Monday, 25 April 2011

BIG architects: loop city film


'from finger plan to loop city' film by BIG architectspresented at the 12th international architecture biennale at the danish pavilion.

This is a good graphic presentation for the loop city which focus on connecting the suburb to the centre. It proposes to continue to connect the area around in a sustainable spine of public transport, energy exchange and electric car infrastructure.


Energy loop of the new proposal.

Sunday, 24 April 2011

The Union Street Urban Orchard Publication



I have already posted about this project during the fucus week. I knew of this project from Heather Ring who desinged the Union street urban orchard. Unfortunately, the Union street urban orchard has finished. The site was 100 union street in SE1, which had been transformed into an urban orchard and community garden. All these trees and plants have found new homes and been located onto local estates and existing community garden.
They suggested to create the book about what was achived this summer.

Monty Don's " Italian Gardens " BBC Preview



This is Monty Don's personal grand garden tour around Italy. He is a British television presenter, writer and speaker on horticulture. Also he is well known for presenting the BBC series 'Gardener's World'.
This program includes the retreats of the affluent north and horticultural gems of the south.

Available full version is below link...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/i/b010nrgf/

Wednesday, 20 April 2011

PAYSAGES EN EXIL

IM Greenhouse sunset
I found an experimental installation in Toulouse, France. This is a unique blend of architecture and nature. The “cloud” brings a level of abstraction to those wandering on the path to the garden, almost containing people in this experience and separating them from the rest of the world for the duration of the walk.

IM Pink cloud's night view
The project finds its genesis in the description of “wandering plants phenomenon” made by Gilles Clément who is gardener.

IM From bridge 1

IM Family inside the greenhouse
This project invites visitors to participate in the journey of a seedling. Upon entering, people are encouraged to randomly select a medicinal seedling from one of five continents. Continuing their journey through the greenhouse, over a mist-covered footbridge, they are welcomed by a garden where the seedling could be planted.

IM Plants details 2IM Dew on skin detail

Monday, 28 March 2011


Lexicon of Garden and Landscape Architecture : Meto J. Vroom

It is very useful and easy to use reference guide to landscape design. It serves to clarify important tems and expressions that designers use on a daily basis.

Saturday, 26 March 2011

[Restoration project]


Ballast Point Park

The Ballast Point Park is situated on the Birchgrove Peninsula in the inner reaches of Sydney harbour, Australia. The site was contaminated by former industrial lubricant production site.
The design uses world leading sustainability principles to minimise the project’s carbon footprint and ecologically rehabilitate the site. The environmental approach is further underpinned by site-wide stormwater biofiltration, recycled materials, and wind turbines for on-site energy production.



8 vertical axis wind turbines and an extract from a Les Murray poem, carved into recycled tank panels, forms a sculptural re-interpretation of the site’s former largest storage tank. The wind turbines symbolise the future, a step away from our fossil fuelled past towards more sustainable renewable energy forms.




Dominant new terrace walls sit atop the sandstone cliffs but these walls are not made of precious sandstone excavated from another site, rather from the rubble of our past. What once was called rubbish is now called beautiful. It is the new ballast. But it is more than this at play: It is the total composition of these recycled rubber filled cages, off set with concrete coping panels topped with fine grain railing, that allow these walls to sit confidently at the portal to the inner harbour.

Tree Museum in Switzerland





Have ever heard that tree museum? This is the World's first tree museum in Rapperswill-Jona, Switzerland. It would be interesting to note that the museum will include over 2,000 trees that will beautify the lands of a 14th century monastery. The 22 species of trees will grow on a territory of 2.5 acres. The list of species includes English yew and Scotch pine.