Sunday, November 30, 2008

The Notorious H2O

Blue is the New Green - runs the headlines in last weeks NY Times blog, and not a moment too soon for that. Allison Arieff give an explanation: "A range of alternative energy technologies are available to us today; there is, however, no substitute for water. But there are new ways of thinking about water that can help us make better use of the available supply. ...there are innovations, large and small, now available that would provide for systematic management and optimization of our nation’s water."


:: image via Inhabitat

While this idea of peak-water is not news - it did spur an interesting debate. Arieff went on in the article to explain a range of strategies that aim to address the water dilemma, all of which are pretty common fodder on the landscape architectural front: Living Roofs, Living Walls, Greywater, and Rainwater Harvesting all focus around green building and sustainable sites.




:: images via NY Times

While many of the above examples ring truly green, the specific focus on blue, particularly in water conservation and stormwater strategies. Some other projects around the concept of water worthy of discussion. First, a great water diagram via a post from my buddies at Urbanarbolismo, (here's a link to the English translation) Jordi mentions: "Recently I published an article entitled: 10 original ideas for water treatment systems, without a doubt this project: "The mysterious story of the garden that produces water" would be the idea 11. This is a project for a garden that recycles waste water for the people of Cehegin (Murcia)." The idea comes from Monica Garcia and Javier Rubio from cómo crear historias - read more about the project at their site.




:: images via Urbanarbolismo

This may strike on one of those discussions we had related to telling stories with a minimal amount of imagery... in this case simple animated graphics that layer items upon each other to give relationships. Check these interesting and simple 'narratives'.



:: images via Urbanarbolismo

Pruned picked up a bunch of posts around water that are a fabulous cross-section. A snippet discusses the Central Arizona Project (if you've read Cadillac Desert you know this one)...


:: image via Pruned

...and follows up with a pairing that discusses the work Paisajes Emergentes and their second-place winning competition entry for an abandoned airport in Quito (Parque del Lago) with some amazing graphics - (be sure to click on the LONG site plan and exploded axon drawings below for sure).


:: images via Pruned

And some more focused imagery:



:: images via Pruned

While static, the following series gives another 'narrative' which is essential in discussing process-based designs involving water. This amphitheater / urban beach / rainwater harvesting storage tank is elegant and simple in design and function.


:: images via Pruned

This reminds me (albeit much more expansive and elegant) of a project I designed here in Portland (well Milwaukie, Oregon) that used the sunken amphitheater seating for additional rainwater storage in an urban plaza (i'll post some images soon)... the scale and quality of this are great in image - and from experience there are some logisitics that would need to be grappled with for sure to pull it off. More images of all of these projects are availabile via the Flickr site for Paisajes Emergentes.

Finishing off the triad - another project from Pruned that offers some interesting images (and fantastic graphic techniques) for the Marti Mas Rivera, of Universitat Politecnica De Catalunya, Barcelona, a rainwater harvesting project for the Arabic Fortress Hill of Baza in Andalucia. Check the full post, but check these amazing pics.






:: images via Pruned

eye candy offers a more simple view of an integrated rain chain via a project from David Baker + Partners Architects, showing the connection from imagery to action.


:: image via eye candy

There are definitely some other interesting phenomena out there. Lisa Town mentions in her recent trip to Venice, the phenomenon of rising tide intruding into public spaces: "In the areas where piazza is at it's lowest, which is in even outlined with lines in the paving that also used to provide an outline of the underlying cistern, the water sits in the plaza. It actually makes for beautiful pictures with the reflection of the surrounding buildings but is nevertheless an unfortunate event to see." Read her post for more pics... I'm particularly fond of the walkways where people patiently queue up to cross the water.


:: image via Lisa Town

Again, Lisa Town mentions the great Play Pump (see Aqueous Solutions for a reference here at L+U), which uses a merry-go-round to pump and store drinking water for use... particularly important in areas where access to fresh water may mean the difference between life and death. That's good, clean, and from the sounds of it, Green fun.

:: image via Lisa Town

Related: Aqueous Solutions Part I Part II Part III

Thinking Out of the Box, Pt. 2

Following the big box threads of the previous post, some of the speculative work of Lewis Tsurumaki Lewis (LTL) offers another viewpoint towards the idea of a tranformed development archetype.


:: image via LTL

I think half of my interest in LTL is the concepts, the other half is the interesting graphic techniques - many of them section-perspective overlays of sketchup and other 3-D graphics with a variety of hand-sketching, complete with graphite smearing that gives a wonderful feel to their drawings.


:: The Graphic Technique (Park Tower) LTL - image via AIA NY

They remind me (at least stylistically) quite a bit of the pomo sci-fi renderings by Lebbeus Woods that we all drooled over in college as we envisioned William Gibson cyberpunk novels come to life.


:: Sketch by Lebbeus Woods - image via e-tba

Shifting gears back to Big Box, my colleague Brett Milligan picked up Opportunistic Architecture while we were in the midst of the Habitats competition about a year ago... and I had another opportunity to take a closer look recently as well. The speculative project New Suburbanism is a great addition to this discussion of repurposing big box areas for new uses. Check out the remainder of LTL's work as well when you get a chance.


:: image via Better World Books

From the LTL website: "In New Suburbanism individual houses reformat existing desires, creatively reclaiming the normative suburban spatial logic determined by commodified rooms and features. In the New Suburbanism proposal, the house arrangements are made through exploiting the reciprocal relationship between the figural commodity rooms and the free space of the public programs, initiating a spatial play not achieved in the stilted plans of typical homes and setting the stage for unprecedented mass customization. In New Suburbanism, latent desires of suburbia are exploited, lamentable redundancies are absolved, and new sectional matings are established in continued pursuit of the American Dream."




:: images via The Curated Object

As you notice in the images of New Suburbanism above and below, there an interesting juxtaposition of 'big-box' elements tucked under and facing opposite to a more residential occupied space that sits atop the rooftop, utilizing this often disregarded spaces. This simple folding adds a level of complexity to the spatial arrangement, but also separating visually and physically the two uses - while allowing for the practicalities of auto traffic and movement of goods in an out of spaces.


:: image via The Curated Object


:: image via ArquitecturaMNP

The plan gives a further clue to the overall form, which does show the similar underlying box form, with the more residential character overlaid atop this - along with shared community amenities such as sports fields and open spaces. Definitely another interesting viewpoint to add to the discussion about big-box reuse and reconfiguration.


:: image via ArquitecturaMNP

And thanks much Damien from the great site World Landscape Architect - who directed me to the immense Chadstone Shopping Centre in Melbourne - weighing in at a hefty 1.6 million square feet, with an associated 10,000 stall parking lot. Not necessarily up to Mall of America (2.5 million s.f.) standards, but it brings up a good point... we discuss big box stores, but what about the greening of the mega-mall?

Wonder what LTL could do with this one?


:: Chadstone Shopping Centre - image via Google Earth

Friday, November 28, 2008

Thinking Out of the Box, Pt. 1

The ubiquitous big box store is a staple of modern life, which, along with it's associated expansive parking areas eat up a good portion of our cities. The collections of big box stores, known as power centers, exacerbate this phenonmenon by multiplying the footprint and impact of the store uses - creating significant gashes in the urban fabric. Tool around Google Earth and you can find these everywhere - particularly at the nexus of highway access points and areas of flat lowland zones.


:: Big Box Power Center in Portland - image via Google Earth


:: Sensitive Big Box Power Center? - image via Nave Newell

This urban typology has special resonance after working on a big box alternative in the Integrating Habitats competition entry for Urban Ecotones, where we re-envisioned a significantly sized green home store - giving a twist on the modern big box, amongst other idea - focused on parking, site, and building form.




:: Integrating Habitats Big Box - images via L+U

An article recently entitled Big Box & Beyond by Joel Garreau with the tagline: "Today's Temples of Consumption Don't Have To Be Tomorrow's Ruins. What's in Store?" provides some additional visions of the big-box phenomenon. This coincides with the publication of 'Big Box Reuse' by Julia Christensen - which furthers the great work from her blog of the same name. Although a range of 'reuse' options exist, everyone's favorite (and perhaps mine as well, having visited the factory back in the day) is the Spam Museum nee Kmart, in Austin, Minnesota.


:: Spam Museum - image via Big Box Reuse

Garreau's article jumps in with some stats: "This lesson looms because we're going to have to figure out what to do with a whole lot of big boxes, and soon. There are thousands of them -- vast prairies of Targets and Bed Bath & Beyonds and Costcos and Home Depots. Wal-Mart alone has 4,224 in the United States, more than half of them Supercenters into which, on average, you could comfortably fit four NFL football fields."


:: Even with Solar Panels - it needs some work - image via Treehugger

Christensen gives some context for her project: "In the background is this very large problem that is being thrust upon our landscape. The big-box buildings themselves were not necessarily wanted in the first place. These corporations are not held accountable for the fact that they are building hundreds and hundreds of buildings that will be abandoned in the future. Luckily, our communities are incredibly resourceful, finding amazing things to do with these buildings. That's key. That's the balance of this project, the thrust of the message."

And a clear definition as a starting point, narrowing in on not just vacant retail, but looking at a question of scale. Again from Christensen: "Big boxes are not only one-story, one-room places originally created for retail sales. They are of breathtaking size -- some of them as much as 280,000 square feet or six football fields. They are marked by dazzlingly tall ceilings -- 18 feet or more -- that beg to have additional levels, balconies and cantilevers added to them. And they offer world-class heating, ventilation and air-conditioning."

The article continues with some of the motivations behind the phenomenon - sometimes due to economic downturns where stores are closed, but also due to policies such as 'dark stores' - in which a property is still owned by the company but kept undeveloped to limit direct competition with a replacement Superstore. Uses such as churches seem a popular choice - and are more viable because they don't compete with the original owners. There were many options kicked around, including homeless shelters, cemeteries, and the favorite - inverting the box and using it for a litter box for a 10-story tall cat. Now that, is adaptive reuse.


:: image via Washington Post

So what can one do with such specialized open framework? As Garreau mentions and the article shows, quite a lot... and the options are not necessarily limited. "Nonetheless, big boxes are nothing if not generic. So possibilities that can be imagined here can work elsewhere."




:: The Estates at Place W - images via Washington Post

After this interesting rumination on the topic, the interesting aspect comes as the Washington Post collected a series of architects, developers, engineers and artists (no landscape architects...?) to re-envision the big-box paradigm through visual media. The premise: "Let your imagination soar. So what if big boxes seem at first glance like bridesmaids' dresses -- big, ugly and not a whole lot you can use them for. At second glance, with some alterations they can be made to seem so promising." A collection of these items with some narrative is found below, but check out the full visual feast here.

In Build A Town in the Parking Lot, Christopher B. Leinberger and Darrel Rippeteau use the big box parking as a field for future urbanization. "The vast acreage of big-box parking lots seems almost providentially proportioned to be turned into walkable city blocks"


:: Build a town in the Parking Lot - images via Washington Post

Esocoff & AssociatesArchitects look at gardening and design for disassembly: "The vast roof supports solar voltaics, which enables not only a greenhouse, but a recharging area for electric cars, and a veneer of apartments for people who really want to get near their groceries. Everything is designed to be easily disassembled and moved as the economics of the box location changes."


:: La Vigne de la Grande BoÎte - images via Washington Post

Rusty Meadows and Tammy Kim of the Perkins+Will Washington office used viticultural as a point of departure, draping the roof and parking lot with grape vines: "The interior of the big box has plenty of space for a retail outlet as well as areas for bottling, case storage, processing and shipping. It also features a wine-making school and a cafe."


:: Variation on a Garden - images via Washington Post

The final one that I really took a liking to, maybe just for the montaged lined paper presentation, is by Darrel Rippeteau called The Gardens of Gathiersburg. "Organic gardeners routinely lay down weed-suppressing black plastic into which they poke holes to plant their seeds. Asphalt is just like that, only a little thicker, observes Darrel Rippeteau, principal of Rippeteau Architects. So in the process of creating a truck garden (below), the parking lot becomes an orchard. Under the parking lot you find an elaborate network of drainage pipes..."




:: The Gardens of Gaithersburg - images via Washington Post

I'm actually amazed by how many similar design moves and concepts that we investigated in the Urban Ecotones submittal for the big box ended up in these sketches... gardening and urban agriculture, parking lot adaptation, re-development of urban parking voids -- I guess great minds think alike.

Look out soon for Part 2, which will feature another unique big-box transformation by a great firm, Lewis Tsurumaki Lewis (LTL) - from their book 'Opportunistic Architecture' which was and continues to be one of those influential texts for us, at least. Stay tuned.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Tel Aviv Port

Dezeen featured this project recently, and I thought it worth an opportunity to investigate a little further. The Tel Aviv Port by Mayslits Kassif Architects. I was struck by the utter simplicity of form, as well as some of the interesting detailing of this highly trafficked open space, and some of the subtle ways of defining form. What first caught my eye is the was the undulating boardwalk - which aside from being visually interesting, makes for an interesting exercise to see how it was detailed.




:: images via
Dezeen

The site plan shows a variety of these spaces... particularly reinforcing the design intent... Via Dezeen: "The design introduces an extensive undulating, non-hierarchical surface, that acts both as a reflection of the mythological dunes on which the port was built; and as an open invitation to free interpretations and unstructured activities. Various public, political and social initiatives – from spontaneous rallies to artistic endeavors and public acts of solidarity – are now drawn to this unique urban platform, indicating the project’s success in reinventing the port as a vibrant public sphere."


:: image via
Dezeen

The overall form definitely gives thought to the concept of an urban beach - offering a more structured interface with the shoreline.


:: image via
Dezeen
This takes a variety of forms that are analagous from wharf steps, shorelines, dunes, replete with umbrellas for viewing the sea. There are also 'rocks' giving a reinforcement to the beach concept and creating nodes for seating and relaxing... but doing so in an organic way similar to natural settings.


:: image via
Dezeen

The overall form and detailing is interesting, and the breadth of space given to the public is laudable. There is, however, a certain barreness to the space that I can't help thinking would benefit from at least some minimal planted areas. Perhaps this is the tradeoff due to heavy use and climate, or maybe a design gesture. While the wood would stay cool, and the umbrellas provide some shading, there seems little respite from elements - giving one a simple option of sun, or head elsewhere to the surrounding buildings.

:: image via
Dezeen

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

LAs + Plants

Ok, this is not another post about James Corner (but it does have some more images). Instead, there were some observations from a couple of recent comments that came from 'Corner(ing) the Market' a few posts back that I thought worthy of throwing out into the world and seeing what grew. The commentary was particularly aimed at some comments from Susan Szenasy of Metropolis. I mentioned that Metropolis seems to be covering more landscape-related materials, as well as the fact that Ms. Szenasy made some seemingly disparaging or clueless commentary about our fine field.


:: James Corner's Beyond Building A-Z, Venice Biennial - image via Lisa Town

'Wes' mentioned the lack of understanding of the profession: "I was appalled at Susan's comments coming from a respected design journalist and editor in chief of Metropolis magazine. There's much to criticize about the field of landscape architecture and the direction it is going; but she clearly has no concept of even what landscape architects do!"


:: Detail of Corner's corner - image via Lisa Town

'Argyle' followed up with a different story from a panel at the 2008 ASLA Conference (here's an edited snippet): "Susan Szenasy hosted a morning general session at the ALSA conference in Philly last month... essentially she told a story about being on a site with several LAs and only one of them could ID a plant when she asked about one ...Kathryn Gustafson ... took the comment to heart and made the reply; Gustafson put Szenasy in her place by letting her know that LAs are not horticulturists. We have to know such a broad spectrum of details across so many related disciplines that we can't possibly be expected to know plants that well. She said LAs are constantly put in the position of team building… bringing together specific professionals such as geologists and horticulturalists... and trying to use their specific knowledge to form/transform space."

So the question that is begging to be answered:
Are landscape architects synthesizers of knowledge from plant and other specialists, or can they be specialists in plants themselves?

I know this is one of those age old questions, much like the 'what do we call ourselves' or 'art vs. science' that seem to crop up occasionally and spark some interesting online debate. To me this is a more complex question...that has as much diversity of reason as the profession has facets. The amount of knowledge, of course, is based on what you do along the continuum of landscape architectural practice.

On one hand Gustafson is right on... we are broadly competant and able to bring together design, science, social, and political elements in coming up with dynamic spaces. This macro-scale view does not rely on knowledge of a particular species of plant, but on the balancing of hundreds of variables. Does a single plant here or there matter? Can you do this work and remain a plants expert?

In the middle ground, there's professionals working a variety of scales and project typologies - some which tap into the complexity of group and system dynamics, and others that work at site and detail scale. This jack-of-all-trades/master-of-none paradox makes us need to be able to see big picture dynamics, understand complex systems, and also prepare detailed documents to make these a reality. Can we switch scales and do each of these well - or do we marginalize the entirety by the impossibility of this massive undertaking?

On the fine grain scale, there a common cop-out for landscape architecture to remain somewhat ignorant of the actual physical tools we use in our daily practice (i.e. soils, plants, materials, et.al.) There is also an often equal countervalent patronizing tone from the 'plant' people that LAs have no clue about plants. Both are patently disrupting to the profession and process.

In the end, to be work, any of these process must become the human-scale reality of all of that broad based synthesizing and hand-waving... it's the reality that exists as the actual built product. This is the stage where it is vital that a project works. So as we ponder this... there seem to be a million more questions... Are you a specialist or generalist? Do you know plants, or do you farm this knowledge out in specialized cases (or every case)? Is there an implication that a landscape architect must be a plant pro, or does this oversimplify and reduce the profession to it's former 'shrubbing up' status? And on... and on.

Anyone have any thoughts?

Monday, November 24, 2008

Corner Redux

It seems that James Corner is basking in the glow of design press recently... with another feature in New York Magazine that investigates (in depth) the evolution and potential of Fresh Kills Park. While I have yet to see the movie, Wall-E Park by Robert Sullivan alludes to the idealogy implicit in the movie and it's message of restoration. He comments: "On giant piles of trash left by a generation of New Yorkers, landscape architect James Corner is building a park that has the power to change the way we see the past and the future of the city."


:: Fresh Kills circa 1990 - image via New York Magazine

The barren landscape is evoked from the start: "Let’s start at the peak of what was once a steaming, stinking, seagull-infested mountain of trash, a peak that is now green, or greenish, or maybe more like a green-hued brown, the tall grasses having been recently mown by the sanitation workers still operating at Fresh Kills, on the western shore of Staten Island. Today the sun dries the once slime-covered slopes, as a few hawks circle in big, slow swoops and a jet makes a lazy approach to Newark, just across the Arthur Kill."

The savior... of course is James Corner and his firm Field Operations. While known in NYC primarily for the High Line, the 2000+acre landfill renovation will be the life's work: "But as celebrated as the High Line will probably be, it is Field Operations’ other New York park—the one that’s bigger than lower Manhattan, and currently about the height of Mexico’s Great Pyramid of Cholula—that may change people’s ideas of what a park is all about."


:: image via New York Magazine

And the potential to change people's perceptions of parks is perhap Corner's greatest contribution. Sullivan evokes the pastoral baggage that has accumulated over the past century plus from the time of Central Park. The new aesthetic is derived from a new model, as Corner mentions: "Parks all start to look the same,” he says, “and that sameness is either the pastoral model or the modernist formal model, and this is my problem with style. We try not to have a style.” When Corner and his team began to think about Fresh Kills, they knew that the site was so large and technically demanding that it would be distracting to think in terms of design the way Olmsted did. So they have opted instead to “grow” the park."

The idea of palimpsest is mentioned, with is perhaps a good metaphor for Corner's work at Fresh Kills... a product and a referent to the history of this site's illustrious use. This may be a question of necessity rather than planning, due to the sheer immensity of the space, and the requirement to keep certain elements and prepare 'fields' in others... a broad brush and more passive design process that yields spaces that unfold over time.


:: image via New York Magazine

While allusions to historical large parks put's him in illustrious company, Corner is: "...more like Olmsted as modern-literature professor, a designer who sees the landscape as text, a place where stories are written and rewritten, one on top of the next, sometimes getting all smudged up. At Field Operations, he is attempting to expand the idea of ecology to include not just rivers and streams but also subway lines, movements of capital, and weekend traffic. “To me, a city is an ecology—it’s an ecology of money, an ecology of infrastructure, an ecology of people,” he says. “Everyone thinks ecology is about nature, and it is, but there are so many other systems.”

While dealing with the historical remnants of shifting subgrade, methane offgassing and toxic leachate, the park design builds on this systems approach to protect and restore - no small feat on this scale. But alas, the beauty perhaps comes from the realistic and truthful approach that Corner took during the competition: "Every contestant ended up emphasizing so-called green ideas like recycling, native planting, and the use of sustainable-energy sources. Hargraves Associates featured Olmsted-sounding names like “The Meadows” and “The Preserve”; John M. Caslan and Partners proposed “ecospheres,” or giant domes that housed various American climates; and Rios’s plan featured an intrapark amphibious shuttle bus. But none of the competitors addressed the trash hills as explicitly as Corner."


:: image via New York Magazine

The beauty of the competition is that it acknowledges time as a major component of the design process. This requires some definite patience, but with a potential that pivoted on a simple idea posited by Corner: "Keep the views, which he knew would blow away every New Yorker who will, 40 years from now, take a hybrid bus or solar-powered ferry to the place. “I said, ‘Look, whatever we do we’ve got to keep the big and green. These are views and vistas that most people in a city would have to drive three or four hours to see.’ "


:: image via New York Magazine

This broad view doesn't discount the details... at least in terms of regeneration, evoking the broadness of a forest and the biomimicry of a lichen to explain the process: "Corner relates the architecture of the place to something more along the lines of forest and landscape management than typical park development. “You start with nothing, and you grow, through management, a more diverse ecology,” he says. “You take a very sterile or inert foundation and move something in. It’s like lichen. They quickly grow and die, grow and die, creating a rich soil that something else can grow onto. And that’s how ecosystems grow.”

Continuing on to explain the Lifescape concept and it's distinct phases: Moundscape, Fieldscape, Openscape, and Eventscape - gives some indication, at least in verbal form of the evolution from primitive state to usable park - with constantly expanding occupation over this time period. This evolution is conceptual but realistic - and perhaps difficult to comprehend when looking at the scale and current state of the park.


:: image via New York Magazine

With criticism of the glacial timeline, as well as the idea of 'erasing' the landfill thrown out via critics - the plan is responsive of site constraints and opportunities. Versus Duisberg Nord - a specific post-industrial ruin in which Peter Latz built a large scale park, Fresh Kills is a whole different monster: "As much as Corner admired Latz’s achievement, Fresh Kills doesn’t offer him the same opportunities for romantic decrepitude. For starters, most ecologists argue that we can’t just leave a place like Fresh Kills a broken dump. “If you left it alone,” says Handel, “it would change, but it would change in a depauperate way.” And Corner can’t imagine exposing, say, leachate streams for teaching-moment purposes, especially in a city where parents sue if their children’s feet burn on hot playgrounds. “I think landscape should be edifying, but there are joyous and optimistic ways. It doesn’t have to be so apocalyptic.”

This positivity in the face of amazing constraints is the hallmark of a long-view - which is perhaps the definition of the design. Change is inevitable in landscape architecture, yet we seem to look at design as a 'product' that has a finite timeframe and beautiful ending - not as something that evolves along sometimes unknown ways. "The most complicated part of the design is the idea that it is designed to change. “Large parks will always exceed singular narratives,” Corner wrote in a recent essay. “They are larger than the designer’s will for authorship.” He added, “The trick is to design a large park framework that is sufficiently robust to lend structure and identity while also having sufficient pliancy and ‘give’ to adapt to changing demands and ecologies over time.”

"Fresh Kills is like forest succession on a simultaneously human and industrial basis, like a nurse log in the woods, where one plant moves in on the back of another, where one use is superseded by another, one layer of ideas on top of the last." In the end, is the park on it's way to potential success, using this pliancy and flexibility? Is this something we can even begin to ascribe potential meaning, or are we caught up in the pastoral baggage of our perceptions of parks that will not allow us to comprehend something different. Or, as Sullivan mentions, does this offer a potential teaching moment, both on a site scale and as a society - about our relationship with trash, it's dirty heritage, and our way of dealing with it?

This, perhaps, is the question at the root of modern landscape architecture. And Corner deserves this moment in the spotlight, with us all following him into the breach.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

300!


Blogging is tough sometimes...

It's one of those moments of serendipity - the 300th post happens to coincide with the (almost) one year anniversary of Landscape+Urbanism (the actual post numero uno was 11.26.07) It started slowly (due to my naivety and a certain habitats competition I was working on, but seemed to pick up and gain both a voice, some themes, and hell yes, and audience over this short period.)

Thanks for a great year - and look forward to more dialogue, more discussion, and of course, more vegitectural and material eye candy in the next year!

Materiality and Light

There are a few different ways of approaching the use of materials in landscape installations. While there exists a finite amount of materials (albeit growing due to our ability to co-opt and produce more products), there is no limitations to the diversity of applications and combinations. While landscape architecture is getting more experimental, I tend to look to architecture for some of the more original uses to adapt to the site.

Some architectural examples that recently caught my eye really start to provide some interesting ways to perforate the skin and play with light - both as it floods interior spaces as well as the interesting formal properties for the exterior facades. The renderings (via Tropolism) of the Thermal Baths of San Pelligrino by Dominique Perrault Architecture are a fitting example of this idea. Simply... stunning.


:: image via Tropolism

Combining this concept with my love of rusted metal is the Performer's House by Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects in Silkeborg, Denmark. From Arch Daily: "Externally, the new building is clad with boldly perforated rust-red steel panels. After dark the internal lights shine through the circular apertures incised into the façade, turning the building into an animated beacon shining its light over the surrounding area. In this way the building appears to be perpetually in motion, becoming itself a ‘performer’."






:: images via Arch Daily

And Inhabitat's coverage of a temporary eco-pavilion designed by Assadi + Pulido, for the XVI Chilean Architecture Biennial... with a juxtaposition of perforated base and a reusable woven aluminum facade treatment... check it out - it's pretty amazing.








:: images via Inhabitat

A Daily Dose of Architecture recently had an great post of the idea of 'Porous Masonry Walls' - giving a range of example projects from Frank Lloyd Wright to Peter Zumthor. A few other notable projects include Kengo Kuma's Stone Museum - with brickwork that provide articulation from the exterior and thin patterned slits of light on the interior.


:: image via Archidose

And the Nazarí Wall Intervention in Granada, Spain by Antonio Jiménez Torrecillas perforated double wall.


:: image via Archidose

My favorite is Anagram Architects' glowing facade at the South Asian Human Rights Documentation Centre.


:: image via Archidose

Archidose also featured the "Richard Desmond Children's Eye Centre at Moorfields Eye Hospital in Islington, London, England by Penoyre & Prasad LLP, 2007." which has perforations - as well as tapping into the use of movement and wind on the facade.


:: image via Archidose

The above project takes a cues from Ned Kahn perhaps, whose kinetic sculptures definitely require a full post soon...


:: image via Ned Kahn

In the interim, here's a sneak preview of a couple of my favorites...


:: Articulated Cloud - image via Ned Kahn


:: Wind Veil - image via Ned Kahn

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Flossin' - Site Style

The Urban Dictionary is a fabulous resource for staying current on the constantly evolving lingo (alongside a weekly dose of William Safire). One new addition to my lexicon, via a tricked out SUV rolling by a few weeks back is the term Flossin' (that's sans g, in the Palin tradition). The short of it, it's showing off your goods, or via the UD: "Rolling in a fine ride with the general intent to enjoy ostenstation, prestige."

In a major cultural mashup, I'm co-opting the term to include the use of beautiful site furnishings or other landscape architectural bling - a similar usage to the urban term. Time for Flossin'... starting with a man who knows ostenstation... Frank Gehry. Via Tropolism > Core 77, the: "the visitors bench for the World Company building in Tokyo" definitely fits the bill with it's swoopy shapes.






:: images via Core 77

Contemporist shows up The Diagram Bench from Swedish furniture manufacturer Nola: "Architects Clara Lindencrona and Karin Andersson usually design in response to an existing landscape, but their plastic-fibre ‘Diagram’ bench seems to be a landscape in itself. ‘Diagram’s precipitous backrest brings the outline of mountain range to mind, while its rippling surface suggests a topography of mountain plateaux sloping towards the sea. The bench is a beautiful compliment to a contemporary gallery or a modern museum – where it could be mistaken for an artwork – yet tough enough to be the school playground’s coolest attraction." Here in well posed shiny black:


:: image via Contemporist

And in situ in yellow...




:: images via Contemporist

Designboom has a bench that is perhaps not ostentatious - but a stand out nonetheless. The lin pod bench by leif-designpark: "...stands out because of its elongated seat which is designed to hold a potted plant. reclining on the bench immerses the sitter in the greenery, as if they were sitting in nature. the bench is built using a wood base and upholstered seat that is embroidered with an abstract line pattern."




:: images via Designboom

Also, the scale can increase to site structures, such as this shelter, via IM - from the london design festival 08 preview: tom dixon at 100% detail:


:: image via IM

And this elegant playground via eye candy - from nocturnal design lab:




:: images via eye candy

And coming full circle via Inhabitat - perhaps the best true example of flossin' a tree with a somewhat intrusive (to the tree at least) Yellow Treehouse Restaurant in New Zealand by Pacific Environments Architects Ltd. Taking tree-sitting to a new aesthetic level - this building is perched within a redwood tree. Ironically enough, this wood structure occupying a tree is perhaps a fitting testimony to it's patron, the Yellow Pages - which is responsible for massive paper waste on a yearly basis... Inhabitat mentions 5% of landfill waste annually - perhaps houses made from old phone books would be preferable?






:: image via Inhabitat

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Veg.itecture #43

Once again, with feeling... I have green roofs on the brain right now, because upon cracking open my new (and god-awful expensive) copy of Steven Cantor's Green Roofs in Sustainable Landscape Design - to find a double spread of Multnomah County's green roof on chapter one... a design I did while at my previous employer (and a beautiful wildflower meadow). Also, we had another 3000 sf project that went into the Pearl district here in Portland last week. It's good to see the old and the new converge. Look for a review of the book, and some photos of the project soon.

For the worldwide examples, a new version of Veg.itecture. Starting off, the Dinastia Competition by Pascal Arquitectos - via World Architecture News: "Regarding the common areas it was decided to make them independent in each tower in order to use the rooftops and leaving another free section at the bottom: this concept, of building only at the center of the terrain, will allow to have more green areas..."




:: images via WAN

Another from WAN - the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Manhattan by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners features a boxy platform shrouded with greenery.


:: image via WAN

Taking a turn to the strange, a competition to realize Will Alsop's vision for Wellesley Road... via WAN: "The competition brief envisages that a mix of building types and forms, parks, meadows, squares and other aspects of public realm could exist to the east and west of the downsized road. Diversity is a key word - Will Alsop talks of a series of external 'living rooms', the furniture being relatively small-scale buildings sitting against the backdrop of the existing skyscrapers." Whoa!


:: image via WAN

To veer from illustrative projects to a simple built one, via Arch Daily. OUTrial house by KWK PROMES offers a mitigation effort for a site intrusion, by folding and tucking the building features under the earth: "A green clearing surrounded by forest was the only context for the proposed small house. Hence the idea to “carve out” a piece of the grass-covered site, move it up and treat it as the roofing to arrange all the required functions underneath."




:: images via Arch Daily

More via Arch Daily: "When the whole was ready, the client came up with another request, to create some space for a small recording studio and a conservatory. The latter was obtained by linking the ground floor with the grassy roof through an “incision” in the green plane and “bending” the incised fragment down, inside the building."




:: images via Arch Daily

Some less building-related examples worthy of a look. These amazing rebar 'trees' at the Getty Center - via Playscapes. Not so sure how kid-friendly this would be though?


:: image via Playscapes

Next, Dwell featured a design by the Bouroullec brothers: "Inspired by age-old techniques of bending tree branches into functional shapes over the course of their slow growth, the Bouroullecs designed their Vegetal Chair to mirror the asymmetry and organic basket-style of woven branches."


:: image via Dwell

And a simple and elegant inverted design of Patrick Morris’ Sky Planter, via Inhabitat:


:: image via Inhabitat

Finally, a new-ish feature, showing a snippet or two from the latest assorted news from the vegetated building front. Anyone see a clipping related to vegetated architecture, drop a line.

:: Monitoring Green Roof Performance with Weather Stations (Renewable Energy World)
:: Stormwater retentions should be consideration for green roofs (Daily Commercial News)

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Corner(ing) the Market

I've been sitting on this almost finished post for almost two weeks, patiently, then not so patiently waiting for Metropolis to get around to posting their November content online... mainly for this month's great profile about James Corner, and some sweet new pics of the High Line and other work. Finally it's here, and we can properly illustrate this article 'The Long View' and elucidate what Corner means to the profession?


:: what can YOU learn from this man? - image via Metropolis

This picks up our threads from previous discussions of influence and professional voice... Perhaps Corner is that voice. Not a magazine to shy away from hyperbole, the frontispiece proudly starts out with the simple statement...
"By embracing the city's industrial past - reclaiming landfills, remediating browfields, developing neglected waterfronts - James Corner has helped reinvent the field of landscape architecture."

No small feat, for sure - but I think perhaps it's deserved. And since the intra-professional backbiting of a few years back had died back - perhaps the profession has finally turned that corner (no pun intended) that we all needed to attain some professional validation. I haven't heard much lately about the art versus science debate. Nor is there a bemoaning of ecology as a cop-out to design credibility within the professional dialogue. Seems, as many of us mentioned, you can (or rather have to and certainly want to) have both. And it's refreshing to see the change. Not that we've buttoned up every issue, but there seems some sort of viable platform (to borrow the election term) upon which we exist as a profession and proceed with our work. At the very least we've cracked out of our shells and remembered the importance of not just what we do - but that we need to be visible and vocal leaders in this world as well. There is credit due to a number of players - and one of those is definitely Mr. Corner.




:: Fresh Kills - images via Metropolis

The article is a good overview about Corner, and his professional work with Field Operations giving a broad timeline of 25 years of professional and academic work that has turned from writing to competitions to realized large scale built works. It touches on some of the foundations, such as Fresh Kills, as well as showing the expansion and evolution of the scope and breadth of FO's work. It's an impressive evolution and interesting to see some visuals of newer work, such as the Lake Ontario Park in Toronto: "Similar to Fresh Kills... a combination of wetlands and uplands on an environmentally degraded site. The design accepts the complicated landscape rather than smothering it with a single-minded vision."





And the Shelby Farms proposal (previously covered by L+U here) which influence the overall role of the profession. As Corner posits, we should occupy that driver's seat in leading these design interventions: "Rather than wielding bushes and trees—the proverbial parsley around the roast of proper ­architecture—landscape architects are, as Corner sees it, the best prepared to tackle the complex, large-scale, often environmentally damaged sites that have become the hallmark of urban regeneration."




:: Shelby Farms - image via Metropolis

It's also refreshing to see some confidence and candor coming from the profession. One note that stuck in my head from the article: "“I don’t want to be embarrassed to be a landscape architect because we’re thought of as tree people who come in at the end of the day,” he says." It's something we can all support and strive in our practice to promote as well.


:: Fresh Kills - image via Metropolis

The article does spend a lot of time on Fresh Kills, particularly the scale (immense) and the timeline (long) for implementation. As a landscape architect best known for popularizing temporality and duration - it seems even Corner is prone to the antsiness of the designer: "...the slowness grates on Corner. “I think I may have become less patient,” he says. “You go all out, you put a lot into this, and it’s frustrating to see the way and not have it followed.” He went on, “It’s a great profession, a great medium, but I tell you, it’s such a difficult medium to move.”


:: Fresh Kills Phase One - images via Metropolis


:: Repurposed Diggers as Signage - images via Metropolis

Perhaps some of the long timeline will be abated by the High Line, which is progressing steadily from zoomy renderings to actual reality.



The article has some great new images of the High Line's continually evolving construction and implementation of the High Line... I particularly enjoy the precast fingers... here's a few more.








:: images via Metropolis

As an further endnote... Has anyone noticed Metropolis' coverage of Landscape Architecture lately. Seems as if some of the editors have finally discovered the fair profession since Susan Szensasy's commentary from last year... thoughts?

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Pruning AAgrotecture

Most readers have no doubt seen Alexander Trevi's great quartet of projects in an ongoing series on AAgrotecture over at Pruned. Part of a Vertical Studio from the Architecture Association (AA) in London taught by Nannette Jackowski and Ricardo de Ostos - the purpose was to address a central question: "Can extremes of programmatic effectiveness blend with the fragility of human habitat?"

This complexly simple question illicited a number of interesting responses. The four projects that are featured are worth a thorough reading and viewing... and I won't duplicate Trevi's excellent text, but wanted to show some of the great imagery of these projects... Be sure to check out the full posts via the title links (all images via Pruned):

Kings Vineyard London





Aquaculture





Farmacy





And check out Jackowski and de Ostos new Pamphlet Architecture 29: Untold Stories... could be the best one since, well, the last one by Smout and Allen... I'm ordering one, right, now.

Land Art Influence

As I muddle through the very dense and wonderful book 'Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings', it's continually evident that 1) Smithson was way ahead of his time in thinking of sites within the context of emphemerality and change, and 2) the field of landscape architecture can learn significant amounts from the library of land art - not just in reframing ideas within a landscape context, but in thinking seriously about process. The disappearance and re-emergence of Smithson's Spiral Jetty (1970) is just one example amongst many to ponder.


:: Spiral Jetty - image via Treehugger

Smithson is also one example of a land artist with a significant written documentation to back it up, allowing perhaps a greater glimpse into the mind of the artist at work. I will post a more extensive discussion of the book once I am able to digest it all in a meaningful way, but in the meantime, there's been some interesting land-art news as well as some interesting installations that are worth a look.

Some perils of this large-scale and immovable art... namely potential degradation and removal due to land pressures. One current example is the afforementioned Spiral Jetty, via Treehugger: "Now it, and other such natural pieces are under threat because of real estate development and oil drilling pressures. In this case, an oil company wanted to conduct exploratory drilling into the lake bed. In response a protest was mounted by the Dia Art Foundation and the state of Utah received thousands of complaints. "What we particularly object to is the potential visual impact that drilling might have on the work, as well as the equally important environmental impact it could have on the lake itself and its delicate ecosystem,” says a director of Dia. “An oil spill could be disastrous for the lake, and therefore, the jetty.”


:: images via Robert Smithson

The work of Michael Heizer got some digital ink as well, including a threat (in the form of a new train route adjacent to his long-term piece 'City' (circa 1970-present):


:: image via Treehugger

And the natural degradation of Double Negative (1969), which "...consists of two trenches cut into the the Mormon Mesa in Nevada. Around 240,000 tons of sandstone was displaced to create the ravines which span 1,500 feet and are each 50 feet deep." While the natural degradation may seem a threat, it was part of the process: "The artist asked that no conservation be undertaken on the piece so the walls of the man-made canyon are slowly crumbling and it is disappearing."


:: image via Treehugger

And via Tropolism, perhaps a way to find the site before it turns from it's present nothingness, and degenerates back into dust... "Greg Allen does the homework and finds one of our favorite works of Land Art, Double Negative, using the GPS device in the car of his in-laws. The large yet simple cut in the earth, famously difficult to find in the era of cars without GPS and the before-time of non-internet, is now super easy to find! He also found it on Google Maps in a really great satellite photo of the work."


:: image via Tropolism

An exhibition that has made the rounds (and is recently housed at San Francisco's de Young Museum) is Maya Lin's Systematic Landscapes. Inhabitat covers the new work in a post entitled "Re-mixed Topographies' which alludes to the idea of mixing the scientific with the representational in these studio works, "...without compromising the wisdom and wonder of studying natural phenomena" The centerpiece is '2x4 Landscape', as well as a few other works included as well.


:: 2x4 Landscape - image via Inhabitat


:: Line - image via Inhabitat


:: Lake Pass - image via Inhabitat

Spanning the gap between the monumental land art and the studio installations, a couple of recent additions include The Sequence by Arne Qunize (via MoCo Loco) and Field of Light by Bruce Munro (via Dezeen). These installations add to our continuum of landscape interventions - often playing off the context of site and in these cases - the adjacent architecture.




:: The Sequence - images via MoCo Loco






:: Field of Light - images via Dezeen

It looks like land art, landscape-based studio art, and art in the landscape, are all still alive and well in contemporary design society. That, to me, is a good sign.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Tree Manipulation

It's always amazing how malleable plant materials can be, particularly as we manipulate them and bend them to our varieties of will. Not content to just allow plants to grow into their natural form, we do all sorts of madness to them - chopping, topping, pleaching, espalier, trimming, bosques, poodling, topiary, arborsculture - in addition to just merely subjecting them to urban pollutants, compacted soils, high pollutant loading and a litany of other tests.

:: image via Dezeen


:: image via Wikipedia
Yet the plants still show a remarkable resilience. Following up on July's 'Stupid Plant Tricks' and September's 'Neo-Vertical Greening' - my colleague Lisa Town sent some great pictures of some examples from Europe - showing some severe pleaching... and due to the season you can see the underlying structure involved. It's pretty intricate - specifically the concept of inosculation - where the different trees knit together into one organism - related to the more directed grafting.





:: images via Lisa Town

And a Bavarian Garden Show example from Lisa as well... kinda cool.

:: image via Lisa Town
This has inspired me to do a more evolved post on the different types of 'training' and manipulation we do to plants - so look forward to that soon. And any other cool ideas or examples out there of this tree manipulation... feel free to post a comment or shoot an email with links...

Friday, November 14, 2008

20+10+X = the World

A press release announcing the 20+10+X World Architecture Community Awards, a unique process of culling through what is no small feat - the best projects in the world architecture community. Aside from being a comprehensive online portal: "... WA is an “online community” initiated by Suha Özkan and 200+ invited Honorary Members, and a growing number of registered members (3500 in October)." ... the awards take a unique, democratic approach by using ratings and member voting for final decisions."


:: image via WA Community

A quick perusal of the recently posted 1st Cycle Winners gives a VERY broad cross-section of global architecture. There are a few projects I've seen before, others were new. Here's a snapshot of some of the entries - but definitely be sure to check them all out, as well as the balance of the site.


Of course, I wanted to start with a favorite of mine, the incredibly photogenic LEGO by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) - with a terraced panelling of greenery. "During the Marshall years when post war Denmark was being rebuilt, the state chose to favour prefabricated concrete over all other forms of construction. As a result the in-situ cast concrete industry has almost vanished, leaving the entire building industry based on prefabricated modules and concrete elements. Contemporary Denmark has become a country entirely made from LEGO bricks."






:: images via WA Community

Next is the Meghna Residence from Bangladesh, 2003-2005 by Architect Rafiq Azam: "The courtyard for privacy & connectivity, the water layering the Deltaic ambience. In the photographs you can see the swimming pool, ghat and garden for big trees at level five. The foral green and sound of water away from the ground - the library & garden at level 3. the entry atrium & the family lounge."




:: images via WA Community

A green example from Poland, Origami House by Przemek Olczyk offers some ground to sky faceting - similar to, yep, you guessed it, origami. Check out some graphics.




:: images via WA Community

The hoverfront d in Ireland, by Georg Driendl. This literally and figuratively vegetated form offers a metaphor of growth, a: "...monumental structure in dublin mirrors the rapid economical growth of the republic of ireland. It's neccessary to analyze growth and expansion of a city and to advance it with architectural methods, considering a stringent, logical affiliation to existing space > hoverfront d creates perspectives, feelings not many buildings are able to create – to look down at the water from 200m, to watch incoming ships. the impression of a flying city, hovering + grounded at the same time."




:: images via WA Community

The Pilot project for a modern trial detention center in Italy by Stefano Dosi... with some curvy veg.itecture.


:: image via WA Community





:: images via WA Community

And finally, a quick snapshot ofthe Carapace House, by LAB ZERO - which is a stunning graphic representation...


:: image via WA Community
As I mentioned, there more on the site, so check out not just the awards, but the remainder of the site is worth checking out - or in the words of Charles Jencks, "World Architecture Community is the gallop archipop google." Um, okay....

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Kaputt!

The firm Kaputt! has come up a couple of times recently, and aside from being one of those cool firm names that stick in your head. Recently they've gained some more exposure and notoriety. From the site: "They have earned some notoriety as they were acknowledged with an honorable mention in the international competition organized by the Carlsberg Group, for the large-scale urban development of the company’s property in the outskirts of Copenhagen." A quick link to Belly of an Architect showed some graphics for a single family house that I love for their simple and artistic uniqueness. Beautiful.




:: images via Belly of an Architect

Shifting gears a bit to more traditional graphic forms, the project offers some interesting narrative: "The functional setting is simple. The social volume is more organic, designed for the communitarian family life, in sharp contrast with the private wing. The garden offers an intimate external space and a generous entrance of natural light... The garden wall is also assumed as part of the architecture of the house, as it suggests a filtered visual connection with the external territory, its trees and hedges becoming a part of its enveloping atmosphere."




:: images via Belly of an Architect

Archidose mentioned Kaputt! in their regular Firm Faces segment, showing their creative method for describing firm personnel via pen on skin - although that same project keeps cropping up...


:: image via Archidose

Monday, November 10, 2008

Veg.itecture #42

It has been a while since we've had an opportunity to showcase some Vegetated Architecture. You missed it, didn't you? Well, I did lose all of my accumulated links on my old computer - but it didn't take long to accumulate some more gems. And well, it's not all eye candy, as there has been some new ink about the state of rooftop greening. One tidbit was the significant cost escalation at the Vancouver Convention Center, which is dire news as the expansive 2.5 hectare roof is becoming more expensive as well. At least the payback should be immense with that much coverage. Here's some other more positive thoughts.

Arch Daily starts off with a lovely addition - Sky Village in Rødovre by MVRDV.


:: images via Arch Daily

The terraced form fits nicely with the modular green roofs - although they seem a bit flat and perhaps surreal due to the oversized trees and lack of visible root zone. A cool effect, and interesting to see how the distributed spaces could be linked from roof to roof via gravity.




:: images via Arch Daily

A bit more restrained (and perhaps astroturfed?), this example via Coolboom is the Garden House by Takeshi Hosaka Architects. A brief synopsis: "Although the indoor and outdoor are different environments, they are made from similar dimensions, structures, finishes and furniture. The whole house feels like a garden, where the living scenes expand to both indoor and outdoor." Cool... boom.




:: images via Coolboom

And picked up in multiple locations, this green roof topped houseboat gives veg.itecture some aquatic mobility and credence to amphibious architecture with style (via Inhabitat)


:: image via Inhabitat

Veering from the water to the air, what looks like a giant fan, the (where else) Dubai Anara Tower, with "...sky gardens every 27 floors..." opening up to a large propeller turbine. The design is based on a minaret, but somehow lacks the elegance of this simple form. Also, check out JG's Preston and his commentary footnote about Dubai-chitecture... the bubble may be ready to burst.




:: Big Ass Fan - images via Jetson Green

Lastly, this post stretches the idea a bit, but was a necessary antidote to the Dubai-n excess. Via Archidose, these Tree Huts by Tadashi Kawamata are on view at NYCs Madison Square Park for the rest of the year. Simple rustic boxes reflect the somewhat ephemeral habitat located in the urban park - and allow the eye to catch these contrasting structures - perhaps missing the forest for the tree huts.






:: images via Archidose

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Hell Freezes Over

Ok, maybe a tad of hyperbole, but I definitely did a doubletake when reading this article in the NY Times about the Greening of the Big Box. 'Green Plans in Blueprints for Retailers,' 11.07.08 - outlines some of the sustainable strategies being implemented around the country by the most unlikely of sources. I've seen a few articles discussing some of these ideas, such as plastic baseboards and moldings from used diapers (ewwwww.... ok, its from diaper manufacturing, kidding!) in a Walmart, wind turbines at a Chicago Chipotle, and waste heat recovery at a Florida pizza chain. And then there's the McDonald's with a green roof.


:: Whaddya mean it's not a rooftop garden? - image via NY Times

This picture made me stop in my tracks. A McDonald's with a green roof? Ok, so they call it a rooftop garden in the caption, but looks like an extensive green roof to me, and a pretty ratty one at that. But it exists. On a McDonalds. Whatever Chicago has done, we all need to learn from and bottle it. Perhaps it's just making evident the benefits. From the article: "Across the country, a race is under way among stores and fast-food restaurants to build environmentally friendly outlets, as a way to curry favor with consumers and to lower operating costs. Most chains are focusing on prototypes at the moment, but the trend could eventually change the look and function of thousands of stores."

The branding potential is one thing, but I doubt anyone is going to think McDs is eco-friendly, ever. The actual benefits of cost savings for operations seems to make the most financial sense for these companies. Some are doning the green-wash thing. Some are certifying through LEED and other mechanisms. Either way - the sheer economy of scale from cumulatively the companies mentioned in the article - Walmart, McDonalds, Kohls, Target, Office Depot, Subway, and Best Buy - and see what the overall benefits could be.

A couple of thoughts. First, this seems to me a real shift in mode for green roofs specifically. We've discussed this before, but there's going to be more of a need in the future to provide low-cost, high-function green roofs for big-box and other retail stores - as they are not going to be willing to invest $20-30 per square foot for these benefits - as the payback is too long. The industry is starting to catch up, but a $10 per square foot roof is the panacea - along with proper QA/QC and design that fits it to a site/roof and more importantly - a region/climate. As systems-approaches continue - the quality will decrease (at no fault to the system, just that it's not a one-size-fits-all product) and the failure rate will increase - due to poor design, install, and maintenance. We need to be wary of this commodification of green in this case (and others).

Second, if we can actually start leveraging this green 'building' into holistic green development - including low-impact development of sites - reduced parking lots or reconfigured lots with less expansive pavement, and overall stormwater management throughout... we'll be on to something. A couple of reasons. The sites will look better - which is a benefit to fast-food/big-box blight in cities. The sites will function better. The lack of urban heat island, polluting stormwater, and other negatives will be less costly to maintain, and aid in the overall community health. Inevitably, a whole-scale re-envisioning of the place of fast-food, drive-through, big-box, and other forms of development within our lifestyle and urban patterns need to be considered.

While green retailing may for some be lipstick on a pig, I'd say it's a valuable step in the right direction. In the future, we need to consider our peak-oil verging, unhealthy, unwalkable, auto-centric, and polluting communities - and see if there's a wider view we can take as well. Then again, if hell keeps freezing over like this in the future, that should at least provide some temporary relief from global climate change, right?

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Ecotransitional Urbanism

This project came to Landscape+Urbanism via new LU graduate Jorge Ayala, from the AALU in London. It's an interesting use of Landscape Urbanism principals in Chinese urban areas - balancing ecotourism with fragile natural systems in a rapidly growing region. [following images and text from Jorge - thanks!]




ECOTRANSITIONAL URBANISM Pearl River Delta, China
JORGE AYALA

"The project, located on a 27 square kilometer island called Qi Ao located in the Pearl River Delta, has the potential to become a gateway for Hong Kong/Shenzhen due to its strategic location and the increasing passenger flows through it. The site is threatened to become another generic Chinese urbanization that spread across farmlands and rural life. Thus the signs of scarcity of water resources, deforestation, fish farming and industrial pollution are already present."





"Based on the Landscape Urbanism emergent discipline, the city proposal seeks to establish an eco-tourism strategy that embraces the existing site and its natural energies such as tidal variations, local mangroves and seasonal rainfall to assure the viability and sustainability of the island."





[editorial note] This project reminds me of the challenge of Landscape Urbanism in re-defining perpections of landscape illustration, perhaps transcending language and being able to bundle meaning, temporality, and materiality within the graphic milieu. In the meantime, it'd be interesting to get people's take on graphics and meaning as rendered with these 5 images and a short paragraph of text - to see what they say to you in terms of concept.

I have asked Jorge to elaborate on the illustrations with some explanatory text when he has available time, so look forward to hearing some of the substance behind the graphics. We shall see if our interpretations align with the designer's intention. That's what it's all about right?

Revisiting the Strip

Following a post regarding the Flip A Strip competition sponsored by SMOCA (see Flip this Strip, 10.20.08) I got word from students Nils Havelka and Nicolas Zimmerman from the ETH Zürich - and the similarities of the winning entry 'urban battery' by MOS to their entry Living House in the Holcim Foundation Student Poster Competition from 2007.


:: image via Holcim Foundation

Nils dropped me a line about the similarities. "The original Idea for "uban battery" by MOS was taken from our award winning "living house". Because we are students and lack resource an power to fight to protect our ideas, we thought we'd contact the people who publish that project hoping to get published alongside with the urban battery. The synnergy of that would realy make up for the abuse. You can find the project here: (it's the 10th project on the list) It was "highly commended" at the Holcim Forum for sustainable construction in april 2007."


:: images via Holcim Foundation

From their board, a snippet of text: "One of the project key points is the construction of a modular facade, consisting of plastic canisters containing algae that nourish from polluted air (CO2 etc.) and provide electricity through photosynthesis. The canisters are mounted to a modular steel scaffold that can be attached to any given structure. In combination with the fluorescent effect of the algae at night parts of the scaffold could expand the known experience of public space by adding seating modules et al., making the new hull an extension of public space."



:: images via Holcim Foundation

On a more equitable note - Nils mentioned that their commended entry, and it's technology was the impetus for being asked to contribute to the United Bottle Project, which was displayed at the Val Alen institute in New York. For more on the specifics of this project, check out their site - but it uses a similar technology.


:: images via icsid

Although there isn't really a strong formalistic resemblance, some of the techno-innovation is in the same family - if not out-and-out copies. It's a wonder that this doesn't happen more often in our digital age, with easy access to information and ideas. It's also really hard to prove ownership on these ideas... for sure. It's tough to track design or intellectual property, specifically for something that has a level of complexity and is 1) not built, 2) not patented, and 3)not fully realized beyond a short description. I'm not charging anything one-way or the other - just giving some equal time to students who feel slighted - which in my mind is fair, but I also think their project is pretty cool and they took the initiative to contact me. There's definitely a history of similar design ideas throughout architecture - which is a product of quantity and access to information, so....

Question: Has anyone had, been a part of, or heard of experiences of passing resemblances, uncanny similarities, or outright plagarism in competition entries and/or design solutions? I'd love to hear other dialogue on this concept?

The Detroit Dilemma

As mentioned previously, I spent an intensive three-day long whirlwind charrette in Detroit, Michigan as part of on interdisciplinary team for the Sustainable Design Assessment Team (SDAT) program as part of the AIAs Communities by Design Program. This was my first SDAT experience, as well as my first visit to Detroit (short of passing through the airport). In short, it was intense and amazing.


:: Landsat Detroit - image via Wikipedia

For starters, an interesting facet of what the AIA does in this program is to pull together teams that relate to the specific needs of the the project. In this case, our team was led by Alan Mallach, a planner who specializes in revitalization of communities, captured aptly in his book Bringing Buildings Back: From Abandoned Buildings to Community Assets. The team was rounded out with a variety of specialists, including Subrata Basu, architect and planner from Miami Dade County Planning and Zoning; Steven Gazillo, Director of Transportation Planning from URS Corp from Connecticutt; Colin Meehan, renewable energy expert from Environmental Defense Fund in Austin, Texas; Teresa Lynch, economist and Research Director for the Initiative for a Competitive Inner City from Boston; Edwin Marty, Urban Agriculture Specialist and Executive Director of the Jones Valley Urban Farm in Birmingham, Alabama; and myself, representing GreenWorks Landscape Architecture and covering land use and open space.

Then there was Detroit itself, which is faced with a post-industrial situation that is mind-boggling in its scope. Through historical development as a single-industry (auto) and single-land use (typically single family) - the City of Detroit, perhaps more than anywhere else is suffering from the loss of manufacturing, and widescale depopulation, and a preponderance of vacant lands. This has been widely covered throughout, but was quite stunning to see.




:: images via Forgotten Detroit

Imagine this: A city of 2 million folks grew to a land area of around 140 square miles. With economic downturn and white flight to the suburbs the population has shrunk from this number to somewhere around 800,000 persons currently, with a final balancing point around 600,000 people project for 2020. In terms of the future - this means a significant shrinking city, with plenty of land, road capacity, and infrastructure to deal with. What could be a very big headache, can also become a definite opportunity to reinvent the City in a new image.

There isn't just widespread blight... To create a foundation for this new growth, I was surprised by the vitality and vibrance of many areas - perhaps contrasted by the vast tracts of vacant land. Areas of Downtown, Midtown, Mexicantown, New Center, and a sprinkling of neighborhoods throughout Detroit are hanging on due to education, medical, and other industries that are still viable. The Eastern Market was a real treat to see the lively urban agriculture hub operating within the city.


:: Eastern Market - image courtesy of Edwin Marty

And there are vibrant green spaces - include a (reworked) Olmstedian gem- Belle Isle Park (which I got a mere glimpse of) and the front yard of Jack White's old Indian Village home, prior to his exodus to Nashville. Also, there are plans for an extended RiverWalk, and other open spaces throughout the region, including the Inner City Greenway and the Dequinder Cut rail to trail bikeway. That's not to mention the lively Heidelberg Project - which you definitely have to see to believe.


:: image via The Heidelberg Project

The process literally was non-stop - spanning from 8am to 10pm on a typical day (factor in 3 hour time difference), with little time to take a break. This is due to the accelerated nature of the charrette. This process was facilitated expertly by the AIA staff (Erin Simmons and Marcia Garcia) and a team of local experts - who got us up to speed on the issues facing the community. Along with a townhall and a series of focus groups, we got to meet the groups and individuals that are making a difference every day. Our goal was not to tell them what to do... but to give them some outside perspective to confront their issues.

How did we do this? Well, you can see the final report (and I won't be able to capture all of the great info in a short post), but there were a few items I thought had real relevance and life into the future in terms of Detroit becoming a model for Shrinking Cities in the US, using all of the lenses we aimed at the city. There was obviously the need to reinvent new economic models that tap into green manufacturing as well as propping up local business and existing industry. There is also a great opportunity for energy efficiency and production of green power, which could supply and possibly be an export for Michigan, specifically when used for off-short (i.e. Great Lakes wind production).

Culturally there were many opportunities to tap into the cultural history of music and racial integration, as well as using this to sustain urban vitality. From a more physical point of view, the fact that the population of this 'new Detroit' could fit within 50 square miles - leaving 80-90 square miles of 'opportunity area' that could consist of greenways, parkways, and urban agriculture - along with urban reserves. This leaves areas of density - core and urban villages - intertwined with the new fabric of community that is regenerative.


:: Urban Village model - image via SDAT

A big portion of these 'opportunity areas' would become significant portions of urban farming, building on the great urban agriculture movement already in place in Detroit, but ramping this up to an economic and viable commercial scale (remember, 80 sq.mi. is about 50,000 acres - talk about urban ag!). Ideas such as bioremediation, urban forestry to reduce air pollution and heat island, growing sunflowers for biodiesel, biomass production, large scale garden farms, and more - occupying green belts within the city. An amazing proposition.


:: Farmadelphia - image via BLDGBLOG

Another bummer for me was not being able to see Ford's River Rouge plant (next time for sure), although it did offer a viable model for industrial redevelopment along the Detroit river - replacing old industry with more eco-friendly models, as well as retaining the industrial heritage similar to the Post-Industrial Parks in Germany's Emscher River Valley, such as Duisburg Nord.


:: Park Duisburg Nord - image via Archidose

This is a mere glimpse... to be sure. For more, check out our final presentation powerpoint here, and stay tuned for the final report, which will flesh out some of these bullet points and provide a blueprint for local groups to continue their great work in giving the City of Detroit and sustainable and economically viable future.


:: image via AIA SDAT

Overall the SDAT process is a great way to work collaborative with other professionals to look at creative problem solving and testing us to look beyond the obvious to see the potential in all places. There's a limit to how much can be done in 3-4 full days, but that's also part of the fun. There's also a definite arc that these processes take depending on the team and the direction they chose. For instance, I was disappointed that we didn't get to put pencil to paper in coming up with some real ideas in visual form - but due to the scale of the city and the issues - it was determined that any specifics would be seen as outsiders telling a community what to do. I guess I thought that was the whole point? Anyway, it was amazing, and I would do it again in a second. And it's definitely opened my eyes to the potential of Detroit and other Post-Industrial cities... and how landscape urbanism and multi-disciplinary approaches to idea generation will create more applicable and viable solutions.

And, in what seemed like some immediate positive reinforcement - as we set to leave Detroit on Sunday morning, many of us picked up the Sunday New York Times (great for a long plane ride, for the crossword alone). In this issue we saw a very fitting article related to our trip, and not specific to Detroit, very applicable to the city's dilemma. 'A Splash of Green for the Rust Belt' offered a glimmer of a new economy for cities facing the loss of manufacturing and looking to reinvent themselves.


:: Manufacturing Turbine Blades in Iowa - image via NYT

A apt finish to a great week. Look, it may be our future.

L+U

Friday, November 7, 2008

Secret Garden

The National Geographic Channel is set to air a show on the construction of the One Bryant Park. Titled Man Made: Ultimate Skyscraper, this series offers a rare glimpse at green building in process.


:: image via National Geographic Channel

From their press email: "National Geographic Channel gives viewers an exclusive look at the design and construction of an eco-friendly marvel: One Bryant Park, set to be the second tallest building in New York City and one of the world's most energy-efficient skyscrapers. Follow architects and engineers as they take a modern approach to green technology, incorporating innovative new systems including an on-site power plant that will reduce the buildings energy consumption by 50 percent. Then go behind the scenes with construction workers as they dig one of the deepest foundations in midtown, lay recycled steel beams, pour environmentally friendly concrete, and build a skyscraper whose blueprints could map out a new design for our planets future."

An aside, see Rick Cook from Cook+Fox give an overview of their office greenroof - and some information about the greenroof and water harvesting systems atop One Bryant Park. Very cool.


L+U

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Auspicious Victory

Today we hit 100,000 visitors (and an additional 250,000 page views). I feel honored to have achieved this within the confines of a short year... Now, with a new laptop (although a fried and potentially unrecoverable old one), and a fresh backlog of posts from my newly restored RSS feeds - I'm ready for some new posting in the upcoming days. Also, I will recount the amazing Detroit SDAT experience that I had last week, as well as some other exciting local happenings... It's good to be back.

And in the spirit of 'Change You Can Believe In', look forward to some changes in content and context here at Landscape+Urbanism. I'm turning a corner in my career and interest, which alas (for better or worse) will be reflected in the content here). And here's a big one (hurrah, thanks, cold one) for Obama... It's a brand new day. Let's savor it. It's been a long time.


L+U