🪼
Xuebing Du
Mike Driver
hello vonnie

Origami Around

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
NASA
Today's Document

roma★

No title available

Product Placement
Show & Tell

blake kathryn

oozey mess
occasionally subtle

JVL
No title available

★
sheepfilms
seen from Pakistan
seen from France
seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from Argentina
seen from Brazil
seen from Argentina
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Japan

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Chile

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
@dolceoblio-blog
Puente Peatonal / Miró Rivera Architects, Austin, TX, USA
lothar götz… tankstelle, fulda 1951 @ lothar-goetz-architekt
We Own The City – Enabling Community Practice in Architecture and Urban Planning
(via 1: Grading Grades | 50 Alternate American Flags, Each A Secret Infographic | Co.Design: business innovation design)
(via ‘Living Pavements’ To Greenify Public Spaces — The Pop-Up City)
Casa in Una Pineta by Massimo Fiorido Associati + Sundaymorning
Renovation of a single-storey residence first constructed in the 1960s on a sandy site that is closely surrounded by pine trees.
A salvaged window house in Christiania, Denmark.
From Tiny House Blog:
A town within a city, a rebel neighborhood within a well-ordered society. This is Christiania (Freetown), Denmark, a small community smack dab in the middle of Copenhagen, Denmark. Within this community are tiny houses, built by hand and with whatever materials are within reach. Christiania began in 1971 as an occupation of disused army barracks in the southern portion of Copenhagen near a lake. The 900 or so freethinking individuals who inhabit the area are a self governing community who refuse to pay taxes to the Danish government, run their own businesses and schools, live without cars on unpaved roads, build their own houses, restaurants and civil buildings and even have their own currency.
ekkehard altenburger - mirrorhouse (1996)
Section 2 of the High Line
(via Medici by Mattiazzi, design at STYLEPARK)
What’s this?
Each philosopher is a node in the network and the lines between them (or edges in the terminology of graph theory) represents lines of influence. The node and text are sized according to the number of connections. The algorithm that visualises the graph also tends to put the better connected nodes in the centre of the diagram so we get the most influential philosophers, in large text, clustered in the centre.
[via The Dish]
(via Invisible Bridge by Scapelab « Landezine | Landscape Architecture Works)
Le parc national Takino Suzuran Hillside, Sapporo, Hokkaido. (via Le Monde)
Reclaiming public space (via New Nordic Architecture - News - Domus)