Salk Institute - Louis Kahn (La Jolla, CA) 1960

This is one of those places that is bigger conceptually than I had ever imagined (having only looked at photos and having read about it for years). First of all, it’s important to note that Jonas Salk is the person that developed the vaccine for polio in 1954. It’s believed Polio had killed over 500,000+ people worldwide (over a 50 year period) and left tens of millions with debilitating paralysis or physical deformities.

The institute is situated on the edge of the Pacific Ocean and in a grand gesture both frames the wide optimistic sky above and opens it’s arms to the teaming-with-life sea below. Kahn somehow captured the weight of Salk’s accomplishment and gracefully honored it with these mirrored stacks that house tiny wooden monk-like cells for devoted academics, encouraging them to reach high. A channel of water runs along the center uniting a public space for researchers to congregate and share ideas (there are even slate boards at the base of each stack for chalked ideas to freely be displayed, discussed and debated) with clear pools (of metaphorical knowledge) that tier at the West end and return the water back to the start of the fountain.

It’s a sacred place that remarkably blends the spiritual and scientific. It felt more like a cathedral than any cathedral I’ve visited. If you ever get the chance…go experience it.

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Garden Studio (London)

Strong and appropriate material palette on this tiny backyard studio, especially like the terrazzo clad exterior and polished concrete floor and patio. Looks like it could exist in the American West nicely. More by Sonn Studio here.

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Treehouses

Several years ago, I was talking with a carpenter at a party about treehouses. He shared that when he was a teen, he and his friends built one about 60ft high - this made his dad slightly uncomfortable so he supplied the kids with a bunch of netting to secure below as a precaution. The kids set it up about 15ft from the base of the tree and spent the summer jumping into it….from the treehouse.

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Peking Man Cave Shelter (THAD)

The roof structure’s elegant form recalls the ancient terrain of the area, mimicking the hillside that once protected the dwellers of this now historic site. More info. here.

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Peking Man Cave is the site of a group of Homo Erectus fossils (from approx. 750,000 yrs. ago), discovered in 1929–37 during excavations at Zhoukoudian near Beijing, China.

Peking Man Cave is the site of a group of Homo Erectus fossils (from approx. 750,000 yrs. ago), discovered in 1929–37 during excavations at Zhoukoudian near Beijing, China.

3 things

  1. I like how the wood decking is spaced by every other spindle

  2. The scaled shingles create a playful texture

  3. The entire in-between-space is cover by a glass skylight

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