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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lilli Licka , Peter Lodermeyer , Gisela ErlacherPublisher: Park Books Imprint: Park Books Dimensions: Width: 15.00cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 25.00cm Weight: 0.666kg ISBN: 9783906027920ISBN 10: 3906027929 Pages: 112 Publication Date: 23 November 2017 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsFascinating. . . . For most people, bridges are simply a way of getting from one place to another. Nobody gives them much thought to what might lie beneath them. Look closely, though, and you'll find homes, shops, parks, and other wonderful things. . . . The photos marry the cold, monumental architecture of bridges and highways with surprising vignettes of daily life. -- (04/25/2016) In 2011, Erlacher visited Chongqing city in China and became fascinated with urban 'under-spaces'--small, unlikely pockets of life wedged between or tucked away under towering megastructures like expressways and bridges. She'd seen these before. Near her home in Vienna, Austria, stood a tiny house, with its roof just a few feet under two mammoth highways. Erlacher embarked on a four-year project to photograph these forgotten spaces. In Chongqing and Shanghai, as well as in cities in Europe, she peeked beneath massive concrete structures to uncover signs of humanity. -- (04/25/2016) If you've traveled to cities such as Shanghai, London, or Amsterdam, chances are you've noticed expressways and bridges that take over like the long arms of an octopus. Gisela Erlacher noticed them, too, although the photographer started to pay closer attention to what was happening beneath these concrete structures rather than what was on top of them. -- (05/05/2016) Erlacher's photos give a kind of magical quality to these leftover spaces that have been creatively transformed--either officially or otherwise--into useful parts of an urban landscape. But they also highlight the fact that in most major metropolises, space is a finite resource. -- (04/25/2016) With the development of transportation infrastructure in the twentieth century, much of our urban land was shrouded in shadow. Overpasses and underpasses for highways, and towering concrete bridges for cars and trains, claimed thousands of miles of open space. As the human population continues to grow, those places are becoming more valuable. Around the world, formerly disused underpasses are being developed into parks, housing, soccer fields, and even horse paddocks. Gisela Erlacher--Skies of Concrete examines how such places are being adapted for practical. -- (04/25/2016) For Skies of Concrete, [Erlacher] traveled within Austria and to the Netherlands, Great Britain, and China to find pockets of human activity crammed and wedged beneath towering bridges and roadways. Among the many surreal spaces she unearthed are a colorful jungle gym beneath the criss-cross of looming overpasses; an adventure-park ropes course installed beneath a railway bridge in the Alps; and two men in Chongqing, China, dwarfed by concrete above and below, lounging as if on a garden patio. . . . If these scenes are testaments to the eerie effects of urbanization, they also celebrate the resourcefulness and ingenuity of those who continue to ride horses or grow flowers in leftover spaces. -- (01/07/2016) Author InformationEssays by Lilli Licka and Peter Lodermeyer. Lilli Licka is a landscape architect and founding partner with Koselicka Landscape Architecture in Vienna. She also teaches as a Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences in Vienna. Peter Lodermeyer is a scholar of art history. He lives and works as a critic, freelance writer and curator in Bonn. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |