Ole. Ole-Ole-Ole. Ole. Ole….

Braving hurricane style flash storms, I headed up to Hell’s Kitchen for the Euro 2008 final at Lansdowne Road. Starting up at 2:30 we all had a full Irish breakfast (I usually pass on the congealed pigs blood aka black pudding but the rest is great hangover food) and after a few pints we switched to a beertower of stella when the first kick was tapped.

This year it was an exciting tournament. I watched many of the group stages with the French the surprise losers and Croatia and Turkey the surprise winners through the quarterfinals. The Spanish swept through their group and after a shoot out with Italy in the quarterfinals, they didn’t have any trouble taking out Russia again. Germany on the other hand were tournament favorites, even through they lost to Croatia and just taking out Portugal in the quarterfinals. Even though Turkey had several players hurt or on suspension, Germany struggled to close them out until the end.

The final was set. Germany, the tourny favorites vs. Spain, the team of superstars, but could they come together as a team. Not being part of Europe, I selected Portugal and Spain early on. The English aren’t fans of the Germans, to say the
With several Spaniards draped in their country’s flag and pogoing through the bar, there was a great energy for the match and as Torres scored the first goal, the bar erupted with cheers and stiff fists in the air. The match was tense as the Germans picked up their play, as they usually do in the second half and it was a great final match as +3 minutes after official time, the horn was blown and Spain won their 2nd ever Euro 2008.

So much for Enrique Iglesias’ “Can You Hear Me” as a motivating song for the Euro 2008:

More Euro 2008 photos

UPDATE: Deadspin’s put together some good highlights including a reference to the “unofficial anthem” for this year’s tournament which was hummed for almost every match when the players took the field.

Running Torsos Through WTC…

There was once a time where I thought I wanted to be an architect or designer of creative, abstract structures for the public. I had a very supportive graphics design teacher in high school, who taught be the basics of hand drafting including perspective, shading, and dimension. After 4 months I was able to scale and sketch a replica of my interior and exterior designed dream house, which I entered into the state fair and won a first prize for.

Moving on to college, I took up classes in structure design and Auto CAD which were prerequisite for my engineering degree but I never took them to heart as much as I should have. Although my major had changed to Civil/ENVE engineering, I still had thoughts of creating structures…

Had I spent more time studying people like Santiago Calatava I would, to this day, be designing structures as planned…

Today I went to an exhibit at the MET titled Sculpture into Architecture presenting much of the work by Santiago Calatava.

Click on the links for the museum to read more on the exhibit. He should be important to New Yorkers because he’s the one that designed the new World Trade Center Hub (pictured above) – should it ever get completed. Not only that, everyone should experience the sight or even a walk through of some of his work. He’s a universal artist and engineer that combines science, art, technology and engineering into workable and beautifully livable structures. Inspired by nature, his work embodies a sense of potential movement or fluidity erupting from white concrete, glass, cables and steel struts.

I especially enjoyed the sketching, modeling and final photographic results of the Alamillo Bridge in Seville, Spain and the Ciutat de les Arts i les Ci’ncies in Valencia, Spain. I just wish I could get a chance to see the City of Arts & Sciences in person some day.

If you get a chance to make the exhibit, take the time. It’s well worth it (as if the MET in general is just another gallery).

In NY, the WTC Transportation Hub has been proposed but ground has still yet to be broke on the project. “Calatrava designed the underground concourse, mezzanine, and platform levels to be free of vertical columns for a greater sense of light, movement, and openness…. ‘The building is built with steel, glass, and light. They will all be equal building materials,’ Calatrava said. ‘The light will arrive at the platform, and visitors will feel like they are arriving in a great place, a welcoming place.'” Not sure if it will get finished by teh planned 2009 date, but I certainly am looking forward to it.

“A tradition is always in evolution… You can look back, but one of the bases on which I build is to push ahead” ~ Santiago Calatrava