Categories
Community Travel

The Phipps Spring Show with Hays LAS

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Hays Landscape Architecture Studio

has prepared a melodic transformation of the well-known Phipps Conservatory in downtown Pittsburgh. The exhibit opens the morning of March 22nd for crowds to enjoy the sensory sights and sounds. Hays has infused blossoms with the blues in the sunken garden swamp. In the Palm Room the designers give a whimsical nod to the swing era of the 1930’s. Transcend further down the path of music history and experience the loud and colorful world of rock n’ roll. You will find classical music in the formal Broderie Room, a location popular for proposals and weddings. A peek below, with Phil’s sketch of The Grand Crescendo in the Palm Room, offers a hint of what more you will find over the rainbow.

Palm room perspective final~

From Phipps’s Site :  An Invitation to Join us March 22nd

Drawing inspiration from Pittsburgh’s musical soul, Phipps comes alive with melody and rhythm

Take a toe-tapping journey through a musical world where melodies bloom like flowers. This year, Spring Flower Show combines music and garden design for a sensational new exhibit filled with sights, sounds and scents that are sure to have you singing.
From one room to the next, musical genres from swing and big band to blues and rock ´n roll will be showcased through whimsical sculptures made out of up-cycled instruments; surprising planters like an upright piano; and carefully orchestrated plantings designed to mimic the rise and fall of musical notes as they move up and down the scale. Popular songs will also be piped through some of the rooms, adding to the multi-sensory experience.
The stars of the show, of course, will be the thousands of vibrant tulips, daffodils, hyacinths and other seasonal favorites, in addition to some new highlights, including several varieties of primula, foxtail lilies and Himalayan blue poppies. Arranged in spectacular groupings according to color and theme, each plant will be carefully placed to add scope to and enliven each scene, from blue and purple flowers representing the blues genre, to rainbow-hued blooms coming together to form the bars of a larger-than-life xylophone.
Spring Flower Show, designed by Hays Landscape Architecture Studio, Ltd., runs through April 20. Exhibit hours are 9:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. daily and until 10 p.m. on Fridays. Admission is $15 for adults, $14 for seniors and students, and $11 for children (ages 2 – 18). Members and children under 2 enter for free.

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Presenting Sponsor 
Photos © Paul g. Wiegman

Categories
Poetry

Revitchitect

Learning the program is almost as difficult as the following title.

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Revitchitect

The wrench has not a parallel side.

Our tools are changing.

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Riveting, reviting, revealing,

Collapse the ribbon panel.

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There are option bars full of properties.

Where one once played with the heaviness of a pencil,

My cursor chooses buttons,

Pressing project browsing for ideas.

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There is a parameter of bounding edges,

Tip-toeing the thin line between getting it in and

getting it right.

The palate, please, an application for the tongue

-the menu taste, something to fight this hunger

to finish.

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Could a structural model link to my center?

Allow just something to let me stand where

Navigation leads into crisscrossed streets?

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Statues, these, drawn with everything in plan

but referenced where?

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Lost on a layer, in an object

Gone to modify, those deep wells,

A spring of unknown dimensions.

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And, someday you will swim,

Break the surface of a mountain reflection.

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Tip, clip, clasp, and snap.

Pin walls to their places.

Hold roofs where they are associated

Or losing the foundation,

When the earth shakes and

Work is left in clouds.

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What a constraint

To the opening and closing of a mind.

Standing soldiers are pushed off the ledge,

The world now thinks in a computer.

The instances are fleeting in our visual world,

Virtually useless.

Categories
Community

Main Street Gallery Event

At The Main Street Gallery, 145 E. Main Street in St. Clairsville Ohio

the show will continue into March 2014.

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Sculptural pieces by Eric Price. Wall paintings and photography by

Melanie Steffl-Thompson, Patricia and Andrew Croft.

Categories
Community

Gallery Event – February 13th

Flyer

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I would like to invite you all to visit Main Street Gallery

for out next event featuring sculptor, Eric Price.

Eric specializes in both realistic and caricature creations.

He operates “Eric’s Priceless Pieces,” and creates custom

hand built sculptures for his clients.

Please stop by our gallery for a reception and an opportunity

to see Eric’s work on Thursday, February 13, 2014 from

6 pm-9 pm.

Categories
About Me

Marathon Fuel

That is, my 1st Marathon ever and I am quite excited!

Though my first marathon won’t be until this October I am going to prepare this spring by running up to the 18 mile marker. My brother suggested the schedule below: Hal Higdon Training Program: Novice 1 for beginner marathoners . I’ve begun to follow the regimine but was glad that the first week I could actually run 6 miles on a Saturday. For the real race I plan to begin training a few weeks ahead of this schedule.

Marathon_18weeks

With a few tweaks suggested by a friend massage therapist, the program will change to rest more during weeks of long runs. As for my running diet I’ve never had a problem consuming carbohydrates. I found these articles online that focus on different high-glycemic carbohydrates:  Running Competitor and Active.

The next item on my running list-of-things-to-do is to find running partners! I’ve just moved to Morgantown and a friend of mine runs with a group on the weekends. I look forward to joining them soon and hope to find a partner who won’t mind running the 18-miler with me!

Categories
Architecture

Fairmont State visits Mills Group

Talking about Architecture

Ronchamp by Corbusier

Last Friday our Morgantown office of Mills Group hosted six students from Fairmont State University. The architectural students were eager, as juniors and seniors, to learn what an architect does post-graduation.  Different people throughout the firm spent time describing the different aspects of our work. Interiors were discussed, then our latest and greatest video editing programs to create walk-though scenes were described and enjoyed. Sustainability was a hot topic and the nearby Farmer’s Market building was a great example of how infrastructure within a tight downtown grid can provide dual purposes for multi-use real estate. Transforming from a parking lot into a Farmer’s Market pavilion on summer weekends, the structure is a practice in sustainability. Hosting solar panels for electricity and recycling rain-water are two of the features among many design decisions for this “green” place to showcase local vegetables.

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I focused on three things for the Architecture discussion: Putting together a drawing set, how to become an architect, and what opportunities there are for architects.

Daniel Liebskind in Berlin_The jewish museum

I began with describing how architects act as mediators. We collaborate between the client and the contractor. Architects have to be great communicators. We know code issues, the proper way to tie in a footing, and we provide clients with a unique perspective on design and the arrangement of spaces.

The first step to beginning a project is being awarded the work. The architect must provide clients with a contract of architectural fees. We’ve got to be great listeners. We are tasked with putting down client desires on paper to be built! We have to discuss their goals, the site, timelines, budgets, and expectations. We must be organized and upfront.

So, let’s say the architect wins the project! The next step is pulling together all of the information that we’ll use in order to provide a realistic solution to what the owner is trying to achieve.

Carlos Scarpa at Brion Cemetary in an Vito d'Altivole Italy

The students and I began to talk about what inspires us. I talked about finding images and using them as a discussion tool with clients. It’s easy to differentiate between what one likes and doesn’t like when something is sitting front of you in black and white. We talked about sketching. Some students offered that they didn’t like being influenced during their inspiration periods and wanted instead to come up with something original.

We began to talk about the type of projects we’re working on in order to discuss how one should begin the designing process. I told the students, excitedly, that I learned something new every day; a new program, a new way of constructing something. Another young man talked about designing a building about ‘earth.’ Some projects were mobile home based. Projects in previous semesters were huge –healthcare sized works. After I discussed editing architecture, one student discussed a professor who was assigning a project a week. People new the profession, or new to the classroom feel daunted by where to begin. I offered beginning with what makes sense. If you feel strongly about one area then start there. Move off from that starting point. Don’t worry about editing. Just get something on paper. The perceptive gentleman thought this may be the lesson the project-a-week-professor was displaying. Eventually this task of design comes more naturally, and you find a rhythm to it.

St. Marks Venice

I referenced past blogs about designing a ReFab Kitchen, and using images to discuss projects with clients to provide architecture inspiration.

At a certain point in the design effort, after the floor plan is approved, the architect needs to refocus the efforts and start to think of what a contractor needs to price and build the project.

We talked about ways we were presenting our work: sketches, computer programs, drafting, and sculpting. I quickly showed them construction documents and told them that they’d be doing things like this for the majority of their time while learning to work in an office.

Lake Como Architecture

The architect builds a construction set that is formed of lots of pages of details and then you solicit bidders. We talked about what a contractor needs in these drawings.

Once the set moves on to construction, you become a negotiator between the client and the contractor; acting as an agent for the client in an informed manner.

I encouraged them to ask to get out in the field and be a part of client meetings so that eventually they would feel comfortable running the meetings.

Then it was time for… How to become an Architect

How to be an Architect

As a student seek grants and scholarships. It’s easy to acquire $1000 but, not so easy to pay it back. Fairmont State is currently working to achieve an accredited Masters Program. The students were involved in making this very important step move forward!

Last on my list, but the most enjoyable segment of my talk, was on opportunities for Architects.  It was at that point that I had the opportunity to discuss my favorite part about my architectural education: Travel!!! The images I used to describe my time through Portugal, Spain, France, Italy and Switzerland have been sprinkled throughout this blog.

As an architect you may work in all types of firms: architectural, graphic, landscape architectural, or architecture/engineering firms. Go wherever you get a job.

Live where you want to live and experience firms of all sizes. It’s not going to be the last job you have, but working somewhere gets your foot in the door. You’ll take any experience and build upon it. Be exposed to projects of all sizes.

We learn to be perceptive. Sketch and think of why you like places when you are in them. Critique them and discuss it with your friends. You have the opportunity to influence the way people live. You get to see your work in a livable dimension, it’s an incredible task we’re presented with and the profession needs young people to keep it active.

Keep a work life balance and be healthy. Everything can be an inspiration. Balancing what you love with your work is a great career to embark on!

Trevi fountain in Roma

Venice

Good job to Mariah for planning an afternoon to help young architects open their eyes to our profession.

Categories
Poetry

Sailboat

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Sailboat

Feeling the boat

Turn and woo

Small corrections were all it took

To keep the sails tufted

The tassels swinging

Sails lifting

And the wind pulling us further and further

From shore.

 

Categories
Poetry

A Spell to Fall Asleep

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A Spell to Fall Asleep

I step on a dream –

The poof of genies,

Sparkles and powder,

Midnight turns India

Turret colors as dizzying as a carousel.

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Magic carpet, wind in the face,

Fun like bouncing in blow-up castles,

Riding horseback over Ireland,

Long-flowing chestnut hair falls in billows.

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Mushroom steps sound hollow,

The elves play a tapping tune,

Someone in the shade slides a lullaby guitar

Lightly like a harp winding down.

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The eyes close and bring one to foreign memories,

Candy cane swirls, the trumpet sounds,

And morning has all-of-a-sudden awoken.

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Categories
Poetry Travel

A Second Life – Green Mountain Coffee

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A Second Life – Green Mountain Coffee

Off their main streets

Woven through the state

Vermont basks in astute minds.

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All that goes, all that moves,

Lily flower thoughts are allowed here.

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Here, on a painted porch

Heavy brackets lifting an ancient roof

Painted cedar shingles

At the brow of the green mountains

Mansard roofs, cupola peaks are

Standing guard over

Everything that will be accepted.

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Try the Green Mountain Coffee yourself and enjoy the tour through Waterbury’s historic train station!
Categories
Poetry Travel

Woodstock Rests

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Woodstock Rests

Woodstock rests

In the hollows of Lincoln.

The inn and brewery serves the thru-hiker double rye

Greeting the kids

Walking from Georgia to Maine

When there are only four hundred miles to go.

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We recommend Woodstock Inn and Brewery!