@signordal The White House

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Norðurljós / Aurora borealis by raudkollur …

Norðurljós / Aurora borealis by raudkollur http://flic.kr/p/e4fC31

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71 Thousand High-Res Historical Maps Available for Free Download


Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

History and geography lovers rejoice! You can now see and even download incredible maps from the David Rumsey Map Collection database. The website contains more that 71 thousand maps and images that span the 16th to the 21st century and illustrate everything from the seven continents, to the entire world and even celestial bodies. 

The maps and images serve as useful historical and artistic references, offering rare cartographic detail and insight into the visual organization of territories. The exceptionally high-resolution images can be filtered by place, author, and date of creation.


Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection

Take advantage of this unprecedented resource!

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This week’s Dezeen Mail features Yves Behar’s self-rocking crib and Apple’s new London store

apple-store-foster-partners-dezeen-mail-sq

Apple’s new central London store by Foster + Partners features in this week’s edition of Dezeen Mail, along with a smart crib for exhausted parents and Juergen Teller riding naked on a donkey. Subscribe to Dezeen Mail ›

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Smugglers Notch, Vermontphoto via joelle

Smugglers Notch, Vermont

photo via joelle

@signordal Electricity in the air

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@signordal Brooklyn NY

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@signordal Uppsala Sweden

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“Building cannot be separated from the economics that drive construction”

Opinion: Mimi on Lisbon

Both Amanda Levete’s MAAT museum and the Lisbon Architecture Triennale opened in the Portuguese capital earlier this month. Together they prove that architecture is physically shaped by its fiscal situation, says Mimi Zeiger in this week’s Opinion. Read more

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Harvey Road / Erbar Mattes


© Stale Eriksen

© Stale Eriksen


© Stale Eriksen


© Stale Eriksen


© Stale Eriksen


© Stale Eriksen

  • Architects: Erbar Mattes
  • Location: London, UK
  • Architect In Charge: Demian Erbar
  • Area: 100.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Stale Eriksen
  • Contractor: Ireneusz Maduzia
  • Structural Engineer : Thomas Hallam Consulting Limited
  • Services Engineer: Environmental Engineering Partnership

© Stale Eriksen

© Stale Eriksen

The existing house, is the home of a family with two young children. The former ground floor layout was biased towards the front of the house. A playroom, dining space and kitchen were arranged within an undefined open space, oriented towards the street and the party wall of a neighbouring extension. The brief was to reconfigure and extend the ground floor in order to improve the connection to the garden.


© Stale Eriksen

© Stale Eriksen

The new ‘garden room’ inverts the former street-facing layout. Benefiting from the afternoon light, this space forms the new heart of the house, incorporating kitchen, dining and play area for the children. The kitchen layout is turned 90 degrees to face the garden.


Existing Floor Plan

Existing Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

The flank and rear walls of the original extension were removed at ground floor level in order to accommodate the new extension with side return. The space is tectonically defined by the new structural elements, which bear the load of the floor above.


© Stale Eriksen

© Stale Eriksen

The former bay window arrangement was reinterpreted as one large opening with a deep window seat, corresponding with the depth of the first floor bay window. A movable oak framed window allows the space to open towards the terrace. The children’s toys are stored in large drawers underneath the upholstered window bench. 


© Stale Eriksen

© Stale Eriksen




A generous roof light, along the length of the room, washes the new party wall with natural daylight. Level access to the garden is via a 1.2m wide and 2.5m high timber framed glass door.


© Stale Eriksen

© Stale Eriksen

The existing narrow outdoor terrace was enlarged to form a patio. The pre-cast concrete window sill and masonry plinth serve as seating areas, while a new timber fence structures the garden and was designed to form a back rest along the masonry bench.


© Stale Eriksen

© Stale Eriksen

The former drawing room was reinstated in its original shape and new ancillary functions, grouped in the central area of the plan.


© Stale Eriksen

© Stale Eriksen

Lime washed masonry, precast concrete, and white oiled oak were used throughout. Precast concrete was used for the sill, lintel and copings. The precast elements are composed of white limestone aggregates and white cement, and sandblasted to a rough finish. The structural components were clad in oak veneer internally, matching the floor boards and built-in furniture. The work surfaces in the kitchen are formed of single concrete slabs with exposed aggregates and a honed finish.

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