Tag Archives: architecture

Man Swims Across Mount Everest Lake To Highlight Global Climate Change

Photo via Business Innovation Factory We’ve heard of people doing some crazy swims to draw attention to a particular cause – for instance, Big River Man who swims some of the mightiest rivers in the world and in the process, points out their problems with pollution and other issues. But this latest swimmer is solid enough to make the toughest members of the Polar Bear club shiver. Lewis Gordon Pugh managed to become the first person to finish a long-distance swim in a lake … Read the full story on TreeHugger

View original post here:
Man Swims Across Mount Everest Lake To Highlight Global Climate Change

AIA/HUD Awards Show that Good Design Isn’t Just for Rich People

Photo credits: Jeffrey Peters/Anne Hamersky So many of the prizes for architecture go to gems that cost serious money to build, for people that have serious money to pay for it. The AIA/HUD awards are different; they recognize “excellence in affordable housing architecture, neighborhood design, participatory design, and accessibility.” The Paseo Center at Coyote Creek won for Excellence in Affordable Housing Design. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

More here:
AIA/HUD Awards Show that Good Design Isn’t Just for Rich People

They Took All the Trees And Put Them in a Tree Museum

Joni Mitchell wrote: They took all the trees Put ’em in a tree museum And they charged the people A dollar and a half just to see ’em And they built it in Switzerland! But with inflation, it is now fifteen bucks. It is the personal collection of landscape architect Enzo Enea, who tells the New York Times: “I have collected trees over the last 17 years from gardens that I was building or houses that I was building,” Mr. Enea said. “Trees had to be moved, and instead of cutting them, I tried to remove them.” … Read the full story on TreeHugger

View original post here:
They Took All the Trees And Put Them in a Tree Museum

Crazy/Cool DIY Idea: Embed Vintage Furniture in Plaster (Photos)

Photos: Courtesy of Mut Architecture . Faced with the challenge to create a posh lounge for VIPs at the Cannes Film Festival with prohibitively low budget, the fellows from the Bronx based firm Mut Architecture came up with this interesting idea. After recuperating furniture from the streets in the French Riviera, they chopped the pieces, placed them together in weird ways, and embedded them all with other elements such as pots in plaster, with pallets as a base. Take a closer look inside…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read the original post:
Crazy/Cool DIY Idea: Embed Vintage Furniture in Plaster (Photos)

Weekday Vegetarian: Making a Warm Weather Supper From Wilted Kale with Lemon and Garlic

Photo: Emma Alter I spent the weekend looking through a new cookbook from Williams-Sonoma called Cooking From the Farmers’ Market. I’ve only made a few things from it so far, but I’m enjoying it. It’s not a vegetarian cookbook, but the emphasis is on the fruits and vegetables that are available in the market. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read more:
Weekday Vegetarian: Making a Warm Weather Supper From Wilted Kale with Lemon and Garlic

Lessons From Apartment Therapy’s Small, Cool Kitchen Competition

Apartment Therapy runs the small, cool contests every year, including one for kitchens; cleverly, they break it into categories including owning (American kitchens where people go nuts) renting (where people have more limited options) and international (because they really are different) This year’s … Read the full story on TreeHugger

See the article here:
Lessons From Apartment Therapy’s Small, Cool Kitchen Competition

UK’s First Desalination Plant Opens on Thames to Quench Londoners’ Thirst

Photo by Jaymi Heimbuch The Thames has come a long way from the polluted mess it once was just a few years ago. Clean-up efforts have been so successful, even fragile and fickle seahorses have returned . Now, the citizens of London can even drink the river water, thanks to a new desalination plant that has just opened up. It is the United Kingdom’s first desal plant, and while it will provide the city with much needed drinking water, desalination is not withou… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read more:
UK’s First Desalination Plant Opens on Thames to Quench Londoners’ Thirst

Can We Use Biomimicry To Design Cities? Janine Benyus Says, Why Not?

Photo by author: Janine Benyus + InterfaceFLOR CEO Lindsey Parnell at Saf London Yesterday in a sunny corner of London, a select group of UK journalists, myself included, were treated to an enrapturing few hours in the company of biomimicry guru Janine Benyus . The group was brought together by sustainable business pioneers InterfaceFLOR , whose long standing… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read the original here:
Can We Use Biomimicry To Design Cities? Janine Benyus Says, Why Not?

Quote of the Day: Robert Stern on When All Architecture is Green Architecture

Robert Stern is Dean of the Yale School of Architecture, discussing sustainable design in Environment Yale. UTNE Reader picks up the story and illustrates it with….. a parking garage? “I don’t think sustainability is a design aesthetic, any more than having electricity in your building, or telephones, or anything else,” says Ster… Read the full story on TreeHugger

View post:
Quote of the Day: Robert Stern on When All Architecture is Green Architecture

Arts hold promise as jobs engine in California economy

California lost thousands of manufacturing jobs when the economy soured in the early 1990s. The recession has drained away thousands of construction jobs. What the state could use is a new source of well-paying jobs — and it might have found it in the arts. The Joint Legislative Committee on the Arts held a hearing last week in Culver City to find ways to help the arts heal the ailing economy. It was standing room only last week at the Museum of Design, Art and Architecture as State Senator Curren Price gaveled the hearing to order. The L.A. Democrat chairs the Joint Committee on the Arts. “As manufacturing continues to leave the state, our creative sector continues to grow and holds the greatest promise, I think, for our future jobs engine,” said Price. In Price's mind, that creative sector sprawls from TV show sets in Tinseltown to start-ups in the Silicon Valley. It's the Hollywood blockbuster and the nonprofit children's arts group. In Los Angeles and Orange counties, the creative sector is responsible for nearly a million jobs. That's the finding of a study by L.A.'s Otis College of Art and Design. “Unlike cheap manual labor, creative jobs that involve individual artistic creation, innovative design thinking and other high level problem-solving cannot be outsourced easily,” said Samuel Hoi, president of Otis College. Hoi says policymakers should try to keep manufacturing jobs in California. But he says it's also important to prepare young people for jobs in the creative sector — jobs that will stay here. “We need to support more K-12 arts and design education,” he said to thunderous applause from the public, “as well as students' pathways to work and college.” The committee heard from film and TV industry representatives about the success of a recent tax incentive to keep film productions from running out of state. A recording industry rep talked about the threat of piracy. And leaders of hard-hit local arts nonprofits and theatre groups lined up to speak. Elizabeth Doran is the managing director of the Actor's Gang in Culver City. She says arts groups should be exempt from the state sales tax when they buy needed materials. “We are spending our budgets and we are paying sales tax on that and I could instead take that money and build a classroom that I could use to teach the students who are not learning in our schools, K-12, in my new arts center that I'm building,” Doran said. State lawmakers are considering a bill that would send 20 percent of the revenue from sales taxes on art supplies to a fund for arts organizations. The bill could be a jobs boon for California's economy, supporters say. added by: emarston