Sunday, 29 January 2012
Tuesday, 17 January 2012
Urbanized Screening
On Thursday the 19th of January at 6.30pm there will be a screening, over at the Deaf Institute here in Manchester, of Gary Hustwit's new film, Urbanized. The third film in his documentary trilogy series, following on from Helvetica and Objectified, looks to the urbanisation of our planet. Worth a visit.
Tuesday, 10 January 2012
Dwelle
Manchester's Dwelle has recently completed a mock up of its micro house. Situated at the foot of the curry mile in Rusholme, it's original approach to home living appears somewhat lost in a barren landscape of mediocrity.
Tuesday, 3 January 2012
The Start of the End
Elisabeth House in Manchester has begun its demise. Demolition has engulfed the building and it's new existence is on the horizon.
Sunday, 11 December 2011
The End: Warehouse
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Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Labels:
2011,
Manchester,
modeselektor,
music,
store street,
the end,
warehouse project,
whp
Tuesday, 1 November 2011
Business School vs Business School
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Image Copyright to UofM |
The plans come as MMU's very own new Business School reaches the final stage of construction, with an opening date set for the summer of 2012. The 2 institutions look to promote the importance and growth of Business in Manchester, as the city looks to a service-led developments to act as a backbone to it's economy.
The University of Manchester's scheme looks to expand the current Business School, housed in the University Precinct, with a £60million budget for new conference facilities, a four star hotel and an executive education centre for the training programs which the University have for external corporate clients.
Bruntwood is the only name mentioned in the press release, however it appears that BDP are the chosen architect for the scheme. There vast portfolio of educational-orientated work over the past 50 years puts them in a great position to deliver a much needed refresh to the school. However the shift away from student based development perhaps shows where the University of Manchester is looking to expand and grow on a more economical level. The joint venture with Bruntwood highlights the University's desire for commerciality. Bruntwood own a significant share of commercial property in Manchester, and there expansion down the Oxford Road Corridor perhaps signifies a change in the future of Universities in the country, moving towards an entirely privatised outfit of further education in the UK.
Labels:
BDP,
Bruntwood,
Business School,
Manchester,
Manchester University,
MMU
Thursday, 6 October 2011
Rashid Rana + Asia Triennial At Cornerhouse
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COPYRIGHT OF KEN ADLARD |
Last
Friday saw the openings of Rashid Rana’s first major public show, titled
‘Everything Is Happening At Once’, and the Asia Triennial Manchester 11 at the
keystone of modern art in Manchester, Cornerhouse.
Rana’s
exhibition is an accumulation of his work from 2006 to present. His work looks
to blend the line between the viewers perception of imagery. With the use of
uniform grids, and matrixes of phenomenal quantity of photos, Rana challenges
his cultural heritage with underlining layers hidden within the scale, only
visible up close, a blur and unreadable at a glance. Particularly in Gallery 2,
‘Between Flesh and Blood’, there is a collection of works that challenge
culturally and politically the perception of multi-culture and unified world.
At a far the space appears to be littered with great mosaics and carpets from
Asia, yet up close you begin to see their true detail, and a new layer is
revealed. Small images build up the bigger picture, images of slaughtered
animals manifest themselves into a beautiful Persian carpet. A typical mosaic
begins to fade into a sea of tiled pornographic images, only visible at close
proximity. Other pieces that lay across the 3 floors range from the
aforementioned subjective images to grand scaled objects of art that use the
space and exploration of the viewer to create a unique interaction with itself.
Rana
work deals with the concept of scale beautifully, ‘Deseperatley Seeking
Paradise II’ draws you into to it’s grandeur and prominence in the room. As one
circles and begins to read what is on show the large scale skyline is revealed
out of nowhere. It then all changes, as one gets closer the scales shifts and
the revelation of the matrix of images depicting small houses from the artist’s
hometown of Lahore in Pakistan. The exhibition successfully engages with it’s
audience on many levels, and the interaction and visual teasing leads to an
enjoyable exploration of the space.
The
Asia Triennial Manchester 11 launched on Friday. A festival celebrating
contemporary visual art from Asia. Rana’s exhibition is just one of the
features happening between the 1st of October and 27th of
November. Cornerhouse is also showcasing the film programme for the festival
and a variety of talks curated for the festival. Events are happening across
the city and information about it can be found on their website; http://www.asiatriennialmanchester.com/
Cornerhouse
sits at the heart of contemporary culture in Manchester. It’s dominance of the
scene is a testament to the beliefs it works to, and the determination to
showcase contemporary pieces of all medias across all platforms. Except what
now is to become of Cornerhouse. Plans are already set in motion, with
international architects Mecanoo designing a new home for Cornerhouse and the
Library Theatre, what does the future hold for this landmark outlet of art. We
are all in awe of the current space, and some trepidation has to be felt for
the relocation and space that it will transition to. Finally what is to become
of the space in which we love to got to, will it’s function change, or is it
merely an expansion and faith in the success of contemporary art.
Rashid Rana: Everything is Happening at Once runs at
Cornerhouse, Manchester from Sat 01 Oct until Fri 30 Dec 2011 and admission is
free.
Monday, 26 September 2011
The Shed
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Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
As the fresh blood of architectural students first litter their rooms with posters and flyers, and then proceed to litter the streets with themselves, so to has MMU with a collection of new builds across the All Saints Campus. The Business School is still to open it's doors, and the new Faculty of Arts building is just under a year from completion, one building has opened (although still incomplete), the "Shed".
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Copyright Jack Penford Baker |
Although seen as a temporary relocation for a single year, the refurbishment seems more of a long term investment for the university, and why shouldn't it. Chatham doesn't offer great studio space, but it does have other benefits. Why not then utilise both spaces, offering a more attractable faculty.
The refurbishment has been designed by local architects, and fellow tutors, Re-Form architects. After their fantastic refit of the Neighbourhood's office in the Northern Quarter, their understanding of space and ability to utilise and reuse what is existing and subtly transform the space. The building still is to be complete however, and a final opinion can not be given until so, but it's current state is the right direction for the MSA to be taking.
Tuesday, 20 September 2011
New Year + New Posters + New Writers
Vinoly + Manchester City's Domination
Manchester City Football Club and Vinoly Architects submitted a planning application to Manchester City Council yesterday for a new Training Academy. Positioned on 80 acres of brownfield and industrial land, the scheme looks to put MCFC at the centre of English Football development.
The site will include 14 full size training pitches and a new 7,000 seated stadium for the youth teams. They have also allocated upto 5.5 acres for community lead schemes, including the possibility of an education facility.
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Copyright of MCFC |
The vast cash injection and sudden growth happening over at the Etihad stadium is the start of something big in the East of Manchester. Over the decades as Salford has flourished into a secondary centre of Manchester in the west, it appears that now is the time for the east to finally succeed and expand, competing with the city centre and Salford as a destination.
As Alsops master plan in Ancoats still seeks it's success you wonder whether the expansion at MCFC will help sandwich it in, positioning it within the centre, rather than the edge where it currently sits. There is also the very quiet BDP Master plan for the further context in and around the stadium. Their scheme is still to be seen but the massive overhaul of a leisure lead development can only change the future urban grain of the city.
Can a city work well with 3 key destinations, or will they begin to merge, blurring the lines between the areas, expanding what is deemed the "centre", and becoming the catalyst that turns Manchester into the city of Greater Manchester, a new Mega-City. Built to rival that of London and Paris, even as far as New York. The city of the future.
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