• Grenfell victims' families file ARB complaint against refurbishment architect
    archinect.com
    The BBC is reporting on an effortled by family members of victims of the fatal 2017Grenfell Fire tragedy to hold Studio E, the architectural firm responsible for its design, accountable in front of the UKsArchitects Registration Board (ARB).The action outlines Studio E as a negligent party. The BBC reports Studio E is already undergoing the liquidation process. Petitioners are, however, hoping to "set a precedent enabling other residents of buildings with dangerous cladding to file a complaint against their architects with the ARB."
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  • Studio Gang updates progress on mass timber conference center at Harvard
    archinect.com
    The new David Rubenstein Treehouse conference center project from Studio Gang for Harvard University has topped out near its campus in the Allston neighborhood of Boston.What will become Harvards first-ever mass timber structure is included as part of the larger 36-acre Enterprise Research Campus (or ERC) development that was announced last summer along with designs from MVRDV, Moody Nolan, and Marlon Blackwell. It follows another creative higher ed timber design from Studio Gang, the new two-buildingcampus expansion for the California College of the Arts (CCA) in San Francisco, whichwas unveiled in November.
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  • Sang Dae Lee wins 2024 American Prize for Architecture
    archinect.com
    The South Korean-born academic, architect, and urban designer Sang Dae Lee has been awarded the 2024 American Prize for Architecture by both The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies.
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  • CellFluids 2.0 is Here - https://blendermarket.com/products/ce
    www.youtube.com
    CellFluids 2.0 is Here - https://blendermarket.com/products/ce... This is a Geometry Nodes-powered addon for simulating fluids. #blender3d #b3d #simulation #fluid #cellfluids #blender #sim #geonode #procedural(Feed generated with FetchRSS)
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  • Indiana Jones and the Great Circle Update 2 Brings More Fixes for Bugs, Lighting, and More
    gamingbolt.com
    MachineGames has pushed out the second post-launch patch for its recently-released first-person action-adventure title,Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, and though it doesnt bring any major new features to the table like the first patch did with the addition of Path Tracing on PC, it does bring a number of fixes and tweaks nonetheless.As you would expect, the update addresses a number of bugs and glitches relating to save files, various gameplay actions, and more, from a bug that prevented players from equipping Indys whip to some performance issues during cutscenes to another issue that saw save files getting damaged. Additionally, on Xbox Series X/S, the patch also introduces fixes to the implementation of Global Illumination, so you should now see improved shadows and lighting across the board. Check out the full patch notes below.Indiana Jones and the Great Circleis available on Xbox Series X/S and PC, and launches for PS5 next Spring. Read our review of the game through here.PATCH NOTES:GeneralFixed an issue where users Game Slot may be reported as being damaged, or may appear to be completely missing, when no actual problem had occurred.GameplayFixed an issue where player may be unable to equip Indys whip.Fixed an issue where a player may end up with Indys camera permanently equipped.Fixed an issue where player may drop and lose their camera if they use the quick-equip (key item) prompt to equip their camera while they are inspecting another nearby pick-up item.GraphicsFix to prevent Double vision getting stuck on screen when Indy has almost drowned. To players who have already encountered this issue, repeating the near-drown should clear the issue.Some further improvements to reduce stutter from duplicated frames during cutscenes.Missions and quests Please note this section contains some small spoilersFixed an issue where Gina may not approach the secret entrance to the Vatican Treasure Chamber, blocking the mission from progressing.Fixed an issue where Gina may go to pick the lock to the exit from the Vatican Treasure Chamber as soon as you enter the room, meaning you may miss some very important story developments.Fixed a big hole in the floor collision around the edge of the wall around the Ziggurat in Sukhothai that the player could fall through.PC Specific fixesFixed an issue where Nvidia DLSS may cause performance problems when enabled.Fixed an issue where Nvidia Frame Generation wasnt activated properly if HDR is in use.Fixed an issue where Nvidia Low Latency Mode could cause performance problems when used with Frame Generation.Fixed an issue where global illumination may be completely disabled when playing with below minimum VRAM graphics cards.Fixed an issue where Lighting may be over bright in interior spaces if Path Tracing (Full Ray Tracing) is set to Medium or High Quality.Known Issue: Nvidia Frame Generation may be temporarily disabled if HDR is activated for the first time. To work around this issue, disable and then re-enable DLSS. This only needs to be done once.Xbox Specific fixesImprovements to Global Illumination on Xbox, to fix issues where shadowed areas had appeared brighter than expected.
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  • Exodus Gameplay Trailer Showcases Combat, Characters, and More
    gamingbolt.com
    Exodushas grabbed our attention with its narrative premise and promises of a choice- and narrative-driven sci-fi epic, and now, developer Archetype Entertainment has also offered a first look at the action RPGs gameplay. As promised, the developer has released a new gameplay trailer that showcases a couple of minutes of in-game footage, showing glimpses of combat, a number of different characters, and more. You can view it below.Exoduswill see players engaging in third-person over-the-shoulder shooter combat, which we get to see a fair bit of in the trailer. It also shows off shots of a firefight against what looks like a giant, armoured bear (likely an Awakened creature, which, in Exodusfiction, means fully sentient and intelligent), in addition to a number of different locations. Archetype Entertainment is also promising a heavy emphasis on choice-driven storytelling, customization mechanics, and more.Exodusis in development for PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC. The game doesnt yet have a release date or window.
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  • Suikoden 1 and 2 HD Remaster Opening Movies Revealed
    gamingbolt.com
    While 2024 was the year of Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes, 2025 is when the Suikoden series makes its resurgence. A remastered compilation of the first two games launches in March, and Konami has released both their opening movies. Check them out below.Directed by Yoshitaka Murayama (who also helmed Eiyuden Chronicle and passed away earlier this year), both titles focus on recruiting the 108 Stars of Destiny to rise against oppressive forces. Each title offers turn-based combat, tactical battles with armies, and one-on-one Duels between certain characters.The remasters offer improvements to the visual effects and redrawn backgrounds alongside various quality-of-life options. Players can fast-forward through combat to speed up the pacing or enable auto-battling. The UI is also updated to fit modern times, while the sound effects have received the HD treatment.Suikoden 1 and 2 HD Remaster: Gate Rune and Dunan Unification Wars launches on March 6th, 2025, for Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, PS4, PS5, PC, and Nintendo Switch.
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  • The Auditor Generals Report, Part 6: Procurement
    www.canadianarchitect.com
    Demolition continues at Ontario Place. Photo by Steven EvansThe majority of Auditor General Shelley Spences 121-page Value for Money audit of the Ontario Place redevelopment centres on procurement. We found that the CFD [Call for Development] process and realty decisions were not fair, transparent or accountable to all participants as would be required by the Realty Direction, the CFD document, and best practices, writes Spence.That language echoes the words of previous Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk, who analyzed changes to the Greenbelt in a 2023 report, concluding that the way the government proposed changes to the Greenbelt was not publicly transparent, objective or well-informed, and was inconsistent with the vision, goals and processes of the Greenbelt Plan, as well as previous amendments to the Greenbelt boundary.Summarizing the Ministry of Infrastructures decision-making on Ontario Place, the report points to how, for example, despite published guidance that contact with government officials was prohibited during the open period, some participants were invited to meet with government officials and high-ranking political staff during the CFD open period. These communications included nine e-mails and one call between a Vice President at Infrastructure Ontario and Thermes legal counsel, an introduction of Therme to the transaction advisor leading the Call for Development, and an invitation to an event at the legal counsels firm. Minutes of these meetingsas well as separate meetings between the VP and other participantswere not kept, so there is no way to know what was discussed, let alone assess whether all participants had equal access to the same information.Rather than following the Provinces standard procurement law, directives, or best practices, the 2019 Call for Development, as well as an earlier call in 2017, were categorized as real estate transactions. This is unusualother large waterfront developments, in both Ontario and abroad, have proceeded as procurements. In any case, the current process also did not meet the lesser requirements of the Realty Directive, which strives for accountability and transparency. As a result of terms and conditions with considerable ambiguity (for instance, The Government may select one, none or multiple submissions as part of the process), a few participants did not invest a significant amount of time and resources into their submissions, sending in a one-page response.The assessment process itself, in the Auditor Generals summary, was irregular, subjective, and not always followed. The process used a qualitative scoring framework, with criteria that were not finalized until after the submission deadlinewith the result that a third of the criteria never appeared in the CFD document being referenced by submitters. Criteria were not assigned relative weights, leading to uneven scoring. In many cases, individual assessors scores were very different from each othernot unusual in itselfbut after a consensus meeting that sought to reconcile those scores, some scores were altered two subsequent times. While assessors were required to score all areas, there were 126 instances (or 11%) where an objective was left unscored by an assessor. One assessor did not score any of the criteria for Therme prior to the consensus meeting. The process did not include a fairness monitor, whose job as an independent third party involves ensuring that the advertised process is followed, and all parties are treated fairly and equally.One of the submitters, Triple Five Group, was asked to substantially revise and resubmit its submission, which was received 70 days after the submission deadline. This process moved the submission from a consensus score of low and the lead assessor writing that they were unable to assess the submission, to Triple Five Group eventually becoming the primary comprehensive site-wide solution option. In other cases, proponents were selected for a short list or further discussions despite ranking lower than others. Due diligence meetings, in which Infrastructure Ontario sought to clarify information and/or confirm assumptions in submissions, were conducted with only six of the 34 participants, despite four additional participants receiving a high score for Alignment with Governments Vision and an additional 13 participants assessed as receiving a moderate score on this criteria.One of the biggest procedural missteps is that the Call for Developments envisioned two different types of bids: some that would present a comprehensive site-wide solution, and another scenario with multiple single tenants. The same criteria were used to score these vastly different solutions, notes the report. The full implications of the provincial costs of each solution were not presented to key decision-makers, even though by taking on its present role as Master Developer, the province has put taxpayers on the hook for public realm, parking, and last mile transit costs totalling over $950 million for the project. The report notes that several of the site-wide submissions includes designs for the public realm, parking solutions, and/or last mile designs, including, in some cases, provisions to pay for these features.The social and environmental costs of redevelopment were not considered in the redevelopment, eitherand the report makes notes that the governments Rebuilding Ontario Place Act, 2023 exempts the site from key environmental assessments and heritage requirements. As critics have long noted, there was no input sought from the public until after the tenants had already been announced. In the 17 consultations held afterwards, a key sentiment, according to Infrastructure Ontarios own reporting, was why now and whats the purpose; why [wasnt the] public consulted on partner selection.Taking what the public wanted into consideration from the beginning would have made the process more open and transparent to the public and could have prevented many of the issues, lawsuits, media attention, etc. that have occurred, says the Auditor Generals report. Between September 2019 and June 2024, the government has spent $8.5 million on legal fees associated with the 2019 CFD, MZO, lease negotiations and associated work.Related:The Auditor Generals Report, Part 1: The cost of privatizing Ontario PlaceThe Auditor Generals Report, Part 2: The billion dollar question of parkingThe Auditor Generals Report, Part 3: ThermeThe Auditor Generals Report, Part 4: Collateral DamageThe Auditor Generals Report, Part 5: The Future, Continued Privatization of Ontario PlaceThe post The Auditor Generals Report, Part 6: Procurement appeared first on Canadian Architect.
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