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Don said: "Thanks for the post! Very cultural to say the least. Very much worth the time to view. A couple of side notes if you haven't had a chance..." [read]

Sarah said: ""After all, what did people expect? If you build more roads, and don't at the same time provide for more public transit, then sure enough, more peo..." [read]

said: "Well if there was a increase in the population within a metro area, then there's always an increase in traffic so it wouldn't matter what roads pub..." [read]

said: "anyone bothered to check out lunchboxes.com? You can get tiffins, regular lunch boxes, themed lunch boxes, domed lunchbox/thermos combos, bento box..." [read]

Preserve said: "I'm on track with the used lunch box perspective. Why make more and more and more lunch boxes when there are already millions of perfectly good lu..." [read]

Shigeru Ban - Designing Outside The Square

by Warren McLaren, Sydney on 05.31.05
Design & Architecture (designers)

Shigeru-Ban.jpg

What do a Rwandan refugee camp and a world fair in Germany have in common? Radical architect Shigeru Ban is what. Both the tent and the massive pavilion are supported by his key design innovation — not reinforced steel or carbon-fibre but humble cardboard paper tubes! Winner of both Best Young Architect of the Year (1997) from The Japan Institute of Architects through to the Grande Medaille d'Or from the Academie d' Architecture last year. This design virtuoso has taken cubby house creation to its logical conclusion. He has designed both temporary and permanent structures using his cardboard tubes. From the grand halls of busy cities to lowly rural refugee accommodation, he has amply demonstrated that new thought and working with simple materials can create buildings, that satisfy both need and want. Memory jogger from GreenClips. ::Shigeru Ban Architects [by WM]

See also past posts like: Cardboard House of the Future

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