PHCON2002:0016:012:030:006
1978
PH1984:0405
documents textuels
AP075.S4.SS3.013
1980s
documents textuels
1980s
documents textuels
ARCH254075
Description:
working papers
n.d.
documents textuels
n.d.
dessins
ARCH258370
1990
dessins
1990
dessins
AP140.S2.SS1.D84.P4
circa 1986-1990
dessins
circa 1986-1990
PH1998:0014:433
architecture
between 1928 and 1930
architecture
PH1997:0059
Description:
- The series "Running Fence 1997" focuses "on the first 14 miles of the border fence that separates the United States and Mexico, beginning at the Pacific Ocean and ending in the Otay Mountains.... [It] analyzes the "idea" of the border and explores its iconography, the border being a subject that is of extreme importance to the public as the world proceeds towards greater globalization. [Geoffrey] James has written of the project: "[The border fence] was built by the US Army Corps of Engineers in 1994, out of recycled metal landing strip - the most visible symbol of what is known as Operation Gatekeeper. Because the steel sheets are placed in the ground so that their ridges run horizontally, a man can hop over the fence with ease; and no Mexican child ever seems to be impeded from retrieving a soccer ball from US territory. The real barrier to illegal immigration from Mexico into the USA is less visible: hundreds of buried sensors linked to a central computer, nightscopes, helicopters and Border Patrol Agents in white Broncos."" (Evans).
architecture, ingénierie, topographique
1997
View of an industrial park under construction with a partially completed building in the foreground and partially completed houses and mountains in the background, Mesa de Otay, Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico
Actions:
PH1997:0059
Description:
- The series "Running Fence 1997" focuses "on the first 14 miles of the border fence that separates the United States and Mexico, beginning at the Pacific Ocean and ending in the Otay Mountains.... [It] analyzes the "idea" of the border and explores its iconography, the border being a subject that is of extreme importance to the public as the world proceeds towards greater globalization. [Geoffrey] James has written of the project: "[The border fence] was built by the US Army Corps of Engineers in 1994, out of recycled metal landing strip - the most visible symbol of what is known as Operation Gatekeeper. Because the steel sheets are placed in the ground so that their ridges run horizontally, a man can hop over the fence with ease; and no Mexican child ever seems to be impeded from retrieving a soccer ball from US territory. The real barrier to illegal immigration from Mexico into the USA is less visible: hundreds of buried sensors linked to a central computer, nightscopes, helicopters and Border Patrol Agents in white Broncos."" (Evans).
architecture, ingénierie, topographique
dessins, documents textuels
AP178.S1.1990.PR02.008.1
Description:
Original file title: Santiago (1) Jardim Bonaval (2) Restaurante
1989-1995
Project documentation, correspondence, and drawings of the Park and the Restaurante de Santo Domingo de Bonaval, Parque de Santo Domingo de Bonaval, Santiago de Compostela (folder 1 of 3)
Actions:
AP178.S1.1990.PR02.008.1
Description:
Original file title: Santiago (1) Jardim Bonaval (2) Restaurante
dessins, documents textuels
1989-1995
dessins, documents textuels
AP178.S1.1990.PR02.008.2
Description:
Original file title: Santiago (1) Jardim Bonaval (2) Restaurante
1989-1995
Project documentation, correspondence, and drawings of the Park and the Restaurante de Santo Domingo de Bonaval, Parque de Santo Domingo de Bonaval, Santiago de Compostela (folder 2 of 3)
Actions:
AP178.S1.1990.PR02.008.2
Description:
Original file title: Santiago (1) Jardim Bonaval (2) Restaurante
dessins, documents textuels
1989-1995