Luanda, the fastest growing city in the world, is desperately short of clean water. Only one in six Luandan households has running water, forcing most of the inhabitants of the musseques (the vast slums that constitute the majority of Luanda's land area) to depend on contaminated water brought by truck from rivers hours north and south of the city. The price of water in the musseques can be as high as 12 cents a gallon, a huge burden on a populace which lives on an average of $2 per person per day. In 2006, the worst African cholera epidemic in a decade devastated the musseques, killing 1600, spread by contaminated drinking water as well as contact with sewage.
What if water, already inextricable from agricultural farming processes, was itself farmed? Beyond the direct benefits a renewable source of fresh, clean water would provide Luanda, farming water seeds the city with potential. By establishing an infrastructure to effect the farming of water, one may farm landscapes, societies, production: a city.
Stephen Becker and Rob Holmes are mammoth. Stephen is an architectural designer and project manager based outside of Boston. Rob practices as a landscape architect in Washington, DC.
On Farming - Contents
BRACKET [on farming]
The Productive Surface
Factory-Farmed Architecture: You Are How You Eat
Farm Logic
Cash Crops, Energy Landscapes
What We Are Is What We Eat
GEOtube: Vertical Salt Deposit Growth System
Living Tower: A Vertical Horse Stable for Luxor
Seasoned Pasture: A Demonstration Range and Public Park
Nomadic Allotments: London’s Farming Future
Learning from Salinas (Hopefully)
AGER-AGRI
Aquaculture Seascape Park
Precipitating a Productive Countryside: A Renewed Company Town Model
Landgrab City
Harvesting Space
The Building That Farms…
Post-Agricultural Speculations
Project::Farm
Chia Mesa
Butter in the Mail: Experiments in an Epistolary Economy
Ecologically Emergent Leisure Landscapes [EELLs]
Fructus Vegetabilis: Growing Profit in the War on Error
The Catalog: From Ploughs to Clouds
Notes Towards a History of Agrarian Urbanism
Rethinking Urbanism in the Shrinking City of New Orleans
Beyond Disney
45°50’8”N 119°41’57”W: Hybrid-Poplar Farm
Recycling Takes Command
BLDG 2.0: Crowd-Sourcing Building Energy Performance
Microcosmic Aquaculture
Cloud Skippers
Line 13 – Superlinearity
Food Matrix
HydroLoops: Mechanization and the Command Prompt
Farming [PARK]: Rail, Roadways, and Urban Form Today
Performative Landscapes
Farm Plus: Hybrid Agricultural Landscapes
Migrational Fields: Farming and the Chinese Urban Village
Reforestation of Greenwood Farm: An Emergent Landscape and Intervention
Your Town Tomorrow
On Farming
Vertical Farming in Las Vegas? Beyond Pragmatism, Toward Desire
Globalgaelisation