Friday, 4 July 2014
North Korean architecture
Are hovercrafts and giant wheels the future of North Korean architecture?
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Architects from North Korea were asked to design buildings with no constraints on cost or possibilities. Here, a designer envisions a cluster of villas overlooking a waterfall in the Mount Kumgang region.
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A North Korean vision of the future
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- A tour group asked North Korean designers to come up with their visions of the future
- The results depict a mixture of Soviet style and futuristic technology
- Images are currently on display at the Venice Architecture Biennale
If you are viewing this article on mobile you may not be able to see all images embedded in the story. Click here to access a gallery containing all pictures.
(CNN) -- What happens when a North Korean architect is given free rein to design what he or she likes?
Over the course of the last four years, one Beijing based tour company has sought to answer that question by asking a practicing architect from North Korea to create futuristic designs for sustainable tourism developments in the country.
Koryo Tours -- which offers organized trips around North Korea -- provided the anonymous participant who works at the Paektusan Architectural Institute in Pyongyang with an open brief and no limits on costs, scale or physical possibilities.
The fascinating results depict something akin to Soviet-era iconography and the Jetsons and are now on display at the Venice Architecture Biennale in Italy.
According to Nick Bonner, the man who arranged the project, "there is very little exposure to contemporary architecture in North Korea."
"The architect who led this project for us drew upon his own thoughts and experiences," he added.
Unsurprisingly, the career path of an architect in North Korea is very structured.
"All architects (in North Korea) are trained at the University of Architecture and all work for the government. There are no private projects," Bonner continued.
"In a way, it's not much different than working for a council -- limited projects, but the better you are the more chance you have of working on more interesting projects, and the more chance of influencing design."
Some designs appear more rooted in reality than others which take big leaps into what the architect believes may be possible in the future.
The image above shows a hotel and gondola on the West Sea Barrage in the port city of Nampo, an area currently without major accommodation facilities.
Exhibiting slightly more blue-sky thinking, this image depicts a flying house that can double up as a hovercraft.
Combining the old and the new, meanwhile, this nifty-looking bridge is designed to connect the famous mountains of Myohyangsan.
People walking across it in the morning will be high above the early mist providing the sensation of floating above the clouds, the architect said.
"Apart from blocks of architecture that reflect Soviet influence, there is a certain futuristic style (and) modernism in many of the buildings" in North Korea, Bonner said.
In the image above, visitors to a mountain villa retreat interact with each other in an atrium designed to encourage social interaction between holidaymakers.
Reaction to the exhibition has been mixed so far.
"Some people see it as retro and kitsch, while others see it as inventive, fun and with some valid ideas," Bonner said.
"It was never intended as anything more than a visual brainstorm -- a way to stimulate engagement, ideas and discussion."
The designs will be on display at the Korean Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale until November while Koryo Tours will be running a seven day architecture trip to North Korea in late October.
video that's shocked Australia
The racist video that's shocked Australia
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Police in Australia have charged a woman after a video was uploaded to YouTube showing her hurling racist abuse at passengers on a train near Sydney.
Racially offensive gestures, mocking of accents, referring to a woman as a "gook". The three-and-a-half minute video is packed with racist abuse. It was uploaded to YouTube on Wednesday by one of the passengers who filmed it on the train. The video begins with the woman expressing her anger that some children have not given up their seats to let her sit down.
She then starts abusing a woman she calls an "Asian", and a man she assumes is the woman's boyfriend. "Look at this bogan here," she says, using an Australian slang term similar to "white trash". "He can only get a gook, he can't even get a regular girlfriend. It's so sad." "Gook" is a derogatory term which came to prominence when used by American soldiers in the Vietnam war.
The video has been watched more than 280,000 times and prompted more than 1,000 comments on YouTube - as well as discussion on Twitter and Facebook. "Good on those train passengers for filming that incident,"tweeted Australia's Race Discrimination Commissioner Tim Soutphommasane. "It's one way we can hold people accountable for racist abuse." In the video, several of the passengers are seen to challenge the woman directly for her behaviour.
Victoria Beckham becomes an unlikely gardener .
Victoria Beckham becomes an unlikely Vogue gardener while David strips off: Beckham's evolution continues
They might not dream of using wedding thrones now, but the Beckhams still manage to keep the world talking
Two strong sets of images from the Beckham family today – here we have David Beckham posing in underwear for the umpteenth time for H&M (not that anyone seems to mind much) and then Victoria Beckham who has swapped her signature fitted dresses for wellies and a dog for her new British Vogue double cover.
In the Vogue version of gardening, Beckham is seen pensively staring into the distance holding Digby the dog (who belongs to the magazine’s fashion director Lucinda Chambers) in a new lady of the manor guise, photographed by Patrick Demarchelier. The full shoot features in the publication's August issue, on sale on Monday 7 July.
In another shot, looking like a pre-Raphaelite pruner, she sits with freshly-cut roses in an oversized jumper, wellies that understandably show no signs of usage and, naturally, a scarecrow-style hat.
No, it’s not what we’d all wear for a spot of weeding, but this isVogue – they don’t deal with realism, nor do they claim to.
Setting a very different tone, David Beckham appears in his H&M underwear again, dripping in a liquid that probably isn’t sweat. His message is obvious, although as unlikely as Victoria the gardener: ‘Buy my new high street ‘loungewear’ and you too will look just as I, with my mighty muscles and undisputed mojo.’
The retired footballer probably dislikes posing like Derek Zoolander as much as Victoria is averse to horticulture, but their ability to keep their profile high and well-liked over such a long period of time is impressive.
The couple are fast approaching their 15th wedding anniversary on 4 July; yes, it’s been nearly 15 years since they both sat on matching red velvet thrones, she wearing a twinkling tiara and he with bleached floppy hair.
“I wouldn’t be where I am without David,” Beckham told BritishVogue. “He gives me the security and encouragement to do what I do. I do the same for him.”
While Kim and Kanye West, one of the only couples in the world to have garnered the same amount of showbiz headlines, are yet to both reach a status where they are both seen as talented individuals in their own right; the Beckhams have succeeded and they have done so together, respectively repackaging themselves time and time again with a hearty amount of self-awareness and humour.
She managed to go from Spice Girl footballer’s wife to cracking the fashion industry – one of the most exclusive and elite arenas there is – which, on the whole, values talent over money. David has left football to become a charity ambassador and all-round self-deprecating good guy who most people would be happy to go for a pint with.
Importantly though, they have evolved together – Brand Beckham to the end.
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