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10 results for the search term: urban ecosystems
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6
POPS
‘Air Tree’ Structures in Madrid produce Oxygen and Energy
thedoorway
by thedoorway  5-10-2008    2
  by papananook  
3
POPS
this legless lizard looks suspiciously like a 'snak'!
silvanaraihane
by silvanaraihane  4-29-2008    3
  by tanyamm  
7
POPS
Great Lakes algae blooms-"No simple solution"
pokkets
by pokkets  10-6-2007    4
  by zadoz  
21
POPS
Vertical farms coming to a high rise near you
adamc
by adamc  1-30-2007    5
  by mugofcoffee  
1
POPS
Wes Clark's 100 Year Vision
xynthee
by xynthee  11-11-2006    1
  by egoldstein  
0
POPS
Environmental Change in Peri-Urban Areas and Human and Ecosystem Health
kmcolo
by kmcolo  12-30-2008   
 No Remarks
1
POPS
NOAA Report Calls Flame Retardant Concern
violetnightshade
by violetnightshade  4-2-2009   
 No Remarks
0
POPS
Save that water
lindabeekeeper
by lindabeekeeper  7-16-2008   
 No Remarks
5
POPS
To Beat the Heat in Madrid: Build an Air Tree
urbanlife
by urbanlife  1-25-2008   
 A new structure that will “climatically transform” its urban architecture. These trees will cool the surrounding environments and as a bonus generate clean electricity. Designed by Urban Ecosystems
2
POPS
Jane's Walk (Ottawa, Canada)
egsnyder
by egsnyder  5-2-2008   
 Who is Jane Jacobs? Edit Jane Jacobs (1916-2006) was an urbanist and activist whose writings championed a fresh, community-based approach to understanding, organizing, designing, and building cities. She had no formal training as a planner, and yet her 1961 best-seller, The Death and Life of Great American Cities, and her later books introduced ground-breaking ideas about how cities function, evolve, and succeed or fail that now seem like common sense to today’s architects, planners, politicians, and activists. Jacobs saw cities as ecosystems with their own dynamics that would evolve over time according to how they were used. With a keen eye for detail, she wrote eloquently about sidewalks, parks, retail design, and self-organization. She promoted higher density, short blocks, local economies, and mixed uses. Jacobs helped derail the car-centred approach to urban planning in both New York City and Toronto, invigorating neighbourhood activism by helping stop the expansion of expr
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