april 29th, 2008
The spiderweb shaped Living Roof on top of California Academy of Sciences in bloom.
This fall, after eight years and almost half a billion dollars, architect Renzo Piano will complete the greenest museum ever built—the new California Academy of Sciences, in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park—housing its aquarium, planetarium, and natural-history museum under a two-and-a-half-acre “living roof.”
Long section of the museum design © Rpbw
Piano’s museum has made extensive use of technology in the service of the institution’s green mandate and promises to set a new standard for ‘green museums’. Vanity Fair’s Matt Tyrnauer writes about its genesis.
Overview © Rpbw
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Architecture, Environment, Science, Technology, USA |
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Posted by Michiel van Iersel
april 15th, 2008
Here is a blatant quote from Mike Ellis‘ electronicmuseum.org.uk, but since he has such a simple and straightforward conclusion of MW2008 I wanted to copy it entirely.
Ellis just spent 7 years working as Head of Web for the National Museum of Science and Industry, UK, which comprises the Science Museum in London, Media Museum in Bradford and Railway Museum in York. He now calls himself a «Solutions Architect», working for the Professional Services Group at Eduserv.
Please visit his site, he is an authority on many things, and might even come from the future.
This is Mike’s «direction of travel gut feel for what actually went on during the week:
- We’re doing some very cool stuff using some great new approaches and technologies.
- We’re starting to see the benefits of open access to our content, both in terms of Creative Commons and programmatic access via API’s or syndication.
- We’re - at last - worrying less and doing more.
- We’re beginning to see the benefits of community, not just the coolness.
- Finally: we’re up for collaborating and sharing in more open and positive ways than ever before.»
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Heritage, Media, Museum, Science, Web 2.0, Web 3.0 |
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Posted by Juha van 't Zelfde
april 15th, 2008
The keynote speaker of last week’s Museums and the Web in Montreal Michael Geist is looking back at the conference with a critical article in the Toronto Star. In short, Geist summons Canada’s museums to remove fees and contractual barriers to Canadian heritage.
«The dozens of presentations at the conference highlighted the remarkable transformation in how museums display their collections and interact with the public.»
He goes on to say that «(m)any museums are using online video, social networks and interactive multimedia to pull content from diverse places to create «virtual museums.» So, the museum community has emerged as a leading voice for the development of legal frameworks to facilitate digitization and avoid restrictions that could hamper cultural innovation.»
Yet, according to Geist, who holds the Canada research chair in Internet and e-commerce law at the University of Ottawa faculty of law, «some fear the advocacy and actions of museums in embracing the Internet are not consistent, particularly in their policies on works for which copyright has expired.»
According to documents obtained by Geist under the Access to Information Act, the National Gallery of Canada appears to be treating public-domain works as a profit centre.
«(T)he gallery often added hundreds of dollars to the total cost of fulfilling a request, despite the fact that the images were in the public domain. In fact, the permission costs for such works were actually higher than those for works still subject to copyright. The gallery reasoned that the copyright holder would apply additional charges.»
Read his full article (Toronto Star, April 15, 2008)
Visit Michael Geist’s homepage
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Culture, Heritage, History, Media, Museum, North-America, Politics, Science, Web 2.0, Web 3.0 |
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Posted by Juha van 't Zelfde
april 12th, 2008

The final day of the conference is on its way. This morning we had quite a rewarding demonstration of the n8 strategy, explaining our on and off line activities. It is interesting to see so many institutions working with all these interesting and intelligent tools, but not many working collectively in a city or region, like we do in Amsterdam. I would be keen to learn from other organisations that develop plans together. The collective of over 40 museums in Amsterdam have founded the n8 as an innovation platform for youth marketing, event organisation and new media development. Our annual Museum Night is by far the most known of the projects we do, but the Museum in MP3 portal is getting some good feedback, amongst others from the kind people at MoMA and ICA Boston. I would love to discuss this more in depth with attendees of MW2008.
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Business, Design, Heritage, Media, Museum, North-America, Politics, Science, Technology, Web 3.0 |
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Posted by Juha van 't Zelfde
april 10th, 2008
The 12th edition of the annual Museums and the Web conference has started today. Keynote speaker Michael Geist, law professor at the University of Ottawa where he holds the Canada Research Chair of Internet and E-commerce Law, had an interesting talk at the opening plenary, stressing the need for museums to take responsibility for shaping the future Web.
Like every year, the conference is as cluttered and complex as the topics it addresses. Chairman and MW evangelist David Bearman admits it himself, advising visitors to ‘browse’ the lectures instead of fanatically trying to absorb all of its contents. This mornings’s program consists of sessions entitled ‘Personalisation’, ‘Engaging Museum Audiences’ and ‘Theoretical Frameworks’. After lunch, themes are a.o. ‘Mobile Computing’, User-Generated Content’ and ‘What to do with New Media Art?’.
MW2008
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Business, Heritage, History, Media, Museum, North-America, Politics, Science, Technology, Web 2.0, Web 3.0 |
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Posted by Juha van 't Zelfde
maart 30th, 2008
Her Majesty Queen Beatrix of The Netherlands, during a guided tour of CORPUS, which opened to the public on March 20th 2008.
Ever wanted to take a stroll through the human body? A new museum in the Netherlands lets you do just that. CORPUS (Latin for ‘body’) is a new museum on the outskirts of the Hague in the Netherlands that is both a science education centre and an amusement park. It offers a ‘journey through the human body’ during which the visitor can see, feel and hear how the human body works and what roles healthy food, healthy life and plenty of exercise plays.
The museum attraction offers a variety of information and provides education and entertainment with this journey as well as a vast number of permanent and variable exhibitions. This concept has been realised in a 35-meter high transparent building, which incorporates an awkward looking seated human figure that reaches 35meters high.
The makers of the museum attraction are hoping that a combination amusement park and health education museum will encourage kids to take better care of their own bodies. Questions as ‘Why do I have to sleep?’, ‘what happens when I sneeze’, ‘how does my hair grow’ are answered in CORPUS by means of tangible, visible and audible conceptions. They have used the latest technology in the field of imagery, sound and 3D effects to present and explain all aspects of the medical aspects of the human body.
The awkward looking body/building that houses CORPUS is situated along the A44 highway between Amsterdam and The Hague in The Netherlands.
Click here for more information and images from WTOL
Read an article (Building, March 27, 2008)
Go to CORPUS website
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Architecture, Museum, Science, Technology |
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Posted by Michiel van Iersel