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‘slicetow, module 1’, 2010 by mathilde nivet
image © zoe guilbert

Words by Staff @Designboom

Cite de l’Architecture & Heritage in Paris, France, has organized an exhibition at Le Palais de Chaillot, entitled ‘Paper Architecture’ featuring designs by Ingrid SiliakusBeatrice CoronStephanie BeckMathilde Nivet and Peter Callesen. The collection of work looks at iconic buildings and the creation of imaginary cities made of the thin sheets. During the presentation children will learn the techniques used in the art of folding and etching to realize the models.

Paris-based designer Mathilde Nivet takes the context of urbanism and the city as the source for her work. She uses a pop-up technique which combines folding, decoupage and montage to represent three-dimensional architecture at a large scale. The facades make up a paper town at different levels to evoke a sense of memory and metropolitan legacy.


‘slicetow, module 2’…

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Contour Farming:A Practice of Rainwater Coservation and Reducing Soil Erosion

Practice of tilling sloped land along lines of consistent elevation in order to conserve rainwater and to reduce soil losses from surface erosion. These objectives are achieved by means of furrows, crop rows, and wheel tracks across slopes, all of which act as reservoirs to catch and retain rainwater, thus permitting increased infiltration and more uniform distribution of the water.

Contour farming is growing crops “on the level” across or perpendicular to a slope rather than up and down the slope. The rows running across the slope are designed to be as level as possible to facilitate tillage and planting operations on the contour.

Contour farming has been practiced for centuries in parts of the world where irrigation farming is important. Although in the United States the technique was first practiced at the turn of the 19th century, straight-line planting in rows parallel to field boundaries and regardless of slopes long remained the prevalent method. Efforts by the U.S. Soil Conservation Service to promote contouring in the 1930s as an essential part of erosion control eventually led to its widespread adoption.

The practice has been proved to reduce fertilizer loss, power and time consumption, and wear on machines, as well as to increase crop yields and reduce erosion. Contour farming is most effective when used in conjunction with such practices as strip cropping, terracing, and water diversion.

Stripcropping is growing strips of row crops such as corn and soybeans alternate in a planned rotation with equal-width strips of close-growing crops such as forages, small grains or sod, all arranged systematically across a field.

In contour stripcropping, crop strips alternate down a slope on the contour (across or perpendicular to the slope) to reduce soil erosion and runoff.

In cross-wind stripcropping, crop strips are straighter and arranged perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction to reduce soil erosion by wind.

Benefits

Keep valuable topsoil in place on sloping fields and slows down erosion.Slow water down and let it soak into the soil.Iimprove irrigation systems and conserve water.Reduce labor and make harvesting easier.Improve the appearance of the farm.

links and Sources:

Encyclopedia Britannica

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Jeremy's avatarOpen Geography

DigitalGlobe and GeoEye are not the only commercial satellite companies providing high resolution imagery to governments. In Europe, Astrium is talking about its new satellite offerings, and positioning itself and the merged DigitalGlobe as the world’s leading providers of imagery:

Patrick Le Roch, director of Astrium Services’ Geo-Information division, said the proposed merger of DigitalGlobe and GeoEye “creates a de facto duopoly between us and the merged U.S. companies.”

Briefing reporters here Oct. 8 during a visit to the Pleiades 1B and Spot 7 assembly facilities, Le Roch said Astrium Services estimates the global addressable market for Earth observation imagery is about 1.8 billion euros ($2.3 billion) in 2012.

The market, he said, is growing at a rate of 7 percent per year, with the high-resolution component growing faster than the other niches.

Le Roch said the “addressable” qualifier is meant to exclude markets that are not open to…

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ISRO Maps More Accurate than Google maps

Kohima, India: Asserting that GIS technology is emerging as a powerful tool for decentralised planning, a workshop, held in Kohima, capital of the northeastern state of Nagaland, called for utilisation of vital data and maps made available by ISRO through state-level remote sensing centres for decentralised planning at state, district and block levels.

The day-long workshop on space-based information support for decentralised planning (SIS-DP) was organised jointly by the Nagaland GIS and Remote Sensing Centre, the North East Space Application Centre (NESAC), Shillong, the Indian Institute of Remote Sensing (IIRS), Dehradun, the National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC), Hyderabad, and ISRO.

Giving an overview of SIS-DP in the North-east, NESAC director S Sudhakar suggested that state government departments use ISRO maps and data that are much more up to date and have higher resolution than Google maps.

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