Saturday, June 20, 2009

Concert Today @ Sangati Center

Bansuri and Santoor Concert

Saturday June 20th
8pm

Mindia Devi Klein - bansuri
Arshad Syed - santoor and tabla


Mindia Devi has been a disciple of Ustad Ali Akbar Khan since the age of 19. A recipient of the American Institute of Indian Studies Smithsonian Fellowship, Mindia traveled to India to train on bansuri under Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia. Mindia's expertise in jazz music, stemming from her training at NYC's High School of Performing Arts, and her knowledge of gamelan music from a Fulbright Scholarship trip to Bali, enable her to continue to innovate musically.


http://sangaticenter.org/

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"To Die For"



A Street-Artist in Greece reacts to the Taliban's brutal execution of a young couple in Afghanistan who tried to flee for love.


Taliban execute eloping young lovers in Afghanist

A young couple who tried to elope in one of the most lawless and conservative parts of Afghanistan have been publicly executed by Taliban gunmen after their parents handed them over to be tried by insurgents.

Officials from the south-western province of Nimroz say Gul Pecha, in her late teens, and her boyfriend Abdul Aziz, 21, were shot by a firing squad outside a mosque in their home village of Lokhi on Monday.

The couple had fled to a nearby village and were planning to start a life together without the permission of their parents, according to the province's police chief Abdul Jabar Pardeli.

But they were found by their parents and turned over to the Taliban, who held them for four days in Lokhi's mosque before putting them on trial.

Ghulam Dastageer Azad, the governor of Nimroz, said the couple's execution was "against Islam, against the law and against the constitution".

An unofficial justice system, often dispensing brutal punishment to people found guilty of petty crimes or breaking the Taliban's strict interpretation of Islamic values, has become the hallmark of areas where insurgents enjoy a high degree of influence.

A recent report by a human rights group said the Taliban systematically terrorise civilians with threatening "night letters", executions and limb amputations in order to force communities not to support the government.

Taliban commanders are even issued with manuals telling them what techniques to use and who to target.

Officials say the couple's home district of Khash Rod is under almost complete Taliban control.

Sadiq Chakhansor, the head of the provincial council, said he thought the couple were intending to flee to Iran, where many young people from the region grew up as refugees, enjoying a relatively liberal environment before returning to their much more restrictive homeland.

Although the provincial governor, chief of police and leader of the local council all claimed Taliban gunmen were responsible for the murders, a spokesman for the movement denied Taliban involvement.

"I have contacted our fighters in the area and I can say that none of them were involved," said Qari Yousuf Ahmadi. "But it was a very bad thing for these people to escape from their homes without permission and it is right that they should be punished according to Sharia law."

There are almost no Afghan or foreign troops in Khash Rod, which is seen as a resting area and a passageway for militants moving through into neighbouring Helmand province where most of Britain's effort in the country is directed.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Zaha Hadid.. At it again!

Zaha Hadid Architects Win Cairo Expo City Competition



Zaha Hadid Architects have won a competition to design Cairo Expo City in Cairo, Egypt.

After presenting the design to Egyptian Prime Minister Dr. Ahmed Nazif, Zaha Hadid Architects was announced as architects of the new Cairo Expo City. Zaha Hadid Architects will be designing Cairo Expo City together with global multi-disciplinary engineering consultancy Buro Happold.

The winning design for Cairo Expo City delivers a unique facility for Cairo – a 450,000 square metre, state of the art city for exhibitions and conferences, located between the centre of Cairo and the city’s airport. The project comprises a major international exhibition and conference center with business hotel. A further office tower and a shopping centre are also proposed.

‘This is a truly national project for Egypt.’ said Sherif Salem, CEO of the GOIEF (General Organization of International Exhibitions and Fairs).
‘The current exhibition halls for Cairo do not meet the standards now required by the international conference and exhibition industry. With this exceptional design by Zaha Hadid Architects, Cairo will be among the world’s top cities for conferences and fairs, able to cater for the widest variety and size of events.’

The undulating fluid forms of the Cairo Expo City design were inspired by the natural topography of the Nile valley explained Zaha Hadid.

‘As the exhibition spaces require the greatest degree of flexibility, we wanted to ensure that all the public spaces and formal composition of Cairo Expo City relate to the surrounding Egyptian landscape.’ said Hadid. ‘Along the great rivers of the region, most particularly the Nile, there is a powerful dynamic – a constant flow between the water and the land – which extends to incorporate the neighboring buildings and landscapes. For the Cairo Expo City design, we worked to capture that seamlessness and fluidity in an urban architectural context.’

Carving and sculpting processes have been used to divide the very large exhibition and conference areas required for Cairo Expo City into clusters of individual buildings that have their own formal composition, yet each building relates to the overall design. A main north-south artery is carved through the design, with secondary streams converging at the center to ease crowd traffic during event. The movement of people within these streams informs the building entrances on the site.

Zaha Hadid Architects was shortlisted with Norwegian architecture practice Snohetta for the second phase of the competition in April. Works will begin in October this year to clear the site.

Client: GOIEF (General Organization of International Exhibitions and Fairs), Cairo

Design: Zaha Hadid Architects
Engineering: Buro Happold, London
Quantity Surveyor: Gleeds, London
Traffic and Logistics: Buro Happold, London
Built Area: 450,000sqm (exhibition halls, conference centre and mixed-use areas)
Height of Towers: 33 and 31 stories

Related posts:

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  3. Nekton Stools // Seamless Collection // Zaha Hadid
  4. Zaha Hadid Architects Reveal More Information And Pictures Of Their ‘Regium Waterfront’ Project
  5. Zaha Hadid Architects Wins Competition For The LLC At The University Of Economics & Business // Vienna // Austria.
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source:
http://www.archicentral.com/zaha-hadid-architects-win-cairo-expo-city-competition-19779/


source:http://www.greenthinkers.org/blog/2008/06/chic_solar_fashion.html

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Chic Solar Fashion

zegnasolarjacket_photos.jpg

Want to look all cool and stuff? Like Italian designers? Well, then the Solar-Powered Jacket from Ermenegildo Zegna just might be for you.

Made of a breathable fabric called Microtene, the jacket features two two-by-three-inch solar panels embedded in the jacket’s removable Nehru-style collar. According to Henry Alford, the panels are wired to a battery in the breast pocket which is the size of a deck of cards: with four hours’ worth of sun, the battery can be used to charge five- and six-volt appliances like cell phones and iPods.

How much? Put it this way, if you have to ask, you might not be able to afford it.

Sidenote: We had to ask. It’s $750.



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Integration of Photovoltaics in membrane structures.


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An interesting write up in DETAIL Magazine :

http://www.detail.de/artikel_photovoltaics-membrane-structures-jan-cremers_23673_En.htm

I wonder if this might begin to be incorporated into fashion now that they have the technology for malleable pv…

Gives a whole new meaning to “sun dress!”




Research + Technology


Integration of Photovoltaics in Membrane Structures


Membrane materials offer a broad and attractive range of possibilities for the creation of wide-span lightweight building skins with a high level of light transmission. The many different kinds of buildings constructed with high-performance membranes and thin-sheet or film-like materials confirms the enormous potential of these high-tech substances, which in their original built form – i.e. the tent – are among the oldest known to man.
Photovoltaik, Membranen
PV Flexibles on PTFE membranes
Although suspended building elements are ideally suited for large-area structures like stadium roofs and airports, there was hitherto no way of incorporating photovoltaics in them. With its PV Flexibles, SolarNext AG has now developed a form of photovoltaic technology that enables solar cells to be integrated directly into membrane materials.
This technology is based on extremely flexible, amorphous thin-film solar cells embedded in ETFE laminates. Durable building materials like ETFE film and PTFE-coated glass-fibre fabric from the fluoropolymer group are a well-tried solution in everyday practice. They are more durable than PVC membranes; they are resistant to UV-radiation; and their “self-cleansing” surfaces ensure good resistance to soiling.

PV Flexibles can, for example, be used for single-layer roofs and facades without an additional supporting structure. They can also be substituted for the upper layer of pneumatically supported cushions. Used on situations such as these, photovoltaic elements serve not only to generate electricity; they can also provide shade, which may often be an essential requirement.


Anticlastic shape of an integrated photovoltaic- PTFE-membrane structure with applied laminates

In this way, insolation within the building in summer can be minimized, thereby reducing the necessary cooling loads and energy consumption. This synergetic effect is especially important, since it helps to improve the economics of the integrated photovoltaic installation.
The development of the thin-film technology used in this context took place at the University of Neuchâtel in Switzerland. In the meantime, it has undergone further refinement by the established Swiss company VHF Technologies, which also manufactures the resultant product. In a continuous (roll-to-roll) production process, the photovoltaic cells are applied to the polymer bearing material in a sequence of layers, whereby the solar cells ultimately have a total thickness of only about 1 µm.
The use of economic polymers as a substrate results in a very high deposition speed in comparison to that of alternative bearing materials such as glass or metal foil. This, in turn, results in moderate substrate temperatures. Otherwise, a thermally induced distortion of the substrate material would inevitably occur, which would present a further obstacle.
According to a study carried out by the Q-Cells company, the potential of this technology in terms of cost savings is superior to that of any other technique. In 2010, the overall costs could be as much as 70 per cent lower than those of comparable modern systems.
Photovoltaic rolls manufactured in this way are cut to length, aligned and joined to form laminates that meet the specific requirements of each project. The photovoltaic membrane is then bedded between two ETFE layers of different thicknesses. This process of lamination ensures that the photovoltaic cells are effectively protected against loads and stresses, as well as against moisture and weathering.
At present, the size of the modules is still limited by the dimensions of the available laminating equipment (approxately 3 m ≈ 1.5 m). Depending on whether they are used in roofs or facades, in a single-layer form of construction or as part of a multilayer membrane cushion, the individual laminae may have to be joined to form larger areas.
To create the relevant three-dimensional form, the edges must be fixed together after cutting, using a special welding process. Only when this has been done can the PV Flexibles be inte-
grated in large-area pneumatic structures.
When the photovoltaic elements are used as an intermediate layer or inside a cushion, they are, of course, optimally protected. In such cases, however, the light-refracting effect of the upper film layer and the thermal gains that occur in the heat-absorbing middle layer would result in a diminution of the energy yield. For that reason, it is clearly preferable to integrate the photovoltaics in the outer layer of the cushion.

Photovoltaic cells integrated in top layer of pneumatic membrane structure


Flexible photovoltaic construction integrated in a large membrane structure (photomontage of Gottlieb Daimler Stadium, Stuttgart)

Estimating the yield
Estimating the yield from a photovoltaic system that is incorporated in a membrane structure is a far more complex process than that for conventional photovoltaic modules. The reasons for this are as follows:

• As the product of quite different architectural designs, the geometry of roof and facade structures will obviously vary from project to project and necessitate different layouts for the integral photovoltaic system in each case. In other words, a standard situation that would allow the development of a more or less uniform product scarcely exists.
• The orientation of the individual photovoltaic elements in relation to the sun can vary within a single project. The process of determining the form of the films or membranes – the outcome of a building’s geometry, the supporting structure and the loads to be borne – will also be decisive for the geometry of the photovoltaic system.
• Generally speaking, the surfaces should be curved in at least one direction – better still in two (anticlastic) – otherwise they will not be structurally stable.
• The complex, three-dimensional forms that occur make it more difficult to assess possible shading effects.

Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jan Cremers is director of envelope technology at the Solar
Next AG/Hightex Group in Rimsting on Chiemsee, ¬Germany. He also teaches at Stuttgart University of Applied Sciences.

www.solarnext.de

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Friday, June 5, 2009

I LOVE YOU ALLLLL!!!!!!!!!


Last night was so amazing.


highlights:


dAdAs....

3$ beer
5$ martini
priceless friends:)


LOTS OF YELLING but '' its my birthday!!!!!" so it was okay.


mannnnnnnnj is amazing. fact.





alllllllsoooooo


went to osha's last night. AMAZING. don't remmebre having a sip of that lychee martini bc i was tooo drunk. fact.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

birthday :)


last year for my birthday i was in Munich, Germany.

This year, I will be in San Francisco, U.S.A.


Huge difference.

Or not!


We are having a party on Saturday and the theme is "JUNE-TOBER FEST!!!!!"

"Come one, come all, just make sure to bring some alcohol!!"