6th International Garden Festival, Jardins de Métis/Reford Gardens

Susan Herrington, Hip Hop, 2005


Twelve gardens by designers from Australia, France, the United States, Québec and Canada make up the 6th International Garden Festival, which will be held at the Jardins de Métis/Reford Gardens, Québec, Canada from June 24 to October 2, 2005.

Atelier Big City, Head in the Clouds, 2005


Judging from the project briefs, the gardens promise to be inventive, provocative, and fun. Last year's entries, some of which are presented again this year, expanded traditional notions of what forms gardens can take, what gardens can mean, and what functions they can take.

Go see and send back photos.

Gardens-in-a-Bag



Portable Landscape. Mobile Landscape. Instant Landscape. The list of possible studios goes on.


Gardens-in-a-Bag

Politiki'z

I've got lots of fresh ideas to bring to the political arena. Unfortunately, only one comes to mind right now.



Platform:

- Adopt the metric system.

Pedestrian Levitation

Thomas Laureysse

Pedestrian Levitation by Thomas Laureyssen is a site-specific installation, which “visualises the real movement of people, and adds a virtual movement based on the assumption that the mind of people is not subject to gravity or any other physical limitations.”

Now let's visualize the movement of people in a park on Mars or on the moon.

Thomas Laureysse

“The movement of the pedestrians could be regarded as force-vectors thought the space. A person's trajectory from A -> B is nearly never a straight line, as many obstacles are in the way (like buildings), imposed trajectories (pedestrian crossings, sidewalks) and physical limitations (gravity). At this point a question is asked: how would the pedestrians move when they were not limited by anything? What could their trajectory be? The results of these thought processes could never be scientifically correct, but are an artistic interpretation in nature.”

Geological Investigation of the Alluvial Valley of the Lower Mississippi River

Harold N. Fisk's 1944 monumental tome on nature at its most mundane and sublime is, amazingly, available online and free. Landscape architects in every specialty have much to glean from it, not the least of which are water engineering techniques, ecological and geological processes, graphic representation, and the ideological and philosophical implications of reconstructing the Mississippi River.

The maps, scanned at high resolution and full scale, are some of the most beautiful I've seen.

The following files are hosted by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

1. Geological Investigation of the Alluvial Valley of the Lower Mississippi River - Fisk, 1944 Report (197MB)
2. Oversized Plates - Fisk, 1944 Report (686MB)
3. Oversized Plates Rectified - Fisk, 1944 Report (369MB)

You can also preview the maps on Flickr here.

Geological Investigation of the Alluvial Valley of the Lower Mississippi River



Lower Mississippi Valley: Engineering Geology Mapping Program


Part II
Part III
Part IV
Part V
Alluvial Porn

Guerrilla Gardening

“Without permit or license, we plant seeds and seedlings in all those neglected corners of public space.”

Guerilla Gardening

I am heartened to hear that native species are being prescribed. Hope it outgrows its "guerrilla" moniker as it usually implies a transitory act, minimal public participation, and intangible community benefits. But would it then become “community gardening?” A fascinating thread in the urban garden narrative.

TerraServer, Part II

I had planned on including a third image, that of Michael Heizer's City, to yesterday's entry but could not find one particular quote, which I was reminded of during my "scopic drive" through the West, in its entirety to accompany the image.

Icarus can ignore the tricks of Daedalus in his shifting and endless labyrinths. His altitude transforms him into a voyeur. It places him at a distance, it changes an enchanting world into a text. It allows him to read it, to become a solar Eye, a god’s regard. The exaltation of a scopic…drive. Just to be this seeing point creates the fiction of knowledge. Must one then redescend into the somber space through which crowds of people move about, crowds that, visible from above, cannot see there below. The fall of Icarus.

— Michael de Certeau, “Practices of Space”, in Marshal Blonsky On Signs (Basil Blackwell, London, 1985) pp. 122-49.


It's imperative to visit the sites. Maps lie; they are imperfect substitutes.

The City by Michael Heizer



Michael Kimmelman, "Art's Last, Lonely Cowboy," The New York Times Magazine (6 Feb 2005)
Michael Kimmelman, "Michael Heizer: A Sculptor's Colossus of the Desert," The New York Times (12 Dec 1999)


TerraServer


TerraServer, Part III
Dugway Proving Ground: or, TerraServer, Part IV

TerraServer

Google Maps has garnered a lot of attention and praise recently, but I still prefer TerraServer for my aerial needs. Not only are the aerials switchable to corresponding USGS topgographic maps but each one comes with the all important geographic coordinates and scale.

Below are two aerials of two landmark works in land art. I have always wanted to search for them in TerraServer. Using directions culled from the web, now I have.

Spiral Jetty by Robert Smithson


Double Negative by Michael Heizer



TerraServer, Part II
TerraServer, Part III
Dugway Proving Ground: or, TerraServer, Part IV

The Group of Eight

What are the chances the G8 will write off my student loans at next month's summit in Scotland? Probably slim to none, unless I can convince them that money went to line the pockets of ruthless dictators and brutally oppress non-ruling tribes. If anybody with the G8 calls and asks what I did with the money, go along with the story. Thanks.

Red Carpet

Movie Review: Mean Girls, starring Lindsey Lohan

Rating: Two stars (out of five)



This movie is watchable, but it never lived up to its potential or justified the hype. Better than Brandon Stewart, but not as good as Chris Simms.



Landscape Architecture Film Series

In need of a movie suggestion? Try a movie or two or an entire series from the Landscape Architecture Film Series at the University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign. Missing from the website are the series from Spring 2004 and Fall 2004. They are listed below.

Landscape Architecture Film Series

SPRING 2004 FILM SERIES
Alien Nation or: How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Live with Foreigners


Walter Lang, The King and I (1956)
Orson Welles, Touch of Evil (1958)
Gillo Pontecorvo, The Battle of Algiers (1965)
Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Ali: Fear Eats the Soul
Cheech Marin, Born in East L.A. (1987)
Mira Nair, Mississippi Masala (1991)
Mathieu Kassovitz, La Haine (1995)
Kar Wai Wong, Happy Together
Daniel Friedman and Sharon Grimberg, Miss India Georgia (1997)
David and Laurie Shapiro, Keep the River on Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale (2000)
Atom Egoyan, Ararat (2002)

FALL 2004 FILM SERIES
Spectral Subtopia: Seven Films about Suburban Space in Post-war America


John O'Hagan, Wonderland (1997)
Nunnally Johnson, The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956)
Todd Haynes, Far From Heaven (2002)
Frank Perry, The Swimmer (1968)
Bryan Forbes, The Stepford Wives (1975)
Ang Lee, The Ice Storm (1997)
Tobe Hooper, Poltergeist (1982)


Landscape Architecture Film Series @ the University of Illinois


MILF

The Vertical Farm Project

“An estimated 109 hectares of new land (about 20% more land than is represented by the country of Brazil) will be needed to grow enough food to feed them, if traditional farming practices continue as they are practiced today. At present, throughout the world, over 80% of the land that is suitable for raising crops is in use. Historically, some 15% of that has been laid waste by poor management practices. What can be done to avoid this impending disaster?”

Farm vertically. In urban areas.

Pierre Sartoux



The Vertical Farm Project
Atelier SOA Architectes Paris

Wave Garden by Yusuke Obuchi

Wave Garden by Yusuke Obuchi has been making the rounds in the exhibition circuit since it was first presented as a Master's thesis project at Princeton University's School of Architecture in 2002. Currently, it is part of the 2nd International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam (see The Flood Begins). Whether utopian or whimsical or both, it is grounded on a deep understanding of real materials and systems that it transcends its utopian trappings. One could be beguiled into thinking that it might just work.

Wave Garden by Yusuke Obuchi


Floating off the California coastline, the Wave Garden is a prototype for a dual-function power plant and public park, oscillating with the ocean waves and cycles of energy demand. It is designed to succeed the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant after its 40-year license expires in the year 2026.

As an alternative to nuclear and other conventional energy sources, the Wave Garden is an electric power plant that derives energy from the movement of ocean waves. Its piezo-electro membrane is a flexible electric generator, where bending the material or applying stress creates an electric charge. Conversely, applying electric current to the membranes causes it to deform.

Wave Garden by Yusuke Obuchi


Monday through Friday, it generates energy, but at the weekends, the Wave Garden changes into a public garden - thus changing from a space of production to one of recreation and consumption. At the weekends, selected areas lift above the surface of the ocean, acting as a ceiling under which boats approach the entrances.

The area dedicated to recreation during the weekends is inversely proportional to the energy consumed during the week. In this way, the public park acts as a visual indicator of energy consumption - the less energy used, the more area allocated to recreation.

Wave Garden by Yusuke Obuchi


Wave Garden by Yusuke Obuchi


Visitors gain access to the public garden via an elevator. They pass through the membrane, which allows them to observe the thinness of Wave Garden's ground plane.


Princeton University, School of Architecture, Thesis Projects, 2002
Storefront for Architecture, 2002
Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum, National Design Triennial, 2004
2nd International Architecture Biennial Rotterdam, Flow, 2005

Sports page

There should be online CWS bracket contests like there are for the NCAA basketball tournament. I hope this will be addressed at the Special Session.

Good luck on that ace, sir

I dare you to accept the challenge offered by GNR tribute band Rocket Queens, as found in their Manifesto:

Just try and find an album that rocks as hard as Appetite for Destruction.

Just try.

The Flood Begins

The Flood is the title for the 2nd International Architecture Biennale (May 26 - June 26) in Rotterdam, chosen by curator Andriaan Geuze. Though water and flooding is a particular local concern, they are imporant themes outside the Netherlands, too.

“Climate change means that the whole world must address the issue. Around the world cities are situated on low-lying coastal zones and in delta regions where rivers enter the sea. These are amongst the most fertile areas and are well linked by sea and land to the world. But these are also cities with populations in the millions that are now highly vulnerable because of the threat of flooding.”

Niall Kirkwood


Containermetropolis, Maasvlakte 2, the Netherlands


Archetype Dutch Watercity with KLM houses


Southern Flevoland, Swifterweg, 2000

DHEA an anabolic Steroid?

It will be classified as such unless you act now.

Senate Bill 1137 was authored with the explicit goal of classifying this supplement as an anabolic steroid:


To include dehydroepiandrosterone as an anabolic steroid. (Introduced in Senate)

S 1137 IS


109th CONGRESS

1st Session

S. 1137
To include dehydroepiandrosterone as an anabolic steroid.


IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

May 26, 2005
Mr. GRASSLEY (for himself, Mr. MCCAIN, and Mr. ALLEN) introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


A BILL
To include dehydroepiandrosterone as an anabolic steroid.


Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. INCLUSION OF DEHYDROEPIANDROSTERONE.

Section 102(41)(A) of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 802(41)(A)) is amended--

(1) in the matter preceding clause (i), by striking `corticosteroids, and dehydroepiandrosterone' and inserting `and corticosteroids';

(2) by redesignating clauses (x) through (xlx) as clauses (xi) through (xlxi), respectively; and

(3) by inserting after clause (ix) the following:

`(x) dehydroepiandrosterone (androst-5-en-3b-ol-17-one);'.


The Sports & Fitness Supplement Association (SFSA) has teamed with Save our Supplements and is asking for the public to lend a hand.

You can go to SaveOurSupplements.org and send a form letter to your representatives today.

If we don't draw the line somewhere, then the Government will draw the line for us.

Landscape within Architecture (within Landscape)

306090 07 Landscape within Architecture306090 07: Landscape within Architecture is intended as a foray into landscape architecture and a catalyst for exchange between students, faculty, and administrators interested in understanding and expanding the presence of landscape within the pedagogy and practice of architecture. This volume includes essays by Frederick Steiner, Alessandra Ponte, James Wines, Kimberly Hill, and others, as well as student projects by Kristin Akkerman Schuster, Elena Wiersma, and Hillary Sample.

Guest editor David L. Hays writes: “Collectively, the essays underscore four main lessons for architecture and landscape architecture. The first is that exposure to alternate theory and practice expands the way designers think about and beyond aspects of work already familiar to them. ... A second lesson is to embrace time in practical as well as philosophical terms. ... A third lesson is to get students out of the studio. ... Explorations of real space educate the body and mind in ways that cannot be achieved within the confines of the studio. ... A fourth lesson for both architecture and landscape architecture is to move beyond appropriation by engaging in real collaboration ... [H]ierarchical division of design professions that characterized professional culture in the last century should be a thing of the past.”

Axel Erlandson and the Tree Circus

Every element to this fascinating story seems ripe for a feature documentary. There are the trees, seemingly extraterrestrial but undoubtedly man-made. There is Axel Erlandson, an arboreal alchemist with grand visions of commercial success but whose endless hours spent on his menagerie point to a devotion verging on the spiritual. There are the variable horticultural triumphs hinting at the fame he longed for but found difficult to cultivate. And then the neglect, constant confusion over ownership, and the epic transfer to a theme park. An aberrant Wagnerian Philip Glass passage would be blaring in the soundtrack at this time. A wife, an architect (not a landscape architect), and a nurseryman complete the cast.

Someone contact Errol Morris!

Axel Erlandson and the Tree Circus

Axel Erlandson and the Tree Circus

Axel Erlandson and the Tree Circus

Axel Erlandson and the Tree Circus

It is a variation on a classic garden narrative — an eccentric, garden aesthete, the favorite of aristocrats or even an aristocrat himself, experimenting with forms at a grand country estate, which becomes the stage setting for social fraternizing. Amidst the part-Japanese, part-Egyptian, part-Classical regular-irregular topiary jungle, social conventions are strictly enforced. One faux pas and you suffer the same fate as Glen Close in the finale of Dangerous Liaison. Except when it's a deliciously illicit tryst, which everyone else would be having. And then circumstances of history lead to the garden's ruin, to the designer obscurity, only to be rediscovered and transformed into a theme park in contemporary times.

Tourists now flock en mass. And well-funded grad students come for an hour and then proceed to spend their remaining grant money drinking and partying.

Axel Erlandson and the Tree Circus

Axel Erlandson and the Tree Circus


Circus Trees @ Bonfante Gardens
Axel Erlandson @ Designboom
Contemporary photos @ Phancy
Arborculture


Wind Tunnel QTVR

The False Forest

Ben Katchor has a fancy concept “for the edification and pleasure of the nation's 40 million hay fever sufferers” but arguably for a site no less natural than Yosemite National Park.

The False Forest by Ben Katchor

Read the full comic strip here.

Groundswell

Duisburg-Nord Landscape Park


MoMA's first survey of contemporary landscape design has ended but its website still remains.

Groundswell portrays the surge of creativity in the contemporary created landscape by presenting a diverse selection of plazas, public parks, and urban sectors — found through the United States, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East — that have recently been completed or are in the process of being realized.”

Africa, South America, and Australia are (un)characteristically not represented. Our loss. Or is it theirs?

Duisburg-Nord Landscape Park

Biopaver by Joseph Hagerman

Ecologically sound pavers as alternative to impervious surfaces like asphalt and concrete are nothing new. What is novel about Biopaver, by Columbia graduate student Joseph Hagerman, is the addition of a biological core of phytoremediating plants that filters out pollutants from storm water runoff. It represents a synthesis of techonology, ecological process, and design.

Biopaver by Joseph Hagerman


Biopager by Joseph Hagerman


Biopaver by Joseph Hagerman

Beauty is truth, truth beauty

Raise your hand if you want a reality show starring Paris Latsis and D.J. AM.

Queso fresco, si! Queso fresco, no!

I had no idea there was such a thing as smuggled cheese. Hmmph.

Politics is local

Operation SafeClear is a program implemented by Smog City Mayor Bill White in January. If your car breaks down on the freeway, you get towed. The idea is that towing broken down cars from the freeway will lead to less congestion and fewer accidents. Good idea. But then the whining started because if your car gets towed, you have to pay the tow truck company. Gasp! How unfair! Why should I be responsible for my own car breaking down on the freeway?! In response to the whining, the city now pays to have cars towed. And guess what, it's going to cost the city an estimated $3 mil per year. So now we're whining about that. Not to worry, I'm sure this will all be sorted out at the Special Session.

Four Days to Hitchhike from Saginaw

Have you been to the old terminal at Hobby Airport lately? That place is worse than TV Max.

Rosemary Laing and the Marvelous

In The Age of the Marvelous, Joy Kenseth defined the word "marvel" as understood several hundred years ago: "anything that lay outside the ordinary, especially when it had the capacity to excite the particular emotional responses of wonder, surprise, astonishment, or admiration." In seeing Rosemary Laing's work, one can't help but exclaim, "Marvelous!"

Rosemary Laing


Rosemary Laing


Laing has covered a patch of rainforest floor with brightly patterned carpeting. The result is discomforting. Are we in nature? Is this nature? Or is it actually comforting to find something familiar in the wilderness? Are we in a sumptuous salon? This is a place where man belongs and yet doesn't belong. We have made a space for ourselves and yet we feel like occupiers, despoilers of virgin land.

Hey Gables - You suck!

I am moving to a Gables apartment complex in the near future. Come to find out, I can't get Time Warner cable service there, because they have an exclusive contract with an outfit called TV Max. TV Max does not offer HD programming or a DVR-type cable box. What a rip off. If I'm lucky, the Gables will only allow me to buy food at Soviet bakeries. You suck, Gables. I want my money back.