revised postcards of urban renewal, cottage style and green

Just under a month ago, a myurbanist entry presented further imagery of renewal in Seattle’s Madrona Woods–with continuing reconstruction photos of a “Thoreau-like cottage”, first shown here.

Today, showing more replacement than reconstruction, a more expansive home rises from the original footprint.

In the era of sustainability, this form of site intensification is one way the urban setting will redevelop while preserving neighborhood look and feel.


my-turbanist, camels and transit modes: the postcard

In another postcard for your urbanist, transit-oriented friends, an interurban transit operator guards himself from the sun.

For an additional reference, consider Stephen Killion’s June 24 Architizer post, which provides the nineteenth century history of the U.S. Camel Corps as a prologue to a discussion of transit issues in Los Angeles. He ironically warns that without care, new transit proposals of the Obama-era could go the way of the failed allocation of 28 camels to the city for cargo purposes as part of the Camel Corps’ downsizing in 1863.

high urbandwidth and city texture: two postcards

Rich city texture (complete with pedestrian and transit opportunities and magnetic color) is another feature of high urbandwidth. Below, renderings of Nice, France display the remade city center focused around the Nice Tramway, which I described in seattlepi.com (click here) last year.

high urbandwidth and street performance: a postcard

Street performance in a public space is one feature of high urbandwidth.

Here, we return to Seattle’s Occidental Park, (also featured here and, by Dan Bertolet, here), to walk with A.K. “Mimi” Allin, for a strolling read of a complex novel, merged with the notion of enhanced mutual ownership of public space.

Click here to read more about Allin and 4Culture’s site-specific performance exhibit, “Walking in War in Peace”.

a postcard of the street mime performer

In Bath, England, the posture of a street mime inspires inquiry as to his role–is he merely emulating a statue, or is he performing aside a public right of way because he has been denied the opportunity in a private place?