Monday, April 30, 2012
Sunday, April 29, 2012
London, England, UK
To Will and Kate: Happy Anniversary! This is what Trafalgar Square looked like exactly one year ago. It was a nation-building moment and a monarchy functioning as it should in the modern world. The young royals will probably return to this very screen again in the summer, when the London Olympics provide another shot at nation-building. [2011]
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Friday, April 27, 2012
Istanbul, Turkey
Haircuts are perfect souvenirs. They weigh less than nothing; they take up no luggage space; they provide entrées to neighborhood culture; they make you look like the locals; they are vehicles of people-to-people diplomacy; and, they burden not the future with decisions about disposal. The man in the middle is my barber in Istanbul. [2007]
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Auckland, New Zealand
Sit for a while in Western Park and compare the distinguished facades of the past with the contemporary storefronts along Ponsonby Road today. Too bad Auckland lost so much architectural heritage to spurts of modernization. Still disoriented? Nothing is buried here. It's a sculpture exhibit, one of many "architectural icebergs" visible from Ponsonby. [2011]
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Monday, April 23, 2012
Yosemite, California, USA
"In the cold and snow of winter, there’s a spring that waits to be." Natalie Sleeth might have been talking about Yosemite's snow plants when she penned these lyrics. Snow plants are saprophytes: they have no photosynthetic ability. (They're not green, are they?) On the coniferous forest floor, these 'putrid plants' draw their nutrients from rotting detritus alone. [2005]
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Carrboro, North Carolina, USA
'Garden Everywhere' is good advice for Earth Day. Bring cultivation of food and pharmaceuticals closer to home. But, here in Carrboro, there will be no garden behind this chain-link fence where an abandoned building now stands. Rather (you guessed it!), yet another CVS will miraculously appear delivering [junk] food and pharmaceuticals from afar. [2012]
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Moscow, Ohio, USA
Does Homer Simpson live in this neighborhood? No. The stack and cooling tower are those of a coal-fired power plant, not a nuclear one. Appearances can be deceptive, can't they? But maybe not so deceptive: Zimmer was to have been powered by a nuclear reactor but the plans changed when it was almost finished. That's why you don't see Bart playing in the yard. [2010]
Friday, April 20, 2012
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Bangkok, Thailand
The Royal Palace's Temple of the Emerald Buddha encompasses Phra Sri Rattana Chedi. Chedis are built to house relics of the Buddha. They are more commonly known as stupas. Siam's palace precinct and temple precinct were one. And, during the 'age of empire,' Siam's palace took a back seat to no other royal court on earth. Siam is now Thailand. [2011]
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Canillo, Andorra
One wall, two shutters, three signs of life: a metaphor for Andorra itself. The Pyrenees form the wall. The winter snows form the shutters. Three signs of life? The geranium, the floret on the lintel, and the lacy foliage on the curtain. Life flourishes in Andorra's three valleys just as it does in this finestral niche. [2005]
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Monday, April 16, 2012
Haleiwa, Hawaii, USA
Look at what lives in Kaiaka Bay: something for dinner. What a successful species crabs have been. They have colonized water and land all over the world. Here on Oahu, though, the local species of land crabs has been driven into extinction by successive waves of the earth's most predatory colonizer: homo sapiens. [2011]
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Sofia, Bulgaria
Sofia's Hagia Sofia stands as a visual reminder of the 6th century, a time when Bulgaria was part of the Byzantine Empire. In the empire's capital city, Constantinople, stood the most magnificent church in the world, a church by the same name: Hagia Sofia. Translated from Greek, it means "holy wisdom." Guess why Bulgaria's capital was christened Sofia. [2010]
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Sofia, Bulgaria
The Sofia Synagogue is the largest in southeastern Europe. It is a visual reminder of the Jewish community that once thrived in Bulgaria, but which took off for Israel after 1948. The central location and the imposing architecture point to a large, proud, and wealthy Jewish population as it existed a hundred years ago. [2010]
Friday, April 13, 2012
Sofia, Bulgaria
The Banya Bashi Mosque is a visual reminder of Bulgaria's Ottoman past and a jewel in Sofia's architectural crown. After all, Banya Bashi was designed by Sinan, Suleiman the Magnificent's chief architect. The fountain suggests what's pooling underground: not just water, but hot water. Sofia's mineral baths are nearby. [2010]
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Malacca, Malaysia
All you need is a table and a typewriter to make a living in the digital economy. Digital economy? Remember: Your digits are your fingers! The scribe in this picture is using his to fill out forms for customers in the neighborhood. But, scenes like this are becoming rarer as the "other digital economy" changes the face of our cities. [2011]
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Eureka! I found it on the south bank of the Yarra River in Melbourne. It was the tallest residential building in the world when completed in 2006, but now the honor has been stolen away by Dubai. As for Eureka: That's its name, a commemoration of the gold-rush Battle of Eureka Stockade. What do you make of the sculpture in the foreground? [2011]
Monday, April 9, 2012
Jerusalem, Israel
By tradition, the old walled city of Jerusalem is divided into four quarters. This is the Muslim Quarter. Within these limestone canyons, each new generation of Palestinians adds a line to the city's narrative. But, while people of the four quarters descend from a single ancestor, Abraham, there is no common understanding of the city's past. [1999]
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Jerusalem, Israel
By tradition, the old walled city of Jerusalem is divided into four quarters. This is the Christian Quarter. It is anchored by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The large dome spreads over the place where Jesus was buried and rose from the dead. The small dome marks the place where 'the one true cross' was found 300 years after the Crucifixion. [1999]
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Jerusalem, Israel
By tradition, the old walled city of Jerusalem is divided into four quarters. This is the Armenian Quarter. It is anchored by St. James Cathedral. With the Republic of Armenia's independence in 1991, this map of the 'Armenian Genocide' appeared on all of the quarter's streets. Most of historic Armenia is now part of Turkey. Note the two alphabets on display here. [1997]
Friday, April 6, 2012
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Saqqara, Egypt
Located just west of Memphis, Djoser's Step Pyramid moved the Egyptians a step closer to engineering the Great Pyramid of Giza. By extension, it was also the first step in developing the skills that made Dubai's Burg Khalifa possible. All of today's superlatives have roots somewhere in the ancient world. [2000]
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
La Condamine, Monaco
The day's done, and the slipshoes have returned to their home sill. The navy blues carry on a conversation with the potted plant, while the dolphin-eyed blues keep watch over the sidewalk below. Which one will be your avatar? The deep-rooted loner? The conversationalist who always finds someone to talk to? Or the ever-watchful looking for adventure? [2008]
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Monday, April 2, 2012
Swedesboro, New Jersey, USA
The Swedes (admixed with Finns) were the first European settlers on the lower Delaware River, and many of their descendants are buried here at Old Swede's Church (Lutheran, of course). At its height in the mid-1600's, their empire included parts of 10 countries on today's map of Europe and a nascent colony in North America. [2005]
Sunday, April 1, 2012
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