The exterior of this brick home in Amsterdam was transformed by Studio Wessels Boer into a large-sca

The exterior of this brick home in Amsterdam was transformed by Studio Wessels Boer into a large-scale curio case to commemorate its role as one of the original Dutch "dime buildings," an early, 1870s-era attempt at cooperative housing. Each of the custom-made cut-outs tells a story about either the history of the place or a personal narrative from a current resident. [Lustik]

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Visit This House Being 3D Printed in Amsterdam Right Now

Visit This House Being 3D Printed in Amsterdam Right Now

If you think 3D printing is only good for making flimsy paperweights, then you’re pretty much right. A group of audacious Dutch architects, however, have just begun 3D printing an entire canal house in Amsterdam. Is the first 3D printed house a gimmick? Definitely! Is it an experiment that pushes the possibilities for 3D printing technology and architecture ? Maybe!

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Okay, So Vertical Videos Are Now Art?

Okay, So Vertical Videos Are Now Art?

Unperturbed by the scourge of vertical video shot on mobile phones, a bunch of Serious Artists have banded together for a film festival devoted exclusively to incorrectly oriented videos. Why subject our eyeballs to such unnatural composition? For art, duh.

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Amsterdam’s Canal Aqua: Bottled Canal Water Costs Almost $70 Per Bottle

Amsterdam is known for a lot of things, including their scenic canals. The city’s Canal District is turning 400 this year, and the city is celebrating by selling bottles of water obtained from the canal.

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It’s an unusual souvenir but hey, at least it lets you take an actual piece (or rather, several hundred milliliters) of the attraction with you, complete with sediment. The water is bottled as Amsterdam Canal Aqua and has the background story of the waterway printed on the back of its label.

It’s obviously not potable, so don’t drink it if you know what’s good for you.

Each bottle of Amsterdam Canal Aqua is priced at €50 (~$69 USD.)

[via PSFK via Food Beast]

Driverless cars as life savers, pigeons as pedestrians, lip readers as crime stoppers, and alcoholic

Driverless cars as life savers, pigeons as pedestrians, lip readers as crime stoppers, and alcoholics as city employees. These are just a few of the urban reads on our radar this week.

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Nokia’s co-developed high-amplitude mics retain 10-month exclusivity, HTC has to look elsewhere (updated)

Nokia’s injunction yesterday has now been made a little more concrete. The Amsterdam district court has handed down a 10-month ban on STMicroelectronics selling its high-amplitude mics to anyone other than the Finnish phone maker. The same dual-membrane microphone is used in both the Lumia 720 and the HTC One, but Nokia (which co-developed and designed the component) had signed a 12-month exclusivity deal with the chipmaker — a deal that STMicroelectronics apparently thought was only six months long.

According to All About Phones NL, the ruling won’t halt sales of One devices already out there, with the court stating that HTC was “blameless” and that it couldn’t have known about the contract between Nokia and STMicroelectronics. In short, you’ll still be able to buy HTC’s flagship in the Netherlands with those dual high-amp mics in tow — at least for now. We’ve reached out to both companies for comment, but it’s shaping up to be another parts supply woe for HTC’s new smartphone.

Update: We’ve just heard from HTC on this, and its response is largely the same as yesterday’s:

“HTC is disappointed in the decision. We are consulting with STM and will decide whether it is necessary to explore alternative solutions in due course. In the meanwhile, we do not expect this decision to have any immediate impact on our handset sales.”

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Via: All About Phones NL

Source: Amsterdam District Court filing

Gas Stations Transformed into Gorgeous Glowing Zombies

Gas stations aren’t pretty, especially the stark, utilitarian ones that sit just off the highway with their filthy bathrooms and broken vending machines. But a handful of stops along an Amsterdam roadway got a glowing renovation. Literally. More »