Urban heat island effect is measured as the temperature difference between the air within the urban canopy layer and that measured in rural areas.  Built urban environments can suppress air movements, obstructing cool flows and exacerbating pollution.  However, as Alexander Robinson argues in his research for SWA, “high density cities may be our best sustainable… Read more »

YingYuHung

Posted by
in Landscape Infrastructure
on

Be the first to comment

Share this post
Facebook
Twitter

GALVESTON-BAY

Experiencing severe coastal storms has always been part of living near the sea; however, current planning models and infrastructures are putting residents in positions equivalent to placing their heads in the sand. On September 13, 2008 Hurricane Ike struck the upper Texas coast, wreaking havoc on infrastructure and washing away entire communities. In response, SWA… Read more »

Urban landscapes are most often designed within a limited range of expectations. Visually interesting, sometimes providing important ecosystem services, designed landscape environments should include other, richer possibilities. There are urban farms. There are community, rooftop and kitchen gardens. There are growing numbers of people interested in reducing the carbon and energy footprint of our foods…. Read more »

JoeRunco

Posted by
in Urban Agriculture
on

Be the first to comment

Share this post
Facebook
Twitter

In recent posts we’ve been discussing art and science as related to ecology. Art and science are two concepts that are generally considered to be binaries-terms in opposition to one another. Yet we are interested in creating hybrids between these two, exploring relationships in which art and science are fused together in our design methodology…. Read more »

Andrew Watkins

Posted by
in Urban Ecologies
on

Be the first to comment

Share this post
Facebook
Twitter

If there is magic on this planet, it is contained in water…. Its substance reaches everywhere; it touches the past and prepares the future; it moves under the poles and wanders thinly in the heights of air. It can assume forms of exquisite perfection in a snowflake, or strip the living to a single shining… Read more »

SeanOMalley

Posted by
in Arts and Culture
on

Be the first to comment

Share this post
Facebook
Twitter

Opportunities abound for engineering encounters between guests and their food in the landscape – a breakfast orangerie where fruit is freshly plucked for juice, courtyard gardens planted in orchards of nuts and fruits, herbal lawns at the spa, a poolside planted with date palms. Many hotels are integrating local and on-site food production in a… Read more »

EllenBurke

Posted by
in Arts and Culture, Urban Agriculture
on

Be the first to comment

Share this post
Facebook
Twitter