Saturday, May 31, 2008

Detail


Here is an overhang detail at a brick wall. The weathered brick is meant to imitate brick from 250 years ago. You can see a metal drip around the top of the wood. Where the overhang juts out from the wall, there is metal flashing as well.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Gates



I detailed this gate. The project was "Harbor Lofts" for the CIM Group. It is located in Anaheim, California. Sales began in 2008.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Made with paper & light cardboard



Architecture is not always building with sticks and bricks. Sometimes it is working with surfaces. Here is a collection of surfaces made to look like a flaming dagger. It was part of a costume for a medieval themed awards dinner (Rancho Del Mar District of the Orange County Boy Scouts of America www.ocbsa.org)

Photography by CJ Ganiere

Sunday, May 11, 2008

:-)

Happy Mothers' Day.
To every mother, past, present and future. Thank you.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

History of Accessibility

Sometime it helps to learn about the past before pressing into the future. Accessibility is presently considered a civil right in the United States of America. I received the e-mail below from one of the most knowledgeable people in California on the subject.

From: Mankin, Michael
Sent: Wednesday, April 09, 2008 9:51 AM
Hello,
Well, no online history – just the Attorney General's site:
https://oag.ca.gov/civil/major-initiatives

CA has little institutional memory, yet archives exist in various agency records where the law requires retention.  One of the best timelines is online at DREDF:
http://www.dredf.org/about/dredf_timeline.shtml

DSA had a ANSI standard applied to new state funded buildings from 1969 until 1982, but no path of travel for existing buildings until after that. Local enforcement followed suit in 1970.

I find that every administration develops its own version of history according to the current political agenda.

Here is federal timeline:
TIMETABLE OF LEGISLATION AND ACCESSIBILITY GUIDELINES FROM 1961 TO 1998:

1961 ANSI publishes ANSI A117.1, Making Buildings Accessible to and Usable by the Physically Handicapped.
1965 Congress passes the Vocational Rehabilitation Amendment Act (P.L. 89-333).
1968 Congress passes the Architectural Barriers Act (ABA) (P.L. 90-480).
1973 Congress passes the Rehabilitation Act (P.L. 93-112).
1978 Sections 502 and 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (P.L. 93-112) are amended.
1980 ANSI publishes a revised version of ANSI A117.1, designated ANSI A117.1-1980.
1982 U.S. Access Board publishes Minimum Guidelines and Requirements for Accessible Design (MGRAD).
1984 Federal ABA rule-making agencies (HEW, DOD, HUD, USPO) publish Uniform Federal Accessibility Standard (UFAS).
1986 ANSI publishes revised version of ANSI A117.1, designated ANSI A117.1-1986.
1988 Congress passes the Fair Housing Amendments Act (P.L. 100-430).
1990 Congress passes the Americans with Disabilities Act (P.L. 101-336).
1991 U.S. Access Board publishes Americans with Disabilities Act Accessibility Guidelines for  Buildings and Facilities (ADAAG).
1991 U.S. Departments of Justice and Transportation publish the ADA Standards for Accessible Design.
1992 ANSI publishes a revised version of ANSI A117.1, designated CABO/ANSI A117.1-1992.
1995 Congress passes the Congressional Accountability Act.
1998 ANSI publishes a revised version of ANSI A117.1, designated CABO/ANSI A117.1-1998.
1998 Congress reauthorizes the Rehabilitation Act.
2004 U.S. Access Board publishes new Americans with Disabilities Act / Architectural Barriers Act   Accessibility Guideline (36 CFR Parts 1190 and 1191)
 Michael J. Mankin

Supervising Architect
Division of the State Architect, Headquarters Office
Department of General Services
1102 Q Street, Suite 5100
Sacramento, CA 95811-6550
BUILDING GREEN  •  BUYING GREEN  •  WORKING GREEN

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Photo Editing

While studying at USC (www.usc.edu), I discovered Adobe's Photoshop 3.0. It came during my 4th year of architecture school. I was experimenting with CAD and rendering. At the time AutoCad was its eleventh version and the rendering was very primitive. My instructor suggested using Photoshop to enhance the images of my glorified boxes. You could add trees, cars, people or add the appearance of glass (without having to render glass which at the time took multiple hours).

Photoshop improved year over year and left my price range to stay current with the updates.

One freebie I found is Gnu Image Manipulation Program (GIMP). http://www.gimp.org/ After using GIMP at work for nearly a year, I find it suitable for most of my work with images.

Another freebie is Picasa2 by Google. http://picasa.google.com/ Picasa2 cannot draw or paint, but it can organize and add effects.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Newport Beach Temple

Attached is a photo of the Newport Beach Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The architect described the structure as a steel with some concrete. It is clad with a stone that is supposed to leech it's pinkish color over time to become whiter and whiter.

--
http://www.cafepress.com/ganiere
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Friday, May 2, 2008

Revit

As an architect I am always looking for the best way to express my design ideas. We use many tools. Pencil, pen, paper, plotter, computer, software. One bit of software that I use regularly is Revit Architecture 2008 by Autodesk. It is not a simple tool, but it is a powerful tool.

http://resources.autodesk.com/adsk/servlet/Revit-Architecture/overview.htm

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Selling something

Many blogs have advertising or advertise. Well who am I to break the trend?

http://www.cafepress.com/ganiere

Podcast with some architecture content...

https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/chris-ganiere