JOHN LOCKE, ARCHITECT

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About

Hello. I live in New York and work at The Living. I hold a graduate degree from Columbia University's GSAPP and an undergraduate architecture degree from the University of Texas at Austin. I have more than seven years of professional experience at noted architecture firms, including New York-based Rogers Marvel Architects and SOM. I also tackle freelance graphic and photography work with my partner in crime, the multi-talented Jackie Caradonio at Lion in Oil. In addition, I teach a course, Hacking the Urban Experience, at Columbia. View my CV here: CV(html). Thanks and have a nice day.

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john.h.locke{at}gmail.com
310.735.3333

Architecture Portfolios

Portfolio 2002-2007 (issuu)
Portfolio 2008-2009 (issuu)

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20090713 kinne, research | No Comments »Tags: kinne, research

slow, expensive, and with clearly defined boundaries


View Kinne Road Trip in a larger map
My route for the next three (four? five? – funded fellowships and the absence of steady employment allow the luxury of improvisation) weeks. The overall, zoomed-out, google-eye view of the trip revolves around research through observation of structures, installations, natural landforms, urban growths, manipulated landforms, etc. constructed in the great blank slate of the Southwest desert. A place where time stretches from Planck’s constant – used to record the chain reactions that produce an Atomic detonation – up to Robert Smithson brushing up against the infinite on the Great Salt Flats. All of which is tested and implemented under the powerful spell of the Western landscape – a strange entity mixed in with notions of nation and empire, with bravery and myth, history and ficition. That’s what makes it interesting, and that’s what I want to check out.
The format is the road-trip. The ambling, somewhat desultory first-hand narration of a nomadic journey across the desert’s offensively vast spaces, situated between fragmented vignettes of activity. A goal of the research will be to attempt to resolve the disparate nature of the desert’s strange, isolated events into a cohesive, related narrative. I’ll be posting updates along the way (as free desert wi-fi allows) and a longer, more thorough paper after the conclusion (hopefully).

 

Some highlights will include:
Smithson’s Spiral Jetty // The Nevada Nuclear Testing Site // Maquiladora Settlements in Juarez // White Sands Missile Museum // Death Valley // Donald Judd’s Marfa Installations // Mexico City // BioSphere 2 // Heizer’s Double Negative // Canyonlands National Park // Informal urban growth along the U.S./MEX border // foreclosed ghost towns in the Phoenix suburbs

 

view the original proposal Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control (Without Architects) or: Why Infrastructure Won’t Save Us

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