Lockeport Beach House / Nova Tayona Architects


© Janet Kimber

© Janet Kimber


© Janet Kimber


© Janet Kimber


© Janet Kimber


© Janet Kimber

  • Architects: Nova Tayona Architects
  • Location: South Shore, NS B0K, Canada
  • Architect In Charge: Nova Tayona Architects
  • Area: 195.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Janet Kimber
  • Team: Nova Tayona, Rachel Law, Michelle Martinez
  • General Contractor: Trunnells and Tenons Construction
  • Structural Engineer: Andrea Doncaster
  • Custom Millwork: The Wooden Menagerie
  • Diagrams / Drawings: Andrew Falls, Tara Castator, Ram Espino

© Janet Kimber

© Janet Kimber

From the architect. Within a protected cove along the South Shore of Nova Scotia, at the end of a stretch of sand, a river empties out into the sea. Time and tides have created a one kilometre forested sandbar on which this beach house sits.


© Janet Kimber

© Janet Kimber

Approaching the site is a parallel journey between a low-lying salt marsh to the north-west and the forested sandbar to the south-east. Along that journey, the beach is never in view, and so, the project is ironic as beach houses go. Despite the dramatic location on an expanse of shoreline, the clients were drawn to the internal, cozy character of the site. Scraggly, curmudgeonly tamarack and spruce trees covered in Old Man’s Beard are very particular to some areas of Nova Scotia and thrive in the 10 cm of shallow soil here. The trees shelter the site from the openness of the beach and defend against erosion of the sandbank. A mandate of protecting the sandbank, and the clients’ appreciation of hearing the ocean, but not seeing it were starting points for siting strategy. They did not want their new house to be on display from the beach.The most one sees of the water are moments of shimmering light filtered through the treeline at the site’s southern edge. The sound of waves pull one along a worn footpath through the tree line, towards a break in the vegetation that finally reveals the coast and ocean horizon. From these initial impressions, the house tucks itself against the forest, is hidden from the shore, and beach walkers plus the resident endangered piping plovers are none the wiser.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Skinned in black-stained eastern white cedar, the house recedes against the forest backdrop, and contradicts its bright interior. The design takes advantage of passive solar orientation, and catching light. At 10’ (3m) deep, the 48’ (15m) wide cantilevered roof overhang provides the perfect amount of shade in the summer, and allows the low winter sun to warm the concrete floors in the cold season. Not only does the asymmetrical gabled roof provide shelter and shade, it also leverages coastal storms, harvesting rainwater that is funnelled into three 1750 gallon (6600 litre) cisterns. The storage tanks are the sole source of potable water for the house.


© Janet Kimber

© Janet Kimber

To protect against storm surges, the house is elevated by a grid of helical piles bearing 6 meters down into the sand. Above the piles, the lightweight wood-frame structure houses a straight-forward, one-level plan. Bedrooms and private areas have low-ceilings and an intimate closeness with the trees and north-west light. The tall, main living area has a wide view to the south, towards a small clearing of beach grass and the tree-line separating the house and the shore.


© Janet Kimber

© Janet Kimber

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Arch 11 completes Rocky Mountain home atop a concrete plinth



Colorado architecture firm Arch11 has raised a single-family residence on a concrete plinth to provide unobstructed views of the Rocky Mountains (+ slideshow). (more…)

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Call for entries to American Architecture Prize 2016



Dezeen promotion: entries are now open for architects to submit projects to the American Architecture Prize, which will be judged by Alejandro Zaera-PoloSadie Morgan and Will Alsop (+ slideshow). (more…)

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These are 18 of the World’s Strangest Buildings


Waldspirale, Darmstadt, Germany / Friedensreich Hundertwasser. Image © Flickr user dalbera. Licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Waldspirale, Darmstadt, Germany / Friedensreich Hundertwasser. Image © Flickr user dalbera. Licensed under CC BY 2.0.

While there are many ways to stand out from the crowd in the field of architecture, some buildings challenge your expectations so greatly that they can only be described as “bizarre.” This list of 18 buildings, compiled by Fly Abu Dhabi, takes a look at some of those exceptionally strange buildings. While several of these examples appear to be “ducks” lifted straight from the pages of Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown’s seminal Learning from Las Vegasothers find their originality in unorthodox curves, flipped orientations and sharp geometries. But all share one thing in common – they’re nothing like your everyday buildings. 

Continue reading for the full graphic list. 

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7 Tips to Liberate Yourself from Repressed Anger

Reminiscing back to your childhood days, you might recall throwing a fit at the candy aisle when your mother refused to get you that bag of skittles. Back then you felt free to express your negative emotions. You couldn’t even have fathomed to keep them underlid in a box, that box would have exploded for sure.

Then over the years, we learned that expressing out loud our feelings more often than not didn’t get us anywhere. Long gone are the days when we were understood and forgiven for having crossed the bounds of proper behavior. You are now a grown-up, it’s time to start acting like it. Some might even suggest that you should suppress your anger altogether. But our feelings are still as potent as when we were kids. We’ve just learned to ignore them or bottle them up.

angerWhile suppressing your anger is probably wise to do in public or at your work place (you don’t want to lose your job or be labeled as a psycho,) your frustrations stacked up on one another will slowly eat away at you. Studies have shown the link between cancer and suppressed anger:

“Cancer is caused by the suppression of toxic emotions; primarily anger, hate, resentment and grief. Suppression of these toxic negative emotions increases stress hormone cortisol levels, which directly suppress immune system function. When the immune system is not functioning properly, normal cells mutate into cancer cells as revealed in the 6 phases of cancer.” (alternative-cancer-care.com)

You might be thinking that this rage you feel will always be a part of you, no matter how long you meditate or try to control it- it’s still there underneath – like a dormant volcano. But you can learn to manage it and express it in healthy ways by putting into practice some useful and practical tips, so that it doesn’t end up ruining your life.

So what are some ways we can express that oppressing anger in a healthy manner?

Here’s what works for me:

1. Inner Reflection

Trough quiet reflection, identify the main events in your life that prompted anger to take residence inside your heart. Mistakes, personal failures, regrets, and poor choices may have amplified the guilt and anger. Write them down so as to capture the feelings, purging those experiences on paper, letting them free.

2. Let go through forgiveness

True forgiveness cannot be achieved without understanding and compassion. Let your inner voice reveal to you the deeper causes behind hurtful acts or words. As Simone Weil observes, “a hurtful act is the transference to others of the degradation which we bear in ourselves.” Remember it never was about you. It becomes easier to forgive when you recognize the humanness in the other.

Similarly, forgive yourself for past mistakes. Dwelling on what ifs and should haves will continue to trap you in a vicious circle of negative thinking. There is an African proverb that says: “when there is no enemy within, the enemies outside cannot hurt you.” When you have accepted yourself with all of your hang ups, getting past your regrets, your flaws and imperfections, you will be able to let go of self loathing and anger. As a result, people or circumstances will make you less angry. So if people push your buttons, there won’t be an immediate knee jerk reaction. It all starts with you.

Instead use the hard earned lessons as a building platform for a new beginning.
Everyone deserves happiness and a fresh new start. If you continue to let guilt hold you back, you will never be able to experience life, the present moment to the fullest. Let it go. You’ve suffered long enough.

3. Keep it real

You have the ability to control your anger, it doesn’t have to control you. Only you are responsible for your life and how you choose to react to any given situation.

Whenever you disagree with someone, and you start to feel the first bouts of anger coming on, hold your tongue and take conscious deep breaths instead. Leave the room. Let your heart rate return to normal until your mind is focused again.

When the time is right, express your frustration by talking about it in a calm manner. For instance you could say “I feel hurt when we are in a disagreement because I truly care what you think” or “why do you feel this way?” “how can we resolve this?” This way the conversation doesn’t revolve around who’s right or wrong. You let the other person know that you are willing to listen with a caring ear, making space for an honest and calm conversation to happen.

In this way you will save yourself the painful realization aftermath that the whole thing was over dramatized. A misunderstanding that could have been cleared out in the early stages had you just put your pride to the side for a moment.

If you don’t have the possibility to talk it over, go for a run, listen to some music that speaks to you, play a video game, write in your journal your thoughts and feelings, or find an outlet to transfer that powerful emotion outward (without having to punch anyone.)

4. Visualization

Visualize the person you love the most in your life for a few moments. Fill your heart with those positive feelings.

Now picture the person(s) who have hurt you in the past. Say “I forgive you.” “I am releasing you.” Try to feel the release of the negative energy in your body, heart, and mind. This doesn’t mean that you are dismissing your justified feelings of anger. According to St. Augustine, “forgiveness is simply the act of surrendering our desire for revenge; that is, our desire to hurt someone for having hurt us.” Forgiveness will unload a huge burden off your heart. Do it for yourself.

Recall the good moments you lived with the person(s) you have in mind; what they said or did that you appreciated. It will become easier to finally forgive and let go. Do it for yourself.

5. Accept that the past cannot be undone

Focus on improving your present life instead, which will determine your future. Holding on to resentful thoughts will only drag you backwards, also preventing you from cultivating meaningful interpersonal relationships. Your cynical mood will affect the way you see and interpret the world around you. As a result, you miss out on life and other beautiful moments. The past doesn’t have to define you. But you can redefine your future self. Drop that bag of bricks you’ve been carrying around by starting a new chapter in your life. You have a another chance for happiness.

6. Accept the fact that a lot of things will always be beyond your control

Sometimes things don’t go your way no matter how much control you think you have. Similarly, you cannot change people, all you can do is accept them as they are or walk away.

7. Choose to be more open instead of being angry and closed off

Personally, I find that the most effective way to let go of my anger is to ignore the voice that tells me to keep myself guarded (unless my gut is telling me so.) I tell myself instead that everyone is unique and different. People will respond to me based on how I respond to them in the first place.

Being honest and open creates a bonding experience. There is no room for anger when you lay it all out. By clearing up any misconception that may arise you can move forward instead of clinging to negative thoughts and assumptions. You reclaim your power by being authentic with yourself and others.

I choose to make conscious efforts to build genuine human connections, to see from other peoples’ point of view before jumping to hasty conclusions.

Empathy and understanding of others defuse my angry feelings.

Cultivating better relationships, choosing forgiveness over bitterness, not letting the past affect my present life, and expressing my feelings in healthier ways, has led me to let go of past grudges and live life more in peace.

Anger is a normal human reaction. You just learned to rely on it too much for protection, but many times it is unnecessary and uncalled for. It damages your relationships and if it isn’t properly managed, will damage your health as well.

This life is meant to be enjoyed. But an angry heart will kill joy every time. Rage is the most devastating and lethal human emotion. By effectively managing your anger instead of suppressing it or flying off the handle, you will gain more self confidence and self respect. You will reclaim your energy and peace of mind.

If your anger comes back like a sudden violent storm, don’t deny it. Allow the emotion to pass and the raging water to return to calm. Let your pain get expressed, your side of the story get heard by talking about it in a normal tone instead of yelling. Then gently let the negative emotions go by deeply accepting yourself just as you are.

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How To Conquer The Four Horsemen of Productivity Apocalypse

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“We think, mistakenly, that success is the result of the amount of time we put in at work, instead of the quality of time we put in.” -Arianna Huffington

A lot of the top advice on “work-life balance” angers me and probably will anger you too.

Let me explain…

There’s a concept on work-life balance that every college student has heard. It goes something like this:

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Your life has different parts you have to juggle. You HAVE to sacrifice at least one of these to succeed at the others:

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  • Career/School Success
  • Sleep Time
  • Social/Personal Life and Family Time
  • Health and Fitness

There are different variations of this principle, like the Burners Theory, but it’s the same basic idea. I’ve coined my own really cool name for it: The Four Horsemen Principle (it references the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, implying an “apocalypse” if you don’t handle them well).

Now, here’s what pisses me off. It’s completely FALSE.

A lot of the most read articles and content on this topic simply tell you that you have to accept that you have to give up a part of your life. This idea is ingrained into American culture: “you have to work 15 hours a day and sacrifice your health, sleep, and family time to make it.”

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Ask any Sillicon valley entrepreneur or Hollywood actor. Heck, just look around at your peers and you’ll find one who brags about their lack of sleep.

It perpetuates a needless cycle of self-harm.

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If you think spending time with your daughter Sally is a part of your success, then are you really successful if you’ve made millions but haven’t spent her in the last two weeks?

People think taking time to sleep or exercise takes time away from succeeding in your career. But sometimes, it helps you succeed more in your career. Don’t take it from me, take it from this guy…

The youngest billionaire in the history of humankind and founder of Facebook and Asana wrote a post about this. The “too-long-didn’t-read” summary is that he argues he would’ve succeeded with Facebook even faster if he had slept more, exercised more, and ate less junk food. He said these bad habits lead to less productivity, needless fighting, emotional outbreaks, less energy, and less focus.

What is best way to solve these work-life balance hurdles? I’m not saying I have it solved, but here are some steps to master The Four Horsemen.

Note: You don’t need to do all the steps. Every step on its own helps.

Step 1: Kill Multiple Birds With One Stone

multitasking

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My initial response to The Four Horseman Principle was to question everyone’s assumptions.
“Can I succeed and keep all four horsemen?” I pondered.

Here is how everyone else thought:

“Life is filled with compromises. If you want to excel in your work and social life, your health and family life will decline. If you want to be fit and a great parent, then you may be forced to kill your career potential. You are free to choose which four horsemen you want, but you have to realize that you will never reach your potential for all of them.”

So I thought, “Is there a life hack I can use to destroy this flawed belief?”

Perhaps I could fuse health and work or social or family time. “What if I exercised at work with a standing desk or treadmill? What if I joined social fitness groups like Crossfit?”

Now, I know what you’re thinking. Believing that you will be healthy with a little extra standing is like believing you are a smart because you bought a book and left it on a shelf. Plus, not everyone can convince their boss to do something like this.

You can get fit while keeping in touch with friends by choosing fitness activities. You can find an active event for your family to go to rather than one where you bond over junk food. There are ways of truly mastering two horsemen in the time it takes everyone else to master one.

See Also: The New and Modern Way Companies Are Increasing Productivity

Step 2: Outsource Career and Family/Social — Get Someone Else To Help You.

The billionaire Sir Richard Branson was asked when’s the last time he shopped for groceries. He said he hadn’t in years. He has an assistant do it.

If your time is worth $1,000 an hour, you’ve lost out on $1,000 you could have made AND an hour of your time if you spend it on a low-level task like grocery shopping. Instead, pay someone $20 to do it for you and you’ve just bought back some of your life AND set up an opportunity to make 1,000 more dollars.

See Also: 6 Most Commonly Outsourced Tasks and Why They Work

Your parents (and mine too) don’t do this because they lived with a moderate salary and it was mathematically correct to do your own groceries, laundry, car repairs, and plumbing. You end up saving more by doing it yourself. But once you start making some serious cash (which you should strive to do if you aren’t), your level of thinking should evolve.

We outsource small parts of our problems already. We buy fast food and dinners from restaurants so we don’t have to make it. We pay to have our grass cut to save time. We get our oil changed so we don’t have to learn how to ourselves.

Outsourcing bits of your life lets you buy back time and use it better. Can you use the same concept on a horseman and use that extra time to better another horseman?

For a lot of us, your career is the biggest horseman. It’s where we spend most of our time and it’s the last horseman to get ignored. Anyone can outsource parts of the career horseman.

Tim Ferriss is one example of a CEO’s who built systems to let him live a 4 hour work week. He outsources the low level work of his business so he can focus on only the tasks he can do.

Family is another example. Working mothers can outsource the family horseman by paying for a nanny. Calling it “outsourcing” might sound too corporate, but people don’t worry -it’s natural. People do this already.

Other than the obvious, think outside the box. If you’re making a lot of money, for example, but don’t have time to spend with your family, you can pay for a Fast Pass to skip the lines when all of you visit Disney World. Or pay extra to go to a less crowded area to have higher quality one-on-one time.

The benefit of outsourcing is you keep a horseman alive without using your time. But removing yourself completely has a downside. In the book Rework, the author brings up a great point: most people will end up feeling bored and without purpose after several months of sitting on a beach or playing golf all day.

Also every parent I know would rather spend time with their child than outsource it completely to a babysitter.

So what’s the lesson?

Career is the main horseman you want to outsource. Family is the one usually you don’t want to outsource too much. Partially outsourcing it is the way to go. 100% is almost always too much.

Step 3: Make the Most of Your Time

One of the most tragic things I see is that most people never reach their potential. It can be easy to make the excuse, “If only I had more time, I could get rich or get jacked or spend more time with Sally.”

One way to tackle this issue is to change your focus from wishing you had more time to optimizing the time you have. In other words, acknowledge your constraints. The question to ask yourself is, “Assuming a time limit, how can I be as efficient as possible?”

For instance:
Assuming I can only work 8 hours a day, how can I make the most money possible?
Assuming I can only exercise for 30 minutes a day, how can I exhaust my muscles more in that time?
Assuming I can only spend 1 hour a week with friends, how can I make it the best experience?

This type of questioning pulls your focus towards something positive (getting everything you can out of all you’ve got) rather than something negative and unproductive (complaining about not having time).

All throughout my life, I’ve always met someone who’s bragged about getting zero sleep.

They’ll say, “I did another all-nighter to study for the test.” Or they’ll say, “I only slept 2 hours last night. I’m the CEO.”

We’ve gotten to a point in society where it’s literally glorified and looked at as impressive.

I’ve had a full college course schedule, while working a part-time job, an internship, running a high-traffic website, sitting on a few extra business courses, and still had time to sleep at least 8 hours a day and play video games. Not because I’m super human. I just did what needed to be done quickly.

I did an all nighter once just to try it out and it was a complete waste of time. Every hour that past, I got more and more unproductive as my mind turned to mush until I wasn’t doing a thing.
You don’t have to do that.

We’re all guilty of stretching out time we don’t need with long deadlines and flashy tactics. There was probably a school essay you had to write where you ended up doing the whole thing the night before. You didn’t need the 6 month window.

For me, it’s the Fitness Horseman. I’m guilty of stretching out a workout to take over an hour when it should only take 15 minutes.The fitness YouTube AthleanX (over 1 million subscribers) says that “if you work out right, you can’t work out long.” This is because it doesn’t take long to do exhaust your muscles if you do it right.

Step 4: Have Different Seasons

Break your time into seasons. We naturally do this already, but being aware of it can make you better at it.

What if, instead of chasing a perfect work-life balance, you divided your life into seasons that focused on a particular horseman?

Think 100% success at 2 horsemen and 80% success at the other two.

The importance of your horsemen may change throughout life. When you are in your 20s or 30s, it can be easier to exercise and develop your career. The health and career horsemen are galloping. The sleep horse is dying (literally) because maybe you’re building a visionary business and have hard-working competitors.

A decade later, you might have a baby and suddenly, the fitness horseman slows down a bit while your family horseman starts sprinting. Another decade passes and you visit old friends you put off. The Social horseman starts trotting. And the sleep horseman is a welcomed friend.

Caution:

My whole point is that you can master all the horsemen. It’s not impossible. Therefore, don’t take this too far and start creating a season of 0% all horsemen but the Career horseman. That would negate the whole point I’m trying to disprove.

I am simply saying that there are moments in your life where compromise may be inevitable because you are doing something game-changing. Here are a few examples:

  • Elon Musk sleeping 5 hours a day and working the other 19 because he’s building a tech start-up in a billion dollar industry against tough competitors in a fast-pacing industry.
  • Will Smith working through lunch and the weekends to become one of the world’s most respected actors.

For average to above-average people, it’s totally possible to master all horses. For game-changers and visionaries, a season to life could be useful.

For people below average, a season can simply be an excuse.

We all know someone who is failing at every horseman because he’s staying up way too late to play the 5th hour of a video game and watch more Netflix.

Where are you right now?

Step 5: Decide When Enough is Enough For A Certain Horse

Set a specific number of dollars you should hit when enough is enough. For example, many travel hackers say that you can live like a king across many countries with $50,000 a year because of the low cost of living. Maybe that’s your magic number.

Without a definitive number, it can be an endless chase for money, fame, or awards.You never know when to get off the Career Horseman and spend some time on the others because enough is never enough.

Cara DeLevigne, Oprah Winfrey, Jessica Alba, Alicia Keys, and Lady Gaga are some of the most followed stars on Instagram and Twitter. They’ve all taken time out of their lives to speak to women about needless career exhaustion from chasing needless additional career success.

Cara’s speech emphasizes one of the biggest lessons I’m trying to spread: Modern society has made us think that wealth and fame will bring you happiness. Science has shown that it’s just a small part. Don’t kill yourself from exhaustion just chasing these while compromising on everything else.

There’s plenty of other successful celebrities who have come out with this revelation after learning the hard way, but this message doesn’t seem to spread. Most of the younger generation are still enamored by the idea that overwork is the only way to go.

Ask yourself if childhood memories are creating false beliefs you hold to.

If you had a lack of opportunities when you were young, that memory often pushes you to take on more opportunities than you can handle.

Cara is a great example. She used to have a very difficult time getting any opportunities until the world suddenly fell in love with her iconic eyebrows and she had more than she could handle. When her thighs started manifesting spots from exhaustion, her modeling agency shipped her off to a hospital for a quick-fix of needle injections (instead of letting her rest).

Maybe your childhood imprint is something different. It could be a chase to prove something to your parents that was (and never will be) satisfied.

These women all emphasize two big points that they had to learn the hard way:

  • Be willing and comfortable to say “no” to requests.
  • Modern society over-hypes the happiness and results that career, success, wealth, and fame will bring to you. Don’t sacrifice too much to chase more and more of this.

This doesn’t only hold true for the career horseman; it holds true for all of them.

The multi-millionaire behind Huffington Post, Arianna Huffington, wrote a book on sleep called The Sleep Revolution after she collapsed from exhaustion from overwork. In the book, she argues that everyone should get at least 7 hours of sleep a night for optimal performance.

As far as family time is concerned, I’ve realized that there is a clear threshold where relatives (teenagers especially) are tired of seeing you. In fact, they’re annoyed by your presence. You become the overbearing, embarrassing parent or sibling.

Sometimes adding more family time adds diminished returns because they’ve seen more than enough of you already.

Learn to dial it back to focus on other horsemen when it’s clear this horse is getting overfed. Does your child really need your fourth hour of “family time” for that day? Is three enough when you’ve been doing this everyday of the week for years?

Step 6: Make it A Priority and It Will Become One

priority

Gary Vaynerchuk said in an interview that he never missed a game of the Jets even during the busiest time of his entire life. During that time, he was literally building a 100 million dollar wine company and working 12 hour days every day of the week. H

ow? He made Jets games a priority no matter what.

Ever hear a girl or guy you like say, “I didn’t have time to text back.” You knew instantly that it was a lie.

In the back of your mind, you said, “I don’t care if you’re falling off a cliff.  If you really like someone, you will make time to text back.” We all know it.

It’s the same principle with each horseman. If you tell yourself “I will sleep 7 hours today no matter what”, you will. Making more money can wait.

And it truly can. You don’t need millions of dollar to pay for shelter and food. It can wait.

Conclusion

It is possible to master all four horseman of the work-life balance Apocalypse. There will be occasional times where you may have to compromise but that’s really for the hustlers who are trying to change the world.

We all know someone who sucks at all the horsemen: they stay up until 2am, aren’t doing well at their job, haven’t seen their family (or any friends) in months, and don’t know what a gym is.

We all know someone who is exhausting himself by working 13 hour days at work and assuming that’s the only way it can be.

Perhaps it’s not that simple. Maybe you can achieve the same results by working more intelligently.

Finally, I know people who seem to have most or all the horsemen mastered, like online entrepreneurs John Chow or Pat Flynn:

They drop their kids off at school everyday.
They can take hours off work every day if they want.
They make more money than 99% of people on earth.
They run 5+ miles a day.
They sleep like a baby.

This just proves that it’s not always a “this or that” situation.

If you make it a priority, it will happen. Rather than assume you have to kill a horseman, ask yourself if you can manage them better.

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The post How To Conquer The Four Horsemen of Productivity Apocalypse appeared first on Dumb Little Man.

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Modulo Rebouças / Dal Pian Arquitetos


© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon


© Nelson Kon


© Nelson Kon


© Nelson Kon


© Nelson Kon

  • Architects: Dal Pian Arquitetos
  • Location: R. Capote Valente, 39 – Pinheiros, São Paulo – SP, Brazil
  • Architect In Charge: Carolina Freire
  • Authors: Renato Dal Pian, Lilian Dal Pian
  • Area: 6019.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Nelson Kon
  • Project Team: Paulo Noguer, Amanda Higuti, Natalie Tchilian, Sabrina Aron, Julio Costa, Cristina Sin.
  • Artistic Panels: Ronah Carraro
  • Furniture: Tryptique Architecture
  • Developer: Idea!Zarvos
  • Contractor: Engeform
  • Foundations: Apoio
  • Air Conditioning: Contractors
  • Structural Engineers: Gama Z Engenharia
  • Electricity And Plumbing: Grau Engenharia
  • Façade Consultant: Arqmate
  • Visual Communication: João Nitsche
  • Landscape Design: Isabel Duprat
  • Lighting: Mingrone Iluminação
  • Acoustics: Harmonia Acústica
  • Theater: Cineplast
  • Sealing Consultant: Proassp

© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon

At the corner of Rebouças Avenue and Capote Valente Street, in the neighborhood of Pinheiros, the project consists of 46 office units and a theater.


© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon

Situated in a squared conformation plot, the building is conceived as a single cube volume internally perforated by a continuous void which brings light and ventilation into the interior. The common areas of the program, such as the reception, the theater foyer and collective circulations, are located surrounding this central void. This multiplicity of spaces permeated by gardens provides its users with varied perspectives and playful visions of the internal building events.


© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon

Section

Section

© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon

Externally, the building is coated by a set of frames alternating glazing modules with opaque seals made of aluminum composite panels, in shades of gray and yellow.


© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon

The transparent ground floor, permeable and receptive to urban flows, harmonically inserts the building into the urban fabric of the city.


© Nelson Kon

© Nelson Kon

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Iwan Baan photographs Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s Vagelos Educational Building in New York



Photographer Iwan Baan has released new images of Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s recently completed medical building for Columbia University, which trades a typical educational facility’s “boring” horizontal layout for vertical organisation (+ slideshow). (more…)

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Why We’re Celebrating Today And Why All Architects Should, Too

On this day twenty-five years ago Tim Berners-Lee launched the “World Wide Web” protocol at CERN in Switzerland, ushering in the age of the Internet. Over the last two decades this global information network has rapidly evolved, increasingly influencing how architecture is conceived, produced, discussed and ultimately implemented in real space.

ArchDaily is an evolving project of the Internet – an experiment in archiving, disseminating discourse and sharing content related to architecture and urbanism on a scale that was not possible as little as two decades ago. Since our foundation in 2008, we have operated around a single mission: to bring knowledge, inspiration and tools to the people who are, and will be, designing the urban centers which will accommodate our planet’s (exponentially rising) population. Most importantly for us, we are continually connecting people from around the developed and developing world by building a platform which operates in four languages—Spanish, English, Portuguese and Mandarin Chinese—to ensure that these discussions are available to the widest possible global audience.

We are ardent supporters of architecture, cheerleaders for design thinking, and—most importantly—advocates for open access to information about the built environment. With so many talented people who are consistently producing new ways for us to inhabit and understand the world around us, the entire global architecture community should be aware of, and have access to, cutting-edge research and information. This is our central motivation for focusing our efforts on publishing online.

The entire ArchDaily staff is constantly recognizing the outstanding debt that we owe to the pioneers of architectural print: to the people who started journals where others weren’t easily available, to those who valued not only discourse, but deliberation and critical thinking in architecture.


We love what we do. Image © ArchDaily

We love what we do. Image © ArchDaily

In June of this year, we received a handwritten message from one of our readers:

I am writing to thank you for your work. I grew up in a small country town in Victoria, Australia. I lived 3 1/2 hours drive from a city. My closest library has 5 books in the “architecture & design” category. I had no access to the world and history of architecture. Your website opened that world up for me. I found my passion and education through ArchDaily. In January I moved to Melbourne to begin my first year of my Architecture Degree at Monash University. I have never been happier.

Thank you for all you do.

While this is only one example from the many messages that we are fortunate to receive, it summarizes what we consider as our purpose. We are humbled by the fact that we reach between 400,000 and 500,000 (in English) visitors on a daily basis, and we vow to continue to empower the many architects and contributors who have made this incredible feat possible.

When ArchDaily’s co-founder, David Basulto, penned our first post on the 9th March 2008 he wrote: “Here comes ArchDaily! Architecture, day by day.” Our work—over 62,000 articles later—has been made possible by the Internet, and we are phenomenally excited to continue to develop alongside it.

David Basulto, Patrick Lynch, Amanda Pimenta, Becky Quintal, Rory Stott, and James Taylor-Foster
ArchDaily Global Team

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Everglades National Park in Florida is a subtle place where…

Everglades National Park in Florida is a subtle place where earth, water and sky blend in a low green landscape – where mere inches of elevation produce distinct changes in vegetation and a great wealth of birds and other unique wildlife find refuge. One of the most environmentally significant regions in the world, this special park can also impress with its sublime beauty. Sunset photo courtesy of Aryeh Nirenberg.