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Rau muống, nostalgia, and war, by Tuyen Le, Mary Le.
Behind the guesthouse was a luscious
garden
named vườn di cư (migrating
garden
) by the artist Tuấn Mami. A
garden
full of vegetables that the local Vietnamese community has donated to the artist to build a green haven full of produce.
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The Garden of the Meanwhile: An Architectural Fiction, by Stefan Gzyl.
The
Garden
of the Meanwhile: An Architectural Fiction. Words and Images. Stefan Gzyl.
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Woe Is Me, Once a Prize, Now... A Pariah, by Tuyen Le.
Once, I was the most desirable exotic plant, "a capital plant for a small town
garden
", or in a friendlier tone, "a handsome bush".
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People are in fields, by Nicole van Roij.
Its public
gardens
are interwoven with the geometrical yellow-brick architecture of the building. The brick sculptures and artworks placed on the two-centimetre-cut grass reflect the language of the museum.
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Missing Urbanists, by Federico Ruiz.
She misses the Palestinian mountains and the roofs of the houses that stand on them: “You don’t have space; you have a house next to house next to house, then behind you a house, in front of you a house, so your roof is your
garden
.
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Ark[s], by Aikaterina Myserli.
Since March 2011 almost 1,6 million
migrants
arrived on the southern borders of Europe by boat, while 13.179 people died in the waters of the Mediterranean Sea. The case of Greece.
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Inside 'Inside' reflections on collapse, by Stefan Gzyl.
My trip had an objective: finding out how
migrants
’ vacant spaces were being used and transformed amidst the country’s collapse.
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Diamond in the Rough, Forever Young, by Jonas Althuis.
During the 19th and 20th centuries, shipping and maritime industries brought prosperity, attracting huge numbers of
migrants
from surrounding regions to come work in the harbours and ship-building docks that were at the time still close to the city centre
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No Bombing, No Heavy Petting, Just Stay in Your Lanes, by Sam Eadington.
I scrolled around the area on Google Maps looking down on all the villas with their own little pool in their own little
garden
.
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Domestic calamities, by Federico Ruiz.
C. nods and laughs nervously: “Yes, they are in my
garden
.”. The phone rings. Professor K. says he must hang up for a moment.
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The Paths That We Must Walk, by Chun Kit "CK" Wong.
Upon reaching
Garde
de Poissy, the train station closest to Villa Savoye, it instantly occurred to me that my imaginations were far from the truth.
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Language and Design Cognition: Toward a theory of Language Based Design, by Christopher Clarkson.
Gardner
has also conceded that the different aspects of language, such as syntax and phonology lie truer to language’s assumed position as an analytical tool, whilst things like semantics and pragmatics involve other intelligences.
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An ode to the pavement, by Margot Hols.
My physical living, working and exercising space may have been restricted to 14m2, but the
garden
has never seen my face so many times per day and I’m rediscovering my tiny neighbourhood.
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Inscribing Spaces, by Chun Kit "CK" Wong.
Five points of Architecture. , Le Corbusier introduced the concept of a roof
garden
, as a physical replacement of the land the building has displaced.
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Incredible Nottingham, by Dorsa Ghaemi, Francien Fons, Jolt Wiersma and Sun Ah Hwang.
Sherwood Estate –
Garden
City, 1920’s: "Sherwood Estate, habitations fit for the heroes that had won the war, was built in the periphery of the city according to
garden
city principles.
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If not now, then when?, by Inez Margaux Van Oeveren & Gigi Altman.
Instead of only using the space for waiting for the tram, we also suggested charging and parking bicycles and a green roof to purify the air in cities or being used as a vegetable
garden
for the residents.
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Tracing Archaeology, by Nicole van Roij.
An interesting example of combining the interpretations in a design is the recently built residential tower Stone
Garden
in Beirut, designed by the Beirut-born Lina Ghotmeh.
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Fyre Festival, by Jack Oliver Petch.
You can’t tell me our renders don’t feature glamorous people enjoying impossible spaces - developments thrive on images of smiling kids running through natural
gardens
. The only difference is that these folk were called out on their lies.
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Thoughts on Green, by Valentin Zech.
Humans keep them alive, especially in parks and
gardens
, because their atypical red colour breaks with the green mainstream. We always want the rare and exceptional, even if it actually means the tree is sick. Green is a name. Green is wisdom.
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A subjective take on greenwashing, by Katarzyna Soltysiak and Ecaterina Stefanescu.
Adding hanging
gardens
and a state-of-the-art ventilation system is not good enough if you are ignoring fair working practices or the fact that your client actively rejects the idea of climate change.
…
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