CV
May 19, 2008
i have started the job hunt today! – one CV carefully hand delivered. not exactly pushing the boat out, and maybe setting myself up for disappointment approaching my favorite first… but after this next few weeks of ‘one last big push’ for hand-ins i will start in earnest….
i am also picking up my IDS diary from the binders tomorrow which is quite exciting – for a hand-in on thursday.
francesca :
May 19, 2008
i have heard back from Francesca the environmental consultant today, who may have some useful info about building in China from her experience of building in the region. but i will have to wait until after the weekend as she is crazy busy. we will see…
newsflash two.
May 14, 2008
after the shock of the tornado in Burma the other week, two days ago there was the biggest and most devastating earthquake that China has seen for years and the epicenter of the quake was in the province directly north of my site. the reason i am mentioning it here is that the risk is the same as my site in terms the landslides triggered by the quake, and the excessive regional rainfall currently exaggerating the problem.
sadly, many have lost their lives in collapsed buildings due to the quake, but many lives could have been saved by reducing the many landslides that buried many other buildings and obliterated roads making the movement of aid impossible in some places. the planting of trees in combination with drainage channels and piling which is very much in the plans of the Chinese government, but is slow to implement on a such a massive scale will help. this is why my project proposes such an important system that can be realistically and quickly reproduced on a village scale, to protect the local population from landslides and provide a longterm sustainable and productive eco-system.
news flash
May 13, 2008
even old news is good news, and i just found this….
on www.planetark.com
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email to environmental consultant
May 12, 2008
Francesca is working on a school not far from my project site in the mountains of SW china, and although I have quite a lot of content for my IDS Report, I showed it to a few people today and it was suggested that I contact Francesca to see if there was anything she could add in terms of comparison between UK and Chinese construction management, practice and law.
I need to get this diary in to the binders tomorrow though, so you may have to check my sketchbooks for the last installments of my bloggers diary……
china query: francesca.galeazzi@arup.com, francesca_galeazzi@hotmail.com
hello Francesca, (Galeazzi)
I met you for a tutorial chat at the MET the other week.
my project is on a hillside in tiger leaping gorge, SW china, made from solid wood and stacked coppiced willow insulation.
I am sure you are busy, but I was just wondering if I could pick your brains on a couple of things related to your experience of building near there.
this is just to make a couple of comparisons between UK construction considerations and Chinese/remote locations in the mountains.
what would you say would be the hardest thing to get done on site over there that in the UK would be easy?
how does health and safety on site and in the design compare to the UK – lifting, balustrades etc?
how are construction materials transported to site, and how possible was it to source them locally?
what sort of contract was used for the project?
I would be super grateful if you had time to answer any or all of these questions.
thanks very much for your time,
Anna.
rationalisation
May 9, 2008
some simplification of the individual unit ‘boxes’, but keeping the same articulation language on the front elevation with the separate units defined by the stacked timber in between – creating the effect of a natural fallen rock mass on the hillside.
i have also brought the bathroom away from the back of the house (the side up against the embankment) giving it natural light and ventilation, as well as using it as a sliver through the house defining the change from less private to more private as you move through the house.
the justification for the insulated parts between rooms becomes more clear as i show storage recesses are cut into them for the rooms, and the charcoal-stove flue passing through the one between the kitchen/living space.
it may seem a bit scary to be making alterations at this stage, but they are all good things to consider, and although i now need to do more drawings, none of the changes alter the general concept, and i am happy to have had the opportunity to discuss and rationalise my project further so it is as realistic and workable as possible for the local Tibetans that would in theory be building it.
planning the final count-down :
May 6, 2008
last crit ever….
May 2, 2008
a strange feeling – possibly exaggerated by my lack of sleep – that yesterday was my last crit ever.
i was one of the first to present, and it was good to get it out of the way and to have a discussion with the panel while they were still quite fresh.
it was a useful process, to push to get some things completed, and to put it up on the wall always helps me to clarify where my strengths and more importantly at this point – my weaknesses lie.
i had plenty of information, research and ideas to put up on the wall, but there was not enough big wow images amongst the detail – so i need to crack on with this.
we discussed the issues of building in a remote location in china, and the possibility of having trouble getting enough skilled builders willing to take on the challenge of the construction methods i am proposing. it was suggested that i need to have good justification for my chosen forms if i was going to convince the Tibetan locals that my buildings are worth the effort, and therefore a certain amount of rationalisation may be necessary in the design, and a very clear construction sequence plan.








