Posts Tagged ‘bookcase’

Sleeping with books

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

Morgan Puett library bedroom Mildred's Lane

“I would be most content if my children grew up to be the kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves.”

~Anna Quindlen, “Enough Bookshelves,” New York Times, 7 August 1991. This room is in Mildred’s Lane, the Pennsylvania artist’s colony that J. Morgan Puett and partner built over many years. Thanks to kellylynnwaters for the photo, which is originally from J. Morgan Puett via pjb.

Avenel Cooperative Housing Project built either for cartoonists or communists

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Avenel Cooperative Housing, 1947, by Gregory Ain

Why can’t cooperative housing look like this more often? The Avenel Cooperative Housing Project in LA’s Silver Lake neighbourhood, supposedly built either for “a bunch of communists” or for a “group of motion picture cartoonists and their families” (click above for informative Wikipedia article) was affordable when it was built in 1947 and of course is now ridiculously expensive. It was designed by architect Gregory Ain for a group of ten families who each contributed $11,000. Ain built ten three-bedroom units of 960 sq ft (89 sq m), each positioned along a common path. They were meant to be a model for low-cost housing, but these particular units have proven so well-designed and constructed that they’re now too prized to be affordable. Someone needs to copy these, both for their looks and for the fact that though a relatively small square footage for a family, they’re so well-laid out that they apparently feel spacious. See comments here for a possible explanation why. As a plan for affordable urban living these days, it’s unlikely that a single storey would now be considered an efficient use of an expensive urban lot. Or would it? Photos from LA Curbed. See also the LA Times and here.

Avenel Cooperative Housing, 1947, by Gregory Ain

Avenel Cooperative Housing, 1947, by Gregory Ain

Avenel Cooperative Housing, 1947, by Gregory Ain

Avenel Cooperative Housing, 1947, by Gregory Ain

Avenel Cooperative Housing, 1947, by Gregory Ain

House full of holes by David Hovey

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Beams with holes

A few years ago architect/builder David Hovey designed and built this house for himself and his family in Winnetka, Illinois, just outside Chicago. Like most of Hovey’s buildings the house is constructed of relatively simple materials, including perforated steel I-beams, and all its parts are designed to be pre-fabricated and then shipped in. The house took only two days to assemble. It’s airy and welcoming, minimalist without being forbidding, and really well decorated. It takes a lot of skill to use this much red and yellow without producing a mustard-and-ketchup colour scheme – how many architects, let alone builder/architects, are this good at interior design as well? All this house needs is an indoor swing; you could hang one just about anywhere. Via AD (article worth reading). Photos by Jon Miller and Hedrich Blessing. More on Hovey at mocoloco and here.

House by and for architect David Hovey

“I’ve spent my career thinking about how to design buildings economically and efficiently,” [Hovey] says. “I want to create systems that go together simply, in a way that leads to rapid construction. By reducing the elapsed time between design and occupancy, I can save a lot of administrative costs. And I want to put everything together using standard products and familiar technologies, which saves even more.”

Vancouver could really use a few builder architects like Hovey – or even just one, somebody with a good eye and an interest in simple materials affordably assembled.

House by and for architect David Hovey

House by and for architect David Hovey

House by and for architect David Hovey

When library scientists complain about having too many books.

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

bookcase with pitchfork

This is an addendum – or antidote – to the previous wall-of-books post. Riba, a library scientist, writes

Within our home the sheer quantity of books we own inhibits our ability to display artwork. Bookshelves have consumed most of the wallspace, leaving few places to hang paintings. We could weed our book collection — I could point to dozens of books which we haven’t opened in over a decade which are also readily available from the library… But whether it’s nostalgia, inertia, or something else, the books continue to gather dust and the paintings sit in the corner.

And we’re not alone. Self-storage has become a massive growth industry as Americans have more possessions than can fit in their homes.

[E]ven when the stored items are innocent possessions, a certain poignant sadness haunts them: They are mementos we somehow can’t live with, and yet can’t live without, and exemplify the downside of acquisition, the moment when you realize there are more bread machines, plastic lawn chairs, and treadmills than anyone could use in a lifetime.

We only have so much time, money space and attention. So when does a security blanket become an anchor?

See my post on a similar topic here. Bookcase above via Bokhyller via Preik.

For bookshelf fetishists

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

Via Preik via Bokhyller, shelves

Via Preik via Bokhyller, shelves

Via Preik via Bokhyller, shelves

Via Preik via Bokhyller, shelves

In case you haven’t already see the entire amazing archive, it’s by Bokhyller via Preik.

Egle Amaldi’s bookshelf & modernist Cado shelving

Saturday, January 17th, 2009

Italian architect Egle Amaldi's own living room

These staggered, airy midcentury modern arrangements are so much less chichi than the many fancified contemporary bookshelves we see around. For some reason we love this simple, balanced living room belonging to Italian architect Egle Amaldi in the 1960s. The bookshelf – its shape and the way it spans the whole width – is probably the key to the room. It is somewhat reminiscent of Cado shelving, named after Danish designer Poul Cadovius, even though its shelves are longer and it’s missing the characteristic cabinets and other boxy components. (See an excellent example at kitkadesign and below.) Its verticals are visually interesting and objects look particularly good on the syncopated horizontal levels. How hard would this be to DIY? Probably not that hard. More photos of this type of bookcase in the book “The Modern Room” which also features work by Amaldi. People say that the contemporary versions of these are RAKKS and ISS, but we like the simplicity of the one above. Some DIY ideas for Cado shelving and “pole” shelving (where the supports are poles fixed to ceiling and floor, rather than wall-mounted) can be found on the Pole Shelving blog. If you’re in Vancouver, there are a couple of Cado-style units at the moment at Fabulous Finds.

Paul Cadovius Royal System wall unit, in Pesaro, Italy

Paul Cadovius Royal System wall unit

Below, more classic Cado shelving from Flickr.

My cado system...needs a magazine rack and more shelves