Learning from Chicago, Montréal, Paris

Historic hotel likely to become top spot

by CLAIRE TYRRELL, The West Australian, May 5, 2014

National Hotel’s Karl Bullers who will be conducting tours of the National Hotel as part of Fremantle Heritage week, people will get access to the rooftop where he plans to open a rooftop bar Photo: Mogens Johansen, The West Australian Source: https://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/

National Hotel’s Karl Bullers who will be conducting tours of the National Hotel as part of Fremantle Heritage week, people will get access to the rooftop where he plans to open a rooftop bar
Photo: Mogens Johansen, The West Australian
Source: https://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/

It is a million-dollar view of Fremantle not seen by the public for almost a century.

The National Hotel rooftop is one of the few places you can experience 360-degree views of the historic port.

Sailor’s wives used the vantage point in the 19th century to watch for ships arriving, when it was dubbed “widows’ walk”.

Only accessible by ladder, the space was used by select hotel guests as a walkway.

When Karl Bullers took over the hotel in 2010, public access to the iconic space became a priority.

“It was a U-shaped walkway but we filled in the courtyard and made the staircase through the hotel so it is one big open area,” he said.

“We have got planning approval to put a bar and restaurant on the roof.”

Though regular public access to the rooftop is at least a year away, people can get a glimpse of the space on tours during Fremantle Heritage week, which runs from Friday to May 18.

As well as the National Hotel, owners and architects at Fremantle’s Bread in Common and Hougoumont Hotel will explain the process of transforming heritage buildings into modern venues.

“I will talk about history of the building, the challenges I faced getting the venue open again and why it is designed the way it is,” Mr Bullers said.

Fire has ravaged the National Hotel at least twice. Mr Bullers said fire protection was a major challenge of redesigning the rooftop.

Read the original story

Hedge two-way mirror walkabout, Metropolitan Museum, New York – review

by Ariella Budick, Financial Times, May 5, 2014

'Hedge Two-Way Mirror Walkabout' sits on the roof of the Metropolitan Museum in New York Photo: Hyle Skopitz Source: www.ft.com

‘Hedge Two-Way Mirror Walkabout’ sits on the roof of the Metropolitan Museum in New York
Photo: Hyle Skopitz
Source: www.ft.com

A seriously charming and richly allusive installation has appeared on the roof of the Met

The Metropolitan Museum’s remote rooftop garden has always offered savvy visitors respite from hall after hall of sublime majesty. Right now, it opens on to an artificial-grass oasis that hovers like a magic carpet above the edge of Central Park. Lawn chairs are temptingly scattered about. The view beckons. And off to one side, a mirrored pavilion perches on its glowing patch of green, catching the kaleidoscopic tumult of the city and playfully casting it back.

Dan Graham collaborated with landscape architect Günther Vogt to transform the Met’s severe space into “Hedge Two-Way Mirror Walkabout”, a seriously charming funhouse. It’s a mind-bending piece of walk-in sculpture, a two-chambered bubble of mirrored glass and steel that invites viewers to glimpse themselves in its reflective surfaces. However we look at it, we see ourselves askew – here, sleekly thin; there, grotesquely fat, mixed up with the people on the other side of the transparent wall and a flickering melange of sky, leaves, buildings and passing clouds.

Graham’s rooftop pavilion teems with allusions. It invokes, first of all, the extravagantly ornamental structures – faux Greek temples, mock gothic ruins – designed as picturesque points of interest in 18th-century English gardens. At Stowe, Lord Cobham hid a “Temple of Ancient Virtue” among the vegetation, honouring the greatest Greeks and expressing his yearning for Hellenic antiquity. Graham has fallen under a more modern version of the neoclassical spell: he finds inspiration in the stripped-down austerity of Mies van der Rohe’s Barcelona Pavilion, which he admires both because it was always meant to be temporary, and because it effectively blends vegetation and reflective glass.

Read the full story

Arizona rooftop solar customers could face new tax

by  AMANDA H. MILLER, CleanEnergyAuthority, May 6, 2014

Solar in Arizona Photo: Arizona Republic Source: www.cleanenergyauthority.com

Solar in Arizona
Photo: Arizona Republic
Source: www.cleanenergyauthority.com

Homeowners who are leasing rooftop solar arrays in Arizona could be hit with an average $152 a year property tax bill they weren’t counting on when they decide to go solar.

The state department of revenue recently reinterpreted a tax policy that exempts rooftop solar equipment from property tax, determining that the exemption only applies to those who own their solar arrays, not people who lease solar panels.

The state Department of Revenue said the leased panels are merchant power plants and the leasing companies should pay tax on them.

Those taxes would flow through to customers.

Solar leasing accounts for the majority of the distributed solar generation in Arizona and is widely adopted by middle class residents who can’t afford to buy complete systems outright.

Most who lease rooftop solar systems save $60 to $120 a year over buying all of their power from Arizona Public Service. The new property tax would erase the cost benefit of going solar, solar advocates say.

“Arizona is breaking new ground for being an extremely strange political environment,” said Bryan Miller, vice president of public policy for solar leasing company Sunrun and president of The Alliance for Solar Choice.

[Read more…]

Rooftop Film Club wows London

by JASON PALMER, Entertainment Focus, May 7, 2014

Rooftop Film Club Source: www.rooftopfilmclub.com

Rooftop Film Club
Source: www.rooftopfilmclub.com

The Rooftop Film Club have returned with a brand new line-up that brings a summer of movies to lucky Londoners. The pop up film event (in association with British Airways) takes place across exclusive rooftop venues – the Bussey Building in Peckham Rye and the Queen of Hoxton in Shoreditch – from May 1 until September 30, 2014.
Last night we attended the screening of Amy Heckerling’s seminal 90s classic Clueless; starring Alicia Silverstone, Brittany Murphy and Paul Rudd.

The weather proved to be great given its unpredictability, with rain only affecting the last 5mins of the film. The crowds slowly amassed at the top of the Queen of Hoxton in Shoreditch, a great hidden gem with a gloriously cosy rooftop packed full of food, drink, great sights and the perfect chill-out area.

As darkness fell, so our experience began with an eager crowd rushing to their seats for ‘Chick-Flick Tuesday’, and a sold-out screening of one of the 90s most endearing and peerless comedies.

Each reveller gets to sit on an exclusive British Airways directors-style chair and there are blankets and ponchos readily available should the elements conspire against you. Armed with a delicious drink from the bar and our special infra-red headsets for that ‘in-flight’ experience, the film began as the London skyline gleamed proudly around us. It’s also worth mentioning just how helpful and nice the staff were – something that too often gets overlooked at big events like these.

[Read more…]

A Farm Grows in Brooklyn – on the Roof

by MARK J. MILLER, for National Geographic, April 29, 2014

This story is part of National Geographic‘s special eight-month “Future of Food” series.

U.S. cities lead a rooftop-farming movement that’s spreading around the globe.

For most urban dwellers, visiting a working farm requires a journey into the countryside. But in a growing number of world capitals, a farm is just a short elevator ride away—on the roof.

In Singapore, Amsterdam, Hong Kong, Tokyo, and Montreal as well as several U.S. cities, farms have been built atop multistory buildings.

“Five years ago, there were virtually no rooftop farms,” Steven Peck, founder and president of Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, told National Geographic. “Now they are starting to appear across the globe.”

Peck says that as fossil fuels become more expensive and the number of urban dwellers continues to rise, urban farming will help feed the population without increasing the cost and pollution of food transport.

Rooftop farming was born out of the green-roof movement, in which building owners partially or completely cover roofs with vegetation atop special waterproof membranes. Green roofs use plants and flowers to provide insulation, create a habitat for local wildlife, help control runoff, put more oxygen into the atmosphere—and provide a welcome, verdant break from urban drabness.

Rooftop farms take the green-roof concept a step further, with plots that provide fruits and vegetables for local residents and the chance for urban volunteers to become part-time farmers.

[Read more…]

Rooftop poppy field planted to mark WW1 centenary

by ROBERT CUMBER, GetWestLondon, April 29, 2014

The roof of The Big Yellow Self Storage Companys warehouse in Brentford, on which thousands of poppy seeds have been planted in the shape of a giant '100' to mark the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War Source: www.getwestlondon.co.uk

The roof of The Big Yellow Self Storage Companys warehouse in Brentford, on which thousands of poppy seeds have been planted in the shape of a giant ‘100’ to mark the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War
Source: www.getwestlondon.co.uk

Thousands of poppies have been planted on top of a storage depot in Brentford in the shape of a giant ‘100’.

A spectacular rooftop display has been planted to mark the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War.

Thousands of poppy seeds have been sown in a lawn on top of The Big Yellow Self Storage Company’s warehouse beside the M4 in Great West Road, Brentford.

It is hoped they will bloom in time for the 100th anniversary of Britain’s entry into the conflict, on August 4, providing a colourful reminder of the huge human sacrifice on battlefields across the globe.

The seeds were planted last Wednesday (April 23) by roofing firm Wild About Roofs, in partnership with the storage company and Hounslow Chamber of Commerce, with sponsorship from Boningale GreenSky, Sedum Supply and Quilliam Property Services.

Daniel MacAuliffe, managing director of Wild About Roofs, said: “We wanted to mark this year in a unique way. By sowing the poppy seeds and watching them grow over the coming months into a spectacular and bright 100 this is a great way to show our support to the 100 Years of Remembrance.

“Once the poppies are in full bloom we will be hosting an official launch at The Big Yellow Self Storage Company and have a special guest to unveil the ‘100’ in its full glory.”

Read the original story