Friday, August 28, 2015

FTB 39 - Lower Mid-City, New Orleans


In the move to Seattle, I uncovered some unfinished business, circa 2009


In the process, Grand Palace Hotel implosion became city-wide block party.   Then everyone got dusted out.  This is not my video.  I was on top of a CBD parking garage. There was much concern that the dust would harm elderly residents at the Iberville Projects but wind conditions worked out, it seems.

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

FTB38 - new sound sketchbook

Guitar, drums, clangy pitched thangs.  Check out the first 5 from the 4 track:


Wednesday, April 22, 2015

FTB 37 - Ras Al Khor, Dubai


Ras Al Khor ("Head of Creek") is a Ramsar Wetland of International Importance, located smack in the middle of one of the fastest-growing cities.  In the center, a grey heron and flamingo catch shade and look for food.  Background - Burj Khalifa, Earth's tallest building.

Ras Al Khor Wildlife Sanctuary lies at the head of Dubai Creek, along the Central Asia-Africa flyway.  These tidal mudflats, mangrove swamps, and desert wetlands provide migrating birds a rest stop at the edge of endless dunes that make up the Arabian Peninsula's Empty Quarter to the southwest.  Birds use Southeast Louisiana's barrier islands in a similar way before crossing the Gulf of Mexico.  I visited Ras Al Khor in early April while staying in Sharjah.

Waterway edges have been drastically altered by humans and surrounded by buildings.


Water taxis carry folks between sides of Bur Dubai (Old Dubai) upcreek from Ras Al Khoor.  Edges of the creek are lined by wharfs, restaurants, malls, hotels, and other built interventions.


Restoration of Ras Al Khor began in 1985.  Camel had previously grazed the area barren.  Hydrologic disconnection from tidal energies comes from upstream dredging, built developments, and pollution barriers.  Tidal shifts are artificially created by a pump station at the head of the creek.  


Access to Ras Al Khor is barred except for select spots.  Here is public birdwatching blind, constructed with traditional date palm fronds woven together. Last year 15,000 people visited the location.  Bayou Sauvage in New Orleans (a city with 25% Dubai's population) hosts 50,000 people annually.
Ras Al Khor Wildlife Sanctuary provides binoculars, tripod telescope, and identification books for guests.  Nice touch.  Here is another grey heron.

For more on the Ras Al Khor wetland and its story, take a look at “Ras Al Khor – Eco-tourism in constructed wetlands: post modernity in the modernity of the Dubai Landscape”.  Chris Ryan, Heba Aziz, and Ivan Ninov have written a a readable, short academic paper on Ras Al Khor and the development around it.  It also contains more info on "The Lagoons", a huge residential development currently under construction next door, marketing luxury life and boating in the wetlands.  

Monday, March 23, 2015

FTB36 - Barrier Island Shifts, Documented

Between 1984 and 2007, Karen Westphal* used time-lapse aerial photography to document shifting barrier islands along the Louisiana Coast while longshore transport, breaking waves, built structures, and other factors impact the movement of sand and sediment. Check out the links:

I find the following images to be very helpful in understanding the processes that Karen has documented.

Barrier island accretion through drumstick model.  The opposite can also happen, as an island is split by wave washover.
Grand Isle, Lousiana.  Photo taken from edge of beach.  Note how currents have dropped sand loads between beach and rock wall.  Birds often hunt here.

From Andrew Barron of Barataria Terrebonne National Estuary Program (BTNEP)

relatively new delta lobes of the Mississippi River, now constrained to the Balize delta course

older geologic features, well below the surface
Southeastern Louisiana is disappearing.  It's well-known, and it's a complicated equation.  Levees and human-made hydrologic barriers prevent Mississippi River sediment from building land atop fault lines while industry drains subterranean oil reserves and salt domes.  Trade channels have altered salinity throughout the Pontchartrain Basin while Gulf wetlands are devastated by salinity intrusion through exploratory oil canals.  The region's urban areas are subsiding after pumping all water away from development, drying out soils that rely upon water for structural stability, and replacing swampland with impervious surfaces.  That's not all, but it's a start.  Long story short: in the history of development along the lower Mississippi, natural systems have not been given due attention.  Engineering did not beat out nature, and we are now short of breath (and money) trying to catch up.  Natural systems shift and adapt, often more slowly and powerfully than human-built systems.  The barrier islands of Louisiana are a great example of this.

*Karen is a scientist working for National Audubon Society's Louisiana Coastal Initiative and is involved coordinating the Louisiana Master Naturalist Program.  I'm stoked that she shared this with me, I hope you enjoy it.

Monday, January 26, 2015

FTB35 - archaeological artifacts (updated 3-16-15)

from Wealth and Physical Stamina:

SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015


PAST TENSE PRESENT TENSE

Between 2008-2013 WNPS documented short-lived bands worthy of replay.  Many of these tapes were never released to the public as members went on to other projects.  As these 4-track master tapes resurface, we will digitize + compile them here with downloadable links.  You can also listen via Youtube, with tracks listed.  

family treasure trove:
Sparrowhawk
Nervous Juvenile
Firebrand (download here, see below for stream
Heat Rash (download here, see below for stream)
Brothers (download here, see below for stream)
Relax Band

Here are some old WNPS cassette releases to listen to:
WNPS01: Skin Shit - Prom Teeth
WNPS02: Gas Explode - Shrivel, Squirt, Implode
WNPS05: Necro Hippies - Sore Throat
WNPS06: Fisher Cat - Apocalypse
WNPS07: Fisher Cat







Thursday, January 22, 2015

FTB34 - Paths to Land

The old dusty "Freedom to Build" thought that the processes for legally accessing vacant property around town were quite hard to interpret.  This veil has contributed to a skewed sense of who can access vacant property to enliven neighborhoods, and should be lifted!   We pored over documents, visited sites, and interviewed folks until all of our brains' water evaporated.  The outcome was the tri-fold "Paths to Land Use" pamphlet. 

Download it here.  It's a tri-fold, so it looks wacky until it's folded.  





Labyrinthine processes created + intertwined consciously, worded in a foreign tongue... "Post-Kelo Era"?

Sunday, January 4, 2015

FTB33 - "Water on Display" from 1968


explanation of environmental processes with mid-1900's graphic design



In 1968 the United States was waking up to industrialized population growth's adverse effects on natural systems that we rely upon, and the US Geological Survey compiled 100+ graphics from public presentations explaining complicated hydrologic + geologic processes.  "Water on Display" documents posters by USGS's Water Resources, Conservation, Computer, Geologic, Topographic, Marine Research, and Recruiting Divisions.  

Take a look! You can download it HERE (28MB medium resolution) and HERE (9MB low res).  I've reduced the resolution to create a manageable filesize. Hopefully this hard-to-find document can be of interest to others working with public environmental education and have renewed relevance as water management issues continue to shape the future of our existence.  See the Data Center (formerly Greater New Orleans Community Data Center) report: The Water Workers: Workforce Opportunities in Water Management in Southeast Louisiana

The USGS still has reports available on all sorts of detailed topics via their maps + publications, lending programs with their library, and localized project sites such as Water Resources of Louisiana.  This is from San Diego's brand-new 9-story Central Library, which houses a high school, art gallery, event space, and more.