Liège Guillemins

Between 2005 and 2009 a new high speed rail station landed in Liège (Belgium), a monumental design by Santiago Calatrava. The Guillemins station solved several infrastructural problems and provided the region of Liège and the Dutch region of Zuid-Limburg with access to the TGV-network. Surprisingly, the station also has direct access from the adjacent motorway. The huge terminal is an architectonic eye-catcher, attracting tourists and couples shooting wedding photographs. From the platforms, a wide panorama of the city can be observed, made possible by the longitudinal roof construction. The integration of the station with its surroundings however remains problematic.

Unlike the station of Leuven, Liège-Guillemins is situated as an island in an urban void and space of flows, with no urban development adjacent to it. The master plan, drawn up by Calatrava and Eurogare, foresees broad boulevards connecting the station with the waterfront of the Meuse river. In practice, not much of this connection has been realized yet. In fact, it is almost impossible to get directly from the station to the river, since an urban expressway blocks ones way, with very few options for pedestrian crossing.

As also observed by the Architectural Record, the large space in front of the station remains a desolate parking lot for the time being. Because of its scale and shape, the station also does not connect in any way to the existing neighborhood. The direct surroundings, including some rundown urban blocks with vacant lots and prostitution, will in time probably make way for realization of the master plan.

Surroundings of Liége-Guillemins

Meuse waterfront

Wonderland China

A very remarkable project by photographer Catherine Hyland, who explored an abandoned theme park at the urban fringe of Beijing. The original plan, to build a theme park bigger and more crowded than Disneyland, turned out to be a fantasy in itself. When the investors couldn’t come to an arrangement of land ownership with the local farmers, the plans were canceled and the construction site abandoned. Slowly, local residents of the village reoccupy these bizarre grounds. Read more at Atlantic City.
 

Utrecht panorama

A view over Utrecht, The Netherlands, from the top floor of the provincial headquarters. Because of its central position, the busiest train station and intertwining of highways, the area is considered the hub of the country. Paradoxically, it is also one of the greenest regions, with moderate densities, as the pictures show.

West – historic center and railway station

East – national park and highway junctions

Northeast – Rijnsweerd, Uithof and Zeist

7th European landscape biennial

Semptember 27-29th, the 7th European Landscape Biennial will take place in Barcelona. The theme of this year’s event is ‘Biennal versus Biennal’, focused on discovering new ways of action, while exploring inhospitable areas and guiding discussion towards rethinking old certainties.

The Biennial has been consolidated on a European scale in its six previous editions:
“Remaking Landscapes” (1999)
“Gardens in Arms” (2001)
“Only with Nature” (2003)
“Landscape: a Product / a Production” (2006)
“Storm & Stress” (2008) and
“Liquid Landscape” (2010).

Furthermore, the Biennial approaches the international scale in lasts edition through our invited countries (as we have focused on the contemporary landscapes of USA and China) and this edition as a wider overview.

Download the program

Lemonopoly

The online game Lemonopoly was launched in the San Fransisco bay area, a region traditionally rich in citrus fruit. Unfortunately, lots of fruit goes to waste. The game challenges tree owners and residents to make better use of the fruit, sharing it and making things from lemons, limes and oranges, such as lemonade or marmalade. As such, scoring in the online game promotes a new social citrus culture in the real city. In July this year, the game will be fully functioning, providing a point system for sharing lemons, adding trees to the map and making things with citrus fruit.