/Home/Dossiers/Sustainability Reloaded/Re:loading #02 – Your Agenda: maps, books, events & awards

Re:loading #02 – Your Agenda: maps, books, events & awards

DossiersSustainability Reloaded

[1] Atlas of hidden water may avert future conflict (article/ New Scientist)
[2] Depletion and Abundance: Life On The New Home Front – Sharon Astyk (book review)
[3] Call for entries (journal/ Bracket)
[4] City Eco Lab (event/ Biennale Internationale Design – Saint Etienne)
[5] Urban Farmer Will Allen receives award

[1]
Atlas of hidden water may avert future conflict – Article from New Scientist, 24 October, 2008

They are one of the world’s greatest and most precious natural resources, yet are entirely hidden. Now, for the first time, a high-resolution map shows where underground aquifers store vast amounts of water.

[2]
Depletion and Abundance: Life On The New Home Front – Sharon Astyk is a writer, teacher and subsistence farmer, and the author of two forthcoming books on Peak Oil and Climate Change — Depletion and Abundance: Life on the New Home Front (Fall ‘08) and A Nation of Farmers (And Cooks) (Spring ‘09), the latter co-authored with Aaron Newton. Both books are forthcoming from New Society Publishers.

Review by Amanda Kovattana at Energy Bulletin
Commentary: “Unplugged – or unhinged” by John Thackara at Doors of Perception

[3]
Call for entries on the theme of farming by the new journal (annually) Bracket, founded by InfraNet Lab and Archinect.

timetable: Submissions due: February 2, 2009 / Jury Review: February 2009 / Notification and Editing: March 2009 / Book release: October 2009

theme: The first edition of [bracket] is centered around the theme of farming. Once merely understood in terms of agriculture, today information, energy, labour, and landscape, among others, can be farmed. Farming harnesses the efficiency of collectivity and community. Whether cultivating land, harvesting resources, extracting energy or delegating labor, farming reveals the interdependencies of our globalized world. Simultaneously, farming represents the local gesture, the productive landscape, and the alternative economy. The processes of farming are mutable, parametric, and efficient. From terraforming to foodsheds to crowdsourcing, farming often involves the management of the natural mediated by the technologic. Farming, beyond its most common agricultural understanding is the modification of infrastructure, urbanisms, architectures, and landscapes toward a privileging of production. more …

[4]
City Eco Lab at Biennale Internationale Design – Saint Etienne – 15-30 November, 2008

City Eco Lab is an event, a market of travelling projects that bears witness to experiments carried out around the country. For this reason, the 2008 biennial, will organise workshops, encounters and exchanges centred around daily life themes: foodstuffs, water, energy, mobility etc. Visitors will be encouraged to think about how they might use these commodities in a more sustainable world.

City Eco Lab blog and an outline by John Thackara (the curator)

[5]
Urban Farmer Will Allen receives award, a (50.000 USD) genius grant from the MacArthur Foundation:

Will Allen is an urban farmer who is transforming the cultivation, production, and delivery of healthy foods to underserved, urban populations. In 1995, while assisting neighborhood children with a gardening project, Allen began developing the farming methods and educational programs that are now the hallmark of the non-profit organization Growing Power, which he directs and co-founded. Guiding all is his efforts is the recognition that the unhealthy diets of low-income, urban populations, and such related health problems as obesity and diabetes, largely are attributable to limited access to safe and affordable fresh fruits and vegetables. more info about Allen at Macarthur

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EpTWQWx1MQ]

Here the NYT article: “An Urban Farmer Is Rewarded for His Dream

Posted by Jeroen Beekmans on 02-11-2008
| No comments | Add comment

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Volume


Click here to learn more!

 

Current Issue


Volume #31 — Guilty Landscapes
Buy here



Guilt has been effectively used to control and manipulate the masses. But it can also be the start of a change for the better: awareness, concern, action. Engagement and guilt are never far apart. Engagement is sublimated guilt. We can build on guilt, but can we build with guilt? Is guilt a material to design with?

| Read more

Special


Limited Edition
Volume Shopping Bag

NL: EUR 7,50
International: EUR 10





This unique Volume bag was conceptualized by Daniel van der Velden and Maureen Mooren. Though originally conceived as T-shirts, we couldn't resist re-publishing this text now that it is again so actual.
 

On the Agenda


| agenda


Book Store


Go to the book store.

Dossiers


Al Manakh Gulf Continued (14)
Collective City (3)
Counterculture (6)
Guilty Landscapes (2)
Internet of Things (14)
Privatize! (5)
Suburbia After the Crash (4)
Sustainability Reloaded (32)
The Moon (14)

 


Al Manakh





Archives


  • | May 2012 (7)
  • | April 2012 (6)
  • | March 2012 (7)
  • | February 2012 (12)
  • | January 2012 (5)
  • | December 2011 (3)
  • | November 2011 (6)
  • | October 2011 (4)


  • | 2012 (37)
  • | 2011 (59)
  • | 2010 (82)
  • | 2009 (46)
  • | 2008 (39)
  • | 2007 (9)
  • | 2006 (5)
  • | 2005 (4)
  • Info


    Volume is an independent quarterly magazine that sets the agenda for architecture and design.

    Volume is published by the Archis foundation.


     

    On Twitter




    The Issues Archive


    Explore the vast archive of Volume and its predecessor Archis. All the issues since 1993, their covers, full tables of content and a growing amount of articles are online.



    On Facebook


    Volume on Facebook

    Archis SEE Network



    Action!