A disaster, eight years ago, will be never forgotten…


Everyone will remember what happened on this date, exactly eight years ago around 8 t0 9am. A disaster, not natural, it’s man-made, struck United States of America.

The 911 attack, caused both towers of World Trade Center to collapse and killed over 2000 innocent people, those working in the office buildings. Four commercial airliners were hijacked by Al-Qaeda terrorists, two planes struck into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon, and another one on a rural area in Pennsylvania after the plane being taken control back by the crews and some of the passengers. Total deaths are over 2974 people, with 24 people still listed as missing. The number almost reach 3000.

A normal working day for all the Americans, New Yorkians, turned out to be deadly on the day. Everybody is shocked to see both towers on fire, and collapsed to the ground, leaving only rubbles on the ground and dust onto the air. The whole world is shocked by the event.

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A great condolence wished to those who lost their family in 911 attacks, despite the tragedy had occured eight yars ago. We will be feeling sad when this issue come out again.

Currently learning ArchiCAD…


Another software, this software is specialized in rendering. I am amazed by the multi-purpose functions of the software. When I first installed this software, I was like…aarrgghh..what is this thing!!!???@

After attending weekly lessons on learning ArchiCAD, I begin to be familiarized with the software. It is cool, help us a lot in computer-based rendering. You can view your drawings in 3D, apply shadow on it, changing colour based on the materials, etc…

Previous semester, we had learnt the AutoCAD, in basic ways, now this semester, it’s time for ArchiCAD. Next time, probably 3dsMax, etc…The outcome of your works in ArchiCAD will look fantastic…better than AutoCAD which is in 2D. It seems like I’m promoting the software here…haha…just recommend it…it is a useful tool anyway.

09.09.09


This date only come once in a year, around this twelve years from 2001 till 2012, when the number of the day is the same as of the month and the year (last two digits). Now, today is dated 09/09/09.

A lucky day perhaps. Many couples will register their wedding today, especially at Thean Hou Temple eventhough today is still in the month of Hungry Ghost Festival.

Today is very much usual for me. Attending class, doing assignment (wondering why I did not put the word ‘completing’, because the assignment can’t be completed in a day, it take days), online and facebook-ing.

Seven Wonders of Modern Architecture (from Conde Nast Traveler’s Magazine, April 2008)


The list below is from the Conde Nast Traveler’s April Magazine in year 2008. I basically agree and disagree to this list someway.

1. New Museum of Contemporary Arts (Manhattan, USA)

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New York Times described it as ‘viewing art in a stack of boxes’.

As you climb out of the Prince Street subway station at Broadway in lower Manhattan, New York, a gleaming apparition grabs your attention.

Designed by Japanese architects Kazuo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa of the firm SANAA, the $50 million, 60,000-square-foot-building is an eight-St0ry stack of shiny, metallic boxes set off-kilter from one another.

The museum contains several levels of galleries, which are designed as high-ceilinged, white-walled spaces, with concrete floors and narrow skylights illuminating one side.

2. Cumulus (Nordborg, Denmark)

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An exhibit hall at Danfoss Universe, Nordborg, Denmark, Cumulus is a spectacular building, which has an irregular roof, curves and angles, like a bite taken out of a cloud. The building openened on May 5, 2007.

Designed by Jurgen H Mayer, the 1,000 sqm building hosts varying exhibitions throughout the year.

The interior of the Cumulus building is kept in black and white, the only accents being the red cushions on the stairs and the exhibition props.

3. Kogod Courtyard (Washington D.C., USA)

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The Kogod Courtyard, with its elegant glass canopy designed by world renowned architect Norman Foster, opened to the public on November 23, 2007 at the historic Patent Office Building that houses the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC.

Foster, winner of the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize (1999), worked with the Smithsonian to create an innovative enclosure for the 28,000-square-foot (2,601-sq-meter) space at the centre of the building that is sensitive to the historic structure; the new ‘floating’ roof does not rest on the original building which was built in phases between 1836 and 1868.

4. Wembley Stadium (London, England)

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The new Wembley Stadium in London is an architectural masterpiece. It is the equivalent of 25,000 double-decker buses; the total length of the escalators is the same as a 400 metre running trackr; the stadium roof rises to 52 metres above the pitch; the new pitch is four metres lower than the previous one.

Each of the two giant screens in the new stadium is the size of 600 domestic television sets.

The soft drink dispensers can pour 30,000 cups in a little over 10 minutes Approximately 40,000 pints of beer can be served during half time in a football/rugby league match.

The arch is 133 metres above the level of the external concourse. With a span of 315 metres, the arch is the longest single span roof structure in the world. With a diameter of 7.4 metres the arch is wide enough for a Channel Tunnel train to run through.

The stadium will be a centerpiece of the 2012 Olympics.

5. Burj Dubai (Dubai, United Arab Emirates)

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Burj Dubai is the world’s tallest building once completed. The final height of the building is a well kept secret because of ‘competition.’ But it is speculated that it will be around 2,275 feet and will exceed 160 floors.

The tower is being constructed by a South Korean company, Samsung Engineering & Construction. This company also built the Petronas Twin Towers in Malaysia and the Taipei 101.

The interior will be decorated by Giorgio Armani. An Armani Hotel will occupy the lower 37 floors. Floors 45 through 108 will have 700 private apartments.

An outdoor swimming pool will be located on the 78th floor of the tower. Corporate offices and suites will fill most of the remaining floors, except for a 123rd floor lobby and 124th floor indoor/outdoor observation deck.

It will also boast of the world’s fastest elevator.

6. The Crystal (Toronto, Canada)

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The Crystal is the dramatic highlight of a $270 million renovation project intended to boost the Royal Ontario Museum’s role as a Toronto focal point.

Designed by architect Daniel Libeskind, the Crystal comprises five interlocking, self-supporting prismatic structures that interface with, but are not attached to, the original historic Royal Ontario Museum buildings.

The exterior is 25 per cent glass and 75 per cent extruded-brushed, aluminum-cladding strips in a warm silver colour.

The steel beams, each unique in its design and manufacture and ranging from 1 to 25 metres in length, were lifted one by one to their specific angle, creating complicated angle joints, sloped walls, and gallery ceilings.

Approximately 3,500 tons of steel and 38 tons of bolts were used to create the skeleton, and roughly 9,000 cubic metres of concrete were poured.

Michael Lee-Chin’s (chairman, Portland Holdings Inc) extraordinary $30 million gift to the ROM is an act of both gratitude and hope.

7. Red Ribbon (Qing Huangdao, China)

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The Tang He River Park site is a river corridor at the outskirts of the fast developing city of Qinghuang Dao, China, with lush vegetation and diverse species but was occupied by deserted irrigation structures and garbage dumps.

Turenscape took a minimum design approach, integrating ecological principles with modern art. A ‘ribbon’ made of steel was introduced across the whole area parallel to the river and penetrates through the willow grove.

This ‘red ribbon’ provides seating and displays native plants.

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I think that the people who made this list has not gone further all around the world to discover the real meaning of wonders in architecture. Where is Beijing National Stadium, CCTV Headquarters Tower, and many other incredible structures with great architecture? The people who made this list has missed out a lot. Basically, this list is just okay to me, but not overall. Actually, the title for the list is just seven wonders of architecture. If it’s like this, where are all the great ancient structures? Hence, I rather add ‘modern’ to the title.

In the future, I will try to make a better list of the seven wonders of modern architecture.

The Final Destination is nice…


Just came back after watching the long-awaited movie of Final Destination 4, simply known as The Final Destination.

The synopsis is the same with previous three installments. A main character had a premonition, a vision that tells him or her that an accident is going to kill him/her and friends. Then, he/she gets them out, escaping death. But then, they will be facing deadlier deaths, one by one, in sequence.

This series, the  fourth one, will be dealing on a man having a vision that an usual car race will turns into horrible car crash accidents that killed him and all his friends. He brings all of his gang out. Then, the escaped survivors died one by one in horrible ways. Finally, no one survives. That’s the end.

The ways they died are super disgusting. Those inner organs crushed out of the body, head chopped off, etc. Yeeaakk…anyway, I just watch the 2D version. 3D version will be more disgusting.

The poster is cool…It’s better in not having vision of accident, just die naturally is better. If not, more horrible way of deaths.

Arghhh…model making again…


Studying architecture is not an easy task. It is super difficult, super challenging, super time-wasting, super energy-wasting, and super expensive.

Think carefully, if you are really interested in this field, then only u study on it. If not, you will regret forever. Eventhough this field is so much of pressure, I still love to study architecture.

Model-making is one of the tasks that I hate the most. Need to buy suitable materials, need to cut here, cut there, build based on scale, glue here, glue there, join here, join there, and clean here, clean there. Sometimes a simple model needs a whole day to complete, which is my 80cube project. Looks simple, but took one day long to complete. Huh…need to clean up those stains, for craftmanship purpose.

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Now, another model needed to be build, not only one, preliminary or prototype model by now only , for Building Technology 102 subject. Me and my partner choose Church on the Water by Tadao Ando to build a sectional model on. The model must show all the construction systems and details, which is the hardest of all.

Tadao Ando’s Church on the Water:

Assignments!!! They cause people stressful (before) and relieved (after), they cause people pass or fail (after), they cause people to get crazy (before), and they cause troubles (before and after)!!!

He did it, finally!!!


You might be wondering what I am writing about? Below are all the answers for your questions.

Who is he?

He is Alain Robert.

Still don’t recognize him?

He is nicknamed as French Spiderman.

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Why?

Climbing skyscrapers are his interest and he has climbed more than 85 structures ranging from monuments to skyscrapers around the world.

What are the famous structures he has climbed?

Empire State Building, Taipei 101, Willis Tower, Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge, Eiffel Tower, Golden Gate Bridge, Jin Mao Tower, Petronas Twin Towers, etc.

What he did today? (see title)

He had successfully climbed the former world tallest buildings and current world tallest twin buildings, the 452m tall Petronas Twin Towers today, 1st Spetember 2009, the day after Malaysia celebrated its 52nd independence.

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When he did that?

This early morning, to be precise; DAWN. From 6.00am till 7.40am. The time is the time when the guards and the public are not aware of him. As soon as they aware of it, he climbed to the top of the tower.

Which tower he climbed?

Tower 2. He climbed from bottom to top of the 88 storeys structure. He reached to the top pinnacle, standing on it, and fixed a Malaysian flag on top of the building.

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Is that dangerous?

Super dangerous. No one would dare to do that except him. No safety belts, he climbed it all with bare hands in the early misty morning of Kuala Lumpur. The exterior is wet, adding difficulty to him, but he did it finally.

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Why do I say ‘finally’?

It is because he had made two previous attempts before this one. Both previous ones failed, in 1997 and 2007. He tried to climb it on the year of completion of the towers (1997) and on the 10th anniversary of the towers (2007), but being stopped by security personnels on the 60th floor.

After this successful attempt, what is the consequence?

He is arrested, and will be charged on criminal tresspass, climbing a building without permission. Anyway, he had the attraction and support from the people looking at him from the ground.

What do I think of him?

Too brave, maybe he wants something challenging to do, scaling towers. He should at least wear safety belts. No one knows what will happen? Don’t risk your life just like that. Think of others. Get permission first. Anyway, he did a good job.

The video from YouTube showing him scaling the tower today:

Did I see it?

No, I didn’t. It’s too early and no one would expect him climbing the tower today. I have just woke up by the time he reached the pinnacle.