First Digital Map of World Ocean Floor….

This is a still shot of the world's first digital map of the seafloor's geology. Image credit: EarthByte Group, School of Geosciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia National ICT Australia (NICTA), Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh, NSW 2015, Australia

This is a still shot of the world’s first digital map of the seafloor’s geology. Image credit: EarthByte Group, School of Geosciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia National ICT Australia (NICTA), Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh, NSW 2015, Australia

Map key.

Map key.

Scientists have created a digital map of the global seafloor’s geology. It’s the first time the composition of our planet’s seafloor has been mapped in 40 years; the most recent map was hand drawn in the 1970s.

Published in the latest edition of Geology, the map will help scientists better understand how our oceans have responded, and will respond, to environmental change. It also reveals the deep ocean basins to be much more complex than previously thought. Adriana Dutkiewicz from the University of Sydney is the lead researcher. She said:

In order to understand environmental change in the oceans we need to better understand what is preserved in the geological record in the seabed.

The deep ocean floor is a graveyard with much of it made up of the remains of microscopic sea creatures called phytoplankton, which thrive in sunlit surface waters. The composition of these remains can help decipher how oceans have responded in the past to climate change.

A special group of phytoplankton called diatoms produce about a quarter of the oxygen we breathe and make a bigger contribution to fighting global warming than most plants on land. Their dead remains sink to the bottom of the ocean, locking away their carbon.

The new seafloor geology map demonstrates that diatom accumulations on the seafloor are nearly entirely independent of diatom blooms in surface waters in the Southern Ocean. Professor Dietmar Muller from the University of Sydney, is a study co-author. Muller said:

This disconnect demonstrates that we understand the carbon source, but not the sink.

Some of the most significant changes to the seafloor map are in the oceans surrounding Australia. Dutkiewicz said:

The old map suggests much of the Southern Ocean around Australia is mainly covered by clay blown off the continent, whereas our map shows this area is actually a complex patchwork of microfossil remains. Life in the Southern Ocean is much richer than previously thought.

The scientists analyzed and categorized around 15,000 seafloor samples – taken over half a century on research cruise ships to generate the data for the map. They teamed with the National ICT Australia (NICTA) big data experts to find the best way to use algorithms to turn this multitude of point observations into a continuous digital map. Simon O’Callaghan from NICTA is a study co-author. He said:

Recent images of Pluto’s icy plains are spectacular, but the process of unveiling the hidden geological secrets of the abyssal plains of our own planet was equally full of surprises!

Bottom line: Scientists have created a new digital map of the geology of Earth’s seafloor.

Source….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

The Epic Moment When Goddess Kali Took Over The Empire State Building In New York…

Goddess Kali is regarded as the Goddess of death but the death of an ego. Of all the forms of Devi, she is considered to be the most compassionate one because she provides moksha or liberation to her children. And now, people in New York would know about Her. Yeah, you read that right.

Goddess Kali was displayed on to the iconic Empire State building in New York which is considered to be the tallest building and also the key piece of NYC skyline.

Empire State building had started a new trend to feature extinct species across the world. But, featuring Goddess Kali was a class apart. Android Jones is the artist who designed the portrait of Kali.

Why Goddess kali? Because She represents the destruction of evil, Android thought it would be a good idea to feature Her. Hence, he opines that She would work as the epitome to fight dangers and pollution.

Recently, the much touted Cecil the lion was also featured there. The death of this lion by an American dentist had caused international outrage. It was broadcast in a picture more than 350 feet tall and 180 feet wide. Other than this, many animals were featured to garner people’s attention and subsequently, create awareness.

Source….Aparajita Mishra in http://www.storypick.com

Natarajan

 

Why this 50-yr-old makes India proud….?

Read on to learn how Raju Dabhade created history…

Raju Dhabade

Do you know this man?

No? Even I didn’t, till I met him.

Now that I have, I will never forget him.

He is a man who makes India proud.

No, he is not a celebrity or a sportsperson who has won medals for the country.

Fifty-year-old Raju Dabhade is the creator of the game of roll ball that will see its third World Championship in December, 2015, in Pune.

The first Roll Ball World Championship, held in 2011 in Pune, was won by Denmark; India was the first runner up.

The second World Cup, which India won, took place in Kenya in 2013.

“Roll ball is so named because it is a fast-paced game where the players use skates and the ball is always rolling, says Dabhade, who is also the general secretary of the International Roll Ball Federation.

Roll ball is a combination of basketball, handball, throwball and skating that requires balance, speed, accuracy and teamwork.

It is played between two teams; the objective is to score the maximum number of goals within a stipulated time.

So how did someone who, as young a boy, made ends meet doing odd jobs like working in a tea stall and delivering newspapers door-to-door end up inventing an international sport?

We asked Dabhade himself:

Raju Dabhade

How did roll ball begin?

As a Physical Training teacher in Pune’s MES Bal Shiksha English Medium School, I used to train and take players from different games for interschool competitions.

During the matches, I was always curious about the origin of these sports.

So I researched about them in detail — I used books from our school library and the internet.

I found out how different types of sports such as basketball, judo, hockey, football, etc, started, their history, playing techniques and strategies, different types of balls, etc.

Then, I began to wonder if it was possible to create a new game and started working on it.

Once in 2002, while teaching skating to students, a ball from the basketball court came bouncing over and I saw a student on skates bouncing the ball back to the players.

That’s how the idea of roll ball began.

It took one year to finally create the game with proper rules and techniques.

Raju Dabhade at the International Roll Ball Federation in Japan

How did roll ball get international recognition?

I took the idea of roll ball to the school’s then principal, Dr Sunitha Bhagwat.

She was very encouraging and talked to the students’ parents about it. I also contacted people I knew.

In February 2003, the official demonstration of the game was organised before the Sports Authority of India.

They liked it a lot and guided us on how to get the game recognised by the government.

We started working on the procedure and I personally went many times to New Delhi for this purpose.

After roll ball was recognised by the Indian government, we obtained a copyright certificate from the USA in March 2003.

Thereafter, first we contacted people in India and held matches here.

Once roll ball got national recognition, we started contacting the neighbouring countries and so on.

Dr Bhagwat adds: “PT teachers usually fall into a routine and are least motivated about getting involved in activities that are not within that routine or interacting with students. But Raju was different. He was an honest person who was good with people and went out of his way to help others.

“Initially, parents of his students funded expenses like transportation that were required for the game’s development.

“He had no financial or social support and lacked communication skills. Yet still, he never came to me with a problem.

“He would say that this is what he had found and needed to see how it works. Hence, I allowed him to use the school grounds for roll ball practices.

“All the support that he has is due to sheer goodwill.”

Raju Dabhade training students for Roll Ball

Can you tell us about your early days?

We were a financially poor family.

I was 15 when I lost my father. So I started earning early through odd jobs like working in a tea stall and door to door newspaper delivery.

I completed my education through night school and finally found a job as a PT teacher at BSEM school.

It has been 15 years since I stared working here and I am indebted to its people for having believed in me at the first go.

I am grateful to that newspaper delivery job which helped me feed my struggling family.

I now have a newspaper agency where I provide employment to poor boys.

You won the national level skating championship at school. How did that happen?

I wanted to learn skating but did not have enough money as my income went towards supporting my family.

Somehow, I managed to save some money and bought the basic skates with iron wheels.

I polished them well and covered them with rubber.

I learned skating on my own.

Later, a friend gave me a pair of good quality skates and I put my soul in practising with them.

I competed at the national level between 1980 and 1985. Then I got a job and couldn’t continue.

It will be the third world cup for roll ball. The game’s reach is surpassing the resources available to manage it. How has this been handled now and initially?

I am lucky. Behind the immense moral and financial support of the school management, friends and parents of students is perhaps the reputation I have earned over the years.

I was a punctual, fair and dedicated teacher, who was a mentor-cum-friend to students.

Fortunately, I have a very supportive wife.

My family never questions me about my whereabouts.

That is their faith in me, perhaps because I’ve never indulged in any wrong doing.

People like local businessmen and associations have also helped after seeing the matches.

Recently, we put up a sports stall in Russia.

As we couldn’t afford LCDs, I took the television set from my home and attached a pen drive to it.

We continuously played match videos and had many people stop by our stall.

What are your success mantras and advice to young Indians?

Work hard and don’t give up till you succeed.

Keep calm and be positive.

Pursue your passion and own your work.

Do something different and innovative.

Everyone gets the opportunity to succeed. Don’t miss it.

Make your nation proud.

Photographs: Kind courtesy Raju Dabhade

Payal Khare Bhatnagar    source….www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Most Beautiful Front Doors Around the World….!!!

Generally doors are sadly boring, but they don’t need to be; they might as well work as thoughtful designs of gateways between worlds or between diverse elements of our existences.

The front door is normally the sole component of a building’s outer part that everyone will interact most regularly with, so if you wish a building to look awesome, there’s likely no nicer way to do it than by designing a gorgeous door.

1. Toronto, Ontario, Canada

most-beautiful-doors-in-the-world-5

Source: mandalaybus

2. Garden Door

most-beautiful-doors-in-the-world-2

Source: wallpapersinhq.com

3. Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

cool-door-designs-5

Source: Ken Piorkowski

4. Northumberland, UK

colorful-doors-4

Source: Maree Turner

colorful-doors-2

Source: Rig

6. Funchal, Madeira, Portugal

 

beautiful-door-designs-5

Source: Natalie AE

7. Fes, Morocco

beautiful-door-designs-4

Source: David K. Edwards

8. Valparaiso, Chile

amazing-doors-5

Source: Byron Ellis

9. Pollença, Balearic Islands, Spain

 

amazing-doors-2

Source: silverlarynx

10. Shanghai, China

amazing-doors-1

Source: Sean Maynard

11. Sardinia, Italy

amazing-doors-4

Source: Pia – Artemisia1975

12. Garden Door by Kazuyuki Ishihara in Japan

amazing-doors-3

Source: Anya Langmead

13. Burano, Italy

beautiful-door-designs-1

Source: John C. Hutchins

14. German Alps

beautiful-door-designs-3

ource: Dominic Walter

15. Chefchaouen, Morocco

beautiful-door-designs-2

Source: Olga Osipova

16. Funchal, Madeira, Portugal

colorful-doors-1

Source: Ahrabella Heabe Lewis

17. Germagno, Piedmont, Italy

colorful-doors-3

Source: Wozz

18. Jaipur, India

colorful-doors-5

Source: payal.jhaveri

19. Valloria, Italy

cool-door-designs-1

Source: socket974

20. Soho, New York, New York, USA

most-beautiful-doors-in-the-world-4

Source: Gary Burke

21. Sintra, Lisbon, Portugal

most-beautiful-doors-in-the-world-3

Source: Amaury Henderick

22. Miami, Florida, USA

most-beautiful-doors-in-the-world-1

Source: jaydkim 

23. Bali, Indonesia

cool-door-designs-4

Source: Corinna A. Carlson

24. Montmartre, Paris, France

cool-door-designs-3

Source: John Kroll

25. Copenhagen, Denmark

cool-door-designs-2

Source: Ingeborg van Leeuwen

Source…www.top13.net

Natarajan

 

How Brooklyn girl Chanie Gorkin’s poem became a global sensation….Just Read it…

Across the seas ... teenager Chanie Gordon is “overwhelmed” by the global reaction to her

Across the seas … teenager Chanie Gordon is “overwhelmed” by the global reaction to her school assignment. Picture: Thinkstock Source: ThinkStock

A HASIDIC girl from Brooklyn, New York, wrote a clever poem that spread like wildfire online and became a hit after it was posted on a wall in London.

Chanie Gorkin, in eleventh grade at the all-girls Lubavitch high school Beth Rivkah in Crown Heights, jotted down the lines for a class assignment last year and then published it on PoetryNation.com.

What happened next is remarkable.

 

Zachery Stephenson, the events manager at the Nambucca bar on Holloway Road in North London had tacked the poem on a wall, after his cousin in New York had forwarded it in response to a negative Facebook post, US ABC News reports.

There it was seen by Ronnie Joice, who was feeling a “bit worn out” after a day of meetings about a prospective job.

The poem, which at first appears to be a bleak outlook on a bad day, contains a surprise. The ending instructs the reader to go back and re-read from the bottom to the top, which completely reverses its meaning.

Class assignment ... the Beth Rivkah High School in Crown Heights, where Chanie Gorkin wr

Class assignment … the Beth Rivkah High School in Crown Heights, where Chanie Gorkin wrote her poem and is in 11th grade. Picture: Google Streetview Source: Supplied

Mr Joice was so taken with the clever poem, he photographed and posted it to Twitter, which resulted in thousands of shares on social media.

The uplifting poem — ironically titled “Worst Day Ever?” — has since been translated into multiple languages, including Hebrew, Chinese and Russian. Her father, Baruch Gorkin, posted some of the translations to his Facebook page.

Chanie’s brother, Shimon Gorkin, proudly posted: “That’s my sister!”

Chanie’s mother, Dena Gorkin, confirmed to ABC News that her daughter wrote the poem. She also said Chanie was away at summer camp and unavailable for comment, but Mrs Gorkin has been telling her daughter about the reaction to the poem and “she’s quite overwhelmed.”

One of the major tenets of Hasidic philosophy is that the mind rules over the heart, that we are able to channel our emotions to the positive … that there is God in everything, and it is part of our mission in life to look for the good, and to find it and to spread it,” Mrs Gorkin said.

So, when Chanie was given the assignment to write about her worst day ever, she used her writing skills to turn the question around.

The Worst Day Ever, by Chanie Gorkin

Today was the absolute worst day ever

And don’t try to convince me that

There’s something good in every day

Because, when you take a closer look,

This world is a pretty evil place.

Even if

Some goodness does shine through once in a while

Satisfaction and happiness don’t last.

And it’s not true that

It’s all in the mind and heart

Because

True happiness can be attained

Only if one’s surroundings are good

It’s not true that good exists

I’m sure you can agree that

The reality

Creates

My attitude

It’s all beyond my control

And you’ll never in a million years hear me say

Today was a very good day

Now read it from bottom to top, the other way,

And see what I really feel about my day.

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

China Set To Open World’s Longest And Highest Glass-Bottom Bridge…

china

 

Courtesy of Haim Dotan Ltd. Architects and Urban Designers

China will soon finish construction on what will be the world’s tallest and longest glass pedestrian bridge, floating 300 meters above a canyon in the Zhangjiajie National Park. Designed by Israeli architect, Haim Dotan, the Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge will be 380 meters long, six meters wide and feature a transparent glass floor.

“The Zhangjiajie Glass Bridge was designed to be invisible as possible — a white bridge disappearing into the clouds,” said Dotan.

The bridge will comprise two side steel beams, a structural glass deck, handrails and side suspension cables, with the capacity to hold up to 800 people at a time. The Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge will also contain a bungee jumping spot and be used as a runway for fashion shows.

Construction is expected to wrap up in July, with the bridge officially opening to the public in October 2015. This follows the country’s recent inauguration of the world’s longest glass skywalk in Longgang National Geological Park in Chongqing.

China Set To Open World’s Longest And Highest Glass-Bottom Bridge originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website in May 2015.

Source….by Katie Watkins
This article originally appeared on ArchDaily http://www.huffingtonpost.com

Natarajan

“Bonsai”…The Story Behind this Name !!!

Bonsai!

Long before the bonsai art form of creating miniature trees came to Japan, the wealthy in China were perfecting their craft known as “penzai” and “penjing.” The former means “tray plant” and the latter “tray scenery.” It is from the Japanese pronunciation of “penzai” that the word “bonzai” ultimately derives- “bon” meaning “tray-like” and “sai” meaning “planting.”  (The Japanese equivalent of penjing is bonkei, meaning “tray landscape.”)

In the earliest form of penjing, first emerging as a developed art form around 600-700 AD in China, people would collect native trees and grow them in small containers as a part of elaborate miniaturized landscapes. Those tiny landscapes were often given as gifts among China’s elite.

While Buddhist monks and delegations sent from Japan to China had been bringing back to Japan miniaturized crafted landscapes as souvenirs starting not that long after the art of penjing had been established in China, it wasn’t until the Kamakura period in Japan (1192-1333 AD) that the Japanese seem to have adopted this craft. The catalyst for this widespread adoption was the introduction of Zen Buddhism to Japan. Around the same time in Japan, penjing was distilled down to single, miniature trees, rather than miniature landscapes being the focus, with famed Zen master Kokan Shiren being particularly influential in the spread of Zen Buddhism and defining bonsai as an art form.

Besides not strictly being “invented” in Japan, another common misconception about bonsai trees is that they are genetically dwarfed. Instead, they are regular tree and shrub species, traditionally pine, maples, and azaleas, which are manipulated using pruning techniques, including extensive root pruning, to dwarf and shape the plants.

While there are many different styles of bonsai, keeping everything balanced is key for whatever type and shape of bonsai tree that is grown, hence Mr. Miyagi’s lessons to Daniel-san about balance in The Karate Kid:

Miyagi: Go, find balance.
Miyagi: Bansai, Daniel-san.
Daniel: Hey, bansai!
Miyagi: Bansai!

For instance, if a leaf or a branch is disproportionately large given the size of the tree, throwing the whole thing out of balance, it should be removed.  One should also hide any signs of pruning, so that the resulting tree looks just like it was naturally grown that way and a perfect, to scale, miniature of what the full size version of the tree would look like if it had the same shape.

Once Japan adopted the craft from China, it began to spread among all classes of Japanese society. According to bonsai historian Robert Baran, by the late 18th century a show for “traditional pine dwarf potted trees” was held annually in Kyoto where, ”Connoisseurs from five provinces and the neighboring areas would bring one or two plants each to the show in order to submit them to the visitors for ranking or judging.”

After Japan ended its over two centuries of isolation in the 19th century, the bonsai tree would be popularized outside of the country at fairs and expos around the world, including the Paris Expositions (1878, 1889) and the St. Louis World’s Fair (1904).

WWII proved both a blessing and a curse to the growth of the bonsai art form.  On the major downside, many growers did not continue in this line of work after the war and numerous extremely old bonsai trees were destroyed. Some effort was given to preserving them, however, such as workers at the Tokyo Imperial Palace continually pouring water over and ultimately rescuing some of the remarkable Imperial Collection as the Palace was burning around them after the allied bombing of Tokyo on May 25, 1945.

On the positive side, at least in terms of helping to continue the popularization of the bonsai tree outside of Japan, many Allied troops occupying Japan admired the art form and even took classes in it, bringing it back with them to their respective homes.

More recently, the art form has been popularized in cinema with, of course, The Karate Kid leading the way.

oldest-bonsai-treeToday, there is a World Bonsai convention that takes place every four years to showcase the best bonsai masters and their work internationally. Washington D.C. also houses the National Bonsai & Penjing Museumdedicated to the miniaturized trees and landscapes.  And if you visit the Tokyo Imperial Palace and tour their bonsai collection, you can spy some of the finest specimens in the world, including one of the oldest known bonsai trees, the Third Shogun (pictured right), which is a five-needle pine that has been steadfastly maintained for an astounding five and a half centuries.

Source….www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

Saigon Post Office …Delivers on Style …

Old world charm of the Ho Chi Minh City post office.

Old world charm of the Ho Chi Minh City post office. Photo: Brian Johnston

In this era of Instragrams and emails, sending postcards is a thing of the past. When I was young, I stamp-licked in colonial-era post offices across Asia, and picked up my poste restante at Singapore’s GPO. It’s years since I was in an overseas post office but, luckily, Ho Chi Minh City’s is hard to miss.

It looks like a petite palace on the outside, all apricot paintwork and neoclassical moulding. Green shutters are folded back like butterfly wings. Couples borrow its romantic, Paris-style backdrop for wedding photos. Inside, though, vaulted steel arches are reminiscent of a Victorian-era railway station: no surprise when you learn the building was designed by Gustave Eiffel, who had already made his name designing bridges for French and Vietnamese railways.

Completed in 1891, Saigon post office has the optimistic architecture of a time when rail travel and telegraphy were rapidly expanding. Step inside and you’ll see a frescoed wall to your left that vaunts the telegraph lines snaking over 1930s Indochina. On the opposite wall, a map shows Saigon’s then rapidly expanding suburbs.

The clock above the entrance of the Ho Chi Minh City post office.

The clock above the entrance of the Ho Chi Minh City post office. Photo: Brian Johnston

The post office was completed in 1891. It’s a clever design, light yet airy. Green-painted ironwork clashes with salmon walls and the bright yellow uniforms of post-office staff. The floor is a glory of patterned tiles. But all eyes are drawn down the main hall to a huge portrait of Ho Chi Minh with a Mona Lisa smile. His moustache is impressive, his beard a wispy tangle.

Travellers of a certain age might feel sentimental. There are rows of still-working phone booths of the sort I used in my youth to call home, after considerable discussion with operators and much clicking on the lines. Young Korean tourists find them curious, and pose for photos with the old-fashioned earpieces to their heads. It tells you something about changed times, and the relentless, exhausting speed of our modern communications.

Slow down, look around. Peer through doors and spot workers at desks teetering with documents. Listen to clanking wind chimes from the souvenir shops that have taken over the entrance arcades. At the “parcels and items for packing” counter under the Uncle Ho portrait, watch parcels being wrapped. Elsewhere, locals send flowers and buy tickets for water-puppet shows.

Curved benches inside the post office.
Curved benches inside the post office. Photo: Brian Johnston

 

A public writer sits by a wooden desk awaiting customers. Duong Van Ngo is in his 80s and has worked for 60 years in this post office. He has wrist bones brittle as a bird’s wings, a full head of grey hair neatly combed. His face is a wrinkled map of history. He must remember the Americans and even the French, and what stories he could write down if he wasn’t scribbling for other people.

I like the colonial, tropical or perhaps communist lack of hurry, measured by the slow drag of flip-flops and the turn of ceiling fans that send wall calendars flapping. Workers sit stupefied behind computers, or read newspapers. Clients stretch and wait patiently, as if they, too, have succumbed to the post office’s opium charms. Only the tourists, who are on holiday, seem in a hurry, with their snap-snap of photos. Sit on a bench and linger a while, and be rewarded by entering a wrinkle in time in the midst of a city of boom and bustle.

See www.vietnamtourism.com

Source….Brian Johnston  in http://www.traveller.com.au

Natarajan

 

” உலகிலேயே சிறந்த வீடு இது …”

நிம்மதியாக வாழ ஓரிடம் வேண்டும் என்பதால் வீடு கட்டுவோர் ஒரு வகை. மற்றொரு பிரிவினர் தங்கள் வீட்டைப் பார்த்து பிறர் ஆச்சரியப்பட்டு நிற்க வேண்டும் என விரும்புவார்கள். இரண்டாம் பிரிவினருக்கு உலகத்திலேயே சிறந்த வீடாகத் தங்கள் வீடே இருக்க வேண்டும் என்ற ஆசையே இருக்கும்.

ஒருவேளை இப்படியோர் ஆசையில் வீடு கட்டத் தொடங்கி, அதை வெற்றிகரமாக முடிக்க விரும்புபவராக நீங்கள் இருந்தால் உங்களுக்கு மைக் ஸ்பிங், அவருடைய மனைவி மரியா ஆகியோர் கட்டியிருக்கும் வீடு கடும் சவாலாக இருக்கும். இந்தச் சவாலை முறியடித்தால் மட்டுமே நீங்கள் அவருடைய வீட்டை மிஞ்சி ஒரு வீடு கட்ட முடியும். ஏனென்றால் இந்தத் தம்பதி கடந்த ஐந்து வருடங்களில் உலகில் கட்டப்பட்ட வீடுகளில் சிறந்த வீட்டைக் கட்டியிருக்கிறார்கள்.

உலகிலேயே சிறந்த வீடு என்றால் அது எப்படி இருக்கும் என்ற கற்பனையுடன் அந்த வீட்டை நீங்கள் பார்க்கும்போது அந்த வீடு உங்களை ஏமாற்றக்கூடும். ஏனெனில் அந்த வீடு ஒரே தளத்தை மட்டுமே கொண்டிருக்கிறது. ஒரே தளத்தைக் கொண்ட வீடு அதுவும் பார்ப்பதற்கு போர் சமயத்தில் பதுங்க உதவும் பதுங்குக் குழி போன்ற தோற்றத்தைக் கொண்ட வீடு எப்படிச் சிறந்த வீடாக இருக்க முடியும் என்ற எண்ணமே மேலெழும்.

ஆனால் வெளிச்சமும் காற்றும் தங்கு தடையின்றிப் புழங்கும் வகையில், பசுமையான சூழலின் நடுவே வெள்ளை நிறத்தில் எழும்பி நிற்கும் அந்த வீட்டை ஒரு முறை பார்த்தாலே மனதில் அப்படியே ஒட்டிக்கொள்ளும் தன்மையை அந்த வீடு கொண்டிருக்கிறது.

தென்கிழக்கு இங்கிலாந்தின் ஆக்ஸ்ஃபோர்டுஷைரில் அமைந்துள்ளது, ஃபில்ண்ட் ஹவுஸ் என்னும் அந்த வீடு. மூன்று படுக்கை அறைகளைக் கொண்டது அது. 2015-ம் ஆண்டுக்கான ‘த ஆர்க்கிடெக்ஸுரல் ரிவ்யூ ஹவுஸ் அவார்ட்’டை அந்த வீடு பெற்றிருக்கிறது. விருதுக் குழுவினர் மைக் ஸ்பிங்கின் வீட்டை முழுமையாக ஆராய்ந்து இந்த விருதை வழங்கியுள்ளார்கள். கட்டுறுதிமிக்கது, ஒழுங்கு முறையான வெளித் தோற்றம் கொண்டது, சவால் விடும் வடிவமைப்பு கொண்டது என வீட்டைக் குறித்து விருதுக் குழுவின் நடுவர்கள் கருத்துத் தெரிவித்துள்ளனர்.

கட்டுமான அதிபர் மைக் ஸ்பிங் தனது பெருமைக்குரிய வீட்டுக்கான இடத்தை 2008-ல் வாங்கியுள்ளார். அப்போது அதன் விலை சுமார் 66 கோடி. 50 ஏக்கர் பரப்பு கொண்ட இடத்தில்தான் விருதுபெற்ற இல்லத்தை அமைத்திருக்கிறார் அவர். அந்த இடத்தில் முன்பு வடிவமைப்பு ரீதியான எந்த முக்கியத்துவமுமற்ற 20-ம் நூற்றாண்டின் தொடக்க கால அமைப்பைக் கொண்ட வீடு ஒன்று இருந்திருக்கிறது.

தொடர்ச்சியான எட்டுக் கட்டிடங்களைக் கொண்டதாகவும், ஓர் உடற்பயிற்சிக் கூடம், ஒரு பண்ணை இல்லம், ஒரு நீச்சல் குளம் ஆகியவற்றைக் கொண்டதாகவும் அந்த வீடு இருந்திருக்கிறது. இதை வாங்கி அந்த இடத்தில்தான் மைக் தன் கனவு இல்லத்தைக் கட்டி முடித்திருக்கிறார்.

கட்டிடக் கலையில் நிபுணத்துவம் பெற்ற டேவிட் சிப்பர்ஃபீல்டு என்னும் கட்டிடக் கலைஞரிடம் வீட்டை நிர்மானிக்கும் பொறுப்பை மைக் ஒப்படைத்துவிட்டார். அவர் உருவாக்கிய நவீனமும் பாரம்பரியமும் சரிவிகிதத்தில் கலந்த இந்த மூன்று படுக்கையறை வீடுதான் இன்று மைக்குக்குப் பெருமை தேடித் தந்துள்ளது. 11 கான்கிரீட் தூண்களின் மேலே கம்பீரமாக நிற்கும் அந்தப் பாரம்பரிய இங்கிலாந்து வீட்டைப் பார்ப்பவர்கள் அவ்வளவு எளிதில் மறந்துவிட மாட்டார்கள்.

Source….www.tamil.thehindu.com
Natarajan

How a Differently Abled Student’s Letter to Nike is Now Changing Many Lives…

How a Differently Abled Student's Letter to Nike is Now Changing Many Lives

Image Courtesy: Screengrab taken from YouTube video uploaded by Nike Basketball

A 16 year old cerebral palsy had a very simple request. He was going to college soon and wouldn’t have his parents there to tie his shoelaces for him. So he wrote a letter to one of the biggest shoe brands in the world and put it up on social media.

And it was Matthew Walzer’s 2012 letter to Mark Parker, Chief Executive Officer of Nike, that resulted in an invention that will help millions of differently abled people in the world.

“I wanted to say look, this is a real issue; these are daily challenges that millions of disabled people face,” says Matthew Walzer in a video released by Nike. It explains how designer Tobie Hatfield and the company came up with the idea of a “wraparound zipper system” that makes getting in and out of shoes much easier for those who face difficulty while using their hands.

“I’ll never forget that night. Taking them out of the box and putting them on – I just felt this wave of independence that I never got to experience before,” says Matthew.

The video makes for a beautiful watch, not only because of the shoes they present to Matthew. They also surprise him by introducing him to one of his favourite sportstars.
Take a look at video below and always remember Tobie Hatfield’s words: “At some point, some people become less able sooner than others. But eventually, we all become less able.”

Source….www.ndtv.com and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan