• Judgement day for Stanton Williams revamp of Seiferts Knightsbridge hotel
    www.architectsjournal.co.uk
    Kensington and Chelsea planners have advised the councils planning committee to approve the application to add four storeys to the five-star 1973 Park Tower Hotel and rework the impervious podium and public realm. The designs go before the committee on Thursday (3 April).The 40m-tall tower, just south of Hyde Park, will increase by 15m in height under Stanton Williams plans. The 2012 Stirling Prize winners proposed rooftop addition will rise 10m above the height of an existing application drawn up by Darling Associates, which was approved in 2020.The latest scheme would remove the existing two top floors before adding an extension of six storeys, four of which will house eight flats. None of the homes will be designated affordable.AdvertisementThe other storeys will be given over to hotel rooms.Stanton Williams claims the 52-year-old cylindrical building currently appears squat and suggested the added height would give it a vertical emphasis denoting successful tall buildings.The hotels distinctive mosaic tiles would also be cleaned under the plans, alongside other more minor changes such as replacing the windows and thermally improving the facade.The podium, described by council planners in its current state as unattractive, would be redeveloped with a restaurant and roof terrace, as well as other commercial space. This tower base currently contains a casino, which would not survive the redevelopment. Planners said this would be welcomed.Stanton Williams said the revamped podium would transform the public realm into an attractive and welcoming place, animated by active frontages and transparent elevations, sympathetic to the surrounding context. They described the current state of the frontage and streetscape as poor and uninspiring.AdvertisementThe plans also include an extension of the basement to include an electrical substation and the removal of a public underground car park below the hotel.The number of hotel rooms would decrease from 271 to 240.Hotel owners Marriott said that it would not be commercially viable to include affordable housing in the hotel extension. If planning permission is granted Marriott set to pay 16.5 million to offset this.Stanton Williams said it had the aim of bringing the building back to life, regenerating a very prominent site in the heart of Knightsbridge, and achieving significant enhancements to the local streetscape and public realm.Recommending approval, council planning officers said the scheme provides high-quality residential and commercial floorspace in a sustainable edge-of-town-centre location, adding that the extensions and alterations had been carefully designed to respect the context of the site.Proposals with red line showing outline of the existing building
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  • These Are the Best Photoshop AI Tools: How to Use Generative Fill, Expand and Remove
    www.cnet.com
    Photoshop has gotten an AI makeover in recent years. Here are the AI tools that you can use now.
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  • I Want to See These Forgotten Nintendo Games on the Switch 2
    www.cnet.com
    With Nintendo's next-gen console on the horizon, it's a perfect time to revive some classic game titles with fresh graphics and features.
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  • As Happened in Texas, Ignoring EPA Science Will Allow Pollution and Cancer to Fester
    www.scientificamerican.com
    OpinionApril 1, 20253 min readAs Happened in Texas, Ignoring EPA Science Will Allow Pollution and Cancer to FesterTrump administration plans to destroy EPA science will leave the air we breathe and the water we drink more pollutedBy Jennifer Sass Cows graze near the Oak Grove Power Plant in Robertson County, Texas, subject to EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) rules to reduce carbon emissions and mercury pollution under the Biden administration. Brandon Bell/Getty ImagesIve spent my scientific career asking the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to set stronger, lawful public-health protections from toxic chemicals. I do not always agree with EPAs final decisions, but I respect the scientific process and am always grateful for the agencys scientistsour public brain trust.In one of the most dangerous acts against facts and science, the Trump administration announced in March that it will shutter the EPAs independent research office. This will cut more than 1,000 scientists and technical experts who help the agency determine if, for example, a chemical poses a cancer risk, or a factory is polluting a nearby river. At the same time, Trumps EPA has installed former oil and chemical industry lobbyists to write the rules to regulate those industries.Theres a lot of empty talk about making us healthy coming from this administration. Future generations will be even worse off.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.What is left unsaid by the Trump EPA is this: eliminating scientists from the EPA is kneecapping environmental safeguards. Every major environmental statutethe Clean Air Act, the Safe Drinking Water Act and the Superfund law governing cleanup requirementsrelies on EPA scientists to calculate how hazardous chemicals are, how people and wildlife may be exposed and what health and ecological harms may occur. Questions critical to environmental and community protections are researched, such as: Will exposure to this chemical in my workplace increase my risk of breast cancer? Is the air quality from power plant emissions safe for the neighboring community? What is an acceptable standard for PFAS forever chemicals in our drinking water?A drone view of the Sulphur Bank mercury mine Superfund site in Clearlake Oaks, Calif., on Tuesday, Jan. 30, 2024.Jane Tyska/Digital First Media/East Bay Times via Getty ImagesInstead, the Trump team is yet again swinging its chainsaw, this time against independent science to favor polluting industries. Consequent to gutting scientific inquiries by the government and decimating academic scientific research, only one type of scientific research will be available for setting environmental standards: polluter research. And thats trouble. The public is right to distrust polluter-sponsored science; see tobacco science and the myth of safe nuclear waste for starters.Just ask Texas. The state of Texass vigorous defense of ethylene oxide, a well-known carcinogen, provides an ongoing example of the perils to public health from science done by a polluting industry with a financial interest in the outcome and the support of a state government hell-bent on rewriting scientific facts about a cancer-causing chemical.In 2016, after nearly 10 years of research and analysis, the EPA determined ethylene oxide, a chemical widely used in facilities in Texas and Louisiana to sterilize medical equipment, was linked to cancerwith a 30 times greater risk than the EPA had previously found. EPAs new risk evaluation included a study of over 300 breast cancer cases in women working with the chemical and adjusted for added risks where children may be exposed.EPAs report was finalized after multiple internal reviews, and reviews from other government agencies, with public input including from Texas and the industry on many occasions. There were also two rounds of public review by the agencys science advisory board.Rather than accept that finding, the chemical industry and Texas regulatory agency issued its own alternative report in 2020 on ethylene oxide. In stark contrast with EPAs evaluation, the Texas assessment is a contractor product sponsored by the ethylene oxide industry with limited public review. It fails to account for the risk of breast cancer and could allow over 3,000 times more air pollution to be emitted, which would drastically increase illnesses and deathsincluding from cancerfor workers and nearby communities.In an effort to compel EPA to adopt Texas cancer-friendly risk estimates nationally, Texas requested a review of its findings by the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, the nations top source of high-quality trusted science and health advice.In March, the National Academies issued its final report, rebuking the foundations of the Texas analysis, finding it repeatedly deviated from best scientific practices and failed to offer a credible basis for its findings, specifically its determination that ethylene oxide was not associated with breast cancer.Texas efforts to rewrite the history of cancer-causing ethylene oxide as a benign, no-big-deal chemical, is just the beginning of the toxic mayhem and misinformation we can expect from the Trump team to support the financial interests of toxic polluters.Erasing cancer evidence, fudging data, and pretending wild claims are the truth will become the norm, undermining every environmental law and regulation in the nation, and compromising our right to health.All of us will suffer for it.This is an opinion and analysis article, and the views expressed by the author or authors are not necessarily those of Scientific American.
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  • Even Four-Year Olds Instinctively Fact-Check for Misinformation
    www.scientificamerican.com
    April 1, 20254 min readFour-Year Olds Respond to Misinformation by Exercising Instinctive Skepticism MusclesChildren ages four to seven demonstrate natural fact checking skills when put to a test with zebras and space aliensBy Gary Stix edited by Dean Visser Sanjeri/Getty ImagesSocial scientists have long studied how children develop a sense of trust in others and how they judge whether someone they are talking to is telling the truth. Less attention has been devoted to how young children judge what is true or false in their early encounters with social media.That has started to change as the online world has become a routine fixture of childrens lives. By the time they reach the age of nine, one third of American children have come into contact with at least one social media platform. By the teen years, social media has become young peoples main source of news about the world around them. An immediate challenge for these neophytes is distinguishing between what is real and fake onlinea struggle exacerbated by AI-based chatbots that deliver relentless streams of untruths.One obvious solution is to isolate a child from such lies and distortions, but a safe refuge has proved elusive. The YouTube Kids channel faced parents outrage in 2017, when inappropriately sexual, lewd and violent content turned up after the platforms filters labeled it child-friendly. (YouTube Kids responded by increasing parental controls.) Another possible approach involves prebunking: inoculating kids to misinformation by letting them know that what they are about to see is false. Similar techniques are used to alert adults about falsehoods related to climate change or vaccinations.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.A different and perhaps more inventive tack entails accepting the inevitability of children spending time online and prodding them to become their own fact-checkers. Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, tested such an approach by asking whether children could learn to recognize misinformationand to use that ability to develop their own fact-checking skills.Evan Orticio, a graduate student in the research group of Berkeley psychologist Celeste Kidd, and colleagues designed a study to investigate the natural fact-checking abilities of young children. The researchers went to parks near campus to interview families who might be willing to participate and recruited 122 children from four to seven years of age for a gamified fact-checking exercise. We were looking, Orticio says, at whether children can adjust their level of skepticism according to the quality of information theyve seen before and translate that into a reasonable policy for how much they should fact-check new information.The kids who joined the study were handed a tablet with content that was presented in the format of either an e-book or a search engine. They were shown a series of statements with accompanying images.Hippos swim in water, read one statement.Hippos swim in outer space, read another.For each statement, the kids were asked to indicate whether they thought it was factual while they inspected realistic images of, say, zebras or hippos.Then they were asked to look at a different page on the tablet that showed 20 space aliens called zorpies. One zorpie had its face exposed to reveal that it had three eyes. The kids then were asked to confirm whether the statement all zorpies have three eyes was, in fact, true. They were given the opportunity to tap on any number of the 20 zorpies to remove the aliens sunglasses and count their eyes before deciding whether the claim was factual.Children who had been exposed to more falsehoods when they were being quizzed about animals in the first part of the exercise removed the glasses from more zorpies, on average, to count the number of eyes. They were more careful to fact-check claims, so they spent longer and sought out more evidence before just accepting this claim about aliens, Orticio says. Kids who had less exposure to false claims did little fact-checkinga conclusion further bolstered by a computer simulation of the games. The results of this research were published in Nature Human Behaviour last October.The conclusions drawn from this research, Orticio says, suggest that oversanitizing childrens media consumptionallowing exposure only to sites labeled kid-friendlymay be a mistake. It can prevent the development of skills that allow a child to discriminate between true and false.Slowly but steadily, the need to teach children to identify misinformation at a young age is gaining recognition. Finlands public school system, for example, now incorporates lessons on media literacy (including how to spot fake news) that begin in preschool.Judith Danovitch, a professor of psychological and brain sciences at the University of Louisville, who was not involved in the research, called the studies methods clever. The results are a great starting point for solving the puzzle of how to help children become informed consumers of information, she says. But, she adds, more research is needed before the authors methods can be adapted into a practical intervention. As the authors point out, it has yet to be seen whether these effects last or extend into other domains.One way to achieve that goal, Orticio proposes, would be to distribute something like the researchers fact-checking game on social media or even on childrens websites such as YouTube Kids. Childrens skepticism is context-specific, Orticio says, so the key is to give them safe opportunities to practice critical thinking in the real, digital world.
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  • The Last of Us showrunner responds to criticism Bella Ramsey looks too young to play Ellie in season two
    www.eurogamer.net
    The Last of Us showrunner responds to criticism Bella Ramsey looks too young to play Ellie in season two"I'm interested in the emotional maturity."Image credit: HBO News by Victoria Kennedy News Reporter Published on April 1, 2025 The Last of Us showrunner Craig Mazin has addressed those criticising Bella Ramsey for not looking older as Ellie in the show's upcoming second season.Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter, Mazin said he understands "the difficulty that some people have where they say, 'She looked like she was 14 in season one. She still looks roughly the same to us, even though now she's 19'."Mazin added he appreciates Ellie in The Last of Us Part 2 does look "much older" than she did in the first game. However, when it comes to the show, he isn't "interested in the physical aspect" of Ellie's appearance.To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Does Anyone Really Want Long Games Anymore? Watch on YouTube"Some people do change quite dramatically and some people don't," Mazin said. "I've been looking at Bella's face for years while editing, and I can see that she's certainly grown. I'm interested in the emotional maturity, and the change in personality."The Last of Us showrunner added he has "watched Bella grow and become independent and start to find her own two feet separate and apart from her parents", stating it's also about "how do I figure out how to be my own person now and test that full independence?"This is something he "[feels in] Ellie completely" when it comes to Ramsey's portrayal of the character."So, I understand where people are coming from, but when they watch this year, I think they're going to see the difference," Mazin closed. Image credit: Naughty Dog Image credit: HBOThe second season of The Last of Us is set to debut next month, and will comprise seven episodes. It will not cover the entirety of The Last of Us Part 2, with subsequent episodes expected to wrap up the narrative.Earlier this week, Naughty Dog's Neil Druckmann weighed in on the 'Was Joel right' debate, following the end of the first game (and first series).
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  • Balatro creator impressed onlookers with his card skills at public event, without being recognised
    www.eurogamer.net
    Balatro creator impressed onlookers with his card skills at public event, without being recognised"Wow you must have played this before!"Image credit: Localthunk News by Ed Nightingale Deputy News Editor Published on April 1, 2025 The anonymous creator of Balatro, LocalThunk, impressed passersby at last month's Game Developer Conference with his card skills, but nobody recognised him.Balatro won several awards at GDC's Game Developers Choice Awards, including Game of the Year, Best Design, Best Debut, and Innovation Award. As a result of the nominations, the game had a booth on the show floor.LocalThunk himself played the game there, but managed to retain his anonymous status despite impressing onlookers at the booth.Balatro - Friends of Jimbo (Pack 3) | Reveal TrailerWatch on YouTube"One of my fav moments from GDC - they had a booth set up to play Balatro since it was an award nominee. I watched for a bit then I gave it a go myself. Crushed a white stake run," the developer wrote on Bluesky."Someone approached me as I was about to leave. 'Wow you must have played this before!'"'I guess you could say that'."He added: "Also this was actually the first and only time I have seen strangers play my game in real life. Have yet to see Balatro in the wild. So as far as I'm concerned y'all are just Truman Show-ing me."one of my fav moments from GDC - they had a booth set up to play Balatro since it was an award nominee. I watched for a bit then I gave it a go myself. Crushed a white stake runsomeone approached me as I was about to leave'Wow you must have played this before!''I guess you could say that' localthunk (@localthunk.bsky.social) 31 March 2025 at 19:42To see this content please enable targeting cookies.It's certainly a fun anecdote from a developer wishing to remain anonymous as a result of the game's success.As with previous awards shows, Playstack Communications Director Wout Van Halderen collected Balatro's wins on LocalThunk's behalf.In an interview last year, LocalThunk admitted he sometimes regrets Balatro's success, despite being grateful."Don't get me wrong - this has changed my life in a lot of amazing ways," he said. "I'm so grateful. But I do miss that time before. It was just a hobby that recharged my batteries. Sometimes I think, 'Maybe I would've been happier if I had never released this game to the public.'"The correct pronunciation of the game's name has also been revealed. Have you been pronouncing Balatro wrong?
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  • PS Plus players should buy 3.99 game now to get huge UE5 remaster completely free
    www.videogamer.com
    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games herePS Plus subscribers have some great additions for April. The Essential games are now out, and they include the magnificent RoboCop, as well as Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Digimon. The extra additions for later include a day-one GOTY contender, as well as another episodic adventure. Before the Extra games are released, PS Plus subscribers should make sure to buy a 3.99 game right now to get a huge new Unreal Engine 5 remaster completely free.PS Plus subs should buy 3.99 game now to get Unreal Engine 5 remaster freeAs part of the PSN store Spring sale, PS Plus subscribers can buy the fantastic horror game, The Sinking City, for just 3.99. This deal lasts until April 10th. If you do not have a PS Plus subscription, then the current deal is 5.99, which is a massive cut from the standard fee of 39.99.The Sinking City is a fantastic detective horror game set within the confines of H.P. Lovecraft. Wed recommend buying it alone because of how good the game is, plus the fact a sequel is officially in-development. However, theres now another reason to buy the game so cheap, and that reason is because existing owners will get an Unreal Engine 5 remaster for free.Yep, you heard right. If you own the PS5 version of the game right now, you will get a UE5 remaster at no additional cost. There is no 10 fee such as with remasters for PlayStation console exclusives like Horizon Zero Dawn.Per WCCFTech, the Unreal Engine 5 remaster will feature an upgraded visual experience, sporting 4K textures, new lighting, improved detail and reflections, 4K textures, support for NVIDIA DLSS, AMD FSR, and TSR upscaling and more. There will also be the addition of photo mode as well as highly-requested quality-of-life improvements.Theres no release date for the Unreal Engine 5 remaster as of writing, but, again, its worth buying The Sinking City so cheap right now so you can get the remaster for free. The UE5 remaster will only apply to the PS5 version of the game and not the PS4.In other news, Fortnite players can unlock a new PS Plus skin for free.Related TopicsPS Plus Subscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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  • Metal Gear Solid Delta isnt removing Subsistences saucy Peep Theatre, confirms age rating
    www.videogamer.com
    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games hereKonamis upcoming Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater will be retaining some of the saucier elements of the PlayStation 2 original. Seemingly based on the games Subsistence update, an official age rating confirms that more sexual elements of the original will be returning in the new remake.With Konami aiming to keep the game as faithful to the original as possible, despite a new modern control scheme that makes the game easier, it makes sense for some of the games risque elements come back. However, with modern sensibilities, it is surprising to see them return.Metal Gear Solid Delta retains risque featuresAs confirmed in the games new ESRB age rating prior to the games August release, Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater is not only retaining some of the sexual elements of the games cutscenes, but also its bonus features.In the Subsistence version of Snake Eater, players could unlock the Peep Demo Theatre. This feature not only showed every cutscene of the game involving Eva in her underwear, but also allowed them to zoom in and ogle the characters body.The game contains some suggestive/sexual content, the ESRB rating reveals. A man groping a womans breasts; close-up cameras angles of deep cleavage; a character briefly groping a mans crotch; a Peep Demo Theatre allowing players to view cutscenes of a female characters body from a first-person perspective.Konamis dedication to recreating the original game has not gone unnoticed. As well as the return of the Peep Demo Theatre, the company is also bringing back the licensed Ape Escape content for PC and PS5, although this is replaced with a new Bomberman section on Xbox. Additionally, the game is even retaining the originals gated area loading instead of making more seamless levels.For more Metal Gear coverage, read about the reason why Snake walks funny in the original, or read about how Hideo Kojima wanted to leave Konami before the first game released.Metal Gear Solid Delta Snake EaterPlatform(s):PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series S, Xbox Series S/X, Xbox Series XGenre(s):Third PersonRelated TopicsSubscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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  • Meet Julian Abele, the Black Architect Who Was a Cornerstone of Americas Gilded Age
    www.architecturaldigest.com
    There are countless examples of Black ingenuity and cultural impact that have gone under-recognizedor intentionally obscuredas part of this countrys history, but Julian Francis Abele was a hidden figure somewhat by design. The African American architect from Philadelphia, who died in 1950 at age 68, was the first Black graduate from the University of Pennsylvanias architecture department and would ultimately become cohead of the renowned Horace Trumbauer firm. Known by many to be relatively shy, serious, and uninterested in the limelight, Abele used his impressive architectural gifts to carve a place in history, guaranteeing that, despite largely working in the shadows, his presence in the industry would forever be seen.He was more than content to do his work in the background, says Peter D. Cook, Abeles great grandnephew and design principal at HGA in Washington, DC. But knowing that he had an impact which still today can be felt and admired throughout a great city like Philadelphia gives me chills.Julian Abele.Courtesy of Duke UniversityDuring its peak reign during Americas Gilded Age, the Trumbauer firm was known for designing lavish residential manors for prominent business magnates and robber barons across the Eastern Seaboard. The firms storied portfolio also included public commissions like churches, hotels, libraries, and museums that were meant to inspire wonder and awe.At the turn of the 20th century, it was customary for architectural designs to be credited to the firm as a whole, so most designersincluding Abeledidnt initial the offices drawings. Though this lack of attribution means that Abeles fingerprints across the design process have had to be unearthed over time, it didnt correlate to a lack of respect for, or recognition of, his talent. From what I gather, he was paid a nice salary for the time, he was obviously a highly valued employee, Cook says. I have to give Trumbauer some credit as well, because he was a white man whoat the turn of the centuryentrusted a Black man to design his most prized commissions for the incredibly influential clients he had.Abele was responsible for the design of all of Trumbauers cut stone building commissions (as working with limestone was his specialty), and he was celebrated for his brilliant implementation of Beaux Arts in America, a French architectural style marked by a synthesis of neoclassical French, Renaissance, and Baroque elements, including sculptural ornamentation, arched windows, and grandiose entrances and staircases known as noble spaces.An indoor stadium at Duke University designed by Abele.Courtesy of Duke UniversityThe influence of Beaux Arts architectureAccording to Dreck Spurlock Wilson, ASLA, NOMA, and associate professor of architectural history at Howard University, Abele was always interested in 18th-century French architecturein fact, he identified as a Francophile. Abele reportedly attended the Pennsylvania Museum School of Industrial Art, which had a strong French influence on him, and by the time he began his studies at the University of Pennsylvania, it was one of the four or five schools of architecture in the US that was actually practicing and teaching the philosophy of Beaux Arts.Bill Whitaker, curator and collections manager of the Architectural Archives at the University of Pennsylvania, suggests that Abeles adoption of this style was equal parts problem-solving and innovation. [It was about] absorbing lessons of the past but also embracing the changing dynamics of the modern world, he explains. [Abele] was really an incredible expert with French Renaissance architecture; I think he loved the nuance of it and loved studying it. He was immediately recognized as a talent. During his sophomore year, Abele joined the architecture society; by his senior year, his classmates had elected him as president.Once Abele was a professional architect, he would go on to design Eisenlohr Hall, which functions as the on-campus home of UPenns president. Whitaker claims that credit for this design was only discovered in recent years, when a rare instance of his initials was found on a set of drawings for the structure. You can see him establishing himself within the firm, and his skills are clear, he says. Its his hand that is developing the critical elements on the faade of buildings.The Cook-Abele House in Spokane, Washington, as photographed in 1959.Courtesy of the Washington State Digital ArchivesAfter Abele graduated from UPenn in 1902 (and before he joined Trumbauers firm as the assistant to a chief designer in 1906), he traveled west to Spokane, Washington, to visit his older sister Elizabeth Abele Cook and her family. During this trip, he designed their home, which was formally recognized as a historic property by Spokanes Landmark Commission in a unanimous vote last year. Its maybe his first attribution for a significant structure, and the only one west of the Mississippi, says Logan Camporeale, historic preservation specialist for the city and county of Spokanes historic preservation office. It has had a lot of changes [since] and sometimes historic preservationists may not be interested in a building like this because it has changed so much, but the story is so important.The home, which was completed in 1905, still has vestiges of the French eclectic style Abele drew up. Its really not typical in Spokane, there are only a handful of other examples which came at least a decade later, Camporeale notes of the aesthetic, adding that he was ahead of the curve and really interested in Beaux Arts, so it makes sense he was experimenting with [another] French style [early in his career].Wilson shares that when Abele returned to Philadelphia and began working for the offices of Trumbauer, there were only about four Negro architects who were licensed and practicing. The architect ascended fairly quickly, becoming chief designer in 1909. Even still, on his application to the American Institute of Architects, where he gained admission in 1942, he only lists the Cook-Abele House in Spokane and a project he worked on after Trumbauers death in 1938 (when he became cohead of the firm with William O. Frank) as his past work experience. So he himself did not want to take specific credit for jobs within the Trumbauer office, Whitaker notes.Philadelphia Museum Of Art in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on August 27, 2016.Photo by Raymond Boyd/Getty ImagesThe beautification of PhiladelphiaAbeles work aligned neatly with the City Beautiful Movement that gained prominence at the turn of the 20th century. (This architecture and urban planning philosophy proposed that beautification efforts in major American citiesin the form of grandiose buildings, striking sculptures, and morewould not only promote aesthetic delight, but would improve quality of life and civic virtue among citizens.) This approach to progressive social reform was a leading concern of the upper class, which the Trumbauer firm was decidedly cozy with, so its no surprise that their clients were also major patrons of the projects borne of this movement; they were commissioned to design the Philadelphia Museum of Art and central library branch.Abeles love of the classical Beaux Arts style, which he became more deeply acquainted with during a Trumbauer-sponsored trip across Europe, was a perfect fit for this agenda, and the architects work on civic commissions made strides in elevating Philadelphias profile as an American city equal to Paris or other European cities. As chief designer at the firm, Abele presented his hand-drawn designs to the art commission for review, so his Black identity was certainly no secret to collaborators, peers, and stakeholders.The monumentality of the museum is wonderful, people dont build buildings like this anymore, says David Barquist, H. Richard Dietrich Jr., curator of American Decorative Arts at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. It creates a sense of drama when you walk in the door that sets you up for the fact that youre in a special place about to have a special experience.The Parkway Central Library, based on the 18th century Htel de la Marine building on the Place de la Concorde in Paris, is very much of the same style. When the building opened in 1927 it was state of the art, not only in terms of the mechanics of the building and retrieval systems for materials in the book stacks, but also in terms of services for childrenthe department had its own entrance which gave children the autonomy to [come here] independently and browse collections, says Marija Gudauskas, head supervisor of Parkway Central Librarys Map Collection and Print and Picture Collection. His work was trying to rejuvenate the past and meet it with the present. He wanted to connect people with history.Doorway to the Duke University Chapel in Durham, North Carolina.Photo by Carol M. Highsmith/Buyenlarge/Getty ImagesKing of the college campusBeyond civic commissions, Abeles designs also decorated university campuses outside the city of Philadelphia: His student-competition-winning design for a Beaux Arts pedestrian gateway was built on the campus of Haverford College in 1901; his design for Harvard Universitys Widener Library was erected in 1915; and, as part of the Trumbauer firms commission to redesign Duke Universitys east campus and the west campus anew in the 1920s, Abeles work can be seen across some 40 buildings, including the chapel, indoor stadium, main administration building, and all of the structures on the main quad.Valerie Gillispie, university archivist at Dukes Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, cites the chapel as the centerpiece because of its location and magnificence. Duke is unusual because the east campus has some older buildings that were remade into a Georgian-style campus, and then on the west campus the design is neo-Gothic, she explains as a stylistic departure from Abeles earlier work. This Gothic Wonderland, as todays students affectionately call it, was likely inspired by the former Duke presidents appreciation for the way Princeton University and Chicago looked, and its aesthetically a stronger fit for the regional Southern context than it would have been in the Northeast.Today, Dukes main quad is named for Abele, and his portrait hangs regally in the reading room of the campus library. But at the time he was designing the school, its unclear how much time he actually spent in Durham and North Carolina, according to Gillispie. While administrators certainly were aware of his Black identity, she notes that Abele was a very proud man and did not like putting himself in the position to be treated as a second-class citizen, so what we are pretty sure of is that he didnt come down to campus and North Carolina very much, because he wouldnt have been accommodated in the way Trumbauer was.In keeping with the blueprint his ancestor laid, Cook says he has always sought out working on projects where there was an opportunity to uplift and inspire places that really contribute to the betterment of our built environment in his own career. Cook, who was one of the three lead designers for the National Museum of African-American History and Culture, counts sensitive, small landscape interventions, like a memorial and restoration of a burial ground of enslaved persons at Thomas Jeffersons Monticello, as projects that are influenced by Abeles commitment to important civic structures.Years ago, my grandfather [Julian Abele Cook Sr.] said to me: When you go to see a doctor you go because youve got some pain, and when you go to see a lawyer you may also have some issues youre wrestling with, Cook shares. But when you go to see an architect, you go with a dream. Thats why I got into architecture, and thats why my grandfather did, and he probably learned that at the feet of Julian Abele, who had such an illustrious career.
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