Thursday 29 September 2011

Babylon - The Wonder of the Ancient World

greek architecture


Babylon is one of the most famous cities in history and the story of its rise and fall has been very interesting for historians. At one time in history Babylon was a very important manufacturing center. Also, it was the epicenter of trade between the west and the east.

Traders were involved in transporting goods through land and sea. In the third millennium Babylon was founded by a man called Nimrod. It was also called Babel. As per historic records, in 1790 BC, Hammurabi was ruling over Babylon. He was the one responsible to expand the city and also made it the capital of his empire. The society was based on law and rules. The laws and rules were inscribed on the pillars of the city.

The city was conquered by many rulers like Assyrians, Hittites, and then Nabopolassar found the Babylon. His son was actually mainly responsible for bringing fame to the city. He built huge palaces and temples and also secured the city by building high walls. The architecture of Babylon was complicated according to Greek historians. They had beautiful gardens on the terrace and also knew how to grow plants without soil. That is why the hanging gardens of Babylon are popular even today. The gardens were so beautiful that they became popular as one of the Seven Wonders of the World. There were several other projects of Babylon that were popular throughout history. The advanced architecture of Babylon still never stops to amaze several archeologists and historians.




About Author:
Kum Martin is an online leading expert in history and education industry. He also offers top quality articles like:
World History, Important Greek Gods

Wednesday 28 September 2011

About Corncribs and the Unpainted Aristocracy: Contemporary Architecture in North Carolina

greek architecture


It is possible to discuss the current condition of architecture in North Carolina by referring to a geologic event that happened between 150 and 200 million years ago: a great geologic uplift, known as the Cape Fear Arch, pushed what is now North Carolina upwards several hundred feet. The arch also raised the sea floor, which had once been joined with South America, and the waves produced by this change created the Outer Banks, a chain of barrier islands that are farther offshore than in any other part of the Atlantic Seaboard. As a result, North Carolina has shallow rivers and only one major harbor at the mouth of the Cape Fear River, which is made treacherous by offshore shoals. Shifting river patterns caused by the Cape Fear Arch, which continues to rise, remove topsoil thus giving North Carolina poorer soils than in surrounding regions. The lack of rivers for transport, inaccessible harbors and poor soils meant that early settlements in North Carolina were modest. For much of its history, North Carolina was a land of small landowners, its population scattered across a vast landscape.

Though we have become the 10th largest state in the nation, our dispersed settlement pattern persists to this day. And that dispersal has created among North Carolinians a spirit of independence that is individualistic, self-sufficient, resourceful, and proud. If we have less wealth, we have less pretense. A long history of dwelling apart can also engender a people who are watchful of their neighbors, self-righteous, and at times dour. I believe that all these qualities can be found in the architecture of North Carolina, not only in the past but also in the present.

Today an urban crescent nearly 200 miles long straddles the Cape Fear Arch along Interstate 85, from Charlotte to Raleigh, an urban banana-like farm where, as every proud Carolinian will tell you, there is chardonnay on every table, NPR in every car, and enough digital progress to make, if not a Silicon Valley, a silicon Piedmont. Parallel to this strip, which is about eight miles wide, there lies an older North Carolina, a quieter place where thousands of small frame houses, vegetable gardens and barns rest in the countryside. In these places it is possible to see an architecture of plain living made by hard-working people not opposed to wealth but not happy with opulence either. I believe there is a rare beauty here, portrayed in the paintings of Sarah Blakeslee, Francis Speight, Maud Gatewood, and Gregory Ivy, and in the photographs of Bayard Wooten.

The diversity of plant and animal life in North Carolina is another legacy of the Cape Fear Arch. Six fully distinct ecological zones span the state, from the sub-tropics of the coast to the Proto-Canadian climate of the highest mountains east of the Mississippi. Today our architecture trends towards sameness across this tapestry of plants and climate, but it was not always so. To a degree that seems remarkable now, the early settlement pattern of North Carolina tells a human story of ordinary buildings close to the land, as varied as the mountain tops and coastal plains on which they stand.

The first buildings in North Carolina were sustainable to their roots: built of local materials, embedded in the landscape, oriented towards the sun and breeze. They were made by Native Americans, not Europeans, in the eastern part of our state. In 1585 English explorer and artist John White documented them in drawings that depict a native people at rest in nature. For over three hundred years this pattern of local adaptation would persist across the state.

In the mountains, for example, farmers built their houses on wind-sheltered slopes facing south, next to a spring or a creek. They planted pole beans and morning glories to shade their porches in summer. Their houses were raised on stone piers to level the slope and to allow hillside water to drain underneath. The crops and the animals they raised varied from mountain valley to river bottom, according to how steep the land was and how the sun came over the mountain ridge. Their barns varied from one valley to the next for the same reasons.

Strewn across the Piedmont hills of North Carolina are flue-cured tobacco barns, built to dry what was, for over two hundred years, the state's dominant cash crop. Sixteen to twenty-four feet square and usually the same height, they were sized to fit racks of tobacco leaves hung inside to dry in heat that could reach 180°F. Capped with a low-pitched gable roof, these humble barns remind me of Greek temples. Legions of them populate the landscape, yet no two are the same because farmers modified each standard barn with sheds to suit the micro-climate of his land. To know where to build a shed onto his tobacco barn, the farmer had to know where the sun rose and set, where the good winds came from, where the bad weather came from and when it came. He designed his house just as carefully because the lives of his children depended on his knowledge. The philosopher Wendell Berry has written that in such attention to place lies the hope of the world. Ordinary people who had no idea they were architects designed and built these extraordinary barns and farmhouses across North Carolina. Their builders are anonymous, yet they embody the wisdom of successive generations.

An equally extraordinary group of rustic cottages at Nags Head on the Outer Banks were also built on instinct for place -- not for farming, but for summers at the beach. The Nags Head cottages date from the 1910-1940 era, and for nearly one hundred years have been the first things hurricanes struck coming in from the Atlantic. Though made of wood framing, their builders made them sturdy enough to resist danger, yet light enough to welcome sun and breeze, elevating each cottage on wooden stilts to avoid floods and provide views of the ocean. Porches on their east and south sides guaranteed a dry porch in any weather, but there were no porches on the north side where bad weather hits the coast. Clad in juniper shingles that have weathered since they were built, the Nags Head cottages were referred to by former News & Observer editor Jonathan Daniels as the "unpainted aristocracy." Today they seem as native to their place as the sand dunes.

Mountain houses, Piedmont barns, and ocean cottages suggest that there is a fundamental, direct way of building that, left to themselves, most non-architect, non-designer makers will discover. I can see this design ethic in corn cribs and textile mills, in peanut barns and in the way early settlers dovetailed logs to make a cabin. These structures are to architecture what words are to poetry. I see this ethic in the way a farmer stores his corn because a corncrib is simpler and quieter than most things we build today but no less valid because of its simplicity.

I think that the same ethic is present in the minds of people who want buildings today, because it shows up in structures unencumbered by style, fashion, appearance commissions, or advertising. In countless DOT bridges, soybean elevators, and mechanics' workshops across North Carolina, I sense the practical mindset of this state.

Good building was much in demand in North Carolina in the years following World War II, when the state struggled to emerge as a progressive leader of the New South. The director of the State Fairgrounds in Raleigh, Dr. J. S. Dorton, wanted to build a new livestock pavilion that would make "the NC State Fair the most modern plant in the world." His architect was Matthew Nowicki, a brilliant young Polish architect who had arrived in North Carolina in 1948 to teach at the newly founded School of Design at North Carolina State College.

Extraordinarily talented yet foreign, Nowicki had an unassuming and practical attitude towards building and clients. He needed it, because he proposed to fling two immense concrete arches into the sky, anchor them at an angle to the earth, and spin a three-inch-thick roof on steel cables between the arches, creating what was one of the most efficient roof spans ever made. Strange as it looked, Dorton Arena's practical efficiency made sense to his tobacco-chewing, country boy clients the way a tobacco barn or a John Deere tractor would. When it was finished, the News and Observer declared that it was "a great architectural wonder that seems to lasso the sky." It remains today the best-known North Carolina building outside the state.

At the same time that Dorton Arena was rising, the young architect George Matsumoto came to North Carolina from his native California to practice architecture and to teach at the School of Design. Matsumoto quickly established himself as one of the most gifted design talents of the post-war generation. Matsumoto's early buildings were modest houses for small business owners and assistant professors. Working with landscape architect Gil Thurlow, Matsumoto sited his buildings to enhance the landscape, elegantly merging with the site. Often he used deciduous trees to shade the buildings in summer and to allow the sun to warm them in winter. Typically his houses were oriented to capture the prevailing summer breezes, and to shelter their occupants from winter wind.

Matsumoto's understanding of the technique and craft of construction encompassed wood, steel, stone and brick. His Gregory Poole equipment building in Raleigh (1956) was a logical and well-built construction that contrasted the delicacy of its steel and glass enclosure with the massive D8 caterpillars displayed inside. Modern though his buildings were, Matsumoto was welcomed because his designs had the directness of a corn crib: they were perceived to be useful and practical.

In 1962, Harwell Hamilton Harris moved to Raleigh to practice and teach at the School of Design. Harris, like Matsumoto, was a native Californian, renowned for his residential architecture. Arguably his finest North Carolina building was St. Giles Presbyterian Church, built from 1967 to 1988. Harris convinced the church building committee to build a family of low-slung, wood shingled buildings around a pine grove. "Did you ever hear of anyone having a revelation indoors?" he asked. The buildings have wide porches and deep eaves that foster outdoor rambles and contemplation. St. Giles is unmistakably modern, and it brought a whiff of California to a piney hillside of Carolina, but it is also in keeping with an older, native tradition of building close to the land.

Although all three 20th century architects were non-native, it is possible to discern a common thread that bound them to their clients: a belief in a practical kind of architecture, without pretense or opulence, that was as plain-spoken as it was confident. In 1952 Harris wrote that, "A region's most important resources are its free minds, its imagination, its stake in the future, its energy and, last of all, its climate, its topography and the particular kinds of sticks and stones it has to build with." His words could describe the cigar-smoking farmers who approved Dorton Arena, the small landowners who lived in houses designed by George Matsumoto, the Deacons of St. Giles Presbyterian Church, and the generations of anonymous barn-builders and cottage dwellers who preceded them.

My reference to older buildings in North Carolina in no way means that we should go back to building such dwellings. Rather it illustrates how the accumulated wisdom of our past can enable us to build in the present. As the English Arts and Craft architect W. R. Lethaby said, "No art which is one man deep is worth much -- it should be a thousand men deep. We cannot forget the knowledge of our historic origins, and we would not want to forget it, even if we could."

In the future, our society will be judged by how we build today. Arguably the most important issue facing architecture today is sustainability. What is the best way to build in equilibrium with this particular place? A balanced architecture rises up from the land it is built on, its hills, streams, weather and its people, their connections, ideas and stake in the future. Today we have the opportunity to return North Carolina to its former balance with nature. And as we do that, we must remember that we are not a land apart: the rock we live on was once part of South America, the wind that blows across our fields originated in the tropics, and the rain that washes over us comes largely from the Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico. The forces that shape our buildings are much older than building.




Award-winning architect Frank Harmon is the founder and principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA in Raleigh, NC, and a Professor in Practice at the North Carolina State University College of Design. He has written extensively on the subject of modern, sustainable, regionally appropriate architecture and a frequent speaker on the subject at architecture conferences, conventions and university programs across the United States. His work has been featured in numerous journals, magazines and books on the subject, including Architectural Record, Architect, Residential Architect, Dwell and the New York Times. He is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects.

Monday 26 September 2011

Emperor Names For Baby

greek architecture


The popularity of the Emperor makes the Emperor name a favorite for baby boy name. Parents admire the personality, achievements, and leadership of the Emperor. He is a male ruler who rules a powerful empire. Here are nine popular Emperor Names which are often used as baby names.

Adrian -

He is a Roman Emperor. His name was a variant of Hadrian. The name is an English baby name which was derived from the real name of Publius Aelius Traianus Hadrianus. Adrian is one of the popular English, German, Russian, Polish, and Romanian baby names. Actually, Adrian has a Latin origin which is from Latin word Hadria. It is another spelling Adria City in Veneto region of Northern Italy.

Charles -

He is the first holy Roman Emperor. He is often refers to Charles the Great. The real name is Charlemagne. It literally means Charles the Great in Latin. Charlemagne is from Latin word Carolus Magnus which means Charles the Great.

Claude -

The baby name was derived from Claudius. He is the fourth Roman Emperor who succeeded Caligula. His disability saves himself from purges of Tiberius and Caligula. After Caligula was assassinated, he became the only male survivor with royal blood. He is the next in line. And, he became the Roman Emperor. Claude is an English baby name which means lame.

Constantine -

He is the first Christian Roman Emperor. He is more commonly known as Constantine I or Constantine the Great. Constantine is from the Latin word Constans. It means constant or steadfast.

Czar -

Czar is sometimes spelled as Tsar, Zar, and Ceazar. Czar and Zar are the English variations which refer to the monarchs. In European, Czar is equivalent to Emperor. In Russia, Serbia, and Bulgaria, Czar is equivalent to supreme ruler or king. Typically, Czar, Ceazar, Tsar, and Zar are Slavic baby names which mean supreme ruler, king, or emperor.

Hadrian -

The name is one of the variations of Publius Aelius Traianus Hadrianus. He is another Roman Emperor who is a gifted writer and architect.

Napolean -

Napolean Bonaparte is a soldier who work his way to general. He became Emperor of France as well as King of Italy, Mediator of Swiss Confederation, and Protector of Rhine Confederation. Napolean is an Italian baby name which means from Naples, Italy. Napolean is also a Greek baby name which means lion of the valley.

Titus -

The baby name is short for Titus Flavius Vespasiamus who is the Roman Emperor. He belongs to the Flavian Dynasty. He succeeded Vespasian who is his father. Titus is a Greek baby name which means of the giants.




Dennis Estrada is a webmaster of unique baby names, Romanian baby names, and Slavic baby names websites.

Sunday 25 September 2011

Many Facets of "Eve"

greek architecture


"Once made equal to man, woman becomes his superior"

Socrates; the great Greek philosopher found the instinctive flame and flare and felt it with its multifarious aspects regarding women in the age when probably, no feminist movement was transmitting the women's rights or the gender issue. The Greeks were perfectionist in all walks of life, from battlefields to chiseling of statues, weaponry to the ornate expression through architecture. Logic and philosophy were other features of their identity; Plato, Socrates and Aristotle were unique and convinced within their views, where the above mentioned quotation, voiced by the great philosopher, could be regarded as the true judgment of all times which, later was taken by the man with prejudice and predisposition.

The story of struggle by women is too long and multi-shaded in different social, historical, religious and psychological circumstances, which have been discussed, analyzed and conceived differently by unlike ethnicities.

In modern world, the tradition of celebrating different days in connection with challenging issues have evolved at a great pace which, in normal state of affairs, are either difficult or impossible to handle with.
March the 8th is a day dedicated to the woman and it is commemorated all around the globe by both the halves.

Pakistan is a country with different ideologies; here we could find women in shuttlecocks (the traditional Burqa) along with high cature of see through and revealing vogue.
We may find woman with erected head running in a "marathon" whilst the same head on the shoulders of a female minister, is aimed with a fanatic bullet on the grounds best known to ...no one.

Leaving it all aside, as we are immune to all rotten sides of the society, there was an exhibition by female artists of SAARC countries at Hamail Art Galleries, Gulberg Lahore, under the title of "The many facets of Eve" in connection with international women's day on 8th lovely evening of March. Painters, sculptresses and ceramists from Bangladesh, India, Nepal and the host country; Pakistan were well-poised for the show.

It was an event of its own kind therefore; the idea captured the visitors and critics with a new and a bit unique frame of mind.

Seven artists from neighboring Bangladesh, nine from India and three from the birthplace of Buddha; Nepal burnished the occasion with their artistic manifestation while Pakistan, as being the host, provided its female artists with maximum opportunity, who were more than fifty in number. Although most of the artists were from Lahore with an exception of one or two from Karachi and Peshawar, otherwise no representation from other provinces could be observed.

Taking the show in terms of art and aesthetic; may divulge a panorama of vibrant colors, blazing canvasses and classic, romantic and abstract expressions depicting the state of mind, the South Asian female artists are in under the social patterns that have evolved, although tousled due to many reasons, in a region dominated by masculinity for centuries.

Bangladeshi painter Shulekha Chaudhary with her painting of a female figure draped in red Sari, composed from backside and creating different portions of drapery, exposed skin of waist and a vertical line of buttons at back of the blouse, was very communicative in terms of expression. She shaped the whole canvas with sharp cuts of blades (rendered with paint) on the female body, in a contrast between the upper and the lower part of the frame, the artist's comment was loud and oppressed with no dynamism in the figure.

Contrary to Shulekha, the Indian painter Babita Das was full of movement and energy as far as the canvas is concerned. Although Babita's expression was abstract, but the basic red and orange pigments against the small dark areas composed in a square frame, were smoldering under the gallery lights.

Another Indian artist Geeta Das with all soothing blues, sacred zinc white and energetic red and orange, painted a female face in oil on canvas but the technique was inspired of the Mughal tradition of miniature painting with stylistically rendered eyes. Nabanita Javed, another Indian with wavy digital movement throughout the canvas imprisoned the eye with lot of movement around statically arranged figures. The color palette of Nabanita consisted of the all-popular shades of blue red and orange.

There were only three artists from Nepal and all of them were looking inspired by the element of design overwhelming all the canvases of Shobha Adhikary and Shushma Rajbhandari, even though the curvilinear form of twisted hair by Ashmina Ranjit stimulated many gazes and took them to a circular journey within the frame.

Pakistani female artists celebrated the day with a full participation in terms of technique, style, medium and subject. The gesture of putting the work of Anna Molka Ahmed, the founder of modern Pakistani Art, motivated many sensitive hearts. The bust of Quaid-e-Azam and a painting with an ironically critical subject pinched many to review the collective attitude as human beings. Just adjacent to the memories of Anna Molka, there were frames with diverse subjects, making the gallery walls talking. The hazy landscape in soft green, dripping blue and baby pink, was showering soft and romantic vision; the young artist succeeded to come with, in a society that didn't encourage such subtle point of view, a true feminine style of expression. Hajra Mansur's female faces were as opulent as they were ever before with dreamy eyes and curls of locks.
The exotic canvases by Maliha Azmi Agha, were scorching in primary blues, reds and yellows, in a closed central composition depicting the intrinsic passion of a vigorous female with free brush movements.

A frame, again in blue tinge with a realistically fashioned woman, having an apple in her hand referring to the everlasting biblical myth related to Eve, by Najia Azmat was interesting in the manner it was executed, a circular calligraphic central area was reminding the centuries old tradition of portraying saints in the western culture, but the calligraphic touch made it an indigenous commodity.

Rahat Naveed Masood, known for her delicate portraits displayed a reclining women composed with a burgundy rose and red Dopatta, covering almost the entire face of the sole figure skilled in soft application of pastels.

Sumera Jawad, an artist very well aware of the social delima regarding woman, put on the show, her work with all famous face of Mukhtaran Mai placed with subdued image of contemporary Pakistani women while the use of red tint by the painter was suggestive and truly womanly.
Chiefly, it were the painters who dominated the whole exhibition but ceramists like Saira Asad, used religious text to enrich the blue ceramic panels, and Kaif Ghaznavi by means of a well conceived arrangement, were amongst those who "like to walk on the un-trodden ways".
Same was the case with sculptresses in terms of number, with the exception of the legendary Anna Molka Ahmed, there were Munazza Rashid, Isma Hussain and Amna Ilyas who graced the show with three-dimensional expression delivered in hard materials. Isma and Amna preferred the enduring subject of reveled contour of female body. Munazza with her social comment "Thali Ka Bayngan" through a realistic and gigantic fiberglass cast tried to mirror the inadequacy caused due to duality existing in selfish approach towards life.

Together with new generation of female Pakistani painters, the veterans were not behind, Zubeda Javed, Dr Mussarat Hassan, Zara David and Salima Hashmi with all the elegance, fervor, and grace enhanced the impact of the show with their fresh work, which could definitely go without saying...!

On the whole, the "Eve" show has triggered the gender based activity in arts, which was not in trend before, what could be the aftermaths?

This question would need time to be answered.



Saturday 24 September 2011

Web 2.0 & Beyond-Filippos-Kolovos.MPG

Presentation of "Ανοικτά λογισμικά βιβλιοθηκών και Web 2.0: το παράδειγμα του Koha" (Open Source Software and Web 2.0) by Philippos Kolovos (Φίλιππος Κολοβός), Βιβλιοθήκη Πανεπιστημίου Μακεδονίας Web 2.0 and Beyond for Libraries Conference, December 10, 2010 URL: web2.deltos.org Summary: Web 2.0 has become an important architecture for library applications. Web 2.0 tools such as social networks, RSS feeds, blogs, podcasts, wikis, and video/photo sharing sites facilitate enhanced access and communication between library clients and librarians. The conference offers presentations on Web 2.0 technologies in library resources and services. Presentations feature Greek and German Libraries that have developed user-friendly, practical approaches to developing and integrating web 2.0 tools. A post-conference afternoon Web 2.0 workshop offers participants a hands-on introduction to Library 2.0 tools for your libraries. This event has been organized by The Committee for the Support of Libraries (CSL) in Thessaloniki. The Committee for the Support of Libraries was founded in 2003 by representatives of Greek and international organizations to contribute to the development of libraries in Greece Location: Conference: Bissell Building, American College of Thessaloniki (ACT), Niarchos Technology Center , basement level, Room #001 Workshop: Bissell Library, Bibliographic Instruction lab, #211, second floor Bissell Library, American College of Thessaloniki (ACT)

Thursday 22 September 2011

Sezen Aksu - Her seyi yak -Safranbolu Houses 2 (Karabük -Türkiye) Black Sea Region

Safranbolu was placed in the world Cultural Heritage list by UNESCO in appreciation of the successful efforts in the preservation of its heritage as a whole. Safranbolu has deserved its real name for its houses, Safranbolu is a town and district of Karabük Province in the Black Sea region of Turkey,located near the north western Black Sea coast of Anatolia,Turkey ;dates back as far as 3000 BC. Safranbolu displays its extremely rich historical and cultural heritage through 1008 architectural structures displaying a good example of Turkish architecture, all preserved in their original environment. These houses are perfect examples of old civilian architecture, reflecting the Turkish social life of the 18th and 19th centuries. The size and the planning of the houses are deeply affected by the large size of the families, in other words a total members of a big family living together in one house. The impressive architecture of their roofs have led them to be called as "Houses with five façades". The houses are two or three storied consisting of 6 to 9 rooms, each room is entirely detailed and have ample window space allowing plenty of light. The delicate woodwork and carved wall and ceiling decorations, the banisters indoor knobs etc. all come together to form an unmatched harmony of architectural aesthetics and Turkish art. Category: Education

Tuesday 20 September 2011

Ryan's Greek Architecture Project + Outtakes - TheDoughertyFamily

-TheDoughertyFamily

Sunday 18 September 2011

Remote Island Getaways - Paradise Awaits You at These Secluded Island Destinations!

greek architecture


Remote island getaways are the perfect vacation option for those looking for ultimate seclusion. Are you done with all those jam-packed so-called tourist spots and now looking for some long-cherished serenity? If so, it is time to break the conventional rules or travelling and escape to remote islands where the virgin nature is stored in its purest form. One of the well-known yet secluded tropical destinations, ideal for remote island getaways is Greek Islands. Following are few islands here which offer the much loved serenity to its visitors:

Santorini Island: When you take a look at the turquoise blue ocean enclosing the island's coastline and Santorini's caldera, you simply cannot resist falling in love with the place. It is no wonder why Santorini Island is considered the most romantic venue for remote island getaways in Greek Islands. Those who love multihued landscapes and exquisite articulate architecture can expect a grand feast for your eyes during the short sojourn at Santorini. Now if you have the freedom to become a little extravagant on the trip, check out the town of Oia. The city boasts impressive ambience and featuring most splendid sunsets. Fira is another town sparkling with interesting nightlife and ample scopes for a lavish shopping spree. Overall Sintorini Island is a perfect blend of seclusion and hustle bustle catering to people looking for all flavors of holidaying.

Maldives: Maldives is one of those isolated destinations which have not been explored by tourists setting for remote island getaways. There are numerous small islands scattered here and there which are awaiting the footsteps of its first visitor. You can even go that extra mile and rent the entire island for several days to ensure absolute privacy. Waterfalls, sun-kissed beaches, lush green woods and vast azure will captivate and soothe your soul. Your passions will be reignited to strengthen the bonds with your loving spouse. The lively culture of Asia and local delicacies will spice up the holidays. Feel free to indulge in exciting water sports like snorkeling, diving or swimming with your spouse.

Turtle Island: Fiji holds a lot of natural treasures to be cherished. Turtle Island is ideal for remote island getaways with its spectacular landscape and vibrant natural hues. There are 14 lavish cottages and each of them can accommodate 2 people. Hence there is no way you will face crowds of people. Spend quality time with your close ones and rejuvenate the interpersonal bonds. Beautiful Tropical paradises await you at one of these secluded island destinations.




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Saturday 17 September 2011

Glasgow Architecture: Moray Place

This terrace of ten small houses was designed by Alexander 'Greek' Thomson and dates from 1859-61.Thomson himself lived at No 1.

Friday 16 September 2011

"The most beautiful place we've seen" Gregdani09's photos around Santorini, Greece (alkyona oia)

Preview of Gregdani09'sblog at TravelPod. Read the full blog here: www.travelpod.com This blog preview was made by TravelPod using the TripAdvisor™ TripWow slideshow creator. Entry from: Santorini, Greece Entry Title: "The most beautiful place we've seen" Entry: "We arrived in Santorini at noon and it took another hour and a half and two bus rides to get to our destination - the village of Oia (pronounced ee-ah). But is well worth the wait. This is the most beautiful place we have visited, not just on this trip, but ever. The architecture, the quaint streets, the blue water, the white-washed homes...we love it all! First, the place we rented was incredible and is everything you would expect from a Greek island villa. Just check out the pics from our balcony. After settling in, we walked the narrow streets and went down 214 steps to the seaside. We jumped into the Aegean Sea, surrounded by Europeans - complete with Speedos and bare chests (even the females). We met some very nice Americans from San Francisco, chatted with them for a while and then hung out at a local taverna right on the water. Greg had his new favorite beer Mythos and Danielle had white wine. Something cool about all the tavernas here in Greece: they always give you some sort of snack with your drinks. We like that. We then headed back to the villa, enjoyed our patio view for a bit then went out to dinner. Although the place we ate had gorgeous sunset views, it was severely overpriced for some lackluster ...

Wednesday 14 September 2011

Famous Architects

greek architecture


Architects have been and will remain at the forefront of designing the built environment that surrounds us. As professional experts in the field of building, design and construction, architects use their creativity to simplify the complex process of designing and build socially and economically sustainable cities and communities. Following are some world famous architects known for their unique creative skills, vision and contributions.

Frank Lloyd Wright

Frank Lloyd Wright is one of America's most famous architects. Although he had no formal education in architecture, he believed that his work as a farm hand in Wisconsin made him very perceptive and helped develop his spatial abilities. After studying engineering at the University of Wisconsin for a few semesters at the age of 15, he left to apprentice with J.L. Silsbee and Louis Sullivan. After working with them for six years, Wright opened his own practice. During his 70-year career, Wright designed 1,141 buildings, including homes, offices, churches, schools, libraries, bridges and museums. One of his most important contributions was the Prairie House style of architecture. He experimented with obtuse angles and circles, creating unusually shaped structures, an example of which is the spiral Guggenheim Museum (1943-49). He also developed a series of low-cost homes which he called Usonian. Although he earned recognition in the early 1900s as one of the popular modern architects he became the recipient of the American Institute of Architects only in 1949.

Some of his more famous projects were:

Frederick C. Robie House 1909

Unity Temple 1906

Fallingwater 1936

Johnson Wax Administration Building 1936

I.M. Pei

I. M. Pei one of the most famous modern architects was born in Canton, China in 1917. Pei grew up in Shanghai, but in 1935 he moved to the United States to study architecture and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and later at Harvard University. He became the Director of Architecture at the real estate development firm, Webb & Knapp in 1948 and then founded his own firm in 1958.

Over the past fifty years, Ieoh Ming Pei has designed more than fifty buildings across the globe including industrial skyscrapers, museums and low income housing. Concerened more with function than theory, the defining feature of I. M. Pei's style is the use of large, abstract forms and sharp, geometric designs. His glass clad structures are born from high tech modernist movement.

During his career, Pei and his firm have won numerous architecture awards. He won the prestigious Pritzker Prize in 1983.

Some of his more noteworthy buildings are:

The Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University

Bank of China Tower

John Hancock Tower

Louvre Pyramid

National Gallery

Le Corbusier

Le Corbusier, born in the late 19th century, was a pioneer of modern architecture. He founded what is popularly known as the International style or the Bauhaus. The essence of modern architecture as advocated by him was described in his 5-point theory that later became the guiding principle for many of his designs.

Freestanding support pillars

Open floor plan independent from the supports

Vertical facade that is free from the supports

Long horizontal sliding windows

Roof gardens

While the earlier buildings by Le Corbusier, called pure prisms were smooth, white concrete and glass structures elevated above the ground, his later designs used rough, heavy forms of stone, concrete, stucco and glass. He was a visionary who not only anticipated the role of the automobile but envisaged that cities would have big apartment buildings with park-like settings. Le Corbusier, as a famous architect was also known for his innovations in urban planning and his solutions for low income housing. Moreover, he believed that the stark buildings he designed would contribute to clean, bright, healthy cities. Le Corbusier's dreams of such an urban haven were aptly realized in the Unité d'Habitation, or the "Radiant City," in Marseilles, France which was built to incorporate shops, meeting rooms, and living quarters for 1,600 people in a 17-story structure. During his long life, Le Corbusier designed buildings in Europe, India, and Russia. Le Corbusier also designed one building in the United States and one in South America.

His most famous buildings are:

Palace for the League of Nations, Geneva 1927

Villa Savoye, Poissy, France 1929

Swiss Building, Cité Universitaire, Paris 1931

The Secretariat at the United Nations Headquarters, New York 1952

R. Buckminister Fuller

Born of poverty and bankruptcy, Buckheimer Fuller had contemplated suicide before his life changed courses and he became a famous architect known for his unique architectural styles dominating the 20th century. He believed that his life was an experiment and that it belonged to the universe. At the age of 32, he embarked on a journey to discover what a penniless and unknown individual might have to offer effectively to humanity. He searched for ways to do more with less so that all the people could be fed and have a shelter over their heads.

Although he never obtained a degree in architecture, he was a modern architect and engineer who designed revolutionary structures. His famous Dymaxion House was a pre-fabricated, pole-supported dwelling. His Dymaxion car was a streamlined, three-wheeled vehicle with the engine in the rear while his Dymaxion Air-Ocean Map projected a spherical world as a flat surface with no visible distortion. However, Fuller's greatest contribution is perhaps the geodesic dome - a remarkable, sphere-like structure based on theories of "energetic-synergetic geometry'' which he developed during WWII. Efficient and economical, the geodesic dome was widely hailed as a possible solution to world housing shortages.

Although his Dymaxion car did not achieve popularity and his design for geodesic domes is rarely used, Fuller made his mark in areas of architecture, mathematics, philosophy, religion, urban development and design.

His most important works included:

1932: The portable Dymaxion house manufactured

1934: The Dymaxion car

1938: Nine Chains to the Moon

1949: Developed the Geodesic Dome

1967: US Pavilion at Expo '67, Montreal, Canada

1969: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth

1970: Approaching the Benign Environment

Louis Sullivan

Louis Sullivan is known to be America's first and original modern architect, as he believed in creating his own designs and forms rather than imitating older historic styles. The unique element in Sullivan's design was that he was able to create aesthetic unity in buildings that were tall instead of the typical wide buildings of the older times. He often used masonry walls with terra cotta designs, with intertwining vines and leaves combined with crisp geometric shapes. Louis Sullivan believed that the exterior of an office building should reflect its interior structure and functions. Ornamentation should be as natural as possible and used only when needed. He rejected the classical references and the ubiquitous arches.

Some of his important buildings are

Wainwright Building

National Farmers'Bank (Sullivan's "Arch")

The Bradley House




William Brister - [http://www.architecturaldesign.tv] - All about Architecture.

Monday 12 September 2011

Greek Architecture and Urban Design: 3000 Years of Creating

Spyros Amourgis, president of the Hellenic Quality Assurance Agency, professor emeritus of architecture at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, and former vice president of the Hellenic Open University focuses on the architectural history of Athens from the early nineteenth to the end of the twentieth century. Series: Voices [1/2010] [Humanities] [Show ID: 14711]

Sunday 11 September 2011

Theatre (CU Architecture)

Constructive Utopism - Architecture of the Future brought to you by falkj.info Part 23 The Theatre Based on a utopian concept "Panokratie" by professor Tobias Breiner aka Tobi Blubb. A detailed description of the concept and my architecture for it can be found in my book "Constructive Utopism", which is completely free online at falkj.info I created the model with Google SketchUp 7 in about 100 hours.

Saturday 10 September 2011

the Old village in the Greek island of ALONISSOS,Sporades.

old village,Alonissos Greek Island.Views.April 2009.a unique experience,walk and look around , think of the past,how life used to be here since the Middle Ages.

Friday 9 September 2011

"Olympia and the End of an Era" Zimmerms's photos around Athens, Greece (study abroad athens)

Preview of Zimmerms's blog at TravelPod. Read the full blog here: www.travelpod.com This blog preview was made by TravelPod using the TripAdvisor™ TripWow slideshow creator. Entry from: Athens, Greece Entry Title: "Olympia and the End of an Era" Entry: "That's all she wrote, folks. My trip around the Peloponnese is all over. And Attica welcomed me warmly. After being off the bus for 30 seconds, I got some pollution in my eye. Ah, Athens, I love you, too! It's really nice to be back, but I'll definitely miss the beauty and serenity that the Peloponnese had to offer. I've come back from a land of beautiful green foliage and polychromic flowers to a land of cold hard steel and concrete... Both have their peculiar charms, and I'm beyond excited to get some Grill and Pita tonight, but... still... It's the Peloponnese. You've got to miss it. I apologize for not truly updating the last two evenings. The internet at my hotel in Pylos and my hotel in Olympia was something to shake a stick at, to use a cliche inversely. It would cut out more regularly than it would provide internet, so I didn't bother getting on the internet for long. In the time that I did have, I uploaded pictures to Facebook. Shortly thereafter each night, the internet became wholly unusable, so my travel blog suffered. But I'm back in beautiful Athens, now, which means I have something like internet again, although my apartment is perhaps the only one without its own router now... But we'll just forget about ...

Wednesday 7 September 2011

Greece the Example of Hospitality

greek architecture


When you hear the word "Greece" what kind of associations does it rise? I think that these associations are similar with mine. The infinite land with olive groves; the country washed by three seas; the country with magnificent architecture and rich cultural heritage; the country that gave the birth of the most famous philosophers; and of course the country that formed the basis of modern European civilization when the Ancient Greece myths had appeared.

During my trip to Greece I didn't feel myself as a tourist there, who communicates only with his friends or relatives. People in Greece are very friendly. They always smile, get on very easy with other people; on the one hand you want to learn much about that country and their culture and the Greeks, on the other hand, they are very interested in learning yours. If, for example, English people want to learn something about a foreigner and his country, they invite him for a cup of tea, Greeks invite you to dance as they consider that music and dance are the best human characteristics. Music is the human soul. It was very difficult for me to catch the rhythm of the Greek music. For a few minutes I felt myself as a log that can't move at all. My hands, my legs seemed to be alien, not mine. But the simple thing I had to do is just to listen to the music and I felt the soul of Greek dance. I thought that Terpsichore (the goddess of dance) has conducted me through the rhythms of dance and the waves of music.

Greeks are very surprising people. They created a very interesting phrase: "If there is no holiday in calendar you should create it". This phrase is the best characteristics of Greeks and their habits to live. Greeks like to celebrate holidays and during the year they celebrate many holidays some of them are religious. I have found out that there is a very amusing holiday in Greece. Men interchange their places with women. Women spend all day long in cafes or in other public places where usually go only men. It's a very amusing and interesting way for entertainment, isn't it?

Greek carnival usually takes place three weeks before the Lent. Well, there is no any difference between the Greek carnival and carnivals in other countries. Of course, it has some peculiarities such as national dances and songs. It's very interesting to watch the people who become one big friendly family. The atmosphere of friendship, joy and happiness reigns here. Everybody wants to share his joy and good mood with others.

One of the summer holidays is the Hellenic Festival which lasts during two months. There are lots of musical and dramatic performances in the ancient theaters during the festival. Watching the magnificent play on the stages I understood that I've met the great talent of actors. Everything looked colorful and unique. It's very difficult to find the suitable words to describe everything I've seen there. I can tell you that it was like a miracle, at least.

Well, Greece is no more a cheap country. The absolute minimum on your expenditures is more than 20$ a day. Of course it's under conditions that you'll decide to travel living in a cheap hostel, although if you want to travel with a comfort and get a pleasure from your journey you have to pay more than 80$ a day. By the way, you shouldn't forget about the tips.

When you will go shopping don't forget about one thing: to bargain with the sellers in Greece is the indication of bad manners. It is not accepted here as, for example, in Eastern countries. But, if you have such passion and if you can't live without it you can go to any market and satisfy your passion there.

Greece is the most beautiful country I've ever seen. Leaving this friendly land I realized that lots of new friends have appeared in my life. They all are very lovely people. Greeks are the people who remember the roots of their nation, honor their traditions and culture. When you come to this wonderful country you will plunge into the atmosphere of friendship and pleasure which you won't change for any price in the world.




Iuri Tarabanov writes about interesting travel experiences. His Discount Travel site is http://www.travelime.com

Tuesday 6 September 2011

Travel Guide New Mexico tm, State Capitol Building

New Mexico State Capitol Building Today's New Mexico State Capitol, known as the Roundhouse, is the only round capitol building in the country. It was built by Robert E. McKee with a design by WC Kruger that combined elements of New Mexico Territorial style, Pueblo adobe architecture and Greek Revival adaptations. The 232000 square-foot Roundhouse was dedicated on Dec. 8, 1966. From a bird's-eye view, the Roundhouse resembles the Zia sun symbol, which is also emblazoned on the New Mexico state flag. The image, which originated at Zia Pueblo, incorporates elements representing the sun's rays, the four directions, the four seasons, and the four phases of life. The State Seal of New Mexico, carved in stone, hangs above each of the Roundhouse's four entrance wings. The four-story Roundhouse includes a subterranean story and a central interior Rotunda that rises 60 feet through the top three stories. The Rotunda's design elements include New Mexico Travertine marble featuring a turquoise and brass mosaic depicting the New Mexico State Seal. The ceiling skylight of stained glass is patterned after a Native American basket weave symbolizing the sky and the earth. The Capitol Art Collection includes paintings, sculpture, handcrafted furniture and other work by New Mexico artists and artisans. The Governor's Gallery, located on the fourth floor, was founded by Clare Apodaca, who served as New Mexico's First Lady from 1975 to 1978. The gallery, an outreach facility of the New ...

Monday 5 September 2011

Kalimera Kriti Hotel & Village Resort - Interior View

www.ellada.net An unobtrusive atmosphere of stylish serenity imbues the vast Reception Hall, with its multicoloured inlaid marble flooring. A spectacular sea view welcomes the visitor through the surrounding bay windows. Through Minoan patios, the Hall area is linked to the Conference Halls and Lounges with large Verandas opening on to the Sissi Bay. The superb design of the spacious Main Building is inspired by the architecture of the Minoan palaces, incorporating neoclassic elements. The three villages are harmoniously spread out in the landscape. Their bungalows are built along the lines of traditional Cretan Architecture. Only the most precious of materials have been used; multicolored Greek marble, carved hard stone and above all love and respect for an environment of unbelievable beauty. You can call us @ + 30 2810 300330 For more informations : www.ellada.net

Sunday 4 September 2011

Foundations of Western Civilization-II (Pt-2 of 2) - Lecture-II

Foundations of Western Civilization-II (Pt-1 of 2) - Lecture-II This is the Second Lecture of a long course comprising of forty-eight lectures, where one explores the essential contours of the human experience in what has come to be called "Western civilization," A-What do we mean when we speak of "the West"? ....1.... We can define this term culturally: free and participatory political institutions, capitalist economies, religious toleration, rational inquiry, an innovative spirit, and so on. ....2.... We can define the term geographically: a cultural tradition that began around the Mediterranean Sea, spent centuries as a European preserve, then migrated to all the earth. ....3....Any definition brings controversy: The West has had freedom and slavery; women have historically enjoyed fewer rights and opportunities than men; some have enjoyed vast wealth while others endured deep poverty. ....4....Definitions also bring paradox: Western civilization began in what is now Iraq, but it would be hard to make a case now for Iraq as Western. Today, Japan, in the "Far East," seems "Western"; in the Cold War years, Turkey was Western while Libya, far to the west of Turkey, was Eastern. B-"Civilization" is no easier to define. ....1....The word itself is built from a Latin root civ—. We see this in such Latin words as civis (citizen), civitas (city), civilis (civil, polite, citizen-like). Thus, cities appear crucial to our sense of what civilization is. ....2....The Greek ...

Friday 2 September 2011

Mykonos Grand Hotel & Resort - Rooms & Suites

www.ellada.net Welcome to Mykonos Grand, a haven of wonderment, basking in the warm glow of sun and sand and laughter, kissed by the gentle turquoise shimmer of the Aegean Sea. Welcome on Mykonos: the word itself brings a treasure of valuable elements into our minds - azure beaches, the charm of landscape, the harmony of architecture, the unique Aegean light and the kind hospitality of its inhabitants. Mykonos is found next to Delos, a sacred island that was one of the revered religious centers of the Greek World. You can call us @ +30 2810 300330 For more informations : www.ellada.net

Thursday 1 September 2011

Age of Empires: Official Trailer (1997, Ensemble/Microsoft)

Age of Empires (often abbreviated to AoE or AofE), is a history-based real-time strategy computer game released in 1997. Developed by Ensemble Studios and published by Microsoft, the game uses the Genie, a 2D sprite based game engine. The game allows the user to act as the leader of an ancient civilization by advancing it through four ages, (Stone Age, Tool Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age) gaining access to new and improved units with each advance. Originally touted as Civilization meets Warcraft, some reviewers felt that the game failed to live up to these expectations when it was released. Despite this, it received generally good reviews, and an expansion pack, Age of Empires: The Rise of Rome Expansion was released in 1998. Both the original Age of Empires and the expansion pack were later released as "the Gold Edition". Age of Empires requires the player to develop a civilization from a handful of hunter-gatherers to an expansive Iron Age empire. To assure victory, the player must gather resources in order to pay for new units, buildings and more advanced technology. Resources must also be preserved, as no new resources become available as the game progresses, meaning, if you cut a tree down, the tree will not come back. Twelve civilizations are available, each with individual sets of attributes, including a varying number of available technologies and units. Each civilization has technologies unique to them, so that no civilization possesses all the technologies ...