Posts tagged adaptive reuse.

Redesigning the mall for public spaces, parks, gardens, even churches: The NYTimes surveys adaptive reuses of the dying American shopping mall ›

Most cities, looking at shrinking budgets, cannot afford to subsidize or knock down ailing malls, and healthy retailers that are expanding — like H&M and Nordstrom Rack — generally will not open at depressed locations. So, as though they were upholstering polyester chairs from the 1960s with Martha Stewart fabric, urban planners and community activists are trying to spruce up and rethink the uses of many of the artifacts.

Schools, medical clinics, call centers, government offices and even churches are now standard tenants in malls. By hanging a curtain to hide the food court, the Galleria in Cleveland, which opened in 1987 with about 70 retailers and restaurants, rents space for weddings and other events. Other malls have added aquariums, casinos and car showrooms.

Designers in Buffalo have proposed stripping down a mall to its foundation and reinventing it as housing, while an aspiring architect in Detroit has proposed turning a mall’s parking lot there into a community farm. Columbus, Ohio, arguing that it was too expensive to maintain an empty mall on prime real estate, dismantled its City Center mall and replaced it with a park.”

NYTimes

  02/07/12 at 11:00am

onearth:

This “massive fish-killing machine” on Lake Erie, which also burns coal to power homes, is shutting down.  No More Bass-O-Matic: Utility to Close Fish-Killing Coal-Fired Power Plant

At least the comments are entertaining…

  01/27/12 at 12:59pm via onearth.org

Fantastic example of adaptive reuse. Double win: via a great tumblr, architizer:

Before and After: In 1986, Mark di Suvero repurposed an abandoned riverside landfill and illegal dumpsite in Long Island City to become the Socrates Sculpture Park, an internationally renowned outdoor museum.

  10/14/11 at 11:05am via architizer.com

World’s largest solar bridge project gets underway. Blackfriars bridge was built in 1886 and spans the Thames in London.

“Work on the world’s largest solar bridge has started in central London.  The new solar roof spanning Blackfriars Railway Bridge above the River Thames will cover more than 6,000 square meters when finished, according to developers. 

Over 4,400 individual photovoltaic panels are expected to produce around 900,000 kilowatt hours of electricity every year, providing the station with half of its energy needs, according to Solar Century, the UK company installing the solar roof.”

CNN

  10/08/11 at 10:06am via CNN