The jewel in the crown of Samizdata.net
A blog for people with a critically rational individualist perspective. We are developing the social individualist meta-context for the future. From the very serious to the extremely frivolous... lets see what is on the mind of the Samizdata people.

Samizdata, derived from Samizdat /n. a system of clandestine publication of banned literature in the USSR
[Russ.,= self-publishing house]
There is much to find for those who look
We are not alone
Made possible by...
 
May 28, 2004
Friday
 
 
The new EUroParliament building in Brussels
Brian Micklethwait (London)  Architecture • European Union

Not everyone who reads this blog will be particularly keen to know what the new EUropean Parliament building in Brussels looks like. But if you would like to know about this, I have a posting up at my Culture Blog which starts with a huge aerial photo of the place taken by someone else, and then has twenty four thumbnail photos you can click on to get to bigger photos that I took myself of this vast building when I was myself in Brussels not long ago.

It has taken me more than two months to get around to exhibiting these photos, for which apologies, but I presumably things have not changed that much since I took them. Partly this was because until recently I had much to learn about how to do this – "thumbnails" etc. (merci Monsieur) – and partly it was that, even if you do know how to stick up a mass of these thumbnails, it is still (for me anyway) a very unwieldy process to actually do, and to actually arrange them in a semi-coherent order, especially since this was the first blog posting effort along these lines that I have attempted.

The building is a scarily impressive edifice, or rather, agglomeration of edifices. I really missed not having a wide angle lens. As it was, it was like trying to photograph an elephant in a crowd. All I could do was assemble lots of details (hence the need for lots of pictures), with only occasional views that got the bigger picture, and none of the whole thing.

Which is only appropriate, considering that this is the EU, and that this entire building is itself only a relatively minor part of the big EU picture, which is itself utterly impossible to get in one snap.

Comments

That big starting capacitor strapped to the roof seems somehow appropriate.


Posted by D Anghelone at May 28, 2004 01:11 PM

It's horrifying.


Posted by Verity at May 28, 2004 02:31 PM

Ugly, bland, horrible buildings. So many institutional hq's recently have been; the new Scottish Executive building in Edinburgh looks like a shopping mall; a bad one at that!


Posted by A_t at May 28, 2004 02:34 PM

I'm continually astonished that architects that design crap like that that get a second commission, much less get to have a career.


Posted by Fred at May 28, 2004 03:49 PM

Fred you are missing the point that Brian was making, viz - this is intentionally intrusive and forbidding, out of scale and aggressively ugly because ... they can do it and there's nothing the citizens of the EU can do about it. Brian's point, if I am reading him right is, this is to teach us who is the boss.

"Here is what we can do with the tax money you sacrifice to pay."


Posted by Verity at May 28, 2004 05:25 PM

You might be interested in 'Stitching' software. You can take a series of digital photos from one spot, then use these programs to 'stitch' them together into one panoramic image.

I got one program about a year ago and have not had anything to use it on since then. This building seems like a good candidate.


Posted by Doug Collins at May 28, 2004 10:46 PM
Post a comment









Remember personal info?


Enter anti-spambot Turing code:





Select some text and click this to format it as a quote Make the selected text bold Make the selected text italic Add a web link


Basic html active.

Alas, but for obscure reasons Mozilla, Mac and Linux users shall not harness to power of the push-button formatting options and shall therefore compose basic html with their bare hands. Yet Mozilla, Mac and Linux users shall not fear, for we shall reveal forthwith the mysteries of Basic Html:

<strong>This text in-between is bold</strong>

<em>This text is in italics</em>

And
<blockquote>This is a quote</blockquote>
Remember to close your opened tags as such: <tag> tagged text and closing </tag> and we promise you will get out of here alive.

For adding links, either use the link URL button on the toolbar or enter your code by hand in the following format:
<a href="http://www.your_link.com">your link text or description here</a>

Movable Type's anti-spambot e-mail address protection is enabled.

You are a guest on private property. Have fun but please be civil and succinct. Blogroaches will be persecuted, not to mention IP banned.

Long third party quotes or articles will also be deleted... so just link to articles you think are germane to your comment, don't quote the whole bloody thing.