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To the Ends of the Earth. A Grand Tour for the 21st Century nimmt
den Leser als intellektuelles Abenteuer auf eine Reise durch eine
sorgfältig zusammengestellte Auswahl von 120 Orten, die den
Zustand unserer heutigen Welt wiederspiegeln. Diese Orte, die über
alle 7 Kontinente verteilt sind, von den Tiefen des Ozeans bis zum
Weltraum, gliedern sich in 6 Kapitel: Paradiese, Utopien,
Maschinen, Ungeheuer, Ruinen und Instrumente. Das Spektrum reicht
vom Apple Park von Steve Jobs in Kalifornien über einen
Nationalpark in Costa Rica, eine kleine Feldstation für den Schutz
der Orang Utans auf Borneo, das zwischen See und Meer gelegene
Trump-Resort Mar-a-Lago bis hin zum Grenzzaun zwischen den USA und
Mexiko und gar auch Objekten unserer Zeit wie dem Smartphone: als
"footprint" des 21. Jahrhunderts.
Through selected works this monograph showcases the design work and
research of leading landscape architect Richard Weller, Chair of
Landscape architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. The book
documents the evolution of Weller’s practice from small scale
artworks to planning megaregions, including his latest proposal for
a World Park. With essays by Jillian Walliss and Dirk Sijmons as
well as his own writing, the book explains Weller’s methods and
motivations; a unique window on to the ways in which the discipline
of landscape architecture has matured over the last 40 years.
Through a carefully curated selection of work, the book makes the
case that landscape architecture is at best “art of
instrumentality. The two essayists in the book are highly regarded.
Jillian Walliss of Melbourne University is a contemporary landscape
architectural critic and in 2017 Dirk Sijmons received the IFLA sir
Geoffrey Jellicoe award, the highest international achievement in
landscape architecture.
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LA+ Green (Paperback)
Tatum Hands, Richard Weller
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R376
Discovery Miles 3 760
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In the middle of the electromagnetic spectrum between the binary
extremes of black and white it’s not gray, as you might expect,
but green. And within green’s bandwidth there are more tonal
variations than any other colour can make. Maybe this is why -
envy, naivete, and money aside - green is generally synonymous with
good. Green is paradise for Islam, luck for the Irish, and a
healthy planet for environmentalists. Whereas the industrial past
was grey, the future is green. LA+ Green explores the green
spectrum from plants to politics and from art to science, with
contributions from: Noam Chomsky; Robert D. Bullard; Kassia St.
Clair; Neil M. Maher; Rob Levinthal; Sonja Dümpelmann; Peder
Anker; Robert Mcdonald; Parker Sutton; Tamara Toles O’Laughlin;
Nicholas Pevzner; Michael Marder; Shannon Mattern; Michael Geffel;
Brian Osborn; Julian Bolleter; Cristina Ramalho; Robert Freestone;
Richard Weller; Michael Geffel; Brian Osborn; Julian Raxworthy.
Almost everything that landscape architects design is ultimately
for a community. Community can be the boon or bane of a project,
and oftentimes both. LA+ COMMUNITY aims to explore how, over time,
each of us moves in and out of multiple communities, shaping them
as they shape us, and in turn shaping our landscapes and cities. We
ask how different disciplines construct different ideas of
community and how those communities are anchored in space and time,
whose interests they serve, and what traces they leave. And we
examine how - in this pluralistic, fragmented, and fluid world -
designers can meaningfully engage with communities. Contributions
from: Anne Whiston Spirn reflects upon her personal and
professional journey through her long-term engagement with the Mill
Creek community in the West Philadelphia Landscape Project.
Architect and cofounder of the DisOrdinary Architecture Project
Jocelyn Boys discusses how designers and policy-makers make
assumptions about the "ordinary user" of public space and explores
ways of understanding and improving how people with disabilities
engage with such spaces. Historical geographer Garrett Dash Nelson
contemplates the conceptual and practical slippages between
understanding community in both its geographical and sociological
forms, and what this means for designers seeking to give spatial
form to the concept of community. A multi-perspective Q+A with
BIPOC designers, educators, and artists Kofi Boone, Julian Agyeman,
Hanna Kim, Alma du Solier, Jeffrey Hou, Melissa Guerrero, and Kat
Engleman confronts the enduring practices of spatial injustice and
the need for new processes, engagement, and outcomes for a racially
and culturally inclusive future. Philosopher and author Mark
Kingwell considers the literal ins and outs of the question "What
is community?" in the midst of a global pandemic. Landscape
architect Kate Orff speaks about the ways in which she uses
community activism and different practices of engagement to drive
better design outcomes. Criminologists James Petty + Alison Young
open our eyes to the rise of hostile architecture and
criminalisation of homelessness in public space. Designer Chrili
Car reflects on lessons learned from working with a self-organised
community in a remote village in northern Ghana to masterplan
long-term local sustainability and greenbelt projects. Ecologist
Jodi Hilty, President and Chief Scientist of the Yellowstone to
Yukon Initiative, speaks about the realisation of this visionary
wildlife-corridor project spanning 3,200 km, two countries, and
hundreds of different communities and interests. Historic
preservationist and planner Francesca Russello Ammon teases out the
contradictions in the canonical urban renewal success story of
Philadelphia's Society Hill. Landscape architect Jessica Henson
gives us the inside story on the intractably complex
socio-political and ecological task of master planning a 51-mile
swath of the Los Angeles River with a diverse range of user
communities. Michael Schwarze-Rodrian recounts the extraordinary
achievements of the Emscher Landscape Park in Germany's Ruhrgebiet,
where over the last 30 years a working-class community facing the
trauma of transition to a post-industrial economy has been
sustained by the medium of landscape, without the forms of
displacement or gentrification typically associated with high-end
greening. Urban planner and author of Just Sustainabilities Julian
Agyeman elucidates what the culturally inclusive design of public
space entails. Architect Mario Matamoros delivers a stinging
critique of the way in which developers and designers in the
Honduran city of Tegucigalpa dupe the public with cynical community
consultation so as to anesthetise the possibility of dissent, and
Sara Padgett Kjaersgaard interviews the CEO of the Federation of
Traditional Owner Corporations, Paul Paton and landscape architect
Anne-Marie Pisani about working with Indigenous communities in
Australia to help facilitate self-determination and connection to
their lands.
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LA+ Time (Paperback)
Richard Weller, Tatum Hands
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R469
R380
Discovery Miles 3 800
Save R89 (19%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Time is ticking. That's what it does. Or at least that's how we
represent what we don't understand. For physics, time is a
byproduct of so called space-time, elastic goo created at the very
moment that something came from nothing; the moment eternity
stopped and the universe began. For geology, time is 4.5 billion
years of compression and catastrophe. For biology time is 3.5
billion years of diversification and now the urgency of the sixth
extinction. For anthropology time is 150 thousand years since
mitochondrial Eve walked out of the rift valley in Ethiopia. For
historians, time begins with Herodotus (484 BC) and ends, or rather
doesn't, with Fukuyama's The End of History. For architecture time
is ruination. For landscape architecture time is ephemerality,
entropy, and growth. For all of us time is running out.
Issue 14 of LA+ Journal brings you the results of the LA+ CREATURE
international design ideas competition, which explored how we can
use design to achieve a more symbiotic existence with other
creatures. The competition brief asked entrants to choose a
nonhuman client and design something - a place, a structure, a
product, a process, a system - to improve its life and increase
human-nonhuman empathy. As well as showcasing the award-winning
designs and a comprehensive Salon des Refuses, LA+ CREATURE
features an essay by Lori Gruen (author of Critical Terms for
Animal Studies) and interviews with jurors Timothy Morton, Kate
Orff, Jennifer Wolch, Andrew Grant, Chris Reed, and Farre Nixon.
How can design be used to challenge the status quo, to interrupt
the jargon, to disrupt and redirect ecological and socio-economic
flows? LA+ Journal’s fourth international design ideas
competition invited designers to take an established place and
design something to productively interrupt both its cultural and
spatial context. What does this mean? It means injecting something
different into a given context to effect new meanings and new
functions. It means questioning what design does, who it’s
designed for, what it looks like, and what it means. Issue #17
brings you the results of the LA+ Interruption design competition.
As well as showcasing the award-winning designs and a comprehensive
Salon des Refusés, LA+ Interruption features interviews with
jurors Fiona Raby, Martin Rein-Cano, Mark Raggatt, Rania Ghosn, and
Jason Zhisen Ho, and an essay by Katya Crawford, coauthor of the
The Design Competition in Landscape Architecture
(forthcoming). Â
In this moment of seemingly compounding global crises and
existential concerns about the future of the planet, LA+ pauses to
consider the values and implications of speculation. How are
speculative acts understood differently within specific
disciplinary structures versus broader cultural perceptions?
Whether employed as a means of influence, a method of production, a
form of practice, a manner of inquiry, a way of seeing, or a
motivating ideology, LA+ Speculation engages speculation and the
speculative as world-shaping concepts worthy of deep and critical
reflection. Guest edited by Christopher Marcinkoski with Javier
Arpa Fernandez, and other contributors include: Merve Bedir, Casey
Lance Brown, Stuart Candy, Paul Dobraszyk, Aroussiak Gabrielian,
Daisy Ginsberg, Adrian Hawker, Souhei Imamu, Karen Lewis, Min Kyung
Lee, Mpho Matsipa, Alexandra Sankova, Jonah Susskind, Ytasha Womak.
Issue 10 of LA+ Journal brings you the results of the LA+
Iconoclast open design ideas competition, in which we asked
designers to reimagine New York's Central Park, fictionally
devastated by eco-terrorists protesting the loss of the world's
forests. See what designers did when faced with the opportunity to
challenge this icon of landscape architecture. LA+ Iconoclast also
features interviews with jurors Geoff Manaugh (BLDGBLOG), Jenny
Osuldsen (Snohetta), Charles Waldheim (Harvard GSD), Beatrice
Galilee (The Met), Lola Shepard (Lateral Office), and Richard
Weller (PennDesign), as well as a critique of competition entries
by Julia Czerniak.
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