August 5th, 2008

An exhausted looking blonde dragged herself in to the doctor’s office. “Doctor, there are dogs all over my neighborhood. They bark all day and all night, and I can’t get a wink of sleep.”
“No problem, I have good news for you,” the doctor answered, rummaging through a drawer full of sample medications. “Here are some new sleeping pills that work like a dream. A few of these and your trouble will be over.”
“Great,” the blonde answered, “I’ll try anything. Let’s give it a shot.”
A few weeks later the blonde returned, looking worse than ever. “Doc, your plan is not working. I’m more tired than before!”
“I don’t understand how that could be”, said the doctor, shaking his head. “Those are the strongest pills on the market!”
“That may be true,” answered the blonde wearily, “but I’m still up all night chasing those dogs and when I finally catch one it’s hard getting him to swallow the pill!”
I had a bad night and couldn’t get of wink of sleep either. I’ll go back to sleep, but I’m not taking a pill. Arrivederci!
- Mood:
amused

Photograph of the new Sinosteel International Plaza in Tianjin, China.
China is a large country with a history that goes back as far as the human collective mind can remember. China has one of the world’s oldest people and continuous civilizations, consisting of states and cultures dating back more than six millennia.
It has the world’s longest continuously used written language system, and is the source of many major inventions, such as what the British scholar and biochemist Joseph Needham called the “four inventions of Ancient China”: paper, the compass gunpowder and printing.
After the death of Mao Zedong, the new generation of political leaders decided to change the future of China by accepting Capitalism and mixing it with Communism in order to compete with the West. They called this economic and political strategy, “one country two, systems”.
“One country, two systems” is an idea originally proposed by Deng Xiaping during the early 1980s, for the reunification of China. He suggested that there will be only one China, but areas such as Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan can have their own capitalist economic and political systems, while the rest of China uses the “socialist” system.
Based on this pragmatic economic and political strategy, China launched one of the most spectacular economic growth the world has even seen. This dramatic economic growth is often referred to as “China’s economic miracle”.
Everywhere you turn your head these days, China is being heralded as the next big thing. There’s no question the country is on the rise—you can witness the stunning economic growth, massive modernization programs and the rising standard of living in the cities.
Its GDP is growing by 10 percent a year. Industrial production is galloping ahead at an annual rate of 17 percent. Its economy is now the second-biggest in the world, behind only the U.S., and there are predictions it will assume the top spot as early as 2020.
China’s integration into the world economy has been astonishingly rapid. Since its adoption of the “Four Modernizations” a generation ago (agriculture, industry, science and technology, and defence) China’s share of world economic output has grown from 3.4 per cent to almost 12 per cent in 2000.
One of the most visible signs of China’s economic growth is its modern architecture. China is now fertile ground for constructing spectacular buildings challenging those of Dubai. Visitors to China’s Summer Olympic Games will marvel in awe as they enter the Olympic venues.
Chins has embraced the so called “Green Architecture”. Green architecture is truly touching new heights with the amazing structures that are being built across the globe. These green skyscrapers are not only magnificent fresh designs that help the planet cool down and recuperate from the scars left by man but also add give modern cities a cool new look with designs that are shaped to dazzle and bamboozle all of us.
Currently under construction in Tinajin, China and to be completed in 2012, the 1,175-feet Sinosteel International Plaza and the 289-feet hotel next to it, have hexagonal windows that make them look like the inside of a beehive. The windows are designed in five different sizes, placed in an energy-efficient configuration that will take the most advantage of the sun and wind. This allows the structure to use the minimum possible energy from conventional energy sources.
Besides their rounded corners and weird windows making them look unlike any building ever built, that odd facade serves a more important purpose. Chinese architects MAD Ltd, designed the honeycomb-shaped exterior shells to actually hold the buildings up, freeing up more floor space. This amazing new construction taken up by the architects at MAD, once again shows China’s economic miracle in action. and the spread of green architecture across the globe.
Source: de zeen design magazine
- Mood:
impressed
