29/08/2012

Prinzessinnengärten: Berlin’s Urban Garden of Eden

Prinzessinnengärten: Berlin’s Urban Garden of Eden

Like a quintessential utopian oasis, the Prinzessinnengärten was in 2009 one of the first urban garden projects to be initiated in the capital city of Germany. Since then it has become a cherished sanctum where one can unwind from the stresses of the city, enjoy a first-class organic meal or come together, to experiment and learn the ins and outs of city farming.

Robert Shaw, a filmmaker, and Marco Clausen, a bar owner and photographer, spearheaded this “pop up farming” project in Berlin’s Kreuzberg district, after an inspiring visit to agriculta urbanas in Cuba. Along with the help of an extensive populace of volunteers, this former fallow wasteland was converted into a mobile farm of transportable organic vegetable plots. Today, the 6,000 square meter pasture consists of a highly diverse range of locally produced herbs and vegetables, all of which are grown without use of pesticides or other artificial substances. Furthermore, the fruits and veggies are cultivated in portable rice bags, baker’s boxes or milk containers. Additionally, there is a honey-cooperation with a fellow beekeeper and at the little sheds, the reaped foods are available for purchase. When necessary, a change of location is fairly easily realised, due to the dynamic, mobile system that is created.

With all the labour-intensive harvesting and tending of foods and plants on this urban farmland, a devoted community has been established. It has become a collective that is first and foremost premised on urban agriculture and sustainable living. In view of this, the Prinzessinnengärten provides an attractive haven for anyone with aspirations to seed, weed and exchange knowledge on organic food and nutrition, biodiversity, planting techniques and even climate control. Yet with the same zest one can also choose to retreat in the wooden ready-made library or in the cafe under the dotted willows, while enjoying a freshly prepared vegetarian meal.


If anything, this urban gardening project illustrates the feasibility to go green amid endless blocks of grey, converting abandoned urban lots into small green beds of fruits, fauna and veggies. As such, it is a good reminder of how small scale interventions can kindle active citizenship to collectively ignite a new, greener lease of life.

And although the word on the streets claims that real estate developers have set their eyes on this green city lung, thus far this local Garden of Eden continues to flourish, evolve and cultivate a greener consciousness.

Claire van der Berg – Images courtesy of Prinzessinnengärten

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27/08/2012

Summer 2012: Wrapping Up

Summer 2012: Wrapping Up

Well, well, well… it’ a wrap! Summer twenty-twelve is dead, her ashes strewn lovingly along sandy beaches and upon the streets of faraway cities. In train cars, dive bars and motel rooms. Oh, she shall surely be missed. But despite her killer heat waves, the never-ending London games and a psycho Batman mass shooting, she brought no rapture, no armageddon. The messiah didn’t even pop in for tea.

So, count your fingers and toes, kids, and snap snap! Chop chop! Out of the bomb shelters and back to the grind with each and every one of you!

Gently, of course. Don’t hit that hamster wheel without some serious coffee. Look around you – you’ll need it.
Perhaps it’s just us, but the light of summer has the darndest tendency to bring into harsh focus exactly those big picture problems we’re all part of. Escape brings perspective, after all. And perspective is the first step towards a solution. And assuming the Maya got it wrong, we’ll be here for quite a while. Now is prime time to make it count.
So as you wake from your summer siestas, we hope you’ll join us in soaking up the seriousness of the season: Elections! Climate change! Censorship! Poverty! Russia’s run amok! Syria’s in shambles!

Nothing we can’t handle together. 
Big cheers to a productive and hopeful new season.


Tag Christof

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26/08/2012

Summer 2012: Polaroid Detroit by Tag Christof

Summer 2012: Polaroid Detroit by Tag Christof

Much like every summer, I explore the ruins of my own country. Interstate, fleabag motels and running on a diet of pure roadside grease, I’m convinced there is no beauty as sublime as the sprawling squalor that is America. And since I don’t live here, I can share Baudrillard’s detached disdain for the place while also being wildly, reverently in love with its endlessness, its absurdity, its contradictions.

So after six weeks of hard labor in a Los Angeles architecture school, I set out (by muscle car, of course) with a bag full of vintage film stock and an arsenal of click-click cameras to burn some serious petrol through the sprawling landscape. Destination: Detroit. That down-and-out fighter in the midst of a full-blown cultural renaissance. (More on that later.)

Below are some instant shots, mostly on old Polaroid 669 from the 23-state, 14,000km trek. I can’t wait to see what comes back from the lab.

An idyllic scene of likely genetically-modified crops somewhere in eastern Nebraska.


The ghost of modernism past. An enormous, shuttered shopping mall in St. Louis.

Home sweet Detroit.


Exploring the eerie, abandoned Brewster-Douglass projects – once the home of Diana Ross.

The Blue Whale, smiling since the 1970s in a lovely little bog outside Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Tag Christof

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25/08/2012

Summer 2012: Morocco by Matthew Mattia

Summer 2012: Morocco by Matthew Mattia

The typical ramadan swim. Essaouira.

A grid between  human and  divine. Rabat.

Romantic walk inside the house. Marrakech.

The classic animal beach. Tanger.

From the same point of view there’re different perspectives. Essaouira.

Matthew Mattia

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24/08/2012

Summer 2012: Pasman by Rujana Rebernjak

Summer 2012: Pasman by Rujana Rebernjak

When you go to Pasman Island in northern Dalmatia, by the size of the ferry that hardly fits more then 15 cars, you can easily figure out you are heading for a lonely and relaxing vacation. Pasman is a small island where time seems to have stopped. Besides a few houses and five or six fishermen’s boats, the only thing you can see is the sea, some rocks and the olive trees. But the beauty of the sea makes up for everything, being one of the cleanest Croatian islands.

That’s why these images show only small bays and the nature surrounding them, a green and blue collage. Get ready for tough roads and lots of walking, maybe on sunrise or sunset, seeing the beautiful light on one of the most incredible Dalmatian islands.

One thing you have to remember if you ever visit Pasman – be sure to make friends with someone who has a boat, that’s the only right way of experiencing it.







Rujana Rebernjak

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24/08/2012

Summer 2012: Chiavari, Italy by Helga Tripi

Summer 2012: Chiavari by Helga Tripi

The color explosion in the Market of Chiavari, located in the Italian Liguria.

The best cheese in town; the multicolor window of La Baita, Carrugio of Chiavari.

The old and prestigious Caffe’ Defilla.

Time to talk. One of the oldest clock-shops and goldsmith’s of Chiavari.

The Sunset Boulevard with a view over the Ligurian sea.

Helga Tripi

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23/08/2012

Summer 2012: Jaala by Naja Conrad-Hansen

Summer 2012: Jaala by Naja Conrad-Hansen

I just came back to Copenhagen from my one month of holiday in Jaala, Finland 61°3′0″N 26°28′55″E. This is the collection of my favorite things to see in the forest.





Naja Conrad-Hansen

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22/08/2012

Summer 2012: Andalusia by Vicky Trombetta

Summer 2012: Andalusia by Vicky Trombetta

Controlled and conscious de-growth? Dedicating August – the holiday month par excellence – to a rural and bucolic life marked by natural rhythms, could be a good starting point. It’s a pity that afterwards September follows.

Andalusian woods early morning after a black coffee, in a perfect light.

Clam spaghetti, my favorite dish and also one of my specialties.

Peace and dim light of Casa Elisabeth, a rural accommodation in Baja Ribera, ideal for the famous Iberian “siesta”.

The scent of the Mediterranean fig, without which the holiday wouldn’t be the same.

The infinite Andalusian olive tree groves at dusk, perfect for a run to detoxicate from the technological stress.

Vicky Trombetta

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21/08/2012

Summer 2012: Lake Como by Caterina Lunghi

Summer 2012: Lake Como by Caterina Lunghi

Three tiramisù, regular, with rasberries or with blueberries, prepared with bio ingredients by Chef Federico Beretta. The last bite of a nice lunch at Restaurant Regina131, on its terrace overlooking the Lake. Worthy of mention: its risotto with lake perch. Regina131, Carate Urio-Laglio, Como.

Archway of lemon trees in the gardens of Villa Carlotta. History, art, a view and gorgeous nature. Villa Carlotta, Tremezzo, Como.

Tables and colorful striped chairs on the terrace of the Grand Hotel Tremezzo overlooking the lake with Bellaggio in the distance. Grand Hotel Tremezzo, Tremezzo, Como.

Charms from Varenna. Flowers, American-style breakfast, gelato, cakes and wonderfully crafted panini. A cute, tiny café in the heart of Varenna. Varenna Caffè, Varenna, Lecco

Bellaggio. Photos shot from a boat on the Lake. The silhoutte of Villa Melzi with its white and azure Moresque-style gazebo perched on the Lake’s edge.

Caterina Lunghi 

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20/08/2012

Summer 2012: Italy by Alessia Bossi

Summer 2012: Italy by Alessia Bossi

Arcola has the most beautiful streets in Liguria.

Bowling in Milan is one of the best activities for a sunny day.

Monterosso is a perfect venue for lazy holidays in a retired mood.

The time seems to stop in Pitigliano in Tuscany, in the province of Grosseto.

The Botanical Garden in Parma is a must-see when taking a pause from the city life.

Alessia Bossi

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