Entries from October 2008
playgrounds
October 12, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Categories: ARCHI - FUN · ARCHI - PLAYGROUNDS · ARCHI - STRUCTURES · TOPOGRAPHY
Tagged: landscape, playgrounds, TOPOGRAPHY
typography at its best.
October 12, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Categories: DESIGN - TYPOGRAPHY
Tagged: typography
needs
October 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment
http://www.maynardarchitects.com
http://www.lekkerdesign.com
Categories: Uncategorized
casa poli, by Pezo Von Ellrichshausen Architect
October 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Categories: ARCHI - BUILT PROJECTS · ARCHI - CHILEAN · ARCHI - HOUSES · MATERIALS - CONCRETE
Tagged: casa poli, Pezo Von Ellrichshausen Architect
Idea
October 7, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Categories: PRINT - FORMATS · PROJECT - 1 · SUSTAINABILITY - RECYCLED MATERIALS
Toward’s Paradise
October 7, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Categories: ARCHI - STRUCTURES · EVENTS - VENICE BIENNALE · LANDSCAPING - PROJECTS · MATERIALS - FABRIC
Tagged: fabric, installation, landscaping, towards paradise, venice biennale
concrete sidewalks redux: the Willow Patch Project, Cazenovia, NY
October 7, 2008 · Leave a Comment
reused sidewalks into concrete weirs to detain stormwater for sedimentation to occur
http://www.designundersky.com/dus/2008/9/19/material-transcended-concrete.html
Categories: LANDSCAPING - PROJECTS · MATERIALS - CONCRETE · SUSTAINABILITY - RECYCLED MATERIALS
Tagged: landscaping, recycled materials, stormwater drains, SUSTAINABILITY, weirs
how to build a green wall or green roof
October 6, 2008 · 1 Comment
i have been very curious about the currently ubiquitous green walls and i stumbled upon this article at archrecord. ok now there are even more reasons for us to be smelling the roses, and growing an urban farm. its really not just about aesthetics.
Basically for GREEN ROOFS there are two types. intensive (accomodate grass, shrubs, small trees, arbors and amenities) and extensive (just grass and smallish plants).

Shallow Assembly (extensive) Diagram 1 Growth media 2 Moisture retention mat 3 Drainage board 4 Protection fabric 5 Membrane (adhered) 6 Dens Deck 7 Approved insulation 8 Substrate

Deep Assembly (Intensive) Diagram 1 Growth media 2 Protection fabric 3 Drainage gravel 4 Protection fabric 5 Root barrier 6 Extruded polystyrene 7 Membrane (adhered) 8 DensDeck 9 Approved insulation 10 Substrate
you can have a hybrid of both types to cater to different parts of the building.
as for GREEN WALLS, the plants are usually held away from the wall to prevent them from damaging the structures.
there are two types of green wall, one of them is the ‘facade greening’ method which refers to the walls that are covered by climbers such as IVY that starts climbing from the ground. Ivy is a self-clinging climbing plant, and it will not damage the wall as long as there aren’t any surface vulnerabilities that the small roots can extend into. it is a pretty inexpensive. there are also twining climbers such as clematis and wisteria which will require additional support as seen on the picture below. steel-anchor and cable systems are taking the place of wooden trellises for this purpose.
the second type of green wall is the ‘living wall’ where planted are rooted in a growing medium attached to the wall. the example of the vancouver aquarium used a galvanised steel support structure anchored one inch away from a windowless wall, where no water proofing is needed over the high density concrete. G-SKY green wall panels were placed into the frame.
These 12-inch square polypropylene modules, 3–3/8 inches deep, had been preplanted in a nursery so that, unlike a green facade of climbing plants, this wall was completely green immediately after installation. In the future, individual modules can be easily removed and replaced if necessary.
the vertical garden is irrigated and nourished by an automated drip system fed from the ranwater collected from the roof top. the gravel bed serves to drain off any excess water.
they grew strawberries on the wall so children could eat from it. and the species planted are all selected because they grow in a native habitat with natural conditions similar to that of the aquarium building walls.
Categories: ARCHI - STRUCTURES · LANDSCAPING - TECHNOLOGY · SUSTAINABILITY
Tagged: green roofs, green walls, landscaping, SUSTAINABILITY
type of home
October 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment
This is what a home should be isn’t it? Rather than the ceaseless and painfully Singaporean routine of school-tuition-swimminglessons-piano lessons-dinner-sleep, and a parental guilt-trip at toys r’ us every weekend, you get this. I’d like to be homeschooled. I’d like to homeschool.
Let’s go build a tree house in our backyard.
images from pepper paints, a blog which i totally love.
Categories: HOME - LIFESTYLE · SUSTAINABILITY - RECYCLED MATERIALS · TOYS - RECYCLED MATERIALS
Tagged: children, craft, education, home, homeschool, making
dancing trees, and singing birds
October 5, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP Architects
Almost magical? Yes, I can’t imagine having to draw this on Autocad (referring to the 3rd picture below of the architectural model) and then build a model of it. The truth is, things look better after they are built.
Categories: ARCHI - BUILT PROJECTS · ARCHI - JAPANESE · MATERIALS - WOOD
Tagged: japanese architecture, protrusions, wood












Designed by Gustafson Porter and Gustafson Guthrie Nichol, a landscape installation titled “Towards Paradise” for the Venice Biennale.
















