Tag Archives: Video

Street Skiing—AMAZING! [Weekend Watch]

This. Is. Amazing. I love cities and I love skiing. I never thought that the two could mix until I saw this trailer. Whether you can it street skiing, ski parkour, or ski porn it is simply incredible.  And not only the skiing, but the cinematography and soundtrack as well. The segment is from All.I.Can by Sherpas Cinema.

Location: Trail, Rossland, and Nelson, BC.
Music: Dance Yrself Clean, by LCD Soundsystem.

If you liked this, check the award-winning 70min film, “All.I.Can.” by Sherpas Cinema [iTunes Download HD].  For more on the film’s background, here’s an article about All.I.Can and the making-of  this segment.

 

 

 Street Skiing—AMAZING! [Weekend Watch]
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The Lost Tribes of New York City [Weekend Watch]

Urban Anthropologists, Andy and Carolyn London interview some of New York City’s more overlooked citizens.

londonsquared.net

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Here Comes the Neighborhood [Weekend Watch]

Watching this video reminded me of the powerful connection between street art and neighborhood placemaking. It gave me all sorts of ideas on how a renewed focus of street art could help continue transform both Vancouver’s and Phoenix’s alleyways.

To be sure a lot of work has already been along these lines in both cities (notably Calle 16 in Phoenix), but it is always good to be pushed forward by outside examples.

HERE COMES THE NEIGHBORHOOD is a Short-Form Docu-series exploring the power of Public Art and innovation to uplift and revitalize urban communities. The Pilot Season revolves around the Arts District of Wynwood Miami, featuring an array of internationally acclaimed and locally respected Street Artists, Graffiti Writers and Muralists.

In 2009, Urban Visionary and Placemaker Tony Goldman partnered with Jeffrey Deitch (Deitch Projects Soho and now director of MoCa Los Angeles) to create the Wynwood Walls.What began with a series of parking lots, loading docks, and drab rundown factory buildings, became a curation of high caliber murals from Futura, Shepard Fairey, OS Gemeos, Kenny Scharf and others. The Walls opened for Art Basel 2009, and now two years later the collection has expanded to include over thirty artists from around the world, becoming a “Town Center” in a district that has grown into one of the largest concentrations of commissioned murals in the World.

This year Artists, many of whom have not shown work in the United States before, were selected by Tony Goldman, Goldman Projects Arts Manager Meghan Coleman and Art Consultant Medvin Sobio of the Visual Arts Collective Viejas Del Mercado. 33third Los Angeles, Mid City Arts, and Montana Cans worked together to provide paint for the project’s ambitious expansion.

HERE COMES THE NEIGHBORHOOD explores a unique juncture in history as a new community emerges and evolves. A progressive urban revitalization campaign is examined in the first person, using this year’s new Artists and their commissions as a lens to explore a neighborhood in transition. The Series is framed by colorful overview and concluding episodes, providing the scope of past, present and future. Each episode is accented by images from legendary Documentary Photographer Martha Cooper, who has been capturing The Walls since they began in 2009. Her Photographs will also appear in a Special Edition Art Book “The Wynwood Walls and Doors” set to be released at Art
Basel 2011.

For more information on the artists and history of the Wynwood Walls visit thewynwoodwalls.com

Episodes of HERE COMES THE NEIGHBORHOOD will digitally premiere for free in the weeks leading up to Art Basel. You are invited and encouraged to share, blog, “like” tweet and tumble this content freely and enthusiastically. Your interest and support is deeply appreciated. To learn more and to view the episodes as they are released, please visit the official site HCTN.tv and the VIMEO PAGE, or contact us directly at INFO@hctn.tv

HERE COMES THE NEIGHBORHOOD
Directed By: Jenner Furst
Produced By: Ben Solomon
Supervising Producers: Julia Willoughby Nason & Daniel B. Levin

Created By: Jenner Furst & Tony Goldman
Executive Producer: Tony Goldman

A CINEMART Production
In Association With Goldman Projects
Coordinating Producer: Meghan Coleman
Consulting Producer: Medvin Sobio

 Here Comes the Neighborhood [Weekend Watch]
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Grand Theft Urbanism [Weekend Watch]

The new edition of the Grand Theft Auto series will feature a fictionalized LA. The characterization includes its idiosyncratic planning landscape, including avaricious developers, activist NIMBYs, and an ambitious ‘starchitect.’ Keep an eye out for the downtown development billboards.

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Mobility for Tomorrow [Weekend Watch]

I love the concept behind this system.  It would be great to have an integrated mobility system that allows you to go from bike to bus to car as needed.  The idea of recovering costs through generating miles as you cycle is especially intriguing.

mo is a new mobility system – it helps make the city a better place to live.

mo-bility.com

mo subscribers can rent bikes, cargobikes, ebikes and cars or use public transportation with just one card. With mo it pays to be eco-friendly: choose an eco-friendly transport or use your own bike to collect momiles. The more momiles the lower your bill. For instance if you mostly ride bikes, renting a car gets cheaper. Cycle and save money.

 

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Colours of a City Evening [Weekend Watch]

Kaid Benfield captures the colours of a New York City evening in this video slideshow.

All images (c)2011 by F. Kaid Benfield. Music: Sharon Shannon featuring Kirsty MacColl, “Libertango” (via YouTube Audio Swap)

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The Tragedy of Urban Renewal [Weekend Watch]

A libertarian take on urban renewal. Filmmaker Jim Epstein read The Power Broker The Tragedy of Urban Renewal [Weekend Watch]—the biography of Robert Moses—and set out to document one of the communities destroyed by Moses’ urban renewal of the 1950s.

From Planetizen:

Epstein found a number of folks who lived in a black community up on West 99th Street that was cleared by Moses’ Manhattantown project:

“In 2007, Epstein started digging through the archives and interviewing residents to learn more about the neighborhood that had vanished. From this work, he created a 7-minute documentary portrait of the old community…”

Cross-posted on Jane’s Walk Phoenix.

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What’s Making Housing Unaffordable in Vancouver? [Weekend Watch]

On September 21st, the SFU Centre for Dialogue hosted a public lecture on affordable housing featuring internationally recognized affordable housing expert Avi Friedman, Professor of Architecture at McGill University.

From the event site:

Metro Vancouver’s many attributes make it a highly desirable place to live and invest. Unfortunately, that makes housing, whether rental or ownership, unaffordable for many of the region’s citizens. The need to think outside the box about lower-cost residential options has become an urgent priority. Renowned international housing expert Dr. Avi Friedman will look at what’s making housing unaffordable in Metro Vancouver—as well as the direct and indirect contributions that affordable housing makes to communities. He will describe potential housing strategies, including examples of local and international projects, that offer innovative affordable housing solutions for this region.

Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to attend this lecture, but thankfully the SFU team recorded the presentation available online.  Here it is.  Note, it runs over an hour and a half, but it is well worth the watch.   if you don;t have the time today, book mark this post for a rainy afternoon. For a written analysis of the event, check out this thorough analysis in the Tyee.

Thinking Outside the Box about Affordable Housing

Running time: 1h 42 minutes

 

Avi Friedman, Professor, McGill University School of Architecture

Friedman Whats Making Housing Unaffordable in Vancouver? [Weekend Watch]Dr. Avi Friedman received his Bachelor’s degree in Architecture and Town Planning from the Israel Institute of Technology, his Master’s Degree from McGill University, and his Doctorate from the University of Montréal. In 1988, he founded the Affordable Homes Program at the McGill School of Architecture where he teaches.

He is known nationally and internationally for his housing innovation and in particular for the Grow Home and Next Home designs. He is the author of ten books and was a syndicated columnist for the CanWest Chain of daily newspapers. He is a practicing architect and the recipient of numerous awards including the Manning Innovation Award and the United Nations World Habitat Award.

In the year 2000 he was selected by Wallpaper magazine as 1 of 10 people from around the world “most likely to change the way we live”.

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London Bus Tour [Weekend Watch]

A great perspective of London’s street life from the top of a double-decker bus. Via Discovering Urbanism.

by moritz oberholzer

Who does not like looking out of the window while being in a bus?

Everything is shot handheld with an hd camera and a DIY 35mm adapter while sitting in one of those red vehicles of London.

The music used is by Ratatat and is called “Loud Pipes.”

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Roll On Future City [Weekend Watch]

I love the line “We are cycledrivarians” (Although perhaps it should be ‘cycle-driv-esdrians’)

Oregon is inventing better. And as usual, America is watching — enviously. Roll on, future city.

Presented by the Bicycle Transportation Alliance
Video by North, Digital One, Chris Hornbecker

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