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Everyday, Listening, by Maja Liro.
Everyday
, Listening. Words and Exhibition. Maja Liro. The tilted windows on the ground floor, though covered with dark, heavy curtains, let in excited chatter and loud laughter from students heading to their morning classes.
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Post-Post Post, by Night(s) of Philosophy.
Following Latour’s idea of Dingpolitik, we engage in situations in which we can practice an alternate politics, and alternate connections to
everyday
objects by what collectively worries us. The Anthropocene is something that concerns us all.
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The Art of the Commute, by Alessandro Rognoni.
The. commute. , and its bearing in our
everyday
, is overlooked. “How long does it take you to go to work?” I have been frequently asked. I also question myself on this, very often, as I compulsively check the quickest route on Google.
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Bnieuws edition 56/04. Published April 2023.
Finally, "
Everyday
, Listening" by Maja Liro immerses visitors in the noise of BK City. Editorial team. Tuyen Le, Saartje Nibbering, Zuza Sliwinska, Emilie Stecher, Maja Liro, Sem Verwey. With contributions from. START, Su Müstecaplıoğlu.
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Magic / Tragic, by Joey Lageschaar.
How can we come to a closer feeling for the magic/tragic of the
everyday
and the spaces in which it takes place? By restructuring my life, through recalling intimate moments from daily life in a concise manner, five acts are laid out.
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Artefact: You Had One Job, by Saartje Nibbering.
However, not everyone is getting these second chances, and before they know it their mistake has become a real life attribute in a rouring city, where it is admired by the
everyday
reproving eye of the analyst in the crowd, judging: ''you had one job'
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What are You Reading Right Now? John Hanna, by John Hanna.
In this book, his experimental technique effortlessly captures the richness of
everyday
urban life. #paris. #reading.
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A public digital space at home, by Inez Margaux Van Oeveren.
These places could also be integrated into
everyday
spaces, think of the living room, the flexibility and ease of use of video communication could be significantly increased by these public digital design interventions.
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A Lack of Exposure, by Alessandro Rognoni.
Most of all, it represents an unedited version of our reality, a lack of manipulation of the images of our
everyday
life, something that instead keeps happening all around us at a concerning scale.
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Artefact: Painting, by @nlkrts.
I take dozens of photographs and videos throughout my
everyday
life. More often than not they tend to accumulate on my phone until my memory gets full and I transfer them on my computer, burying them in my ‘PhotosfromPhonefolder’.
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Bnieuws edition 58/01. Published November 2024.
As designers, we can draw inspiration from a broad array of references, from cinema, literature or biology, from consumer culture or high art, from the sacred to the mundane, and strive to infuse a touch of magic into
everyday
environments.
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Bnieuws edition 54/05. Published May 2021.
In this issue, we delve into colour’s political meaning, its disparate symbolisms, and look at the shades of our
everyday
life. We asked our contributors to write about a colour of their own interest, and challenged ourselves to do the same.
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When actions speak too loudly, by Chun Kit "CK" Wong.
We manage to rely on a finite library of words to communicate a whole myriad of stories and information, shaping the ways we interact with each other and to cope with situations in our
everyday
life, as well as on a larger scale such as navigating through
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How to Become the Founder of a Feminist Religion, by Heesoo Kwon.
My grandmother used to talk about how much it was hard to leave home before 5am to go to church
everyday
. Our family went to church every weekend. I remember when I took classes in the church to receive my first communion. I was 10 years old.
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The Unchanging Land, by Federico Ruiz.
The Dutch landscape asks for a meticulous beholder (and I’m not one): as in a painting by Bosch or Brueghel, the dramas of
everyday
life are small and meaningful details happening on a stable background.
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M&A Study Trip to Bogota, by Elena Rossoni.
Aside from getting the chance to interact with the friendliest of nations, we were exposed to
everyday
practices and common people, the city’s essential cogs for its ceaseless functioning.
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Writing Urban Places, by Nicole van Roij.
The students are exploring narratives at different social scales, to look at the impact of such aggressive narrative strategies, and to look at other narratives beyond these: the stories of
everyday
life in the city.
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Podcast, Archi-Podcast, by Jan Pruszynski.
You can learn much from the hosts when it comes to
everyday
architects’ life. Monocle 24: The Urbanist.
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Refugee Republic, by Aimee Baars.
In 2014 four Dutch content creators teamed up to create a digital representation of
everyday
life in a refugee camp.
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Architecture of Entrapment, by Alicja Jurkowska.
It is a part of a bigger infrastructure that encompasses shared standards, management styles, and rules that shape
everyday
life. The shopping mall spaces are no longer unique, singular creations but are mass-produced to fit a global template.
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Architectural Misconceptions, by Jan Pruszyński.
Add to it a lot of jargon that they use on
everyday
basis to describe the work they do and it is not hard to imagine why they are portrayed as artistic weirdos, helplessly out of touch with reality, with an always-present scarf around their necks and
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TOK-concept, by Rogier Bos.
As an architecture student, a pencil case has become my
everyday
buddy I take everywhere with me, wherever I go. But in Spring of 2014 my old pencil case’s zipper stopped going back and forward.
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The Last Cup of Coffee in BK?, by Elena Rossoni.
Top-down decisions might appear seemingly efficient, but in our case, the switch was not taken as wholeheartedly by its
everyday
users.
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An Introduction to The Invisible Architect, by Inez Van Oeveren.
This book discusses women's invisibility in
everyday
life by the lack of so-called "gendered data". There is a significant gap in research and statistics on how women use cities, offices, homes, or streets and how man uses them.
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BOOP IT, by Jonathan Kaye.
No matter their level of experience, this responsibility is adopted in written texts and
everyday
conversations. This solemn engagement with the state of architectural discourse introduces pithy observations like: “That building is good.”. “Yikes.”.
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