene una longitud de entre 100 y 120 metros.
En 2003, los investigadores encontraron la oquedad de 83 centímetros de diámetro de manera accidental, luego de una inundación que se presentó en la Ciudadela, y en junio del año pasado se inició la exploración.
Gómez Chávez indicó que el pasaje subterráneo pasa por debajo del Templo de la Serpiente Emplumada, y su entrada fue ubicada cerca de ese edificio. "Todo el proceso podría llevarnos dos meses de trabajo, pues debemos continuar la exploración con la misma sistematización para evitar perder información importante sobre las actividades realizaban ahí los teotihuacanos y que nos permita entender por qué lo cerraron."
No se sabe con precisión cuándo fue construido el túnel, pero existe la idea de que fue cerrado entre el año 200 y el 250 de nuestra era. "Probablemente luego de depositar algo en su interior. Una de las hipótesis es que dentro de las cámaras podríamos ubicar los restos de personajes importantes de la ciudad", dijo el investigador.
Los arqueólogos estimaron que los teotihuacanos arrojaron hasta 200 toneladas de piedra y tierra en el túnel para cerrarlo. Hasta ahora, se han encontrado allí más de 60.000 objetos de jade traído de Guatemala, obsidiana y concha.
Los arqueólogos creen que el túnel debió estar vinculado con conceptos relacionados con el inframundo, "de ahí que no se descarta que en este lugar se hubieran realizado rituales de iniciación e investidura divina de gobernantes", y que puede haber sido el elemento más importante y sagrado en torno del cual se hicieron las primeras edificaciones en este lugar hacia el año 100 antes de Cristo y donde luego se construyó la Ciudadela.

Artículo de Emilio Fernández Román, para El Universal. Reproducido en La Nación, suplemento de Ciencia y Salud.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

City Center in Las Vegas, Nevada

Picture from Architectural Record.com
I'be been in Las Vegas twice, and I have to confess the first time was shocking for me, because everything looked like a giant scenography. I was disgusted to see the Venetian, with a "pond" below an oversized bridge, and the Eiffel tower intertwined in weird constructions. Needless to say the bottle of Coke. And so on.
Next time, I was rushing to a wedding ceremony last year and had no time to think about architecture, but I could realize Las Vegas is growing fast, despite the economy. This is when you can enjoy the City, looking at the City lights at night, from the last level of the Stratosphere tower, is a very nice experience. And I also like that one can walk on the strip.
So, you can see, two different opinions from me and I presume I'll change my mind again and next time I go, if I can forget my profession for a couple of days, I'll be happy to see it again.
I reproduce today some paragraphs from an article by Joann Gonchard, for Architectural Record. I don't like whatever happens in this basement, it's too kitsch, but I'll complete my post if I have the chance to visit it.
Picture from architectural record.com
" Even before the economy tanked, few would have called the scope of CityCenter anything less than incredibly ambitious. The 18-million-square-foot development, which officially opened on the Las Vegas Strip in December, includes almost 6,000 hotel rooms, 2,400 condominiums, 38 restaurants and bars, a convention center, a shopping mall, a Cirque du Soleil theater, and a 150,000-square-foot casino. All of this was designed and built in just over five years for $8.5 billion, making CityCenter reportedly the largest and most expensive commercial project in U.S. history.
CityCenter was conceived to be more than just big. MGM Resorts International (until recently MGM Mirage), which owns the complex with Dubai-based Infinity World, had a set of lofty goals that included LEED certification and the creation of an urban core for the notoriously sprawling city. Instead of the pattern of isolated buildings spread out on big, open lots found elsewhere on the Strip, CityCenter needed to be “vertical, dense, and sustainable,” says J.F. Finn, AIA, project executive for Gensler. The firm acted as an extension of MGM’s design department, overseeing approximately 250 consultants and a cast of marquee architects that included Daniel Libeskind, Helmut Jahn, and Norman Foster, as well firms such as Tihany Design and the Rockwell Group for the interiors.
The project’s ultimate objective was, as one would expect, to generate revenue.
he high-rolling architects were part of MGM’s business strategy, intended to differentiate the complex from the kitsch and flamboyance that have been associated with the Strip at least since Philadelphia architects Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown, and Steven Izenour published Learning from Las Vegas in 1972.
The concentration of buildings on the site was as much a result of the realities of the now-defunct real estate boom as it was the outcome of a new Las Vegas development paradigm. “Property values on the Strip had skyrocketed,” says Sven van Assche, vice president of MGM’s design group. “We had to consider the return on investment for the amount of land,” he explains, referring to the 67 acres formerly occupied by the Boardwalk Hotel and Casino.
For site master planners Ehrenkrantz Ekstut & Kuhn, the challenge was to develop a scheme in which “the buildings would create space, not just be attractive objects,” explains firm principal Peter Cavaluzzi, FAIA. His goal was to create a plan characterized by a mix of uses, pedestrian-oriented spaces, and buildings brought right up to the property line to form a street wall directly on the Strip.
CityCenter’s buildings have earned a total of six LEED Gold certifications. The collection of plaques notwithstanding, it seems a bit of a stretch to call so much air-conditioned space enclosed largely by glass (even high-performing glass) in the middle of the desert “sustainable.” However, the complex does deploy some notable resource-conserving strategies, including an 8.5-megawatt natural-gas-fired cogeneration plant. It generates enough power to satisfy about 13 percent of CityCenter’s electricity demand. But the real benefit comes from capturing the thermal energy produced as part of the generation process and using it to heat the buildings’ domestic water supply and provide space heating in the winter, says Mark Powasnik, senior vice president at WSP Flack + Kurtz, designer of the plant. According to Powasnik, it is the first cogeneration system of its type in Clark County, Nevada.
Unfortunately, CityCenter’s parts don’t quite gel into a cohesive ensemble. The buildings come across as a collection of individual expressions jammed together on a tightly packed site. The structures do define a few spatially interesting outdoor rooms, including a small park sandwiched between Crystals and the Aria. But most of the other outdoor spaces aren’t particularly pedestrian friendly. One example is the long boulevard that leads from the Strip to the Aria’s main entry. The roadway, framed by the Mandarin, Veer, and Crystals, is impressive, especially when viewed from the passenger seat of a limo. But on foot it is a different experience, encumbered by level changes and footbridges.
Though imperfect, CityCenter, with its density and urbanist aspirations, could well represent the next wave of Vegas development. But those who love the Strip’s flashy neon, outsize stucco temples, and theme-parklike atmosphere need not worry that this landscape will disappear anytime soon — at least not until the economy recovers."
Read the full article:

Introducing Marcelo del Valle´s artistic photographies


Marcelo del Valle is an Argentine photographer in Southern California. His pictures, based on different subjects, are amazing. His work makes a simple thing look like a great artistic object. This is one of my favourites, the conjunction of the steel fabric with nature´s own fabric; building and environment together in our perception.
I have selected some more, where complex urban and architectural thoughts are simply shown in one shot. All pictures in this post belong to Marcelo del Valle, and are protected under author´s license. Do not reproduce them without his written permission. 
Here we have  examples of the fusion between Arts and Architecture.








Sunday, August 1, 2010

Architectural Exhibition Presents Unrealized Visions of Berlin

German architects (and brothers) Hans and Wassili Luckhardt designed this building for exhibitions and concerts in 1948
Central Potsdamer Platz. A project by Daniel Libeskind, 1991
From Spiegel on line International; article by Ingeborg Wiensowski:
Berlin's state of flux has inspired architects like no other city. There have always been holes in the cityscape, both metaphorically and geographically. A new exhibition presents architectural visions that were never realized. By showing the spirit of the times, the exhibits offer inspiration for the future.
There are plenty of people who agree that Berlin is an ugly city -- especially when compared to more attractive metropolises like London, Paris or Madrid. Then again, which city has seen as much history as Berlin? No other city was destroyed to the same degree in World War II, and no other city divided afterward.
Rather than discouraging architects and urban planners, the German capital's divisive history, with all the joy and tragedy it entails, has never ceased to inspire. They have flocked to compete in architectural contests from all over the world -- and this despite the fact that most of the entries in these competitions, which took place throughout the 20th century, could never become reality.
Currently those unbuilt plans can be seen on display at Café Moskau, an appropriately historical building from the early 1960s in the city center. The exhibition, named "The Unbuilt Berlin," presents a hundred ideas from 100 architects in the form of plans and drawings. These come complete with supplementary information in respective folders, as well as 13 models created especially for the exhibition to demonstrate some of the plans.
Ludwig Hilbersheimer´s project, 1928
Martin Wagner´s project, 1929
Two Years Collecting
Architect Carsten Krohn, 44, spent two years collecting the unbuilt Berlin projects from throughout the 20th century. He used the €40,000 ($51,600) in subsidies from the Capital Cultural Fund in Berlin, money set aside to enhance the culture in Germany's biggest city, to publish a wonderful catalog that documents all of the unbuilt projects chronologically, with images and text.
During the exhibition Krohn is also showing short films in which he conducted interviews with 29 architects. Among them are big names in contemporary architecture like Daniel Libeskind of the United States, Alvaro Siza of Portugal and Dutchman Rem Koolhaas, who, in 1991, famously quit the panel assessing the reconstruction of Berlin's central Potsdamer Platz because he felt the conditions that the city's administration had given for the architecture were too restrictive. Krohn even managed to get an on-camera interview with shy but venerated German architect Ludwig Leo, who gave up the profession after completing several grand buildings in the city.
Unbuilt Icons
The main features of the exhibition, though, are unbuilt architectural projects from between 1907 and 1997. Some have become modern icons, such as Mies van der Rohe's plans for a skyscraper on Friedrich Strasse in 1921 -- such buildings were unheard of at the time -- while others have simply became notorious, such as the gigantic designs for Hitler's utopian German capital, Germania, developed by his architect Albert Speer.
The city's history is seen through the plans that were never realized. With the erection of the Berlin Wall and the division of the city, a lot of planned building never happened: Such as the 1958 blueprint that Swiss-French architect and urban planner Le Corbusier developed for the city's reconstruction after WWII. A large part of Corbusier's plan, which did not actually win the competition anyway, stretched into the east of the city. The fall of the Wall in 1989 was also disruptive. For example, in 1988 Italian architect Aldo Rossi won the contest to build the Museum of German History in Berlin near the Reichstag. But that design, too, has since been consigned to history.
The exhibition begins with early plans for the central Berlin square, Pariser Platz, by Austrian architect Joseph Maria Olbrich. It is actually astounding to see how many of the locations the exhibition covers that remain unfinished today -- they are either still being planned, are unbuilt or currently under construction.
So Modern They Could Be Built Today
Some of the plans still seem so fresh and so modern that one can imagine them being commissioned today. One example of this is the 1925 plan by Dutch architect Cornelis van Eesteren for Berlin's famous Unter den Linden boulevard. The plan envisages maintaining older buildings at the east end of the street, while building four-story commercial buildings, with towers reaching up to 45 meters (150-feet)high, at the west end. At the interface there would be a 170-meter tall high-rise. Nearby, on the historic Gendarmenmarkt square, German architect Hugo Häring, who once shared an office with van der Rohe, came up with a logical design for a city of high-rise buildings. For Ludwig Hilbersheimer, who taught at the Bauhaus School, this was the ideal place for his radical 1924 vision of a "commercial city," his answer to Le Corbusier's urban planning.
Equally uncompromising was the 1928 "Tiergarten-ring" by young German architect Werner Kallmorgen, who was just 26 at the time. He imagined a 14 kilometer- (8.7 mile-) long, four-story development encircling the famous Berlin park that would enclose it, thereby turning it into a recreational area. Berlin architects Ursulina Schüler-Witte and Ralf Schüler, who established an architectural practice together in the city in 1967, had a similar idea: They wanted to cover 9.5 kilometers of the highway that runs through the city's Grunewald forested area with terrace housing. Crazy? Not really. These sorts of redevelopment plans, where older areas are covered with newer buildings, are currently being planned in Rem Koolhaas' offices as a scheme of last resort.
Holes in Cityscape Inspiring
Science fiction fans will not be disappointed either. In 1988, American architect and artist Lebheus Woods, who now mainly works in architectural theory, developed a plan for a "Berlin Underground." His was a vision that was supposed to lead to the formation of an underground government, which would eventually lead to a reunified Germany.
Of course, there are also less pleasant discoveries to be made at the exhibition. For instance, German architect Emil Fahrenkamp, the architect behind the wonderful 1930s Shell House in Berlin, considered his 1937 plans for a competition for a college complex that might have become part of Albert Speer's notorious "Germania" as a sign of the "glorious past."
Over the years, and especially after reunification, Berlin has been a city of dreams for many architects -- after all, there are not many cities where one would find such huge holes in the center of the such a big city. Even in this century, many of those holes still exist -- and great architectural ideas are still being solicited. Examples include the closed Tempelhof airport and the as-yet-unbuilt, and much disputed, Berlin city palace. There is plenty of inspiration to be found at this exhibition. It is so good that it won't just excite retired architects, it even has the potential to rouse sleepy city planners from their slumber.
Keep on looking at pictures:

Sentiment of Beauty

Picture from xiongdudu.com
Of these catenations of sentiments with visible objects, the first is the sentiment of Beauty or Loveliness; which is suggested by easy-flowing curvatures of surface, with smoothness; as is so well illustrated in Mr. Burke's Essay on the Sublime and Beautiful, and in Mr. Hogarth's analysis of Beauty; a new edition of which is much wanted separate from his other works.
The sentiment of Beauty appears to be attached from our cradles to the easy curvatures of lines, and smooth surfaces of visible objects, and to have been derived from the form of the female bosom; as spoken of in Zoonomia, Vol. I. Section XVI. on Instinct.
Sentimental love, as distinguished from the animal passion of that name, with which it is frequently accompanied, consists in the desire or sensation of beholding, embracing, and saluting, a beautiful object.
Image from specialisttravel.greenbee.com
The characteristic of beauty therefore is that it is the object of love; and though many other objects are in common language called beautiful, yet they are only called so metaphorically, and ought to be termed agreeable. A Grecian temple may give us the pleasurable idea of sublimity; a Gothic temple may give us the pleasurable idea of variety; and a modern house the pleasurable idea of utility; music and poetry may inspire our love by association of ideas; but none of these, except metaphorically, can be termed beautiful; as we have no wish to embrace or salute them.
Our perception of beauty consists in our recognition by the sense of vision of those objects, first which have before inspired our love by the pleasure, which they have afforded to many of our senses: as to our sense of warmth, of touch, of smell, of taste, hunger and thirst; and secondly, which bear any analogy of form to such objects.
When the babe, soon after it is born into this cold world, is applied to its mother's bosom, its sense of perceiving warmth is first agreeably affected; next its sense of smell is delighted with the odour of her milk; then its taste is gratified by the flavour of it, afterwards the appetites of hunger and of thirst afford pleasure by the possession of their objects, and by the subsequent digestion of the aliment; and lastly, the sense of touch is delighted by the softness and smoothness of the milky fountain, the source of such variety of happiness.
From The Temple of Nature; or, The Origin of Society. By Erasmus Darwin, 1802

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