Shallow Waters
On ecological and social metabolisms, cohabitation, engineering and economy in urbanised shallow water territories.
This magazine explores two extreme cases of urbanised shallow water territories ā Markermeer/IJsselmeer in the heart of the Netherlands and the Venetian Lagoon. One is probably the most technologically controlled water on Earth, while the other negotiates a balance of natural water cycles, extreme weather, and a robust tourist economy. Providing points of reflection for similar territories where prospective sea level rise in the near future poses urgent questions about human and more-than human cohabitation, engineering, economy, and both ecological and social metabolisms.Ā
142 pages, 24.5 x 18 cm, softcover, Onomatopee (Eindhoven).
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Shallow Waters
Shallow Waters
On ecological and social metabolisms, cohabitation, engineering and economy in urbanised shallow water territories.
This magazine explores two extreme cases of urbanised shallow water territories ā Markermeer/IJsselmeer in the heart of the Netherlands and the Venetian Lagoon. One is probably the most technologically controlled water on Earth, while the other negotiates a balance of natural water cycles, extreme weather, and a robust tourist economy. Providing points of reflection for similar territories where prospective sea level rise in the near future poses urgent questions about human and more-than human cohabitation, engineering, economy, and both ecological and social metabolisms.Ā
142 pages, 24.5 x 18 cm, softcover, Onomatopee (Eindhoven).
Original: $55.39
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Description
On ecological and social metabolisms, cohabitation, engineering and economy in urbanised shallow water territories.
This magazine explores two extreme cases of urbanised shallow water territories ā Markermeer/IJsselmeer in the heart of the Netherlands and the Venetian Lagoon. One is probably the most technologically controlled water on Earth, while the other negotiates a balance of natural water cycles, extreme weather, and a robust tourist economy. Providing points of reflection for similar territories where prospective sea level rise in the near future poses urgent questions about human and more-than human cohabitation, engineering, economy, and both ecological and social metabolisms.Ā
142 pages, 24.5 x 18 cm, softcover, Onomatopee (Eindhoven).
























