Conner Cunningham

@otherstuffandthings

landscape, architecture, and other stuff designer
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Weeks posts
Really beautiful blockage on Milwaukee’s Easy Side
14 1
8 months ago
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9 months ago
Yet, he said, it is often our mightiest projects that most obviously betray the degree of our insecurity. The construction of fortifications, for instance—and Antwerp was an outstanding example of that craft—clearly showed how we feel obliged to keep surrounding ourselves with defenses, built in successive phases as a precaution against any incursion by enemy powers, until the idea of concentric rings making their way steadily outward comes up against its natural limits. If we study the development of fortifications from Floriani, da Capri, and Sanmicheli, by way of Rusenstein, Burgsdorff, Coehoorn, and Klengel, and so to Vauban and Montalembert, it is amazing, said Austerlitz, to see the persistence with which generations of masters of the art of military architecture, for all their undoubtedly outstanding gifts, clung to what we can easily see today was a fundamentally wrong-headed idea: the notion that by designing an ideal tracé with blunt bastions and ravelins projecting well beyond it, allowing the cannon of the fortress to cover the entire operational area outside the walls, you could make a city as secure as anything in the world can ever be. No one today, said Austerlitz, has the faintest idea of the boundless amount of theoretical writings on the building of fortifications, of the fantastic nature of the geometric, trigonometric, and logistical calculations they record, of the inflated excesses of the professional vocabulary of fortification and siegecraft, no one now understands its simplest terms, escarpe and courtine, faussebraie, réduit, and glacis, yet even from our present standpoint we can see that towards the end of the seventeenth century the star-shaped dodecagon behind trenches had finally crystallized, out of the various available systems, as the preferred ground plan: a kind of ideal typical pattern derived from the Golden Section, which indeed, as study of the intricately sketched plans of such fortified complexes as those of Coevorden, Neuf-Brisach, and Saarlouis will show, immediately strikes the layman as an emblem both of absolute power and of the ingenuity the engineers put to the service of that power. - WG Sebald “Austerlitz”
15 1
10 months ago
3 0
10 months ago
I love patches of sod what always comes to mind is that Burle Marx project where he takes the two different types of grass and patterns them whether in checkerboard or wave pattern. My memory tells me he was using different types of grass for those to assist in patterning, but really I’m not sure if it was just some steel edging and careful cutting. You can look up pics it’s really wonderful. But who really needs that when you’ve got contractors with wonderful hands that install in opposing directions making this very sort of 2000’s sort of rectangle gradient. Look if we’re going to have lawn at least make it interesting that’s all I’m saying, even if it’s just temporary.
10 2
11 months ago
5 0
11 months ago
This is very powerful
9 0
11 months ago
3 0
11 months ago
2 0
11 months ago
3 0
11 months ago
6 0
1 year ago
7 0
1 year ago