亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳作品41页PPT

合集下载

大师作品分析

大师作品分析

B
63
参考书目:
1. 弗兰普顿.现代建筑——一部批判的历史.张钦南等译.北京:三联书店,2004 2. 史密斯.建筑理论(下)—勒柯布西耶的遗产.王贵祥译.北北京:中国建筑工业出版社,2007 3. 弗兰普顿.建构文化研究.王骏阳译.北京:中国建筑工工业出版社,2007 4. 柯洪编著.建筑评论—现代建筑与历史嬗变.刘托译.北京京知识产权出版社/中国水利水电出版社,2005 5. 罗杰•H •克拉克,迈克尔•波斯.世界建筑大师名作图析.汤纪敏,包志禹译.北京:中国建筑工工业出版社, 2006 6. 路易斯 康的空间构成—图说20世纪的建筑大师 原口绣昭 著 徐苏宁 吕飞 译 中国建筑工业出版社 2009
B
19
柯布西埃从人体尺度出发,选定 下垂手臂,脐,头顶,上伸手臂 四个部位为控制点,与地面距离 分别为 86,113,183,226厘米。 这些数值之间存在着两种关系: 一是黄金比率关系;另一个是上 伸手臂高恰为脐高的两倍,即226 和113厘米。
利用这两个数值为基准,插入其 他相应数值,形成两套级数,前 者称“红尺”,后者称“蓝尺”。 将红、蓝尺重合,作为横纵向坐 标,其相交形成的许多大小不同 的正方形和长方形称为模度。
美国,阿拉维纳曾为得克萨斯州奥斯汀的圣爱德
华大学设计了学生宿舍(2008年)。
B
62
圣爱德华大学宿舍
作业任务书
以组为单位(4人/组),从现代主义或其后的建筑大师中选择一位大师在欧洲的建筑 作品进行分析:
(1)与周边建筑与环境的关系:区位、建筑布局、交通组织、外部空间、出入口、景观组织等,绘 制黑白图,归纳总图设计特点; (2)建筑功能布局与空间组织:绘制功能分析图、平面与垂直交通空间组织的类型与特点、空间限 定的方式、家具布局分析,总结特点; (3)建筑形态与造型:建筑形体组合与构图、各立面的构图、轴测、开窗方式、建筑造型特点; (4)建筑结构与材料运用:建筑结构形式以及各结构构件的连接方式建筑材料的运用、建筑细部构 造分析。

高中历史 第八单元第23课《美术的辉煌》课件 新人教版必修3

高中历史 第八单元第23课《美术的辉煌》课件 新人教版必修3
图中那位在硝烟中左手握枪、右手高举三色旗,奋勇当先,正在召唤群众前进的青年姑娘,既是起义参加 者的真实写照,又是自由女神的象征。她健康、有力、坚决、美丽而朴素,正领导着工人、知识分子的革命
6 2队大0伍学21奋生年紧勇10前握月步进9日枪。,左眼侧中,闪一烁个着少自年由挥的动渴双望枪。急他奔身而后来有,两他个象工征人着挥少舞年着英尖雄刀阿,莱表尔情;刚右毅侧。穿在黑他上们衣后、面戴还高有筒许帽多的
物的悲剧性,方形木墩就像纪念碑一样起着稳定构图的作用,
特别是上面写着“A·Marat,David”(“献给马拉,大卫”)的
题字,更显出它的存在是不可少的。从上方射来的光线在暗
面低沉的背影衬托下使得主人公显得更加突出,强烈的明暗
对比使得形象具有纪念碑雕刻的立体感。画面中的一些细节
也是耐人寻味的。例如:凶手科尔黛给马拉的短笺上清晰可
13
凡•高《自画像 》
凡·高 (1853—1890),生于荷兰乡村的一 个新教牧师家庭。他早期画风写实,受到荷 兰传统绘画及法国写实主义画派的影响。 1886年,他来到巴黎,结识印象派和新印象 派画家,并接触到日本浮世绘的作品。视野 的扩展使其画风巨变,他的画,开始由早期 的沉闷、昏暗,而变得简洁、明亮和色彩强 烈。而当他1888年来到法国南部小镇阿尔的 时候,则已经摆脱印象派及新印象派的影响, 走到了与之背道而驰的境地。
——毕加索《法兰西文学报》
2021年10月9日
25
毕加索壁画《格尔尼卡》
《格尔尼卡》以半写实的象征性手法和单纯的黑、
白、灰三色组成低沉的调子,渲染悲剧性的气氛,
2021充年10分月9日表现了战争带给人类的灾难。
26
马 蒂 斯 《 舞 蹈 》
《舞蹈》,马蒂斯1909年创作。这幅画中,五个裸体的男女,黄棕色的躯体,在蓝色和绿色 的背景中自由烂漫地舒展、舞蹈、飞翔。看不清舞者的脸,看不见他们的表情,只有健康的肢 体,在天地间飘扬。他们如同在天空中飞翔的鸟,携手而舞,又如在清流中游动的鱼,无所依 靠,却优哉游哉。《舞蹈》从韵律线上看是圆形的构图,有明显的旋转运动的感觉。在这幅狂 野奔放的画面上,舞蹈者似乎被某种粗犷而原始的强大节奏所控制,他们手拉着手围成一个圆

亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳来自前线的建筑大师

亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳来自前线的建筑大师
天 主 教 大 学 数 学 学 院 (1 9 9 9 年 , 图
图1亚历 杭 德 罗
2 )、 智 利 天 主 教 大 学 学 院 ( 2 0 0 4
年 ,图3 ) 、 建筑 学 院 改造 ( 2 0 0 4 年,
“ 当建筑 师 开始 关心 社 会的 时候 ,他们 就开 始 不在 乎做 一些 “ 差 图 4 )、 智 利 天 主 教 大 学 连 体 塔 楼 建 筑” ,甚 至不把 自己当成建 筑 师 把设 计 作 为工具 ,来解决 设计 以 ( 2 0 0 5 年 ,图5 )、 爱德华大学新学 外 的 事情 , 因 为设 计在 设 计之 外会 硬有 力量 ”
设 计 创 造 了 具 有 强 大 影 响 力 的 建 筑 作 品 , 同 时也 回 府 了2 1 世 纪 的 重 要 挑
战 。他 的建 造工 程让 弱势 阶层 获 得 了

经 济 机 会 , 缓 和 了 自 然 灾 害 的 恶 劣 影 响 , 降 低 了 能 源 消 耗 ,并 提 供 了令 人
名家名作 / Ma s t e r p i e c e s
的建 筑 师事 务 所 。 自2 O O 1 年 以来 ,一 直
出 生在 智 利 首都 圣地 亚 哥 。 1 9 9 2 年从 智 2 0 1 6 年 威 尼 斯 建筑 双 年 展 的总 及主 要
利 天主 教 大 学 建筑 学 专 业毕 业 :1 9 9 2 年 策展 人 。 阿拉维纳 从2 6 岁 就 开 始 拥 有 自 己
建 筑 物 料 ( 2 0 0 3 至1 9 9 3 年 ,在 威 尼斯 大学 学 习历 史与 理
名家名作 / Ma s t e r p i e c e s
● f ■ _ ,

IA final 25 Oct

IA final 25 Oct

EUROPEAN COMMISSIONDIRECTORATE-GENERALTAXATION AND CUSTOMS UNIONCustoms PolicyOrigin, Customs Valuation and Trade FacilitationBrussels, 25 October 2007TAXUD/C5/RL D(2007)TAXUD/GSP-RO/IA/1/07 – EN Document interneInternal documentImpact assessment onRules of origin forthe Generalised System of Preferences(GSP)WaiverThis report commits only the Commission services involved in its preparation. The text is prepared as a basis for comment and does not prejudge the final form of any decision to be taken by the Commission.Commission européenne, B-1049 Bruxelles / Europese Commissie, B-1049 Brussel - Belgium. Telephone: (32-2) 299 11 11. Office: MO51 0/10. Telephone: direct line (32-2) 2950789. Fax: (32-2) 2969850.TABLE OF CONTENTS GLOSSARY (5)1. PROCEDURAL ISSUES AND CONSULTATION OF INTERESTEDPARTIES (7)2. WHAT IS THE PROBLEM? (8)2.1 GSP and the purpose of rules of origin (8)2.2 The nature of the problem (11)2.3 What are the underlying drivers of the problem? (16)2.4 Who is affected, in what ways, and to what extent? (17)2.5 EU right to act (18)3. WHAT ARE THE OBJECTIVES? (18)4. POLICY OPTIONS (19)4.1 Revision of rules for the determination of origin – sufficient processingof goods which are not wholly obtained (19)4.1.1 Option 1 - The status quo (20)4.1.2 Option 2 - A single, across-the-board criterion, based on value added (20)4.1.3 Option 3 - A single, across-the-board criterion, based on a change ofHS tariff heading or change of tariff sub-heading (21)4.1.4 Option 4 - Adapt the current rules on a product-by-product basis (21)4.2 Revision of rules for the determination of origin – conditions for whollyobtained fisheries products (22)4.2.1 Option 1 - Status quo (22)4.2.2 Option 2 - Simplify the present conditions (22)4.2.3 Option 3 - Allow cumulation of the conditions (22)4.3 Option 4 - Conditions for cumulation of origin (22)4.3.1 Option 1 - Status quo (23)4.3.2 Option 2 - Allocate origin on the basis of value added (23)4.3.3 Option 3 - Simplify the present conditions (23)4.3.4 Option 4 - Extend the scope of cumulation (23)4.4 Procedures for management and control of rules of origin (24)4.4.1 Option 1 - The status quo (24)4.4.2 Option 2 - Evidence of origin provided directly by registered exporters (24)4.4.3 Option 3 - Evidence of origin provided directly by approved exporters (24)4.4.4 Option 4 - Introduce certification by the exporter only (no priorregistration or approval) (25)4.5 Instruments to ensure compliance by the authorities of beneficiarycountries with their obligations (25)4.5.1 Option 1 - Status quo (25)4.5.2 Option 2 - Establish a programme to monitor the arrangements andprovide assistance and/or impose sanctions or safeguards whererequired (25)5. ANALYSIS OF IMPACTS (25)5.1 General considerations (25)5.2 The social impact of rules of origin (28)5.3 The administrative costs of rules of origin (29)5.4 The budgetary effect (31)5.5 The environmental impact of rules of origin (32)5.6 Revision of rules for the determination of origin – sufficient processingof goods which are not wholly obtained (33)5.6.1 Option 1 - The status quo (33)5.6.2 Option 2 - A single, across-the-board criterion, based on value added (34)5.6.3 Option 3 - A single, across-the-board criterion, based on a change ofHS tariff heading or sub-heading (46)5.6.4 Option 4 - Adapt the current rules on a product-by-product basis (48)5.7 Revision of rules for the determination of origin – conditions for whollyobtained fisheries products (49)5.7.1 Option 1 - Status quo (49)5.7.2 Option 2 - Simplify the present conditions (49)5.7.3 Option 3 - Allow cumulation of the conditions (49)5.8 Conditions for cumulation of origin (49)5.8.1 Option 1 - Status quo (49)5.8.2 Option 2 - Allocate origin on the basis of value added (49)5.8.3 Option 3 - Simplify the present conditions (50)5.8.4 Option 4 - Extend the scope of cumulation (51)5.9 Procedures for management and control of rules of origin (52)5.9.1 Option 1 - The status quo (52)5.9.2 Option 2 - Evidence of origin provided directly by registered exporters (52)5.9.3 Option 3 - Introduce certification by approved exporters only (54)5.9.4 Option 4 - Introduce certification by the exporter only (no registrationor approval) (54)5.10 Instruments to ensure compliance by the authorities of beneficiarycountries with their obligations (55)5.10.1 Option 1 - Status quo (55)5.10.2 Option 2 - Establish a programme to monitor the arrangements andprovide assistance and/or impose sanctions or safeguards whererequired (55)6. COMPARING THE OPTIONS (56)6.1 Revision of rules for the determination of origin - sufficient processingof goods which are not wholly obtained (56)6.2 Revision of rules for the determination of origin – conditions for whollyobtained fisheries products (61)6.3 Conditions for cumulation of origin (62)6.4 Procedures for management and control of rules of origin (64)6.5 Instruments to ensure compliance by the authorities of beneficiarycountries with their obligations (69)6.6 Overall conclusion (69)7. MONITORING THE OPTIONS (70)7.1 Revision of rules for the determination of origin (70)7.2 Conditions for cumulation of origin (70)7.3 Procedures for management and control of rules of origin (70)7.4 Instruments to ensure compliance by the authorities of beneficiarycountries with their obligations (71)A NNEXES:S EE SEPARATE DOCUMENTG LOSSARY Preferential tariff treatment (or preference) Reduced or zero import duty which is granted provided that goods originate in a beneficiary countryGSPGeneralised System of Preferences EBA Everything But Arms – a special arrangement under GSPfor LDCs, granting them duty- and quota-free access formost productsLDC Least Developed CountriesBeneficiary countries Countries eligible for preferential tariff treatment underthe GSP scheme (as listed in the GSP Regulation –Regulation 980/2005)Competent authorities:The authorities competent for the issue and verification ofproof of origin (Certificate of origin) Form A:Form used to claim the benefit of GSP preference HS or Harmonised SystemHarmonised Commodity Description and Coding System Wholly obtained Natural products from a beneficiary country and goodsmade entirely from them (not containing imported non-originating elements)Sufficient working or processing The conditions which products made using imported, non-originating materials or components must fulfil in abeneficiary country in order to be considered asoriginating thereCumulation of origin A facilitation which allows the countries in the cumulationzone to cooperate in order to comply with the rules.Originating products of country A may be furtherprocessed in country B and counted as originating.Regional cumulation of origin A specific type of cumulation in GSP, applicable to three separate regional groupsMinimal operations Working or processing operations regarded as insufficientto confer origin or the minimal level of processing that hasto be carried out in cumulation.Value added The value which must be added to non-originatingmaterials in order to obtain originEx-works price The price paid for the product ex-works to themanufacturer in whose undertaking the last working orprocessing is carried out, provided that the price includesthe value of all the materials used, minus any internaltaxes which are, or may be, repaid when the productobtained is exportedUtilisation rateThe proportion of imported products for which preferenceis claimed, compared to all those which are eligible for it.1.P ROCEDURAL ISSUES AND CONSULTATION OFINTERESTED PARTIES1.On 16 March 2005, the Commission adopted a communication entitled "The rulesof origin in preferential trade arrangements: Orientations for the future" (hereafter "the communication")1. This contained three elements: appropriate rules determining the acquisition of origin; efficient management and control procedures;and a secured environment for legitimate trade. With regard to the first element, the communication acknowledged that further analysis of the suitability of a value added method for determining origin was required. The communication was a general document concerning all preferential trade arrangements, but it envisaged that the first applications should be to priority, development-oriented arrangements such as the Generalised System of Preferences (GSP). The purpose of this impact assessment is to support a draft regulation for the reform of GSP rules of origin.2.An inter-service group was set up in September 2005, in which the following DGswere represented: Trade; Enterprise and Industry; Fisheries and Maritime Affairs;Agriculture and Rural Development; Development; Enlargement; EuropAid Cooperation Office; European Anti-fraud Office; Health and Consumer Protection;External Relations; Budget; Legal Service; Secretariat-General. The group decided that a full impact assessment was required, covering not just the value-added method, but also the procedural elements in the communication. The group met six times.3.The reform of GSP rules of origin is included as a simplification initiative on theCommission's work programme for 20072.4.Three studies on the use of a value-added method by outside consultants werecommissioned: a general study by Olivier Cadot, Jaime de Melo and Emmanuel Pondard of ADE s.a.3 (hereafter "ADE"); one focusing specifically on textiles, by Prof. Dr. Michiel Scheffer of Saxion Hogescholen4 (hereafter "Scheffer") and one concerning the fisheries sector by a consortium comprising Oceanic Développement (France) and MegaPesca Lda (Portugal)5 (hereafter "Oceanic/MegaPesca"). All consultants were required to consult stakeholders (beneficiary countries and industry representatives).5.The Commission services carried out a specific consultation to test ideas for certainoptions concerning sensitive agricultural products with 27 organisations representing the sectors concerned in the Community. These organisations were1COM(2005) 100.2 COM(2006) 629, 24.10.2006.3 "Evaluating the Consequences of Shift to a Value-added method for Determining Origin in EU PTAs", July 2006 (Letter of Contract No. 2005/103984, Framework Contract AMS/451 - LOT No. 11).4 "Study on the application of value criteria for textile products in preferential rules of origin", October 2006 (Tender 06-H13).5 Contrat Cadre FISH/2006/20, Specific Convention N° 3 "Rules of Origin in Preferential Trade Arrangements: New rules for the fishery sector".contacted by letter in March 2007 and given one month in which to respond (see Annex [1]. 16 did so.6.The Commission services also consulted European federations on the thresholds tobe applied to industrial products. A letter was addressed to them on 11 June 2007 (see Annex [2]).7.The Communication was the Commission's response to a major consultationexercise (Green Paper) on rules of origin launched at the end of 20036. It was published on the Commission's web-site and there was a 3-month consultation period. Responses were received from private companies, European trade and business organisations, national and local trade and business organisations, consultancy groups, authorities of Member States and of third countries, international and regional organisations, a research centre and a non-governmental organisation. A summary of the results was also published on the internet7.8.Both before and after the adoption of the communication, the Commission serviceshave had many meetings with representatives of thirds countries and of trade associations. In addition, in May 2005 and November 2006 two conferences were held with representatives of GSP beneficiary countries in Brussels to inform them about the communication and the options, and to hear their views.9.The respondents to the Green Paper almost unanimously agreed that rules of originwere too complex and needed to be changed. However, there was no agreement among respondents about how best to do this. At the conferences with beneficiary countries it likewise appeared that the current rules were considered unsatisfactory.10.The Impact Assessment Board considered this impact assessment at its meeting on29 August 2007. In response to its opinion, delivered on 31 August 2007, a glossaryhas been added, a point on the budgetary impact for the EU has been added and some other textual amendments have been made. In addition, a more comprehensive executive summary has been provided.However, the time available did not permit all issues (such as that the reasoning underlying the assumptions made concerning utilisation rate, the benefits and drawbacks of changes to cumulation, and the assessment of employment, social and environmental impacts resulting from the expected trade deflection) raised by the impact assessment board to be fully addressed. The Commission services do not underestimate the importance of these elements but consider that the information and analysis already included are already substantial.2.W HAT IS THE PROBLEM?2.1 GSP and the purpose of rules of origin1.GSP8 is a preferential trade arrangement which grants reduced or zero import dutyto products originating in 179 beneficiary countries. It is an arrangement with a6COM(2003) 787, 18.12.20037 http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/resources/documents/origin_consultation_final.pdf8 Currently implemented by Council Regulation (EC) No. 980/2005 (OL L 169, 30.6.2005, p. 1).development focus, aiming to facilitate the full insertion of developing countries into the world economy, supporting their economic and social development through better access to the Community market and strengthening regional economic integration. It contains three arrangements:– The general arrangement, which grants a range of reductions and suspensions for the products listed in the annex to the regulation;– a special incentive arrangement for sustainable development and good governance ("GSP Plus"), which provides additional benefits for 15 vulnerable countries implementing certain international standards in human and labour rights, environmental protection, the fight against drugs, and good governance;– a special arrangement for least developed countries (EBA), which grants duty- and quota-free access for all products except arms originating in the 49 Least Developed Countries (LDCs).2. Table 19 shows the average GSP preferences and global trade value of GSPpreferential imports into the EU.3. GSP is granted unilaterally by the Community and beneficiary countries range fromthe very large and relatively advanced (such as China) to tiny islands and the world's poorest countries. However, a "graduation" mechanism provides for the removal of preferences for countries (except those benefiting from EBA) whose exports reach a determined level in any sector. For this reason China, although still a GSP beneficiary, is excluded from preference for many sectors.4. The countries which make greatest use of GSP are not unexpectedly the largest andmost economically developed countries (see volumes of exports in column 5 of9 Source: ADE study.Notes: Computed from EUROSTAT. TRAINS data was used for tariffs equivalents of specific tariffs and tariff-rate-quotas for agricultural products. a : Thousand euros b : Value of imports eligible for preferences c : Total number of tariff lines (over all countries) to the EU at HS-8 level. See annex 2 of the ADE study for the exclusion of tariff lines due to missing data. d : Import value of preferences according to filing status requested at EU customs (i.e. on the assumption that the requested status was granted)e : Value of actual preferences ()MFN PREF ij i i ij t t M −∑. Does not include special regimes for ACP(37)and ACP(41).f: Import-weighted figures in parenthesis (weighted by imports at HS-8 level) g : See volume II, chapter 1 of the ADE study for definition of the construction of the index h : Maximum value-content of imports when applicable (see text for interpretation). k : Value of imports under the special Cotonou regime (bananas, rice, sugar). l : Value of misclaiming computed as ()CLAIM ELIG iji i ij t t M−∑where CLAIM i t is the tariff applicable to the status claimed and ELIG i t is the eligible status for the claiming country. A ‘+’ is entered for overclaiming (CLAIM ELIG ii t t >) and a ‘-’ for underclaiming (CLAIM ELIG i i t t <) m : Value of imports for GSP (92) countries under tariff lines that claimed either GSP or ACP status when these lines were not eligible for GSP status (corresponding value preference in parenthesis)Annex 310). LDCs tend to export mainly textiles and clothing and footwear, and (where they have the natural resources) processed agricultural and fisheries products.Country range Description of the valueGSP but neitherACP nor EBA (92)ACP but not EBA(37)EBA and also ACP(41)EBA but not ACP(9)EU imports a 152.191.986 11.718.363 4.847.399 1.566.684GSP eligible b 100.584.679 All lines All lines All linestariff lines c 99.26210.9347.3763.494Imports under preference: of which dGSP(ACP) 14.021.313(6.446.738)133.884(1.747.487)14.174(677.104)760.523(1.837)Value of preference e GSP(ACP)487.037(439.086)6.332(168.953)2.844(64.428)90.280(290)Value of Mis-claiming l Overclaim(underclaim)1.398(-261.978)8.361(0)(0)(0)Value of imports (overclaiming) for ineligible GSP lines m 1.269.032 ( 41.533 )Import Value under Special ACPregime k6.118 381.932 54.083 0Average MFN tariff f 5,08% (2,27%) 4,75% (1,71%) 4,18% (1,50%) 7,91% (11,90%) Average Preferential tariff f 2,66% (1,15%) 0,17% (0,01%)Table 1: Preferences and their value in the EU market, 2004EUR (000)5.The rules of origin are a tool serving on the one hand to ensure that the activitywhich takes place in the beneficiary country represents a real economic input andthat the benefit of the tariff preferences goes to the intended beneficiaries, and onthe other hand to prevent abuse. As such, they are an essential component ofCommunity trade policy.10 Source: UNCTAD. The data in Annex I present the utilisation rates with regard to the most exported products from both GSP and EBA countries. Exports of products subject to MFN duty equals zero and which are not covered by the GSP preferences are not taken into account. The figures do not refer to smaller quantities of exports even if low export value could also imply problems in the fulfilment of the origin rules. However, a full analysis of all the headings lines for a large number of countries goes beyondthe scope of this impact assessment. Generally the attention is focused on the most exported goods as the economies represent already a certain level of specialisation and intend to maximise the benefits of the existing natural resources, for the purpose of this document called wholly obtained products. It is impossible to set up a system of rules of origin where every country will produce everything. The objectiveis, on the other hand, to tie permanently the economies of the developing countries with the global economy in order to maximise their internal economic potentials.6.Rules of origin consist of two parts: substance and procedures:–Substance means the conditions for goods to be considered as originating in the beneficiary country. To qualify for preference, products must be "wholly obtained" in it (essentially, natural products or products obtained therefrom) or have undergone "sufficient working or processing" there. For this purpose, the present rules lay down a product-by-product list of requirements as well as detailed conditions for cases in which origin may be "cumulated" with other countries. Fuller details are given in Annex [4].–Procedures means the system of administrative cooperation for the management and control of origin. Proof of origin must be given, usually by means of a certificate of origin Form A stamped for each individual export by the competent authorities of the beneficiary country. These authorities are also responsible for carrying out subsequent verifications. Fuller details are given in Annex [5].2.2 The nature of the problem1.The preferences for some products are under-used in some cases. Statisticsshow relatively low use rates by many of the least developed countries (LDCs) and other vulnerable countries (Annex 3) – utilisation rates for the top fifteen exported products). Although many factors affect investment decisions and the ability to export under preference (including geography and infrastructure, the available workforce and political stability), it appears that one reason is that rules of origin may act as a barrier to trade for such countries, because exporters there are unable to comply with them because they are complex and/or too stringent.2.The under-utilisation cannot be ascribed to the preferences duty rates not being lowenough for LDCs, since they already enjoy zero duty for virtually all their exports. 3.Rules of origin do not affect all sectors equally; the utilisation rates varysubstantially from sector to sector. For agricultural and fishery goods they are high (80-100%). This is because these goods are generally "wholly obtained", i.e.extracted mineral products, harvested vegetables, live animals etc. The lack of these products among the most exported goods seems not to be caused by the stringency of origin rules, as their main objective is to support the use of local raw materials produced in a given country.4.From the figures in Annex 3 it appears that there are problems in complying withthe origin conditions in the industrial sectors. The sector with the lowest utilisation rates is the clothing industry, namely Chapters 61 and 62 of the Combined Nomenclature (CN) (the rate varies from 0 to 50%, even though there are differences at the heading level and a strong differentiation between countries). At a first glance it appears that there are also anomalies with regard to other industrial products exported in large quantities from developing countries (chemicals, machinery and transport equipment). The under-utilisation in these sectors affects more developed GSP countries (Brazil, Russia, Indonesia, Malaysia or Thailand, for example). There are only traces of exports of those products from the LDCs (and the utilisation rates are zero, i.e. they seem not to be able to use the preferences at all).5.Rules of origin do not affect all beneficiaries equally, but tend to penalise thesmaller and least developed countries, which have less integrated economies.However, other, larger countries are able to export extremely large volumes to the Community despite the current rules of origin. See table 2, and in particular columns 5 and 7.Table 2: Volumes of import in the EU market from India and Sri Lanka and therespective utilisation rates and their value1.Graphic 1 below and point 1 of Annex [4] show how for exporters of productswhich are not wholly obtained the complexity is particularly acute, since it is a multi-step process: they must contend not only with a product-by-product list of rules (and in some cases, alternative rules) defining the level of processing requiredto confer origin, but also a number of exceptions and conditions (minimal operations which can never confer origin, tolerances, etc.), all giving rise to repeated problems of interpretation, without mentioning the possible use of cumulation.Graphic 1: Deciding whether products originate or not2. There are in fact currently 545 different list rules used for the various preferential arrangements in which the EU is involved, corresponding to 509 different categories of products 11, plus 107 alternative rules. There is no common indicator or tool to measure what is 'sufficient processing', which means that the origin requirement can discriminate between products or manufacturing processes which are similar. Nor are the rules easily adapted to the appearance of new products, new processes or changing trade patterns. Annex [6] indicates some of the problems of interpretation encountered, while the following table 3 shows the breakdown of use of various criteria amongst the total number of list rules (alternative rules are not included):WO CTH SP VP WO+CTHWO+VP 29 98 150 128 44 5,3% 18% 27,5%23,5% 0,7%0,7% CTH+VP SP+VP WO+CTH+VP Sets+VPNRTOTAL 94 28 22 654517,2% 5,1% 0,4%0,4%1,1%100% Table 3: Current rules for sufficient working or processing, by type.WO= manufacture from wholly obtained or already originating productsCTH= change of tariff heading or subheading (positive or negative test)VP= value percentageSP= specific process11 For some categories of products, two or even three rules are offered at the choice of the exporter (not to mention possible 'alternative rules').NR= 'no rule' ('manufacture from any heading')3.The ADE study demonstrates the correlation between the strictness of rules oforigin and low use rate. This trend is also amply confirmed by anecdotal evidence.On the other hand, in cases where rules of origin have been relaxed, experience shows that the use rate can go up: for example, when the EU reduced the processing requirement for textile products from three stages to two, and following specific initiatives by other donor countries such as the USA and Canada).4.The rules for "wholly obtained" products are relatively clear, but not free of alldifficulty: for example, the case, illustrated in point 4 of Annex [4], of the conditions for fishing vessels catching fish outside the territorial waters of the beneficiary country. These rules are not always easy to interpret or apply to concrete cases and it is particularly difficult to establish the ownership of companies, where several holding companies may be concerned.5.Cumulation is a facilitation of the normal rules, which allows the processingrequired to be carried out in a group of countries instead of the beneficiary country alone. GSP regional cumulation aims at encouraging economic cooperation and thus promoting regional integration, but sustained anecdotal evidence shows that it too is under-used12. Because of its strict and complex conditions, described in point2 of Annex [3], it has proved hard to apply in practice. The allocation of origin inthis context is particularly important, since different countries are subject to different levels of preference.6.Cost. Participation in preferential trade causes costs for enterprises as well as forpublic administrations. The current system of rules of origin is seen as burdensome and excessively complicated. The complexity of multiple rules adds to costs for all parties.7.The administrative costs of rules of origin are those which are incurred byenterprises for the determination of the preferential status of exported products, its permanent control and the issuing of proofs of origin. The administrative costs of any substantial reform affect different stakeholders. As the GSP rules of origin concern an autonomous system of unilateral preferences, the possible costs can be evaluated from the perspective of:- economic operators;- public authorities.8.The ADE study concludes that there is an average total compliance cost of 3.2%13.It further observes that using its "restrictiveness index" compliance costs can be broken down into two components: "an industry-specific distortionary cost due to the RoO’s effect on input sourcing −forcing a minimum of sourcing from the preferential trading zone as opposed to potentially cheaper sources outside− and an administrative (paperwork) component which we assume, for simplicity, to be the same across industries." By this means it arrives at "an average administrative 12 There is no requirement to indicate the use of cumulation on Form A (even if some countries do). Consequently, the Community does not hold statistics on the use of regional cumulation.13 Point 2.3 in part I。

亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳作品

亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳作品
14
作品解析
为了提高土地利用率,我们起先设计了联排房屋,并把每块 场地的宽度缩减到与房屋宽度一致,另外我们尝试调整了房 间尺寸,但只够容纳 66 户居民。这种设计的问题是,如果 一个家庭想加建一个房间的话会挡住现有房间的采光和通风。 另一大弊端是,住户在两个房间之间走动必须经过其他房间, 牺牲了空间的私密性。结果会导致的不是土地被有效利用, 而是拥挤的住宅和混乱的温床。
殊元素融合进去。从某种角度来说,他的设计手法可以描述为用曲线和体量来创造出一个空
间,实现1+1=3的效果。
25
圣爱德华大学新宿舍和餐厅
第二个就是 Louis Kahn在上世纪60年代所设计的埃德曼大厅,他采用蜂巢式的形状去围成 并定义一个中心,作为一个特殊的元素。他并未添加元素,而是采用一种方式合成蜂巢式的 形状以及体量,并共重复操作了3次。
5
建筑观
• 亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳——把生命的力量注入建筑的灵魂中 • 起点——为母校设计建筑 • 普利兹克建筑奖基金会主席汤姆士·普利兹克表示:“评审团选出了
一位令我们深刻理解什么是真正伟大的设计的建筑师。亚历杭德 罗·阿拉维纳首倡的协作方式设计创造了具有强大影响力的建筑作品, 同时也回应了21世纪的重要挑战。他的建造工程让弱势阶层获得了经 济机会,缓和了自然灾害的恶劣影响,降低了能源消耗,并提供了令 人舒适的公共空间。富于创新和感召力的他为我们示范了最好的建筑 能够怎样改善人们的生活。” • 在得知获得2016年普利兹克建筑奖后,阿拉维纳给普利兹克基金会的 邮件中写道:“没有任何成就是归属个人的,建筑设计是一项集体协 作的学科。” • 1992年,从智利天主教大学毕业后,阿拉维纳就成为了一名建筑师, 两年后就成立了自己的建筑师事务所。他的第一个项目是为母校设计 新的数学学院(1999年建成),他们把新大楼添加到两座已有的建筑 之上,让“1+2=1”,这栋新添的大楼减少了原本两座建筑的许多元 素。 • 此外,他还为母校设计了医学院、建筑学院、连体塔楼、UC创新中心。 其中,整体混凝土砌块的UC创新中心更成为了圣地亚哥的一道风景线。

大师作品

大师作品

二作品赏析
二作品赏析
“半房”设计成就人文关怀的巅峰
然而真正让阿拉维纳和他的小伙伴们与众5不 同并为其赢得国际声望的是2004年完成的金塔 蒙罗伊住宅项目。这个项目的挑战在于如何在 有限的资金下完成社会保障房建设。 美国当地时间1月13日,普利兹克建筑奖基金会主席汤 姆士· 普利兹克宣布,现年48岁的阿拉维纳荣获2016年 普利兹克建筑奖。 评委会认为:“很少有人能像阿拉维纳一样,将人们对 建筑实践需求上升到对艺术追求的高度,同时应对当今 社会和经济挑战。”
二作品赏析
结局? 没错,和大叔预想的一样,在建成之后的几年,这一间间“半房” 渐渐被填满 这个被违法占据了30年的贫民窟,变成了一个生活环境很好的小社 区这个项目完成后得到了当地这些贫民家庭的好评。 大叔开始在第三世界的各种贫困地区引入这种“半房”的设计 给各种贫困地区的住房问题做出了不可磨灭的贡献... 建筑师提供一个框架,然后由住户接手
这里的贫民家庭都是从农村进入 城市,非法占据了市中心半公顷 的土地。但贫民们不愿意搬走
VS
这点钱,阿拉维纳大叔要用 来为每户家庭买土地、提供 基础设施并建造出住房。
艰巨
这个项目中,当地政府会为100户 人家每户提供预算补助金7500美 元。
二作品赏析
这点儿钱,只够给30个家庭,其他70个肿么 办?不患寡而患不均呐! 要不,联排屋也成,也一样有发挥空间…… 只够给60个家庭。
二作品赏析
安西里尼创新中心的设计彰显了这名建筑师 的成熟老练。建筑的远观孔武有力,而实则 非常人性化和温馨。建筑设计逆转常规,外 观上是不透明的混凝土结构,内部却有一个 滤光玻璃构成的中庭。 建筑物的外围体量巨大,但能源消耗却被降 至最低。其内部具有许多可供人们自发偶遇 的空间以及能够通览各类活动的透明度。阿 拉维纳创造了一个生动、有趣和温馨的空间。

2016年普利普利兹克奖得主|亚力杭德罗·阿拉维纳|Alejandro Aravena|获奖情况

2016年普利普利兹克奖得主|亚力杭德罗·阿拉维纳|Alejandro Aravena|获奖情况

2016年普利普利兹克奖得主Alejandro Aravena亚力简德罗·阿拉维纳|智利2016年获奖者公布视频2016 Announcement Video on Vimeo.html阿拉维纳作品概览(后面附有原图,另存后可以查看)这些图片的说明在2016年作品集里,点击这里获取亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马智利天主教大学数学学院,1999年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:Tadeuz Jalocha智利天主教大学数学学院,1999年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:Tadeuz Jalocha智利天主教大学医学院,2004年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:罗兰·哈尔伯智利天主教大学医学院,2004年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:罗兰·哈尔伯智利天主教大学建筑学院,2004年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:马丁·布拉沃智利天主教大学连体塔楼,2005年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥, 大学教室和办公室摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马智利天主教大学连体塔楼,2005年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥, 大学教室和办公室摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马智利天主教大学连体塔楼,2005年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥, 大学教室和办公室素描由亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳提供智利天主教大学UC创新中心- 阿纳克莱托·安吉里尼,2014年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥摄影:妮娜·维迪奇智利天主教大学UC创新中心- 阿纳克莱托·安吉里尼,2014年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥摄影:妮娜·维迪奇智利天主教大学UC创新中心- 阿纳克莱托·安吉里尼,2014年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥摄影:菲利普·迪亚兹智利天主教大学UC创新中心- 阿纳克莱托·安吉里尼,2014年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马智利天主教大学UC创新中心- 阿纳克莱托·安吉里尼,2014年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥摄影:詹姆斯·弗洛里奥智利天主教大学UC创新中心- 阿纳克莱托·安吉里尼,2014年,圣华金校区, 智利圣地亚哥ELEMENTAL提供的设计草图(亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳)金塔蒙罗伊住宅,2004年,智利伊基克摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马——上图:居民自己动手实现的中产阶层生活标准, 下图:得到财政资金支持的―半成品房子‖金塔蒙罗伊住宅,2004年,智利伊基克摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马——左:得到财政资金支持的―半成品房子‖, 右:居民自己动手实现的中产阶层生活标准金塔蒙罗伊住宅,2004年,智利伊基克上图:摄影:路德维科·杜素辛, 得到财政资金支持的―半成品房子‖, 下图:摄影:Tadeuz Jalocha, 居民自己动手实现的中产阶层生活标准蒙特雷住宅,2010年,墨西哥蒙特雷摄影:拉米罗·拉米雷斯, 得到财政资金支持的―半成品房子‖蒙特雷住宅,2010年,墨西哥蒙特雷摄影:拉米罗·拉米雷斯, 居民自己动手实现的中产阶层生活标准的案例之一大都会步道,1997年- 在建,智利圣地亚哥摄影:Guy Wenborne大都会步道,1997年- 在建,智利圣地亚哥ELEMENTAL的规划大都会步道,1997年- 在建,智利圣地亚哥供图:ELEMENTAL二百周年纪念儿童公园,2012年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马二百周年纪念儿童公园,2012年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马二百周年纪念儿童公园,2012年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马二百周年纪念儿童公园,2012年,智利圣地亚哥摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马圣爱德华大学宿舍,2008年,美国德克萨斯州奥斯汀摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马圣爱德华大学宿舍,2008年,美国德克萨斯州奥斯汀摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马圣爱德华大学宿舍,2008年,美国德克萨斯州奥斯汀摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马圣爱德华大学宿舍,2008年,美国德克萨斯州奥斯汀摄影:克里斯托瓦尔·帕尔马拉斯克鲁塞斯朝圣观景台,2010年,墨西哥哈利斯科摄影:伊万·班无椅解决方案,2010年, 为Vitra公司设计摄影:妮可·巴赫曼无椅解决方案,2010年, 为Vitra公司设计摄影:妮可·巴赫曼孔斯蒂图西翁海啸后可持续重建计划,2010年- 在建,智利孔斯蒂图西翁供图:ELEMENTAL孔斯蒂图西翁海啸后可持续重建计划,2010年- 在建,智利孔斯蒂图西翁供图:ELEMENTAL孔斯蒂图西翁海啸后可持续重建计划,2010年- 在建,智利孔斯蒂图西翁供图:ELEMENTAL孔斯蒂图西翁海啸后可持续重建计划,2010年- 在建,智利孔斯蒂图西翁摄影:菲利普·迪亚兹孔斯蒂图西翁海啸后可持续重建计划,2010年- 在建,智利孔斯蒂图西翁供图:ELEMENTAL绿屋,2013年,智利孔斯蒂图西翁供图:ELEMENTAL ——上图:得到财政资金支持的―半成品房子‖建设, 下图:居民自己动手实现的中产阶层生活标准绿屋,2013年,智利孔斯蒂图西翁供图:ELEMENTAL ——上图:得到财政资金支持的―半成品房子‖建设, 下图:居民自己动手实现的中产阶层生活标准孔斯蒂图西翁文化中心,2014年,智利孔斯蒂图西翁摄影:菲利普·迪亚兹孔斯蒂图西翁文化中心,2014年,智利孔斯蒂图西翁摄影:菲利普·迪亚兹孔斯蒂图西翁海滨长廊,2014年,智利孔斯蒂图西翁摄影:菲利普·迪亚兹孔斯蒂图西翁海滨长廊,2014年,智利孔斯蒂图西翁摄影:菲利普·迪亚兹卡拉马PLUS,2012 年–在建,智利卡拉马ELEMENTAL制图作家小屋,2015年,瑞士蒙特里谢尔供图:+2 Architectes作家小屋,2015年,瑞士蒙特里谢尔供图:+2 ArchitectesAyelén学校,2015年,智利兰卡瓜供图:ELEMENTALAyelén学校,2015年,智利兰卡瓜供图:ELEMENTALOcho Quebradas住所,2013年–在建,智利洛斯维洛斯ELEMENTAL制图Ocho Quebradas住所,2013年–在建,智利洛斯维洛斯ELEMENTAL制图Ocho Quebradas住所,2013年–在建,智利洛斯维洛斯ELEMENTAL制图―Humano‖公园博物馆,2014年–在建,智利圣地亚哥ELEMENTAL制图Arauco Vivero,2015年, 智利新奥尔科内斯, Arauco林业公司食堂和办公楼供图:ELEMENTAL诺华上海园区办公楼,2015年(在建),中国上海供图:ELEMENTAL诺华上海园区办公楼,2015年(在建),中国上海摄影:塞缪尔·博恩——天井ELEMENTAL,2013年, 智利圣地亚哥供图:ELEMENTALELEMENTAL,2013年, 智利圣地亚哥供图:ELEMENTALELEMENTAL,2015年, 智利圣地亚哥供图:ELEMENTAL原始尺寸照片|图纸(可另存为后查看)。

TED演讲(亚历杭德罗)

TED演讲(亚历杭德罗)

The Power of Synthesis-------Alejandro Aravena If there’s any power in design, that’s power of synthesis. The more complex the problem, the more the need for simplicity. So allow me to share three cases where we tried to apply design’s power of synthesis.Let’s start with the global challenge of urbanization. It’s a fact that people are moving towards cities, and even if counterintuitive, it’s good news. Evidence shows that people are better off in cities. But there’s a problem that I would call the “3S” menace: The scale, speed, scarcity of means with which we will have to respond to this phenomenon has no precedence in history. For you to have an idea, out of the three billion people living in cities today, one billion are under the line of poverty. By 2030, out of five billion people that will be living in cities, two billion are going to be under the line of poverty. That means that we will have to build a one million-people city per week, with 10,000 dollars per family during the next 15 years. A one million-people city per week, with 10,000 dollars per family, If we don’t solve this equation, it is not that people will stop coming to cities. They will come anyhow, but they will live in slums, favelas and informal settlements. So what to do? Well, an answer may come from favelas and slums themselves. A clue could be in this question we were asked 10 years ago. We were asked to accommodate 100 families that had been occupying illegally half a hectare in the center of the city of Iquique in the north of Chile using a $10,000 subsidy with which we had to buy the land, provide the infrastructure, and build the houses that, in the best of the cases, would be of around 40 square meters. And by the way, they said, the cost of the land, because it’s in the center of the city, is three times more than what social housing can normally afford. Due to the difficulty of the question, we decide to include the families in the process of understanding the constraints, and we started a participatory design process, and testing what was available there in the market. Detached houses, 30 families could be accommodated.Row houses ,60 families. The only way toaccommodated all of them was by building in height,and they threatened us to go on a hunger strike if we even dared to offer this as a solution,because they could not make the tiny apartments expand.So the conclusion with the families and this is important,not our conclusion with the families,was that we had a problem.We had to innovate.So what did we do? Well,a middle-class family lives reasonably well in around 80 square meters,but when there’s no money,what the market does is to reduce the size of the house to 40 square meters.What we said was,what if ,instead of thinking of 40 square meters as a small house,why don’t we consider it half of a good one? When you rephrase the problem as half of a good house instead of a small one,the key question is,which half do we do?And we thought we had to do with public money the half that families won’t be able to do individually.We identified five design condition that belonged to the hard half of a house,and we went back the families to do two things join forces and split tasks.Our design was something in between a building and a house.As a building,it could pay for expensive ,well-located land,and as a house, it could expand.If, in the process of not being expelled to the periphery while getting a house,families kept their network and their jobs,we knew that the expansion would begin right away.So we went from this initial social housing to a middle-class unit achieved by families themselves within a couple of weeks.This was our first project in Iquique 10 years ago.This is our last project in Chile.Different designs,same principle:You provide the frame,and from then on,families take over.So the purpose of design,trying to understanding and trying to give an answer to the “3S” menace,scale,speed and scarcity is to channel people’s own building capacity.We won’t solve the one million people per week equation unless we use people’s own power for building.So with the right design,slums and favelas may not be the problem but actually the only possible solution.The second case is how design can contribute to sustainability.In 2012,we entered the competition for the Angelini Innovation Center,andthe aim was to build the right environment for knowledge creation.It is accepted that for such an aim,knowledge creation,interaction among people ,face-to-face contact,it’s important,and we agreed on that.But for us, the question of the right environment was a very literal question.We wanted to have a working space with the right light ,with the right temperature,with the right air.So we asked ourselves:Does the typical office building help us in that sense?Well,how dose that building look,typically?It’s a collection of floors,one on top of each other,with a core in the center with elevators,stairs,pipes,wires,everything,and then a glass skin on the outside,that, due to direct sun radiation,creates a huge greenhouse effect inside.In addition to that,Let’s say a guy working on the seventh floor goes every single day through the third floor,but has no idea what the guy on that floor is working on.So we thought,well,maybe we have to turn this scheme inside out.And what we did was,let’s have an open atrium,a hollowed core,the same collection of floors,but have the walls and the mass in the perimeter, so that when the sun hits,it’s not impacting directly glass, but a wall.When you have an open atrium inside, you are able to see what others are doing from within the building, and you have a better way to control light,and when you place the mass and the walls in the perimeters,then you are preventing direct sun radiation.You may also open those windows and get cross-ventilation.We just made those openings of such a scale that they could work as elevated squares,outdoor spaces throughout the entire height the building. None of this is rocket science.You don’t require sophisticated programming.It’s not about technology.This is just archaic,primitive common sense,and by using common sense,we went from 120 kilowatts per square meter per year,which is the typical energy consumption for cooling a glass power,to 40 kilowatts per square meter per year.So with the right design,sustainability is noting but the rigorous use of common sense.Last case I would like to share is how design can provide more comprehensive answers against natural disasters.You may know thatChile,in 2010,was hit by an 8.8 Richter scale earthquake and tsunami,and we were called to work in the reconstruction of the Constitucion in the southern part of the country.We were given 100 days,three months,to design almost everything, from public buildings to public space,street grid,transportation,housing,and mainly how to protect the city against future tsunamis.This was new in Chilean urban design,and there were in the air a couple of alternatives.First one:Forbid installation on ground zero.Thirty million dollars spent mainly in land expropriation.This is exactly what’s being discussed in Japan nowadays,and if you have a disciplined population like the Japanese,this may work,but we know that in Chile,this land is going to be occupied illegally anyhow,so this alternative was unrealistic and undesirable.Second alternative;build a big wall,heavy infrastructure to resist the energy of the waves.This alternative was conveniently lobbied by big building companies,because it meant 42 million dollars in contracts,and was also politically preferred,because it required no land expropriation.But Japan proved that trying to resist the force of nature is useless.So this alternative was irresponsible.As in the housing process,we had to include the community in the way of finding a solution for this,and we started a participatory design process.【采访】I don’t know if you were able to read the subtitles,but you can tell from the body language that participatory design is not a hippie,romantic,let’s-all-dream-together-about-the-future-of-the-city, kind of thing.It is actually not even with the families trying to find the right answer.It is mainly trying to identify with the precision what is the right question.There is nothing worse than answering well the wrong question.So it was pretty obvious after this process,that,well,we chicken out here and go away because it’s too tense,or we go even further in asking,what else is bothering you?What other problems do you have and you want us to take care of now that the city will have to be rethought from scratch?And what they said was,look,fine to protect the city against future tsunamis,we really appreciate,but the next one is going to comein,what, 20 years?But every single year,we have problems of flooding due to rain.In addition,we are in the middle of the forest region of the country,and our public space sucks.It’s poor and it’s scarce.And the origin of the city,our identity,is not really connected to the building that fell,it is connected to the river,but the river cannot be accessed publicly,because its shores are privately owned.So we thought that we had to produce a third alternative,and our approach was against geographical threats,have geographical answers.What if,in between the city and the sea,we have a forest,a forest that doesn’t try to resist the energy of nature,but dissipates it by introducing friction?A forest that may be able to laminate the water and prevent the flooding?That may pay the historical debt of public space,and that may provide ,finally,democratic access to the river. So as a conclusion of the participatory design,the alternative was validated politically and socially,but there was still the problem of the cost:48 million dollars.So what we did was a survey in the public investment system,and found out that there were three ministries with three projects in the exact same place,not knowing of the existence of the other projects.The sum of them:52 million dollars.So design’s power of the synthesis is trying to make a more efficient use of the scarcest resource in cities,which is not money,but coordination.By doing so,we were able to save four million dollars,and that is why the forest is today under construction.So be it the force of self construction,the force of common sense,or the force of nature,all these forces need to be translated into form,and what that form is modeling and shaping is not cement,bricks,or wood.It is life itself. Design’s power of synthesis is just an attempt to put at the innermost core of architecture the force of life.Thank you so much.整合的力量-----亚历杭德罗·阿拉维纳如果说设计有什么力量的话,那就是整合的力量。

  1. 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
  2. 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
  3. 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
相关文档
最新文档