A Queen’s biology professor is gaining international attention for his work on a study that proves the contaminating effects of Alberta’s oil sands.
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A Queen’s biology professor is gaining international attention for his work on a study that proves the contaminating effects of Alberta’s oil sands.
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MAD has unveiled plans for a towering village of apartment blocks beside the Huangshan Mountains in eastern China.
Inspired by the topographical layers of the landscape, the buildings will have organically shaped floor plates and will emerge from amongst the treetops on a site beside the Taiping Lake. Via Lauren Moss, association concert urbain, Marion Caillol - MIPIM /MAPIC Press Officer , Duane Tilden
François Lanthier's comment,
November 19, 2012 4:48 PM
Love it! Where do you find all thins great information?
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For this rural Ontario home, building sustainably was less about high-tech gizmos than learning to truly love the land. The 925-sq-foot house blends into the landscape with a steel shed roof and siding; it looks like a high-design little brother to the barns on the surrounding farms, and its energy footprint is equally subtle: Designer Lisa Moffitt built it with an array of sustainable features that take the simple home off-grid...
Read about these features and learn more about this contemporary green project at dwell.com. Via Lauren Moss, Digital Sustainability Delete the scoop?
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This bioclimatic house, by Estudio José Luis Rodríguez, is a self-sufficient structure integrated into the terrain of the Canary Islands, a landscape characterized by a continuous terracing of the extreme topography.
In response to this site, the design features a basalt stone wall that supports a light structure of plywood, galvanized steel walls and glass. The building's orientation is determined by solar radiation; photovoltaic panels produce electricity, in order to achieve zero carbon emissions. The living area is connected to the outside with a space that is protected from sun and wind, while a wall located in the sleeping area to the north has a high thermal mass for passive temperature control. The design also aims to reduce its ecological footprint on the use of materials and construction systems by using local materials (basalt wall insulation covered with volcanic lapilli, for example), environmentally certified materials and no harmful elements, such as VOC compounds in synthetic paints and varnishes.
View more images of this unique, contextural and contemporary green project at the link to ArchDaily's feature... Via Lauren Moss, Susan Davis Cushing Delete the scoop?
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