💙 Alone at the dusk on 500px by Angel Usero, AlmerÃa,… http://ift.tt/24n42Tn
💙 Alone at the dusk on 500px by Angel Usero, AlmerÃa,… http://ift.tt/24n42Tn
Balmoral House is a private home located in Mosman, a suburb of Sydney, Australia. It was designed by Fox Johnston Architects in 2015. Balmoral House by Fox Johnston Architects: “The project takes the form of a series of platforms, as buildings responding to the rhythm and topography of the site. A long linear form to the west contains sleeping areas and bathrooms at the lower level, a garage space at..
With the rise of computational networks and power, cognitive models developed and debated over in the postwar decades have finally been able to be put to work. Back then, there was a philosophical debate raging alongside the burgeoning field of computer science theory on the nature of consciousness, in which machines of artificial intelligence served as a thought experiment to question humanity. Yet with the proliferation of data and the centralization of its archives, theoretical practice moved from conceptual experiments to empirical tests.
The shift is decisive, as along with it moved the criteria of philosophical judgment from abstract reason to pragmatic conjecture. Machines of models of artificial intelligence are still put to the test, but evaluated according to their results, not logical consistency or rationality. Artificial intelligence is both a theory and a practice, which respectively evolved at different times and speeds. The ability to test artificial intelligence has only become recently possible thanks to the internet, which serves as is its prime laboratory and space of experimentation. But increasingly, artificial intelligence is leaving the web, crossing the digital divide, and being applied to cities and the environment.
There are many analogies that can be drawn today between computers and cities. This formal similarity, as rough as it may be, has allowed network-based logics to begin to shape urban development and the way we (want to) live. Logistics is the general term for such processes. Computers stand apart in the history of machines in the sense that it’s not so much a tool as it is a toolbox, one whose contents can be invented with relative freedom and lack of constraint. It’s for all of these reasons that artificial intelligence is resistant to our critical faculties. It’s not so much that we don’t understand it, but paradoxically, it’s that we finally can. Artificial intelligence is real. It’s not the perfect model of consciousness we thought we were aiming for, but it’s close enough.
It’s hard to comprehend the potential impact of artificial intelligence. As a system in need of deployment, AI is plagued by scale and ‘boundary issues’. Take basic income, for instance, which often accompanies recent calls for automation. Small scale tests are currently being developed and rolled out in certain places around the globe, the Dutch city of Utrecht being one of the largest.[1] Yet as soon as the decision needs to be made of who gets it and who doesn’t – be it only nationals, residents, inhabitants, or whatever – a certain political violence needs to be exacted that undermines the rationale behind the effort and the scientific value of its results. Basic income really only works if its universal.[2]
Self-driving cars are another ‘prime’ example of boundary issues facing artificial intelligence. While early public demos and private tests were on closed circuits or even set tracks, tests have begun in ‘dynamic’ urban environments. Last month, Uber reportedly rolled out its first fleet of self-driving vehicles in downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania for an indefinite period (notably, most trials are finite).[3] Yet even before live road tests became a thing, a humbling revelation dawned about the challenges facing the successful implementation of such systems into our cities, our landscapes, and our daily lives: we are the problem. Or in other words, the problem of tomorrow is today.
Left to their own devices, self-driving cars hold immense promise to radically transform urban mobility patterns and upheave the cultures and economies that support them towards more sustainable and equitable ends. But beyond a debate over whether we should be conservative or liberal with the values and practices currently in place today, self-driving cars probe more a fundamental human anxiety about the degree of trust and responsibility we place in the machines we live with. An easy way to wash this problem away is to fabricate a boundary: if we were to remove all other things from the space in which the system is ‘live’ – non-self-driving cars and pedestrians, for example – at least some of this risk would be ameliorated, if not eliminated altogether.
Like most ‘problems’ though, the challenges facing the future of AI are not as simple as erecting a wall. Hybridity is a fundamental problem, yes, but if we were to assume it to be the only one, the future itself would be subsumed and lost within the desire for a very particular kind of progress. Artificial intelligence has given rise to what has come to be known as ‘existential risk’ insofar as it throws humanity itself into question, much like its early models questioned what it meant to be human.[4] AI stands to rewrite the logic by which we have relation with the support systems our lives depend upon. AI is predicated by ‘locking in’ a political cosmology of actors and the rights distributed to them. AI writes politics with code, yet increasingly into stone and the flesh as well.
By throwing it into question, systems of artificial intelligence such as self-driving cars allow us to reflect upon some of the most fundamental questions of humanity, like: not whether to kill or not, but which life to take in in situations where death is unavoidable.[5] Death has always been factored into infrastructure as a negative externality, and design has responded accordingly. Road barriers prevent people from crossing the highway, for example. But how does one implement a safety feature, emergency airbags for instance, in artificial intelligence? Profanity filters – basic script libraries easily drawn in to any chatbot program – are only applicable to so few cases.[6]
Artificial intelligence has finally begun to develop according to models not based on the human brain. Perhaps for this very reason, yet despite the fact that we have perhaps never had such a refined and deep understanding of it, there is great fear over our ability to control artificial intelligence. Accidents and mistakes do and will happen, and while we can be careful, we can’t really predict what will happen when AI systems go ‘live’, and especially not in increasingly large, complex, and fundamental domains. Yet we can speculate and think what we would want to happen in innumerous instances. The anxieties surrounding artificial intelligence are thus not necessarily about control per se, but rather our ability to respond to what the future brings (with or without the help of AI, I might add).
The technologies we use on a daily, hourly basis frame our relation to the world and our experience of it. This is nothing particularly new. We design machines, and machines design us. By using them we change ourselves. Yet today, machines are learning to change themselves based on how we use them. This is where that devilish concept of ‘intention’ comes in. Life is messy; unpredictable and dangerous, filled with sentiment. Social engineering has haunted the dreams of visionaries since the rise of the Soviet state, but never before have the potentials to engineer life’s folds been so great. The machines are not coming; they’re already here. We need to learn about machines because we learn from machines, because we make machines. We need to understand the power and potential they have in order to better form an idea of what we want to do with them, what we want them to do, and what we want them to do to us.
References
[1]Â Tracy Brown Hamilton, ‘The Netherlands’ Upcoming Money-for-Nothing Experiment’, The Atlantic, 21 June 2016. (accessed 26 August 2016).
[2] Alex Williams and Nick Srnicek, Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work (Verso, 2015).
[3] Max Chafkin, ‘Uber’s First Self-Driving Fleet Arrives in Pittsburgh This Month’, Bloomberg Businessweek, 18 August 2016. (accessed 21 August 2016).
[4]Â Raffi Khatchadourian, ‘The Doomsday Invention’, The New Yorker, 23 November 2015. (accessed 25 August 2016).
[5]Â Iyad Rahwan, Jean-Francois Bonnefon, Azim Shariff, et. al, ‘Moral Machine’, Scalable Cooperation, MIT Media Lab. (accessed 21 August 2016).
[6] Peter Lee, ‘Learning from Tay’s introduction’, Official Microsoft Blog, 25 March 2016. (accessed 21 August 2016).
Introducing Volume #49: Hello World!
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Volume is an independent quarterly magazine that sets the agenda for architecture and design. With going beyond architecture’s definition of ‘making buildings’ it reaches out for global views on designing environments, advocates broader attitudes to social structures, and reclaims the cultural and political significance of architecture. Created as a global idea platform to voice architecture any way, anywhere, anytime, it represents the expansion of architectural territories and the new mandate for design.
Rolling coverage of all the day’s political developments as they happen
9.01am BST
Unite has welcomed the announcement, saying 25,000 jobs will be created by the Hinkley Point C project. This is from Unite’s national officer for energy, Kevin Coyne.
Our members are shovel ready and dead keen to start work on the country’s first nuclear power station for a generation. It is excellent news that that the uncertainty caused by Theresa May’s decision to put Hinkley Point ‘on hold’ has now been dispelled and that the Government recognises the role of nuclear in a mixed energy economy. It means that the lights will remain on in the UK in the decades ahead and it heralds an economic renaissance for the West Country, with the accompanying creation of thousands of skilled jobs and the positive ripple effects to the supply chain across the UK.
8.53am BST
Finally we’ve got the confirmation that the government is giving the Hinkley Point C power station the go-ahead. Theresa May halted it in July, just before contracts were due to be signed because she wanted to review it, but this morning the government has announced that it will go ahead – but with new rules governing future foreign investment in British nuclear power stations.
This is crucial because in some respects the the concerns about Hinkley are not really about Hinkley at all, but about Bradwell. China is a minority investor in Hinkley Point, but it is investing as part of a deal that will also see it play a minority role in building a new nuclear power station at Sizewell, in Suffolk, and that will also see it take the lead in building a new nuclear plant at Bradwell, in Essex. For the Chinese Bradwell is the real prize because they believe that establishing successful Chinese-designed nuclear power station in the UK will lead to them breaking into many other markets in the West.
Related: Hinkley Point C nuclear power station gets go-ahead
Having thoroughly reviewed the proposal for Hinkley Point C, we will introduce a series of measures to enhance security and will ensure Hinkley cannot change hands without the government’s agreement. Consequently, we have decided to proceed with the first new nuclear power station for a generation.
Britain needs to upgrade its supplies of energy and we have always been clear that nuclear is an important part of ensuring our future low-carbon energy security.
Politics blog | The Guardian http://ift.tt/2cyG851
The building is located in the old city center of Bucharest and has had a long and intricate history. Built in the 19th century, it started out as a bank and then it became a clothing shop between the `50s and the `90s. In the past 20 years, after the clothing shop closed, the building became slowly a ruin, before it regained life as a bookstore. We saw it as a permanent shell and our intervention as a fragment in its history. Pieces of recent restorations were kept visible in our final design, the concrete walls in the basement and several components of outline beams, as an expression of the building’s continuous metamorphosis.
Being a retail space, the main functional component is the furniture. The height of the floors made possible the addition of intermediary platforms, serving as the stylistic elements that define and shape the space.
We had to play with the existing elements and find ways to create visual impact and sculptural value, while empowering the classical elements of the building. We created an organic fluid form that winds through the existing structural elements, sometimes withdrawn behind the existing pillars and other times emerging in the spaces between them. The platforms have a railing composed of equally spaced metal rods that follows the form and is both opaque and transparent, depending on the angle of view and the curvature of the shape.
We opted for a punctual lighting system with a warm spectrum. Seemingly random, the arrangement of luminaries has been calculated to fulfill the illumination needs of various products. The photometric calculations resulted a number of bodies in the proximity of the furniture and above circulations – purely functional light – and another number of bodies that give the ambient light. The image that inspired the artificial lighting design is that of a starry sky, like the one seen through the central skylight at night.
Force is a private home designed by White Interior Design. It is located in Taipei, Taiwan. Photos by: HighliteImages
Danilov Plaza is a multifunctional complex situated on the first line of buildings on Novodanilovskaya Embankment in Moscow. This area, which was until recently considered lacking in prestige due to its numerous disused industrial buildings, is currently undergoing a transformation into a modern business district. The main driving force in this change of image is the construction of several business complexes designed by leading Moscow architects along the River Moskva.
Danilov Plaza consists of two 13-storey blocks linked by glass passageways. The two-part volumetric composition is reflected in the design of the buildings: the façade of the building which stands closer to the river is clad with unpainted aluminium composite panels, while its sister building is faced in panels with a gold-coloured coating. In addition to using visually striking materials, the complex’s façades employ the kind of ornamental motifs which are characteristic of SPEECH. The frames of the square window apertures – which, thanks to the additional relief contours, resemble perspectival portals – form an unusual geometrical pattern covering the larger part of the buildings. The displacement of the axis of the portals relative to the axis of the windows creates a changing play of light and shadow on the façades and produces the impression of a moving, ‘living’ membrane –a kind of scintillating suit of ‘chainmail’ worn over the powerful ‘torsos’ of the blocks.
The façade theme changes twice: the two bottom and two top storeys of the buildings are of a different design. The bottom part of each building is mostly of glass, making the buildings seem to float above the ground. The top floors differ from the main façade pattern in having taller window apertures, the upper parts of which are additionally divided into three narrow panes. Thus the classical technique for decorating the attic floor of a building works perfectly well in modern architecture too, making the building seem lighter, harmonizing its proportions, and accentuating the cornice.
A friend asked me why I do this, why I blog. So I asked her why she plays golf. This is an evergreen post for me. I’ve modified a bit with each iteration, but it says something that’s fundamentally true about the creative process and certainly about my personal creative process. Writing (and also photography) […]