LOCUS Architecture BLOG

Building the Art of Sustainability

Monday, May 24, 2010

GOSH, ADULTS THESE DAYS!

My seven year old was at a friend’s birthday party this weekend, which always reminds me of the first one we gave at our house for our older son’s eighth birthday. Twenty five banshees pounding, sprinting, diving, and crashing around our house – each with a cup of some sticky fluid in hand. Wait, why did we agree to this? In different circumstances, I’d probably have repressed the memory by now, but I often reflect upon a moment from that party.

Each time a carload of boys would arrive, they’d sprint up the walk before jamming and wiggling through our front door simultaneously – like puppies. Breathless, most of them would take a quick look around and stop.

“WHOA! CARTER, YOUR HOUSE IS SO COOL!!! AWESOME!”

And boom, they were off to explore, drop toys over the catwalk, write on the chalkboard walls, stick magnets to the bathroom door, crank the stereo (of course), throw paper airplanes out the third floor windows, and crawl along the translucent floors while buddies cheered from below. “Let me try, my turn, my turn!” An indoor jungle gym of untapped potential.

The parents would come in a minute later, take a similar look around, and address my wife and me with a more calculated reaction, delivered in adult code. “Hey, this is really different…must be interesting to live here. What do your neighbors think?” TRANSLATION: What kind of weird maniacs would live in a house like this? Can I even trust my children here?

As our children develop into teens and adults, what happens to our acceptance and even thirst for difference? Don’t get me wrong, I’m not suggesting the masses should have a house like mine nor do I dismiss Tudors and Colonials as safe repetitions of worn European patterns. On the other hand, if kids – without a single exception in my experience – think our home is awesome, what changes after childhood to make people of their parent’s age suspicious?

I don’t have an answer, but I wonder if it has something to do with advertising. Sameness is somewhat ubiquitous in American culture, while regional culture may well be eroding with globalization. Gross oversimplification coming – in general, we eat similar foods, wear similar clothes, covet similar cars/bikes, and hang around with like-minded people. Our homes, when put on the market for consumption, are “depersonalized” so they appeal to the broadest (most beige) tastes. Why do we settle for this kind of life? Most of the people I know crave unique experiences when traveling, eating, or even just exercising. Why not demand it every day in the spaces we occupy?

I’m not going to take up skateboarding anytime soon, and I refuse to limit myself to my boys’ preferred eating habits, but maybe it’s time we try to see the possibilities our second graders see when viewing the world they move through. In fact, I think I’m going go home tonight and spray them both with a garden hose after a game of whiffle ball. In return, maybe they’ll try some escargot.

posted by Wynne Yelland at 3:20 pm  

Friday, May 21, 2010

REDWOOD & WINE ON THE PORCH?

Past clients Paul and Martha asked us to create a porch and main floor bathroom for their century-old home in a historic district in Minneapolis, “…something with pizzazz, different, but without thumbing our noses at our neighbors, some of whom are strict traditionalists.”

New porch + bath towards the end of construction

We answered by referencing the roof line and construction of the original cornice and fascia, detailing which was important to the neighborhood group. Windows and trim also recall the original colors of the existing structure, yet all of this is contrasted by a vertical-grain redwood screen that provides privacy to porch-sitters a mere twenty feet from the sidewalk. Tree huggers need not send me hateful notes, all the redwood and douglas fir used in the project is in its second life. The redwood was sourced from Duluth Timber, reclaimed from wine barrels.

Hidden above – in the roofline – is a “dish” flat roof for a future planted surface using Live Roof. The project was carefully and lovingly assembled by Ed Erickson of Ed Erickson Construction.

Reclaimed redwood screen

posted by Wynne Yelland at 9:47 am  

Thursday, May 13, 2010

ART-A-WHIRL 2010

Don black, line your pockets with cash, and steer your conversion van – if you have one – to NE Minneapolis for Art-A-Whirl this weekend. Use the Locus studio, #333, as your launching point to visit hundreds of open artist studios in the Northrup King Building. Jam that van with jewelry, paintings, sculptures, photography, fashion, furniture, textiles, prints, letterpress, maps, mosaics, heck – you can even bring your mandolin to have it repaired in here.

AN ENERGY-EFFICIENT MODERN HOUSE at Art-A-Whirl? Huh?

At Locus, we’ll be launching PPoD FOR SALE, an inexpensive small kit house perfect for cabin, pool house, DIYers, or urban infill. Buy one today, sit on the couch enjoying the living room view by the end of summer. Seriously.

PPoD 1.5, with red steel siding & roofing

PPoD Living

We’ll have information about underutilized services we’ve been offering for years: inexpensive fixed-fee design packages and free design consultations during First Thursdays in the Arts District. Naturally, we’ll be displaying beautiful images of environments created by Locus Architecture.

Bored? Yawning? Heard all about Art-A-Whirl too many times already? Bet you don’t know about Travis Nichols. On Sunday at 2, Travis will be at Locus to read from his first novel Off We Go Into The Wild Blue Yonder. In a recent review in the Star Tribune, Jane Ciabattari writes “Although sometimes unpolished, ‘Off We Go Into The Wild Blue Yonder’ is both original and haunting.” At times, the novel reminded me of Jonathan Safran Foer’s Everything is Illuminated, which remains one of the most original, thought-provoking, and entertaining books I’ve read.

Art-A-Whirl opens Friday and closes Sunday, May 14-16. Friday night 5-10, Saturday 12-8, Sunday 12-5. Adam will be in Friday night and Sunday. Wynne will be in Saturday 12-4, and Paul will take the evening shift on Saturday, 4-8. See you there!

posted by Wynne Yelland at 10:17 am  

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

LEMON SPICE & EVERYTHING NICE

Sarah, a friend of a friend, writes a local food blog, Vegetarian Perspective. She mentioned Locus’ 2X2 series in a recent post on her blog, a recipe for Lemon Spice cookies. Seems we inspired her – at least in part – to bake some truly awesome cookies. Her photo doesn’t lie. Sustainable creativity isn’t all architecture.

Take a bike ride, burn some calories, and make room for a dozen cookies – followed by potato leek soup.

posted by Wynne Yelland at 10:57 am  

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