3. this five story high green wall incorporates 7,600 plants from 237 species to transform a historic
corner in paris into piece of living architecture. beginning with a plain concrete wall, the designer
installed a metal, pvc, and nonbiodegradable-felt structure that prevents damage to the building
while still allowing plants to grow without soil. a built-in watering system keeps the wall healthy,
allowing it to mature and change the city landscape over the course of several years.
plants help keep historic architecture alive.
4. será la ciudad del futuro un
organismo viviente?
meTREEpolis concept, atlanta georgia
5. in these fantastical renderings (produced for the historic channel s city of the future
competition), plants become power producers that harness natural energy from the sun to
power an entire city. as they grow, the plants take over the city and transform it into a hybrid
place: part city, part forest. at the top, a canopy of biologically enhanced plants capture
energy from the sun and water from the clouds. the canopy stays low in open, suburban
areas and lifts off the ground in the dense remnants of urban downtowns.
urban planning meets the law of the judge.
6. puede retirarse la arquitectura
de una tormenta?
hut on sleds, new Zealand
7. to avoid destruction during inevitable and intensifying storms, structures built within the
coastal erosion zone of the coromandel peninsula must be removable. this house takes
the requirement as a playful design challenge. the structure functions almost like a
wooden tent a two story shutter winches open to form a sheltering awning, and closes to
protect the house in inclement weather. perched on tow sleds, the home can move to the
back of its site, or across the beach and onto a barge for a total relocation.
the earth is changing, and so should our architecture.
9. after an earthquake devastated the new Zealand town of Christchurch, citizens were left to grieve
casualties as well as the loss of their central cathedral. one architect responded with a piece of
emergency architecture a rapidly built cathedral made of paper tubes, shipping containers, and a
lightweight polycarbonate skin. the structure could not be more simple. the result is sublime.
rebuilding after disaster is a moment for ingenuity.