November 3, 2009
George III Style Leather Covered Armchairs
England
late 19th C.
the arched back and seat with apple green tufted leather, the arms and legs in dark walnut
http://www.1stdibs.com/furniture_item_detail.php?id=324211
November 2, 2009
Death and Life- urban life cycle

Life from decay
I see this building on a regular basis, walking home up 16th street. On this particular day it was grey and rainy and kind of dark and eery outside. I was struck by the beauty of this life cycle–trees, new life, growing out of the death and decay of an abandoned building.
October 30, 2009
eLevaToR dOOrs with a TwIsT!
check, check, check it out!
![shams-taekwondo-school[1] shams-taekwondo-school[1]](http://pldit.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/shams-taekwondo-school1.jpg?w=470)
you know karate? well i know Karaaazy!
![superman-the-movie[1] superman-the-movie[1]](http://pldit.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/superman-the-movie1.jpg?w=470)
It’s a bird, it’s a plane,…..
![great-lakes-science-center-bodyworld[1] great-lakes-science-center-bodyworld[1]](http://pldit.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/great-lakes-science-center-bodyworld1.jpg?w=470)
Just Gross!……but oh so cool at the same time!
October 28, 2009
Philly Street Furniture
http://www.planphilly.com/new-pitches-street-furniture
New pitches for “street furniture”
By Anthony Campisi
For PlanPhilly
Philadelphians had a chance on Monday to hear from four companies that will probably be bidding for the city’s new 20-year contract to install and maintain street furniture.
The city is preparing to release a request for proposals for a street furniture contract covering bus shelters, bike racks and information kiosks and held the meeting to get ideas about what should be included in the RFP.
Representatives from CBS Outdoor, CEMUSA, JCDecaux and Clear Channel Adshel made presentations to residents, activists and Rina Cutler, deputy mayor for transportation and utilities, at the Academy of Natural Sciences.
Joe Minott of the Clear Air Council and Mary Tracy of SCRUB, an advocacy group for public space, stressed the importance of balancing aesthetics with the need for advertisements.
While advertisements on bus shelters and other public furniture are “how we can make this happen,” Tracy asked, “how much is enough?”
Minott also stressed the importance of maintaining the bus shelters, criticizing CBS for its handling of the current contract.
“Oversight is critical,” he said.
The contract won’t cost the city money. Instead, the company which wins it will sell advertisements and will get a part of that to cover capital and maintenance costs. Any extra money will go into the city’s general fund.
“Any revenue we can generate … we are looking at very, very closely,” Cutler said.
The current contract, which provides for more than 260 bus shelters, has brought in about $10 million in revenue.
Cutler said the RFP will preserve the 12 sculpture bus shelters on Chestnut Street and the 27 arts in transit shelters maintained by the Center City District and will also look at expanding current amenities by doing things like adding more bus shelters.
She also assured members of the arts community that special rates it has for advertising at downtown bus stops will be preserved, and possibly expanded, in the new contract.
The city will probably break the RFP into two parts, she explained, with one segment covering bus shelters and asking for designs and plans for other street furniture like honor boxes for newspapers and public information kiosks. Another segment will deal with plans for maintaining the street furniture network.
The RFP is expected to be released by the end of the year, and bids will be considered by a committee including Cutler’s office, SEPTA, the Planning Commission and the Law Department.
All four companies expressed some trepidation that the contract may not cover newsstands, which are owned by the vendors and can include advertising. The JCDecaux representative said that the arrangement could depress advertising prices.
An outline of the four companies’ presentations follows:
CBS Outdoor
CBS’ representative, Richard Ament, stressed the importance of clear guidelines in the RFP, saying that his company is concerned with maintenance problems at city bus shelters.
“We’re not a design company,” he said, explaining that CBS contracts out design of street furniture and focuses on building advertising models to fund city’s street furniture programs.
CBS prefers to have street furniture designs presented to them by the city. It will then fabricate the furniture, sell advertising for it and work to maintain it.
JCDecaux
Bernard Parisot, president and co-CEO of JCDecaux North America, presented his company as a design firm, noting that architect Robert Stern had designed bus shelters for the company.
He said that the company invented street furniture by designing the first bus shelter 45 years ago and that “we pride ourselves in our attention to quality.”
JCDecaux runs the bike share system in Paris (Cutler said a bike share system probably won’t be included in the RFP) and has contracts for Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles and St. Louis.
Parisot said that JCDecuax funds bus shelters and other street furniture in outlying neighborhoods by concentrating advertising in downtowns, where street traffic is higher and advertising space commands better prices.
CEMUSA
Mark Madden, director of business development at CEMUSA, pointed out that his company exclusively focuses on street furniture and has the world’s largest contract, with the city of New York.
“Street furniture is the only medium that we sell,” he said, adding that CEMUSA ensures that advertising doesn’t become too intrusive by performing line-of-sight studies at bus stops.
The company also usually avoids advertising on products like park benches and garbage cans, and, he said, is committed to using environmentally sustainable business practices. Many of its bus shelters are solar powered, made of recycled materials and cleaned by environmentally friendly solvents.
Madden also said that the firm focuses on hiring local residents for jobs and usually opens up offices in cities where it has contracts.
Clear Channel Adshel
Clear Channel Adshel is the world’s biggest outdoor advertiser, with $3 billion a year in revenue.
Clear Channel representative George Kauker noted that the firm has contracts in Washington, D.C., and San Francisco and is active in 30 countries.
He said that the company minimizes on-street disturbances related to furniture installation by doing most construction in the warehouse and that it utilizes an online reporting system to coordinate responses to maintenance requests.
Let the Mayor’s Office of Transportation and Utilities know what you think about the street furniture concepts by completing this survey.
Survey link:
http://www.zoomerang.com/Survey/?p=WEB229S67Z8US3
Florence Broadhurst…How I heart textiles!
Overshadowed by her mysterious murder in1977 , Florence Broadhurst signature use of colour and pattern has captured the world�s imagination.
![091030_florence_broadhurst[1] 091030_florence_broadhurst[1]](http://pldit.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/091030_florence_broadhurst1.jpg?w=470)
![Chronicle%20Books%20-%20Florence%20Broadhurst[1] Chronicle%20Books%20-%20Florence%20Broadhurst[1]](http://pldit.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/chronicle20books20-20florence20broadhurst1.jpg?w=470)
Highly reccomended read!
Now, more than 100 years after her birth, her work has been rediscovered by the world�s leading fashion, interior and homeware designers and her prints are in huge demand internationally.
![willandtobys[1] willandtobys[1]](http://pldit.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/willandtobys1.jpg?w=200&h=300)
![emmahack2[1] emmahack2[1]](http://pldit.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/emmahack21.jpg?w=470)
AMAZING BODY ART …created by Emma Hack’s, only artist allowed to work with Florence’s beautiful legacy of wall patterns.![Emma_Hack_Florence_Broadhurst_2[1] Emma_Hack_Florence_Broadhurst_2[1]](http://pldit.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/emma_hack_florence_broadhurst_21.jpg?w=470)
Now that’s Epic! Enjoy….
The Garden, Epic Fail Los Angeles.
“The fourteen-acre community garden at 41st and Alameda in South Central Los Angeles is the largest of its kind in the United States. Started as a form of healing after the devastating L.A. riots in 1992, the South Central Farmers have since created a miracle in one of the country’s most blighted neighborhoods. Growing their own food. Feeding their families. Creating a community.
But now, bulldozers are poised to level their 14-acre oasis.
The Garden follows the plight of the farmers, from the tilled soil of this urban farm to the polished marble of City Hall. Mostly immigrants from Latin America, from countries where they feared for their lives if they were to speak out, we watch them organize, fight back, and demand answers:
Why was the land sold to a wealthy developer for millions less than fair-market value? Why was the transaction done in a closed-door session of the LA City Council? Why has it never been made public?
And the powers-that-be have the same response: “The garden is wonderful, but there is nothing more we can do.”
If everyone told you nothing more could be done, would you give up?”
Peaches Ramos, taking back the neighborhood
” Stand up for what is right, even if you’re standing alone.”-unknown
October 27, 2009
stephen wiltshire draws manhattan skyline from memory
click image for original posting on designboom.com!









