Saturday, August 9, 2008

Water Worlds

A range of projects featuring water not just as a theme, but a major design element... very disparate in scale and application, but with that common hydrological thread. For starters, one of the typologies of green roofs, discussed previously on L+U, is the concept of 'blue roofs' - which use water to provide cooling atop building structures. A couple of amazing examples of this follow. First, the whimsical version of this is via Treehugger - of some art installations to creat 'Psycho Buildings' one of which includes a rooftop 'lake' replete with boats:


:: image via Treehugger

Some text via Treehugger: "The outside projects include an outdoor lake, created on top of the roof of the museum (pictured). Visitors can line up to take a little row boat ride in this newly made waterway in the sky, with the London Eye and Houses of Parliament in the distance. The water seems to flow over the side of the building. The floating dock for the odd little boats was made from reclaimed timber and junk-store furniture. The handles of the oars came from legs of old chairs with brass castors."

A more elegant version is the Tanatoria Municipal, by Jordi Badia /Josep Val in León, Spain is a stunning example of perhaps not exactly a 'blue roof' in the traditional sense, but a very cool one nonetheless...


:: images via Arch Daily

From Arch Daily: "A completely buried construction, it eludes its volume and its signification in order to camouflage itself in the interstices of a too-close residential area.A sheet of water by way of a roof constitutes the single facade, reflecting León’s sky like an allegory of death. All that emerges from the water are mysterious fingers in search of light for prayer."




:: images via Arch Daily

A few projects that propose floating architecture, reminiscent of the Dutch and their concept of 'amphibious architecture'... starting with a vision of New Orleans via Inhabitat: "Here’s an approach that endeavors to ride the river rather than stem it’s course. Harvard Graduate School of Design students Kiduck Kim and Christian Stayner have conceived of a Floating City that will “rise safely in an Archimedean liquid landscape.”


:: image via Inhabitat

Next - some literal amphibious development - a water-based development via World Architecture News - Waterkwekerij (Water Nursery) in Alkmaar, Netherlands...






:: images via WAN

A third version, via Inhabitat: "A set of zero-carbon floating buildings has been chosen by RIBA as the winning design for the visitor center at the new Brockholes Wetland and Woodland Nature Reserve in Preston, northern England. Nicknamed ‘A Floating World’... Built on an island of floating pontoons over a former 67-acre gravel pit, visitors are reassured with the guarantee of ‘unlimited flood protection’. The connection they experience with nature is greater through close proximity of the café, shop, gallery, education areas, and meeting rooms to the reeds and wildlife of the surrounding wetland environment."




:: images via Inhabitat

Following up this amphibious theme, is the idea of water walls which captures the concept of defining architectural spaces by streaming water vertically along the building perimeter. Via BDonline, the "...MIT building with walls made entirely of water will go on display ... at the Zaragoza World Expo in northern Spain, the theme of which is water and sustainable development." That's hot - and cool...






:: images via BDonline

Finally, this was much covered - and I have been meaning to feature it for a while, to no avail. So here goes - the History Channel's City of the Future Competition, was the winning entry from Iwamoto Scott Architecture - HydroNet.


:: image via History Channel

An excerpt from their entry statement: "Symbiotic and multi-scalar, SF HYDRO-NET is an occupiable infrastructure that organizes critical flows of the city. HYDRO-NET provides an underground arterial traffic network for hydrogen-fueled hover-cars, while simultaneously collecting, storing and distributing water and power tapped from existing aquifer and geothermal sources beneath San Francisco. A new aquaculture zone with ponds of algae and forests of sinuous housing towers reoccupy Baylands inundated by rising sea levels."



:: images via History Channel

Andrea Cochran Interview

I do have a certain unreserved fondness for the designs of Andrea Cochran, and was excited to see this Dwell Design Leaders video, via Andrew Spiering from the steadily growing and informative Land8Lounge... check out the video, as well as the lounge... you won't be sorry with either.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Ten Books on Veg.itecture

A recent office desk move (and slogging multiple boxes of books in my personal library) made me think, that although I do an occasional review of books periodically - it would behoove me to summarize some of the classic tomes that define some of the key themes on the blog. While I intend to continue and expand these lists to other areas (planning, landscape urbanism, landscape architecture, etc.) I thought it appropriate to start with my favorite (and one with a somewhat limited reading list) - Vegetated Architecture.

These don't come with a lot of commentary - but will of course, trickle down through time... links via Powells and photos via Amazon - if you can buy them from my local Powells - you'll feel better (and I'd feel better if Powells had better cover photos... and Amazon got rid of the stupid 'Search Inside' plastered on the cover - either way, I'm spending more money and making none from both (read: until my book deal - I just love books :)

1. Ecodesign: A Manual for Ecological Design - by Ken Yeang


:: image via Amazon

2. Architecture: Nature - by Philip Jodidio


:: image via Amazon

3. Landscrapers: Building with the Land - by Aaron Betsky


:: image via Amazon

4. Vertical Gardens - by Anna Lambertini


:: image via libreria universita

5. Green Roof Plants: A Resource and Planting Guide - by Ed & Lucy Snodgrass


:: image via
Seedhead

6. Green Roofs: Ecological Design and Construction - EarthPledge


:: image via Amazon

7. Green Roof: A Case Study: Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates' Design for the Headquarters of the American Society of Landscape Architects - by Christian Werthmann


:: image via Architecture.MNP

8. Living Systems: Innovative Materials and Technologies for Landscape Architecture - by Liat Margolis


: image via Best Web Buys

9. Planting Green Roofs and Living Walls - by Nigel Dunnett and Noel Kingsbury


:: image via BookCourt

10. Eco Skyscrapers - by Ken Yeang


:: image via Amazon

While not all inclusive, you will notice there is an absence of some of the Green Roof staples, (such as Osmundson's great 'Roof Gardens' or anything by Malcolm Wells), which is purposeful, and actually quite exciting. There was a time when there were less than 3 books on the subject - modern or historical. Ok, that's an overstatement, but really, practically, there are still only maybe a dozen books on green roofs of any sort... although still applicable, not as all-encompassing for Veg.itecture.

There are a bunch of gardening related books on 'rooftops' which are formulaic adaptations of the gardening books - with a bit of variation for roofs. There are also multiple books on climbing plants and trellises, which are valuable resources, but not specifically related. Green Roof books are coming out left and right - some good, some crap. And there are still very few books on vertical greening - but expect a bunch soon...

Any comments on other books in people's libraries that people know of (that are actually out on the market, not say Patrick Blanc's new one) - I am all ears!