Arch. Myriam B. Mahiques Curriculum Vitae

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

The cataphiles of Paris catacombs

Photo by Stephen Alvarez
Excerpts from the article by Neil Shea, for National Geographic:

Paris has a deeper and stranger connection to its underground than almost any city, and that underground is one of the richest. The arteries and intestines of Paris, the hundreds of miles of tunnels that make up some of the oldest and densest subway and sewer networks in the world, are just the start of it. Under Paris there are spaces of all kinds: canals and reservoirs, crypts and bank vaults, wine cellars transformed into nightclubs and galleries. Most surprising of all are the carrières—the old limestone quarries that fan out in a deep and intricate web under many neighborhoods, mostly in the southern part of the metropolis.
Into the 19th century those caverns and tunnels were mined for building stone. After that farmers raised mushrooms in them, at one point producing hundreds of tons a year. During World War II, French Resistance fighters—the underground—hid in some quarries; the Germans built bunkers in others. Today the tunnels are roamed by a different clandestine group, a loose and leaderless community whose members sometimes spend days and nights below the city. They're called cataphiles, people who love the Paris underground.
Entering the quarries has been illegal since 1955, so cataphiles tend to be young people fleeing the surface world and its rules. Veterans say the scene blossomed in the 1970s and '80s, when traditional Parisian rebelliousness got a fresh jolt from punk culture. Going underground was easier then, because there were many more open entrances. Some cataphiles discovered they could walk into the quarries through forgotten doorways in their school basements, then crawl onward into tunnels filled with bones—the famous catacombs. In places only they knew, the cataphiles partied, staged performances, created art, took drugs. Freedom reigned underground, even anarchy.
A "cataphile" . Picture by Stephen Alvarez
Behind the neat stacks of skulls, tibias, and femurs in the Paris catacombs lies a chaos of bones. In the 18th and 19th centuries the city dug up millions of skeletons from over-flowing cemeteries and poured them at night into old quarries. Photograph by Stephen Alvarez

At first the surface world barely noticed. But by the end of the '80s the city and private property owners had shut most of the entrances, and an elite police unit began patrolling the tunnels. Yet they couldn't manage to stamp out cataphilia. The young couple I saw climbing out of a manhole that morning were cataphiles. Maybe they had been on a date; some of the men I've explored the quarries with met their future wives in the tunnels, trading phone numbers by flashlight. Cataphiles make some of the best guides to the Paris underworld. Most Parisians are only dimly aware of its extent, even though, as they ride the Métro, they may be hurtling above the bones of their ancestors.
Keep on reading:

NAHRO 2011 Summer Conference and National Conference & Exhibition CALL FOR PROPOSALS

The National NAHRO Conferences provides a unique educational opportunity for housing and community development policy makers and practitioners to network and learn how public, private and nonprofit groups can create affordable housing. In conjunction with the educational offering are committee meetings and pre/post conference seminars.
With the level of educational programming, peer-to-peer learning and orchestrated networking events, National NAHRO conferences have long been considered the most important events of the year among industry leaders. Share your knowledge and help shape the ideas and strategies that will influence industry professionals.
Submissions are now being accepted for concurrent session presentations at the NAHRO 2011 Summer Conference in Louisville, KY on July 28-30 and the 2011 National Conference & Exhibition in St. Louis, MO on October 23-25.
To submit a proposal go to http://nahro.scsubmissions.com
If you have questions, email at conferenceprogramming@nahro.org

Monday, February 7, 2011

Los festejos del Año Nuevo Chino en Buenos Aires

Festejos en el Barrio Chino de Buenos Aires. Foto archivo de La Nación
Cuando yo pasaba en colectivo por el incipiente Barrio Chino de Bajo Belgrano, Buenos Aires, rumbo a la facultad, no hubiera imaginado nunca cómo crecería y además se afianzarían los lazos culturales.
No ha sido sencillo, y recuerdo uno de mis primeros posts en este blog ha sido el rechazo de los vecinos ante la sorpresiva construcción del Arco Chino, en la entrada del Barrio.
De hecho, nuestra convivencia con inmigrantes asiáticos comienza a fines de los 70´, cuando el gobierno abrió la importación sin impuestos de sus productos, creando una crisis horrenda en el mercado local. Los productos que fueron novedad al principio, en unos pocos años fueron causantes de hostilidades, por la competencia económica. Y, por lo que veo, ha llevado 30 años lograr la integración cultural.
De la nota del diario La Nación, con fecha de hoy, tomo estos párrafos y dejo el link para la lectura completa del artículo.
Foto Emiliano Lasalvia
¨Decenas de miles de personas se congregaron ayer en el Bajo Belgrano para celebrar la llegada del año nuevo chino, el 4709 del calendario oriental, que tiene como símbolo el conejo de metal. Fuentes de la organización aseguraron que durante todo el día más de 80.000 personas participaron en los festejos organizados por las asociaciones chinas y argentinas.
En Juramento y Arribeños la multitud se agolpaba bajo la mirada atónita de aquellos que pasaban en el tren. Al cruzar el arco chino, una pequeña ciudad oriental emergía y los dos dragones que habitualmente protegen la entrada del barrio chino eran rodeados por decenas de personas que querían una fotografía con el legendario animal.
El festival, que comenzó a las diez de la mañana, fue inaugurado oficialmente al mediodía por el ministro de Cultura de la ciudad, Hernán Lombardi, y por los integrantes del templo Fo Guang Shan, quienes estuvieron a cargo de la histórica ceremonia del "clavado de pupilas" que se realiza cada año para que el dragón "despierte".
Luego, en la típica "danza del dragón" acompañada de música con tambores, el animal recorrió todos los locales para darles augurio a los comerciantes mientras la gente intentaba tocarlo y fotografiarlo.
Este año el lema del evento es la integridad cultural, por eso hay eventos de danzas tradicionales chinas y también festivales de tango.¨

Sunday, February 6, 2011

DIY Do it yourself Urbanism

Dumpster pools
" No longer empty" 

I came across with this nice essay by Mimi Zeiger for the Design Observer Group. In these years of financial crisis, I've seen so many stores closed, foreclosures, our library closed at weekends, campaments, and so on. Desolation.
And now, it seems people is moving ahead with urban-domestic proposals.
This is an excerpt from Mimi's essay, the pictures are an excellent representation of this kind of " movement".
Parking day
Parking day
" Our current recession is inspiring its own strategies and tactics: It's increasingly a catch-all for a host of urban interventions. This is a trend that I like to describe with a mouthful of a title: Provisional, Opportunistic, Ubiquitous, and Odd Tactics in Guerilla and DIY Practice and Urbanism. With this verbaciousness, I hope to capture the tactical multiplicity and inventive thinking that have cropped up in the vacuum of more conventional commissions. These days vacant lots offer sites for urban farming, mini-golf, and dumpster pools. Trash recycles into a speculative housing prototype (see the Tiny Pallet House). Whether it’s The Living’s Amphibious Architecture or Mark Shepard's Serendipitor, the built environment speaks through mobile devices. Retail spaces hit by the recession are fodder for reinvention, as the art organization No Longer Empty transforms unleased storefronts into temporary galleries. Even the street itself is reclaimed. REBAR’s annual initiative, Park(ing) Day, urges global participants to use a pranksters wit to turn parking spaces into pocket parks, one quarter at a time."
Keep on reading:
All pictures downloaded from the article.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Symposium: Concrete Utopías.1960s ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM

Former bank of London or Lloyds Bank. By Clorindo Testa, Buenos Aires. Picture from buenosairesphotographer.com

The 1960s was a transformative decade for architectural practice in the Americas, Europe and Asia. It coincided with the social and cultural transformations initiated by student protests and the emergence of the global village theorized by Marshall McLuhan. During those years, a number of architects and urban planners began rethinking the utopian legacy of modernity by looking at the city as a new space and place of intense social interaction. A number of scholars and architects will convene at the University of Houston Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture to discuss the innovations of the utopian projects put forth during the 1960s as well as their relevance to today.
All events will take place in the UH Architecture Auditorium, Rm. 150.
The symposium is free and open to the public.
For more information email Michelangelo Sabatino at msabatino@uh.edu and/or go to NEWS at 

Friday, February 4, 2011

International Association for the Study of Environment, Space, and Place. Call for Papers

Bolivian festival. From companymagazine.org
SEVENTH ANNUAL CONFERENCE
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF ENVIRONMENT, SPACE, AND PLACE
SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT STATE UNIVERSITY: APRIL 29 - MAY 1, 2011
CONFERENCE THEME: THE SPACING OF FESTIVE ENACTMENTS
The Conference seeks to foster Crossdisciplinary—Interdisciplinary—Transdisciplinary conversations on the subject of the festive, festivity, festival in terms of spatial production: produced and producing. Presentations are to be 25 minutes with an additional 10 minutes for questions and discussion. Papers may be submitted for possible publication in the journal Environment, Space, Place. Panels are welcome.
Befitting a Feast: convivial, jovial, mirth, merrymaking, cheerful, rejoicing, glad, gaiety, joyous.
The festive is not merely a subjective feeling; the festive is not merely a spatial site designated/constructed to be a festive place. The festive involves spatial inscription including both enactments and built environments. The site of a World Series with its celebratory festivities becomes a site of horror during an earthquake. An ordinary city block becomes the site of the festive through the spatial enactments constituting “a block party.” Our goal for this conference is to examine festive enactments as taking place through the opportunities and limitations afforded by the spacing of built environments. How is spatiality itself agency in the production of the festive? How do festivities produce their own spatiality? How is built space to be constructed to promote the festive?
SEND ABSTRACTS OF APPROXIMATELY 200 WORDS BY FEBRUARY 10, 2011 TO

Troy Paddock: paddockt1@southernct.edu
Persons interested in chairing sessions should also contact Troy Paddock
Send abstracts of approximately 200 words by February 10, 2011 to,
Troy Paddock: paddockt1@southernct.edu
For topics and more info:

Thursday, February 3, 2011

MUSIC IN ARCHITECTURE - ARCHITECTURE IN MUSIC Symposium

Philharmonic of Berlin. From cotidianul.ro

From Michael L Benedikt, ACSA Distinguished Professor, Director, Center for American Architecture and Design at University of Texas at Austin:
"Architecture is frozen music," as Goethe once wrote, and the phrase continues to resonate in this age.
With new and traditional compositional techniques, new and traditional physical and sonic materials, and deeper notions of "performance" in hand, the Center for American Architecture and Design and the Sarah and Ernest Butler School of Music at The University of Texas at Austin are pleased to announce the MUSIC IN ARCHITECTURE - ARCHITECTURE IN MUSIC Symposium.
Scheduled for October 19-22, 2011, the Symposium will involve live performances of competition-winning composition installations and commissioned works, as well as paper presentations and roundtables, all with media coverage.
We would very much appreciate your forwarding this Call for Competition Entries and Call for Papers to architecture and music colleagues and students that you think might be especially interested:

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Definition of Biourbanism

Urban growth as an organism. Simulation by Myriam B. Mahiques

This definition proposed by professors Antonio Caperna, Alessandro Giuliani, Nikos A. Salingaros, Stefano Serafini, Alessia Cerqua, is reproduced on Thoughts of Architecture and Urbanism with their permission:
¨Biourbanism focuses on the urban organism, considering it as a hypercomplex system, according to its internal and external dynamics and their mutual interactions.
The urban body is composed of several interconnected layers of dynamic structure, all influencing each other in a non-linear manner. This interaction results in emergent properties, which are not predictable except through a dynamical analysis of the connected whole. This approach therefore links Biourbanism to the Life Sciences, and to Integrated Systems Sciences like Statistical Mechanics, Thermodynamics, Operations Research, and Ecology in an essential manner. The similarity of approaches lies not only in the common methodology, but also in the content of the results (hence the prefix “Bio”), because the city represents the living environment of the human species. Biourbanism recognizes “optimal forms” defined at different scales (from the purely physiological up to the ecological levels) which, through morphogenetic processes, guarantee an optimum of systemic efficiency and for the quality of life of the inhabitants. A design that does not follow these laws produces anti-natural, hostile environments, which do not fit into an individual’s evolution, and thus fail to enhance life in any way.
Biourbanism acts in the real world by applying a participative and helping methodology. It verifies results inter-subjectively (as people express their physical and emotional wellbeing through feedback) as well as objectively (via experimental measures of physiological, social, and economic reactions).
The aim of Biourbanism is to make a scientific contribution towards: (i) the development and implementation of the premises of Deep Ecology (Bateson) on social-environmental grounds; (ii) the identification and actualization of environmental enhancement according to the natural needs of human beings and the ecosystem in which they live; (iii) managing the transition of the fossil fuel economy towards a new organizational model of civilization; and (iv) deepening the organic interaction between cultural and physical factors in urban reality (as, for example, the geometry of social action, fluxes and networks study, etc.).¨

References:
Nikos Salingaros, Twelve Lectures on Architecture. Algorithmic Sustainable Design, Solingen: Umbau Verlag, 2010.
Nikos Salingaros, Antonio Caperna, Michael Mehaffy, Geeta Mehta, Federico Mena-Quintero, Agatino Rizzo, Stefano Serafini, Emanuele Strano, «A Definition of P2P (Peer-To‐Peer) Urbanism», AboutUsWiki, the P2P Foundation, DorfWiki, Peer to Peer Urbanism (September 2010). Presented by Nikos Salingaros at the International Commons Conference, Heinrich Böll Foundation, Berlin, 1st November 2010.
Milena De Matteis, Stefano Serafini (eds.), Progettare la città a misura d’uomo. L’alternativa ecologica del Gruppo Salìngaros: una città più bella e più giusta, Rome: SIBU, 2010.
Stephen Marshall, Cities, Design & Evolution, London: Routledge, 2008.
Peter Newman Tima Beatley, Heather Boyer, Resilient Cities. Responding to Peak Oil and Climate Change, Washington: Island Press, 2009.
Joseph P. Zbilut, Alessandro Giuliani, Simplicity. The Latent Order of Complexity, New York: Nova Science Publishers, 2007.
Sergio Porta, Paolo Crucitti, Vito Latora, “The network analysis of urban streets: a primal approach”, Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design, 33 (2006), pp. 705-725.
Juval Portugali (ed.), Complex Artificial Environments. Simulation, Cognition and VR in the Study and Planning of Cities, Berlin - Heidelberg - New York: Springer, 2006.
Michael Batty, Cities and Complexity: understanding cities with cellular automata, agent-base models, and fractals, Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 2005.
Christopher Alexander, The Nature of Order, 4 vol., Berkeley, CA: Center for Environmental Structure, 2002-2005.
Juval Portugali, Self-Organization and the City, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 2000.
Grant Hildebrand, Origins of architectural pleasure, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1999.
Stephen R. Kellert, Edward O. Wilson (eds.), The Biophilia Hypotesis, Washington: Island Press, 1993.
René Thom, Esquisse d’une Sémiophysique, Paris: InterEditions, 1991.
Antonio Lima-de-Faria, Evolution without Selection. Form and Function by Autoevolution, London – New York – Amsterdam: Elsevier Science, 1988.
Gregory Bateson, Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity (Advances in Systems Theory, Complexity, and the Human Sciences), Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 1979.
Conrad H. Waddington, Tools for Thought, London: Jonathan Cape Ltd., 1977.
Edgar Morin, La Méthode I: La Nature de la Nature, Paris: Seuil, 1977.
Ludwig von Bertalanffy, General System Theory, New York: George Braziller, 1968.
Read more about Biourbanism:
Gruppo Salingaros:

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails