Arq.to Posted October 27, 2007 Report Posted October 27, 2007 BLDGBLOG - Quintas-prédios - Knafo Klimor Architects http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2179/1746574453_f52db46636_o.jpg[image: Agro-housing will include rooftop vegetable plots; designed and rendered by Knafo Klimor Architects].Via Dwell's recently redesigned blog, we discover so-called agro-housing: buildings made for, with, and alongside residential experiments in agriculture. http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2283/1746577911_88727693ac_o.jpg[images: Agro-housing by Knafo Klimor Architects].Agro-housing, Dwell writes, "incorporat[es] greenhouses within high-rise housing projects."Essentially, the project is a combination of housing and urban agriculture. There's an apartment tower in which people live. Then there's a multi-story greenhouse that sits in the middle of the building, where fruits, vegetables, spices, and flowers will grow. A rooftop green space caps off the structure, and passive and active solar energy, along with gray water irrigation and rain water harvesting, helps keep the building also somewhat sustainable in form as well as function. Jetson Green adds that this would also result in a "decreased reliance on transportation for agricultural products," thus cutting down on unnecessary truck, train, and container ship journeys. You'd walk out onto your terrace, pick an apple and then eat it. http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2309/1746577265_8d8eed45b0_o.jpghttp-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2243/1746571649_1644c94ec8_o.jpghttp-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2123/1746571069_a3e30a76e5_o.jpghttp-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2171/1746572183_fb5cb177e0_o.jpg[images: Like the interior of the Oxygen Garden, it's agro-housing by Knafo Klimor Architects].The specific project featured here is by Knafo Klimor Architects – and, though it was intended for construction in China, clearly it could be useful elsewhere. The building has the potential to bring its climate with it, as it were, and so this would be as appropriate for Shenzhen as it would be for South Chicago – or Camden Town or Trastevere.http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2045/1747423980_f3fd2a2509_o.jpg[images: Agro-housing by Knafo Klimor Architects].I'd build half a dozen of them and grow cloned roses. Open up a show garden. A maze of fertilized balconies overlooking the East Bay. At the end of the tour you eat a salad of flowers, specially tended in my top secret fields, grown inside an unacknowledged seventh building somewhere on Van Ness.In any case, I'm all for cross-breeding architecture with agriculture and, at the very least, this is a well-rendered (if overly rectilinear –*surely there are better angles for capturing rain and sun?) possible start. Ler artigo... Quote Arquitectura, Arquitetura, Construção, Engenharia e outros Espaço de Arquitetura e Fórum da Casa E LEGO, Comunidade LEGO, notícias e novidade LEGO
JVS Posted November 1, 2007 Report Posted November 1, 2007 In China, there’s a massive exodus from the rural to urban areas, but it’s controlled because the country doesn’t have enough housing for everyone that wants to live in a city. At the same time, urbanization accentuates the air and soil pollution problems. So, Knafo Klimor Architects proposed an agro-housing project that blends agriculture and high-rise housing in one structure. This agro-housing project brings the food-supply directly to the building, and to the extent that residents can realize the benefits of urban farming, there is a decreased reliance on transportation for agricultural products (shopping and delivery to stores). Plus, with the building’s integrated water capture systems, the project has the potential to reduce water consumption and runoff. Residents could make money off the crops, too. This agro-housing project is going to be built in Wuhan, China. As you can see from the renderings, the building has quite the elaborate labyrinth to control water, air, and heat. Structurally, it will be made with SIPs and a majority of the materials will come from steel, aluminum, and terracotta — all materials that can be recycled at the end of the building’s life. Via Dwell. in Architecture.mnp http-~~-//architecture.myninjaplease.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/agro_housing-1.jpg http-~~-//architecture.myninjaplease.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/agro_housing-7.jpg Quote
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