apparently the Mad Mouse sold for the bargain price of $150,000. One of the carriages is being kept in a Showgrounds museum, and another is being donated for auction to raise funds for athletes to go to Beijing.Queen Anne wrote:The story says the Mad Mouse was demolished, and then goes on to say it was sold to the Newcastle show.
Am I missing something? I would have thought demolition was more likely than a move..the Mad Mouse always looked so questionable, to me
COM: Adelaide Showgrounds Redevelopment | $35m
Re: Royal Adelaide Show gets a new ride!
Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.
- Queen Anne
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Re: Royal Adelaide Show gets a new ride!
Wow, thanks Wayno. Interesting after-life for the old Mad Mouse, then!
Re: Royal Adelaide Show gets a new ride!
Don't be. Newcastle is a shithole (and, yes, I have been there, so I know what I'm talking about).Wayno wrote:the risk of death was always an attraction with the Mad Mouse! i'm almost jealous of NewcastleQueen Anne wrote:The story says the Mad Mouse was demolished, and then goes on to say it was sold to the Newcastle show.
Am I missing something? I would have thought demolition was more likely than a move..the Mad Mouse always looked so questionable, to me
- Xaragmata
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Re: $35m for exhibition hall
Lots of activity on site yesterday, & exhibition hall coming along well.
Some pics at http://www.xaragmata.thebbs.org/album/a ... ll-01.html
Some pics at http://www.xaragmata.thebbs.org/album/a ... ll-01.html
Re: $35m for exhibition hall
Wayville is looking very modern now, and once this is done hopefully we can get some high quality exhibitions - bigger and better Car Show comes to mind - possibly a big IT exhibition as well would be good. I think this hall will make it possible to do this now.
Great pics BTW.
Great pics BTW.
Studied Civil Engineering - graduated 1995 - now working in IT.
- monotonehell
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Re: $35m for exhibition hall
Ironically architecturally speaking, the old Duncan Hall is in the Modern style, while the new design will be post-modern. It's funny how the word "modern" doesn't mean contemporary in design terms but has come to mean it in the vernacular.ReallyBad wrote:Wayville is looking very modern now...
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.
Re: $35m for exhibition hall
So when will contemporary design have gone beyond futuristic?monotonehell wrote:Ironically architecturally speaking, the old Duncan Hall is in the Modern style, while the new design will be post-modern. It's funny how the word "modern" doesn't mean contemporary in design terms but has come to mean it in the vernacular.ReallyBad wrote:Wayville is looking very modern now...
cheers,
Rhino
Rhino
- monotonehell
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Re: $35m for exhibition hall
Contemporary just means "of now". So what's contemporary this year is history the next.rhino wrote:So when will contemporary design have gone beyond futuristic?monotonehell wrote:Ironically architecturally speaking, the old Duncan Hall is in the Modern style, while the new design will be post-modern. It's funny how the word "modern" doesn't mean contemporary in design terms but has come to mean it in the vernacular.ReallyBad wrote:Wayville is looking very modern now...
What's futuristic? Nothing. Any design that's considered futuristic is rooted in the now. So in a few years time what looked futuristic now will look lame then. Take for example what people thought looked futuristic in the 1950s, now it just looks like a joke. Even short term ideas of the future are ephemeral. Look at what we thought was futuristic in 2002, see much brushed aluminium and blue LEDs these days?
The only design school to have survived for many years that still looks contemporary today is some aspects of Bauhaus. Simple lines and using materials' inherent properties still are the foundations of many designs.
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.
Re: $35m for exhibition hall
Thank you Mono. My comment was made tongue-in-cheek because contemporary design is considered post-modern, and modern design is now considered old. Logically, then, when post-modern design is considered old, futuristic design could be contemporary. Or perhaps it will be called Late Post-Modern.
cheers,
Rhino
Rhino
- monotonehell
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Re: $35m for exhibition hall
*Head 'splodes!*rhino wrote:Thank you Mono. My comment was made tongue-in-cheek because contemporary design is considered post-modern, and modern design is now considered old. Logically, then, when post-modern design is considered old, futuristic design could be contemporary. Or perhaps it will be called Late Post-Modern.
I had an idea you were being sarcastic, but had to take your post at face value
Actually ... *takes deep breath* we're way past post-modern, or even post-post-modern, with contemporary design being a synthesis of the post-modern playful aesthetic coupled with the neo-realist zeitgeist through the filter of post '90's recession functionality mindset. *wheeze*
Which all adds up to a tonne of :wank:
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.
Re: $35m for exhibition hall
Googie architecture is fantastic!monotonehell wrote:Contemporary just means "of now". So what's contemporary this year is history the next.rhino wrote:So when will contemporary design have gone beyond futuristic?monotonehell wrote: Ironically architecturally speaking, the old Duncan Hall is in the Modern style, while the new design will be post-modern. It's funny how the word "modern" doesn't mean contemporary in design terms but has come to mean it in the vernacular.
What's futuristic? Nothing. Any design that's considered futuristic is rooted in the now. So in a few years time what looked futuristic now will look lame then. Take for example what people thought looked futuristic in the 1950s, now it just looks like a joke. Even short term ideas of the future are ephemeral. Look at what we thought was futuristic in 2002, see much brushed aluminium and blue LEDs these days?
The only design school to have survived for many years that still looks contemporary today is some aspects of Bauhaus. Simple lines and using materials' inherent properties still are the foundations of many designs.
- monotonehell
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Re: $35m for exhibition hall
Meet George Jetson.Omicron wrote:Googie architecture is fantastic!
His boy Elroy.
Daughter, Judy.
Jane, his wife...
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.
Re: $35m for exhibition hall
A most enjoyable show.monotonehell wrote:Meet George Jetson.Omicron wrote:Googie architecture is fantastic!
His boy Elroy.
Daughter, Judy.
Jane, his wife...
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