Talk about seeing light at the end of the tunnel! The Bush Administration still has a couple of months to wreak havoc on the environment — and I don’t doubt that they’ll do just that – but a decision yesterday in response to legal action by the Sierra Club gave me…well, hope….
Daily Archives: November 14, 2008
Bella Gaia: A Personal Connection With Our Planet
Kenji Williams is in Tokyo this week with his amazing Bella Gaia presentation. This video is from the digital planetarium at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, filmed using HD cameras and fisheye lenses. Kenji Williams on the violin with KaChun Yu running the visualizations. Because we all need a reminder of just how beautiful our planet really is….
Mad City Chickens
I’ve posted about this before, but I just found this link to an interview with the director of Mad City Chicken. Click on the image below to see the video.
For a link to the film website, click here.
This movie is showing in Nanaimo, BC in November…
Urban Issues Film Festival in Nanaimo, BC on November 21st, 2008. The festival is held at Vancouver Island University. For more info, contact: Deborah Jensen, Development Services Department City of Nanaimo 238 Franklyn Street , Nanaimo , BC Phone (250) 755-4473 Fax (250) 755-4479
HT to City Farmer for the news.
Technorati Tags: chickens, Mad City Chickens, urban agriculture, urban chickens, urban farming, urban hens
Events: FUEL Documentary, Bosky Dell Fall Blowout Sale, and Nolita Denim Swap
Portland Premier of the Major Motion Documentary FUEL The world is addicted to fuel. It is time for an intervention. Change your fuel…change the world. Fields of Fuel is an ecological disaster documentary with a surprising message: It’s not that hard to do something to improve the environment. Appearances by Larry Hagman, Woody Harrelson, Willie Nelson, Julia Roberts and Neil Young. Call (503) 221-3280 for ticket information. November 14, 7:30pm Fox Tower Cinema, 846 SW Park Ave, Portland
Bosky Dell Natives Customer Appreciation Fall Blowout Sale! Come celebrate the season with us and enjoy discounts of up to 30% off select plant purchases. (Gift items priced as marked and not subject to 30% discount.) We have a beautiful stock of handmade gifts at the lowest prices of the year. Here are just a few of the delightful items you will find at Bosky Dell Natives:
Native Plants, including Live Holiday Trees! Holiday trees come with vintage ornaments and a hand-created Sacred Tree Card. Silk screen t-shirts designed by Bosky Dell Natives, Kershaw Utility Knives (top quality knives and tools at rock bottom prices), Organic, Local Berry Honey and Hand-rolled Beeswax Candles all ready for gift-giving and perfect for your holiday table. Come See Us this Weekend for the Best Deals of the Year!! November 14, 15 and 16 10am-5pm 23311 SW Bosky Dell Lane, West Linn, OR 97068, 503-638-5945 *Coupoon: Receive 10% off your purchase of native Oregon plants.
Nolita Denim Swap to Benefit Big Brothers Big Sisters If you bring a used pair of jeans to Nolita Denim in the Pearl you’ll get $25 off towards your next pair. Jeans must be wearable to be donated. Through November 17th
Nolita sent us this list of organic denim brands they carry: Good Society www.goodsociety.org Loomstate www.loomstate.org Seven www.sevenforallmankind.com (they offer a few styles each season that are organic)
Organic clothing brands: Prairie Underground www.prairieunderground.com (womens only)
Topo Ranch www.toporanch.com (mens only) Suburban Riot (both m+w)Alternative Fuels: Retooled Approach May Make Bio-based Butanol More Competitive With Ethanol
A modified method of producing biobutanol could make the fuel more competitive with ethanol as a clean-burning alternative to gasoline.
Mysterious Microbe May Play Important Role In Ocean Ecology
An unusual microorganism discovered in the open ocean may force scientists to rethink their understanding of how carbon and nitrogen cycle through ocean ecosystems. Researchers characterized the new microbe by analyzing its genetic material and said it appears to be an atypical member of the cyanobacteria that fixes nitrogen but lacks the genes for photosynthesis.
Clicking Knees Are Antelopes’ Way Of Saying ‘Back Off’
Knee clicking can establish mating rights among antelopes. A study of eland antelopes has uncovered the dominance displays used by males to settle disputes over access to fertile females, without resorting to genuine violence.
Balkanology, New Architecture and Urban Phenomena in South Eastern Europe
Sarajevo, 2008. ©Wolfgang Thaler
Last week, just a few hours after having landed in Switzerland for the IETM Autumn Plenary Meeting (which focused on the very sexy theme of ‘misunderstanding’), i was sitting in a train to Basel. Like an automaton, i had been drawn to the city to visit Balkanology, New Architecture and Urban Phenomena in South Eastern Europe, the ongoing exhibition at the Swiss Architecture Museum.
SA M explores contemporary architecture and urban design from a trans-disciplinary perspective, not just at national level as its title might suggest, it also puts architecture into a global context.
Having been very impressed by their previous show, Re-sampling Ornament, i was more than eager to get very enthusiastic about the current one. Expectations were high. Expectations were met.
It started well right from the start. The exhibition design by Thilo Fuchs & Oliver Mayer of Tatin, with Oliver Theinert was a delight. Floating panels, writings on the floors, elegant typography and graphics.
© Tom Bisig

Now about the content of the show: Balkans generally refers to South Eastern Europe, a region with varying geographical definitions. Going beyond clichés and the pathos, the Balkanology exhibition focuses on the impact of recent socio-political changes on architecture and urban planning, drawing a variegated picture of urban development in the region and the forces that determine it.
Prishtina, 2008. © Kai Voeckler
Curated by Kai Vöckler, the exhibitions focuses on two main themes:
- the way inhabitants solved the lack of housing and initiated construction projects on their own account. - a comparison between outstanding yet hardly known buildings of socialist modernism in Yugoslavia with contemporary architecture.
Prishtina, 2008. © Kai Vöckler
Since the collapse of the socialist economic system in ex-Yugoslavia and Albania and the war that lead to the split of Yugoslavia, a new form of urbanisation typified by extensive informal building activity has appeared on the territory. Taking advantage of sketchy legal frameworks and governments initially too weak to enforce rules and regulations, inhabitants have taken the issue of housing shortage in their own hands, they started building new dwellings from scratch and adapting existing edifice for their own purposes.
Prishtina, 2008. © Kai Voeckler
In this context, a term often used in all its negative connotations like Balkanization takes a radically different meaning: it stands for the improvisation and adaptation skills of architecture. Some of the many questions the exhibition aims to raise iinclude: how can a combination of governmental and social control offer the best possible basis for a successful retro-active ‘post-regulation? To what extent unregulated, informal urbanism develops new typologies and urban forms, and how these forms could also emerge under the banner of neo-liberal de-urbanisation in the rest of Europe.
These unregulated forms of urban developments have often bypassed the expertise of architects. This makeshift architecture has nevertheless developed its own style and culture characterized by a new intermeshing of spaces through visual worlds communicated by the media, migratory movements and cash flows.As part of a broader research on Belgrade informal architecture, Dubravka Sekulic and Ivan Kucina have compiled a fascinating archive of Belgrade roof extensions. The project in longer run wants to examine the cultural habits that provoke this kind of action in the city and their implication on architecture and public space of the city.
More images of the roof extensions in the PDF report
In the other chapter of Balkanology, examples found in Belgrade, Zagreb, Kotor, Prishtina and Tirana illustrate the way architects, artists, urbanists and activists from South Eastern Europe are dealing with these rapid new transformation processes. The outstanding yet hardly known buildings of socialist modernism in Yugoslavia are compared with contemporary architecture.
National and University Library, Prishtina, Kosovo, 1983. Architect: Andrija Mutnjaković. ©Wolfgang Thaler
Using selected cases, Maroje Mrduljaš, editor of Oris, and architectural historian Vladimir Kulić show how Yugoslavian architects and planners have tackled “modernity” and “internationality”. As you will see in the following examples, the outcome of their investigation oscillates between the depressing and the exhilarating.
©Wolfgang Thaler
New Belgrade, a residential area built across the river from Belgrade by Tito after 1950, was conceived as a city of ‘light, sun and future’ and planned following the principles of the CIAM (the International Congress of Modern Architecture). The challenge at the time was to erect as many buildings, as fast as possible, in order to accommodate a displaced and quickly growing post WW II population. The initial vision of functionality and modernity was translated into what has been defined as a ‘brutalist architectural approach’.
Image by Jim Skreech, via Belgraded
One of the most striking projects that demonstrates the modernity of Yugoslavia is Rijeka’s Flexible Swimming Pool, designed by Vladimir Turina in 1949. The auditoriums of this ‘architectural device” would have been place on railway tracks to be moved from inside to outside depending on the weather. The inner pool could be easily turned into an exhibition hall or an airplane hangar. All the elements could have been constructed with the technology of the time. I couldn’t find any image of the project online so let’s drift to another project i found particularly appealing:
Zlatko Ugljen was a student interested in the reinterpretation and modernization of Bosnian Ottoman heritage when he started the Šerefudin’s White Mosque project in Visoko, Bosnia and Herzegovina. What started as a modest project made pro bono for the local community ended up as one of the most internationally celebrated buildings in former Yugoslavia: it was awarded the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 1983 and in 2007, Hungarian architects declared that the mosque was one of the three best designed sacral places in Europe. More images.
On the left, the minaret and mosque as seen from the graveyard. © Jacques Betant.On the right, inside view. ©Wolfgang Thaler
Balkanology, New Architecture and Urban Phenomena in South Eastern Europe runs until December 28 at SA M, the Swiss Architecture Museum in Basel.
One final recommendation: get your hands on S AM No. 6 - The publication accompanying the exhibition Balkanology - New Architecture and Urban Phenomena in South Eastern Europe, edited by Francesca Ferguson & Kai Vöckler.
This piece originally appeared on Regine Debatty’s blog, We Make Money, Not Art.
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(Posted by Regine Debatty in Urban Design and Planning at 2:41 PM)
ShakeOut: Californians Get Down for Emergency Preparedness
Yesterday, approximately 5 million southern Californians living near the San Andreas Fault participated in an emergency preparedness drill called The Great Southern California ShakeOut. For these ready residents, an earthquake isn’t a matter of if but when.
The ShakeOut scenario was based on a 7.8-magnitude earthquake along the San Andreas Fault, which experts say could cause nearly 2,000 deaths and $200 billion in damage.
Along with their sponsors, ShakeOut.org made some great PSAs to help encourage people to participate in the big day.
Some were eerie:
Some were informative:
And some were just hilarious:
In the 21st century, it seems as if the next natural disaster is continually just around the corner. Be it an earthquake, hurricane, flood or tornado, knowing what to do in case of a disaster is more than just wise, it’s essential.
Image credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times
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(Posted by Sarah Kuck in Resource - Community at 2:33 PM)
Headlines from Worldchanging Seattle (11/14/08)
This week in headlines from Worldchanging Seattle:
AIA Award-Winners: Visions for Veggie Oil and Parking Lots Two conceptual projects received commendations for their vision at last week’s AIA Honor Awards, offering a glimpse at what leading designers could contribute to cities of the future.
Arts Leadership Lab: Bringing the Arts Perspective to Urban Issues Artists bring a fresh perspective to traditional urban and rural planning issues. Especially when diverse groups can connect via collaborative leadership-building projects like the Arts Leadership Lab.
New Facility for Homeless to be Built in Ballard A boarded-up home at 1753 NW 56th St. in Ballard will be converted into a 60-unit shelter for the chronically homeless.
What’s in Your (Fast) Food? Starting January 1, diners at nearby chain restaurants will be able to check out the nutrition information of their meal before placing an order.
Lecture Notes: Dominic DellaSala and the Climate Change Commons What can we do to plan for climate change on the local level? Jennifer Power talks with the executive director of Conservation Science & Policy Programs at the National Center for Conservation Science and Policy.
Are you here in Seattle? We’d like to hear from you! Check out the local blog and leave comments, or contact editor[at]Worldchanging[dot]com if you have ideas or would like to write.
Image courtesy of The Miller Hull Partnership
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(Posted by WorldChanging Team in About Worldchanging at 1:14 PM)
