Design and Architecture
Podcast door KCRW
Host Frances Anderton looks at design and architecture from a Los Angeles perspective.
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76 afleveringenGeoffrey von Oeyen completed a dream house for his brother, only to see it destroyed by the Woolsey Fire two years ago. As he nears completion on the rebuild, he reflects on living in the wildland-urban interface. Also, Janna Ireland is on a mission to tell stories about Black people and their creativity. She talks about her new photo book of buildings by the architect Paul Revere Williams.
Roman Mars has spent 10 years using his radio show “99% Invisible [https://99percentinvisible.org/]” to reveal the everyday quirks and delights of cities. Now he’s co-written a book called “The 99% Invisible City: A Field Guide to the Hidden World of Everyday Design [https://99percentinvisible.org/book/].” Mars talks with DnA about tales from LA, writing for print v. radio, and whether he secretly yearns to be a designer.
Americans are experiencing an epidemic of loneliness [https://www.kcrw.com/news/shows/press-play-with-madeleine-brand/wildfires-census-loneliness-tv/dear-loneliness-project]. A coliving project in Hollywood was designed to remedy it. Then came a pandemic. Ten months after its opening, DnA explores the design of Treehouse with creative director Sean Knibb, architect Jeff Soler, and reporter Adriana Cargill. Some residents also share how the project just might be what the doctor ordered at a time of extreme isolation.
Ventilation has become a life or death issue as as experts find that COVID-19 infections increase in poorly ventilated interiors. DnA looks into the extreme measures being taken to improve air conditioning and asks whether outside air is cheaper and healthier. D.J. Waldie has a writerly gift for divining the “sacred ordinariness” in the fabric of Los Angeles. In his new book “Becoming Los Angeles: Myth, Memory, and a Sense of Place,” Waldie reckons with himself and the region in a post-George Floyd world, while illuminating details of LA life, from telecopters to the tiles at Union Station.
California has around 21,000 licensed architects, and 300 of them are Black. SoCalNOMA (National Organization of Minority Architects [https://socalnoma.org/]) hopes to change that through its Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Challenge [https://socalnoma.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/SoCal-NOMA-DEI-Challenge_2020-Final-for-Release-1.pdf]. SoCalNOMA President Lance Collins also talks about decolonizing architecture education and finding an African American architectural language. Computer engineer William English made the mouse a reality. His son John reflects on his father’s work, how William English felt about Apple’s version of the mouse, and how the mouse got its name.
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