Infinite Parking Lots
In: Anthropological quarterly: AQ, Band 95, Heft 2, S. 465-474
ISSN: 1534-1518
422 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Anthropological quarterly: AQ, Band 95, Heft 2, S. 465-474
ISSN: 1534-1518
Blog: AIER | American Institute for Economic Research
"There's a good reason why Kansas's wheat fields, Texas's hunting reserves, New Jersey's cranberry bogs, and Florida's orange groves aren't parking lots." ~ Donald J. Boudreaux
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 36, Heft 0, S. 673-678
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Management report for nonunion organizations, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 5-5
ISSN: 1530-8286
In: Popular Government, Band 24, S. 7-9
In: Socio-economic planning sciences: the international journal of public sector decision-making, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 95-101
ISSN: 0038-0121
In: Environmental science and pollution research: ESPR, Band 22, Heft 23, S. 18654-18668
ISSN: 1614-7499
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 41.3, Heft 0, S. 163-168
ISSN: 2185-0593
Parking Lot Park is a live public event that maps the various geographies - geologic, political, social, and sexual- which intersect within the first Open Space Park of San Diego, California: San Clemente Canyon. Currently known as Marian Bear Park, the land has undergone many transformations: formerly a harvest spot for the Kumeyaay and later grazing territory for Mission era cattle ranchers, the presently U.S.-owned canyon was protected from highway expansions in the 1970s by it's namesake, Marian Bear. Parking Lot Park unfolded November 8th, and 9th 2014 as a sound promenade and drive-in theater within the canyon itself. Staged for audiences of 50, participants traversed the canyon with flashlights to discover 6 sound installations. Each sound promenade station gave voice to an individual layer of the human geography of Marian Bear Park. Projected through a set of custom-built speakers, stories were told through looping recorded vocal narration, and are interwoven and counterbalanced with processed and manipulated field recorded sounds from the canyon. The evening concluded with a drive-in theater about the origin myth erotics of the canyon, accompanied by an FM radio sound composition designed for the insulated intimacy of a car cab. By drawing out individual threads of material and social engagement in San Clemente Canyon, the project proposes that landscape is a constantly shifting expression of emergent, dominant, and residual patterns. Parking Lot Park presents geologic time as both erotic and contingent as the dynamic between lovers, and conversely, that human environmental influence is as much of a layer as sedimentary rock
BASE
In: Public management: PM, Band 20, S. 201-205
ISSN: 0033-3611
SWP
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 23, Heft 0, S. 397-402
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, Band 56, S. 59-67
In: Computers, environment and urban systems: CEUS ; an international journal, Band 56, S. 59-67
ISSN: 0198-9715
In: YTRA-D-21-01679
SSRN