Deep structure in Aarhus
FC-01x Future Cities (1st Run) - Exercise 1 : "Making the Invisible - Visible"
Uploaded on 2015-04-17 by bukovitelli
Background: Landscape urbanism plays with the concept of deep structure and deep sectioning in order to obtain information that is not apparent. There are traces of slower, larger processes, subsurface, behind-the-scene mechanisms if one wears the appropriate lens to get this info. I am introducing two of these in the case of Aarhus stream crossing. Ecological information: ecology develops a legion of statistical data harvesting and analysis methods, while also having to work with interfering, interacting information. Technology exists to collect for instance data on soil nutrients, such as Ferrum, ammonia, nitrates, phosphorus, manganese and calcium using optical sensors (Yokota et al, 2007). The data can be compared with the requirements of certain species, communities, or other succesful/unsuccesful riverside ecosystems. Traffic pattern: a simple cross-sectional measurement of the magnitude and distribution of motorised traffic can help us identify wildlife, and public life affecting disturbances such as noise, smell and danger. [1]: https://edxuploads.s3.amazonaws.com/1429259581501792.jpg