PBS' Making Black America: Through the Grapevine (E1)

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PBS' Making Black America: Through the Grapevine (E1)
The lake with 'trampoline' islands
The world’s only floating national park is located in Manipur, India.
Floating school + some workflow and previous sketches. Which one do you find better, 2D or with perspective?
Personally I like the "3D" look better, even though the perspective is a bit wonky.
Magic University. Work in progress which i may or may not finish later 0:)
SEKOLAH TERAPUNG COCOK BAGI JAKARTA YANG BANJIR?
SEKOLAH TERAPUNG COCOK BAGI JAKARTA YANG BANJIR?
MAKOKO di Lagos, Nigeria adalah area yang sangat rentan oleh banjir. Tempat ini juga hanya memiliki 1 tempat bagi sekolah anak-anak.
Seorang arsitek pada tahun 2013 mencetuskan ide yang berbeda yaitu membuat sekolah terapung di area perairan yang akan bisa menjadi tempat belajar baik disaat kering atau banjir. Arsitek ini bernama Kunle Adeyemi dari Nigeria.
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Floating School Wakili Makassar di Ajang YSEALI Seeds for The Future Thailand - Gosulsel
Bangkok, Gosulsel.com – Tim penggagas Program The Floating School dari Makassar mewakili Indonesia di ajang YSEALI Seeds for The Future Program selama dua hari, 20-21 Januari 2017 di Bangkok, Thailand. Selain mereka, 19 tim lainnya berasal dari 10 negara, yaitu Indonesia, Malaysia, B...
http://gosulsel.com/komunitas/21/01/2017/floating-school-wakili-makassar-di-ajang-yseali-seeds-for-the-future-thailand/
#FloatingSchool #Pangkep #YSEALI
Floating school on a lagoon brings hope to Nigeria’s slum-on-stilts
By Sharon Ogunleye, Reuters, March 16, 2016
Makoko, a vast slum of houses on stilts in a Lagos, Nigeria, lagoon, now boasts a new school. Pyramid-shaped, floating, and capable of withstanding the waterways’ extreme weather, it is a beacon of hope for the nearly 100,000 Nigerians who live there.
With room for 100 pupils, the school--built with locally sourced wood and floating on hundreds of recycled plastic barrels--throws a spotlight on the poverty that pervades the commercial hub of Africa’s most populous nation.
Aid-funded Makoko Floating School offers free education to local children, most of whose parents fish for a living and who, like most of the megacity’s 21 million residents, lack a reliable electricity and water supply.
Makoko was established as a fishing village hundreds of years ago but now climate change and rapid urbanization are threatening its way of life.
The school, designed by Nigerian architect Kunle Adeyemi, can adapt to changing water levels and was built specifically to withstand the storms and floods that are common in the four-month-long rainy season.
It took three years to build and caters for children who progress from an existing school--the only English-speaking one in the area.
The school’s director, Shemede Noah, said the new site is a major improvement on the old one, which was built on reclaimed land and has been damaged by high tides in the peak rainy months of October and November.
The school has 47 pupils so far and they, like other children in the lagoon, travel to school by canoe.
From the outside, the pyramid-shape stands out against the mass of boxy, wooden houses and canoes spread across much of the lagoon and can be seen from many parts of the city’s Victoria Island business district.