“Landgrab City” is an installation commissioned by the Shenzhen/Hong Kong Biennale of Architecture/Urbanism 2010 and is located on Shenzhenwan Avenue (Nanshan), a busy shopping district in the city of Shenzhen. Conceived as an investigation of the full extent of Shenzhen’s spatial footprint, the installation is comprised of two parts: a map of one of the city’s dense downtown areas, home to approximately 4.5 million people, and a plot of cultivated land divided into small lots. This land is a representation, at the same scale as the map, of the amount of territory necessary to provide the food consumed by the inhabitants of the portion of city sampled in the map, projected to 2027—the year China is expected to overtake the US as the world’s leading economy. Each lot represents the extent of a single food group’s footprint: vegetables, cereals, fruits, and pasture (for livestock), among others.
On Farming - Contents
BRACKET [on farming]
The Catalog: From Ploughs to Clouds
Beyond Disney
Your Town Tomorrow
Migrational Fields: Farming and the Chinese Urban Village
Farm Plus: Hybrid Agricultural Landscapes
Globalgaelisation
Aquaculture Seascape Park
Farm Logic
Reforestation of Greenwood Farm: An Emergent Landscape and Intervention
Cash Crops, Energy Landscapes
BLDG 2.0: Crowd-Sourcing Building Energy Performance
What We Are Is What We Eat
Butter in the Mail: Experiments in an Epistolary Economy
On Farming
HydroLoops: Mechanization and the Command Prompt
Living Tower: A Vertical Horse Stable for Luxor
GEOtube: Vertical Salt Deposit Growth System
Vertical Farming in Las Vegas? Beyond Pragmatism, Toward Desire
Learning from Salinas (Hopefully)
Food Matrix
Cloud Skippers
Fructus Vegetabilis: Growing Profit in the War on Error
45°50’8”N 119°41’57”W: Hybrid-Poplar Farm
Project::Farm
Seasoned Pasture: A Demonstration Range and Public Park
Factory-Farmed Architecture: You Are How You Eat
Hydrating Luanda
Notes Towards a History of Agrarian Urbanism
Post-Agricultural Speculations
The Building That Farms…
Chia Mesa
Nomadic Allotments: London’s Farming Future
Farming [PARK]: Rail, Roadways, and Urban Form Today
Microcosmic Aquaculture
Recycling Takes Command
Line 13 – Superlinearity
The Productive Surface
AGER-AGRI
Harvesting Space
Precipitating a Productive Countryside: A Renewed Company Town Model
Rethinking Urbanism in the Shrinking City of New Orleans
Ecologically Emergent Leisure Landscapes [EELLs]
Performative Landscapes