Name:

jaymie

Profile:

Schooled in Philly, NYC based. In my free time I investigate the hype and read. I'm into luxury branding, creative development, culture, traveling,meeting people, music, and magazines. I work as visual coordinator for fashion house YSL. www.jaymiemorales.blogspot.com

architecture Archives

7.12.2009 005.jpg

7.12.2009 007.jpg
thumb_3164_c03c4e8b45d20be3ceae4c6624ff492d.jpg
Elle Decor is footing the bill for Margiela to commission French architect Jacques Carlo's Parisian apartment. The specs look beautiful (and creepy- so Margiela). I'm sure it will have all the Wallpaper readers yapping for days.

"One of the great, but often unmentioned, causes of both happiness and misery is the quality of our environment"- Alain de Botton

LBLI.jpg

     Above: Long Beach, Long Island.

     Ever since I tried looking for an apartment in Manhattan I became obsessed with cities and the living situations that encompass them.  I would walk into apartments and take a look around and try to hide the expression on my face that probably read, "I rather live at home forever sharing a room with my younger brother and three ferrets than live in this mouse hole."  

    The quality of space is what defines people here in Manhattan or in any other city. You are successful when you don't have to walk 6 blocks to do your laundry.  You are successful when your kitchen and living room aren't the same space.  You are successful when you don't need a roomate to split the bills.  Housing breaks up the people. So what would happen if we had equality living?  What if the quality of space was just as good for the financier living uptown and the artist living downtown?

 I found Alain De Bottom's text at the MOMA store. In my attempt to figure out what makes living a mouse hole "ok" or living in a mansion fabulous he brings the question back to you, "changing the way we think about our homes, our streets, and ourselves."

Below: Tijuana, Mexico

TiajuanaMX.jpg

 

 *all the photos I have taken in the past couple of years.

DSC08058.JPG
With more people crowding the cities each day and technology making the changes that accompany them possible, the new cities of tomorrow are alive and happening. With each year that passes cities layers are becoming deeper and more complex.  Can we keep up? Do we have the money to keep up? More importantly are the people ready to make certain changes that are necessary to live in new urban dwellings that don't infringe on living/ environmental standards?
The New York Times Magazine talks about how the cities of tomorrow we see in the movies are slowly becoming reality. With new buildings being made and old ones being knocked down the artifacts that represented the old city are now being layed out by the new. Even if you don't vote, or don't participate in neighborhood meetings, take note about the changes that are happening around you and think. It is the least you can do, right?