architectureandarts:

Shizuoka International Garden and Horticulture Exhibition designed by Kengo Kuma and Associates.


theintegral:

Slavoj Zizek Explains Why Nature Does Not Exist


ghendel:

At the end of the last ice age, around 11,500 years ago, our planet entered the Holocene, an epoch of climatic stability and warmth. People came out of their caves and took advantage of the new conditions; they started farming and settling in villages and towns, which led to development of cultures and the rise of entire civilizations.

However, since the industrial revolution, human activity has accelerated and become so profound and global that many scientists think we have pushed the planet across a new geological boundary, into what some are calling the Anthropocene (which literally means the “age of man”). Now geologists are considering whether to formally define the new age, recognizing it in the same way as the Jurassic, Cambrian, or Holocene.

The photo is of Bingham Mine, the world’s largest open pit mine (copper), located outside of Salt Lake City and clearly visible from the International Space Station. Is is still growing and in operation today.


studiocuriosity:

RSA New Contemporaries 2012 *Submission*


drawingarchitecture:

Chicago Expo High rise/ Speculating on Cultures at the Edge of Destruction.

Mary Alejandra Alvarez 


sixpennybook:

How much of a language is silent? This video, created at Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design, seeks to provide a visual representation of silent letters.


rustybreak:

Ahn Min Jeong


fuckyeahbrutalism:

Science Building, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 1966 (Project)

(I.M. Pei & Partners)


landscapearchitecture:

(via Charles Jencks: Metaphysical Landscapes at Jupiter Artland « AAJ Press)


Watch a 3-minute journey through the last 250 years of our history, from the start of the Industrial Revolution to the Rio 20 Summit. The film charts the growth of humanity into a global force on an equivalent scale to major geological processes. The film is part of the world’s first educational webportal on the Anthropocene, commissioned by the Planet Under Pressure conference, and developed and sponsored by
anthropocene.info

Welcome to the Anthropocene ::: Planet Under Pressure (via fromegotoeco)