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  • Redevelopment of the Car Factory In Porte d'Ivry [France, Paris]

    Redevelopment of the Car Factory In Porte d'Ivry [France, Paris]
    Paris, France

    Car factory in Paris

    AREP builds on city's historic legacy with redevelopment of former car factory in Paris. AREP has redeveloped the former Panhard car factory in Porte d'Ivry, Paris, applying exciting design choices to work with the city's existing heritage.

    The Panhard and Levassor workshops were partially demolished in 1967 to create the Olympiades district. They are the last remnants of a thriving industrial past, after the demolition of all the automobile plants in Paris: the Renault facilities on Ile Séguin, Citroën in Javel and part of the Panhard factory at Porte d'Ivry.

    Paris

    Between 2007 and 2013, AREP extended and entirely refurbished the building to create 21,000 sq m of office space as well as public facilities (a nursery and the premises of a non-profit organisation running a day centre for the homeless). The firm worked with architects Jean-Marie Duthilleul and Etienne Tricaud and with Benoît Ferré and Serge Caillaud (Phase 1 and Building Work Management).

    France, Paris

    In an environment dominated by the verticality of high-rise residential blocks, the project keeps the former factory alive, sustains its horizontality and unique architectural style and relies on the ornamental features of the existing façades: materials, dominant chromatic palette and contour line.

    The brick façade provides a mineral base extending the current façades while the openings are in line with the rhythm of the original building. Each, partially or entirely, new façade forms a coherent whole with the reinforced mineral angles providing the framework for a more open sequence in the centre.

    Architecture in France

    Two large industrial-style statuesque boxes loom above the roof-top mouldings, clad in a double semi-transparent layer of glass and perforated coppery metal and echoing the tiles on the saw tooth roofs. These are intended as a metaphor of the former industrial features.

    The adjacent cut of the Petite Ceinture (an abandoned railway line) was decked over to create a garden. Planted with ground covering plants, shrubs and trees, the garden slopes down from Rue Regnault to the new garden level, reflecting the characteristic bucolic image of the embankments of the Petite Ceinture, where vegetation takes over any available space.

    Map in Paris

    The new extension houses a nursery in its north-east corner and a day centre for the homeless in its north-west corner, both situated on the garden and ground-floor levels.

    The work spaces inside the building are designed to facilitate contact, interaction, formal and informal relations. This result is achieved through clearly designed spaces (atrium and vertical access flows), quality of the working environment (natural light, acoustics and ergonomics) and green spaces.

    Redevelopment of the Car Factory In Porte d'Ivry [France, Paris], 7 out of 10 [based on 175 votes]

    VIA «Redevelopment of the Car Factory In Porte d'Ivry [France, Paris]»

  • Huge Pipes, As an Architectural Element

    Huge Pipes, As an Architectural Element
    Huge pipes

    Architectural Factory of Pipes

    The building for company T Bailey Inc is made as factory expansion on manufacture of steel pipes. The architect of the project — Tom Kundig from studio Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects — used huge pipes as a design element.

    We Make the Pipes!

    Total area of office of 1,100 sq. m. For construction of office architects used directly that product which is made by the customer. Visitors will get to a building on huge pipes. In a huge vertical pipe the large fan which will condition air at the main office is placed. The conditioner will be charged by energy of the sun.

    Factory expansion

    The interior corresponds to stylistics. The concrete floor, open structure, a covering minimum. The roof inclination will direct streams of rain water to a garden, for watering of trees growing there.

    VIA «Huge Pipes, As an Architectural Element»

  • Hotel of new type in Amsterdam

    Hotel of new type in Amsterdam

    CitizenM

    CitizenM is the hotel made of ready modules of rooms.

    The hotel of new type is constructed in Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam. The design of the project was developed by the Holland architectural studio, “Concrete”.

    Each of two hundred thirty rooms has been constructed and arranged by furniture at factory. Then the received elements have been made together as containers by the ship — and the hotel has turned out.

    The concept assumes reduction of all unnecessary expenses and removal of all unnecessary details. As a result of visitors receive magnificent conditions and comfort for very moderate price. In hotel of 230 numbers, 14 square metres everyone by the area.

    Amsterdam hotel

    All elements-rooms are made at own factory SitizenM, are mobile and are easily transported. Rooms are placed over the building ground floor where the dynamical lobby is placed, a drawing room, creative rooms, restaurant and a bar.

    Company Concrete has thought up the concept which has defined new possibilities for creative process and a new way for all involved technologies.

    CitizenM wishes to clone the concept and to construct more than 20 hotels next year, with use of technology of blocks. The second hotel will be constructed in Amsterdam, the third - in Glasgow. Other European cities now are in the field of research.

    Schiphol Airport

    As, according to owners CitizenM, everything, that is necessary for us during a stop in road is an excellent bed and a pure bathroom, they have concentrated on these details.

    To save space, subjects from a bathroom are placed separately in a room. In the big glass cylinders are a shower and a toilet, in the small cylinder the bowl and additional space for storage of personal things is hidden.

    Interior hotel

    The space effective utilisation has given a life to effective decisions; for example, the mirror simultaneously is a place for storage. In a steel framework the mirror in full growth which, on the other hand, consists of a mirror for a make-up with illumination, departments for storage of sanitary articles, in hotel available the European, English and American sockets is concluded.

    On either side of a bed night little tables are located. Under a bed the huge locker for suitcase storage in an open kind or other personal things is placed. Sockets on a forward part of a bed allow to connect your laptop or phone.

    Hotel Holland

    Designers have tried to create as much as possible house conditions — zones for work, rest, meal. The design of rooms is created together with furniture brand Vitra. The furniture will periodically vary, that will allow Vitra to organise additional show-rum of production.

    Electronic terminal

    The philosophy of a new hotel brand is that:

    “Small rest in road is necessary to All travellers. To researchers, wise men, dandies, businessmen, adventurers and dreamers. They are independent and individual, but they are united by one — aspiration to travel positively. For all mobile citizens of the world. CitizenM”

    Hotel in Amsterdam

    VIA «Hotel of new type in Amsterdam»

  • Doctor Who looks like he's suffering from a case of Voldemort-itis as the time lord is 'cloned'

    Doctor Who looks like he's suffering from a case of Voldemort-itis as the time lord is 'cloned'
    By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
    ©Scary: A piece of matter morphs into a doppelganger of Doctor Who (Matt Smitih) in tonight's episode
    Doctor Who looks like he's come down with a strange illness in tonight's episode of the sci-fi show.
    With his altered features and pasty white face, the time lord looks like a dead ringer for Harry Potter villain Lord Voldemort.
    But it turns out it isn't even the Doctor at all - it's a piece of matter morphing into his doppelganger.
    ©Lookalike: The morphing ganger looks similar to Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) in the Harry Potter films (right)
    In Rebel Flesh - the first of a two-parter episode - a bizarre creature transforms into a clone of the Dr, played by Matt Smith.
    The drama starts when a solar tsunami sends the Tardis heading towards a futuristic factory on earth which uses programmable matter to create clones of people - aka 'Gangers' - so they can carry out their hazardous work at an acid-mining factory.
    But it appears 'the flesh' has developed a mind of its own and worked out how to replicate themselves.
    When a second storm hits planet earth, the Gangers are seperated, leaving humans unsure who is a genuine person and who is a doppelganger.
    To make things even more confusing, the gangers can remember every second of their 'originals' life and feel every emotion they've ever experienced.
    ©Will the Doctor save the day? The real time lord has to convince everyone to accept the 'gangers'
    With the help of his assistant Amy Pond, the Dr has to try and convince the scared humans to accept the gangers before civil war breaks out.
    Tonight's episode of Doctor Who is on BBC1 at 6:45pm.
    source: dailymail

    VIA Doctor Who looks like he's suffering from a case of Voldemort-itis as the time lord is 'cloned'

  • Red Bull Office

    Red Bull Office
    Red Bull Office

    Red Bull Interior

    Red Bull
    Bull Office
    Office

    Entrant Company: Sid Lee Architecture, Montreal;
    Architectural design: Sid Lee Architecture;
    Branding & graphic design: Sid Lee;
    Builders: professional construction studio: Fiction Factory;
    Local Architects: Kamstra Architecten BNA;
    General contractor: Jora Vision B.V.;
    Photographer: Ewout Huibers.

    VIA «Red Bull Office»

  • A Pale Horse Named Death Listening Party at Idle Hands Bar

    A Pale Horse Named Death Listening Party at Idle Hands Bar
    ©On Thursday, May 25, our friends at Idle Hands Bar bring you the Official A Pale Horse Named Death listening party for their brand new album titled "And Hell Will Follow Me". Not only will the music be cranked and the drink specials will be poured to the masses, but the bands founder and front-man Mr. Sal Abruscato (Life of Agony) will be there to meet his fans. Here is the Official press release:
    ©"A PALE HORSE NAMED DEATH's debut album "And Hell Will Follow Me" is set to be released June 14th on SPV/Steamhammer. To celebrate the release of the album, the band will be hosting an exclusive listening party at Idle Hands Bar in New York, NY. Idle Hands is located at 25 Avenue B. The party is open to the public and members of APHND will of course be in attendance. Don't miss what is sure to be a killer event with drink specials and your chance to hear the new album before it hits stores."
    Here is the artist bio:
    "A PALE HORSE NAMED DEATH is the brainchild of Brooklyn, NY native Sal Abruscato, and sounds like Alice in Chains mysteriously sneaking up behind Type O Negative with a butcher knife while being filmed for a future episode of "Law & Order". Critical acclaim has been quick upon the announcement of the album's June release.
    Sal's partner in crime on "And Hell Will Follow Me" is Matt Brown, sound engineer extraordinaire and guitarist of fellow NY band SEVENTH VOID. "The chemistry between me and Matt is unique and flawless very rare in today's music. We are the murdering evil version of Lennon and McCartney." says Abruscato.
    Brown adds, "Sal asked me if I would help to take these songs to the next level. I took on this project for my friend, to find some closure in rough times. The music is just an extension of our friendship and our passion for creativity."
    ©The album artwork was done by Sam Shearon aka Mr. Sam, who has previously done work for Rob Zombie, Fear Factory and Cradle of Filth to name a few, and features a 20 page booklet with artwork for each individual song. Additionally, the Double LP version will feature a never before heard bonus track called "Pick Up Truck".
    To top that all off, Life of Agony's Keith Caputo lent background vocals to four tracks and Lou Reed's saxophonist Ulrich Krieger guests on "Die Alone". Bobby Hambel from Biohazard - who also plays with the band live - played the guitar leads on three tunes.
    APHND is also a force to be reckoned with live, with shows and festivals already planned in both the U.S. and Europe. Alongside Sal, Matt and Bobby, the live line-up places Type O and Seventh Void drummer Johnny Kelly behind the kit, and Eric Morgan on bass.
    "This is my pinnacle creation, the best album I have ever done." commented Sal. And after listening, most people are tending to agree."
    Click to listen to their NEW song To Die in Your Arms(Courtesy of Revolver Magazine)
    Click to listen to their NEW song Serial Killer(Courtesy of Metal Sucks)
    Click to listen to their NEW song Devil in the Closet(Courtesy of GunShy Assassin)
    Click to listen to their NEW song Heroin Train
    ©LIVE - Line Up:
    - Sal Abruscato (Life Of Agony), Guitar & Vocals
    - Johnny Kelly (Type O Negative, Seventh Void), Drums
    - Bobby Hambel (Biohazard), Guitar
    - Matt Brown (Supermassiv, Seventh Void), Guitar
    - Eric Morgan, Bass
    Guests:
    - Keith Caputo (Life Of Agony) - background vocals
    - Ulrich Krieger (Lou Reed) - saxophone on "Die Alone"
    - Bobby Hambell (Biohazard) - additional guitars
    Related links:
    A Pale Horse Named Death
    SPV Music
    Official Facebook Invite

    VIA A Pale Horse Named Death Listening Party at Idle Hands Bar

  • Opeth Announce North American Tour

    Opeth Announce North American Tour
    ©Swedish progressive Death Metal band Opeth are not only releasing their 10th studio album titled "Heritage" on September 20 (via Roadrunner Records), but they are also doing a massive North American tour with fellow Swedish countrymen Katatonia! The seven-week headline tour will kick off on September 19 in Worcester, Mass. and will conclude on November 1st in Baltimore.
    Opeth will also play a one-off show this weekend as part of the vaunted Bonnaroo Festival outside of Nashville. The band performs on June 10th in what should be a "can't miss" performance.
    Heritage sees the band expanding mightily on their progressive influences.

    Here are the tourdates:
    - 9/19/2011: The Palladium (Worcester, MA)
    - 9/20/2011: Webster Theatre (Hartford, CT)
    - 9/21/2011: Webster Hall (New York, NY)
    - 9/23/2011: The Trocadero (Philadelphia, PA)
    - 9/26/2011: Newport Music Hall (Columbus, OH)
    - 9/27/2011: Expo Five (Louisville, KY)
    - 9/28/2011: Cannery Ballroom (Nashville, TN)
    - 9/29/2011: Amos' Southend (Charlotte, NC)
    - 9/30/2011: Center Stage (Atlanta, GA)
    - 10/1/2011: House of Blues (Lake Buena Vista, FL)
    - 10/3/2011: Warehouse Live (Houston, TX)
    - 10/4/2011: Stubb's Waller Creek (Austin, TX)
    - 10/5/2011: Granada Theatre (Dallas, TX)
    - 10/6/2011: The Beaumont (Kansas City, MO)
    - 10/7/2011: First Avenue (Loop Station, MN)
    - 10/8/2011: Burton Cummings Theatre (Winnipeg, MAN)
    - 10/10/2011: Edmonton Events Centre (Edmonton, ALB)
    - 10/11/2011: MacEwan Hall (Calgary, ALB)
    - 10/13/2011: Commodore Ballroom (Vancouver, BC)
    - 10/14/2011: Knitting Factory (Spokane, WA)
    - 10/15/2011: Showbox SoDo (Seattle, WA)
    - 10/16/2011: Roseland Theater (Portland, OR)
    - 10/18/2011: The Warfield (San Francisco, CA)
    - 10/18/2011: The Mayan Theatre (Los Angeles, CA)
    - 10/20/2011: House Of Blues (San Diego, CA)
    - 10/21/2011: The Fox Theater (Pomona, CA)
    - 10/22/2011: Marquee Theatre (Tempe, AZ)
    - 10/24/2011: The Complex (Salt Lake City, UT)
    - 10/25/2011: Ogden Theatre (Denver, CO)
    - 10/27/2011: The Rave (Milwaukee, WI)
    - 10/28/2011: Vic Theatre (Chicago, IL)
    - 10/29/2011: St. Andrew's Hall (Detroit, MI)
    - 10/31/2011: Mr. Smalls (Millvale, PA)
    - 11/1/2011: Rams Head Live (Baltimore, MD)
    TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE NOW!
    Here is the album cover for their new album "Heritage", due on September 20 (via Roadrunner Records):
    ©
    Related links:
    Opeth

    VIA Opeth Announce North American Tour

  • Picasso, Matisse and... Tim Burton!..

     Picasso, Matisse and... Tim Burton!..

    Johnny Depp

    Alice In Wonderland: Johnny Depp

    Weirdo. Loner. Outsider. These are some of the terms director Tim Burton uses to describe himself. You will notice `creative genius’ isn’t one of them, however, the term is being thrust upon on the quirky filmmaker thanks to Tim Burton: The Exhibition which opened at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) in Melbourne on Thursday. The show is an extension of an exhibition curated by the Performance Center Alexanderhoehe, Iserlohn (Germany), which attracted more than 850, 000 visitors and made it the third largest exhibit at MoMA ever, behind Picasso and Matisse.

    It is a remarkable feat for someone who is firstly, not a mainstream artist, and secondly, alive.

    “Most of this stuff was never meant to really be seen,” says Burton, sitting cross-legged in an ACMI room in his signature uniform of black jeans, a black shirt and black oversized cardigan. His famous curly hair frizzes out at all ends and his hands, fluid and always moving, add to its state by running through it as he describes the `freedoms’ of being labelled a weirdo.
    “As soon as society says you’re a weirdo, then you’re a weirdo, whether you like it or not,” says the 51-year-old.
    “After a certain time you just accept it and it gives you a sense of freedom because if you want to wear a bag over your head society will just accept it because they thought you were weird anyway.
    “Like when I was at Disney they thought I was weird, so I would work under my desk for half the day.
    “Sometimes if they couldn’t find me I’d just be in a dark cupboard working, like my private confessional.
    “So there’s an amount of freedom when you’re categorised a certain way. “
    Growing up in Burbank, California, Tim Burton was fascinated by the visual image and spent his formative years sketching, painting, animating and filming what he saw around him.
    “When you circle outside of society, when you’re kind of, you’re not in there, you’re looking at things,” he says.
    “A lot of it has to do with feeling out of society so you have a lot more observation.”
    These observations make up the first part of the exhibit, Surviving Burbank, and include, among dozens of sketches and early short films, a handmade book he submitted to Disney in the 1970s and the accompanying rejection letter. Several years later Burton achieved his goal and began working at Disney’s Burbank studios as an animator. Some of his early work for the company was as on family hits The Black Cauldron and The Fox and the Hound, which Burton physically shudders remembering.
    “I was never good at drawing foxes, especially the cute ones,” he says.
    “That’s why I can’t look at the exhibit because it freaks me out too much.
    “I know they’ve done a good job, but it’s like seeing your dirty laundry hanging up. “`Oh there’s my underwear from 1973 and there’s some dirty socks.’

    Personal embarrassment aside, the exhibition is an in-depth look at the creative processes and twisted imagination of Burton, featuring more than 700 works including drawings, early films, sculptures, concept art, installations, puppets, costumes and cinematic ephemera. The second part of the exhibition, Beautifying Burbank, follows Burton’s step away from the Disney studio and his first early film and animation works, including his rarely seen Japanese kung-fu version of Hansel and Gretel and better known works Frankenweenie and Vincent, the latter based around one of Burton’s great inspirations — horror movie icon Vincent Price.

    The final section, Beyond Burbank, looks at his feature film career, which has spanned over two decades. From his early works, such as Beetlejuice and Edward Scissorhands, to more recent films like Charlie and The Chocolate Factory and Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street, Burton has made the leap from cult to commercially successful filmmaker. His latest film, Alice In Wonderland, has grossed more than $1 billion at the international box office and gone on to become the fifth highest grossing film of all time. But Burton is quick to write-off his recent success and says if spending half his lifetime in the movie-making business has taught him anything, it is that filmmaking is a `humbling process’.

    “I remember after making Batman I thought `oh, that was a success, I can go and do anything now’,” he says.
    “And so I went and pitched them Edward Scissorhands and they gave me a completely blank look.
    “Nobody wanted to do that and nobody wanted to do Ed Wood, so I had to go about it in other ways.
    “Then I remember pitching a musical version of The House Of Wax with Michael Jackson that he was into but they, the studio, were definitely not into.
    “It’s always a struggle to make a film.”

    Despite the many `challenges’ faced when trying to get a project off the ground, Burton says he has faith that everything works out for a reason. He cites the studio not letting him have Sammy Davis Jr play Beetlejuice as an example, because `it opened the door for Michael Keaton’ who also went on to play Batman in Burton’s two adaptations of the comic book superhero. Another near-miss occurred when, after three hours of auditioning, Burton talked a young Tom Cruise out of wanting the role of Edward Scissorhands, which was later filled by Johnny Depp, who has become a frequent collaborator and one of Burton’s closest friends. Failed projects and major successes go hand in hand for Burton, who says he has learned `not to regret anything’.

    “I don’t really regret, it’s always important not to,” he says.
    “Every movie I’ve done, whether it’s turned out or not, I’ve still enjoyed aspects of it, you know?
    “I mean I think the one I got the most slack with is Planet Of The Apes because that was messing with a classic.
    “But I still enjoyed seeing talking apes."

    One of the highlights of the exhibition is the 2.7kg costume Depp wore in Edward Scissorhands (above), which is stationed at the entrance to the exhibit along with one of the scissor hands on display in a glass cabinet. Other featured works which will have the legions of Burtonites, the name given to passionate Tim Burton fans, gushing is the famous outfit Michelle Phfieffer wore as Catwoman in Batman Returns, original puppets from Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas borrowed from the Disney archives, costumes and sketches from Alice In Wonderland and the Burtonarium, a carnival tent buried deep within the exhibit which houses a light emitting sculptural work by Burton called Carousel (pictured at the very bottom).

    ACMI Head of Exhibitions Conrad Bodman says the `diversity’ of the exhibits represents Burton as a filmmaker and goes a long way to explaining his loyal fan base.

    “One of the things that Tim has always done is work across a range of film genres - action films, animated films, family films, horror films - and I think all of those types of films have different audiences and when you pull all those inspirations together in the one place, people want to come,” he says.
    “What we’re showing in the exhibition is a lot of original concept artwork for his major feature films and we’re kind of looking at the process of his feature filmmaking over the years.
    “People can see that often the hand drawn is the starting point for some ideas and then that turns into a visual reality for a whole process of development.
    “Tim still does a lot of that kind of drawing, painting and making puppets for himself and people will be fascinated to see that process in action.”

    Unlike many other filmmakers, Burton says he has been able to maintain his artistic integrity and stay connected to his creative roots by separating himself from the industry.

    “I don’t live in Hollywood,” he says.
    “I moved away many years ago and once you start doing things they try to treat you as a commodity, a thing.
    “You know, you spend your whole life to be recognised as a human being and then they try to tag you as a thing.
    “Like `oh, you’ve done this and that’s what we expect’ so I don’t go back and look at my films too much because I try not to become a `thing’.
    “I try to keep human... no person or people should be described as one thing.
    “I think everybody has lots of different aspects to their personality.
    “Some are dark, funny, sad, there are so many words for each person.”

    Considering Melbourne was originally to be called Batmania, after one of it’s founders John Batman, it seems appropriate that it is to be the home of Tim Burton: The Exhibition, which runs until October 11. Already ACMI has experienced a fevour amongst Burton’s Australian fans, with all of his public appearances selling out within 24 hours of going on sale and hundreds of fans queuing through Federation Square to be the first to enter the exhibit when it opened on Thursday and have copies of the exhibition guide signed by Burton himself. It is ironic that his work and films are so accepted by the society he once considered himself `outside’ of. It is a phenomenon best summed up by Burton’s partner and regular collaborator Helena Bonham Carter, with whom he has two children. In a book on the art of Tim Burton she says: “When I see him surrounded by flushed and hyperventilating young fans I feel it’s a triumph of the lonely misunderstood outsider child he once felt he was. Now he’s the most understood misunderstood person I’ve come across in the world.”

    In the meantime Burton says he is enjoying a lull between live action projects, while busying himself with a feature-length adaptation of Frankenweenie (concept art), due for release next year. He emphasises the stop-motion animated film is the only project he is working on and committed to, despite online reports which have linked him to adaptations of The Addams Family and super-natural TV series Dark Shadows, both which he blatantly denies were ever `considered’.

    “That’s why I never go on the internet because it always seems like I have some sort of evil clone out there that is doing all these projects,” he says.
    “I’m still recovering from the last one.
    “Whenever I read this stuff I get tired, I think `God, I must be busy’.
    “The studios often have a release date before they have a script, which is such a mistake.
    “I’m trying to get out of that and, you know, into this strange concept of having a script before you announce a release date.”

    P.S. I did the good Samaritan thing on Sunday and took some boys I babysit to see The Karate Kid. Considering what I endured sitting through that movie, karma better have a pet unicorn heading my way! And while you're in the laughing mood, you must must must watch the video clip for The Karate Kid theme song: Never Say Never by Justin Bieber, featuring rapping from Jaden Smith. Hopefully this is not an indication that Smith will make a rap song to accompany every movie he makes, just like his dad. But seriously, when you look young standing next to Justin Bieber then it's time to stop rapping and get back in the womb.

    Picasso, Matisse and... Tim Burton!.., 9 out of 10 [based on 461 votes]

    VIA Picasso, Matisse and... Tim Burton!..

  • Jackass Star Ryan Dunn dead at 34

    Jackass Star Ryan Dunn dead at 34
    ©According to MTV news, Ryan Dunn from MTV's "Jackass", was involved in a fatal car crash that took his life on Sunday night (June 19) in Pennsylvania. According to various sources, Dunn had been drinking right before the accident and what started as a fun night ended up turning into a tragedy for all of his family, friends, and fans. Rest In Peace Ryan!
    Here is the OFFICIAL press release:
    "According to TMZ, the accident occurred at 3 a.m. on Route 322 and New Street in West Goshen Township. While it's unknown who was driving at the time, an unidentified passenger also died in the crash. April Margera, the mother of Dunn's "Jackass" co-star Bam, broke the news to WMMR 93.3's "Preston and Steve" radio show.
    ©In the last photo Dunn posted to Twitter, he and two friends are seen drinking what may be alcoholic beverages. TMZ also reported that the car caught fire in the crash. A tow truck was later sent to the scene to remove the car. A photo obtained by an NBC affiliate in Pennsylvania, showed the wrecked car on the side of the road. As of press time, no further information was known about the accident.
    ©
    Dunn kicked off his career doing crazy stunts and skateboard tricks in a series of online videos, which eventually led to his part in MTV's "Jackass" in 2000. The daredevil was a key member of the crew, appearing in "Jackass" spin-offs like "Viva La Bam" and "Bam's Unholy Union," as Bam's sidekick and often acting as the voice of reason within the zany crew. Dunn's new show "Proving Ground," in which he and co-host Jessica Choban test out action sequences from TV, games and movies, premiered on G4 last Tuesday.
    When MTV News sat down with the "Jackass" crew last year, they named Dunn's first stunt for the show as one of their favorites in 10 years of the TV show and movies. "I loved when [Bam Margera] made Ryan jump into the poo factory, the 'Poo Dive' I think we called it," creator Jeff Tremaine said. " 'Cause that was horrible, but the best part was ... revealing his tattoos that we didn't know about. That was the first time we ever met Ryan."
    He appeared in all three "Jackass" flicks and even took a stab at Hollywood, with a role in non-"Jackass" projects like the Jessica Simpson flick "Blonde Ambition" and on the NBC procedural staple "Law & Oder: SVU."
    This is what those who were close to Ryan Dunn had to say about this sad news:
    "Today I lost my brother Ryan Dunn. My heart goes out to his family and his beloved Angie. RIP Ryan , I love you buddy." - Johnny Knoxville
    "I feel like I lost a brother, Ryan Dunn was family and we are all deeply devastated." - Jeff Tremaine (Jackass Director)
    "I have not been able to talk with Bam as he is in Arizona, but I cannot believe that his friend is dead. Ryan was a wonderful person he really was the sweetest and nicest guy - he was like my extra son, everybody loved him. He had a long-term girlfriend and she will be absolutely devastated - she has turned off her phone just now… I'm too upset to say anything else just now." - April Margera (Ban Margera's mother)
    "I just lost my best friend, I have been crying hysterical for a full day. Millions of people are crying right now!" - Bam Margera
    See also
    "I'm very Sad and Shocked to hear about Ryan Dunn. My thoughts&Prayers are with his Family." - Benji Madden tweeted (Good Charlotte guitarist)
    "Just heard the news that my friend and die-hard Life Of Agony fan, Ryan Dunn of Jackass died this morning. The world is a less funny place right now. This completely sucks." - Alan Robert (Life Of Agony)
    Please, whenever you drink leave the car at home or give the keys to somebody else!


    Related links:
    Dickhouse TV

    VIA Jackass Star Ryan Dunn dead at 34

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