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Water turned off in Abu Dhabi desert tree experiment (photo)

Dead Forest, Richard Allenby Pratt, eco-photography, Consumption, Abu Dhabi, desert forest, dead forest in the desert, water issues, water scarcity, halophytes, desert mangrove experimentOur local photographer takes a look at what happens when trees are cut off from their water source in a “desert experiment” in the United Arab Emirates.

I previously talked about the irrigated forestry projects in the deserts of the Western Region of the UAE. This picture shows what happens when someone turns the tap off. It seems unlikely that this was a deliberate decision, considering the thousands of square kilometres that continue to be irrigated.

I suspect it is more likely there was a problem with the water supply system for a short time, or possibly even the complete failure, or salinisation, of the ground water well after excessive extraction.

It’s interesting to see the indigenous Chenopod shrubs (which are halophytic – salt tolerant) beginning to repopulate the area, possibly even benefitting a little from the shade of the planted trees. It’s a stark reminder that some species of plant have evolved over millennia to succeed, without human intervention, in this challenging environment.

Related: Massive concrete amphitheater lies disused outside of Dubai

Why people favour ill-adapted species of plant over perfectly adapted ones for their landscaping is a mystery I will never decipher. Maybe the complete ‘mastery of nature’ is still an instinctive goal of our species? Hopefully it’s one we will evolve beyond soon, before we come too close to succeeding.

You can see some of the dead forests on Google Earth at the following co-ordinates  24° 2’23.68″N  53° 1’37.94″E

 

Cliche Arab references in Libyan bank design by Henning Larsen Architects

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Central Bank of Libya, Henning Larsen Architects, Islamic architecture, Libyan design, green design Middle East, desert architecture, berber architecture, earth construction, cliche in Arab architectureWe don’t mean to pick on any one firm here, but a string of repetitive competition proposals has culminated most recently in the Central Bank of Libya design for Tripoli by Henning Larsen Architects. Although they and other foreign foreign firms are making an effort to be culturally relevant, how many desert-like “flowing facades” do we need?

Tips to curb the energy consumption of your aquariums

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jellyfish in aquarium
Like any other appliance, the various components of a home aquarium can consume not insignificant amounts of energy over the course of a year.

8 reasons to go meatless on Mondays – take our challenge!

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meatless mondayA new case of Mad Cow disease has been reported in Egypt. It may be the final push to make me pass on meat.

Saudi man’s charity fridge reduces food waste and helps the poor

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saudi_arabian_charity_fridge

A charitable man who wishes to remain anonymous recently installed a refrigerator outside of his home in Hail, Saudi Arabia. His neighbors can leave their excess food inside the refrigerator where it is kept fresh and clean. Needy people can then anonymously use this excess food without the shame of begging.

Toilet of the future? Holy crap, it’s here!

mobile solar toilet

The 2012 winners of a competition with a cringe-inducing name teamed up with a powerhouse plumbing manufacturer to design a self-contained restroom that could be deployed anywhere – it doesn’t require plumbing infrastructure or connection to a power grid!

Tunisia’s eco-conscious start-up: Exploralis

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Medjerda Exploralis Tunisia

As I enter Arafet Ben Marzou’s new  “office” at the top floor of an apartment building facing the lakes in Tunis, I am met with a very familiar feeling: that silicon valley, young brains, start-up feel. Only this time it is “ à la Tunisienne”, and I have to say, I prefer it.

Organic farming doesn’t pay off in Gaza

Arab Farmer, Gaza farming, organic food, Gaza City, politics, poverty, food security, agricultureOrganic farming is widely thought to be the healthy choice – not only nutritionally but because organic farmers are required (in general) to keep their crops chemical- and pesticide-free. But in poverty-stricken Gaza, people are more frequently buying conventionally-grown foods.

Tiny trash homes create humanity with salvaged waste

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6-homeless-shelters-Gregory-Kloehn

Artist Gregory Kloehn veered off course from a career creating large-scale sculptures, focusing his talents on making tiny buildings from garbage. He erects one-room houses to hotel the homeless, dumpster diving for raw materials which he reassembles into inventive (and minuscule) mobile homes.

Why the octopus does not get tied in knots

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octopus-arms-knots

This is one for the kids to answer at dinnertime: An octopus’s arms are covered in hundreds of suckers that will stick to just about anything, with one important exception: those suckers generally won’t grab onto the octopus itself. If they did, the flexible animals would quickly find themselves all tangled up.

Jameel prizewinner reinvents the iconic Middle Eastern rug

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Jameel Prize 2014Green Prophet’s brought you the story behind this year’s winner of the Jameel Prize – 3, an international award for contemporary design inspired by ancient Islamic tradition. But there are nine other finalists who warrant a closer look. Meet fiber artist Faig Ahmed – guaranteed his amazing rugs will trip you up!

handmade-carpet-by-Faig-AhmedThe Azerbaijan-based mixed-media artist redefines the visual boundaries of iconic middle eastern carpets by distorting the conventional structure of their generally symmetrical patterns.  The striking results invite us to look back to the originals with new appreciation of traditional forms. His work is reminiscent of Irish photographer David Thomas Smith who “Google maps” major cities into virtual Persian carpets.

Most of Ahmed’s work revolves around the construction and deconstruction of the intricately patterned rugs and carpets native to Azerbaijan, Iran, and Turkey. He rearranges aspects of  traditional composition, sometimes pulling fragments into three dimensions.

handmade-carpet-by-Faig-Ahmed

“To be honest, things I do are not always right and beautiful. I do it without thinking, it’s my instantaneous expression. I just make bold experiments, putting them into the art scene, trusting myself and my viewers,” he told website DZineTrip.

This experimentation leads to style mash-ups like tagging a classical pattern with graffiti (painstakingly woven into the piece – no spray paint was hurt in the making of this carpet!).

handmade-carpet-by-Faig-Ahmed

The artist views the carpet as a symbol of invincible Middle East tradition, an enduring icon; a painstakingly crafted artwork that functions – often for centuries – as a pragmatic household artifact. A slight change in form dramatically alters its structure, and in the process, pulls it into the 21st Century.

handmade-carpet-by-Faig-Ahmed

In his artist’s statement, Ahmed says “I’ve been always fond of investigating and researching every detail of anything that had interested me and sometimes this research reaches inconceivable depths mixing up with my imagination. I’m harried by a question others have left in childhood – ‘what is inside?’ That’s why I’m changing visually static objects making them spatial, giving them a new depth and revealing the essence of the object – which, just a moment ago, was mediocre.”

That’s quite a mouthful – so let’s stick with the images.

The carpet pictured below was one featured in the Jameel Prize 3 Exhibition held at London’s Victoria & Albert last April.  The classical pattern devolves into pixels as the expert handcrafting and brilliantly colored fibers remain consistent.  It’s simultaneously jarring and gorgeous.

Faig AhmedAhmed uses ancient, handmade techniques (employing local artisans) to create designs inspired by digital corruption and image manipulation. His rug patterns swirl and melt and bloat – sometimes dripping off walls or literally unraveling.

Check out his website (link here) for more of his wild reinterpretations. His carpets have been featured in the Wall Street Journal, Beautiful Decay, The Grumpy Owl and Stylus.  Based in Azerbaijan capital Baku, there is no information as to when or if his rugs will be commercially available.

Images from Faig Ahmed’s website

Deadly Turkish mine explosion spurs massive social protest

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turkey mine explosion, turkey mine, mine explosion turkey, social protests turkey, soma mine, istanbul mine protests, ankara protests

Protests broke out across Turkey after an explosion at a coal mine on Tuesday afternoon has killed at least 270 people. Opposition politician Ozgur Ozel recently proposed to investigate mine safety following earlier deaths, but the government shut him down. Now outraged citizens are urging Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to resign.

Green up or ship out – Saudi clamps down on construction industry

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Saudi Arabia, green building, green building regulations, Saudi Green Building Forum, King Abdullah Economic City, carbon emissions, greening construction industry, renewable energy

Saudi Arabia has announced that the construction industry has five years to “green” up their business. Amid a massive construction boom, the Presidency of Meteorology and Environment (PME) has decreed that all companies must reduce their air, water and noise pollution in keeping with regulations approved in 2008.

Soylent, a beige goop alternative to eating food?

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soylent nutritional drink

A liquid formula that goes down easy and provides you enough nutrients for the day. Would you ever start eating soylent?

Star Wars 7 “otherworldly” set in Abu Dhabi desert

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desert dune, abu dhabi, star wars VII, abu dhabi desert, star wars film set abu dhabi, middle east, entertainment industryActors and actresses are starting to arrive in Abu Dhabi to film a segment of Star Wars 7 in the desert, according to sources close to The National – one of the best regarded newspapers in the United Arab Emirates. How does this fare for the local environment?