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Peter Guthrie

Peter Guthrie

Official Google SketchUp Blog Architectural Rendering Blog - Architectural Rendering and Architectural Illustration in Watercolor, Pencil and Pen and Ink If you went to architecture or environmental design school back in the day (when you had to use punch cards to enter data into a room-sized computer), you have witnessed the great shift from analog to digital in the design industry. You’re also old enough to have begun taking for granted the many ways the digital revolution changed our professional lives. As 2013 draws to a close, seems like a reasonable time to share a personal list of “best ways the digital revolution changed my professional life.” Since I tend not to use CAD--arguably the tool that has had the most influence--my list will be different from yours, but please add your own list in the comments section below. (And no, you don’t have to be an architect to play along.) Jimmy Stewart, from that famous movie So here we go: my list of the best ways the digital revolution has changed my life: The internet.

MobileAcademy - Flight Case Archive Flight Case Archive Since 2004 different film and audio archives with the topic of “Narratives about Places, Cities and Territories” are evolving from the projects of the Mobile Academy, now merged in a transportable archive unit. Flight Case, Van Abbemuseum, Photo: Peter Cox Flight Case, Van Abbemuseum Flight Case, Bregenz Flight Case, Steirischer Herbst Helmut Höge at the opening at HAU Visitor watching the talk Eyal Weizman and David Cambell/ Space Controll 1 and Matthias Lilienthal listening at a team meeting Flight Case Archive in the office of HAU2 >> more photos from the openin From the 5th - 8th of November the Flight Case Archive has been shown in Hamburg, Kampnagel at the Dance Congress 2009 Drawing: Florian Stirnemann - raumlaborberlin Content: Blackmarket for Useful Knowledge 2005 – 2011 700 talks with experts (200 hrs. KIOSK for useful Knowledge 2003 - 2011 I. Night Lesson Nr.1 2008 Joseph Vogl, "On Hesitation" (1.20 hrs.

How to make over 50000 dollars a year selling 3d models – tips from a top seller | 3D Rendering The following article is an interview with one of the top sellers in the 3d stock world. Although he does not want to reveal his true identity because he does not want to risk having his collection copied, he has revealed a lot of valuable information and shared some great tips that will prove useful for 3d artists who to make money selling 3d models on turbosquid, the3dstudio and other 3d marketplaces. Cgdigest:First of all, tell us a little bit about your background and experience with selling 3d models. Seller: I have been educated as a visual artist and I am a self taught 3d modeler. Cgdigest: How large is your collection and how much money do you make per year selling 3d models? Seller: I have more than 600 3d models in my collection and I make about 50000 usd a year. Cgdigest: That’s quite a lot. Seller: When I first started selling 3d models, they were all modeled as part of my freelance projects. Seller: To be honest, I don’t. Seller: This is a very complex subject.

LA VILLE RAYÉE Expertise in Website Designing, 3D Architectural Design, Online Marketing Aggregated Porosity DAL WKSHP Aggregated Porosity is an exploration of digital fabrication and fluid forms structures, the canopy was produced by students and architecture professionals in the ‘digital architecture laboratory’ workshop held in changsha, China. The installation was created under the direction of professor Biao Hu and Yu Du of Zaha Hadid architects with invited tutors like Suryansh Chandra also from Zaha Hadid architects and Shuojiong Zhang of UNstudio, who were asked to propose a design scheme aligned with the workshop’s theme and that could provide shade and fit in a volume of 3 x 3 x 6 meters.

David Hier Render Studio The Open-Office Trap In 1973, my high school, Acton-Boxborough Regional, in Acton, Massachusetts, moved to a sprawling brick building at the foot of a hill. Inspired by architectural trends of the preceding decade, the classrooms in one of its wings didn’t have doors. The rooms opened up directly onto the hallway, and tidbits about the French Revolution, say, or Benjamin Franklin’s breakfast, would drift from one classroom to another. Distracting at best and frustrating at worst, wide-open classrooms went, for the most part, the way of other ill-considered architectural fads of the time, like concrete domes. The open office was originally conceived by a team from Hamburg, Germany, in the nineteen-fifties, to facilitate communication and idea flow. In 2011, the organizational psychologist Matthew Davis reviewed more than a hundred studies about office environments. Psychologically, the repercussions of open offices are relatively straightforward.

3D Modeling Services: Architectural 3D Rendering & 3D Modeling Services Landscape Optimism: Chris Reed on Landscape Urbanism: Places: Design Observer Interview: Quilian Riano Chris Reed. [All images courtesy of Stoss Landscape Urbanism, except as noted] In 2000 landscape architect Chris Reed founded StossLU, or Stoss Landscape Urbanism. Since then the Boston-based office has emerged as one of the leading advocates for enlarging the scope and scale of landscape projects and practices. In the past decade Stoss has indeed played a formative role in a range of ambitious projects, both built and proposed. Along the way Stoss has racked up numerous awards, including the 2010 Landscape Award from Topos Journal, and been the subject of national and international publications, including a 2007 monograph. Erie Street Plaza, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Earlier this year I interviewed Chris Reed at his office at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard, where he is an Adjunct Associate Professor. Quilian Riano: You were recently one of four finalists in the Minneapolis Riverfront Design Competition. Top: Minneapolis Riverfront Streamlines overview.

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