Wednesday, May 31, 2000
Some photographs from my trip to Holland are now on kazys.net. Click here.
More images and more text will follow.

posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/31/2000 12:58:05 AM
Monday, May 29, 2000
The photographs of the Lithuania Pavilion at the World Expo are on kazys.net. Click here
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/29/2000 07:02:28 PM
Rem Koolhaas receives the Pritzker Prize today in Jerusalem. CNN has the details.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/29/2000 07:01:44 AM
Sunday, May 28, 2000
I'm back in the US. Expect lots more images from Holland, along with some images from Lithuania, and photos of the Lithuanian Pavilion at the World Expo in Hannover, designed by Marina and Audrius Bucas, Gintaras Kuginys, Valdas Ozarinskas and Aida Ceponyte.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/28/2000 04:11:36 PM
Thursday, May 25, 2000
Here's a little something from MVRDV's WoZoCo housing project. Apparently not all the features of the building have been published ... MVRDV's web site is cool too.

I'm in Vilnius, Lithuania at the moment. More such images when I get back.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/25/2000 08:22:23 AM
Wednesday, May 24, 2000
I'm at TU-Delft where I gave my lecture Los Angeles, Cluster City and will be in Lithuania starting tomorrow. Photos of Wozocos housing and the Wos 8 heat transfer station will arrive on the web site Sunday.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/24/2000 04:00:23 AM
Thursday, May 18, 2000
Find out more than you ever wanted to know about where you live. Two useful sites for demographic research by zip code are Easidemographics and Claritas.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/18/2000 08:04:50 AM
Wednesday, May 17, 2000
I got my passport back from the scary LA passport agency, so next week I'm giving a lecture on Los Angeles, Cluster City at TU-Delft. The only consolation about going to the passport agency is that it is in the beautiful Federal Building. I was looking for some images for you, but I didn't find any. Instead, I found this strange ad for 'Armageddon' that caused a 12 mile backup on the 405 in 1998.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/17/2000 04:45:11 PM
In case you haven't seen it, go check out The Concept Book for the Proposed Seattle Public Library by OMA.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/17/2000 04:40:29 PM
High technology may want to appear clean, but it isn't. See Silicon Hell at the Guardian.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/17/2000 08:47:37 AM
Tuesday, May 16, 2000
Mako the Flower Girl is another member of the Hedge Collective.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/16/2000 12:21:26 PM
The following books are required for my Soft City course. Manuel Castells, The Rise of the Network Society. (Oxford: Blackwell, 1996). Castells, perhaps the foremost urban historian of our time, examines the dramatic changes in the city over the last thirty years in this, the first of an epic, three volume work, The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture. Castells discusses the information technology revolution, globalization, along with recent changes in corporate structures, employment, and the development of the space of flows and timeless time. David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity. (Oxford: Blackwell, 1990). Although older than Castellss survey, Harveys book anticipates it by diagnosing the transition from a Fordist to a Post-Fordist society. Harveys focus is ultimately more on the cultural ramifications of this shift and his primary interest being in how the meaning and perception of time and space have been altered during this century. Harveys book also serves as a good introduction to the theoretical issues of modernism and postmodernism.
Also recommended is Michael J. Weiss, The Clustered World : How We Live, What We Buy, and What It All Means About Who We Are (New York: Little, Brown, and Company, 2000).
For anyone new to Los Angeles, the Thomas Guide to Los Angeles County is crucial.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/16/2000 12:05:31 PM
Monday, May 15, 2000
For the last twelve years or so, I have been using Microsoft Word on some incarnation of the Mac. During that time, I have amassed a large custom dictionary of words related to architecture and theory. I am making this available on the web @ kazys.net It will work with Microsoft Word 98 for the Mac and should work with other versions of Word for the Mac and for Windows. As expected, I take no responsiblity and can't help you if it doesn't work. If it does, you'll find that the usual suspects - e.g. Corbusier, Denari, Deleuze, and so forth, no longer trip up your spell checker.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/15/2000 08:08:31 PM
Check out scenes from Israel Kandarian's thesis project @ archinect and scenes from Chip Minnick's Nike Housing thesis @ kazys.net. I was co-advisor for both of their thesis projects. Lebbeus Woods called Chip's project "cynical" while Tarek Naga called Israel's project "bourgeois." You be the judge.
These projects may best be read in conjunction with my articles The Caress of the Commodity and Postmodern Permutations.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/15/2000 05:00:17 PM
The Metropolitan Research and Design program, run by Michael Speaks starts today at SCI-Arc. A key component is the Soft City, a course taught by Jeffrey Inaba of the Harvard Graduate School of Design and myself. The summer will also feature courses taught by Joe Day of Hedge Design and Dayware and Michael Speaks together with a studio by Neil Denari and Mark McVay.
A description of the MR+D program is provisionally located here.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/15/2000 04:46:50 PM
Sunday, May 14, 2000
Welcome to kazys.net, the weblog for architecture and network culture.
Static web sites are dead. By this we don't mean that clever animations are the new rule. On the contrary. Clever animations are attractive but take a great deal of time to create. The network society doesn't have this sort of time. Instead of window dressing, we demand fast culture, fast architecture, and fast web sites.
The next wave of web sites is the weblog. A weblog - often blog for short - is a fast web site, frequently and repeatedly updated, often once a day or more than once a day. Some of these sites - such as macintouch are devoted to news and content. Others are zine-like public diaries and venting boards, for example the rather sublime www.restless.org.
Come back and tune in often.
posted by Kazys Varnelis 5/14/2000 07:47:10 PM