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Paris Expo: Bravos and Bouquets for Urban Gardens

by Sheron Long on July 15, 2013

Roses on display at Paris Garden Show, featuring creative ideas in urban gardening. Image © Sheron Long

A bouquet of roses brightens a rainy day at Jardins, Jardin Aux Tuileries, annual Paris garden show.
© Sheron Long

Creative Ideas Find Fertile Ground

Plenty of creative ideas grew in the Paris salon of Gertrude Stein (early 1900s), including her famous quote:

A rose is a rose is a rose. 

Though generally interpreted to mean that “things are what they say they are,” I’m not so sure that’s the case when it comes to the term “garden show.”

A garden show is a garden show is not just a garden show when it’s in Paris.

This year, the Paris garden show known as Jardins, Jardin Aux Tuileries staged its magic in the Tuileries Garden—a stunning display of beauty (superbe, as the French say) and fertile ground for creative ideas in urban gardening.

Can’t Go Out? Go Up!—The Beauty of  Vertical Gardens

I bought my ticket to beauty and was enchanted from the moment I saw wispy fabric waving in the wind.

Wall of roses at Jardins, Jardin Aux Tuileries, a Paris Expo featuring creative ideas in urban gardening. Image © Sheron Long

“L’Instant Grand-Siècle,” exhibit by Nicolas Gilsoul for Laurent-Perrier at Paris garden show
© Sheron Long

What was behind it? A vertical garden of roses—pink and mauve and white and red—created by landscape architect Nicolas Gilsoul for Champagne Laurent-Perrier, a participant in the annual event for the past nine years.

Wall of Roses at Jardins, Jardin Aux Tuileries, a Paris garden show featuring creative ideas in urban gardening. Image © Sheron Long

Just how big was that bouquet? 10,000 roses and over 15 feet tall!
© Sheron Long

OK, a rose is a rose is a rose, but when I saw 10,000 of them in a vertical garden three times my height, I had to elaborate: Oh-là-là!

Vertical gardens have been around at least since the Hanging Gardens of Babylon in 600 BC. Today, however, they are a new and creative way to address issues in the urban environment.

  • Green, living urban walls bring to city dwellers the beauty and nature that has long been associated with health and well-being.
  • Vertical gardens play a role in controlling temperatures inside buildings.
  • Some vertical gardens are farms, growing food to feed the increasing urban population.

Vertical gardens are as varied as any landscape. See 39 more here.

Do Creative Ideas Change with the Times? 

Jardins, Jardin Aux Tuileries, in partnership with the Louvre Museum, formerly the royal residence at the east end of the Tuileries Garden, began the annual event ten years ago.

Each year, the show addresses creative gardening ideas.

Sign honoring Le Notre to whom Jardins, Jardin Aux Tuileries dedicated its garden show that features creative ideas in urban gardening. Image © Sheron Long

André le Nôtre made the French formal garden
famous throughout Europe.
© Sheron Long

This year’s event honored landscape architect André Le Nôtre (1613–1700) for his creative genius upon the 400th anniversary of his birth.

Le Nôtre was born into a family of gardeners to kings and was trained in the Tuileries Garden, which he modified between 1666 and 1672.

He is perhaps best known for creating the grand gardens at Versailles for Louis XIV.

Creative ideas often spring from need. Le Notre’s creative challenge was to “think big,” generating ideas that worked on a vast scale, whereas urban spaces today often demand creative ideas that work on a small scale.

Times change, and so do creative solutions.

Somehow, I was sure that Le Nôtre would approve of today’s artists, designers, and landscape architects who are working “small” and “up” to bring beauty to urban spaces.

Ugly Sidewalks? Dress Them Up with Dadagreen®

When I saw this gentleman dressed up as Le Nôtre in the Dadagreen® exhibit, I knew I would find creative ideas there.

Actor playing Le Notre at the 2013 Paris garden admiring the creative ideas in urban gardening in the Dadagreen exhibit. Image © Paule Kingleur

Le Nôtre impersonator sits amidst the creative ideas at the Dadagreen® exhibit.
© Sara Lub

Bringing beauty to fences and grills along streets and bridges, by hospitals and schools, to your balcony—that’s the goal of Dadagreen®, innovative flower pots that combine two old ideas—saddlebags and container gardening—to create fertile ground for an urban garden.

Dadagreen® flower boxes straddling urban railings, a creative idea in urban gardening. Image © Paule Kingleur

Dadagreen® flower boxes ride the railings in Paris and green up urban spaces.
© Paule Kingleur

Dadagreen®, the concept of Paule Kingleur, founder of Paris Label, consists of two saddlebags handmade of recycled tarp and decorated with eye-catching photographs. Filled with dirt, the innovative pots welcome flowers, greenery, and even vegetables for those who want to create a kitchen garden on their street.

The Dadagreen, a creative idea in urban gardening, is planted with zucchini. Image © Paule Kingleur

Zucchini for dinner? Just pick it from your street garden!
© Paule Kingleur

How Do Creative Ideas Sprout and Grow?

In Paule Kingleur’s case, one gray November day, she saw a colorful child’s bonnet with stripes perched atop a street pole, one of those ugly anti-parking barriers.

She noticed how the bonnet dressed up the sidewalk. Committed to an urban life, Paule also believes in the right of urban dwellers to connect with nature.

That’s when she had an “Oh, I see” moment, realizing that she could hang pretty containers, called Potogreens, on existing poles to create micro-gardens and beauty in urban spaces.

Many new ideas are born like this. And often, the first idea leads to another. Later, Paule created the larger Dadagreen® where bigger urban gardens can thrive.

Where will Paule’s ideas go next? All over the city. Not content with prettying up a static sidewalk space, Paule threw the Dadagreen® saddlebags on a bike to take beauty on the road! Now, that’s a creative idea that fits our times!

Bicycle with Dadagreen® flower boxes, a creative idea in urban gardening. Image © Sheron Long

Garden on the go!
© Sheron Long

At Jardins, Jardin Aux Tuileries 2013, the rose wall by Nicolas Gilsoul won the Prix Coup de Coeur (“Lovestruck” Award).

Paule Kingleur’s Dadagreen® won the Prix Innovation Cité Vert (Prize for Green City Innovation). 

The name Dadagreen® is a combination of the English word “green,” denoting its green mission, and “dada,” a childish nickname for horse, reflecting its characteristic of a straddle (and a wink at the Dadaist-Surrealist movement).

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

Arles Photo Festival: Inspired by Black and White

by Meredith Mullins on July 11, 2013

Black and White installation by Daido Moriyama, including a fishnet frame and enlarged contact sheets, offering creative inspiration for black and white photographers

Labyrinth + Monochrome
Installation at Rencontres d’Arles by Daido Moriyama

Creative Inspiration—It’s Back in Black (and White)

Black-and-white photography is alive and well . . . and living in Arles this summer.*

The annual photo festival, Rencontres d’Arles (Conference in Arles), proclaims loudly and clearly in this year’s program that black-and-white photography is not dead.

But, how does B&W live in this world of creative inspiration? As nostalgia, poetry, humanism, a graceful simplification of form and light, abstraction, raw power, sentimentality, or timeless truth.

Housing Innovations: The Tiny Mushroom House

by Janine Boylan on July 8, 2013

Mushroom tiny house, showing an example of housing innovations

The house that mushrooms built
© Ecovative Design

The Assignment

Last April, Sam Harrington was given an assignment: grow a house.

Mycelium, used to grow the mushroom tiny house, an example of housing innovations

Mycelium, shown under an electron microscope
© Ecovative Design

Harrington works at Ecovative Design, where they create innovative and environmentally friendly products ranging from packaging to construction materials.

But grow a house?

Yes, like other Ecovative Design products, this house would be built—and grown—with the help of fungus fibers called mycelium.

Ecovative Design has discovered a process that uses mycelium to tightly bond things, like wooden boards, together. They would now apply the process in housing innovations.

The Plan

Harrington decided to build a “tiny house,” a home under 500 square feet. The tiny house movement has been growing in popularity since Sarah Susanka published The Not So Big House in 1995.

Harrington’s tiny house, like many others, would be built on a trailer so it could be moved around easily. It would also have space-saving features like a bed loft.

Harrington learned that the first annual Tiny House Fair would be held in June, 2013, and he was determined to attend with the completed tiny house in tow. So, he had to put his innovative ideas to work quickly!

Building the Frame

Harrington started the mushroom tiny house with a simple four-corner frame that marked the edges of its outer perimeter.

Tiny house frame for the mushroom tiny house, an example of housing innovations

The house requires four posts to mark the corners, but no studs.
© Ecovative Design

Then he screwed on two parallel layers of pine tongue-and-groove boards with three-and-a-half inches of air between them. The mycelium, or mushroom mixture, will later fill this space.

There are no supporting studs in the mushroom house. The mycelium bonds the two layers of boards so tightly together that it doesn’t require the additional structural support beyond the corner boards.

Growing the Walls and Ceiling

To fill the wall cavities, Harrington and team packed layer after layer of moist mushroom mix (made from corn stalks and mycelium) into the cavities to serve as insulation.

The Mushroom® Insulation has several advantages. Since there are no studs, it is continuous, preventing colder spots in the walls that occur when standard insulation is fitted around studs. Also, the mushroom mixture even grows around and seals the electrical outlets, which are notorious for leaking cold air in tradtional construction.

Filling the walls of the mushroom tiny house, an example of housing innovations

Harrington and team fill the walls with the mycelium mixture.
© Ecovative Design

Each layer of Mushroom® Insulation grew for about three days and turned mycelium-white. That’s when Harrington knew that the mix was tightly fused to the pine boards.

Mycelium growing inside the walls of the mushroom tiny house, an example of housing innovations

How does your mycelium grow?
© Ecovative Design

Does the house ever stop growing? Harrington explains, “The Mushroom® Insulation slowly dries through the pine boards, so it is important not to make a structure out of plastic! The fungus eventually runs out of moisture and stops growing. But if you have a roof leak in the house, a mushroom might grow there to indicate the leak.”

(Oh, I see an added benefit of Mushroom® Insulation—surprise home-grown mushrooms!)

Mushroom ceiling tiles in the mushroom tiny house, an example of housing innovations

A tiny window in the wall shows the Mushroom® Insulation.
Ceiling tiles are made of the same material.
© Ecovative Design

The team also used their mushroom technology in the ceiling tiles. Harrington reports that the tiles have excellent acoustic properties. Plus, the mycelium material is highly fire retardant.

Future Innovations

Eventually, the team also hopes to use the mycelium to grow furniture. They have plans to create engineered-wood-type products that could be put together.

But that’s in the future. This year, they finished just in time to get to the Tiny House Fair and show the world their housing innovations.

Oh, I see—with innovative ideas, even growing a home is possible!

Mushroom tiny house, an example of housing innovations

The first tour of the tiny house
© Ecovative Design

In this video, Harrington and Ecovative CEO Eben Bayer explain their mushroom technology and the mushroom tiny house project.

Watch this video from Derek “Deek” Diedricksen, host of HGTV’s “Extreme Small Space,” to take a tour of the mushroom tiny house.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

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