Reclaiming Urban Landscape | Part 1
This week, we’re looking at ideas that claim our urban space back from the gruesome grip of commercialization, concrete and the general ugly of the city. Welcome to the Reclaiming Urban Landscape issue, Part 1: Top 5 Urban Design Greenifications, or what scaffolding has to do with Bambi.
GREENS FOR GRINS
Nothing says “give us back our space” like some unexpected greenification amidst the pavement-and-concrete dullness of the city. So we’ve picked the top 5 ideas that bring a tasty bite-sized bit of green to our urban stew of gray.
URBAN PARK(ING)
The PARK(ing) Project started in 2005 when REBAR, a San Francisco collective of artists, designers and activists, decided the city was in desperate need of an intervention: the dire lack of outdoor human habitat in downtown public space deprived people of their very basic need for a space to sit, relax and do nothing.
At the same time, 70% of the city’s downtown outdoor areas were dedicated to vehicles. So REBAR decided the way to go was to temporarily reclaim some of those parking spaces, feeding meters as a way of “renting” some precious outdoor space for up to 2 hours and transforming that space into a mini-park where people could just sit and enjoy themselves.
Think of it as a bonsai version of The Great Outdoors.

Since then, urban PARK(ing) has been popping up all over the world — Santa Monica, Glasgow, Sicily — producing the expected chain of befuddlement followed by amusement and eventually a delighted grin. And we say anything that brings more smiles to our sidewalks bustling with steel-faced pedestrians is a brilliant idea. >>> via REBAR Group
PARKWHEEL
The Parkwheel, a grass-lined wheel that lets you take the park with you, is the product of a student project aiming to make a social statement about the lack of green space in cities — and the irony of how we’re not even allowed to walk on the few public grass areas that do exist.

This nifty “park to go” came from David Gallaugher and two more students at the Dalhousie University of Architecture in Nova Scotia.
And, hamster jokes aside, we really, really want one. >>> via Treehugger
ADIDAS GRUN
Ugly billboards are everywhere, polluting our cityscape with bad ads, uninspiring imagery and general corporate unseemliness. So when one pops up and actually brings something fresh and inspiring to our urban scenery, we dig big-time.
Like this one for the adidas Grun, a shoe collection of questionable design that may indeed look much better on your building’s facade than it does on your feet.

Spotted in London. (Why is everything better in Europe?)
GREEN GREEN SCREEN
Ah, construction sites. With their raw industrial scaffolding, they’re just about the ugliest and least outdoorsy city sight. So when something not only covers the big ugly but actually greenifies the sidewalk, it’s a very, very good thing.
That’s exactly what Japanese architecture studio Klein Dytham did in Tokyo back in 2003 when the city’s largest mixed-use development was being built.

The Green Green Screen spanned an impressive 900 feet, covering the construction site with vertical stripes of 13 types of living evergreens alternating with green-leaf-themed graphic patterns. The Green Green Screen stayed up for the entire 3-year duration of the development, delighting passersby with a parklike experience that every New York sidewalk could oh-so-desperately use.
EDINA TOKODI GREEN GRAFFITI
As much as we respect graffiti culture, it has become one of the most universal reminders that you’re in a city — nothing says urban clutter like a graffiti-clad concrete wall. Which is why we dig street artist Edina Tokodi’s green graffiti — moss installations transforming drab public spaces like neighborhood streets and subway trains into living, touchable art galleries.

The Hungarian-born, Brooklyn-based artist is appalled by our city-dweller lack of a relationship with nature and hopes her art sends us into “mentally healthy garden states” — she sees herself a as a “cultivator of eco-urban sensitivity,” and relates her art to deeper emotional memories of animals and gardens from her childhood in Central Europe.
We just wanna pet Green Bambi.
Enjoyed this post? Subscribe to our feed for more great stuff.
- Reclaiming Urban Landscape | Part 4 The most influential guerrilla and street art that liberates our urban landscape from the gray grip of blandness and makes a social statement in the process. ...
- Reclaiming Urban Landscape | Part 2 Graffiti artwork, once the mark of a city's counter-culture, has come dangerously close to becoming an expected cultural cliché. Some of it, however, breaks convention in the most unexpected and stride-stopping of ways: here are our top 5 picks. ...
- Reclaiming Urban Landscape | Part 3 One of the greatest challenges of city life is navigating the cultural clutter. Here are 5 ways to find the best of what's out there with minimal effort. ...
- (P)hilly PARK(ing) You heard it here first. And now you hear it here second. GREENLIGHTING THE TRAFFIC PROBLEM Remember The PARK(ing) Project? On September 18, Philly finally joined the 50+ cities that partake in the annual phenomenon of National PARK(ing) Day, and now we’ve got the pics to prove it. All throughout...
- Play Me, I’m Yours: Reclaiming Public Space How an international guerrilla art project is revitalizing public space, community and our relationship with music....
















Hmmm. Can you plant wheat grass in the Adidas Gruen?
Fashionable AND tasty…
Ha. If anything, Commish, you’re on to a good analogy here — the Grün and wheatgrass seem to have quite a bit in common in that both come from a good place (because, c’mon, who doesn’t like adidas?), but both can best be described as an “acquired taste” that the majority of people unfortunately never end up acquiring. Humph.
[...] « Reclaiming Urban Landscape | Part 1 [...]
[...] parts 1, 2 or 3? Share the brain tickle: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can [...]
Great green collection on urban landscape.
Thanks for the post.
by OwlTemplates.com
[...] the PARK(ing) Project? On September 18, Philly finally joined the 50+ cities that partake in the annual phenomenon of [...]
[...] parts 1, 2 or [...]
[...] me of follow-up comments via email « Reclaiming Urban Landscape | Part 1 Reclaiming Urban Landscape | Part 3 [...]