Zarte Spannung • 1923
Discover Wassily Kandinsky Art
A series of Illustrations and posters, dedicated to the vibrant open creative culture of Bauhaus design school and its leaders, masters and
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Zarte Spannung • 1923
Discover Wassily Kandinsky Art
A series of Illustrations and posters, dedicated to the vibrant open creative culture of Bauhaus design school and its leaders, masters and
- Eliezer Yudkowsky
Stavanger, Norway
(via Roman Hutter | a f a s i a)
URBAN BEAUTY
VIENNA 2021
(via Andreas Gruber, Gustav Willeit · Kindergarden Enneberg · Divisare)
The Orangery at Calke Abbey
“The way the world actually is, is an enormously complex interrelated organism.”
— Alan Watts
“The question of what kind of city we want cannot be divorced from that of what kind of social ties, relationship to nature, lifestyles, technologies and aesthetic values we desire. The right to the city is far more than the individual liberty to access urban resources: it is a right to change ourselves by changing the city. It is, moreover, a common rather than an individual right since this transformation inevitably depends upon the exercise of a collective power to reshape the processes of urbanization. The freedom to make and remake our cities and ourselves is, I want to argue, one of the most precious yet most neglected of our human rights.”
— David Harvey, The Right to the City
„Why do we build more than we need?“ is the question Dimitri Minten, Tim Vekemans and their team of RE-ST have been asking themselves for the last decade. In view of already dense cities, climate change and a dire need for resource conservation this question reaches well beyond the sphere of architecture and addresses the core question of how we want to live. With „Zwerfruimte/Wanderspace“, recently published by NAi010 Publishers, RE-ST round up ten years of research and architectural practice and object the seemingly natural growth of the total building stock. Taking the Belgian region of Flanders as backdrop the architects and contributors muse about what they call wander spaces, spaces that are both built and unbuilt, have been produced by us all and are at the same time underused. With the help of their everyday practice the architects demonstrate that the issue very much transcends the narrow space of Flanders and actually can be transposed to the world. Each chapter offers a different perspective on wander spaces and connects the topic with e.g. architectural and general history, its metaphorical appearance in everyday life or, as real-life examples, the projects of RE-ST and in this way visualizes not only the feasiblity of the reuse/ transformation of existing buildings and spaces but also the actual imperative of breaking with linear building practices. With their proposed circular building culture RE-ST instead opt for more sustainability in connection with increased livability, an approach that is not only highly welcome but virtually inescapable. „Zwerfruimte/Wanderspace“ is a very relevant, thought-provoking book that adds an intelligent, multifaceted perspective to the discourse around reuse and sustainability in architecture.
Long Spam @ Offramp 11: Ground
by Neyran Turan
Marc Koehler Architects - House with 11 views, Almere 2015. Photos © Filip Dujardin.
Lees verder
Architecture
Ian Kitson Landscape architect
Brooklyn Naval Cemetery Landscape by Nelson Byrd Wolt
A memorial meadow framed by an undulating boardwalk lifted above the undisturbed ground. The site is an unmarked burial ground from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
oudolf private garden by piet oudolf, via Flickr