Archive for the 'sustainable' Category
April 2, 2008

Perspective rendering of the future Aga Khan Museum in Toronto, from canadianarchitect.com
The Aga Khan (آقا خان), spiritual leader of the Ismaili Muslims, is celebrating his golden jubilee this year. Fittingly and well-deservedly, his media presence has been everywhere. The Aga Khan has spent his life promoting community development, pluralism, peace, and as a plus, a legacy of great architecture.

The New Ismaili Centre by Charles Correa, from canadianarchitect.com
The Aga Khan seems to have taken a liking for Canada, and we have two major projects under construction right now in Toronto and Ottawa. Toronto outbid London (England!) for the Aga Khan Museum, a three-part project consisting of museum, religious, and cultural centre.

The Fumihiko Maki designed Aga Khan Museum, from canadianarchitect.com
The designs are still being completed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Fumihiko Maki, celebrated architect Charles Correa, Vladimir Djurovik of Lebanon, with Moriyama & Teshima from Toronto overseeing the project construction. This is truly a stellar cast of architects, and I have high hopes that this will be the most exciting project in Toronto for years to come (complete in 2011).

View of Vladimir Djurovik’s landscaped gardens, from canadianarchitect.com
It is too bad though that the old Bata Shoe headquarters were demolished for this plan… As the Toronto Star’s Christopher Hume aptly remarked, “Surely there’s an element of irony when an architecturally worthy building must be destroyed in the name of culture.”
Canada’s second Aga Khan project is the Ottawa Centre of Pluralism, to be housed in the former building of the War Museum.

Aga Khan Centre of Pluralism in Ottawa, photo courtesy of the Government of Canada
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Posted in architecture, montreal, news, planning, politics, sustainable, toronto | Tagged aga khan, bata shoe, development, ismaili, museum, preservation, religion | 3 Comments »
March 25, 2008
Surprisingly enough, there do exist urban farms in Canadian cities.

Ottawa Central Experimental Farm from above, Image from Google Earth
One is the Ottawa Experimental Farm, which is very close to downtown (just southwest of Parliament Hill). This farm not only has a large swath of land dedicated to growing crops and testing out new cultivation techniques, it has an extensive built campus of research laboratories, government ministries, greenhouses, visitor facilities, and even an arboretum.

McGill University’s MacDonald Campus from above, Image from Google Earth
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Posted in cities, montreal, planning, sustainable | Tagged agriculture, crops, food, mcgill, ottawa, urban farm | 2 Comments »
February 15, 2008
cross-posted to thesis matrix, as an ongoing development of my masters thesis research.

Greenpeace activists campaigning against nuclear power in Brasilia
In a city that has been all but abandoned by government and corporations, Detroit citizens have had to become self-reliant. Because of declining tax revenues, the city has had to cut down on many basic services. Fed up with the lack of security, mass transit, utilities, locals have banded together in community organizations to combat the city’s ills and negative image.
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Posted in architecture, cities, politics, sustainable | Tagged abandoned, activism, detroit, greenpeace, guerilla, radical, self-reliance | No Comments »
February 10, 2008
This is a follow up to my earlier post about the amenities that can be found in the Toronto Hydro corridor lands.

CBC News (2005). A transmission tower looms in front of the CN Tower.
Hydro corridors, or electricity lines, are necessary for city development. The Finch hydro corridor carries transmission lines ranging in voltage up to 500kV and varies in width from 30 to 180 meters. This is a swath of mostly green land that cuts east-west across the entire city, and is sandwiched between residential, industrial, and commercial developments. The corridor creates barriers in the surrounding neighbourhoods: North York’s downtown skyscrapers are cut abruptly at the transmission lines, and the York University - Jane Finch neighbourhoods are insulated from one another by this open land.

Chau, Andrew (2008). Finch hydro corridor (in red) and its connections with existing bicycle paths (in green).
While the corridor acts as a barrier in certain communities, there are areas where the green space is a positive influence and supports a range of activities. These include parkland, transportation infrastructure, and sports facilities. The issue surrounding the Finch hydro corridor, and hydro corridors in general, is how they can be changed from an element that separates neighbourhoods, to a positive and unifying amenity. This is an issue of creative reuse of existing infrastructure corridors.
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Posted in planning, sustainable, toronto | Tagged adaptive reuse, finch, high line, hydro corridors, infrastructure, transmission lines | No Comments »
February 5, 2008
What does 200 sq.ft. mean?
An entire Manila studio apartment (left) could fit inside the space of these Toronto dining and living rooms (right)
In Toronto, it means to the typical downtown urbanite, enough room for two comfy couches plus a t.v., a rug, and maybe an extensive collection of books. In a smaller row house, such as one in Bloor West, the dining and living rooms may together make up 200 sq.ft.
In Manila (the Philippines), 200 sq.ft. is a luxury studio condominium. These Avida Towers are currently under construction in the capital city. There are many apartments in Manila where entire families plus relatives live in this same 200 sq.ft.

urban form studies, from Spacing Toronto
Posted in architecture, planning, sustainable, toronto | Tagged avida towers, bloor west, condo, density, manila | 1 Comment »
January 30, 2008

Image courtesy of the American Geographic Institute
Ron Eglash gives an amazing TED talk about fractals found in African villages. He debunks a couple of widely held prejudices. One, that all natives would design with fractals. This isn’t true, because African natives are the only ones that build their villages in the fractal form. The other, that these fractals are based solely on intuition. Many are algorithmic and intentional, such as in cloth designs and even in divination rituals.

Image courtesy of Rajah on TechRepublic, created using Apophysis
These ideas of self-organization are in the brain, in ecological sustainability, the aids virus, capitalism… artists today are using fractals to generate incredible digital pieces. When will an architect design a building using fractals?
The fractal villages he talks about are below:
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Posted in art, cities, digital, planning, sustainable | Tagged african villages, biomimicry, fractals, mathematics, TED talks | 1 Comment »
January 18, 2008

“Look again at that dot. That’s here. That’s home. That’s us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every “superstar,” every “supreme leader,” every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there-on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.
i think that there is no better time than right now to revisit Carl Sagan’s thoughts on the voyager 1 photograph. this photo really puts things into proper perspective.
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Posted in photography, sustainable | Tagged carl sagan, earth, nasa | No Comments »
January 17, 2008
the idea of farms contained within skyscrapers aren’t new - in fact, a number of proposals have been floated in recent years: for new york city, las vegas, even toronto. mvrdv proposed a “pig city”. there’s an underground farm housed in a former bank vault underneath tokyo.

i wonder if the idea of a vertical farm is even economically feasible, given that there would need to be artificial sunlight in the buildings, watering pumped up tens of stories, the expenses for transportation and delivery of the crops, fertilizer, and soil, and the high cost of land in the city.

wouldn’t urban agriculture on existing rooftops, open areas in the city, be a much more feasible method to increase urban agriculture?
a few recent designs for farming towers:
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Posted in architecture, planning, sustainable, toronto | Tagged densification, farm animals, skyscraper, urban agriculture, utopic | 5 Comments »