Tag Archive for: Design

Live Long and PROSPECTOR!

I can’t believe a year has already gone by since the Prospector Theater rolled out the pink carpet and opened its doors! It seems like only yesterday we were working to make sure all of the finishing touches would be ready for the big opening day. As much as we looked forward with anticipation to see the building completed, nothing could have prepared us for what was to come.
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The Beauty of New England

New England has always been at home with architectural innovation.  Our towns and farmland have some of the handsomest native architecture in the world – beautiful and eminently practical.

More recently, some of the world’s greatest modern architects – people like Walter Gropius, Philip Johnson and the “Harvard Five” who settled in and around New Canaan have added their contributions to this rich heritage.

We love the modernists and many of their designs.  Certainly their open and flowing approach to interior space has changed the way we live and raised our expectations.

We believe in designs that have their roots in the past.  Because if a design is strong enough to withstand the test of time (and Northeastern winters) it must have something going for it.

That doesn’t mean ignoring the present or the future . . . just the opposite.

Modern materials and designs make it even easier to build in a timeless way and ensure that the people who live and work in our buildings are comfortable for generations to come.  We take the best of modernists and combine it with the wisdom of New England tradition to create structures that are as graceful as they are innovative.

What’s Your Favorite Building?

Everyone has a house or building they love for reasons that are better felt than described.  These are inspired structures that make our lives and communities better simply by them being in them.  You probably can’t name who designed them.

In many cases, they may have been built and rebuilt over the years until they achieved a rambling organic look that is almost impossible to reproduce.  Others may be solid and unchanging testaments to one person’s taste.

What are some of your favorites?  Snap a picture next time you see one and share it here.  Tell us why you like it and we’ll tell you what we think.

paper mache octopus in ocean

Charlie and the Purple Piñata

The other day my 8 year old son came home from school with the idea to make a piñata. Since it wasn’t his birthday, nor anyone else’s I could think of in the neighborhood and knowing that he isn’t necessarily the “arts and crafts” kind of kid, I asked him, Why? His answer was short and sweet. I can smash it and it’s full of candy. Ahhhh yes, destruction and candy, my 8 year old’s Holy Grail.

So began the weeklong after-dinner project of constructing a piñata. All said and done, building a piñata is fairly simple and a fun thing to do with your children. We simply blew up a balloon and started the paper-mache process of flour, water and newspaper strips. Tip #1: Use a plaster or glue mix to give the piñata additional strength. After four layers of newspaper strips, our paper-mache looked like a big egg, of course this was the point at which my son explained he was interested in making a snake piñata! Tip #2: Decide on what you are making first, and then use the appropriate balloon or cardboard to shape your paper-mache creation. After lengthy discussions it was decided that we would make an octopus. With brown, purple and blue crepe paper in hand, the decorating and designing commenced. Tip #3: Consider your strategy for filling the piñata with candy, and how to close it up prior to decorating. Once decorated, we realized that the hole to fill the piñata was on the bottom of the octopus head rather than the top. The solution for this gravity challenge would have to be accomplished with the design of the tentacles. We cut the leg shapes (8 in total) out of foam core, decorated them and glued them together in an “X” arrangement which allowed for a 3” diameter foam core plug to be glued at the top of the “X”. Using picture wire we basically sewed the plug and accompanying octopus legs to the paper-mache head. Tip #4: Do not use picture wire. 

 The day of reckoning had finally come. With a crowd of young neighborhood kids, a plastic yellow wiffle bat and a red bandana, the piñata was hoisted over the basketball hoop. Evidently, my son had spent the week making the proper negotiations amongst his neighboring friends to have first the first “cut” at the purple octopus piñata. With the anticipation growing, blindfold in place and bat at the ready, the piñata was put in motion. I’m not sure that there could have been a more anti-climatic ending if we had planned it. The picture wire used to make a loop for the rope at the top of the piñata, combined with the weight of five bags of candy, combined with sudden pulling on the rope, combined with gravity, essentially created instant piñata failure. Tip #5: Did I mention “do not use picture wire”? Wire cuts paper-mache like a hot knife through butter.

While the piñata was never struck, the driveway did the job perfectly, splitting the octopus head and delivering its candy payload to happy children. Next time (because I’ve been informed “we need to do this again!”) there will be a little better planning and some strategic design and material revisions!

Tag Archive for: Design