A Flower Factory for the Caves Beneath Naples
[Image: The subterranean Flower Factory of Naples by Marco Zanuso; photograph by BLDGBLOG of an image from Rassegna].
I thought I'd kick off a series of posts looking at my time spent so far going through the "Underground Space Center Library" archives at the Canadian Centre for Architecture with a look at a summer 2007 issue of Rassegna magazine, its topic nothing other than underground architecture or architetture sotteranee. While the issue is not actually part of the "Underground Space Center Library" archives, it makes a convenient starting part for a few new posts.
The city of Naples, as many readers will know, is built atop a series of caverns. These continue throughout the coastal region, extending down the coast for quite some time to form grottoes, harbors, and coves; they have been depicted throughout art history and used for everything from smuggling illicit goods (see Roberto Saviano's Gomorrah, for instance) to sheltering the populace from bombing raids during World War II.
[Images: Joseph Wright of Derby, Cavern, near Naples (1774) and A Grotto in the Gulf of Salerno, Sunset (1780-81)].
As the BBC reported a few years back, these caves "have been dug out over thousands of years and used for everything from aqueducts to air raid shelters." Though "more than 900 have been discovered so far," they add, "that is believed to be only a third of what actually lies below." Approximately 2,700 caves, then: there is a whole other world beneath greater Naples.
Photographer Margaret Bourke-White was sent by LIFE magazine to document the wartime reuse of the city's most prominent geological features; from children playing on gravel hillsides to teetering stacks of agricultural machinery waiting quietly in the darkness for the day they could be reactivated, every conceivable activity of everyday life was hosted underground.
[Images: All photos by Margaret Bourke-White, courtesy of LIFE magazine].
But what sorts of sustained, economically pragmatic uses for these spaces might we develop today?
In 1988, an exhibition called Sottonapoli—Beneath Naples—explored possible architectural transformations of the caves.
Amongst those projects was a proposal for an automated "Flower Factory" by Marco Zanuso.
[Image: Underneath Naples; photograph by BLDGBLOG of an image from Rassegna].
As Francesco Trabucco, one of Zanuso's collaborators on the project, wrote in Rassegna's underground issue, the project was for—and the parenthetical comments here are Trabucco's own—"a large phytotron (a neologism referring to an accelerator of natural growth)." He continues:
The operating principle of the phytotron involves creating and monitoring the optimum microenvironment for plant growth: temperature, air humidity, lighting, photoperiodism and nutrition. At the same time, all negative factors tied to the natural environment are eliminated, i.e. climatic variation, the unpredictability of precipitation, variability in the length of the solar day, and—naturally—air and water pollution, and infestation by plants and animals. In the conditions created inside a phytotron, a plant grows at a pace that can be accelerated, with the complete absence of pollutants that are now widely present in plants grown 'naturally,' such as weed killers, insecticides, pesticides, acid rain, smog deposits and chemical fertilizers.
It's basically an underground greenhouse, of course, but a fully automated one forming its own subterranean microclimate. Think of it as a buried version of VW's legendary CarTowers in Wolfsburg, Germany, crossed with the indoor skyscraper farms so popular on architecture blogs back in 2007. The botanical results are not tomatoes, corn, wheat, or cucumbers, however, but prize flowers.
It's a kind of pharaonic Keukenhof, or a cultivated series of entombed precision-microclimates powered by a surrogate sun.
[Image: The subterranean Flower Factory of Naples by Marco Zanuso; photograph by BLDGBLOG of an image from Rassegna].
Indeed, "A circular system of solar mirrors is designed to be installed on the ground level," Trabucco explains, "thereby concentrating enormous amounts of thermal energy to a steam ball set on an upper level. The latter produces superheated steam to power the electric turbines."
Nearby that is "a sterile laboratory, set up at the system entrance, in which plant cloning and micropropagation are conducted." Successful shoots are then "placed in growth chambers until they are large enough to transplant to trays, which have holes that are sized and spaced according to the morphology of the individual plants."
These aeroponic trays of engineered flowers are then placed, via automated relay, into a series of "maturation tunnels"—in many ways quite similar to the mushroom tunnel of Mittagong—"that are 1.8 meters wide and about 100 meters long. Tunnel height varies to cater to plant morphology; the number of overlaid tunnels or growth levels depends on the height of the gallery."
From there, these flowers grown in such unique architectural circumstances would be harvested, pruned, crated, and shipped all over the world—and probably no one would know their actual origin.
[Image: The Flower Factory by Marco Zanuso; photograph by BLDGBLOG of an image from Rassegna].
In any case, the possible underground future of botanical cultivation, using specialty equipment and architectural design to transform caves into ornamental flower farms or large-scale plantations, is something I'll mention again while exploring the archives of the "Underground Space Center Library" at the CCA.
All information from: http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2010/06/flower-factory-in-caves-beneath-naples.html
Tuesday, 29 June 2010
Wednesday, 19 May 2010
The Orchid Thief: A True Story of Beauty and Obsession
The Orchid Thief is non-fiction book by American journalist Susan Orlean based on investigate the story of John Laroche, an eccentric plant dealer who had been arrested along with a crew of Seminoles for poaching rare orchids out of the South Florida swamp.
Laroche had planned to clone the orchids and then sell them for a small fortune to impassioned collectors. After he was caught in the act, Laroche set off one of the oddest legal controversies in recent memory, which brought together environmentalists, Native American activists, and devoted orchid collectors. The result is a tale that is strange, compelling, and hilarious.
"New Yorker writer Susan Orlean followed Laroche through swamps and into the eccentric world of Florida's orchid collectors, a subculture of aristocrats, fanatics, and smugglers whose obsession with plants is all-consuming. Along the way, Orlean learned the history of orchid collecting, discovered an odd pattern of plant crimes in Florida, and spend time with Laroche's partners, a tribe of Seminole Indians who are still at war with United States.
Ultimately, Susan Orlean's book is about passion itself, and the amazing lengths to which people will go to gratify it.
"The Orchid Thief is a lesson in the dark, dangerous, sometimes hilarious nature of obsession- any obsession. You sometimes don't want to read on, but find you can't help it"
Anita Manning, USA Today
"....her orchid story turns out to be distinctly 'something more'. Getting to know Mr.Laroche allows her to explore multiple subjects: orchids, Seminole history, the ecology of the Fakahatchee Strand, the fascination of Florida to con men....All that she writes here fits together because it is grounded in her personal experience...acres of opportunity where intriguing things can be found."
Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, The New York Times
"......Orchids have adapted to almost every environment on earth. They can be mutated, crossbred, and cloned. They can take the form of complex architectural structures or of garish, glamorous, luscious flowers. Not surprisingly, orchids have all sorts of sexual associations; few other flowers are as plainly erotic in appearance or effect. Even other creatures find orchids alluring. Some orchids are shaped exactly like the insect that pollinates them; the insect is drawn inside thinking it has found mate......."
Orchid Fever by Susan Orlean, The New Yourker, January 23, 1995
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0WCx6GjD8d4
(text and video: www.susanorlean.com/books/the-orchid-thief.html
luminousinspiration.wordpress.com/ )
Laroche had planned to clone the orchids and then sell them for a small fortune to impassioned collectors. After he was caught in the act, Laroche set off one of the oddest legal controversies in recent memory, which brought together environmentalists, Native American activists, and devoted orchid collectors. The result is a tale that is strange, compelling, and hilarious.
"New Yorker writer Susan Orlean followed Laroche through swamps and into the eccentric world of Florida's orchid collectors, a subculture of aristocrats, fanatics, and smugglers whose obsession with plants is all-consuming. Along the way, Orlean learned the history of orchid collecting, discovered an odd pattern of plant crimes in Florida, and spend time with Laroche's partners, a tribe of Seminole Indians who are still at war with United States.
Ultimately, Susan Orlean's book is about passion itself, and the amazing lengths to which people will go to gratify it.
"The Orchid Thief is a lesson in the dark, dangerous, sometimes hilarious nature of obsession- any obsession. You sometimes don't want to read on, but find you can't help it"
Anita Manning, USA Today
"....her orchid story turns out to be distinctly 'something more'. Getting to know Mr.Laroche allows her to explore multiple subjects: orchids, Seminole history, the ecology of the Fakahatchee Strand, the fascination of Florida to con men....All that she writes here fits together because it is grounded in her personal experience...acres of opportunity where intriguing things can be found."
Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, The New York Times
"......Orchids have adapted to almost every environment on earth. They can be mutated, crossbred, and cloned. They can take the form of complex architectural structures or of garish, glamorous, luscious flowers. Not surprisingly, orchids have all sorts of sexual associations; few other flowers are as plainly erotic in appearance or effect. Even other creatures find orchids alluring. Some orchids are shaped exactly like the insect that pollinates them; the insect is drawn inside thinking it has found mate......."
Orchid Fever by Susan Orlean, The New Yourker, January 23, 1995
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0WCx6GjD8d4
(text and video: www.susanorlean.com/books/the-orchid-thief.html
luminousinspiration.wordpress.com/ )
Saturday, 23 January 2010
LightScraper
LightScraper by Eness
The Lightscraper comes to Melbourne Docklands.
Kindly supported by city of Melbourne.
Ignite Festival- 30st May-14th June 09 day (no light) night (it's bright)
Location - New Quay Promenade.
For more info on the LightScraper.
ENESS Interactive 3d projection mapping
KingPower
The King power complex located in Bangkok Thailand,
enjoyed a nightly interactive projection spectacle
over three months.
It all began with a 15 minute projection and live dance
performance, celebrating King Power 20th anniversary,
during October followed by a series of interactive music
and 3d animation scapes till - New Years Eve 2009.
Five Barco projectors where used spaning the length
of the 90 meter building, creating a 6400x1024 pixel
canvas for ENESS to blanket with 3d real-time
animation and sound delight. Using our in-house
3d projection engine "Pixile" we were able to map
and match every surface of the building in days.
Any tech slavey person would assume this type of
huge installation would require months of preparation
and series of networked machines to achieve the task.
We did it all with 1 machine and 1 month. Try that..
"Cross section in space" created by Eness
Cross Sections in Space
Cross sections in space -
a solid cross section of time and space.
Virtual 3D bodies passing through the sections deflect
and ricochet thousands of surrounding light particles.
The viewer directly affects the gravity, direction and
speed as they walk through the space. Beautiful
and infinite formations are created.
Exhibited at - ART Taipei 2009, Invited by the -
Museum of Comtemporary Art, Taipei (MocaTp)
"Openhouse" by Francis Bitonti and Brian Osborn
The illuminated canopy fills the upper portion of a small courtyard in the French Quarter. As participants fill the courtyard the space is transformed by a field of kinetic devices.
“Our objective is to create a fluid public condition which is programmed by habitation and social interaction.” Participants control the architecture through the seating. The ceiling is created from a grid of robotic components. The components randomly contract and expand while at rest. When the space is empty only one turns on at a time. As people begin to occupy the seats under the canopy, more components begin flickering on and off. Two people will cause three units to randomly dance around three people will activate four and four people will activate 5 etc.
A spectator interacting with openHouse
One of the many robotic components of openHouse
View from below
Closeup of one of the openHouse robotic components
Text and images from: "Urban Umbrella" Wins urbanSHED Design Competition
Images :Francis Bitonti/ Brian Osborn
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