:
DE sign:
(Deconstructing in-order to find new meanings)
A blogging space about my personal interests; was made during training in Stockholm #Young Leaders Visitors Program #Ylvp08 it developed into a social bookmarking blog.
I studied #Architecture; interested in #Design #Art #Education #Urban Design #Digital-media #social-media #Inhabited-Environments #Contemporary-Cultures #experimentation #networking #sustainability & more =)
Please Enjoy, feedback recommended.
p.s. sharing is usually out of interest not Blind praise.
This is neither sacred nor political.
Tuesday, September 23
Wednesday, February 5
HH: The Aga Khan IV : inmemoriam
HH: The Aga Khan IV
Recalling Paradise: The Aga Khan Garden and The Diwan, Devon, Alberta
A jewel-like pavilion completes the world’s northernmost Islamic-inspired garden.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS (Aga Khan Garden) Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects
ARCHITECTS (Diwan) AXIA Design Associates (Design Architects), Arriz + Co. (Architectural & Interior Design), and Kasian Architecture, Interior Design, and Planning (Executive Architects)
TEXT David Down
Carved out of a boggy Alberta forest outside the rural town of Devon, south of Edmonton, the Aga Khan Garden with its new pavilion, known as The Diwan, is a design revelation of exceptional grace, tranquility, spirituality and precision of execution. Masterfully balancing cultural and historical references with local topography, climate, vegetation and materials, both the garden and the building sit perfectly composed in their unexpected context. Together, they comprise the world’s northernmost Islamic-inspired garden, rooted in an ancient and distant culture, yet completely connected to their Canadian home.
Located within The University of Alberta Botanic Garden, the 4.8-hectare Aga Khan Garden was gifted to the University of Alberta in 2018 by His Highness the Aga Khan. The gift nods to Canada’s historic welcoming of Ismaili Muslims in 1972, and is part of the work of the Aga Khan Trust for Culture, which has created and restored important gardens around the world, including Aga Khan Park in Toronto. The Aga Khan himself speaks of gardens as a central element in Muslim culture—places where human creativity and divine majesty are fused, and our responsibility to nature and stewardship of the natural world are put into action. "
AGA KHAN GARDEN ALBERTA
CANADA
The Aga Khan Garden is a gift to the University of Alberta from His Highness the Aga Khan.
It brings to life the principle of pluralism in a 4.8-hectare Mughal-inspired space where
traditional Islamic landscape design takes on strikingly contemporary features.
"Elements inspired by gardens from the Muslim world are interspersed with distinctively
Canadian features, from Alberta’s wild rose beds to Canadian-quarried stonework.
The Garden provides a stunning example of Islamic landscape architecture that explores
the beauty and boundaries of vegetation, light, water, geometry, symmetry, adaptation and human scale.
The serenity of nature highlights each of the design elements including secluded forest paths,
granite and limestone terraces, still pools that reflect the prairie sky and a waterfall that
tumbles over textured stone.
The Aga Khan Garden is laid out in three parts: woodland valley, central court and pond
framed by an orchard. It unfolds in rectangular terraces down to the Calla Pond.
On the highest point stands a pavilion that enjoys a vista over the Garden.
From this plaza, water emerges and runs through a stone-lined channel from one terrace level
to the next and then falls gently into Calla Pond.
At that moment, the Aga Khan Garden transitions from a structured scheme to a looser, curving,
more naturalistic design of the bustan, a fruit orchard that extends around the Calla Pond.
The Garden contains more than 25,000 trees, shrubs, perennials, annuals and wetland plants,
selected for fragrance, beauty and the ability to thrive in Alberta’s climate. Twelve water features
and fountains are sprinkled around the Garden.
Speaking at the inauguration, His Highness spoke of the place, throughout history,
of the Islamic garden in reminding us of the notion of good stewardship of the earth
and “our responsibility to honor, to protect, and to share the gifts of the natural world”.
In considering the role that such green spaces may play, His Highness spoke of the
Garden as a social space, “a place for learning, for sharing, for romance, for diplomacy,
for reflection on the destiny of the human race”."
Sunday, February 2
TF Leaders Leading
Time To Rise 2025
Break Through in 2025
The Power of Identity
Your Path to an Extraordinary Life
Sunday, August 4
Our Shared To-Do List
The World's To Do List | The Global Goals
The 17 Global Goals are the #WorldsToDoList.
As world leaders meet at the United Nations this week, this film serves as a big reminder of what we need to do to achieve the #GlobalGoals This To Do List for the World needs to go somewhere everyone can see it – on the world itself. Share the film and find out how to get involved by clicking here: https://worldstodolist.org/. Credits: Agency: Karmarama CEO - Ben Bilboul, Business Lead - Eilidh McGregor, Account Director - Sophie Jackson, Senior Planner - Max Richards, Executive Creative Director - Adam Kean, Creative team - Rachel Holding & Dan Leppanen, TV producer - Carol Oakley, Creative Producer - Christina Lambrou, Head of Design - Simon Wakeman, Artworkers - Sam Coyle & Dipesh Soni Production: Nineteen Twenty Director - Ludo Fealy, Colour Grade - Kai Van Beers, 2D artist - Jamie Stitson, Producer - Isabella Hunt-Davis, Post Producer - Ondrej Faltin Sound: 750 mph Sound Engineers - Mike Bovill, Michalis Anthis About the Global Goals ------------------------------------- In 2015, world leaders agreed to 17 Global Goals (officially known as the Sustainable Development Goals or SDGs). These goals have the power to create a better world by 2030, by ending poverty, fighting inequality and addressing the urgency of climate change. Guided by the Goals, it is now up to all of us, governments, businesses, civil society and the general public to work together to build a better future for everyone. More about the Global Goals initiative here ▶ https://www.globalgoals.org/
Monday, March 4
SI Leader Lab
SI Leader Lab
SI Leader Lab is designed to strengthen the capacity of civil society organisations to drive successful advocacy work linked to Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 16: promoting just, peaceful and inclusive societies. The programme brings together influential civil society leaders who are open to new digital solutions and innovative methods. The network consists of peers from across various sub-sectors in civil society and provides the participants with broad input from different spheres in the field. SI Leader Lab invites 100 participants from the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe.
The programme combines online workshops, in both regional and cross-regional learning groups, with regular coaching support. In October, all 100 programme participants will come together in Stockholm for an intensive week of onsite learning that deepens the experience and enhances collaboration.
https://si.se/en/apply/si-leadership-programmes/leaderlab/
https://si.se/en/apply/si-leadership-programmes/leaderlab/#steps-1
https://apply-leadership-programmes.si.se/