• Romantic new garden for the cafe in Chiswick Park?

    Updated: 2011-04-30 14:53:45
    Evidently, English Heritage staff have become avid followers of this blog. In August 2010, we criticised the new cafe for being in a sea of bitmac. Now it is surrounded (top photo) by an attractive surfacing with the friendly name of ‘tar and chips’. We therefore urge EH to take another step and implement the [...]

  • Might King Will and Queen Kate restore pagan tree-worship to its rightful place in British culture?

    Updated: 2011-04-29 09:00:56
    The Daily Mail reports that ‘Miss Middleton, 29, who studied history of art at St Andrew’s, has devised a theme which she says ‘pays tribute to the Language of Flowers’ – an idea that is bound to have gone down well with her gardening-obsessed father-in-law, Prince Charles, who famously admitted that he talks to [...]

  • Forest architecture: work, play, live?

    Updated: 2011-04-27 06:55:50
    Working, living and playing in a forest environment: is it possible?Selgas Cano’s architectural office near Madrid suggests so. Although critiques of the scheme suggest the ‘look but don’t touch’ approach of the sealed glazing is a limitation of the scheme. Natural ventilation is provided by a hinged pulley system at one end of the building. Singapore’s [...]

  • Smaller Architecture Projects are Not Just a Sign of the Times

    Updated: 2011-04-21 14:28:00
    modative what is modative projects blog people resources contact modative a modern architecture firm a blog about modern architecture , design , development modative happenings Loading other modative blogs Small Lot Subdivision Blog Car Wash Blog We post , you get an email . That's it . Your : email connect with modative blog authors michael's profile modative scott michael on linkedin christian's profile modative navar christian on linkedin derek's profile architectderek derek on linkedin Most Popular Posts How to Start an Architecture Firm Introduction Mid-Century Modern Colors Architects Creative Professionals Is It Time To Rethink Your Resume 7 Tips for Starting an Architecture Firm Tip 02 : DIY How to Become a Licensed Architect A Healthy Obsession with Small House Floor Plans 7

  • What were bronze age hillforts, like Earnsheugh, used for?

    Updated: 2011-04-20 15:19:23
    The high point in these images is a ‘hillfort’ 150m above the North Sea and with nothing but water and ice between this point and the north pole. The name ‘hill-fort’ suggests a fort on a hill. Archaeologists have never been happy with this term but are unable to think of anything better. Hillforts were [...]

  • City farming with Castanea sativa, the sweet, beautiful and delicious chestnut

    Updated: 2011-04-15 07:30:39
    The yield from a mature woodland of Castanea sativa is similar to the yield of rice from a paddy field, both nutritionally and in terms of harvested weight: Chestunt yields range from 1-5 tonnes per hectare (this figure could be raised by careful management). A good individual chestnut tree may yield up to 25 kg per year. Rice [...]

  • Food glorious food

    Updated: 2011-04-09 03:58:35
    Modern life presents numerous paradoxes. Perhaps the first is the widespread trade in food produce and the convenience of supermarket shopping, that has somehow alienated society from the concept that all food is land or sea based. And this means – land area & sea area – must be used, managed and preserved for this [...]

  • The Green Man in landscape architecture, garden design and world culture

    Updated: 2011-04-06 11:53:54
    Wiki has a useful entry on the Green Man in world culture. He can be ‘a sculpture, drawing, or other representation of a face… Green Men are frequently found on carvings in churches and other buildings (both secular and ecclesiastical)…. Found in many cultures around the world, the Green Man is often related to [...]

  • Two days in the lives of two London trees in spring 2011

    Updated: 2011-04-03 19:10:42
    I was concluding that the leaves would never return to London’s trees when, in the snap of two fingers, the spring is rushing ahead. The above two photographs were taken two days apart, as March turned to April. The weather was much colder than usual before Christmas but since then has been relatively warm.

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