Category: projects

  • SITE Videos

    A Daily Dose of Architecture continued my retro kickback weekend – with some amazing videos related to the 1970s and 1980s big box stores designed by James Wines and his firm SITE. Some of the most known of these are retail stores for the now defunct BEST Stores which I guess wanted an exterior to…

  • Our Crumbling Infrastructure [aka Call Before You Dig]

    [UPDATE: 01.10.09 – As mentioned, I recieved this as an email forward – one of those ubiquitous things that get pitched around in our digital age – thus had no context in which to verify the story. Thus, it turns out that the pics are from a corrosion-related rupture of the high pressure gas line…

  • Veg.itecture #49: VIVA + VIA

    As promised, a slight modification of the Veg.itecture posts – due both to the enormous amounts of projects out there, but also based on a need for some different needs for both built and design projects. So, as promised – in the upcoming 50th post on the series on Vegetated Architecture, an evolution of sorts…

  • Blackburn Gateway

    A quick email from Jem at Eaton Waygood Associates in the UK offered a couple of pics of a current project for a gateway for Blackburn. As I’m a sucker for anyone named Jem, I thought I’d drop a few photos into a post. From the email: “The work has a masonry side, (drystone wall,…

  • China’s Mixed Signals

    The explosive growth of China has offered a dichotomy – on one hand the speed and voraciousness of development has created unprecedented impacts from natural resource consumption and pollution; on the other, the country has created a number of evocative potential eco-city planning examples that have excited and intrigued – giving hope that amidst the…

  • Veg.itecture #48

    With the first Veg.itecture post of 2009, we start to integrate some of the ideas that budded in late 2008. These included more technical interpretation of projects, more discussion of plants, and potential maintenance concerns related to these projects – to add a level of rigor to the visuals. Obviously, as mentioned, this comes with…

  • 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…

  • Again, Time to Get High

    I’ll try to keep my fawning at bay as I post some new info from the High Line (although my obsession is well known)… but sometimes I just can’t resist. I recently plugged through some of the recent High Line Blog posts, and particularly appreciate the short lived ‘What will grow here?’ – which aimed…

  • Urban Roof Farming x2

    One of those interesting trends that may be the hot topic of 2009 (and a major topic of conversation in 2008) is the growing of food in cities – particularly on rooftops and buildings. A couple of recent articles present some viable examples of rooftop agriculture used for education and production. The San Francisco Chronicle…

  • Eco-NoDak?

    A new(ish) blog called TerraMode is a collective of three designers, James Fink, Kavan Donohue, and Michael VanBeek. Their premise is simple and good: “Landscape Architects interested in design communication and it’s influence on the profession.” While posting has been spotty, there’s a trio of North Dakota based project images that were posted initially on…