Monday, October 27, 2008

Landfill Transforms Into Landscape?

Picture this: Layers and mountains of dirty wrappers, napkins, and papers. Mounted atop those mountains, are moth eaten mattresses, worn and dirty of couches, broken stoves, TVs, toilets, refrigerators. Anything that people do not want anymore, either broken, torn, dirty or stained, that are thrown away and put into a certain place. Now imagine all that garbage transformed into a green and agricultural National Park! This landscape restoration named 'The Valley of Joan', has won the Energy, Waste and Recycling category at the 2008 World Architecture Festival in Barcelona, Spain. The Valley of Joan project was conducted in 200, and just completed earlier this year. It is a remarkable recovery from a polluted dump, back into natrual nature. Recreating the landscape after pouring hundreds of thousands of pounds of garbage onto the field is a gracious task to do. I think that this act, by far, helps our environment rebuild itself and regain it's natrual look, before all of our waste overpowered the nature.

Learn more about The Valley of Joan: here

Thursday, October 16, 2008

The Inspiration II

In this picture: Barrington Irving, the youngest and first African-American pilot to fly solo around the world.


Summer camps are probably one of the places you wouldn't want to spend your summer vacation if you lived in Miami, Florida. However, if you signed up for 'Build and Soar', a 10-week camp offered by Barrington Irving, you will not be disappointed with your summer. In this program, inner city highschoolers learn how a plane is put together piece by piece, how the sky is not the limit, and how to work together to acheive a finale: Building a plane by themselves. The highschoolers who participated in 'Build and Soar', also engaged in learning opportunities where they constructed rockets, wind tunnel aerodynamic flight testing, and participated in both real and computer simulations. On October 15, Irving boarded a Zenith XL aircraft that was constructed by the high school students, and took it for a test ride. "I feel excited because it's very inspirational to know I built a plane," said Denzel Brown. Irving justified his thoughts to the crowd that had gathered to watch and cheer him on. "I'm not nervous about flying this aircraft because I believe in our students," he said, just shortly before taking off. The highschoolers named their aircraft the 'Inspiration II', in honor of the plane Barrington used on his trip around the world. Usually, it takes a year to build even an experimental plane, however, these students spent ten weeks on this project, and was still able to make have it take flight and fly a thousand feet above the ground. I believe that this was a major accomplishment to the highschool students, knowing that they've created an aircraft that is stable and can, in fact, take flight. This also creates a spark of inspiration for children and teenagers to know that they too can create a stable model, and the sky is not the limit.

picture credit to: google images.