Saturday, December 31, 2011
Friday, December 30, 2011
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Make space for bikes and helicopters, even if you have to build a peninsula as your landing pad and bring the blacktop down to water's edge. Melbourne makes helicopter rides along the Yarra River available to tourists, but most helipads are on top of office buildings or outside emergency room doors. [2011]
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Singapore, Republic of Singapore
New Bridge Road is one of Singapore's many shopping precincts. At one time the colors of street art might have matched the tropical fruits brought in from the orchards; today, they match the fashions hanging in the stores. What do you see here? A man? A woman? A butterfly? Or just coat hangers doing their job? [2011]
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Athens, Greece
Moray eels have been a delicacy and a good source of protein since ancient times. Today, they continue to show up in Athens' central market. As rather vicious predators, however, they are to be otherwise avoided on your Aegean vacation. One look at those jaws should tell you that! And there's a set of hidden jaws inside. [2006]
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Monday, December 26, 2011
Luxor, Egypt
The Nile provided a perfect highway for the unification of ancient Egypt: ride the current north, and let the Trade Winds carry you south. The felucca captains of today, the masters of the Nile, use the same forces of nature thanks to the ingenuity of their ancestors who began thinking about human-environment relationships more than 5,000 years ago. [2000]
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Virginia Beach, Virginia, USA
New Cape Henry Lighthouse: There's no place like Cape Henry for lighthouses. And, there's no one like Henry's father, James, for giving us the words of Jesus in magisterial English: "I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life." Merry Christmas on the 400th anniversary of King James' Bible! [2007]
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Owls Head, Maine, USA
Owls Head Lighthouse: Beautiful physical geography can give the spirit a lift, and that is nowhere truer than along the coast of Maine. That same physical geography can also give a lighthouse the lift it needs to be seen way out at sea. Owls Head, guardian of Rockland Harbor, need not be tall because it stands on the shoulders of giant metamorphs. [2008]
Friday, December 23, 2011
Point Montara, California, USA
Point Montara Lighthouse: There is no harbor here. Instead, there are rocks offshore, right in the path of ships following the coast northward to the Golden Gate. Only an experienced applicant would qualify for the job of 'fog-horn assistant,' so the Mayo Beach lighthouse on Cape Cod was given the job and moved to the Pacific Coast in the 1920s. [2007]
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Lewes, Delaware, USA
Lewes Harbor-of-Refuge Lighthouse: As we sail through life as fast as the winds of change may take us, we all need a harbor of refuge once in a while. Where do you find yours? At home? In prayer? In a Book? In a memory? We all need lights to mark safe passage, and open arms, like breakwaters, to embrace us. [2008]
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
St. Simons Island, Georgia, USA
St. Simon's Island Lighthouse: The beacon still guides mariners into St. Simon's Sound and on to the port of Brunswick. Its saintly name (probably after Simon Peter) hearkens back to the Spanish history of Georgia's Golden Isles. The boulders in the foreground scream 'Emergency!' They are doing their best to hold back the sea. [2007]
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Liverpool, England, UK
Great towers symbolize great cities, so now Liverpool can compete with London. At 453 feet, St. John's Beacon (now a radio station) appeared on the landscape in 1969 as chapter one in Liverpool's post-industrial history. This week, it gives St. John (the Evangelist, not the Beatle) the stature to herald Jesus' upcoming birthday. [2011]
Monday, December 19, 2011
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Koper, Slovenia
Were it not for Koper, Slovenia would be land-locked. But here, at the head (kop = caput = head) of the Istrian Peninsula, sits the one and only Slovenian port. It looks modern, doesn't it? The container business seems to be booming, but the silos in the distance betray its role in bulk freight handling, too. [2008]
Friday, December 16, 2011
Portland, Oregon, USA
Give the week-end a big Green Star, but only if you use it greenly. In Portland, this is what you see Friday afternoon as you leave downtown. Even the greenest building can't compare with Oregon's great outdoors. Oregonians are so ecotopian and you can be, too. Just remember: "3,000 minutes of week-end start now." [2011]
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Macau S.A.R., China
Give her a big Green Star. She, and an army of gatherers like her, wander the streets of cities in East Asia (not just here in Macau) collecting cardboard and finding a market for it. Good boxes can be reused as boxes; the rest can be recycled. People are as important as technology to environmental sustainability. [2011]
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Welcome to the future: the future of urban architecture. This is the first carbon-neutral office building in Australia. The colorful pixels on the outside are components of the sun-shade system. What you can't see are the night cooling windows, the green roof, the vacuum toilets, and the anaerobic digester. Give it a big Green Star. [2011]
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Granby, Quebec, Canada
Hardly somber, is it? Only the dates of Mario Menard's life provoke a startled gasp: too young to die. But the story etched here in granite is about new beginnings: the next generation of Menards, the triumph of Bambi over a parent's ultimate demise, and the jet just starting its ascent into the heavens. [2011]
Monday, December 12, 2011
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Granby, Quebec, Canada
On Rue Principale in Granby, one restaurant stands out: Chez Trudeau. When you see it, you know it must have a proud history. Where would you go to find out about its beginnings? To the place in town that is all about endings, the Granby cemetery, where Trudeau himself finds a peaceful repose. Chez Trudeau began as the horse-drawn La Cantine. [2011]
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Friday, December 9, 2011
Jerusalem, Israel
In Jerusalem, a principal stands proudly with his students. Notice the proxemics (how people manage the distances between themselves and others). Close physical proximity is typical of Arab (and Mediterranean) culture. Americans require a buffer of space that keeps others at arms length. What if there were a woman in the mix? [1998]
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Helsinki, Finland
Poor Jean Sibelius. Without ears, he can't even hear his own music even though it surrounds him at his own memorial in Helsinki. Fortunately, the rest of us do have ears. On Sibelius' birthday (today!) let's all try to figure out how Finland, small and on the periphery of Europe, has produced so much creativity for such a long time. [2005]
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Monday, December 5, 2011
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
What has happened to skylines over the last century and a half? They have gone high-rise. What began in New York City in 1857, the installation of the first modern elevator, changed our definition of what it means to live in the city. But, low-rise Chinatown still has more character than the shafts in the background. [2011]
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Friday, December 2, 2011
Toluca, Mexico, Mexico
Welcome to the capital of Mexico, Toluca, where the old market hall has been turned into a botanical garden with stained glass sides and ceilings. Doesn't this remind you of the art form that has come to define Mexican culture, the mural? Toluca is the capital of the state of Mexico, one of the United States of Mexico. Yes, there's another United States! [2008]
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Taipei, Taiwan
Cities everywhere are seats of spectacle, but there is nothing more spectacular than Chinese culture on parade. Looking for escape? Don one of these costumes, disappear into the menagerie of Linnaeus-defying street creatures, and leave the real world behind. But, in East Asia, this is the real world. [2011]
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