Things are pretty full on around these parts. Last week's post was totally missed, it's book production time. The head space needed to be elsewhere, subbing up a cheeky 30 interviews into some sort of cohesive mess. But that's a story for another time, like when the book comes out.
In the meantime there have been some other big goings on. As you read this the final touches are being done on the new CT room in Auckland's Hospital's Oncology Department. Anyone who has had anything to do with the Oncology Dept will know only too well, it's not a place that good news normally comes from.
All the staff, orderlies, nurses, doctors, receptionists, heck, the cleaners at Oncology do an incredible job. Hourly, they are there for patients who are highly stressed, who are likely to have or had the worst possible news. They are everyday heroes.
Deep in the bowels of Auckland Oncology is a windowless room, it houses the CT scanner. As a patient, this would be one of the least funnest places in the world. It's a bad news room. Traditionally these rooms are austere white, as clinical as you can get.
Klein Arcihecture's Jeff King is determined to change these places. Son of a terminal cancer patient, he knows only too well how distressing these rooms can be. Jeff has championed the installation of two full wall super graphics with Auckland DHB. The most recent CT one and this one in the EP Lab in 2019. The EP Lab install highlighted how much the staff also enjoyed the super graphic.
There was quite a process in place to get the CT image over the line. Jeff collated and sourced the images which have to fit a demanding criteria . Firstly they have to be shot on the highest possible resolution with the best possible equipment. The images had to be shot at ground level and have no running water in them. There were 6 images short listed from professional landscape photographers. Then the sourced images where put to a hospital staff vote. And here's where I get to claim, I got first, second and fourth...comb's for days!
Auckland Hospital's EP Lab
The EP lab one was bigger, but the CT room means more. The chosen image of Karekare was made using a nodal head rig my late father Lance made for me. Actually both images were made using the Lancey Special. Lance was a master tool maker, a professional tinkerer. I explained to him what a nodal head does. It moves the sensor of the camera off the tripod's axis to the nodal point. It then rotates the camera smoothly around that nodal point. Thus making distortion free frames that will stitch seamlessly together. It's a lot more complicated than that.
But Lance got it, surpassed the brief by a country mile and made this in his garage workshop. It works beyond perfectly.
He'd been a patient at Auckland Oncology. Been dealt the worst possible news. I wish he could see the new CT Scan room, I wish I could be touring the room with him saying 'See Lancey, see what you made.' He would have been chuffed, maybe even uttered one of his Tim The Tool Man grunts.
From The Elements Gallery
Here's another massive pano that I love, love so much it's now loaded into the Elements Gallery for you to view and perhaps get printed! It's from the Putangirua Pinnacles, Cape Palliser . You can check it out better HERE