Archinect
pale shelter

if by underground they mean taking it (sustainable design) "to the grave" aka f^ck it! - then yeah! heck yeah!

i think the concept of sustainability is understood by 1% of the educated public - the inverted pyramid - underground yeahhh!! and so no relationship to the sky here - what about exiting requirements lol ? - all mechanical means to get people to safety at grade ABOVE?!  - natural ventilation, really? natural daylighting, you really think so? (no chance here)  - i thought these were sustainable precepts - i must be wrong, perhaps a droid designed this with some algorithmic idea of what sustainable design embodies

and the cultural response / design intent ? - as reflected in the article, talks about the unique quality of the stratified city layers thru time of the architecture in mexico city. this isn't anything special among cultural landmarks/cities - i found this to be my most interesting discovery while studying in rome -

but in Rome they celebrate, respond to, and maintain the history and beautiful architecture of the past - (i wish more of our american cities did this with early 1890-1920s work) .... THIS project does the opposite - ignores the significance of Mexico City's architecture (it's like saying, yes chopin, i can play an etude nearly as beautiful as yours, but i will put it on "mute"), ignores the city street where people EXIST -  responds with a "ehh f-k it, let's build a freakin inverted pyramid, maverick, and put this whole thing on it's head metaphorically AND physically.

don't get me wrong, cave-like / underground environments can be extremely inspiring when the hard,stone,sectional quality of the earth is experienced - think peter zumthor architecture - but i also think the 9/11 memorial will be a beautiful example of this underground architecture (granted it's a memorial and not a city in the ground)

Fun!

Dec 22, 11 1:06 am  · 
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dia

Last time I looked, excavating and removing the required quantity of earth, and then building an inverted 775,000m2 structure underground wasn't particularly sustainable.

Dec 22, 11 3:18 am  · 
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citizen

Does this strike anyone as, at long last, the anatomical "answer" (as it were) to the supposedly everpresent phallus in skyscraper design?  Rather pointy, yes, but finally a welcome opening for, say, the TransAmerica Pyramid...?

 

 

Dec 22, 11 1:44 pm  · 
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x-jla

evacuating upward in a fire seems dangerous.

Dec 22, 11 1:44 pm  · 
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go do it

just plain dumb

Dec 22, 11 5:43 pm  · 
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l3wis

this would be incalculably expensive

Dec 22, 11 6:07 pm  · 
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mespellrong

This is a idea that you have to admire for the stupidity of it -- not for the reality. No one really wants to live in a jackass movie -- they just want to see it. This is what your professors meant by paper architecture. To me, it looks like an attempt to call Smith+Gill copyists of Violet-le-Duc.

Dec 22, 11 11:26 pm  · 
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underground buildings were the latest thinking back in the 1970s, but after a few attempts at subterranean living and working the idea was buried as a bad idea. so why are folks bothering to resurrect something better left for dead? what a waste of time and talent.  underground ain't sustainable or a good place to be.

Dec 22, 11 11:49 pm  · 
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LOL citizen I like the way you think!

Dec 23, 11 12:28 am  · 
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citizen

I'm just sayin'...

Dec 23, 11 1:56 am  · 
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trace™

pretty model

Dec 23, 11 6:56 am  · 
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TheMasterBuilder

http://youtu.be/i7900th4Ec8

Dec 26, 11 1:53 pm  · 
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