Sunday, July 17, 2011

03.04.11- Zürich!

After a couple of fantastic days travelling around, today was my first full day to spend in my old home city!

I started off walking along the Limmat, heading downstream from about Hardturm, towards the Altstadt.

It was a pretty walk, one which I had never taken before, but also one that is much nicer than it would have been 12 years ago. I wound up in the little garden behind the Landesmuseum, and popped briefly into the shopping center under the Hauptbahnhof to pick up what would be the first of many additional memory cards on this trip. Not only am I an incessant shutterbug, but my new camera takes much larger photos than my old one did!

Back above ground, I started wandering through the winding streets of the Altstadt, with no particular agenda in mind other than just to see it again. In many ways Zürich had become as much a time for me as a place, and I wanted to bring it into the present tense of my mind.

Many views were just as I had remembered.
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The old, arcaded buildings and the low bridges across the Limmat,
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and the Lindenhof up on top of the hill,
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with its enshrined Roman headstone, the oldest reference to "Turicum", the Roman name for Zürich.
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I remember when T came to visit me on her spring break. She kept marveling- right along this street- about how adorable the shuttered windows were, and how old everything was. What surprised me was my reaction, and how much a new "normal" had assimilated into my head. Yes, of course everything is so old, and this is just what all the windows look like here- nothing noteworthy! Her reaction made me stop and be amazed at it all again!
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It was unseasonably warm, and everyone was taking advantage of it, hanging out in the outdoor restaurants and sidewalk cafes.
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OS and I did the same when we met for a yummy lunch of Rösti on Niederdorferstrasse...
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...like Dad getting his Harold's chicken on trips home, how could I not get Rösti at some point during my visit? :)
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After lunch I was on my own again to reacquaint myself with the city. I of course went up to the Polyterrasse, and enjoyed the view across the city to my Uetliberg.
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The Polybahn would have to wait for another day...
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I noticed little details I hadn't remembered or noticed before, particularly some language-based things. Check out the e/umlaut on this facade:
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...and this adorable Isebahnli!
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So Swiss. I love it! :)

One of the buildings over by Bahnhofstrasse taught me a valuable lesson. Fish kissing your ears are ticklish, but don't let geese do the same- they hurt!
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There was a plaque on a building called "Elsässerhof." When I was living here, I must not have thought much of it, as I didn't know until afterwards that my German ancestors were Alsatian! After a quick visit the night before, however, I smiled when I saw the name.
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This building was constructed in 1897 on the site of a medieval house (and restaurant/tavern, I presume), in which Alsatian wine had been sold since 1422. The current building is a contemporary of the cast iron facades of SoHo, and it shows.
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I still love the streetscapes here, even though the colors are mostly very cold grays and whites. I remember how lonely and impersonal this palette felt on the cold, dark, cloudy days of February.
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The Zürchers certainly can't be faulted for a lack of impeccable precision, though! :)
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The Theaterplatz next to Sächseläutenplatz was a construction site, with a(n underground?) parking garage soon to be here. There was fantastic signage on the site fence, explaining the archaeological finds they've been coming across here.

The Swiss lakes were inhabited with pile dwellings from about 5000 to 500 BC. There are a number of these sites that have been preserved throughout six nations, and collectively they were designated a UNESCO world heritage site this year.
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The underwater archaeology taking place here has made it a "competence center" - or better translated, "center of expertise" - for such work.

The 17th Century Baroque city wall is the next layer found here above the prehistoric pile dwellings.
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The star-shaped city wall was begun in 1642 and enclosed new neighborhoods. The wall was dismantled, starting in 1833. Two remnants that can still be found today are the Bauschänzli, the little (man-made) island at the end of the Limmat which now has a restaurant on it, and the Schanzengraben, the remnant of the western moat.

After the dismantling of the city wall, a grain house was built on this site in the 1830s; it was replaced 30 years later with the first Tonhalle (concert hall) in the city.
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In 1835 the "Minerva" was the first steamship on Lake Zürich. It docked here, and began service between Zürich and Rapperswil.

The Utoquai was jam-packed with people, which was hardly surprising on such a fabulously lovely Sunday in early April!
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The view of the Alps from Bürkliplatz was stunning. The whole year I lived here I was on a quest to photograph the Alps from Zürich. Between the hazy overcast days that were so typical and the distance, I never was very successful in this; today, though, they were just as incredible as I'd remembered!
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The Arboretum was very reminiscent of a beautiful spring day in Central Park...
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...but that didn't stop me from finding a quiet shoreline spot under a tree to just take in the view!
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I made my way back over to the Hauptbahnhof
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then on to the Gessnerallee, along the banks of the Sihl.
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This little reclaimed urban park was new since I was last here; if I remember correctly, there were barracks here!

The barracks have been cleaned up, and now house various theaters.
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US cities should start adopting little details like this as we work to become more bike-friendly!
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...although details like this aren't so useful, unless you plan on allowing bikes to be locked up to them! Ah, so tempting, though!
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This stretch of the Sihl, once a backlot, almost forgotten area, can now be appreciated.
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Next I made my way over to the Schanzengraben, one of the remnants of the Baroque city wall.
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I found myself once again laughing at the way I wander around cities.
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In an entire city of beautiful sites, where do I always eventually find myself?
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Along a quiet stretch of water away from the crowds! :)
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The Schanzengraben wraps around the Old Botanical Garden of the Uni Zürich, on a piece of land that was once one of the points in the star-shaped wall.
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That's enough wandering for one day. Time to head back Central, meet OS for dinner, then call it an evening! :)
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Monday, June 13, 2011

02.04.2011-DE-CH-FR-CH

My second day entailed setting my feet in a number of countries too: two countries once and one country twice.

We started the day off bright and early with an exploration of the significant architectural features of Uni Stuttgart. It's a technical university, so naturally it's about as scenic as the science quad of RPI. Nevertheless, there are some cool, experimental constructions.

This pedestrian bridge was designed by Jörg Schlaich, the very prominent structural engineer.
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The intent was to make the bottom chord as close to perfectly horizontal as possible. Of course, technically it's not possible, but visually, it's quite successful!

ILEK: Institut für Leichtbau Entwerfen und Konstruieren (Institute for Light Construction- Design and Construction)
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The building was designed by Frei Otto (of Munich Olympic Stadium fame). Scattered around the site- and inside the building- are all kinds of mockups of different experimental construction systems, like this glass and ridiculously thin steel arched truss in the foreground.

Afterwards we started making our way south through the Black Forest.
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It's such a beautiful area, and I'm sure when these first inklings of spring turn into summer it will be even nicer!
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We saw all kinds of "typical" things en route. Cuckoo clock outlets
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Farmhouses and barns with the local enormous roofs, covered in PV panels :)
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Wind turbines- complete with parasailers in the foreground! (not sure how typical the parasailer is)
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And of course, the Deutsche Bahn crossing an awesome, arched masonry bridge!
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At one point we happened upon the Brigachquelle, which is one of the two sources of the Donau (Danube)!
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A tiny little spring just in front of the farmhouse trickles into this pond, which then empties into a stream to carry it away. This is the beginning of a mighty river.

It's also protected by giant squirrels! ;)
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We found a quiet bench under a tree in a farmer's field and had a quick picnic lunch there.
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Took in the scenery
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and were off!

We had a place to be by the end of the afternoon, so as nice as it was to hang out taking in the fresh air and scenery, we had to continue on.

Our destination was none other than Weil am Rhein, the home of the Vitra campus!
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This is the new showroom building by Herzog & de Meuron.
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A few years ago, I visited the de Young Museum in San Francisco, also by Herzog & de Meuron. While they are two very different buildings, both have a large, low(ish), covered open air separated from the actual building entrance by a courtyard of sorts.

De Young:
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Vitra:
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Since it's a showroom, the entry to the Herzog & deMeuron building is free. We were each given a little "credit card", which we could scan to add to our furniture wish list, customize features, etc. Ahhh, I think I'm just going to keep mine as a little souvenir, thanks!

Each house-extrusion made for a nice, large-but-cozy space inside, with a great view out.
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The cacti clearly enjoyed spectating. :)
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There was a short video showing how these paper lanterns are made.
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And of course, lots of icons of modern design:
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including these ADORABLE Eames elephants!
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A cloudy place to sit if all the sunniness is too much for you:
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A cozy garden space to curl up with a good book and your pet elephant:
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Pretty light and shadow play,
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shiny elephants,
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and elephants, um, thoroughly enjoying their free time outside!
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Fittingly -and awesomely- the path to the showroom was illuminated by Birds Nest light fixtures!
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Next up: Gehry's contribution, the campus museum.
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I have to admit, I'm not nearly as enamored with it now as I was during freshman year in college.
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When I first learned about it, it was eye-opening to see that people could, and did, build things that were exuberant, non-rectilinear, and playful. This is what I liked about it.
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Now in visiting it, there's a lot going on in a small amount of space, but I'm not sure it's doing much other than creating a lot of busy-ness. I hope that means that I've got a more sophisicated sensibility, and not just that I'm getting old!
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There was a nice, monochromatic arrangement here:
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...although I liked it much better with a small splash of color! :)
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Finally, we continued on to Tadao Ando's conference center, passing the Claes Oldenburg sculpture on the way!
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There's a narrow and very deliberate path to get there.
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It turns very sharply, and directs the visitor to walk right next to the wall.
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At this moment I understood something that I never grasped from the photos. Tadao Ando may work with concrete, but his media really are light (which I knew), and sensory experience.
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As you step into the shadow of this wall, you also feel the coolness of the concrete so close to your left arm.
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Then, as you turn the corner, you step back out of the shadow, and into the brightness, but also the warmth of the sunshine.
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The thermal mass of the concrete makes this shift palpable beyond what your eyes tell you.
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The overall effect of this simple, yet deliberate processional entrance is very meditative. I now have a profound respect for what Ando accomplished here.
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Of course, we arrived late in the afternoon. The orientation of the walls is such, though, that the experience in the morning would be very similar, just in reverse: warm daylight first, then cool shadow. Well, that would change the experience dramatically, but the presence of temperature awareness would be there nonetheless.
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The shadows of the cherry tree are just beautiful on this canvas.
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We crossed the border for a quick stop in Basel.
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Then crossed the border again, this time to France, to have dinner in Elsass!
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OS made the fabulous suggestion that since I'm part Alsatian, I should at least see a bit of the region and enjoy their yummy Käsespätzle!
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Elsässisch is much closer to Schwiizerdüütsch than the Hochdeutsch I learned in school. Looking at a map, it's perfectly obvious, but it never occurred to me before! So the thick dialect I learned to understand, if not speak, is much closer to what my ancestors spoke than the (imperfect) proper German that I learned to converse in! Wow! How awesome is that?! :)