Tuesday, April 3, 2007

WEDNESDAY FIELD TRIP

Marc's Class needs to meet in front of Kerry Hall at the beginning of class. Also, bring $1.50 for the bus...unless you feel like walking up 303 stairs + 15 minutes back to Kerry Hall after class.

-Derek

Monday, March 26, 2007

So...Marc's Class...

Where are we meeting today?

Friday, March 23, 2007

Jade Pagoda and Visions of the future



So Marc's class was in kerry hall today, after it got out I went to go catch the 49 going to U-district. It was to be a while before I got there but I turned around and read this article http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/283105_jadepagoda30.html


taped to the inside of a window. to those of you more familiar with broadway than I am, it was the Jade pagoda. Upon reading the article I died a little bit inside, becuase I had one of those true "wish I coulda been around to experience this place when it was alive" kind of feelings, yet I was standing right outside of it, in its current state an empty shell.
it goes along with some discussions I've been having about the paving over of old seattle to create foundations for the new. but on another note. I had a dream last night of cornish. but it was futuristic cornish, possibly a good 50 years out. the interiors have a red and white color scheme and nellie's cafe is way trendy and futuristic. Think 60's interpretation of utopian society mixed with vitra.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Ann's I.D. essay

here is a little taste of my essay.

Gambling, Violence and the International District
By: Ann Hoyer



The International District of Seattle has a long history of violence, the most extraordinary example of violence happened in 1983, in the alley of Maynard Street in the well known after-hours gambling house called the Wah Mee Club. The Wah Mee Massacre, also known as the Chinatown Massacre took thirteen lives. However long before the Wah Mee Massacre, the International district was not exactly a peaceful melting pot Asian cultures. Violence and crimes such as the murder of Police Officer Charles Legate, in 1922, and even before that with the murder of Guichi Inoue, a Japanese wrestler in 1910, has caused unrest in Chinatown. Evidence shows that this distrust amongst citizens law enforcement in the International District is closely tied-in to the underground gambling industry and the greed that comes with it.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Hi it's Nathan in Gabrielle's class and this is an excerpt from my recent paper about the ID. Go ahead take a gander. Enjoy:)


Jackson Street Regrade

Seattle is a beautiful city with rolling hills and plenty to do. The city has made its way into the nation by becoming a major stop for many dreamers on their way to mine gold in the Klondike. Since then it has become a key city for coffee, music, Boeing, University of Washington, and the World Fair. A strange thought though is this may have been impossible without the regrades of Seattle.
The Denny Hill Regrade was the largest project in reconstructing Seattle’s landscape. It involved removing Denny Hill, “one of the proverbial seven hills of Seattle” (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denny_Regrade). A major question posed by the city however was, where were they going to put all the dirt? Eugene McAllaster, the Denny Regrade Consulting Engineer, had the answer. They were to put the dirt into Elliot Bay, creating a larger city and relieving the city from having to grow north. And then they had another thought the tide flats could be also filled in giving them more useful land.
There was one problem though

Blake & Ellen's essays

So, in Gabrielle's class, we've been learing all about the International District. When we were given the task of writing an essay involving the International District, Ellen and I chose two different topics.

I, Blake, chose to write about the diversity of Seattle's I.D. If you didn't already know, the diversity of Asian population in Seattle's I.D. is huge compared to, say, San Fran's Chinatown. I had to research the immigration of different Asian groups, finding out numbers and dates of immigration. Once I got into research mode, I found that there was a ton of negative feelings from Seatte's existing population to the new immigrants. In different times during history, the populations of Asians fluctuated because of things like anti-Chinese laws, the Japanese being removed, and the Filipino's immigration being restricted. You can find out more if you want. I'll send you my paper and you can read it in all its glory. Footnotes and all. Haha.


Well, my paper has absolutely nothing to do with Blake's. and, let's face it, his is probably better. I chose to write about how the third generation of Japanese Americans, or sensai, have lost interest in the cultural landmarks of the International District. My paper goes into detail about how several locations, in particular the Panama Hotel and the Nippon Kan theatre, have been slowly on the decline ever since the Japanese Internment in WWII.

Fin.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Marc's Class

I need to know if any group in Marc's class will switch field trip days with us. Our's is on April 2nd, but I am out of town that day. We need to switch with someone who has a later one. Please let me know.

-Derek

Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

CLUI does it again!

Center for Land Use Interpretation has their newsletter available online here
http://www.clui.org/clui_4_1/lotl/index.html

Their website (see the link list on the right-hand side of the screen) is also a great resource (and you can purchase a copy of "One Hundred Places in Washington").

Monday, February 26, 2007

Who wouldnt want to see work by a person named Alex??


I mean really, we need this field trip, field excursion? Does that sound too much like a vehicle? Anway look what I found its an amazing peice by Anish Kapoor that I will someday replicate. Promise. it's called Cloud Gate

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Upcoming

Okay, so I'm addicted to the blog. I realize this is only my second time posting anything, but I look at it daily, transfixed by its beauty. Also, I keep updating the link list to include any place we go or talk about in class. Speaking of which, I'll also post a list of all the writing prompts/papers so you have them easily available.

As a trailer for one of the field trips we'll be taking (hopefully Friday), check out Alex Schweder (http://alexschweder.com/index.html) for his show at Suyama Space (http://www.suyamapetersondeguchi.com/art/). I realize they haven't updated their site yet, but it's there, really. In fact, here's a review from Adriana Grant (the first sentence talks about the smell of the show) http://www.seattleweekly.com/2007-02-14/arts/monday-2-19.php.

Alex is represented locally by Howard House (http://www.howardhouse.net/current/index.html).

More soon,

Marc




Wednesday, February 21, 2007

I'm IN!!

So, being the techno-idiot I am, I thought giving y'all the blog's address would be all it took. Not quite so:

To start you get an 'invitation' to blog from Marc Dombrosky. It's an e-mail that has a long string of letters and numbers and such that you have to click on, then go through a few steps to register, and then you get to BLOG--just like I'm doing now.

A note: Cornish e-mail filters bounced Marc's invitation to my junk mail. Maybe it'll do that to you, too. So there are glitches--I think in techno-lingo you call 'em 'bugs' in our system. But isn't that what all this is about: learning together? Hey, I feel like I learned something this afternoon.

More soon,

Kim

Monday, February 19, 2007

International District update

Yo Cascade neighborhood investigators. Our class has been scouting out the International District for the past two Fridays. We visited the Wing Luke Asian Museum www.wingluke.org, peeked into the lobby of the Bush Hotel (which is now an apartment building run by the Seattle Chinatown International District Preservation and Development Authority, http://www.scidpda.org/), looked at 1940s items from the old Higo Variety store (now a cool artisan gallery called Kobo, http://koboseattle.com/flash.html, which you might know from their Capitol Hill gallery next to Joe Bar), um, what else? Oh yeah, we climbed up the hill through the Danny Woo Community Gardens, where we paused among some rotting vegetables and wall inscriptions in several different Asian languages, to Kobe Terrace Park, http://www.seattle.gov/parks/parkspaces/kobeterrace.htm, which offers a great view of the neighborhood--and of I-5.

For details about what else we found--what we did later--how to time a pot of tea--and what students in Urban Adaptations are doing with these observations, you'll have to ask them...

xoxo
Gabrielle

Thursday, February 15, 2007

I wonder how many people are going to use this. I say 3.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Oral presentations...

San Dimas High School football rules!

Monday, February 12, 2007

Hello everyone,

Welcome to our blog.