"The adoption of ubiquitous computing, mobile devices, and rich sources of data are changing how we live, work, and play in urban environments. Increasingly, a digital landscape overlays our physical world and is expanding to offer ever-richer experiences that augment—and in some cases, replace—the physical experience: “The city is the platform, the network, the sensors, and the interface,” as frog creative director Rob McIntosh put it in a recent talk. To celebrate the New Cities Foundation summit where frog will be hosting a workshop on the Metacity, design mind presents a special digital issue exclusively on the future of the city."

The Future of The City | design mind

Wow. Can’t wait to explore this special edition of Design Mind.

The New Cities Foundation Summit is starting tomorrow in Paris.

(via axelletess)

“A cidade é a plataforma, a rede, os sensores e a interface”, afirma Rob McIntosh

(via axelletess)

massurban:

“4 Tips For Starting A Farm In Your City [Video]
By Jude Stewart. May 7, 2012
Urban-farming innovators such as Detroit and Cleveland offer an object lesson in how cities can transform disused land into tomorrow’s (healthy) dinner.
Consider this paradox: 49 million Americans live with daily food insecurity, 23 million live in urban food deserts, and collectively we’re all getting fatter. Simultaneously vacant lots, concrete grooves, and other desolate, empty spots dot urban landscapes, while a quarter of traditional agricultural land is severely degraded according to the UN.
Enter the urban farm: a fast, smart, cheap way to bring healthy food closer to those who need it, transform ugly vacant spaces into lush gardens, and promote a healthier, greener, more connected urban community.
Populate empty lots with crops.
Cities like Cleveland and Detroit are leasing abandoned lots to urban farmers for practically nothing—provided the lessees are committed to filling those spots with edible greenery.
If your lot’s soil is poisoned with lead or other contaminants, simply truck in new soil in raised beds. Even cheaper: Plant your veggies in burlap bags filled with clean soil. Roll the sacks up and fill with more soil as the plants grow, and you can transport them indoors when winter hits.
Use your roof.
ASLA’s video suggests restaurants harness their roofs to grow ingredients for their own meals. Big-box stores can lease or farm their own vast roofs and sell the proceeds in-store or via local greenmarkets. Rooftop farms use wasted space and lower your utility bill, too.
Fill up your food trucks.
Mobile trucks sell prepared foods—often unhealthy at that. Why not use them as fresh-fruit stands? Food truck legislation in many cities has relaxed in recent years. Opportunity knocks, suburban farmers: Coordinate with a food truck owner to sell your produce wherever there’s a need in your city—not just at the Saturday greenmarket. Hook the kids on juicy berries or watermelon in summer, and you may make a confirmed veggie fan year-round.”
A recently released video by the American Society of Landscape Architects uses case studies from edible-city innovators, such as Cleveland and Detroit, to offer practical advice for bringing urban farms to your backyard (or corner lot or rooftop). Here are four helpful tips:
Plant a garden in your own yard (or farm the job out to someone else).
Acres of perfect green grass are both a hassle to maintain and, nutritionally speaking, useless. Inhabitants with yards in D.C. and Portland can even lease their yard to those with greener thumbs—and take a cut of the produce they yield.”
Via: Fast Company
Photo:  Flickr user Joel Carranza

massurban:

4 Tips For Starting A Farm In Your City [Video]


By Jude Stewart. May 7, 2012

Urban-farming innovators such as Detroit and Cleveland offer an object lesson in how cities can transform disused land into tomorrow’s (healthy) dinner.

Consider this paradox: 49 million Americans live with daily food insecurity, 23 million live in urban food deserts, and collectively we’re all getting fatter. Simultaneously vacant lots, concrete grooves, and other desolate, empty spots dot urban landscapes, while a quarter of traditional agricultural land is severely degraded according to the UN.

Enter the urban farm: a fast, smart, cheap way to bring healthy food closer to those who need it, transform ugly vacant spaces into lush gardens, and promote a healthier, greener, more connected urban community.

Populate empty lots with crops.

Cities like Cleveland and Detroit are leasing abandoned lots to urban farmers for practically nothing—provided the lessees are committed to filling those spots with edible greenery.

If your lot’s soil is poisoned with lead or other contaminants, simply truck in new soil in raised beds. Even cheaper: Plant your veggies in burlap bags filled with clean soil. Roll the sacks up and fill with more soil as the plants grow, and you can transport them indoors when winter hits.

Use your roof.

ASLA’s video suggests restaurants harness their roofs to grow ingredients for their own meals. Big-box stores can lease or farm their own vast roofs and sell the proceeds in-store or via local greenmarkets. Rooftop farms use wasted space and lower your utility bill, too.

Fill up your food trucks.

Mobile trucks sell prepared foods—often unhealthy at that. Why not use them as fresh-fruit stands? Food truck legislation in many cities has relaxed in recent years. Opportunity knocks, suburban farmers: Coordinate with a food truck owner to sell your produce wherever there’s a need in your city—not just at the Saturday greenmarket. Hook the kids on juicy berries or watermelon in summer, and you may make a confirmed veggie fan year-round.”

A recently released video by the American Society of Landscape Architects uses case studies from edible-city innovators, such as Cleveland and Detroit, to offer practical advice for bringing urban farms to your backyard (or corner lot or rooftop). Here are four helpful tips:

Plant a garden in your own yard (or farm the job out to someone else).

Acres of perfect green grass are both a hassle to maintain and, nutritionally speaking, useless. Inhabitants with yards in D.C. and Portland can even lease their yard to those with greener thumbs—and take a cut of the produce they yield.”

Via: Fast Company

Photo:  Flickr user Joel Carranza



"Cities are the ultimate and natural expression of human evolution, of human dreams and needs; they are as complex as the people who build them, as the planet itself… In their architecture and their social organisation they are capable of reflecting the very best in us."

Michael Moorcock (via pdsmith)

“As cidades são a expressão máxima e natural da evolução humana, dos sonhos e necessidades humanas, pois são tão complexas quanto as pessoas que as constróem, como o próprio planeta … Sua arquitetura e sua organização social são capazes de refletir o melhor em nós.

futurecapetown:

14 May 2012

The recent article “SA’s vision of sustainable cities revealed” (11 May 2012), by the South African government’s news agency BuaNews, unveiling plans to “turn the country’s major cities into sustainable economic hubs,” raise some misalignment to the way Future Cape Town has been…

citybreaths:


Geoffrey West, educating us about how cities work.

According to Geoffrey West, distinguished professor at Santa Fe Institute, we need to develop a “science of cities”. West compares contemporary urbanists to the Wright brothers, who are credited with inventing and building the world’s…

via
by Erico Santos

by Erico Santos

Lindo demais!

Lindo demais!

(Source: oblivi0n-, via wizlakhifa)

irishboyinlondon:

The Guardian - Big Picture:  Copenhagen bikes, by Mikael Colville-Anderson
The guardian has published a great selection of Mikael Coville-Andersons pictures of people getting around their city (Copenhagen) on bikes.  Shows how cycling in the city can and should be - easy, convenient, safe, door to door, stylish…

irishboyinlondon:

The Guardian - Big Picture:  Copenhagen bikes, by Mikael Colville-Anderson

The guardian has published a great selection of Mikael Coville-Andersons pictures of people getting around their city (Copenhagen) on bikes.  Shows how cycling in the city can and should be - easy, convenient, safe, door to door, stylish…

labespaciopublico:

Xylo[phone] by Anuardi and Yailene with the help pf Wilfredo, Jubilee and Bea. First exercise for the project Thoughtless Monuments created by Isabel Ramirez Pagan in collaboration with UrbanoActivo for this first experiment. The project transformed an unused and broken down phone booth into a musical instrument using pvc tubes to create an urban xylophone.  

(via urbanfunscape)

publicdesignfestival:

Straatlokaal is a process of building social encounter by Foundation Projects. During the whole month of April the group worked with people and waste materials in three different district of Utrecht (The Netherlands), turning containers into small houses. From 5 to 10 May the brand new structures will be transfered in Neude neighbourhood and will become Straatlokaal: a public space with a daily programme of events.

myedol:

by Escif

myedol:

by Escif

(via myedol)

myedol:

Urban Plant Tags by Carmichael Collective

(via urbnist)