

Welcome to Global Design, 2010- the arc107 Global Design seminar of Miami University, Department of Architecture and Interior Design. We are exploring the role and influence of design—especially architecture, interior design, urban design and landscape design—on people and environments within a contemporary global context. We are looking at how factors as geography, climate, culture, society, economics, politics, aesthetics, and technology are intrinsically interwoven in the making of the built environment.


I am Vietnamese and I was born in Cincinnati, OH. I never left Ohio and did not get to experience the real culture behind my heritage. My family has taught me many traditions of the Vietnamese culture but I don't get to experience that firsthand in Vietnam. Some day I desire to travel to Vietnam (specifically Saigon, which is now called Ho Chi Minh City) to learn more about the country. Since I am an architecture major, learning the history of the architecture in Vietnam would be interesting. The building styles have evolved throughout the years according to whom was in power at the time in Vietnam. The Notre Dame Cathedral (upper left) is a well known catholic church located in the middle of the city. During the time the church was built, the French government was in power. The style reflects the traditional French with the intricate details. Another part that I discovered about Ho Chi Minh City is that the city itself is following the contemporary path and going towards the more "sleek" style of the generation. District 7 is the part of Ho Chi Minh City that is following the trend.
They are more economically stable and have more money to spend towards these buildings. This part of the city is getting a new look compared to other parts of the city. 


g renewable indigenous materials like bamboo and nipa palm. The hut’s raised position on stilts and its slanted roof help effectively utilize airflow through the home. But the bahay kubo is not seen as an efficient form of architecture because it isn’t westernized: the plant matter and wood used to make the hut gives it a rough appearance, and the one or two room layout of the house goes against western ideas of privacy and separate rooms. But the architecture team’s use of building structure, stilts, and indigenous materials in their plan to raise the school away from flooding, increase airflow, and be environmentally safe show the bahay kubo’s use in modern architecture.
I have traveled to


I decided for my project to travel to the Calcutta slums, in India. This region is full of unknown prospects to the outside world and in fact is one of the richest areas. The people in Calcutta go through so much on a daily basis; which these struggles are just normal items to them. The slum districts barely have the needed supplies to survive off of and because of that people have to contribute to illegalized acts such as drug use and prostitution. This sparked my interests and I believe that people should not have to donate to such operations to maintain a lifestyle. I feel that these ways of survival are wrong and something needs to be done. I also found that India has upcoming millionaires and rising housing and business developments. This was intriguing due to the slum conditions next door. If this is happening why can't those people use those funds to help out the slum conditions? Close to half the population lives in the slums, so wouldn't this be an important issue? We, as Americans take so much for granted, that we don't realize when everything comes down to the wire, what is actually important. We have so much these days with new and upcoming technologies that we become insatiable for more, while others are less fortunate trying to live off a dollar or less a day. Why is it that we constantly gain attention, when other nations are ignored?


For my virtual travels I went to four different sports stadiums throughout the world. Because sports have played such a crucial role in my life, I wanted to learn about the places throughout the world that hold certain sporting events. I was fascinated by the fact that a single building can represent so much to so many people. I was intrigued in the fact that a stadium can hold so many people and their enthusiasm for the specific sport at hand. How a building maintains and embraces the power and energy that thousands of fans bring to each game is remarkable. I wanted to look at what is a good stadium and what is a bad stadium. And how these stadiums that hold thousands of people effect the environment around it. Were the decisions surrounding the building of these stadiums involving the environment and the impact or was it solely based on the chance of making a profit. I tried to pick four sports that have a universal audience. The first stadium we visit is the Estadio Municipal Dr. Magalhaes. This stadium is a soccer stadium in the heart of Portugal. This stadium honors its surroundings and takes a back seat to the medieval castle in the town. The second stadium we visit is the Happy Valley horse track in Hong Kong China. This stadium was built for the British royalty in the government during the 1800s. The third stadium I visited was the Shunyi Olympic rowing and canoeing park. This was a natural oxygen bar for the environment after it was built. The last stadium I visited was the Dallas Cowboys stadium. This stadium was absolutely massive and was a perfect example of Americas bigger is better mentality.

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://z.about.com/d/horseracing/1/5/5/B/2/hkjc06-14a.jpg&imgrefurl=http://horseracing.about.com/od/hongkong/ss/aa120606a_8.htm&usg=__eCkhXj_L38JI6EpThgle5RMtfpM=&h=267&w=400&sz=46&hl=en&start=3&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=rTSWVWRR8vCswM:&tbnh=83&tbnw=124&prev=/images%3Fq%3DHappy%2BValley%2Bracecourse%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dsafari%26sa%3DN%26rls%3Den%26tbs%3Disch:1

http://www.worldstadiums.com/


For my design project I decided to travel to Germany (particularly Weimar, Dessau, and Berlin) and study one of my favorite subjects, The Bauhaus 1919-1933. I wanted my main new source to be The New York Times because they have a fantastic Arts Section of their paper. It was discovered through my article, that perhaps one of the famous Bauhaus designers Franz Ehrlich was a designer for the Nazi's and helped them design the famous gate at the Buchenwald death camp that reads 'Jedem Das Seine'. After discovering the questionable career choice of one of the professors at the Bauhaus I decided to follow the other legendary Bauhaus figures such as Mies van der Rohe, and Walter Gropius - which both moved to America and continued their architectural designing careers.