Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Case Study Meeting Schedule, Thurs 11.13

12:45. Sujung
1:05. Fiona
1:25. Jane
2:05. Neha
2:25. Cassie
2:45. Aspen
3:25. Tomoki
3:45. Stina

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

The Map of "Blue Gold"

"If the 21st century's wars will be fought over water, rather than oil, it might help to at least know what we're fighting over. UNESCO recently released this world map showing where freshwater aquifers lie:"


In Jamie's class, we talked about the practicality of drawing legal boundaries by understanding the land's watershed (instead of an arbitrary straight line). Aquifers are even less visible than watersheds because they are underground, but we are just as dependent on them as water sources for drinking agricultural irrigation. These aquifers hold 100 times the volume of freshwater that flows down rivers and streams around the world at any time!

The UNESCO map reveals how many of these hidden underground water aquifers cross international borders, each of this crossing is a potential for political conflict or even wars.

In the world where freshwater resources are precious and increasingly contentious, the map is a beginning point for us to discuss ways in which international law should govern how water is shared around the world (and not fought over for). That said, the pastel light green, blue and tan is a misleading choice of color to indicate of 'very low' level of groundwater. It makes the middle eastern dessert seems so watery!



News via FP Blog.
New scientist has the write up about this mapping project.

Monday, October 20, 2008

What isn't landscape?

As we describe all the physical things that we create and see as a landscape, the past as historical landscapes, thoughts as landscape of the mind, or imaginative landscape, and so on, are we not effectively saying that everything is a landscape? However, implying that landscape is all encompassing seems like arrogance on our behalf as (potential) landscape architects. So,

"What isn't landscape?"


Laryssa posed this interesting question in the placemaking class last week, and I would like this interesting dialogue to continue. Pitch in and comment!



I thought about this over the weekend, and here's my take on this question:

Landscape, by definition, is used to describe the visible area of land, usually the countryside. It is also used figuratively to describe the invisible features of a situation or activity. Landscape is both the physical place that we see, and the virtual place that we imagine. Hence, it is:
The real + the imagined = Something that exist in our mind.
The material + immaterial = Something that we can perceive.
Then what isn't landscape is something that is beyond what we can see or think about.

For example, the eleventh dimension of the string theory.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

depictions of landscape on pieces of landscape

The Tartaria tablets are arguably the oldest known representations of the first written language (7th century BC). Archeologists have not agreed on the meaning of the symbols etched into these three tablets. It is however, inarguable that the symbols are representations of the authors environment, or, perceived landscape. Here we see that even in the early methods of communication between humans, the landscape (in this case a series of stones) was altered in the process.

The tablets can be understood as an example of landscape through its original definition as "land" "ship" (a representation of perceived surroundings). With regard to place, these symbolic gestures represent a narrative between the author and "nature," the author's culture, and the authors own self identity. It is interesting that the vehicle for communication (impressed stone) itself becomes a mechanism of place reinforcement. In other words the land is both represented and representative. Place is both perceived and reinforced.

That said, is it possible to communicate without alteration of/to our surrounding environment? Reversing the concept from above...as designers what are the vehicles of our communication? and how do these mechanisms/processes/strategies influence the place reinforcing attributes of our landscape?

welcome

water + place.

A blog dedicated to the discussion of relationships between water and place as one story in narrative landscapes.