Posts Tagged ‘urban garden’

29/10

Sigrid

OPEN HOUSE – 20 ROOM VERTICAL GREENHOUSE

Could this be the future of community centres? Open House is a vertical village of haphazardly stacked house shaped rooms recently opened in Anyang, Korea.

Raumlaborkorea, a research and intervention unit of the design group Raumlaborberlin, were invited to design, programme and build this centre as part of ‘Anyang public art project/ A new community in the open city’. Described by it’s designers as a ’social sculpture’, the project aims to knit into the existing urban and social landscape and not only serves the local community but was also built by them!

Two hundred residents of Anyang took part in building workshops and completed the stacked rooms which include a bicycle rent shop, a children’s play pavillion, a community garden and a tea room.

I love this project, Raumlaborkorea have reinvented the architecture associated with community and participation and created a playful and exciting project which also looks great!

06/07

Lisl

LFA Urban Gardens

In keeping with the theme of ‘the welcoming city’ the area between the South Bank and Elephant and Castle saw urban gardens in various shapes and sizes erected for the London Festival of Architecture.

Reduce, reuse, recycle was part of the brief and the environmentally minded projects were constructed using mainly recycled materials, palettes being particularly popular. The guerrilla gardening projects included a pop-up cookery school at much loved Borough Market where the students from the Cardiff University’s Welsh School of Architecture built nomadic allotments that provide people in tight spaces with the opportunity to grow their own food in dense urban environments.

25/06

Riya

Extension to the High Line

Fans of New York’s ‘High Line’ park have some good news to celebrate. The hugely popular urban landscape, designed by architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro in 2009, is due to be extended to twice the length of redundant railway line it currently occupies.

Through a masterful use of detail and materiality, the design pays homage to the signs of decaying industry that surround it. Concrete planks that allow grass to grow in between them are a poignant reminder of nature’s ability to reclaim the man-made and artificial. The new section, designed in collaboration with James Corner Field Operations, will interpret these ideas further and include a dense area of trees and shrubs chosen for their ability to grow in the shade of skyscrapers. A lounging lawn and a sitting area bordered by an empty billboard frame will also enhance the existing design, which elevates visitors above the bustling city below.

The park’s much-anticipated extension is due for completion in Spring 2011.

(images from Inhabitat)

30/09

Tina Michelle Cheng

Radical Nature at the Barbican

Radical Nature

Art and Architecture for a Changing Planet 1969–2009

19 June 2009 – 18 October 2009
Barbican Art Gallery

For another two weeks, the Barbican is featuring an exhibit of nature-inspired designs, displaying an international collection of independent and collaborative work from both artists and architects.   The designs focus on the subject of utopianism, and seek to provide adaptive solutions for our changing environment.

We found several inspiring architectural works.  Symbiosishood by R&Sie(n), is a building situated between North and South Korea that borrows its form from the topography it sits upon.  Eventually, it will blend invisibly into the landscape as the invasive vine it’s covered in overtakes the structure by vegetative expansion.  Tree Mountain by Agnes Denes combines agriculture, environmental art, and architecture to create a circular forest atop a conical mountain in Finland.  The Green Room by A12 (pictured) is an interactive installation, providing a sense of serene solitude within the walls of the mirrored garden.


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