landscapearchitecture:

Minneapolis’ Midtown Greenway: Good for Biz, Good for Bikes. (by Streetfilms)

“While we wring our hands about institutions, learning outside of school is exploding: DIY.org, iPad apps, Khan. Families will curate great online experiences for their kids and this curation will be considered “good parenting.” Families will learn a lot about what their children can and can’t do and sometimes they’ll know more than the school. Institutions have an opportunity to embrace this shift.”
Education Week, March 12, 2013. (via zachklein)
randomc:

artruby:

Alyson Shotz, Mirror Fence (2003).

Awesome. 

How to make a fence disappear. randomc:

artruby:

Alyson Shotz, Mirror Fence (2003).

Awesome. 

How to make a fence disappear.

randomc:

artruby:

Alyson Shotz, Mirror Fence (2003).

Awesome. 

How to make a fence disappear.

(via landscapearchitecture)

Control Vs. Context

The perennial discussions about Fort Wayne’s riverfront are at last moving into action. We only have one chance to do it right. This book looks like a great tool.

Read the review from The Dirt

river

In 2011, the Mississippi River reached record levels. Massive floodgates had to be opened to divert water away from Baton Rouge and New Orleans, where the river rose to within feet of the tops of flood protection levees. Just one year later, droughts in the Midwest have dropped the river to a dangerously low level, threatening both the feasibility of freight transport and, due to rising salinity levels, the viability of New Orleans’s water supply. For the residents of Baton Rouge and New Orleans, however, the record flood of 2011 and low water of 2012 were barely perceptible events. After all, each city is largely divorced from the river, separated by the levee wall. The river has been engineered out of the daily lives of the people that live along it. Even more imperceptible is the massive environmental damage to the surrounding region that has resulted from human modifications to the river.

The Mississippi River is an extreme case of a condition facing many urban rivers, where engineering for the benefit of one use (typically commerce/industry) has come at the expense of other human and natural systems. A new book,River.Space.Design. by a team of European landscape architecture professors, says we must rethink our single-use, massively engineered rivers, offering multi-dimensional strategies for riverside design that benefit river ecology, improve flood protection, and expand human amenities. These strategies are laid out in the form of an extensive catalog that documents numerous design ideas abstracted from successful projects across Europe. These strategies for multi-functional river design are presented in a language that is intended to be comprehensible across a range of relevant disciplines: landscape architecture, ecological science, engineering, and planning. Indeed, the book states that it “can serve as a handbook for interdisciplinary teams and a basis for reaching mutual understanding.”

river1
This design catalog forms the bulk of the first volume River.Space.Design. The book’s second volume consists of case studies documenting the sites from which the design catalog draws. The two-volume format is a unique and critical aspect of the book. Connected only by the book’s outer cover, these volumes are intended to be opened and used simultaneously: each design concept references relevant case studies and each case study references relevant design concepts.

river2
River.Space.Design.’s meticulous organization and graphic design makes this cross referencing easy and natural. For instance, in the design catalog I read about the utility of floating islands in overcoming hard river edges. This entry references a case study in the second volume, which describes a project on the river Leine in Hanover, Germany. In this example, a private businessman has established a café floating on pontoons, accessed by a walkway bypassing the fortified bank of the river.

river3Being able to view this case study — documented through relevant maps, photographs, and narrative — while simultaneously viewing its abstracted design elements in the design catalog is incredibly useful. This format allows for a seamless transition between the conceptual and the concrete. Because we can clearly see the source of the design principles, they do not come across as prescriptive or limiting, but instead function as they should: a catalog of good ideas, derived from successful projects, that may have application in other projects.

With its clear language and impeccable organization and design, River.Space.Design.serves not only as a great resource for design ideas and examples, but also as a challenge to how we consider rivers in an urban context. The book does not view river design in terms of an idealized notion of what a river should be, but instead bases its strategies on dynamic river processes.

Dynamic river processes are not seen as something to repress or obscure, but instead as opportunities to enhance ecology, flood protection, and aesthetics. In the book’s introduction, the author writes, “What has been lacking up to date is an overview that presents the wide diversity of design possibilities for urban river spaces in a systematic and transferable way. This book aims to fill this gap and serve as a primer and reference for designers of urban spaces.” River.Space.Design. is absolutely successful in this regard and will hopefully inspire designers to find ways new ways to engage their community’s rivers.

Read the book.

This guest post is by Ben Wellington, Student ASLA, Master’s of Landscape Architecture Candidate, Louisiana State University.

Image credits: (1) Birkhauser, (2-4) River.Space.Design

I am dedicating this new sketchbook to cabin design.

architizer:

Shortcut! This Giant Trampoline Pathway Cuts Through the Russian Forest!

Its a trampoline path!! architizer:

Shortcut! This Giant Trampoline Pathway Cuts Through the Russian Forest!

Its a trampoline path!! architizer:

Shortcut! This Giant Trampoline Pathway Cuts Through the Russian Forest!

Its a trampoline path!! architizer:

Shortcut! This Giant Trampoline Pathway Cuts Through the Russian Forest!

Its a trampoline path!!

I was researching architectural visualization and stumbled across what appears to be a microsite for an imagined Spanish hospital project. Click on the link above and then click on everything. It is mysterious and compelling.

render

A few weeks ago my buddy Kelly Lynch at Lynchpin Creative told me about a cool project he was beginning work on and asked if I would be interested in being involved. The idea was a series of video shorts highlighting a handful of people in Fort Wayne who were doing and envisioning great things for our city. The series would be called ‘Citizen Wayne’ and in his words, would be “one part cinematic journalism and and one part character study, chronicling interesting stories, people, and places from Fort Wayne and Northeast Indiana.”

From me he was looking for music. He was looking for soundtracks that would stay out of the way, while subtly informing the story and evoking the emotion of the tale. Maybe he never really said that - but that’s what I tried to do. 

The preceding video is one of two we have completed. I know for certain that the video possesses a quality that is uniquely Fort Wayne, in that it is brimming with expectation and spirit. It also a call to action to all who live and love in our city and want to be a part of it’s renaissance.

As always, I hope that the music serves the story and does the message justice.

You can see a teaser and one more of the completed videos right about here.

When I get stressed out at work. I walk over to the greenhouse and let the plants do their work. (Taken with Instagram)

there is a faint shuddering beneath the veil

like an involuntary shiver

the coarse cloth is uncomfortable against 

my skin.

only when I move.