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A spectacular global survey of the new buildings merging
architecture and nature to transform our cities for a sustainable
future. Concrete horizons, urban sprawl, high-density living: never
have our cities and their buildings been in greater need of
greening. Yet what's required is more than an occasional vertical
garden or living roof. Featuring seventy projects from around the
world - some built, some ongoing, some from the future - Garden
City looks at the increasingly inventive ways in which architects
and designers are incorporating nature into the built environment,
transforming the city for the benefit of all. From office buildings
that incorporate urban farms and exchange the CO2 produced by
humans for food and oxygen produced by plants, to lightweight
systems for growing gardens on vertical surfaces; from 'tree
houses' the size of city blocks to civic buildings that are
'plugged into' existing water-management systems - there are rich
and often unexpected ideas for every inquiring designer. The future
of our urban architecture is biologically alert, naturally
self-sustaining and alive. Garden City is this future's first
manifesto.
Growing numbers of us work not only from home, but from anywhere;
job flexibility has become a key requirement for employers and
workers alike. This, in turn, has created new challenges for
architects and designers - many of whom themselves start out
working from home - who are tackling demand head on with innovative
solutions that allow clients to transform their spaces to suit a
wide range of needs, from multifunctional studios to homes that
seamlessly combine work and family life. Divided into five thematic
sections, this book explores the exciting variety of ways that the
workplace can be integrated into the domestic environment. From
stand-alone multifunctional furniture to mobile room dividers and
dynamic solutions that fold out or pop up to create new work areas,
each design addresses the unique needs of the space, client and
working practices for which it was required, and tackles new
questions about the rapidly evolving relationship between work and
domestic life in the 21st century. This essential and timely
resource for homeworkers and practitioners offers fresh ideas for
how to strike the perfect balance between living and working at
home.
How far can we expand the concept of 'urban nature'? How would it
make us feel? And how is it going to transform our cities - and,
eventually, ourselves? Garden City captures the growing global
movement among contemporary architects for biodesigning buildings
less as skin and bodies - structure and facade - and more as living
entities, capable of being ecologically autonomous, horticulturally
productive and ultimately pleasing to our day-to-day lifestyles. It
presents more than 100 (mostly completed) projects, a
life-affirming range of buildings and design ideas that can be
applied to new buildings and those needing rehabilitation. From
office buildings that incorporate urban farms and exchange the CO2
produced by humans for food and oxygen produced by plants, to
lightweight systems for growing gardens on vertical surfaces; from
'tree houses' the size of city blocks to civic buildings that are
'plugged into' existing water-management systems - there are rich
and often unexpected ideas for every inquiring designer. The future
of our urban architecture is biologically alert, naturally
self-sustaining and alive. Garden City is this future's first
manifesto.
Featuring visionary creators from various fields, from art and
contemporary dance to architecture and robotics, this lavishly
illustrated book reports from the forefront of the
crossdisciplinary synthesis that creates new forms of art. The
project was initiated by Diana Vishneva, principal dancer for the
American Ballet Theater in New York (2005-2017) and the Mariinsky
Ballet in St. Petersburg, and a tireless experimenter known for
collaborations that have redefined the future of dance. The book
presents interviews with choreographers William Forsythe and
Carolyn Carlson; photographer Nick Knight; artists Bill Viola and
Olafur Eliasson; architects Toyo Ito and Santiago Calatrava;
robotics inventor Raffaello d'Andrea, and other creators who
actively stretch the conventional limits of their fields. Included
in the volume is a DVD of a film created for this project using
state-of-the-art technologies to translate the language of dance
into that of cinema.
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