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Showing posts from April, 2025

Unit 3 Portfolio

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Link to podcast episode: https://kkapla01.wixsite.com/why-blog/post/beyond-the-facade-podcast Beyond the Facade: 'How Does Technology Frame the World Around Us?' Podcast description: Technology is everywhere—but are we framing it, or is it framing us? A group of tired architecture students talk about how digital tools shape how we see and design. We're not just talking influence: we mean literally framing reality. From camera lenses and phone screens to Revit renderings and news headlines, technology sets the boundaries of what we notice, what we ignore, and what stories get told. In this episode, we explore the concept of the ‘frame’ not just as a visual boundary, but a narrative device. We look at how architecture, media, animation, and journalism all use frames to direct attention and shape meaning. Why does a TikTok feel different from a film? What stories get built into a render or an elevation? How do windows, diagrams, and even news articles act as curated viewpoints...

Unit 3 Reflection

  When choosing a genre and medium for our Unit 3 Project, we were faced with both a challenge and an opportunity. As a group of four architecture students, we knew we didn’t want to do just another research paper or design proposal. We spend so much of our academic lives focused on visual media (drawings, renders, plans) that the chance to work in a completely different format felt exciting. We also wanted our project to feel like something we would actually enjoy consuming, which is how we landed on a podcast. Our episode, ‘How Technology Frames the World Around Us’ was the result of several late night studio chats, where one conversation always spirals into another in a state of sleeplessness. From the state of digital tools in architecture, to Instagram algorithms, to the uncanny aesthetic of AI-generated images, we started to notice a pattern: technology doesn’t just support our work, it shapes how we see, design, and communicate. Additionally, that pattern doesn’t just apply ...

Graphic Novels

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While reading I Was Their American Dream by Malaka Gharib, I was struck by how the graphic novel functions not just as a storytelling device, but as a kind of technology in itself: one that blends words and visuals to communicate identity, culture, and personal history in a deeply engaging way. Gharib’s use of hand-drawn illustrations, playful diagrams, and handwritten fonts creates a personal, almost zine-like aesthetic that mirrors the DIY ethos of expressing complex emotions and experiences outside traditional literary forms. As the daughter of a Filipino mother and an Egyptian father, Gharib’s experience growing up in America is full of contradictions, negotiations, and small moments of clarity. The uniquely colorful visual format, with its limited color palette of oranges and blues, allows her to capture this nuance—tiny shifts in facial expression, symbolic imagery, or the layout of a page do just as much storytelling as her words. This layering of meaning is where the 'tech...

Reddit

Reddit operates as an ideological battlefield online, where anonymity allows for users to share controversial opinions, unfiltered discourse, and collective identity. This makes Reddit uniquely political. The podcast episodes listened to in class provided context for Reddit's existence, as well as what similar such digital spaces mean for our future. Reddit's structure means that it has a capacity to amplify certain niche communities and also blur the boundaries between credible sources and misinformation. In 99% Invisible 's discussion of 'Lost Cities of Geo Redux', the hosts discuss the 'One Terabyte of the Kilobyte Age' project, which archives GeoCities pages, paralleling the archival efforts so central to the Reddit community. Similar to subreddits such as r/datahoarders, the project emphasizes the importance of preserving digital spaces that would otherwise be lost to time. Both platforms serve as time capsules, showcasing how the internet functioned in...