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12. Glass, a History

The history of its [glass] production and use Wikipedia is remarkably details on this topic. I have little to add except to say that windows hold symbolic value, which is why people buy windows with useless pieces of fake frame pretending to divide one pane of glass into six. It seems like glass always looked... Continue Reading →

11. Glass

The insulating properties of glass This experiment of writing a post a day for Michael Sorkin's laundry list of prerequisites for architects has turned into "how effective is google at answering a particular question". I can share links explaining how window insulation is measured (on a zero to one scale called u-value aka thermal transmittance).... Continue Reading →

10. Azaleas

The flowering season for azaleas Number 10 of 250 things an architect should know, according to architect Michael Sorkin. The Azalea Society of America has a chart showing bloom times which vary based on weather, species:

9. Rent Subsidy in DC

[How many people receive rent subisidy] in your city (including the rich)? [A semantic issue: if you rent out a house and the landlord gets tax breaks on their mortgage interest rate is not everyone getting a tertiary/'trickle down' subsidy, assuming that the cost of financing home ownership gets passed on to tenant?] I currently... Continue Reading →

8. Rent Subsidy

The number of people with rent subsidies in New York City The Museum of the City of New York had a show over the winter focusing on affordable housing in the city. The show was a rich look at various types of affordable housing projects undertaken in the last 100 or so years. (Coverage of... Continue Reading →

7. Hatshepsut’s Temple

Everything possible about Hatshepsut’s temple (try not to see it as ‘modernist’ avant la lettre). Queen Hatshepsut made the news this week with reports that her impact had been covered up by her successor (stepson); she was a far more prolific builder than previously thought. Sorkin here implores a reading of her namesake temple that... Continue Reading →

6. Whisper in the City

The distance of a whisper Noise pollution is something I seem to care about now that I'm older. As a teenager I scoffed at my mom complaining about noise coming through the party wall of a neighboring apartment. I laughed and photographed a 'No Honking /$350 Fine' the first time I saw one. Now I... Continue Reading →

5. A Shout in the City

The distance a shout carries in the city A shout travels by airwaves and its reach is influenced by humidity, drowned by wind and ambient noise. Traffic is loud. People can be. A shout is a voice, and a city brings many voices together in close proximity. One shout can be drowned out by others,... Continue Reading →

4. Modulus of Rupture

The modulus of rupture. Number four on Michael Sorkin's list of 250 things every architect should know refers to the strength of a structural element. How much force until the (toothpick, twin, log, beam) snaps? Various sizes of concrete, steel, different species of wood, etc are subjected to a test with a point load increasing... Continue Reading →

3. Lifeboat

[How to live] with the same [5] strangers in a lifeboat for one week. What am I going to write about, naval architecture? (I think I need to save that for number two hundred something.) As an earnest requirement for aspiring architects this one seems silly, but as a thought experiment it offers more. What... Continue Reading →

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