Category: competitions

  • PlastiCity FantastiCity

    The fabulous RMIT based journal KERB has recently announced a new competition called PlastiCity FantastiCity, to envision a new urbanism. From the site: “The competition re-envisions city systems to explore fantastical opportunities that enable groundbreaking and fun projects which shake the design world. A multi-disciplinary approach is encouraged though not required and we are sure…

  • Bilbao Jardín Garden

    A wonderful addition to the International Urban Garden Competition “Bilbao Jardín 2009”, by Diana Balmori of New York-based Balmori Associates and a design that literally ‘climbs the stairs’ with a undulating vegetated strip and cor-ten walls splaying out in a wider planter at the lowest landing. :: image via Bustler – Photo: Iwan BaanSome of…

  • Reinventing Cities Winners

    The finalists for the Reinventing Cities competition have been announced. This open ideas competition was aimed at reinvisioning ‘new urban infrastructures’. It’s hard to tell too much about the entries themselves w/o any appreciable explanatory text to accompany them, but some views of the graphics. I hope we can get more detail about the entries…

  • Off Grid 2.0: Healing the Damaged Edge

    The ideas competition Off Grid 2.0, sponsored by the California Architecture Foundation, recently announced a slate of winning entries under the theme ‘Healing the Damaged Edge’. Definitely take some time to get into the full size PDFs as these thumbnails don’t give one the full picture, and there aren’t any project statements. A range of…

  • Digital Exhaustion

    It’s seems a little time off makes one introspective, or at the very least a bit nostalgic. Did you ever feel that impossible to scratch, lingering itch in the back of your mind? You know, the one that you can’t subsume, but says we’ve devolved from a culture that celebrates the built beauty and artistry…

  • Urbanism for Expanding Cities

    My friend and colleague Brett Milligan and I were fortunate enough to have an article published in ‘Landscape Architecture China’ a new journal that recently published its second issue covering Landscape Urbanism. Our article titled ‘Urbanism for Expanding Cities: Designing the conjugal interface of contrasting systems’ outlined the urban frameworks that were key to our…

  • DailyLand: Pier 57

    This project has been around the blogs lately, and it’s an interesting meshing of site and architecture – driven by the unique opportunity of creating space atop a pier in New York City. Via Bustler, the team includes LOT-EK, with developer Young Woo & Associates The project “…foresees a rooftop park crowning a small shopping…

  • More from the Ecotone

    I am a fan of the conceptual parti of the ‘ecotone’ as seen from the Integrating Habitats competition award winner ‘Urban Ecotones’ from 2008. The use of this landscape ecology principle, which is defined as a transitional zone between distinct plant communities, offers a lot of mileage as an evocative strategy within it’s original sphere…

  • Do You Rule the Sewer?

    I’ve been remiss in posting about the interesting WPA 2.0 competition and it’s alluring tagline: “whoever rules the sewers rules the city” as I was debating about entering because it is just amazingly compelling in idea. So alas, due to summer and time constraints (I know, lame, but I’ll explain later) I’m passing on the…

  • Bat Yam 2010

    I posted here about the 2008 Bat-Yam international biennale of landscape urbanism, and was pleased to get an email annoucing the upcoming 2010 version focusing on Urban Action. The Bat-Yam Biennale functions as a laboratory through which attitudes in and towards urban space are examined. A variety of sites throughout the historic city of Bat-Yam…