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Refuge faunique Marguerite-D'Youville - L'île Saint-Bernard
Nature reserve in Châteauguay, Québec where the Châteauguay river meets Lac Saint-Louis:
Montezuma County, Cortez,CO, Mesa Verde National Park - some of the best-preserved cliff dwellings in the world - The Anasazi inhabited Mesa Verde between 600 to 1300 - Spruce Tree House - (2 towers - constructed beetween AD 1200-1278 - 8 kivas) - kiva
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Architectural conception for central Milton Keynes. 'Tree House', created by artist Robert Rusin, draws inspiration from what Milton Keynes has been since day one.
Unusual, yet very attractive, free-form façade/ décor makes this rectangular shape much more exciting. Bright silhouette of a tree, contrasted with navy-blue glass pays a homage to 'garden city' idea of which Milton Keynes is the best and most-successful example.
See also www.mkfive.co.uk
Mia and Pato helped us build a tree house in the backyard for the kids. This was a 5 day project (plus planning, plus finishing) -- and so much fun to execute and play with.
Amazon Tree Houses was formed in 2007 by Derek Saunderson, a Joiner and Treehouse builder with over twenty years experience. His aim was to bring the craft of treehouse building back from the accountants and sales-men, and put it firmly back in the hands of the crafts-men who's passion for treehouse building shows in their skill and commitment for creating beautiful natural structures.
This is what happens when the temperatures change from the 40s to 70s in 4 days - spring arrives quickly - almost summer-like. From skunk cabbage just popping up, now the blossoming trees are beginning.... Yay!
The backside- ladder access to the suspended level. This ladder is just hanging from the upper level it is not connected to the main treehouse. Similarly the mid level is not connected to the upper level and does not yet have ladder access- but there are plenty of branches to climb on.
Have you ever been to a place that is so magical it feels like another world entirely?
TreeHouse Point is that place for me.
As a child I could scale any tree and would beg for a treehouse but my dad never relented. So when I saw this place it was a childhood dream realized. These are artistic, individual, fantastic little living spaces. You can spend the night in most of them! The photos of this place I've posted here hardly scratch the surface. I encourage you to at the very least take a tour of this stunning, magical property full of unique treehouses. There are many woodland paths, little rustic bridges, the most beautiful bubbling river full of smooth rocks, a gorgeous main lodge--the entire place feels like a fairyland or something out of Lord of the Rings or some such fantasy book or movie.
The experience is hardly one I can properly sum up. You must experience it for yourself.
There's seventeen folk put their names down to rent this
off the council. Eighteen if you include me!
CONNIE MERRIMAN
Tree House (2010)
Dawn Redwood tree, light, paper, wood
I have always wanted a tree house. When I was young, I spent a lot of time in the top of a cherry tree that grew in a woods adjacent to my home. You could be quiet in the branches and watch animals walking the paths below. I thought it would be good to have a shelter for myself in the tree so that I could be more safe and comfortable.
Now I think of a tree house in another way. In a gesture to address the issues of stewardship, this fragile house is made to shelter a tree, and the natural world it represents, from humanity’s built environment. It is a house for a tree.
Constance Merriman creates work that combine traditional mark making and constructions with time based media and documentation systems to form installations that explore the relationships of the environment, natural resources and economic and political power. Merriman’s work has been exhibited in galleries, museums and in public settings. She is currently a collaborator in the Community Forest Project, an investigation into the role and value of greenspace within the urban environment, at Carnegie Mellon University’s STUDIO for Creative Inquiry.
Some lucky kid has this very cool tree house complete with a ship's wheel ready for his sea voyages.
This image appears in my Boats set on flickr because the kid mentioned above may honestly believe it shows the bridge of his ship. If that's the case, the boat set is where the picture belongs.
tree-house-20120411_3705
The paranoid people in the fancy house have a fancy tree house in this tree next to the park. I'd have loved to have had a tree house like this when I was a kid. My Dad built tree houses for my brothers and me a couple of times, and those were fun, but none of them were as fancy as this.
Here's a thing about this tree house. There is a rail fence running along this home's property, presumably marking private property from the property of the village park. The ladder leading into the tree house starts out on the private side of the fence, but the tree house is on the park side. Now, who knows where the property line actually runs, but this all suggests the owner of the house has squatted on park property and claimed a public tree as his own. Which is pretty typical of the type of gun-toting conservative who lives here. I'm sure it's a Trump voter. There's a sign next to the public tree that says "Keep Out. No Trespassing."
A Badminton game in front of the Rubel Castle Tree House. Sandy Krause and Ashni Jarrosiak (foreground) playing.