Showing posts sorted by relevance for query vegetated architecture. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query vegetated architecture. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2008

Sharp & Diamond: Veg.itect

In a twist of singling out architects in the Vegetated Architecture realm, a profile of a landscape architecture firm that is pioneering the use of vertical greening techniques. The Vancouver firm Sharp & Diamond have been developing a number of North American examples, which is in dire need of good examples. I've been familiar with Randy Sharp from S+D since I heard him speak in Denver at GreenBuild 2006, in a session entitled 'Pushing the Envelope' where he discussed living walls.

I am also signed up to take a Living Walls 101 class offered by Green Roofs for Healthy Cities so I thought it a good opportunity to find out more about the work that Mr. Sharp and his firm are doing. From the S+D website bio, Sharp: "...has a passion for transforming urban environments and making sustainable methods visible. He has a deep knowledge of high performance building and landscape systems including permeable paving, ecosystem restoration, living walls and green roofs." Sounds like a Veg.itect to me.

This fits into a project profile for green roofs + living walls, from the website as well: "Vegetated building envelope systems moderate the microclimate of the neighbourhood and improve the comfort of building occupants. Green roofs provide shade, evaporative transpiration, rainwater harvesting, thermal mass and natural ventilation. Eco-effective technologies include extensive green roofs, rooftop gardens, green facades, living walls and urban trees."

A particularly interesting project was the Vancouver Aquarium, which was also featured in Architectural Record, specifically focussing on the 500-square-foot vegetated wall for the new building.




:: images via Architectural Record

A profile of the project and some more thumbnails is available at Greenroofs.com. Additionally, Greenline featured a story about the aquarium as well with some kinda fuzzy photos - the article is worth a perusal though. A quote from the article with some technical specs: "The green wall is approximately 3 meters by 15 meters and is estimated to include about 7,000 plants. Each plant is tucked into an individual container which are aggregated into a larger modular polypropylene unit. The units are then attached to the concrete substructure using a system of wall mounted steel braces. It is important to note that most green walls are designed as lattice or trellis where the plants are allowed to grow up the facade. This installation is very different because the planting medium is actually hung off of the wall and includes irrigation."

For a project dubbed North America's First permanent Living Wall - someone needs to work on the PR for this project (and the quality and availability of photos)... The firm has worked on some other rooftop greening projects in Canada as well, including the Sechelt RCMP Justice Building, and the Burnside Gorge Green Roof in Victoria.


:: Sechelt Justice Building - image via GVRD

Overall, it's interesting to see the firm's overall bio, which makes a point of incorporating vegetated architecture into it's structure. Again from the website, Sharp & Diamond: "...provides a diversity of consultative services ranging from landscape architecture, site planning, urban design and construction administration to LEED® documentation and ecological design design for stormwater, green roofs and living walls."

I am definitely looking forward to the seminar... and perhaps stumbling upon a few more images.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Veg.itecture #21

A few choice projects in the realm of Vegetated Architecture. Also, stay tuned for my review of the innaugural issue of GRHCs 'Living Architecture Monitor' of which they were kind enough to send me a copy. I perused it on the bus this evening, and it's definitely one of the better resources out there (more to come soon).

But on to the projects. As we discuss Living Architecture, Vegetated Buildings, Vegetated Architecture or what ever you call it - there tends to be the span of the realistic to the visionary - and we definitely offer a selection of projects along this continuum. On the more utopian side of the scale is The Locavore Fantasia, a project that has some great visuals from Agro-architects (at least lately) Work Architecture Company, the folks whom recently brought us the stunning and simple Public Farm 1.


:: image via NY Magazine

This project envisions an apartment topped by a functioning urban farm, with an eye towards reducing the foodprint... via NY Mag: "We are interested in urban farming and the notion of trying to make our cities more sustainable by cutting the miles [food travels]..." While I appreciate that this is fiction and hyperbole - the rickety structural table legs and aerial golf course give it some whimsical flourish that makes it less interesting. I like my fantasia at least some plausibility...

And plausible was one of those things you wondered about when renderings of this next project were unveiled a few years back... but it hasn't disappointed. I do like Renzo Piano's California Academy of Sciences building a lot, and it's definitely worth another look if Vanity Fair is going to dedicate some space to this "...fusion of nature and structure." Perhaps the first green roof in VF? Not sure, but probably a good bet. Check the nice photos with the vegetation filling in... And don't let Madonna on the cover scare you away...




:: images via Vanity Fair

A couple from WAN (they cover the world - and a lot of this Veg.itecture is happening out there... not in here) starting with the Emonika City Centre in Slovenia by HOK International. City Centre is a nice way of saying 'mall' - although I've said before what better type of building to do some rooftop greening that massive shopping structures...? Although a bit more of that mass could've been greened up a bit aside from the central glass atria.


:: image via WAN

The next project is a little difficult to discern. Monaco House in Melbourne is a project by McBride Charles Ryan which looks a little origami and contains ground-level retail with offices above. Vegetation is both functional as well as providing respite for workers: "Outdoor balconies provide areas of release from the office desk. The ‘green roofscape’ is similar space but also adds additional insulation to the upper floor." Although from the bottom photo, I have a really hard time figuring out what purpose and amenity this is supposed to bring, aside from putting green?




:: images via WAN

And what would a version of Veg.itecture be without some mega-project that has biomimicked a natural form. In this case The Design Blog offers Metropolia from Moscow, a business complex which takes the form of a very, very large lotus blossom. I'm not sure of the significance of the lotus in the Russian spirituality - but I'm sure that it may have something do to with the otherworldly power source emanating from the center.


:: image via The Design Blog

We end with a project that I really appreciate - both for it's great design and amazingly high price tag that I still can't imagine or begin to fathom... the esteemed ASLA Headquarters Green Roof in Washington DC. Featured recently on an extensive MSNBC profile of green roofs (along with Millenium Park and Ford Rouge Center) - the ASLA project also unveiled a pedogogical aspect with the new educational website that explains green roof benefits and does offer a zoomy if somewhat disorienting 360-degree tour of the project. No where on this site did I find out what you must do to design a roof with $300/s.f. price tag...


:: image via Places and Spaces

Now this... this is green roof with a $300/s.f. price tag... you go Wally!


:: image via Treehugger

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Reading List: Subnature

Another book that engaged me on my hiatus from blogging is one I picked up on somewhat of a whim as it looked like a fascinating read. I wasn't disappointed, as 'Subnature: Architecture's Other Environments" by David Gissen, quickly became impossible to put down. The reason? It really tackles some interesting terrain that is definitely at the fringes of architecture and landscape, which typically addresses the realms purity and order, whether in terms of materials or the messy nature in cities.



To quickly summarize the main components of subnatures, these include: dankness, smoke, gas, exhaust, dust, puddles, mud, debris, weeds, insects, pigeons, and crowds.

The idea of subnature comes from a hierarchy between the supernatural (above nature) and the natural (our current world view), to include this subset of nature in which existence seems difficult if not impossible. Definitely not the standard fare of typical books on architecture, particularly in our current fascination with new space-age materials and technologies to solve problems, while only a minor
ity instead looking at context, natural materiality and process. Gissen's main thesis is we can capture the essence of these subnatures, we may, "...arrive at a truly radical and alternative concept of what environment means."


:: grotto - image via symphonies naturelles

This is specifically engaging, as the evolution of the book, as explained by Gissen in the introduction, is that this information collected here was the residual ephemera from a more focused study an architecture and nature, including a range of historical and contemporary source material from a wide range of sources. While the main academic pursuit of 'natural architecture' is perfe
ctly relevant, (his dissertation included an 'exploration of nature in modern NYC buildings in the 70s) - the leftovers make for a much more interested concept.

So why is the subnature so interesting, specifically in the context of architecture and urbanism? Gissen mentions some of this context: "I draw on architectural and urban design theorists' key texts and contemporary practicioners' recent design to examine how both grou
ps envision peripheral and often denigrated forms of nature..." In essence, it's not just a historical look at unconsidered materials, but a way of looking at the natural processes in a new way. This is perhaps more authentic than many of the explorations and misuse of the word 'ecologies' (or landscape for that matter) in modern parlance, which takes a much broader (and cleaner) cultural view of interactions between organisms and environments.


:: mud - image via ridgeway

There is some precedence for this realm of inquiry, including a few mentioned in the book. These include Antoine Picon's ideas of anxious landscapes, Gilles Clement's writing on the third landscape, and Francois Roche's (from R&Sie(n))
term corrupted biotopes - all of which explore postindustrial landscapes, debris, polluted ecologies, damaged nature. This coincides with some of our recent fascination with the dirty - including a focus on brownfields, post-industrial landscapes, vacant lands, air/water pollution, and other non traditional sites.

This is also why it is interesting to landscape architecture, as it is a clear refutation of the hermetic condition of pure architecture (i.e. a finished product offering refuge from 'outside'), and the desire to apply this condition to that of landscape, which is constantly in flux and infused with these subnatures. Is our desire to fight against these subnatural forces to create order in the garden, or is a more nuanced ecological approach to understand not just the base forces (geological, hydrological, meteorological) and understand the influence and opportunity of the subnatural forces at work.

Gissen frames this in practical terms as a means to achieving true 'sustainability'. The book "...offers an alternative vision to those contemporary municipalities, developers, and architects who seek to remake cities and buildings through the parameters of a more natural framework based on sustainable principles. Subnature also offers an alternative to the emerging vitalist discourse on 'flow' as the dominant effect of nature in architecture." Juxtaposed between the functionalism of the green building movement which "... advance a seemingly neo-Victorian and neo-Haussmannite vision of urbanism in many global cities... [which] often entails the utilization of nature as an instrument that cleans the world, increased productivity and efficiency, and transforms our existing natural relationship, while advancing the social sphere that exists." (p.23)

While not a specific critique of the green movement, it's more a re-engagement in some of the messiness that ensues from our working in nature and specifically subnature either directly or metaphorically. As mentioned, "Subnatures will not save us from our inequities, but its inherently alienating character enables us to consider how more comforting forms and dynamic images of nature are often used to reproduce existing forms of power in society." This is reflected in equity disparities of the rich being able to afford 'green' and the poor still being marginalized and left to reside with the leftover subnatures.

The final distinction is also made between the concept of reconnecting with nature, included in books like Earth Architecture, and one of my favorites The Granite Garden, and pretty much the crux of many of the projects that venture in new forms of habitat creation (such as PHREE Urba
nism), Animal Architecture, or much of the Veg.itectural featured on a regular basis. The photoshopped vegetated visuals versus the messy reality is sometimes difficult to reconcile, perhaps due to the subnatural forces at work. Similarly, Gissen distances the concept from the new theories in architecture that embrace material weathering from Mostafavi & Leatherbarrow, showing that "...evironments appear as fixed and stable systems relative to a dramatically changing architecture object." Weathering and veg.itecture have similarities in expression to date, as it is difficult to choose one or the other - wild process here but not here.

The book itself is visually rich, and is very readable - making it a good book for a range of audiences. While potentially veering into either the overly historicist or the overly theoretical, Gissen toes the line with a certain grace that shows adequate historical background but also modern applicability. The historical is the common jumping off point and ranges within the confines of a coherent thought process (say versus the content schizophrenia of BLDG BLOG)... but is no less interesting.

For instance a 1568 image (in the chapter on dankness) by Philibert de l'Orme showing the idea of a 'builder emerging from a dark cave to become an architect', a metaphor from the transformation from the subnatural realm to the natural.


:: image via Freemason Collection

Additional interesting ideas include the necessity of tobacco smoke in the authenitic experience of Philip Johnson's Glass House, Peter and Alison Smithson's work with rubble at the Robin Hood Gardens, the British Beehive, and countless examples both verbal and visual. Many of these are architectural in nature, but many transcend to include urban spaces or particularly landscape context, making (or blurring) the connection between the three and their various influences due to subnatural forces is a key aspect - beyond just the exploration of the forces themselves.

From the epilogue: "...perhaps this hypothetical architect considers these strange forms of nature as a material endemic to architecture and cities, as opposed to an aberration that must be consolidated, removed or dismissed. He or she is not only engaged with the realities of the modern world but with the social processes that surround architecture, urbanism, and history. To rid cities of subnature negates aspects of urbanity while advancing a narrow concept of architecture's proper environment. By seeing only these things that are useful to a building's program, an architect dismisses key aspects of contemporary urban life."

For me the conceptual and contextual framework of the argument is the most interesting component of the book. It is necessary to include modern interpretations of the application or
engagement of these subnatures, but for the most part these seemed somewhat less relevant, taking away from the overall impact of the argument. Perhaps this had to do with an amount of technological intervention sometimes required to achieve a balance with subnatures, more of forcing versus working with these processes. The examples are interesting, and definitely worth exploring (and many of them have appeared on the blogs throughout the recent couple of years). A typical example, for instance, is found in the category of exhaust. The B_mu tower by R&Sie(n) incorporates the exhaust of Bangkok into the form of the project, adding an element to the skin of the building that is responsive to the immediate context.




:: images via new territories

Read and see a full overview here.

"Bangkok is a very dusty gray and luminous city.The pollution cloud, CO2 residue, filters and standardizes the light with only gray spectral frequencies.Over 50 different words could be used to describe the tones and the touching aspects of the absence of color: “luminous, vaporous, pheromonal, hideous, shaded, transpiring, cottony, rugged, dirty, hazy, suffocating, hairy…” The dust dresses the city and her biotope, even going so far as to modify the climate. Within this fog of specs and particles, Bangkok becomes the melting pot of hypertrophic human activity with convulsing with exchanges of energy, where visibility becomes its greatest charm. At the antipodes of the canons of modern urbanism and its panoply of instruments lies, the city of Bangkok, ectoplasmic, super fluid to quote Kipnis. "

"She is conceived in between aleatory rhizomes where the arborescent growth is at the same time a factor of her transformation and her operational mode.The project for the future museum B-mu feeds off of the climatic opposition between the urban environment’s protuberant energy and the indoor subdued and subject to the museum conditioning procedures (white cube). We are talking here of two distinct geometric structures: one is Euclidian, globalization incased, where cultural merchandises are circulated in an aseptic and deteritorialized universe, and the other typology, plunged in a intoxicating urban chaos."




:: images via new territories

This look at old/new in tandem is really interesting, and illustrated the books simple beauty. To focus on one or the other exclusively would have made for a focused but somewhat less vibrant read. The beauty is also that it is so topical and necessary within the framework of our modern discussions of green building: "When we talk of architecture engaging with the environment, very often we mean to say that architecture is harmonizing with, or open to, some aspect of an uncorrupted nature. An architecture that engages with the environment usually incorporates or mimics the mechanics of trees, sunlight, water, and wind; whether developing a country house or a skyscraper, the architect attempts to work the form, program, and system of the building into a mutually beneficial relationship with the environment... But as this book has demonstrated, the environment is much more than the nature we often image to be in some prehuman and pristine form; it is composed of subnatures produced by social, political, and architectural processes and concepts. Unlike the natural environment, we cannot possibly imagine a subnatural environment generated by, nor found within, a nonhuman world. Subnatures force us to confront the implicit nonsocial character of nature, as it is invoked in discussions of architecture and the environment." (p.211)

While virtually impossible to adequately cover all of the content of this book in a short post, I'm hoping to expand some of the notions of these subnatures, so look forward to some additional posting around these concepts, weaving in some of Gissen's information and project examples and some other writings.

Stay tuned, and definitely get a copy of this book for reading and re-browsing. Fascinating stuff.

Friday, February 1, 2008

Veg.itecture: Super Sized

The next in a continual series of Vegetated Architecture, including some large scale examples from Pittsburgh, Singapore, Moscow, and Paris.

From Inhabitat: "Architect Vincent Callebaut’s latest project balances public galleries, meeting rooms and gathering spaces over canals and abandoned railroad tracks in the 19th Parisian district. The prototype uses green technologies and techniques but is more than just an example of sustainable design. Callebaut’s ‘Anti Smog: An Innovation Centre in Sustainable Development’ is a catalyst for cleaner air."




:: images via Inhabitat

This touches of one of the main themes of Vegetated Architecture, that the plantings are not merely for decoration, but allow for specific functions, in this case smog reduction. Is that the focus? Nope. The plants are merely rooftop greening. The main hero in this story is technology: "The exterior is fitted with 250 square meters of solar photovoltaic panels and coated in titanium dioxide (TiO2). The PV system produces on-site electrical energy while the TiO2 coating works with ultraviolet radiation to interact with particulates in the air, break down organics and reduce air born pollutants and contaminants."

Second, from Architecture.MNP, the low-down on the new Pittsburgh RiverPark by Behnisch Architekten. This high-density waterfront development is aimed at infusing housing into the downtown core. A mixed-use development with a bevy of green strategies, there is actually some use of green spaces to regulate microclimates (and some very well done graphics): "The micro-climate within the RiverPark was also reimagined with the use of green roofs and landscaping and water features"




:: images via architecture.MNP

OMA has released images for a 1,000 unit apartment complex in Singapore, which consists of a massive interlocking complex of hexagonal spaces with what I imagine look like a thin icing of vegetated roof gardens on the tops. The plan is pretty interesting and seems to generate some interesting interstitial zones (under, over, and in between the buildings) but something about this rendering looks lifeless and brutal, much more than could be mitigated with any vegetation or facade articulation. Then again, it's also a concept, so not much detail to go by.


:: image via Dezeen

From late 2007, a variety of sources ran the announcement (most often paired with a 'wow' or an 'ugh') for the Crystal Island in Moscow by Foster + Partners. Dubbed the world's biggest building, it rises 450m tall, and has a floor area of over 2.5million square meters (that's 8.2 million square feet, for the metrically challenged - or around 190 acres for the LAs). Not just a big building, and it is BIG, but a big park as well:

"The building’s spiraling form emerges majestically from a newly landscaped park, rising in converse directions to form a diagonal grid. This distinctive geometry extends throughout the project into the park. The result is that the scheme is seamlessly integrated into a new park landscape, which provides a range of activities throughout the year, including cross country skiing and ice skating in the winter."


:: image via dezeen

What to conclude from the grandiose schemes? Well, most of them are just schemes, but they show ways that landscape provides a range benefits paired with buildings and larger scale plans. Whether it is providing a context, as in the parkland surrounding Crystal Island, what is assured to be a grandiose to the extreme version of excess - this mitigates the size and scope as well as immersing the project in nature. Same concept, but not as strong, is the OMA designed residential complex, but the building forms overshadow the minimal rooftop landscaping (and the surrounding landscape as well).

The functional use in building application seems to resonate in Pittsburgh, where the microclimatic use of plants on ecoroofs and site landscape is a viable strategy that also aids in form-making. In Paris, the form is extremely compelling, and plantings + smog-reduction seem a natural pairing. But why go to the trouble to intricately weave green around the structure, if it is mere decoration?

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Parc del Centre de Poblenou

Architecture as art. Art of Building. Vegetated Architecture. There are a lot of blurry lines out there between themes in design... and this often leads to cross-pollination and perhaps overstepping of turf sometimes. Taking the multi-disciplinary approach a bit further, Coolboom recently featured Jean Nouvel recently in the design for the Parc del Centre de Poblenou in Barcelona.


:: images via Coolboom (photo copyright Iñigo Bujedo Aguirre)

Some info from Coolboom: "...a gigantic sustainable garden of 5,5 hectares designed as “meeting point” and “acoustic microclimate” playing with light and shadows. ... The main garden of the park has a forest very well organized ending at one end of the park with a ramp of volcanic soil. In the second garden, the woodland surrounds the building of the old Oliva-Artés factory and takes the citizens through a visual and olfactory experience. In the third garden the most prominent feature is a crater that carries the visitor with a spiral to the “center of the Earth”."








:: images via Coolboom (photo copyright Iñigo Bujedo Aguirre)

As you can see from these photos, the planting is a bit lacking in spots. This seems to be a cop-out of 'urban' parks - a remnant of our nature belongs outside the city ideology, which is unfortunate. The detailing is interesting, particularly the rusted metal 'gates' and some of the iconic, architectural structures. These create some great spaces, which would be more powerful with some landscape context to set them off a bit. Be sure to check out more photos at the Flickr page of santimarti... with even more details.








:: images via Coolboom (photo copyright Iñigo Bujedo Aguirre)

This trend of architects-as-park designers (i can't resist, Parkitects) has plenty of precedents - many of which , such as Tschumi and Koolhaas at Parc de la Villette, and the work of Stan Allen (featured previously here for his Taichung Gateway Park.) along with many landscape architects, are some of the robust seeds of Landscape Urbanism.

This idea was referenced my Michelle Lin from Brooklyn in an editorial response to the NY Times: "The architecture-themed issue, “The Next City” (June 8), was a wonderful exploration of how today’s cutting-edge architectural firms, like OMA and MVRDV, are exploding the boundaries of conventional architecture. However, I would have liked to have seen perspectives from landscape architects, or what some refer to as “landscape urbanism.” Even architects like Rem Koolhaas, Bernard Tschumi and Stan Allen are turning toward landscape architecture to infuse and renew their own architectural-design strategies. Planning cities by single buildings was, and continues to be, a shortsighted strategy. To truly design our urban centers, we must now think of the city as a landscape of infrastructure (transportation, utilities) and systems (ecological, social, institutional)."

Angling back to Nouvel for a further take, the Times Online recently reported, the architect Jean Nouvel recently discussed the idea of the difference between architecture and art... with some interesting quotes. My favorite: "“For me it is the idea,” he booms. “The concept, that is everything. I don't design a lot, or work with models.” He disdains the computer - “it has no emotion, no feeling” - and even the pencil: “I craft with words.” Most of his day is spent debating, describing, cajoling, using words to get across his concepts."

Can you design with words? I love words, but need to draw and visualize to design. But design is personal - and I'm guessing for all of Nouvel's words, there are a number of talented people to realize this verbalism and give it form. Are architects capable, or should they strive, to make art? Does the act of design make architects capable of viable landscape architecture as well. Sure. I'm a proponent of good design is good design. I also think the collaboration between the two is vital. There's little info on Poblenou as to the team that made it up, whether that was local LAs or horticulturalists. Maybe that's the result of lack of collaboration, resulting in architectural elements and monocultural plantings that could have been energized with good landscape design? (See Revisit: Olympic Sculpture Park for a great example of the collaborative potential).

We as LAs often bemoan the idea of architecture usurping some of the role of park and urban design that we seem to have given up - and has gladly been taken with visiionary architects. Often the results are spotty - sometimes more architectural than good spacemaking. Often the results are amazing... As vegitecture continues, I think we'll see a shift of the pendulum back - with landscape architects recapturing some of this territory - particularly in creating and actively generating building and urban form, creating beautiful infrastructure - and perhaps even recapturing the park as a viable and innovative part of our oeuvre.

Friday, February 15, 2008

World Architecture News

Our dilemma: having the time to spend daily on keeping up with the frenetic pace of design in todays world . Always a challenge, and in searching out more resources, I stumbled upon a great site yesterday, World Architecture News (WAN) featuring at least daily updates to a wide range of buildings world-wide. While building-centric, it follows trends in architecture, thus fits into Vegetated Architecture category (without really even knowing it). One exception was an article/link to the renovation of Les Halles, the much loved Parisian open space. Other great features: good photos, links to firms, and a listing of related books relevant to the project. Definitely check it out.

Here are a few of their projects I thought worthy of highlighting (all images via WAN).




:: The Church Site - Slough - by 3DReid


:: Town Hall - Sogne, Norway - by A-lab




:: Drents Museum - Assen, Netherlands by Erick van Egeraat Architects (EEA)


:: The Red Apple - Rotterdam, Netherlands by KCAP


:: Ocean Financial Centre - Singapore - by Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects

And that's just from the past month or so. Perhaps my bias peeking out again, but there is some really compelling architecture world-wide - that kind of puts a lot of what's going on around here to shame. That is not to say there is not some great examples in Portland or the greater US, but it seems to be more restrained. This is probably due in part to regulation, in part to financing. But what other factors are at work? A recent article in BusinessWeek via Architectural Record highlighted the 'State of American Architecture', starting with a focus on New York. Paul Goldberger is quoted often, giving some shape to the American situation: "Trends today are national or even global. Sustainability is certainly one. We should be doing more on this, but we're doing more than we did in the past."

While regional differences make sense, and global trends provide some levelling to the field, what is the major difference between American architecture/design and it's worldwide peers? Areas like Dubai are driven by significant wealth that tends to create the amazing excess of such interventions as artificial islands, populated by star-powered monumental architecture that would never be built in the US.


:: The Palm Deira - image via TEN Real Estate

Sustainability might provide a common thread, but that is only one major driver of design style and innovation. Ugly LEED Platinum is definitely possible... One word for a driver in the US... money - namely in infrastructure. Cities don't have the funds, where private developers do, and he who pays tends to get to decide. This is reflected, according to Goldberger, of the Ground Zero redevelopment:

"... In many ways, it merely reflects where we are today. It's a commercial development, not a civic place. And it isn't effective urban design." Warming to the topic, he talks about "the relative withdrawal, even abandonment, of large-scale planning by the public sector. It's giving way to private developers, letting them take charge of what gets built where. At the end of the day, it's not real planning." A reason for this withdrawal is the government's inability to build urban infrastructure on the scale that is needed. "What we're seeing is the development of parallel infrastructures—one built by the private sector and one by the public. I can imagine a time in the future when some people might have little interaction with the public infrastructure."

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

A Dozen of the Best of 2008

Well, in the spirit of the impending new year, it's time for a look back on the 300+ posts from Landscape+Urbanism to glean what was new, provocative, innovative, and just plain awe-inspiring. In my biased opinion, reading through the archives and downloads from the year - is that 2008 was definitely the year of Veg.itecture - both in visuals, technologies, and built works. So in this vein - a totally random and unscientific look the best of the best for Veg.itecture, Landscape and Urbanism that will continue to inspire into the new year.

1. Best Veg.itecture Project
Hands down, the most amazing project of the year was the California Academy of Sciences Building in San Francisco. Photogenic, innovative, and inspiring, this project blew everyone away, causing me to proclaim, in hyperbolic fashion, that Piano et.al. had reached the pinnacle of veg.itecture... and I still stand by this.


:: image via
Metropolis

2. Best Urban Agriculture Project (tie)
This is a tie between the practical and the visionary. First, these Agrotecture visions came from the Architecture Association of London (via Pruned), such as this airborne vineyard: "The audacious structure, the winery and the vineyard for red wine grapes are connected by a suspended transport network enabling the use of ground space for a public park. With a capacity to produce 10,000 bottles of red wine annually the project re-articulates private and public space blending productive infrastructure with quality areas to Londoners and tourists."


:: image via
Pruned

And the tie comes from a radically different type of urban agriculture project, from What If, an architecture collective from the UK with a novel idea: "A formerly inaccessible and run-down plot of housing estate land has been transformed into a beautiful oasis of green. Seventy 1/2 tonne bags of soil have been arranged to form an allotment space. Within their individual plots, local residents are carefully tending a spectacular array of vegetables, salads, fruit and flowers. A new sense of community has emerged."


:: image via
What If

3. Best Living Wall
This one is via Balmori Associates for their design for the 'World Mammoth and Permafrost Museum', located in Yakutsk, Siberia. These interior living walls are made up of vegetation from the mosses and lichens that draped the Siberian tundra - and also regulate interior temperature and air quality.


:: image via Balmori Associates

4. Veg.itect of the Year
James Corner of Field Operations... big surprise?... Nope.:)


:: image via Metropolis


5. Best Book
While the new Patrick Blanc book was amazing, and I am constantly turning to Meg Calkins book on Sustainable Materials - my vote for best book of the year goes out to The Public Chance: New Urban Landscapes by a+t architecture publishers which offers solid and graphical analysis from a broad range of projects from around the world. Check it out - it's one that will continue to inspire (and it has since I've wrestled it back from my students from Fall term).




:: images via
a+t architecture publishers

6. Best Use of Materials
There were a ton of potential projects to choose from regarding inventive uses of materials, but in review, this project from Foster and Partners for the United Arab Emirates Shanghai Expo Pavilion utilizes patterns of Islamic art and culture as well as playing with color and light... as always - we shall have to see how it comes together in reality.


:: image via Atelier A+D

7. Best Magazine
I am pleasantly surprised to honor Metropolis Magazine with the best magazine of 2008, for a couple of divergent reasons. First, their expanded coverage of landscape architecture projects has been unprecedented, and will hopefully continue in 2009 with thoughtful and insightful features - not just blurbs about a range of projects. Second, the provocative Susan Szenasy's comments on landscape architecture have fueled some healthy and much needed debate internally - which makes us all better.


:: image via Metropolis


8. Best Blog
Spawned on March 09, 2008, Arch Daily seems like one of those blogs that has been around forever - and I'm constantly amazed by the amount and quality of imagery and posts from around the world. Plus this site is perhaps most low-key and informative in the trend towards vegetated architecture - showing built (yes, in the digital flesh) projects to show that yes, it is possible to do this stuff, and do it well.


:: image via
Arch Daily

9. Best Project Graphics
Coming via Pruned, this project from Marti Mas Rivera, of Universitat Politecnica De Catalunya, Barcelona, a rainwater harvesting project for the Arabic Fortress Hill of Baza in Andalucia. In the time of wicked computer graphics and the lost art of hand-drawing, these fusion-graphics restored my faith in the beauty of the minimal...




:: images via
Pruned

10. Firm/Collective of the Year
My vote goes to a collective of Spanish designers that make up the group Urbanarbolismo - and are constantly producing great and inspiring work around the concepts of veg.itecture, landscape and urbanism - reconnecting the natural to the built environments. Plus, their site can be instantly translated into Spanish for those of us who's bi-lingual skills leave something to be desired.


:: La Torre I-214 refrigerada mediante bosque - image via
Urbanarbolismo

11. Best new resource
Land8Lounge is like Facebook for landscape professionals without all the annoying stuff I hate about Facebook. In addition to being a good social networking site, the L8L community provides opportunities for discussions of the profession, the ability to show and see new work, as well as the possibility of getting exposure to the world-wide professional community like never before.


:: images via
Land8Lounge

12. New Idea for 2009:
My vote for best new idea of the upcoming year isn't a static technology or implementation, but a re-alignment of design with nature that will illicit a vibrant and change-provoking dialogue for years to come. PHWREE Urbanism was coined by Dave Brown (minusa 'silent or lispy W') to become PHREE Urbanism - which stands for POST HUMANIST REWILDED ECO ETHICAL URBANISM... remember those words...


:: image via
Tomorrow's Thoughts Today