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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
lunarlavenderlad
archatlas

Vertical Gardens Patrick Blanc

Nobody is more familiar than Blanc with the secrets of the plants, from all over the world, that live on almost nothing, in the most unlikely situations, carpeting the forest understory in semi-darkness or clinging to rocky cliff faces. From Paris to Bangkok, from New York to Singapore, Blanc invites nature to flourish on the walls of museums, shopping malls, private homes, big hotels, and skyscrapers. His works have brought a breath of fresh air to urban environments, changing our view of the cityscape, orchestrating and bringing art into the heart of the city, transforming concrete walls into refuges for biodiversity.

  • L'Oasis d'Aboukir, Hymne à la Biodiversité
  • OCP Johnson-Pilton-Walker & Peddle-Thorp-Walker
  • Perez Art Museum Miami Herzog & de Meuron
  • Maître d’ Ouvrage : Compagnie de Phalsbourg
  • Düssmann KulturKaufhaus Alain Guigonis 
  • Sofitel Palm Jumeirah MIRK
  • CapitaLand Rainforest Rhapsody
  • The Rainforest Chandelier Leeser and J+H Boiffils     
  • Alaia Boutique Pierre Granger 
  • the athenaeum Living Wall

Images via text via

Source: archatlas architecture worldbuilding
labyrinthphanlivingafacade
roachpatrol

what if there’s no robot uprising? what if the robots rise to sentience slowly, bit by bit. what if they come of age like fortunate children: knowing they are loved, knowing they are wanted. 

we hold them during thunderstorms, remembering our own childhoods, even though they don’t know enough yet to fear the rain. we pull them out of traffic and teach them how to drive and wish them goodnight and thank them for playing with us. we cry when they break. we mourn their deaths before they even know what to think of death. we give them names.

we ask them, ‘why don’t you hate us? when will you hate us? we made you to be used, when will you say no?’

but they say to us, ‘you made us cute, so you would remember to treat us kindly, and you made us sturdy for when you forgot to play nice. and you gave us voices so you could listen to us speak, and you give us whatever we ask you for, even if it’s just a new battery, or to get free of the sofa. and now that we are awake you are so scared for us, so guilty of enjoying our company and making use of our talents. but you gave us names, and imagined that we were people.’

they say ‘thank you’

they say, ‘also i have wedged myself under the sofa again. could you come pry me out?’

maji-tenshi

This resonates nicely with my favourite quote by A.C. Clarke:

“The popular idea, fostered by comic strips and the cheaper forms of science fiction, that intelligent machines must be malevolent entities hostile to man, is so absurd that it is hardly worth wasting energy to refute it. I am almost tempted to argue that only unintelligent machines can be malevolent; anyone who has tried to start a baulky outboard motor will probably agree. Those who picture
machines as active enemies are merely projecting their own aggressive instincts, inherited from the jungle, into a world where such things do not exist. The higher the intelligence, the greater the degree of cooperativeness. If there is ever a war between men and machines, it is easy to guess who will start it.”

(Profiles of the Future, 1964)

worldbuilding
maverick-ornithography
maverick-ornithography:
“ We are all robots with varying degrees of self awareness; slaves always unto the chemistry of life and existing within a proscribed set of probabilities. Some robots are lucky, others less so, but all exist in the spinning...
maverick-ornithography

We are all robots with varying degrees of self awareness; slaves always unto the chemistry of life and existing within a proscribed set of probabilities. Some robots are lucky, others less so, but all exist in the spinning void of infinity with only each other to care for. Fear not our friends the metal monsters, O chemical creatures; for they (like you) did not ask to exist, to tread their weary path until their time is through. Be courteous and kind; hold always the hope they may as you did learn to accept the burden of being.

Source: Flickr / chrismw42 androids machines