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Incheon International Airport, Terminal 1 - Incheon, Korea
HDA : Consultant for engineering and design
Client : KOACA -Korea Airport Construction authority
Architect: KACI Architects with Fentress Bradburn
Date : 1994 - 2001
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/
Orchard Road - Singapour -
HDA : Facades designer -
Client : Swire Properties LTD
Architect : Raymond Woo & Associates Architects
2009-2015
Cover of the chapter of step 4 - Overview yourself, an introspection into yourself, your strong & week points, your opportunities & challenges that you face.
Dr. Ruben Morawicki and lab technician Delmy Diaz use colorimetric analysis to determine protein content of fermented sorghum samples. Fermentation increases protein content and also makes it more available for digestion in animal feed.
SOIL ANALYSiS of Salamander Springs Farm market gardens shows the transformation of the soil over several years of production.
Terms such as CEC (Cation Exchange Capacity), Soil pH, soil organic matter, and the various crop nutrients are discussed.
This slide also includes a little "Tale of Two Soils" written on Salamander Springs Farm highlighting the important of working with nature's processes and not tilling!
Researchers Phil Sharer (front) and Aymeric Rousseau work on AUTONOMIE, Argonne's next-generation plug-and-play software architecture for evaluating the fuel consumption benefits of both components and powertrain throughout the different phases of model-based design, from modeling to hardware implementation.
Photo by Wes Agresta / Courtesy Argonne National Laboratory.
Caught some interesting prismatic colors off the side of an aquarium at sunset. No digital processing.
So as it turns out Architecture is yet another one of our systems that serves us badly while attending to another agenda having to do with personal accolades. It's just not getting the attention that our food system, transport system and land use system has. It should since the built environment is second after our agricultural system in resource use.
Stewart Brand embarks on a fascinating study posing questions that no one seems to ask, mainly, do our buildings really serve our needs. Mostly no, since architects win awards given by judges who don't visit the actual buildings. They just look at pictures. And no one seems to nail them if the roof leaks which apparently they mostly do since so many public buildings have flat roofs. Yep I can attest to that, but I thought it was an exception not the rule. Surely someone's figures out how to make flat roofs not leak. They are so common. He also mentions that Frank Lloyd Wright's buildings always leak. That makes him a fitting icon for Ayn Rand's world view—beautiful theory, but comepletely inflexible and impractical, a museum for the individual artist with no thought to the people who have to live with it.
Having been in a few award winning buildings at Stanford I knew the consequences of having fancy architects do a building. I've heard the complaints. So it was gratifying to have Stewart get on his soap box about it and he's also local so talks a lot about Bay Area buildings. He also comments on how our financing system makes it difficult to build houses or commercial structures slowly enough or incrementally so as to adapt to what's needed. You can only do that if you start with an old warehouse from back when buildings were utilitarian and adaptable.
I've heard Stewart Brand when he introduced Orlov at the Long Now Society wearing his gumboots because he lives aboard an old tug boat. It was Catherine who pointed out that this was his book. He's more well known as the creater of the Whole Earth catalog which was quite influential for me as well. So it was interesting to see him take back his enthusiasm for Buckminster Fuller's dome. (Too difficult for ordinary people to build and fix and it leaked every which way, though to be fair Bucky envisioned the dome as a pre-fab factory built appliance.)
He was also gratifying because he gave me language for what I myself have come to prefer. What he calls the low road building is one that no one cares about so you can do anything to it. I love those situations. He also talks about historical preservation as an overlooked environmental building practice. And he's the first person I've read to speak kindly of the mobile home and travel trailer as permanent shelter.
Published in 1994, I've seen this book around, but never picked it up because I thought it was going to be a stuffy academic deconstructive treatise. Then it was referred to in another book I was reading so I checked it out and was so glad I did, since it gave me so much insight plus it was very readable and anecdotal and now that I'm a rehabber it couldn't be more timely.
Five Rayons North-West of Moscow (Russia)
Pedestrian connection analysis
Overview
Map data copyright Openstreetmap and its contributors
© All Rights Reserved - Black Diamond Images
Family : Myrtaceae
While purchasing rainforest plants today 2/11/2020 at Taree Council Nursery my attention was drawn to a planted mature Rhodamnia rubescens, a critically endangered shrub, growing in the nursery.
I was surprised to see it with fruit developing.
Myrtle Rust, as expected, was active on the fruit and also on the leaves but the plant was surviving nevertheless.
The plant had really suffered in the 2019 drought but had come back in the spring of 2020.
Not far from this plant another surprise was in store - another critically endangered species, a juvenile Rhodomyrtus psidioides with developing flower buds.
The plant was about 2 metres tall and looked relatively free of Myrtle Rust.
On my own property at Diamond Beach both these species were once common.
Except for a small population of 15 very healthy Rhodamnia rubescens plants all the hundreds of plants of both species that once existed have progressively died since Myrtle Rust hit in the spring of 2011.
This spring, 2020, however I've noted a number of what appear to be root suckers of both species popping up in a few places where no other plants of either species are surviving.
I am monitoring their growth however based on past experience they will grow to about 20-30 cm by which time Myrtle Rust will set them back, if not completely kill them.
Early in 2020 a myrtle rust scientist visited the property and examined the 15 healthy Rhodamnia rubescens plants. Cuttings and genetic material were taken and sent to Mount Annan Botanic Gardens for cultivation and DNA analysis to try to establish if the 15 plants are suckers off one, or a number of plants, or if they are all individual plants exhibiting apparent resistance to Myrtle Rust.
While its unlikely the healthy Rhodamnia rubescens are resistant to Myrtle Rust, if in fact they are proven to be so, or at least partially so, then these plants could offer some optimism for the survival of this critically endangered species.
IDENTIFYING AUSTRALIAN RAINFOREST PLANTS,TREES & FUNGI - Flick Group --> DATABASE INDEX
Fabric pull for twin girls. Hot pink binding, navy background, pink, gray, green, aqua, and low volume "scraps". Stuck on a pattern. Options:
a) Churn Dash (like this: thebusybeequiltshop.blogspot.ca/2013/04/potluck-churn-das...)
b) Wonky Stars (like this: www.stitchedincolor.com/2011/02/wonky-star-love.html)
c) Flying Geese (inspired by this: craftyblossom.blogspot.com/2013/04/introducing-collage-by... )
d) "pinwheels" (like this: quiltstory.blogspot.com/2011/06/two-little-banshees-blog-...)
e) Ribbon Star blocks (like this: www.freshlypieced.com/2012/01/ribbon-star-block-tutorial....)
f) card trick (like this: ohsewtempting.wordpress.com/2012/10/26/traditional-patchw...)
g) rectangle quilt (like this: filminthefridge.com/2011/01/31/innocent-crush-rectangle-s...)
h) Toss the whole fabric pull, raid my solids, and go for a disappearing nine patch like this one which I am COMPLETELY OBSESSED with (media-cache-ec4.pinterest.com/736x/ba/53/8a/ba538a76cc129... - can't find the source link, sorry!)
Opinions?
Blogged: modernbiasblog.com/?p=161
DID YOU KNOW? Many of the imaging systems used by Macroscopic Solutions are available for individuals, researchers and labs to purchase?
Products are available here: macroscopicsolutions.com/product-category/imaging-products/
Services are available here: macroscopicsolutions.com/product-category/imaging_services/
DID YOU KNOW? Many of the imaging systems used by Macroscopic Solutions are available for individuals, researchers and labs to purchase?
Products are available here: macroscopicsolutions.com/product-category/imaging-products/
Services are available here: macroscopicsolutions.com/product-category/imaging_services/
Root cause analysis (RCA) is a class of problem solving methods aimed at identifying the root causes of problems or events. This template may be used for up to 6 possible causes, which may be weighted and displayed on a small fishbone diagram. SpreadsheetWEB version of the template provides all features of the template, also can be used, saved and edited online.
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