The story is based around a miniature San Francisco Cable Car that is a full working coffee/espresso bar. It is fully contained with electric power, state-of-the-art coffee brewing equipment, potable and waste water tanks and refrigeration. The Cable Car is a well known icon of the City of San Francisco.
The San Francisco experience was selected as a theme because a miniature San Francisco Cable Car is already owned by the developers of this project as well as other San Francisco pictures and memorabilia. Therefore, the choice was made to build and develop the City of San Francisco around this Cable Car. The blue-sky concept for this attraction being developed and refined in which most of today’s technologies can be incorporated into this concept.
A. STORYLINE:
The story goes like this: A traveler (guest) enters by walking over a scaled down Golden Gate Bridge with tiny sailboats and fog into San Francisco to get the best cup of coffee in the whole world. The traveler will see and pass several San Francisco cityscape scenes to reach the Cable Car. The Cable Car, which is stationary, will be placed over a cobblestone street with facade tracks. The street will also have streetlights, signs and other street props. The guest would have a choice to either leave the city with their purchase or sit down in a lounge area and enjoy the world’s best cup of coffee and a pastry. The goal is to make the guest feel like they traveled to a faraway place even though they may only be there for a quick purchase.
The main area setting would be at dusk or early evening to allow the streetlights, buildings and the bridge to have their lights turned on as well as other special lighting to enhance the attraction. The interior ceili...
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...d plants. They will also select the railroad type aprons and hats that make up the uniform of the servers. This person will also work closely with the SCENIC DESIGNER to choose the proper and realistic colors for the cityscape. In addition, they will help with the selections of artwork and pictures.
C. SCENIC DESIGNER:
The SCENIC DESIGNER has the important role of choosing the murals, designing the cityscape, street design and the lounge areas making them the proper form and functional. They will also select and design the lighting that also includes the streetlights, store signs and neon. The Proper lighting of the facades is also key to making them look realistic.
D. MEDIA DESIGNER:
The MEDIA DESIGNER will be responsible for acquiring and synchronizing the video, audio tracks of sounds and music along with software used in the attraction.
The breaks of an empty cable car grind harshly and metallically, approaching with its bell clanging as though slightly drunk. It can drown out the babbling of the people waiting in line. They, most of whom are tourists adorned with sunglasses and
A basic of Disney theme parks is the Main Street USA zone. This section features highly in all of the parks, usually coming right after the entrance. Key services like Guest Relations are located in this section, inside the "City Hall" (HK Disney Source, 2014). There are a number of elements to the Main Street, USA exhibit, and these will be discussed along with the history of Main Street USA in this paper. In particular, how the different elements of Main Street USA work together are covered. The concept has proven to be long-lasting, even across cultures, because of its magical portrayal of idealized American life, which draws heavily on Walt Disney's own childhood experiences.
"The Cariboo Café" is a story of Chicano immigrants and a Central American refugee. Along with these characters is the owner of the Cariboo Café, who comes in contact with the others. The story progresses in three short sections. Each section involves a different scenario and is told from the point of view of a different narrator. The three separate settings do not fully come together until the end of the last section. This approach makes the story initially very complicated to understand and difficult to connect the sections as a coherent stream of events. However, it is possible that this was Viramontes's intent. Perhaps the situations presented in the story were ones that posed this amount of confusion and frustration in real life to those who lived through them. Maybe Viramontes needed to convey in her story that what really happened in the urban barrios of Los Angeles never really made sense to anyone.
The San Francisco earthquake that took place in 1906 is fairly well-known because of its damage and intensity that would affect many lives. The online exhibit of The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire shows how much was lost during this natural disaster, and how the city was before. Many would wonder what is the purpose of documenting how it was before, and after the earthquake, but the fact that no one was expecting one so big impacted countless lives. Also, at the time San Francisco was becoming the most popular city, therefore it would appear in the headlines how a well-known place that most people loved would become damaged (The Bancroft Library, 2006). Overall, this virtual field trip shows the cause and effect of the earthquake that would change San Francisco in numerous ways.
Our narrator, Fuckhead, is a drug addict who is waiting by the side of the road for someone to pick him up. He gets in three cars through his journey which is an indispensable number not to mention and not to look at. Also, the way he experiences the last car is a focus point in the story.
The opening title sequence is arguably one of the most interesting sequences of the entire film; it begins with a wide high angle shot looking down over San Francisco's Union Square. The square is busy from nearby office workers and Christmas shoppers eating their lunches and enjoying entertainment from local street performers.
It is this commercial movie industry that the city leaders of San Jose seem most intent on protecting. Our city has experienced profound growing pains as we've made the transition from agricultural area, to bedroom community and finally to the bustling metropolis known as Silicon Valley. How cherry orchards birthed Pentium chips is a story for another day . . . but in the process they have brought disparate social classes together in a way that leaves everyone struggling for some sort of cultural base. In the 90's we've seen downtown San Jose develop into a thriving urban area. But in the twenty years of redevelopment San Jose has been forced to deal with urban decay that has jeopardized the city and many of its core institutions. Urban anthropologist, Bob Beauregard, paints a bleak picture of the American city in his book, Voices of Decline, saying America's cities, large and small, are sta...
This film depicts the frontal view of the first sky train car leaving Waterfront Station. It explores the idea of time and perspective. The camera itself is static, recording the constant tracks, following the movement of the train. Positioning the camera at the front provides a view most commuters do not see. We’re often looking out one side of the windows, unless we are catching up on sleep or reading, and depending on the time of day and the weather, despite most of the landscape remaining the same, our view varies slightly each time. Moreover, although the view from Waterfront to Burrard station stays constant given it is underground, it feels a bit unfamiliar due to the change in perspective. Often, we only catch glimpses of the train
Setting: “I move onto the sidewalk and Curt and I stand there watching our cab disappear into the sea of cars making their way up and down Houston.
On a positive note, there are designers who have accomplished what seems like the impossible and created spaces that stand timeless in their place. The Eiffel Tower, Grand Central Station, Sydney Opera House are just a few examples of spaces that provide a unique experience for the people and contribute to the identity of the city.
Starbucks at the time did not typically sell coffee drinks. Beans and coffee makers were their forte. In 1983, Schultz traveled to Milan, Italy, where he was struck by the numerous coffee bars. He saw “not only the romance of coffee . . . but a sense of community” in these c...
During the day the Barcelona Pavilion is completely naturally lit. It captures the light with its’ clear walls surrounding the façade. The overhang from the long roof blocks direct sunlight to soften its intensity. He “was replacing the visual dependence of architecture on effects of light and shadow by playing with reflections” (Kostof p.703). The reflective pools are also a way to play with light.
(y)ears before, I had noticed how trains accurately represented the culture of a country: the seedy distressed country has seedy distressed railway trains, the proud efficient nation is similarly reflected in its rolling stock, as Japan is. There is hope in India because the trains are considered vastly more important than the monkey wagons some Indians drive. Dining cars, I found, told the whole story (and if there were no dining cars the country was beneath consideration). The noodle stall in the Malaysian train, the borscht and bad manners on the Trans-Siberian, the kippers and fried bread on the Flying Scotsman (p. 17).
For more than half a century, one of the most noteworthy and instantly recognisable symbols of the city of San Francisco has been the beloved cable car. The little quaint vehicles going back and forth the steep hills amid the clanging of bells have been a fascination for all, whether old-time San Franciscans or visitors travelling from across the globe. No hill has ever been too steep nor any load too heavy for the charming cable car.
If there are more people, more, density, and a good mixture of uses, it will be a safer city... You cannot find a single city that does not wish to make the city center more vibrant or livelier.” This quote from Jan Gehl, the principal of Gehl Architects, illustrates the importance of having a sustainable city. The Central Park project has showcased to the world on how the landscape we design or occupy, can affect our daily activities and surrounding neighborhood. It sets an example of how design must be appreciated as a crucial factor in sustainability and emphasized on the fact the connection of people and nature should not be ignored. All in all, landscape architects are the ones to determine the physical characteristics of the public realm environment, to decide whether a city is attractive to people and whether people will choose to live in the city in the long