The futur of cities gives food for architectural thought
Par: MOLLARD,Manon.
Type Document : Revue / Périodique Editeur: London Buxton press 2018Description Matérielle: 121p. couv.ill.en coul.,ill.ISSN: 0003-861X. In: The Architectural reviewSommaire: Sommaire: For thousands of years food has shaped civilisation, but with swelling populations and bulging megacities, how can we ensure that we don’t eat ourselves to death? This month’s issue interrogates how food shapes the buildings and landscapes in which it is grown, slaughtered, manufactured, distributed, sold, shared and eaten, bringing to the fore the intrinsic relationship between the built world and the food that sustains it. ‘How do you feed a city?’ Carolyn Steel asks in this month’s keynote essay. The answer, she argues, lies in reassessing the true cost of cheap food, which is threatening both our health and the health of our planet. From droughts in Palermo to the polluting effects of salmon farming in the Isle of Skye, Cooking Sections propose a CLIMAVORE diet that challenges the ways we produce food in changing landscapes. More than just land suffered during Britain’s colonial endeavours in Barbados: many of Britain’s great cultural assets were built on sugar and slave labour, recounts Andrea Stuart. Two schools, the Lycée Hôtelier de Lille by Caruso St John and an agricultural college in Uganda by Studio FH, nurture new life – as well as food production – in different corners of the world. The future of meat is also a hot topic, discussed in Carolien Niebling’s The Sausage of the Future which stars as this month’s Book of the Month, while in Shanghai, an Art Deco slaughterhouse has undergone the unlikely transformation into a cultural quarter, the ramps that once led animals to their death now lined with coffee shops. We also look at fast-food architecture as it leaves the monumental plastic doughnuts behind in favour of health, openness and sustainability, and lament the slow demise of the Great British greasy spoon. Charlie Bigham rethinks not just the bog-standard ready-meal but also the bog-standard factory shed with the new food production campus in the English countryside by Feilden Fowles.Type de document | Site actuel | Cote | Info vol. | Statut | Notes | Date de retour prévue | Code à barres |
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Revue / Périodique |
Bibliothèque Centrale
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16070426001 (Parcourir l'étagère) | 1455 | Disponible | 1455 | 16070426001 |
For thousands of years food has shaped civilisation, but with swelling populations and bulging megacities, how can we ensure that we don’t eat ourselves to death? This month’s issue interrogates how food shapes the buildings and landscapes in which it is grown, slaughtered, manufactured, distributed, sold, shared and eaten, bringing to the fore the intrinsic relationship between the built world and the food that sustains it.
‘How do you feed a city?’ Carolyn Steel asks in this month’s keynote essay. The answer, she argues, lies in reassessing the true cost of cheap food, which is threatening both our health and the health of our planet. From droughts in Palermo to the polluting effects of salmon farming in the Isle of Skye, Cooking Sections propose a CLIMAVORE diet that challenges the ways we produce food in changing landscapes. More than just land suffered during Britain’s colonial endeavours in Barbados: many of Britain’s great cultural assets were built on sugar and slave labour, recounts Andrea Stuart.
Two schools, the Lycée Hôtelier de Lille by Caruso St John and an agricultural college in Uganda by Studio FH, nurture new life – as well as food production – in different corners of the world. The future of meat is also a hot topic, discussed in Carolien Niebling’s The Sausage of the Future which stars as this month’s Book of the Month, while in Shanghai, an Art Deco slaughterhouse has undergone the unlikely transformation into a cultural quarter, the ramps that once led animals to their death now lined with coffee shops. We also look at fast-food architecture as it leaves the monumental plastic doughnuts behind in favour of health, openness and sustainability, and lament the slow demise of the Great British greasy spoon. Charlie Bigham rethinks not just the bog-standard ready-meal but also the bog-standard factory shed with the new food production campus in the English countryside by Feilden Fowles.