Archive for the ‘Location study’ Category

Oil plant – Taranaki

Monday, July 31st, 2006

Oil platforms attrack my attention. As enormous sea-insects, they dominate various coast lines, sucking black sirope out of the ocean’s bottom. I always wonder what’s life like there. A seemingly autonomous zone full of hard working men (?), responsible for the aquirement of this complex natural resource. Complex and powerful in many ways, environmentally, economically and politically.

While we didn’t get access to the oil platform, I visited the oil plant – with a scale model of both the plant and the rig – on the Taranaki coast. With my medium format camera, I captured the plant in twilight. (The images below are snapshots from my digital camera, since I haven’t been able to digitize the analogue slides yet)

model

model

Former hospital – New Plymouth

Monday, July 31st, 2006

Our search for interesting locations in Taranaki was difficult. Weather was one obstacle, the other was a lack of local knowledge to pursue our search. The fishery was one direction, but there wasn’t a strong enough context to connect it with. On our way back from our fishery discoveries, we came across a former hospital, or the overgrown remains of it.

Abandoned Fishery – New Plymouth

Monday, July 31st, 2006

Few professional fishermen are left in New Plymouth. Probably, this trend was followed by the closure of this fishery a decade ago. Completely stripped down, one room got my particular interest. Its blue color and light fall lit traces of prior business: rubber gloves.
While Derek [Holzer] was recording the microsounds of metal pipes, I inspected the inside of the blue room with my video camera. Justin [Morgan] was patiently sitting and listening to the rain dropping on the heavily destroyed roof.

Below just a few shapshots –>

Underpasses – New Plymouth

Wednesday, July 12th, 2006

Concrete dominates the coastal trail of New Plymouth. In different shapes and patterns it guides you from the mouth of the river to the more industrial port area of the city. As grey and unsaturated as it may look, its appearance is manipulated by natural forces like fungi, moss, and rain. Or by local New Plymouth kids who try to brighten it up by graffiti’s. The underpass below has been treated by both treatments, including the city’s attempt to erase the spraypaint from its surface.

underpass railway in New Plymouth

underpass railway in New Plymouth

underpass railway in New Plymouth

underpass railway in New Plymouth

underpass road in New Plymouth

underpass road in New Plymouth

underpass road in New Plymouth