East Gardens, Tokyo Imperial Palace
Tokyo, Japan
noise dept.
we're not kids anymore.
Not today Justin
RMH
Misplaced Lens Cap
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YOU ARE THE REASON
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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Origami Around

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@builtenvironmentref
East Gardens, Tokyo Imperial Palace
Tokyo, Japan
Study trip to Tamarind Square, Cyberjaya
Plant of the Day
Saturday 18 May 2019
Ideal for a sunny, well drained site is the clump-forming perennial Asphodeline lutea (asphodel, king’s spear, yellow asphodel). It has distinctive tall stems with whorls of fine, grey-blue leaves. At the top of the stems are a cluster of star-like yellow flowers which later form a wand of bright green, round fruit which eventually dry to crinkled brown and provide winter interest.
Jill Raggett
Antioch Oark, Houston, TX, Photos by Tom Fox
Designed 1969
Ford Foundation Headquarters, NYC Architects: Kevin Roche and John Dinkeloo Landscape Architect: Dan Kiley Designed 1981 The Ford Foundation is unusual for Manhattan in that it occupies fewer square feet than the site allows. Rather than designing a shorter building to cover the entire site but break the existing skyline, the architects took advantage of the excess space. The offices occupy only a portion of the site, with the remainder devoted to an interior garden within a greenhouse-like atrium. The flourishing vegetation and generous space provide a focal point for the workers and an interface between the Foundation and the city.
Fletcher Steele designed the gardens at Rolling Ridge, North Andover Massachusetts. 1916-22 The summer house of Ethan Allen from New York. Semi preserved as a Methodist Church retreat. These steps and fountain were 20 years before the most famous of Steele’s gardens, Naumkeag in Stockbridge Massachusetts.
This rather unseen, historical pathway connects the northeastern part of Shinjuku with the central district and the train station. Along the way, you find backsides of buildings, but also advertising, toilets, vending machines, a very old kampong with bars and shops, and some complexes that are connected to it.
Some photos I took on last year’s Dutch tour at Piet & Anje Oudolf’s ever-changing garden @Hummelo. They’re closing their garden to visitors at the end of 2018. Interested in this year’s tour to see it? Details on my website: http://www.carexdesign.com/tours/piet-oudolf-and-naturalistic-gardens-2018/.
Final day to reserve your spot on this tour is this coming Monday, June 18.
Tyršovy sady, Pardubice
Insect Hotels
Over 30% of solitary bee species are wood nesters, some spending up to nine months of their lives as larvae incubating in forest deadfall. Ladybugs hibernate over winter in stacks of twigs, and other beneficial creatures – like wasps, lizards, moths, hedgehogs, beetles, and dragonflies – love to find little nooks and crannies to hide from predators and the elements, at any time of year.
An insect hotel is ideally placed in a sheltered location, but still in the sunlight. Ants sometimes eat bee larvae, so a solitary bee hotel is best placed off of the ground. Often, a wire mesh is placed on the outside to prevent bird predation. Ideally, the surrounding area should host flowering and insectary plants, to provide food for the guests!
These natural habitats are often missing from a domestic or overly-landscaped garden, and are absolutely vital to the health of your plants, local life web, and for the pollination of your garden. Designing for your native wildlife is crucial for a long-term healthy, productive, and sustainable space. Good, ecologically-minded design also minimises the amount of work you have to do: for example, I find that when I practice companion planting with insectary Apiaceae-family plants, I never have an aphid problem, because predatory beetles abound, and they eat problematic insects before they get established. Creating balanced ecosystems is a form of biological pest control.
An insect hotel is easily made from twigs, wood, tiles, pinecones, bricks, bark, grass, and other natural or salvaged materials. The form can differ, depending on what sort of creatures you would like to attract, and your aesthetics, but it should basically be designed from a “bug’s eye” view of the world: research what your local species are and what they require in terms of a habitat, and then create it for them in a manner that appeals to your eye.
These are also excellent projects for kids: they are fun and easy to make, interesting to observe, and help foster an early understanding of biology and ecology.
#DIY #bees #insects #entomology #biomimicry #permaculture #kids #art
Pre-made insect hotels: North America / Europe
Images:
B. Alter - Royal Bank of Canada New Wild Garden at the Chelsea Flower Show
sav-ĂĽberlingen.de
Sissi de Kroon, flickr.com
Insect hotel in Hoofddorf, Holland. Bob Daamen, flickr.com
Cheshire Wildlife Trust, cheshirewildlifetrust.org.uk
Kevin Smith and Lisa Lee Benjamin. floragrubb.com
Inspiration Green Article on Insect Hotels
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Villa Ottolenghi
Swedish architectural photographer Ă…ke E:son Lindman photographs this residence in Verona, Italy designed by Carlo Scarpa.
Bernard Tschumi, Advertisements for Architecture (1976-1977)
Parco Centrale di Prato Milan. Italy. 2016 Architects: Elia Zenghelis and Dogma
© kolatan macdonald studio - raybould house and garden - connecticut, USA - 1997