A TEDx speaker, architect Dong-Ping Wong, lays out a case for moving past "sustainable" and transitioning into "productive" architecture. Specifically, he describes architecture that produces three kinds of benefits: Solar and wind energy (see below).
Agricultural crop yields in the middle of a city (strong echoes of my Rana Station, here! Who knew?). He calls it an "urban quilt of productivity."
At left is an overview map of the peninsula jutting out from Copenhagen that was chosen for the development. At right is a detail of an area with several arable fields and even a water treatment facility.
I'll warn you: this is longer than my usual "Image if Interest" video. But I thought the direction he's going, and the solutions he outlined, might be just as fascinating to you as they were to me.
Moving into the 21st Century by moving beyond "first thoughts" about sustainability is, to me, an essential next step.
Instead of capturing increased wind velocity at just one point, Wong and his colleagues designed structures to create a whole surface capturing much more energy, to the point that they become more than self-sufficient.
If we are actually to have a chance of slowing climate change and ameliorating its effects, we must react intelligently.
I think our responses must resonate all the way down into basic design principles, built on entirely new assumptions about the purpose of our built environment. It starts with thinking the way Wong and his colleagues are.
IMAGES: Many thanks to TEDxDumbo 2012, a TEDxCity2.0 event, for this video. I screen-captured the still images from Wong's presentation.
Some reports come from me as the Author Ascendant; this is a report from the SwampThing.
On normal weeks, I like to write a thoughtful post about something that's caught my attention or is part of a series, on Wednesdays. I think of it as my "main" post of the week.
This has not been a normal week.
Becoming a Swamp Thing
The past two days have felt like wading through a metaphorical swamp. In the fullness of time, this'll be "old hat." I keep clinging to that thought. But anyone who's gone through the process of bringing a book into published form knows how much fun the "maiden voyage" is (not).
It seems like I've been dragging my dinghy full of dreams through muddy waters and masses of mangroves. As if I've waded through waist-deep bayous of online forms that ask arcane questions, the like of which I've never had to answer before.
I've striven to raise coherent, properly-formatted graphics up out of the muck of previous musings and hastily-jotted notes. I've fended off biting swarms of glitches, frozen forms, and rebooted programs. And I've beaten back time-sucking leeches of error messages that come with opaque reasons that offer little insight about how to address the flagged problem.
We bipedal land-mammals would navigate them better if we really were Swamp Things. It is my aspiration to someday be a publishing-website "Swamp Thing," who floats past the flotsam and parses the particulars with ease. But in this report from the Swamp Thing, I'm still wearing my swim fins.
All joking and metaphor aside, however, I've finally made it to the point where I'm hovering on the brink of offering What's Bred in the Bone for pre-sale and Advance Reader Copies. Stand by. There will be another report from the Swamp Thing soon! (Even if I'm still just starting to grow my gills).
What can we do? First, educate ourselves. Learn what works, and what's just "green theater." Focus on small, consistent things you can do.
Look for ways to live without using plastic. Seek ways to advocate for change, whether it's petitioning a manufacturer to stop over-packaging in non-biodegradable materials, writing your legislators, or encouraging a friend to use recycling options nearby.
All of us can do something. All of us MUST do something. Or all of us will suffer more and more consequences.
IMAGE: I found this image (complete with its focus on the Americas) on the Tehran Times (seriously). I love the image, and I thank them for sharing! It really IS a global issue.
I'm focusing on "green" architecture this month. Not only green as environmentally sustainable, but green as in there are lots of plants incorporated into the design. In this case, it's an urban apartment building that is designed to incorporate a small "forest" of about 50 trees.
This video shares photos and several people's thoughts about a project called 25 Verde in Turin, Italy. It's an apartment building designed by architect Luciano Pia.
As a gardener, I definitely understand the concern by the gentleman from the German Green Building Council over the high-maintenance aspects, but it sure is a cool-looking place to live!
No matter how much people tell you your life will change after the baby is born, you can never really "get it," until after you've become a parent. There's this divide between "before baby" and "after baby" that can never be crossed in reverse. On the far side of that Rubicon is Terra Incognita (dragons optional) that you'll never understand till you get there.
If my publishing efforts turn out as well as my kids did, I'm good. However, right at this moment the "contractions" have set in, but the results haven't finished coming into the world, yet.
The ISBNs are acquired. I've mostly nailed down the barcode resource, I think. I'm prepared to register my copyright. I keep struggling to get my emailing list up and running, but if you've tried to sign up for it you know I'm not there yet. Soon! I promise!
And also, because my life isn't busy enough, my sister Gigi Sherrell Norwood and I have pooled our resources to create Weird Sisters Publishing LLC. We plan to publish my books, her books, re-publish her late husband Warren C. Norwood's books, and possibly publish work by others, too (but not yet).
The Weird Sisters Facebook Page went live Wednesday. The website's coming. It all needs to be done at once, preferably yesterday. But at least we're on our way.
This is National Library Week. Instead of a Quote of the Week, I decided to dedicate this as the Week of Book Quotes, with help from the marvelous New York illustrator, Simini Blocker.
Even if you've seen Simini'swonderful illustrated quotes before, I hope you'll enjoy them again. And if you're not yet familiar with her work, I offer you the joy of discovery.
This is National Library Week. Instead of a Quote of the Week, I decided to dedicate this as the Week of Book Quotes, with help from the marvelous New York illustrator, Simini Blocker.
Even if you've seen Simini'swonderful illustrated quotes before, I hope you'll enjoy them again. And if you're not yet familiar with her work, I offer you the joy of discovery.
This is National Library Week. Instead of a Quote of the Week, I decided to dedicate this as the Week of Book Quotes, with help from the marvelous New York illustrator, Simini Blocker.
Even if you've seen Simini'swonderful illustrated quotes before, I hope you'll enjoy them again. And if you're not yet familiar with her work, I offer you the joy of discovery.
This is National Library Week. Instead of a Quote of the Week, I decided to dedicate this as the Week of Book Quotes, with help from the marvelous New York illustrator, Simini Blocker.
Even if you've seen Simini'swonderful illustrated quotes before, I hope you'll enjoy them again. And if you're not yet familiar with her work, I offer you the joy of discovery.
IMAGE: Many, many thanks to Simini Blocker's Tumblr for today's marvelous Quote-Image, featuring the words ofan anonymous author.
This is National Library Week. Instead of a Quote of the Week, I decided to dedicate this as the Week of Book Quotes, with help from the marvelous New York illustrator, Simini Blocker.
Even if you've seen Simini'swonderful illustrated quotes before, I hope you'll enjoy them again. And if you're not yet familiar with her work, I offer you the joy of discovery.
This is National Library Week. Instead of a Quote of the Week, I decided to dedicate this as the Week of Book Quotes, with help from the marvelous New York illustrator, Simini Blocker.
Even if you've seen Simini'swonderful illustrated quotes before, I hope you'll enjoy them again. And if you're not yet familiar with her work, I offer you the joy of discovery.
This is National Library Week. Instead of a Quote of the Week, I decided to dedicate this as the Week of Book Quotes, with help from the marvelous New York illustrator, Simini Blocker.
Even if you've seen Simini'swonderful illustrated quotes before, I hope you'll enjoy them again. And if you're not yet familiar with her work, I offer you the joy of discovery.
My own forthcoming novel, What's Bred in the Bone (to be released May 22, 2019) probably doesn't count as Solarpunk per se, because it's not set in our Solar system. But its setting, a habitat space station designed to be self-sustaining, and powered by light from the local system's day-star, is almost a character in its own right. I've drawn heavily on recent developments in architecture, intensive gardening, and related areas.
VIDEO: Many thanks to The B1Mon YouTube for this excellent video survey of tree- and plant-enhanced architecture. My subscribers may notice I posted this a day earlier than normal for an Image of Interest; I have a special series running next week for Library Week that starts on Sunday, so I rearranged the posting dates just a bit. (Oh, and . . . sorry for the pun in the post's title. I couldn't resist.)