MAY LAM: MICROLOCAL
Click to view slideshow.
You can almost watch it come to life on the page: In the sprawl of Bangkok, an illegal dump the size of a large city block was scraped clean, sculpted, and planted thickly with 60,000 trees, many of them quite small. It now looks thick as a rain forest, with an elegant skywalk overhead and cobras on the ground (which is why you?d use the skywalk). This remarkable reforestation project, called the Metro-Forest, by Landscape Architects of Bangkok, repatriates more than 275 species once common enough locally, as James Trulove reports, that sections of the city around it bear their names. Thick as it appears, it?s only getting started. The plan is for the trees to engulf the skywalk in their canopy.
How to describe the vindication of taking an embarrassed site and bringing back some form of its original dignity" ?Strangely exciting,? is how Gwendolyn McGinn, Associate ASLA, puts it to the reporter Anne Raver in this issue. McGinn, of Studio Outside, in Dallas, is working at the Tylee Farm in Texas, not far from Houston. The farm holds what is left of southern post oak savanna that was overturned and grazed nearly to death since the mid-1800s. With Studio Outside?s founder, Tary Arterburn, FASLA, and Amy Bartell, a project manager, she is working to restore the many ecological segues the site once had for newish residential owners who want to live well?as long as their land does, too. Also in this issue: Staff writer/editor Katarina Katsma, ASLA, wr...
_MFUENTENOTICIAS
landscapearchitecturemagazine
_MURLDELAFUENTE
http://landscapearchitecturemagazine.org/
-------------------------------- |
André Cardoso transforms Samsung Eco-Package cardboard box into rocking horse |
|
West Loop Loft: Refurbished 80’s Loft with Timeless Design
29-04-2024 08:19 - (
Architecture )
9 East Studio: Collective Office’s Modern Redesign in Chicago
29-04-2024 08:19 - (
Architecture )