Ethel Baraona | dpr-barcelona

Architect who develops her professional work linked to a number of technical publications in the architectural field.

web | dpr-barcelona
blog | dpr-barcelona BLOG
twitter | @ethel_baraona
theory:

Aristide Antonas | Population of Fragments

the Value of Garbage: Electronic Urbanism's Sewage Management? »


#kamworkshops2011 | a photo-question towards @dpr_barcelona: How did sewage and waste management fit into Zenetos vision for Electronic Urbanism?

Caption and image no23 of the publication on Electronic Urbanism (Arhitektonika Themata 7/1973) shows the use of sewage and recycle collection…

via: the-value-of-garbage


after john hejduk

after john hejduk

The Domestication of the Future, or the Demonization of the House by Michael Vlasopoulos and Petros Phokaides published by Mit Thresholds 38:Future

Architecture Theory Since 1968 [scribd] | free 825 pages book edited by K. Michael Hays

Source: scribd

The Reading Machine frm the post LIBESKIND’S MACHINES by Lebbeus WoodsThe Reading Machine frm the post LIBESKIND’S MACHINES by Lebbeus Woods

The Reading Machine frm the post LIBESKIND’S MACHINES by Lebbeus Woods

“Space is essentially a mental construct. We imagine space to be there, even if we experience it as a void, an absence we cannot perceive.
Space is always the implication of objects. For an object to exist, we think, it needs some kind of space. So, the first space we can imagine is the space occupied by objects.”
Lebbeus Woods | The Question of Space“Space is essentially a mental construct. We imagine space to be there, even if we experience it as a void, an absence we cannot perceive.
Space is always the implication of objects. For an object to exist, we think, it needs some kind of space. So, the first space we can imagine is the space occupied by objects.”
Lebbeus Woods | The Question of Space

“Space is essentially a mental construct. We imagine space to be there, even if we experience it as a void, an absence we cannot perceive.

Space is always the implication of objects. For an object to exist, we think, it needs some kind of space. So, the first space we can imagine is the space occupied by objects.”

Lebbeus Woods | The Question of Space