What Type of Flower Are You?

As you might already know, every type of flower has a meaning and is bound to  transmit the feelings of the person who is offering it to us. We can consider flowers a perfect replica of the human life: planting . . . growth . . . . bloom . . . . withering. So, in a way it is expected to associate different flowers with different personalities.

flowerAre you known for your loyalty, strength and steadiness, then you might be a sunflower! Or maybe you’re bubbly, optimistic and super-friendly, then you… might want to take this fun quick quiz just now to find out what kind of flower you are

What Type of Flower Are You?

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Leave a comment below to tell us how accurate this is

The post What Type of Flower Are You? appeared first on Change your thoughts.

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Times Square – New York City – New York – USA (by…

Times Square – New York City – New York – USA (by Dominik “Dome”

New Autodesk System Streamlines 3D Printing of Large, Complex Objects

A team of engineers at Autodesk have been pushing the limitations of conventional 3D printing — not by redesigning the machines themselves, but by creating a network to harness their collective power. Autodesk’s “Project Escher” is a new printing system that utilizes the power of several 3D printers at once to fabricate complex parts in unison, reports FastCoDesign. The new system can increase production speed by up to 90%. 

While the benefits of 3D printing are undeniable, its lengthy process has impeded it from being rolled out in large-scale additive manufacturing. Designers in industries such as automotive, aerospace and construction want to utilize the power of 3D printing to form complex geometries, but as the printing is measured in weight per hour, large objects can take impossibly long amounts of time. 

Project Escher uses a gantry system with suspended 3D printing “bots,” selectively assigning a part of the model to each, producing a fully assembled final object. Autodesk’s hardware lead for the project, Corey Bloome, told FastCoDesign that there are no limits to the amount of printing bots you can have in the gantry, and the speed will increase with each bot added.

As the design currently stands, this system uses only 3D printers, but Bloome said that in theory robotic arms could be added to the gantry, allowing other elements to be embedded in the final assembly. This means that complex objects, such as cars, have the possibility of being “printed” in one sitting. 

Autodesk is still developing Project Escher in house, with the vision to start enlisting companies to experiment with their own processes in the near future. For more information, check out Autodesk’s video above, or the Project Escher website.

News via FastCoDesign

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Tate Modern Switch House by Herzog & de Meuron opens to the public



These new images by British photographer Jim Stephenson offer a look around Herzog & de Meuron‘s extension to Tate Modern in London, which officially opened on Friday (+ slideshow). (more…)

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Competition: win tickets to Assemble’s talk for the NLA Annual Lecture



Competition: Dezeen has teamed up with New London Architecture to give readers the chance to win one of five pairs of tickets to a lecture delivered by architecture collective Assemble later this month. (more…)

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💙 Swallow in the rain on 500px by Roberto Becucci,…

💙 Swallow in the rain on 500px by Roberto Becucci, Castelnuovo… http://ift.tt/1ObGPbT

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Breathe for iPhone Walks You Through Breathing and Relaxation Exercises

iOS: Anyone struggling with stress
understands that even a little time to relax can help a lot, and Breathe for iPhone is an app that walks you through simple breathing exercises to help you relax, de-stress, and find a little peace.

Read more…

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Trapezoidal glass panels create prismatic facades for SOM’s Beijing skyscraper



Skidmore, Owings & Merrill has completed a 55-storey tower in Beijing with exterior glass panels that function as prisms, capturing and refracting daylight (+ slideshow). (more…)

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Dezeen Jobs: latest jobs update

Dezeen latest jobs update

See the latest from our new and improved recruitment site Dezeen Jobs, including positions with Oppenheim Architecture + Design, Benthem Crouwel Architects and David Kohn Architects, whose projects include a house extension designed to look like the profile of a fox (pictured). This is also the last chance to apply for roles with Squint/OperaNC Design + Architecture, AB Rogers Design and more…

(more…)

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Inside “The Baltic Pavilion” at the 2016 Venice Biennale


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

As part of ArchDaily’s coverage of the 2016 Venice Biennale, we are presenting a series of articles written by the curators of the exhibitions and installations on show. The following text represents the curatorial statement for the exhibition of the inaugural Baltic Pavilion.

There are transformative efforts at play which are reprogramming an inert region beyond the delineations of separate nation-states. The Baltic Pavilion intends to explore the built environment of the Baltic States as a shared space of ideas. This exhibition and a series of related events presents a cross-section of Baltic space. In light of the Anthropocene, a new geological epoch, the developments in this region will unfold as a non-linear stratigraphy.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu


© Laurian Ghinitoiu


© Laurian Ghinitoiu


© Laurian Ghinitoiu


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

Transformative Efforts

Recent geopolitical developments around the Baltic States have created a sense of urgency for new spatial practices to be initiated, that both unite the region and underpin the foundations of the European Union. New infrastructural connections in the Baltic Sea, FSRU Independence, the natural gas storage ship in Klaipėda, and Rail Baltica, the pan-Baltic railway project are among the many examples of this new kind of architecture. The Baltic Pavilion attempts to unravel the conventions and instruments operated by a wide range of spatial practices, industries, and infrastructures that are actively transforming the built space of the three Baltic States, and the wider region. Without making distinction between abstract ideas and their material projections, the exhibition seeks to distill parameters and thought structures, to enable the formulation of a range of spatial interventions which aim to reconfigure the inert built environment of the Baltics.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

Inertia

Some elements of this built environment are too inert to be completely reorganised instantaneously—infrastructures, cities, and transport links are currently in a state of function, and so demand simultaneously specific practices to maintain their stability. At the same time, these structures also determine future possibilities. The Baltic Pavilion is interested in an ecology of practices that inscribe new policies onto existing material assemblies through procedures such as addition, transition, translation, integration, and assimilation—making use of what is already at work.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

Realia

Realia can be understood as a particular material object or idea—linguists use the term to highlight structures that cannot be translated from one language to another. The intersection between power structures, ideologies, and resistances on one side, and the assembly of things on the other, results in realias as authentic responses to specific material parameters. This project proposes a reading of spatial interventions as realia—formed in relation to a place.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

Region

The common denominator for the international team working on the Baltic Pavilion is a specific relationship to the Baltic region as a starting point for inquiry—it is an attempt to re-articulate architecture while responding to the logic of a particular place. Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania share common processes of the political, economic, cultural and infrastructural transformations – from the central planning of the Soviet Union to the current governmentality of the EU. Perhaps the phenomena of the shifting definition of the Baltic countries is a double fold—from the outside it is addressed as one region whilst on the inside it is often understood as three separate quests for identity. Thus, this project is an attempt to link contrasting concepts while analysing the conditions for integrity of the Baltic States through relation to a wider context.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

Anthropocene

The project takes a geological approach—it reads the things that compose this flat landscape as a stack of stratigraphic layers. Man-made space is understood as a sedimentary process and its infrastructures, as well as its mineral resources, are assessed as the key parameters that will define a development. This project functions as an intertwined cross-section cut through the current entanglement of identities, spatial practices, infrastructures, and geological resources.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

Horizon

The exhibition presents a horizon of artifacts—a field that can be observed as a version of what is at work—an image of realias and their links. The different exhibition passages each propose a structured reading of artifacts while at the same time opening up new interpretations. Multiple representations of realias are structured by way of a gradient from subjective, artistic images to operative images.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

Atmosphere

The horizon of artifacts cannot be observed in its entirety—a special installation interferes and obstructs its field of vision. A piece of lightweight, translucent, levitating 2000 square meter fabric restructures the hull of the Palasport to articulate relations between exhibits, visually fragmenting the space. The fabric plateau has special openings, creating a range of layered cavities. It functions as an optical device, allowing visitors to see the Palasport itself in a way that serves to highlight the ethical dimension of its architectural form. This fabric installation does not interfere with the surfaces or structures of the building’s concrete interior, rather, it is suspended and locked at select points a couple of meters above the ground, and is designed so that it can be lifted to accommodate a girls gymnastics competition in June, as well as other activities run by local Venetians during the summer months.

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