Impossible Pillars: Another Natural Wonder of the World
September 23, 2011 by admin · View Comments
[ By Steph in 7 Wonders Series & Geography & Travel & Nature & Ecosystems. ]

Seeming to defy the laws of gravity, teetering, spindly mountains tower into the air in a surreal display reminiscent of the floating monoliths in the movie Avatar. This is China’s Zhangjiajie National Forest Park, and its particularly stunning natural beauty can’t be found anywhere else in the world.


(top & above images via: kenner116, fishki.net)
Located 19 miles from urban Zhangjiajie, a city in the northern Hunan Province, this park is part of the Wulingyuan Scenic Area, an officially recognized UNESCO World Heritage Site. Enjoying a comfortable sub-tropical climate, the park attracts thousands of year-round visitors who come to gawk at its unusual landscape.

(images via: top china travel, wikimedia commons)
Tourists navigate the many hiking trails and attempt to capture on film the staggering pillars that make the park so famous. The small girth of these towering mountains, particularly notable for their height, is the result of many years of erosion which occurs during the expansion of ice in the winter.


(images via: fishki.net, kenner116)
The similarity of the floating ‘Hallelujah Mountains’ in Avatar to the pillars in Zhangjiajie National Forest Park is no accident. The film’s director and production designers were inspired by their ethereal appearance. One pillar, the 3,544-foot Southern Sky Column, has been officially renamed ‘Avatar Hallelujah Mountain’ in honor of the movie.
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:

Amazing Eco-Walkway Bridges Gap Between City and Nature
Somewhere between Singapore’s commercial center and the coast lies a thrilling 120-foot tall walkway through the treetops. It’s a treaty between man and nature.
2 Comments - Click Here to Read More
GLOBAL 3000 | Social Entrepreneur Peru: Albina Ruiz and the Ciudad Saludable
May 12, 2011 by · View Comments
Hardworking Waste Workers — A Peruvian Woman Turns Workers Into Small-Scale Entrepreneurs Pucallpa is a fast-growing city in the Amazon region of Peru. A few years ago, the city was in danger of drowning in garbage because, like many other cities in the world, it had no organized waste disposal system. Thanks to Albina Ruiz, that has changed. She founded the recycling company “Ciudad Saludable”, which means “Healthy City”, and has turned the waste problem into an entrepreneurial success story. The garbage collectors are not employees, but partners in “Ciudad Saludable”. They feel responsible and fulfill an important task for the community. For her work, Albina Ruiz has been honored by the Schwab Foundation. Ciudad Saludable is now so successful that more and more cities in Peru and neighboring countries want to adopt it as a model.
Lost Civilizations: 12 Societies that Vanished in Mystery
May 2, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
[ By Steph in History & Trivia & Science & Research. ]

Why would a flourishing civilization, advanced for its time, suddenly cease to exist, its inhabitants gone and its architecture abandoned? Conspiracy theorists offer all manner of offbeat explanations including alien abduction, but in the case of these 12 societies, the causes were likely more mundane: natural disasters, climate change, invasions and economic irrelevance. Still, we don’t know – and likely never will – exactly what happened to bring about the end of the Khmer Empire of Cambodia, the Minoan society of Crete or two ancient civilizations right here in the United States.
The Indus Valley Civilization, Pakistan

(images via: national geographic)
Home to one of the greatest man-made architectural wonders of the ancient world, the Indus Valley Civilization (known at the height of its influence as the Harappan Civilization) was among the largest early urban settlements on any continent. Located in modern-day Pakistan, the Indus Valley Civilization thrived 4,500 years ago and was then forgotten but for local legends until ruins were excavated in the 1920s. Sophisticated and technologically advanced, this civilization, including the famous Mohenjo Daro, featured the world’s first urban sanitation systems as well as evidence of surprising proficiency in mathematics, engineering and even proto-dentistry. By the year 1500 BCE, the Indus Valley Civilization was virtually abandoned, possibly after invasion by Indo-European tribes or a collapse in agriculture due to climate change.
The Khmer Empire, Cambodia

(images via: tourism object, christian haugen, christoph rooms)
Once one of the most powerful empires of Southeast Asia, the Khmer civilization spread from modern-day Cambodia out into Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar and Malaysia and is best known today for Angkor, its capital city. The empire dates back to 802 CE. Other than stone inscriptions, no written records survive, so our knowledge of the civilization is pieced together from archaeological investigations, reliefs in temple walls and the reports of outsiders including the Chinese. The Khmers practiced both Hinduism and Buddhism and built intricate temples, towers and other structures including Angkor Wat, dedicated to the god Vishnu. Attacks from outsiders, deaths from the plague, water management issues affecting the rice crops and conflicts over power among the royal families likely led to the end of this empire, which finally fell to the Thai people in 1431 CE.
The Anasazi, New Mexico, United States

(images via: erik anestad, national geographic, puroticorico)
‘Anasazi’ is the modern name for the ancient Pueblo Peoples who inhabited the ‘Four Corners’ area of the southwestern United States at the junction of the states of Utah, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado. Their civilization emerged around the 12th century BCE, and remains best known for stone and adobe structures built along cliff walls including Cliff Palace in Mesa Verde National Park, the White House Ruins and Pueblo Bonito at the northern rim of Chaco Canyon. This architecture evolved into amazing multi-story dwellings that were often only accessible by rope or ladder.
The ancient Puebloans did not necessarily “vanish”; they did, however, abandon their homeland for reasons unknown in the 12th and 13th centuries CE. Many experts as well as modern Puebloans, who claim the ancient Puebloans as their ancestors, believe that deforestation and droughts caused internal conflict and warfare, causing these ancient people to disseminate.
The Olmec Civilization, Mexico

(images via: wikimedia commons, bernt rostad)
In what is now Veracruz and Tabasco in the tropical lowlands of south-central Mexico was once a grand Pre-Columbian civilization that constructed incredible ‘colossal heads’, practiced bloodletting and human sacrifice, invented the concept of the number zero and essentially laid the foundation for every Mesoamerican culture that was to follow. The Olmec civilization might even have been the first civilization in the Western hemisphere to develop a writing system, and possibly invented the compass and the Mesoamerican calendar. Dating to around 1500 BCE, the Olmec civilization wasn’t ‘discovered’ by historians until the mid-19th century. Its decline is blamed on environmental changes caused by volcanic eruptions, earthquakes or possibly damaging agricultural practices.
The Aksumite Empire, Ethiopia

(images via: wikimedia commons)
A major participant in trade with the Roman Empire and Ancient India, the Aksumite Empire – also known as the Kingdom of Aksum or Axum – ruled over northeastern Africa including Ethiopia starting in the 4th century BCE. Theorized to be the home of the Queen of Sheba, the Aksumite Empire was likely an indigenous African development that grew to encompass most of present-day Eritrea, northern Ethiopia, Yemen, southern Saudi Arabia and northern Sudan. The empire had its own alphabet and erected enormous obelisks including the Obelisk of Axum, which still stands. It was the first major empire to convert to Christianity. Axum’s decline has been variously blamed on economic isolation due to the expansion of the Islamic Empire, invasions, or climate change which altered the flood pattern of the Nile.
The Minoans, Crete

(images via: wikimedia commons)
Named after the mythical king Minos, the Minoan civilization of Crete wasn’t rediscovered until early in the 20th century, but since then we have uncovered fascinating puzzle pieces of an ancient civilization that began flourishing over 7,000 years ago, hitting its zenith around 1600 BCE. Centers of commerce appeared around 2700 BCE, and as the civilization advanced, palaces of greater and greater complexity were built and rebuilt following series of disasters – likely earthquakes and eruptions of the Thera volcano. One of these palaces was Knossos, the ‘labyrinth’ associated with the legend of Minos, which is now a major archaeological site and tourist attraction. But sometime around 1450 BCE, there was an unknown disaster that the Minoans apparently weren’t able to recover from, and the civilization met its downfall. In moved the Mycenaeans – who would later join the Minoans in the void of vanished empires. Fun fact: the Minoan script, known as Linear A, remains undeciphered.
The Cucuteni-Trypillians, Ukraine & Romania

(images via: wikimedia commons, germanici)
The largest settlements in Neolithic Europe were built by the Cucuteni-Trypillians of modern-day Ukraine, Romania and Moldova. This mysterious civilization, which flourished between 5500 BCE and 2750 BCE, is characterized by its uniquely patterned pottery and by its bizarre habit of burning its own villages to the ground every 60 to 80 years. The villages were rebuilt again and again, on top of the ashes of the old ones. About 3,000 Cucuteni-Trypillian archaeological sites have been identified including what may be the world’s oldest saltworks. Like so many other civilizations, the Cucuteni-Trypillians may have been wiped out by climate change, but other theories suggest that they gradually blended with other groups until their own culture was lost.
The Nabateans, Jordan

(images via: wikimedia commons)
The ancient Nabatean civilization occupied southern Jordan, Canaan and northern Arabia starting in the sixth century BCE, when the Aramaic-speaking Nabatean nomads began gradually migrating from Arabia. Their legacy is epitomized by the breathtaking city of Petra, carved into the solid sandstone rock of Jordan’s mountains, and they are remembered for their skill in water engineering, managing a complex system of dams, canals and reservoirs which helped them expand and thrive in an arid desert region. Little is known of their culture and no written literature survives. They were overtaken by the Romans in 65 BCE, who took full control by 106 CE, renaming the kingdom Arabia Petrea. Sometime around the 4th century CE, the Nabateans left Petra for unknown reasons. It’s believed that, after centuries of foreign rule, the Nabatean civilization was reduced to disparate groups of Greek-writing peasants who were eventually converted to Christianity before their lands were seized altogether by Arab invaders.
Cahokia, Illinois, United States

(images via: wikimedia commons)
Few Americans realize that we have the remains of a lost ancient civilization right here in the United States – in Illinois, just across the Mississippi River from St. Louis, Missouri. The Cahokia Mounds Historic Site is all that is left of an indigenous civilization of the Mississippian culture, settled around 600 CE. The inhabitants of Cahokia did not seem to keep written records, but preserved at this World Heritage Site are a series of grass-covered man-made ‘mounds’ as well as pottery and other artifacts. Cahokia was once the largest urban center north of the great Mesoamerican cities of Mexico and may have once been home to as many as 40,000 people – greater, in the year 1250 CE, than the population of London, England, or that of any American city that was to come until Philadelphia around the year 1800. Cahokia was abandoned around 100 years before Europeans arrived in North America, possibly due to environmental factors or invasion of outside peoples.
The Mycenaean Civilization, Greece

(images via: clairity, wikimedia commons)
Unlike the Minoans before them, the Mycenae didn’t flourish by trade alone – they set out to conquer, and expanded into an empire that overtook much of Greece. Hitting its peak right around the time the Minoans disappeared, the Mycenaean civilization enjoyed five centuries of domination before vanishing sometime around 1100 BCE. Hellenic legend holds that the Mycenae defeated the possibly mythological Troy, and the empire’s artifacts have been found as far away as Ireland. In fact, this culturally and economically wealthy civilization has left behind a wealth of art, architecture and artifacts. What happened to the Mycenae? Natural disasters are possible, but most experts believe that it was either foreign invaders or internal conflict that brought about the end to this once-great empire.
Moche Civilization, Peru

(images via: national geographic, inkanatura)
More of a collection of peoples that shared a similar culture than an empire, the Moche civilization developed an agriculturally-based society complete with palaces, pyramids and complex irrigation canals on the north coast of Peru between about 100 and 800 CE. While they had no predominant written language, leaving us few clues as to their history, they were an extraordinarily artistic and expressive people who left behind incredibly detailed pottery and monumental architecture. In 2006, a Moche chamber was discovered that was apparently used for human sacrifice, containing the remains of human offerings. There are many theories as to why the Moche disappeared, but the most prevalent explanation is the effect of El Nino, a pattern of extreme weather characterized by alternating periods of flooding and extreme droughts. Perhaps this explains the Moche’s bloody efforts to appease the gods.
Clovis Culture, North America

(images via: clovis in the southeast, wikimedia commons)
Very little is known about the Clovis culture, a prehistoric Paleo-Indian people that were thought to have been the first human inhabitants of North America. Archaeologists have tentatively dated artifacts found at an archaeological site near Clovis, New Mexico at 11,500 RCYBP (radiocarbon years before present), equal to about 13,500 calendar years, but dating beyond 10,000 years is considered unreliable. The artifacts, bone and stone blades known as Clovis points, are among the only clues we have that this group – technically not a civilization – ever existed. In the last thirty years, remains of possibly older human activity have been discovered, calling the Clovis’ status into question, but whether or not they were first, they did disappear rather abruptly. Some speculate that the Clovis overhunted, compromising their own food supply, or that climate change, disease and predators took their toll. Others believe that the Clovis didn’t disappear at all, but simply dispersed into the beginnings of early Native American tribes.
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:
12 Historic Sites & Ancient Ruins in Danger of Disappearing
These 12 ancient ruins, archaeological digs and historic sites could be wiped off the face of the earth by climate change, war and other challenges.
Click Here to Read More
Disaster-Proof Architecture: 13 Super-Strong Structures
April 22, 2011 by admin · View Comments
[ By Steph in Art & Design. ]

High-profile earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, hurricanes and other natural disasters have made it more clear than ever that in the face of climate change, stronger buildings able to withstand such events are not just advisable but necessary. These 13 designs range from fantastical concepts for entire floating cities to real homes that have already proven themselves disaster-proof, and from large-scale billion-dollar projects to low-cost housing solutions for the poor.
Earthquake-Proof ‘Coral Reef Island’ for Haiti

(images via: vincent callebaut)
After 2009′s massive earthquake wiped out much of Haiti’s infrastructure, the nation is still struggling to rebuild, and imaginative architect Vincent Callebaut has a suggestion: disaster-proof floating housing inspired by coral reefs. The Coral Reef Project consists of 1000 modular residences in dual wavy stacks, supported on an artificial pier built on seismic piles in the Caribbean. With energy harvested from the waves, hydro-turbines and sea thermal energy conversion, the structure improves the standard of living, providing green terraces for each plug-in ‘pod’ and simplifying delivery of supplies.
Soccer Ball-Shaped Floating Houses

(images via: treehugger)
From a doghouse to a 540-square-foot family dwelling, the ‘Barier’ is an earthquake-proof home shaped like a soccer ball that becomes a floating rescue ship in the event of a natural disaster. The 32-sided urethane-walled surface of the house distributes force, and the base acts as a ballast, ensuring that it stays upright if swept away in a tsunami.
Noah’s Ark – A Floating Hotel

(images via: yellowpelow)
In the event of an earthquake or flood, this hotel would be one of the safest buildings in town. The concept, designed by Remistudio, is structured to resist seismic impact and has an entirely transparent facade to create a biosphere that could allow food production if necessary. Solar panels and rainwater collection would provide inhabitants with energy and water and the bottom half of the hotel rests in a depression in the ground, allowing it to come loose and float.
Earthquake-Proof Solar-Powered Volcano Towers

(images via: ofis)
Looking like a strange sort of man-made volcano, the All-Seasons Tent Tower by OFIS Architecture is a multi-function cylindrical tower powered with solar energy and covered in a mesh skin that filters sunlight for temperature regulation. A system of concrete cores protects the interior – filled with apartments, shops, restaurants, offices and recreational space – from the impact of earthquakes.
Harvest City: Floating Concept for Haiti

(images via: yanko design)
Yet another natural disaster-proof concept takes Haiti from the land to the sea, creating an offshore haven complete with agriculture and industry. Harvest City by E. Keven Schopfer is a complex of floating modules measuring 2 miles in diameter, with four zones connected by a linear system of canals. Cables secure the whole complex, which includes a harbor ‘city center’, to the sea bed. The design even makes use of debris from the 2009 earthquake, putting concrete rubble to work as breakwater filler.
Sticky Rice Mortar in China

(image via: physorg)
Ancient Chinese construction workers found a secret recipe for mortar that has helped their buildings survive for centuries: it’s made with sticky rice. Chemists determined in 2010 that a complex carbohydrate in the ‘sticky rice soup’ which was mixed with lime and used to fill in gaps between stones over 1500 years ago is largely responsible for the strength of the structures, which have withstood multiple earthquakes and even bulldozers.
“Analytical study shows that the ancient masonry mortar is a kind of special organic-inorganic composite material,” the scientists explained. “The inorganic component is calcium carbonate, and the organic component is amylopectin, which comes from the sticky rice soup added to the mortar. Moreover, we found that amylopectin in the mortar acted as an inhibitor: The growth of the calcium carbonate crystal was controlled, and a compact microstructure was produced, which should be the cause of the good performance of this kind of organic-organic mortar.”
Floating Shipping Container Houses for Pakistan

(images via: inhabitat)
Millions of people remain homeless in Pakistan after disastrous 2010 floods – could low-cost, eco-friendly shipping container houses be the solution? The Amphibious Container concept by Richard Moreta is made with reused shipping crates and pallets, resting on a foundation of truck inner tubes which serve as a flotation device in the event of high waters. It can handle a maximum water level of 7.5 feet.
Lilypad Floating City Concept

(images via: vincent callebaut)
Floating mega-cities are Vincent Callebaut’s specialty, and the Lilypad Floating Ecopolis is an especially beautiful example of imagination run wild. Designed for “ecological refugees” in the year 2100, the Lilypad is an amphibious self-sufficient city able to accommodate 50,000 people along with enough plants and animals to sustain them. The lower portion includes a submerged lagoon which filters rainwater.
Low-Income Disaster-Proof Bamboo Housing

(images via: inhabitat)
What if we could keep all of a home’s key elements in a disaster-proof core, surrounded by a bamboo structure that would be inexpensive to replace if a natural disaster destroyed it? That’s the idea behind this low-income housing concept by a group of Indian architects, a design that won the Design Against the Elements competition to create disaster-proof housing. Each three-story apartment complex contains an earthquake, wind and water-resistant core holding water and power lines, bathrooms, kitchens and stairways and an escape hatch to the roof. This provides a safe haven for a low cost, raising survival rates among the most vulnerable populations.
Hurricane-Proof Dome House in Florida

(images via: cyber sharp)
There are lots of cool concepts, but what about disaster-proof homes that have already been built and proven effective? This unusual-looking dome house in Pensacola Beach, Florida has survived four hurricanes including the devastating Katrina, Dennis and Ivan. Owners Mark and Valerie Sigler came up with this $7 million design after Hurricane Opal destroyed their previous house in 1995, leaving them without a residence for 14 months. During Hurricane Dennis in 2004, an NBC News crew stayed in the house and had this to say about it: “You have a one-piece concrete house with five miles of steel in it. The house did exactly what it’s supposed to do.”
Raised Home Escapes Hurricanes, Brush Fires & Floods

(images via: inhabitat)
The owners of this raised house, located on an island off the coast of South Carolina, were determined that their home be able to survive brush fires, hurricanes and floods. The resulting off-grid pre-fabricated house made of recycled steel and SIP panels is engineered to FEMA flood zone requirements and built on helical foundations to withstand 140-mile-per-hour winds. All that space under the house isn’t wasted – in fair weather, it functions as a screened-in shade porch.
The Citadel: Floating Apartment Complex in the Netherlands

(images via: citadelhetnieuwewater.nl)
Not content to simply talk about the dangers of rising sea levels (like much of the rest of the world), the Dutch have begun taking matters into their own hands with architecture that can withstand dramatic changes in the canals that are such an integral part of the Netherlands. As part of a new development called “New Water”, Koen Oltuls of Waterstudio designed ‘The Citadel’, Europe’s first floating apartment complex. 60 luxury apartments, a car park, a floating road and boat docks will work with the changing water levels rather than against them
Foundation (9 Boxes): Absurdist Architecture by Luke O’Sullivan

(images via: luke o’sullivan)
Technically, this isn’t an architecture concept; it’s a work of art – screenprint on wood by Luke O’Sullivan. But Foundation (9 Boxes) still offers an absurdist take on solutions to flood-proof housing, and one that makes a very simple point: build higher.
Says the artist, “‘Foundation (9 Boxes)’ was inspired by dystopian films, absurd architectural concepts, and natural disaster prevention. It was around the time when the housing market crashed, and I was thinking a lot about modular housing units, and façades.”
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:
Design (for) Disaster: 14 Emergency Shelter Concepts
Forget flimsy white tent cities. Housing for refugees and disaster survivors should be like these 14 designs: durable, comfortable, adaptable & eco-friendly.
1 Comment - Click Here to Read More
Breathe Easy: Building Concept Cleanses Dirty City Air
April 20, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
[ By Delana in Art & Design & Nature & Ecosystems & Science & Research. ]

What if, instead of trying to remove all of the things that poison our environment, we built an infrastructure that uses these poisons as fuel to build a better world? That is the idea behind Bubble Wrap, a concept from Andrew Tetrault and Ben Lee for the purification of New York City’s air. An active, living infrastructure would take the very things we hate about city life – the pollution and poor air quality – and turn them into a vibrant, sustainable public space.

Bubble Wrap was designed specifically for New York City, a metropolis known both for its pollution problem and its rich culture. This futuristic project would mesh both in a surprisingly sophisticated way. Densely planted “bubbles” would be linked together and used as a unique type of building material to create living public spaces.

The plants inside the bubbles would take in polluted air and scrub it clean, releasing it again at ground level. Air from the subway exhaust system and from street level is drawn in to be purified and cleansed, making the “pods” into a large-scale air purifier.

The space inside the bubble structure would become a new venue for cultural and neighborhood events. Imagine a farmer’s market in the freshly-cleansed air inside this bubble building – or an open-air festival where everyone can breathe with no worries about pollution.

The designers call this idea a “parasite” that feeds on the excess energy and pollution of the city. Perhaps the relationship between the concept and the city could be seen instead as a symbiotic one: the conceptual building is “fed” by our lifestyle and the city receives a beautiful, living, breathing public space in which to enjoy and experience life.
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:

Thinking Outside the Lot: 3 Futuristic Parking Lot Designs
Parking lots usually look like little more than wasted urban space. These three futuristic parking lot designs take parking complexes to a whole new level.
Click Here to Read More
Great Crates: 3 Cool Cases of Shipping Container Reuse
March 4, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
[ By Steph in Art & Design, Home & Garden. ]

Ultra-portable and long-lasting, shipping containers are ideal building blocks for prefabricated eco-friendly architecture. From emergency shelters in disaster areas to massive urban projects, these steel crates represent endless possibilities and are present in huge quantities in port cities all over the world. The following three recent examples of shipping container reuse show just how versatile they are, including a traveling pop-up restaurant and a boy scout camp.

Greenhouse by Joost is a traveling eco-exhibit and restaurant conceived by artist Joost Bakker, and it aims to be as environmentally friendly as possible, made from shipping containers and straw bales and even growing some of its own food on the rooftop. There’s no trash – everything is recycled or composted – and used cooking oil powers the generator. Currently in Sydney, the restaurant will be heading to Milan this month for the International Furniture Fair before moving on to other cities.

Airy, modern and colorful, this San Antonio shipping container house by Poteet Architects was constructed for use as a summer house, entertainment and guest quarters in an artist community. The owner selected this container specifically for its stunning blue color. Mounted on recycled telephone poles and lined with bamboo, the tiny guest house also features a cantilevered porch platform and a green roof full of flowers.

Heavily critiqued by Treehugger, this forward-thinking new concept for Boy Scout cabins is nonetheless an interesting shift from the old wooden-platform-and-tent of yore. Architect Richard Hammond from Gensler in Los Angeles constructed the prototype for the sustainable renovation of a camp on Catalina Island from a reclaimed shipping container with a fabric top for insulation and that all-important connection to the outdoors. The camp’s director wanted to go in a new green direction for eco-educational purposes, connecting ecologically sound accommodations that protect the wilderness to the scouts’ “leave no trace” philosophy.
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:

Eco Expectations: 14 Green Buildings of Tomorrow
ch_client = “derami”;
ch_width = 336;
ch_height = 160;
ch_type = “mpu”;
ch_non_contextual = 4;
ch_noborders = 1;
ch_vertical =”premium”;
ch_font_title = “Verdana”;
ch_font_text = “Verdana…
2 Comments - Click Here to Read More
Truly Eco-Friendly, Or Corporate Greenwashing?
January 13, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
[ By Marc in Nature & Ecosystems, Technology & Gadgets. ]

Greenwashing is the deceptive use of green marketing and public relations pushes to imply that a company’s products are more eco friendly than they really are. Sometimes there’s a fine line between greenwashing and truly environmentally conscious initiatives, and sometimes the distinction is quite easy to make.

(Images via freshgreenads, yogadork, thoughtsonglobalwarming, greendiary, paprikalab)
Simply making an ad out of plants can be seen as greenwashing, but whether one is annoyed by giant corporations pretending to be more eco conscious than they actually are, it would be hard to argue that plant ads are a step up from the typical billboard.

(Images via environmentteam, plus6dua, techieblogger)
Greenpeace and Unicef create shocking ad campaigns that are far from greenwashing, but are controversial in their own right. Showing decapitated people to argue against deforestation, or show a dead seal in the shape of a shoe, is an intense way to grab people’s attention.

(Images via treehugger, thegreenwashingblog, adpulp, greenbydesign)
Some ads are bedecked with foliage and deeply imply a strong environmental legacy, but on closer look, many of these ads promote products that are difficult to argue as environmentally friendly. From “green chemicals” to fields of cotton, there is little actual environmentalism involved in these products.

(Images via thegreenwashingblog, dailygumboot, inhabitat, ethicalshopper, lighterfootsep, sinostand)
Declaring gas guzzling vehicles as eco friendly, or touting a cut-back on plastic as an environmental outlook are definitely deceptive. Scaling back the damage one does to the environment is admirable, but it doesn’t mean the initial destruction is at all ecologically friendly. It is definitely important for one to keep an eye out when purchasing one product over another simply because it mentions its environmentalism, as companies are more than willing to stretch the truth to get their product in the shopping cart.
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:

Eco Expectations: 14 Green Buildings of Tomorrow
What will the world look like in the future? Will we retreat to floating homes and cities because of rising water levels? Will we construct massive domes around our cities to protect oursel…
2 Comments - Click Here to Read More
Architecture of Antarctica: 12 Strange Sub-Zero Structures
November 5, 2010 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
[ By Steph in Art & Design, Geography & Travel, Science & Research. ]

At the ends of the earth, where man-made architecture of any kind is exceedingly rare, it can be jarring to see these often-massive polar research stations, looking like UFOs on stilts above the snow and ice. Surreal and somewhat sci-fi, these outposts of civilization in both Antarctica and the Arctic are designed to face some of the harshest environmental conditions on earth.
Halley VI Research Station

(image via: british antarctic society)
It certainly makes for an eerie sight: an alien-like pod on legs, perched on a floating ice shelf 900 miles from the South Pole. But this bright blue structure is just the latest incarnation of Britain’s Halley Research Station, which has been in continuous operation for 54 years. The new design, by Faber Maunsell and Hugh Broughton Architects, is currently being constructed in South Africa and shipped to its final location piece by piece. The legs allow it to stay above the level of snowfall, and are equipped with skis to allow mobility as needed.
Svalbard Arctic Research Stations

(images via: christian houge)
“These aren’t film frames from The Empire Strikes Back, even while they look exactly like Rebel Alliance’s Echo Base, ion cannon included,” says Gizmodo. That ‘cannon’ is actually just a weatherproof dome that protects a radar antenna at an Arctic research station in Svalbard, the northernmost area of Norway.
Princess Elisabeth Antarctic Station

(images via: architecture news plus)
It’s the world’s first zero-emission polar station, withstanding unbelievably challenging environmental conditions and looking fantastically modern in the meanwhile. It relies entirely on wind and solar power and is built in concentric layers of living, sleeping, kitchen and laundry space around a central core that holds essential components like water treatment systems and control panels.
Concordia Station

(image via: cnrs phototheque)
Like twin silos, the two round buildings that make up the Concordia Station are the only man-made structures to be seen for miles and miles. Concordia is the most isolated permanent research stations in Antarctica and is perched on top of 3,200 meters of ice in an area known as ‘Dome C’, one of the coldest places on earth.
Neumayer III Station

(image via: awi.de)
Germany’s Neumayer III Station in Antarctica, completed in 2009, is also on hydraulic stilts that allow it to adjust to rising snow levels. Placing such a heavy building – 2,300 pounds of steel – atop little stilts like this was an entirely experimental process for civil engineer Dietrich Enss, who says he searched to no avail for a mathematical formula that would allow him to determine how snow behaves under a load of 30 tons per square meter. Enss ultimately had to rely on his three decades of real-world experience building on icy foundations to create a design that would work.
SANAE IV

(images via: wikimedia commons)
Like a villain’s hidden lair, the SANAE IV research base is an improbable human outpost at the edge of the world. Part of the South African National Antarctic Expedition, SANAE IV is located on a flat-topped mountain and surrounded by a glacial ice sheet. It was one of the first Antarctic structures to use the revolutionary stilt technique to avoid snow loads, copied later by designs like the Halley IV and Neumayer III.
Amundson-Scott South Pole Station

(image via: wikimedia commons)
An icon of the South Pole for three decades, the Amundson-Scott geodesic dome was decommissioned in 2009 and replaced with a somewhat more mundane elevated facility that nevertheless cuts a striking profile (bottom photo, left) beside a power plant an old mechanic’s garage.
St. Ivan Rilkski Chapel

(image via: wikipedia)
Yes, Antarctica has its own churches (several of them, in fact) – and the St. Ivan Rilkski Chapel might just be one of the most unusual places of worship in the world. The Bulgarian church on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands was completed in 2003, and features a mostly-metal construction for strength and durability with a transparent roof that allows lots of natural daylight in. Bulgaria is the only Balkan country with a polar base.
Chilean Tent City

(images via: gizmodo)
They’re not flashy or fancy, but these curving heavy-duty tents stand up to a lot of abuse and they’re all interconnected to form a sort of mobile city for Chilean Air Force members on expeditions to Antarctica. Dining areas, meeting rooms, research labs and sleeping areas are all located off a central hallway, comfortably housing 100 people.
Arctic Mobile Units Concept

(images via: design boom)
Mod and colorful, the ‘Arctic Mobile Unit’ by 2-B-2 Architecture could be a pleasant site – and sight – for researchers spending extended periods in the monochromatic landscapes of the North Pole. The inside boasts bunk platforms, a table for two, a bathroom with toilet and shower and a little kitchenette for home-away-from-home comfort and the whole unit is powered by the sun. The compact unit features slide-outs that can be pushed back in for easy transport.
Mobile Arctic Research Station Concept

(image via: coroflot)
“Within the next few years, it is expected that the majority of the fleet of MD-80 jets will be retired,” says concept artist Carl Burdick, who designed this colorful mobile arctic research station made from the remains of one such jet. “Being on of the most popular regional jets in the world, with over 3,000 produced, this will create an enormous waste stream containing over 12 million kg of waste. This also creates an amazing opportunity to put the features and design capabilities of these structures to good use.”
Arctic Drifter Concept

(images via: les betes)
Even more futuristic – and probably less likely to be built anytime soon – is this inflatable mobile arctic research station designed by Studio Les Betes. The spherical pod is at the mercy of nature, traveling wherever the wind blows on huge air bags which can be deflated to slow or stop the station.
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:
Mobile Cities: 11 Visionary Habitats Roaming Future Earth
In the 21st century, humans are increasingly on the move, traveling across the globe and perhaps, sometime in the future, across the galaxy. We’ve already got enormous cruise ship ‘cities…
Click Here to Read More
12 Historic Sites & Ancient Ruins in Danger of Disappearing
November 1, 2010 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
[ By Steph in Geography & Travel, History & Trivia. ]

Vandalism, climate change, encroaching development and rampant commercialism – these are just a few of the threats facing priceless ancient ruins and historical sites around the world. While over 200 sites are in danger, the Global Heritage Fund has named these 12 sites as most likely to disappear if action isn’t taken immediately, erasing evidence of hundreds or even thousands of years of human history including an Armenian city that once rivaled Constantinople and a sacred place of Buddhist pilgrimage in Afghanistan.
Intramuros and Fort Santiago Historic District, Philippines

(images via: shotfinder, wikimedia commons)
The crumbling walls of a medieval fort make a strong contrast with an adjacent modern skyline, but that’s nothing compared to what you see once you step inside the high walls of Intramuros, the walled city containing the last vestiges of Spanish-era influences in Manila. Beside the ruins that were pelted with heavy shelling during World War II and only partially reconstructed are a Starbucks and a McDonalds. Some of the old moats surrounding the historic zone, which includes the imposing Fort Santiago, have been filled and converted to a golf course. The Global Heritage Fund fears that Intramuros will soon be “overrun by rampant commercialism”, and some historians fear that high-rises and malls will be next.
Hisham’s Palace, Palestine

(images via: michaelramallah, delayed gratification)
Hisham’s Palace’s troubles began over a thousand years ago, when an earthquake leveled it and covered it with sand in 747 AD. It was entirely forgotten for centuries until archaeologists unearthed the remains of this Umayyad winter palace in Palestine beginning in 1934. Historians are intensely curious about the palace, especially since it was unfinished when the earthquake struck, but may never be able to solve the mystery as urban development is encroaching fast. Archaeologists believe that if it’s not preserved now, Hisham’s Palace may be lost forever.
Abandoned Medieval City of Ani, Turkey

(images via: wikimedia commons)
Once upon a time, Ani was home to structures that were among the most technically and artistically advanced in the world, and rivaled renowned metropolises such as Constantinople and Cairo. Today, the former medieval Armenian kingdom (now part of Turkey) is in ruins, uninhabited and nearly forgotten. At its height, Ani was home to 200,000 residents, but a siege by invading Mongols in 1226 decimated its population and it lay dormant until the 19th century. It has been placed on ‘endangered sites’ lists by organizations like World Monuments Fund due to constant threats from earthquakes, neglect and nearby quarrying.
Nineveh, Iraq

(images via: stevanb)
It was the ‘Ancient jewel of the Assyrian Empire’, but Nineveh – located in Iraq near the modern city of Mosul – spent centuries as a pile of rubble even as the Bible told of its greatness. It was rediscovered by archaeologists in the 19th century and many of its ruins have been excavated and rebuilt, but its remains could be buried once again due to constant looting, vandalism and expanding suburbs.
City of Kings: Famagusta, North Cyprus

(images via: spirosk, wikimedia commons)
The Crusader kings were crowned in Famagusta, a once-bustling port city on the northeastern coast of Cyprus; such was its importance in the world. The medieval walled city flourished from the 12th to 15th centuries and was heavily fortified under the protection of Venice but nevertheless sacked by Ottoman Turks, and lay in depressed disuse with just a handful of poverty-stricken residents as it fought for its independence from Turkey. Today, Turkish-Muslim North Cyprus is segregated from Greek Orthodox South Cyprus and some experts say Famagusta won’t get the attention it deserves until Cyprus is reunified.
Swahili City of Lamu, Kenya

(images via: rogiro, wikimedia commons)
Once the trade capital of East Africa, Lamu, Kenya is the one of the oldest remaining Swahili towns on the East African coast and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2001. According to the Global Heritage Fund, Lamu dates back to the 12th century and its buildings embody the long history of Swahili technology and culture. Already pressured by neglect and insufficient management of fresh water resources, Lamu may fall to a large port development that is currently under consideration along the coast that will include an oil refinery and boost population to an unsustainable number.
Ancient Taxila, Pakistan

(images via: wikimedia commons, hassan sarmad)
A Mesolithic cave, Buddhist monasteries, Muslim mosques and four ancient settlements are just the beginning of the treasures that Taxila, Pakistan has to offer. Each settlement represents a different time period, revealing the pattern of progress over centuries including the rich religious and cultural history of the Pakistani people. Declared one of the top tourist sites in Pakistan, Taxila is also in danger of disastrous damage due to development, mining, looting, war and conflict.
Chersonesos Archaeological Site, Ukraine

(images via: argenberg, wikimedia commons)
In photos you’d never guess that these sea-swept ruins, with their tall white columns, were located anywhere but the Mediterranean. But Chersonesos is actually an ancient Greek settlement in Ukraine, founded about 2500 years ago and ruled over the centuries by both Rome and Byzantium. Its isolation made it an ideal place of exile for people who angered Rome, including Pope Clement I and the deposed Byzantine Emperor Justinian II. The ruins, found in the suburbs of Sevastopol, reflect the cultures of Greece, Rome and Byzantium. Urban encroachment and coastal erosion are both threats that the Ukrainian government is ill-equipped to handle due to lack of funding.
Maluti Temples, India

(image via: global heritage fund)
Compared to the majestic palaces and stunning ruins that can be seen all over India, the Maluti Temples are nothing to call home about. In fact, most people haven’t even heard of them. To anyone who loves the juxtaposition of formerly grand architecture with overgrowth and decay, the 72 remaining terracotta temples in the village of Maluti are undeniably beautiful, but they’re in danger of deteriorating completely without proper care. Unfortunately, the local government finds itself in a sort of catch-22 because although protecting the temples could bring in tourism revenue, they currently don’t have the funds or a plan to make it happen.
Bamiyan Valley Archaeology, Afghanistan

(images via: wikimedia commons)
An important Buddhist center on the Silk Road, the Bamiyan Valley in Afghanistan and was home to two towering Buddha statues that were destroyed by the Taliban in March 2001. The art and architecture that remains standing in this picturesque area, nestled within the mountains of the Hindu Kush, stand as a unique intersection of Indian, Hellenistic, Roman and Sasanian cultural influences as well as the Islamic influence that came later. Once a place of Buddhist pilgrimage and still home to many monasteries and sanctuaries, the Bamiyan Valley is threatened by continued cultural and religious conflict.
Sans Souci Palace, Haiti

(images via: wikimedia commons)
Not to be confused with a palace by the same name in Berlin, Haiti’s Sans Souci Palace was the royal home of King Henri Christophe and Queen Marie-Louise. The palace – named “without worry” in French – was built starting in 1810, just after Haiti won its independence, and Henri’s reign was far from peaceful. The unpopular ruler committed suicide on the grounds in 1820 and the palace was largely destroyed by an earthquake in 1842. It was named a World Heritage Site in 1982 but today, as the country struggles to recover from the severe earthquake of January 2010, rebuilding the palace seems unlikely.
Mahasthangarh Archaeological Site, Bangladesh

(images via: wikimedia commons)
Bangladesh’s earliest archaeological site contains both ancient and medieval ruins dating back to the 3rd century BC as well as the tomb of Shah Sultan Balkhi Mahisawar, who settled in the area and converted the people to Islam. Unlike most of Bangladesh, Mahasthangarh is located almost 36 meters above sea level, helping to protect its many archaeological digs from the nation’s frequent floods, but the site is deteriorating rapidly and has been subject to looting and vandalism.
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:
15 Beautiful Buildings Carved from ‘Living Rock’
Perhaps among some of the most astonishing buildings in the world are those cut from living rock. Known as rock-cut architecture, buildings like this can be found all over the world from Myanmar to E…
9 Comments - Click Here to Read More
Mobile Cities: 11 Visionary Habitats Roaming Future Earth
September 20, 2010 by admin · View Comments
[ By Steph in Art & Design, Home & Garden, Technology & Gadgets. ]

In the 21st century, humans are increasingly on the move, traveling across the globe and perhaps, sometime in the future, across the galaxy. We’ve already got enormous cruise ship ‘cities on the sea’, but what about other kinds of mobile cities? Science fiction, concept designers and architects have brought us these 11 awesome ambulatory urban centers ranging from post-apocalyptic escapes on wheels to massive castles that float around in the sky.
Ron Herron’s Walking City

(images via: archigram)
Proposed by architect Ron Herron in a 1964 Archigram magazine article, this ‘Walking City’ concept could actually provide an ideal setting for a scary sci-fi film. Herron imagined massive mobile self-aware robotic structures that roam the earth so they can move to wherever their particular resources or manufacturing abilities are needed.
Philip Reeve’s Traction Cities

(image via: 3-hares)
Naturally, it was only a matter of time before someone took Herron’s idea and turned it into “Municipal Darwinism”, in which intelligent mobile cities take part in a sort of mechanical food chain, with the larger “Traction Cities” consuming the smaller ones. Philip Reeve’s Mortal Engines tosses these tiered predatory cities into battle with one another.
Wandering City by Sergey Skachkov

(image via: cgi society)
Russian concept artist Sergey Skachkov captures a similar mood with his ‘Wandering City’, a digital painting depicting a Herron-like stacked structure on top of a mobile base, chugging along in a cloudy landscape. ‘Wandering City’ earned an honorable mention in the NVArt artspace competition.
Howl’s Moving Castle

(image via: fanpop)
Not all portable cities are land-based. One of the most famous examples of a fictional flying ‘city’ is ‘Howl’s Moving Castle’. The fantasy-novel-turned-Japanese-film features a fish-shaped steampunk structure with a protruding tongue that’s really somewhere between castle and city.
Water Station

(image via: cgi society)
Another entry in the CG Society NVArt artspace competition is ‘Water Station’ by Steve Bjorck, who says of his creation: “The planet is hot and dry. The only water left is hidden deep under the dead crust. This nomadic colony tap into ancient wells scattered across the planets surface with a large, floating station similar to Earths oil and gas platforms. This well has a healthy supply of fresh water, they will be able to stay here for many months, maybe years.”
Superstar: A Mobile Chinatown

(images via: dezeen)
Chinese architecture firm MAD isn’t exactly pleased with New York’s Chinatown, calling it a sloppy, kitschy, outdated tourist trap. What could bring it up to date? Oh, maybe making it a bizarre star-shaped mobile city that can take the latest and greatest of Chinese food, inventions and culture to other cities around the world. ‘The Superstar’ is a self-sustaining city that grows its own food and recycles all of its waste so as never to be a burden on its host cities.
Gaia’s Gift

(image via: cgi society)
Few flying cities are quite as beautiful and organic-looking as ‘Gaia’s Gift’, a digital concept by Petar Milivojevic of Serbia, who says “Gaia represents the energy of all living and unliving parts of the earth that are a complex interacting system that can be thought of as a single organism. Combined with the old theory of Fibonacci about Golden spiral which shows us the perfect balance in nature.”
Nomad City

(images via: wookieepedia)
It could be argued that many Star Wars ships are mobile cities, including the Death Star. But one is particularly interesting: Nomad City, a reclaimed Dreadnaught cruiser mounted on 40 captured AT-ATs that constantly roamed the surface of Nkllon in search of minerals to mine.
Complex in the Center of the Universe

(image via: impact lab)
Of all the unbelievably awe-inspiring architecture concepts submitted for the NVArt artspace competition, this one takes the cake: ‘Complex in the Center of the Universe’ by Polish artist Marek Staszek won first place with a hovering multi-level city complete with green space and water fountains. The artist says “I wanted to achieve complete integration of future architecture with nature, complete with green parks, trees and gardens. Everything that makes us feel relaxed and calm. Architecture can give people magnificent vistas, as well as a small historical old-town feel. “
Stacked City Portable Urban Shelter

(images via: import.export)
A different kind of ‘portable city’ makes it easy to create a home no matter where you go. The Stacked City camping tower by Import.Export is a long way from primitive tent camping, giving travelers an otherwise unattainable view of their surroundings and making them anything but low-profile. As Dornob points out, there are security issues to be addressed, but designs like these could be the turning point for real-life mobile dwellings that go far beyond recreational vehicles.
LEGO Crawler Town

(image via: inhabitat)
Designer Dave DeGobbi brilliantly put LEGO blocks to work in creating a concept model of a massive mobile structure on wheels that “roams the barren wastes of a post steam-punk world after cataclysmic climate change do [sic] to excessive coal use.” According to DeGobbi, this town is where it’s at, considering that it’s the last place to find such luxuries as pizza, fresh vegetables and beer.
Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebEcoist:
Underwater Cities: 12 Sci-Fi Visions & Real Design Ideas
Whether it’s adventure or necessity that ultimately propels us to venture beyond our shores and build new communities in the sea, we’ve got plenty of space to work with: over 70% of the E…
2 Comments - Click Here to Read More


