Technology permits us to experience buildings spatial no matter where you are.
Only problem is that you cannot control the camera. Nevertheless, they are much better than just photos...so enjoy...
Chungking Mansion
some videos i found of the bedrooms
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Friday, February 20, 2009
Chungking Express
While researching about Chungking Mansion, I remembered that this movie directed by Wong Kar Wai - "Chungking Express", was actually based there. It is an anthology about Indian drug smugglers, Chines cops and short-order cooks. Wong Kar Wai grew up in Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, in the shadow of the Mansion, he quotes about his memories : 'The place was always a mystery to me. The people living in and living on it seemed very different from those I encountered. You can't help but have fantasies about what was actually happening inside. Of course, as a child, I was prohibited by my parents from visiting the place."
Chungking Mansion
As I research things about Chungking Mansion (CKM) to do my analysis, I've came a cross some websites that do a pretty good job at characterizing CKM. Here are some excerpts:
Best Example of Globalization in Action
"Take everything that Disney’s Epcot Center represents—the squeaky-clean, child-safe, good-natured cheer of painless globalism—and then cover it in mutton fat, dope resin and human excrement and you’ll get Chungking Mansion. Known as “The Armpit of Asia,” Chungking Mansion is the claustrophobic home for about 20,000 residents from all over the globe. Yet the Mansion also provides a glimpse into one possible over-populated, multi-ethnic future for all of us. This 17-story bazaar of curry stalls, discount electronics vendors, pirated CD and video CD stores, brothels, meth dens and guest houses, provides a glimpse of a dystopian, post-technology future where tribes, cultures and races co-exist in bustling, jumbled squalor. ... No one seems to remember the building’s architect, and the Hong Kong Land Development Corporation has no record of the original design. Perhaps the architect would prefer to remain anonymous, for among the structure’s foibles is that all public space, ... it would be geometrically impossible to create a darker building. " - by Karl T. Greenfeld
http://everything-everywhere.com/2007/12/15/chungking-mansion
oh I just found a great youtube made of the chungking mansion.
Check It! CKM
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Research Part 1: Conclusion
The evolution of
Looking back at the migratory population in Hong Kong, I will propose to spend the next two weeks studying the infamous ‘Chungking Mansion’ which is perhaps comparable to the
Located at a major intersection of the busiest commercial district in Hong Kong, the
In light of this case study, I hope to find a resolution between the two case studies ‘Chinatown’ and ‘Chungking Mansion’; as both tackles the issue of resettlement of displaced individuals in two very different manner.
Hopefully this will aid me with the development of a “
Thesis Statement v.2 from Chinatown
“Migrancy means not only changing places, it also means the changing nature of places.”
“Life is not made up of landmarks and destinations, but a series of passageways.”
The idea of entering a new surrounding and leaving ones home brings about physical displacement and a series of mental unknowns. This unfamiliarity challenges one’s sense of belonging. Individuals are limited from bringing their home in transition to a new permanence. Therefore if home represents a place of belonging, then it is also the boundaries of comfort.
Taking on the idea of a traveling soul where he or she is constantly adapting to a new culture and pace and style of life. How does such an individual find ease and comfort in this transition?
Comfort is found sometimes amongst those of the same kind, resulting individuals from similar origins often tend to bond faster and easier hence the beginnings of various ethnopolis.
It is not just about the movement made by individuals or groups from one locality to another. It is also associated with the transformations acted upon the landscape of the new territory. The adaptation of the (pre)existing local vernacular represents the occurrence of homeland nostalgia.
Using
Sunday, February 15, 2009
Monday, February 9, 2009
Extra! Extra! Read all about It!
Today, Chinatown is a part of the varied heterogeneous American fabric in which Chinese ethnic expression is woven into the American urban scene. The building of archways no longer stand for its old meanings; rather, a commercialization tactic by the city council. This development of the Chinatowns across the world has been quite similar politically, economically and historically.
It seems that Chinatown has become a form of parasite, that is globalized everywhere. As these Paifangs become the symbol, do they become the Starbucks sign for Chinatown? The intention of recreating the existing context to a preferred landscape that is like that of home is lost. Chinatown has now become a commodity, and a place for finding Chinese-ness, not Chinese.
What is the future of Chinatown?
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Networking
Chinatowns are located due to migration. They have always acted as trading posts, apparently due to their capability in business. With the enactment of the Treaty of Peking in 1860, which opened the border for free movement, the numbers of emigration to other parts of the world from China accelerated. Coincidentally, the increasing European colonization in Asia during the mid 1800s resulted in the mass Chinese migration overseas on western ships (steamers). It has been said that from 1868 to 1939 about 6.3 million Chinese left Hong Kong as slaves for the coolie trade. What started out mostly as slavery for the gold rush, located in Australia, North America, Africa ad New Zealand, slowly turned into slavery for the railway industry.
Although the Chinese migrants all came from the coastal area of Guangzhou China, those of different dialects/ linguistic lines traveled to different parts of the world. The Taishanese and Cantonese settled in North America, Australia, Europe and Latin America; whereas the Hokkien and Teochew, moved down to Southeast Asia, Africa, Europe and later, Latin America.
Using these old maps that traced the paths of the Steam-liners taken by Chinese Immigrants, the path taken and stops made concludes the location of various 'major' / 'old' Chinatown.
By studying these routes taken by the steam ships, we can begin to define the origin of each Chinatowns. The pattern of movement across the world map refers to the patterns of migration. Furthermore, understanding that with the spread of word by mouth or letters, more men were bound to travel to locations where they heard of success.
Monday, February 2, 2009
people are weird....
humans are a strange category of creatures.
this has nothing to do with the development of my thesis.
but i'm sitting here in the reading room, watching this man parked next to the beb.
he rolls down the back window and lights a cigar.
but every time he exhales the smoke he rolls down his automatic window, then rolls it back up.
i know its cold out but why does he not just leave the window rolled down.
is he really going to roll his window down and up every single time?
well i'm counting and its already been 6 times and there still a lot of cigar left...
and off he goes...