Ready to take off

Ready to take off.

I stood beneath the Umeda Sky Building and looked straight up, the way you look up at a winter sky when the snow starts to soften the world. Steel ribs, tiled planes, and that impossible circle cut through the center—an opening that makes the whole structure feel less like a building and more like a thought you can step inside.

There’s something honest about architecture that doesn’t try to hide its bones. You can see the crossings and the joints, the way it holds itself together, and it feels strangely alive—quietly working, humming without sound. In Osaka, with the city moving around you, it becomes a small pause. A place where the mundane turns a little mysterious if you’re willing to stand still long enough.

From below, the skybridge reads like a runway. Not for planes, but for your attention—pulling it upward, away from the street, away from the checklist of a day. It’s the kind of view that makes you remember how big “up” can feel.

If you find yourself in Umeda, give yourself the minute it takes to stop and look. Let the lines lead your eyes. Let the open circle frame a patch of pale sky. And for a moment, let it be enough to simply be ready to take off.

Seattle Space Needle

There’s something about looking up at the Seattle Space Needle from directly below that makes the city feel quieter than it is. The legs lean inward like a careful brace, and the saucer above hangs there with a kind of calm confidence—steel and geometry holding their place against a soft, shifting sky.

Today the clouds are scattered, bright and uncommitted, and the white structure catches the light in a way that feels almost domestic—like a familiar porch light in a neighborhood you haven’t visited in years. It’s a landmark, sure, but it also has the steady presence of something that has watched a lot of ordinary days go by.

I like monuments best when they don’t demand anything from you. When they just stand there and let you move around them, letting your thoughts fill in the empty space. The Space Needle does that. It doesn’t need to be explained; it just needs to be seen, from the street, from the park, from the angle that makes you notice the bones of it.

If you’re visiting, you can do the obvious things. But if you live nearby, or if you’re passing through with time to spare, it’s worth stopping for a minute and looking up—letting the wind and the traffic fade, and letting the city feel a little bigger, a little brighter.

Japan Week 2013

Japan Week 2013

Grand Central Terminal’s Vanderbilt Hall
What more can you ask for then Nori chips, hight speed railways, kimono shows, koto music, red lanterns and sake ! A great litte event!

see what you missed here [ Japan Week 2013 ]

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