I crossed this street 2 years ago

testingmatter:

World’s Most Congested Pedestrian Crosswalk
“On cue, the pedestrian masses on the four corners surged forward. Seen from above, they were great armies entering battle, each moving with determination toward their point of contact.
“But there was no clash. In the middle, they came together in fluid movement, like cards shuffled in the hands of a Vegas dealer, each sliding seamlessly past the other.
“For nearly a full minute, the intersection was a sea of humanity. Slowly, the crush trickled out and the asphalt was again almost empty, only a few stragglers rushing to beat the light.
“Then it reverted to the throb of vehicle traffic, another cycle of Shibuya synchronicity complete …
“In this polite nation, the passing bodies seem less chaotic than in, say, Beijing or New York, moving with the cool predictability of a stopwatch. Despite so much humanity inhabiting such a confined space, there’s rarely a collision, sharp elbow, shoulder-brush or unkind word …”
John M. Glionna-The Los Angeles Times

(Source: matterunlimited, via humanscalecities)

I crossed this street 2 years ago

testingmatter:

World’s Most Congested Pedestrian Crosswalk
“On cue, the pedestrian masses on the four corners surged forward. Seen from above, they were great armies entering battle, each moving with determination toward their point of contact.
“But there was no clash. In the middle, they came together in fluid movement, like cards shuffled in the hands of a Vegas dealer, each sliding seamlessly past the other.
“For nearly a full minute, the intersection was a sea of humanity. Slowly, the crush trickled out and the asphalt was again almost empty, only a few stragglers rushing to beat the light.
“Then it reverted to the throb of vehicle traffic, another cycle of Shibuya synchronicity complete …
“In this polite nation, the passing bodies seem less chaotic than in, say, Beijing or New York, moving with the cool predictability of a stopwatch. Despite so much humanity inhabiting such a confined space, there’s rarely a collision, sharp elbow, shoulder-brush or unkind word …”
John M. Glionna-The Los Angeles Times

(Source: matterunlimited, via humanscalecities)

Posted 9 months ago 14 notes

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  1. humanscaled reblogged this from elpliego and added:
    World’s Most Congested Pedestrian Crosswalk
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    I crossed this street 2 years ago
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About:

Fredrik Skåtar is a Swedish architect (M.Arch SAR/MSA)
based in Berlin, Germany and Uppsala, Sweden.

www.skatar.com

Studied at the KTH School of Architecture in Stockholm
at Ecole Nationale Superieure d’Architecture de Paris-La Villette
and at Universität der Künste in Berlin

His studio works with art, design and architectural projects
commissioned by private clients and supported by institutes such as the
Swedish Arts Grants Committee, the Swedish Institute
and The Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts

From 2006-2007, Fredrik worked as an architect for Tema Architects
and from 2007 to 2010, as architect, researcher, concept developer and
graphic designer for Studio Olafur Eliasson

Fredrik has an online portfolio, showing works for others
and cooperations, at portfolio.skatar.com
A login-name and password is required.
To retrieve this, please send an inquiry to contact[a]skatar.com

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