Category Archives: Uncategorized

Blog 2: Empower Field at Mile High

Empower Field at Mile High (formerly known as Sports Authority Field at Mile High). I’ve been in this stadium a lot pre-college years. It’s usually full of great memories for me since we always win home games when I go. As a result my experiences are jubilant, we clinched the AFC twice against the Patriots and a fantastic comeback in 2015 against the same team in the blistering cold with snow.

Blog 1: Mike Loya Building


Mike Loya Academic Services Building is the central hub for admissions and financial aid services at a local university in El Paso, TX.  Like the rest of the university it is themed as Bhutan architecture.  The campus captures the sun rise and sunset really well. It is a unique type of architecture in the heart of the city on a mountain. I live on the Eastside of the city and never saw the types of sunrises or sunsets that I did when I went for tours of the campus.

Blog 8: Monument to the People’s Heroes – Petra Van Court

A marble obelisk designed by Lin Huiyin rises ten stories above Tiananmen Square in Beijing. Dedicated to the martyrs of the 19th and 20th centuries fighting for communism, the Monument to the People’s Heroes was constructed in 1952, though it has since also been assigned as a memorial to those who died in the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. This is one of the few new projects designed by Lin Huiyin, who had a deep passion for restoring and preserving historic structures.

Blog 6: Jianzhen Memorial – Petra Van Court

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This monument built for the Bhuddist monk Jianzhen became a restoration project for Lin and her husband in the mid 1930s. He traveled many times to spread Bhuddism to Japan, eventually becoming ill and blind. This is just another important historical and cultural structure Lin helped restore and preserve for us to appreciate today.

Blog 5: Chinese Emblem – Petra Van Court

Lin Huiyin was involved in not only the design of the Chinese national flag but also in the design of the national emblem of the People’s Republic of China. Working as a professor of architecture at Tsinghua University and was involved in their proposal of a national emblem. Pictured is the Tsinghua University jade disk emblem proposal. In spirit with Lin Huiyin’s passion for preserving history, the proposed emblem was regarded as” too bourgeoisie” due to its multitude of traditional symbols.

Blog 4: Nagle Warren Mansion – Petra Van Court

The Nagle Warren mansion, located in Cheyenne, WY, was built in 1888 by Erasmus Nagle. After serving as a place of residence and before serving as the bed and breakfast it does today, the Nagle Warren Mansion was gifted to the YWCA and served as chaperoned housing for single women. It has twelve rooms, primarily decorated in Victorian styles, with the odd additions of a giant Moroccan chandelier in the foyer and ceilings adorned with carved leather in a few rooms. This building is also a historic landmark in my hometown, and I remember it from tours when I was a little kid. I don’t have any particularly fond memories of this building, but I do remember it standing out to me due to some of the oddities of its design and décor – all essentially original pieces of this mansion.

Blog 3: Union Pacific Railroad Depot – Petra Van Court

Designed by Henry Van Brunt, the Union Pacific Railroad Depot in Cheyenne, Wyoming is a western historic landmark. It stands facing, as well as just down the street, from the state capitol. Since its construction in 1887, it has been converted into a museum and serves as an opportunity to teach the history of my hometown. There has been a plaza built that serves as a gathering location for small concerts, and every summer there is a free pancake breakfast served by the local boy scout troops. The depot is the center of some of my fondest childhood memories because when you step inside, you are taken back in time to the wild west. The historical elements of the depot are preserved incredibly well, due to the sandstone exterior’s capability to resist the brutal winters of the plains. When you step inside, you are taken back to the days of the wild west and it feels as though you’re living the birth of the city with the pioneers.

Blog 2: Devon Tower – Petra Van Court

Devon Energy Center, or Devon Tower, is a skyscraper that reaches 50 stories in downtown OKC and serves as HQ for Devon Energy. The project was designed by Jon Pickard and cost an estimated $750 million USD to complete. The first time I ever saw Devon tower as the day I moved to Oklahoma for college. After a 6 hour drive, the afternoon sunlight reflected off of the angled top of the tower and cast a beam of light across the OKC skyline. After being exhausted for driving for two days on end, it was literally the light at the end of my tunnel – completing my journey across states and signaling the beginning of the next chapter of my life. Every time I see Devon, I’m reminded of my first memory of it. Devon Tower is a giant compared to the rest of the city’s skyline, capable of being seen from miles away and mirroring Oklahoma’s skies across the metro.

Blog 4 — Earhtships — Pin Jung Chen

The Earthships is not the name of a building but a kind of building. It can be built in any climate of the world even in the desert and mountains and still provide electricity, water, and food. It is a completely independent operation. Living in Earthships doesn’t mean that one needs to live in an original life, it can provide a very comfortable modern lifestyle. The exterior of Earthships is designed to have two layers of glass, double greenhouse; working with the sunlight and underground cooling tube, the indoor temperature can be maintained around 22 degrees celsius in every season. It makes it possible for people to live in a carbon-zero way.