Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Exp 3 Final Submission

Exp 3 Final Submission


18 Perspectives Sketches
L shape Pathways













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36 Textures




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Client Tata's Elevator Design




Client Yin's Elevator Design



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Unreal Model
Meeting room for clients

Design for Tata's Office
Tata is a very successful businessman. He has invested in a lot of different types of business. In order to design an office for him. I break all the walls into rectangular box to represent his large variety of business. Moreover, Tata is very aggressive and powerful, to suit his style, the big Z shape pathway of elevator makes him feel like on the top of the world. The texture and colour I chose is more of the strong and firm feeling. I guess he will be appreciated.


The great meeting room
This meeting room is simply a glass wall block. I want to make this meeting room simple because the office of the two clients already have complicated structures. And because both clients are rich and important people in the world business, their meeting must be very significant, so I hand it up in the air. This can give them 360 window view and would not be distracted.


Design for Yin's Office

Zhang Yin is a very outstanding woman, as there is not much woman can be that successful in business industry. Her main business is paper and cardboard industry. She always travel around the world to expand her business. I suppose the way before she succeed must have lots of failure, but she didn't give up and continue which leads to her success today. Therefore, I design a very rough space for her to represent her life journey. The cracking of shapes just to show the feel of paper cracking to reflect her paper business. I add the lights in purpose as I want to add some feel of feminine to her office, to create a contrast to Tata's office.


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Unreal Map starting from Tata's Office
fromTataoffice.ut2
Unreal Map starting from Yin's Office
fromYinoffice.ut2

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Animation of Tata's Elevator Pathway
UT2004_2007-10-24_21-00-18.avi
Animation of Yin's Elevator Pathway
UT2004_2007-10-24_21-01-18.avi

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Tata Power keen to buy Dabhol


Our Bureau

MUMBAI, Aug. 10

THE Tatas are interested in buying Enron's Dabhol power project and "informal talks are on".

Mr Ratan Tata, Chairman of the group's power company Tata Power, today said Tata Power will watch the developments on Enron's Dabhol Power project closely and would ``conceivably think of buying it if it makes sense for us''.

Mr Tata was addressing shareholders of Tata Power at its annual general meeting.

Mr Adi Engineer, Managing Director of the company, later told reporters that any formal discussions on Dabhol Power Co (DPC) would begin only after the legal problems related to the project were solved. ``Informal talks are on,'' he said, without revealing who the company was speaking to.

He said Tata Power was waiting in the wings and would take over DPC if there was a ``good opportunity''.

``We cannot forget that there is a valuable asset created and lying there and it cannot be wished away. We have our ears close to the ground. But the subject of stepping in does not arise till the legal tangle is solved,'' Mr Engineer said.

On being questioned about the statement made by the Enron India chief, Mr Wade Cline, on his readiness to sell the Dabhol project for $1 billion, Mr Engineer said he did not have that much money in his wallet.

``The project can be made viable but the Government will have to take tough decisions such as rationalising the consumption of power. They have to tie up the areas with power deficit with those with a surplus,'' Mr Engineer said.

Mr Ratan Tata also said that it could not be forgotten that Dabhol power was expensive power as the project was a gas-based one. ``But someone has to buy the project,'' he said.

PTI reports: Meanwhile, Dabhol Power Co has moved the Bombay High Court requesting an early hearing of its petition filed as per the Supreme Court order of August 6, challenging the State Electricity Regulatory Commission's (MERC's) jurisdiction to adjudicate in the dispute with the Maharashtra State Electricity Board.

The US energy major would also raise additional grounds supporting its petition in the court, including its objection to the MERC member, Mr Jayant Deo, legal sources said.

Pic.:Mr Ratan Tata, Chairman, Tata Power, and Mr A.J. Engineer, Managing Director, at the company's AGM in Mumbai on Friday.

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/businessline/2001/08/11/stories/14115601.htm


Zhang Yin: The world's richest self-made woman



“Make way for the Big Momma of the Billionaires’ Club,” says the Daily Express. The Big Momma in question is Zhang Yin, a 49-year-old paper recycler who has just emerged not only as the richest entrepreneur in China, but also as the wealthiest self-made woman in the world. According to the Hurun Report rich list, Zhang, despite being almost unknown in the wider world, has suddenly arrived at the top of the list with a net worth of $3.4bn. Many of China’s new entrepreneurs keep a low profile, but Zhang is in a class of her own when it comes to elusiveness. “Even her name is the subject of some contention” – she’s known to many as Cheung Yan. Short-haired, simply dressed and slightly stocky, she was ranked 36th on last year’s list, with her leap in fortune being down to the public listing of her firm, Nine Dragons Paper, in Hong Kong in March.

Zhang, who continues to hold a 72% stake, had some powerful champions who helped put her on the map, notes the FT. Three of Asia’s most influential businessmen, Cheng Yu-tung, Robert Kuok and Lee Shau-kee, snapped up some $20m worth of shares, leading to a stampede of interest in Nine Dragons: the shares have since rocketed by 165%.

The oldest of eight children, Zhang was born into a military family in the north eastern province of Heilongjiang in 1957, and still has a heavy regional accent. Being in the military carried some perks, but life was still tough in the grinding years that followed the rise to power of Mao Tse-tung. “In those days, we only had meat to eat on holidays,” Zhang revealed in a rare interview. “But the lack of material things made me appreciate the value of possessions. My parents always encouraged us to face life and solve our problems independently.”

The introduction of more liberal economic policies in 1985 encouraged Zhang to start her first waste-paper business with less than 30,000 yuan (around £2,500) in savings. It wasn’t easy. She “endured financial hardship, cheating business partners and intimidation from local mobsters”, says The Daily Telegraph. But the timing was good. China’s embryonic economy was booming and, within six years, Zhang had “substantial capital”.

In 1990, Zhang moved to Los Angeles with her husband, Lai Ming-chung, and created America Chung Nam – now the leading exporter of paper in the US – with the aim of recycling waste into packaging for the Chinese consumer-goods sector. In 1996, Zhang returned home in triumph to set up a mill in the booming Pearl River Delta, which she named Nine Dragons. She has never looked back. The company is China’s largest manufacturer of containerboard and is used by scores of brands, including Coca-Cola and Sony; over the past year, net profits have quadrupled.

The secret of her success, she says, is the ability to look ahead. “Forecasting the market ahead of our competitors… is what made us into the market leader.” But not all Zhang’s calls are obviously wise, says The South China Morning Post. Her decision to name her 24-year-old student son, Lau Chun-shun, as the company’s sole non-executive director, has raised eyebrows. She says that her “nurturing and influence” means that the boy’s “character and integrity will be the company’s future asset”. Others aren’t so sure, but most nonetheless are cheered to see that even China’s iron lady of paper is capable of human weakness.

Zhang’s meteoric rise – a breakthrough for China’s women?

Zhang saw off some formidable heavyweights to claim the title of China’s wealthiest entrepreneur, including last year’s leader, Huang Guangyu, founder of electronics retailer Gome, and Larry Yung, head of conglomerate Citic Pacific, who topped Forbes’s last list. Her accomplishment is rightly hailed as a breakthrough for women in China, says The Daily Telegraph. Despite Chairman Mao’s famous line that “women hold up half the sky”, Chinese society and politics remain dominated by men and there are only 35 women on the Chinese 500 richest list.

Zhang’s meteoric rise is all the more impressive given her peers “have not exactly been standing still”, observes Chinadaily.com. “The rich in China are getting richer, faster”, says Rupert Hoogewerf, the British publisher of the Hurun Report. “Eight years ago we only ranked 50 individuals with a cut-off point of $6m”. This year, there are 15 billionaires on this list, up from seven in 2005. He compares China’s current economic landscape to periods in developed countries when economies were exploited by “smart, ruthless and fast-moving” entrepreneurs. But it remains open to question how long the Chinese government will allow this status quo to continue unchecked, says The Times. Last week, state TV devoted half the evening news to President Hu’s call for a more “harmonious society”. The government is agitated by “growing unrest” at yawning income disparities and has vowed to narrow the gap. The arrest last year of investment tycoon Zhang Rongkun, for his suspected involvement in a pension-fund scandal, may be seen by some as a worrying harbinger of crackdowns to come.

http://www.moneyweek.com/file/20593/zhang-yin-the-worlds-richest-self-made-woman.html



How Carlos Slim, World’s Richest Monopolist, Provokes And Profits From The Mexodus

By Steve Sailer

The Main Stream Media's normal lack of interest in Mexico, our southern neighbor, was briefly interrupted last week. There was a flurry of news reports that Bill Gates has been dethroned as the world's richest man by a fellow with an improbable name: Carlos Slim HelĂș, the Mexican telephone monopolist.

After those six weeks of hearing from the MSM that Mexico was unutterably poor and that illegal immigration is the only hope Mexicans had, this Richest-Man-In-The-World-Is-Mexican story seemed a bit off-message. No wonder the press went right back to ignoring Mexico.

It's not that there aren't colorful, in fact downright lurid, stories to be covered south of the border. For example, have you ever heard of Jorge Hank Rhon, who in 2004 was elected mayor of the big border city of Tijuana? It's as if Phil Spector was chosen mayor of San Diego. Known to his constituents as Genghis Hank, this demi-billionaire father of 18 children by four women has a private zoo holding 20,000 animals in sickening squalor.

Tijuana journalists who investigate Hank's doings have a tendency to wind up with bullets in them. His bodyguard was convicted in one of the assassinations.

You might think that a hereditary plutocrat's minion murdering a Mexican reporter a few miles across the border would interest American reporters.

And they might also find it interesting that Hank's brother had been the primary shareholder in the controversial Laredo National Bank of Texas, whose CEO, Gary G. Jacobs, contributed $85,000 to George W. Bush's two campaigns for governor...

But you would be wrong. The truth is that the American press tends to find Mexico an awkward combination of comic and depressing. Stir in political correctness about Mexican immigrants ("Will reporting on Mexico play into the hands of those evil immigration restrictionists?"), plus the modern media personality's tendency to both admire and fear the ultra-rich (with good reason in this case: the Hank family sued the tiny Mexican-American muckraking magazine El Andar for $10 million for covering them), and it's best just to drop the whole subject.

Thus there's almost no important American voice calling repeatedly for reform in Mexico.

So, who is Carlos Slim? And why does he have $67.8 billion?

Slim isn't an out-of-control maniac like Hank. The only scandals clinging to Slim's name are business-political, not personal. He embodies the Mexican ruling class at its best.

Which still isn't so hot.

Although not an innovator, Slim is a competent businessman and manager. He likely would have gotten rich in even the most honest country. He's a bit like baseball slugger Barry Bonds, who was the best baseball player of the 1990s, even though he avoided steroids through the 1998 season. But once Bonds combined his natural gifts with performance-enhancing drugs, he quickly turned into the greatest hitter in history. Similarly, mix Slim's financial skills with Mexico's crony capitalism and you get the richest man in the world.

As New York Times correspondent Alan Riding wrote of Mexico in his 1984 bestseller Distant Neighbors: A Portrait of the Mexicans, "Public life could be defined as the abuse of power to achieve wealth and the abuse of wealth to achieve power." It's worth examining how the master plays the game.

The Mexican-born son of a prosperous Lebanese Christian merchant originally named Yusef Salim Haddam, Slim made his big move in 1990 during President Carlos Salinas' corrupt privatization binge (which was enthusiastically endorsed by the elder President Bush). He bought the government's telephone monopoly. Interestingly, Slim's telephone monopoly was written into NAFTA, negotiated during Bush I, granting Slim a decade without foreign competition.

Andres Oppenheimer, a Pulitzer Prize winner of the Miami Herald, reported in his entertaining book on the Salinas debauch, Bordering on Chaos:

"Salinas offered their buyers sweet regulatory deals… he offered them … a series of behind-the-scenes government favors that would guarantee the profitability of the new owners' investments."

Oppenheimer goes on:

"Salinas authorized spectacular tariff increases without demanding corresponding improvements in the telephone service. In 1991, Telmex was allowed to increase telephone rates by 247.4 percent, while wages that year were allowed to rise by 18 percent."

Of course, such a deal came with a price tag. On February 23, 1993, President Salinas invited Slim and the other 29 richest men in Mexico to dinner, where he shook them down for campaign contributions to the ruling PRI party of 25 million American dollars each—$750 million!

Slim wasn't fazed by the demand, merely suggesting that there was a more discreet way to do this. Oppenheimer writes:

"Telecommunications magnate Slim … supported the motion, adding only that he wished the funds had been collected privately, rather than at a dinner, because publicity over the banquet could 'turn into a political scandal.' In a country where half the population was living under the poverty line, there would be immediate questions as to how these magnates —many of whom had been middle-class businesspeople until the recent privatization of state companies—could each come up with $25 million in cash for the ruling party."

The PRI has been out of power in Mexico City since 2000, but Slim has kept his monopoly. The New York Times reports that Slim "used his influence over the government to fight off attempts by competitors—including MCI and AT&T—to get a piece of the Mexican market." [Prodded by the Left, Mexico's Richest Man Talks Equity, By Ginger Thompson, June 3, 2006]

According to The Economist's 2006 survey of the Mexican economy:

"Telmex still [has] 94% of landlines, 78% of mobile services and 70% of the broadband internet market … If Mexico were the United States, Telmex would have been broken up years ago. But Mexico is Mexico. Telmex is merely one of the more egregious examples of the widespread rule of oligopoly."

Slim's accumulation of $3,000 for every family of five in Mexico has sapped the country's economic growth. Connecting more people via telephones is perhaps the surest way to grow a backward country's economy. But Slim's monopoly keeps the price high by world standards:

"Forbes reported that the average monthly phone bill for a small business in Mexico is $132, compared with $60 in the United States."

In the NY Times article noted above, Ginger Thompson noted that Guillermo Ortiz, head of the Bank of Mexico, estimates that due to monopolies like Slim's:

"Economic growth is one percentage point less than it could be with real competition. There are not enough jobs to keep workers from migrating to the United States and investment is being driven to countries like Brazil and China.”

One percentage point lower growth may not sound like much, but it adds up. George Mason University economist Tyler Cowen points out:

"Had America grown one percentage point less per year, between 1870 and 1990, the America of 1990 would be no richer than the Mexico of 1990."

(I have my differences with Tyler, but he’s right about this).

So, Slim, personally, is the cause of many of Mexico's underemployed swarming into America—an historically unprecedented influx that has been dubbed the Mexodus.

But don't worry, he's figured out how to profit off the illegal immigration he's helping provoke. Larry Luxner reported in 2002:

"In August 1998, Telmex launched 'Mexico En Linea'—a program that allows expatriate Mexicans living in the United States to purchase phone lines for family and friends back home. … Telmex USA has received around one million applications for phone lines, of which 70% are generally approved."

Not surprisingly, Slim is publicly adamant about keeping the flow of illegals heading north so they can send remittances back to his captive customers in Mexico. In his March article about Slim, VDARE.COM's man in Mexico, Allan Wall, noted:

"At a press conference before Bush’s arrival, Slim slammed the border fence, calling it 'illegal" and "absurd.'"

We are constantly told that a border fence can't work. But if a sharp operator like Carlos Slim is afraid of it—well, that's quite an endorsement.

In fact, as someone said, “bring it on”.

http://www.vdare.com/Sailer/070708_slim.htm

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Final Submission Exp 2

Experiment 2: The Edge

3 Quotes

Florence Nightingale

"I can stand out the war with any man."

Stephen Hawkins

"If human life were long enough to find the ultimate theory, everything would have been solved by previous generations. Nothing would be left to be discovered."

Clarles Darwin

"A man who dares to waste an hour of time has not discovered the value of life."


18 Sketches

The first 9 Sketches are based on the quote of Clarles Darwin.
And the followings are based on the quote of Florence Nightingale.












36 Textures From Light to Dark







UNREAL IMAGES


Due to the long traditional beliefs, man used to look down on women. The power of women is always being hindered. Florence Nightingale has a strong beliefs in feminism, she wanted to claim that women should not waste their power and talent as they can do as good as man.
Base on the concept of client, I have designed an outer space with 3 thin long rectangular beams.The longest beam which stands straight in the middle symbolize the faith of Nightingale, the other two shorter beams symbolize the thoughts of most traditional women. Nightingale is a brave women who acts as a good example for every women at that time. She stands out with any other man just like the strong beams in the middle. Women who afraid to change will then be the side beams which always under the control of man and being look down. I have add some blue light sauces which means men power and below it are some red light sauces which means women power.




The second quote is from Clarles Darwin, he claimed that life is short and there is a lot more meaningful things to do than wasting our precious time, so mankind should not waste a single moment. I modeled this space with 3 large rectangles, by rotating and combining, they creates an interesting irregular base. I chose a few different colours for the light sauce. What I want to express is how the people waste the time on having fun, lazing around, live without goals. There is a lot of attraction in the world just like the colourful lights, which will drag us off the way towards the ulitmate value of life. Once we are away from the right track, we fall into traps, indicates by the irregular base, and so ultimate value of life will not be found. Moreover, the opening of this space is designed to be small, so it can tell that it is never easy to reach the ultimate value of life.



To summarize, I will say both quotes also mean that we should not waste something we born to have but to treasure them and to make good use of them, just like women strengthen and time. Therefore, I put forward this idea to the ramp design. It is not obvious to see the ramp as i made it part of the outer space. This can prevent wasting too much on decoration of the ramp, at the same time can enhance the outer space.



UNREAL MAP FILE LINK:
http://hosted.filefront.com/ngmanshan/


Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Exp 2 Clients Quote

Florence Nightingale

"I can stand out the war with any man."

Stephen Hawkins

"If human life were long enough to find the ultimate theory, everything would have been solved by previous generations. Nothing would be left to be discovered."

Clarles Darwin

"A man who dares to waste an hour of time has not discovered the value of life."

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Final Submisson Exp 1

FINAL SUBMISSION:

Patricia Piccinini











Concave (n.), uneven (adj.), waving (v.)

Marcel Duchamp



















movement (n.), mechanistic (adj.) , crush (v.)

Leonardo Da Vinci
























scale (n.), logical (adj.), spinning (v.)

18 Sketch Sections











36 Custom Textures