plants in high places

A few weeks ago, walking on the UCSD campus, I noticed an interesting bit of agriculture taking place:

High-rise corn
High-rise corn

Why let a lack of soil and a third-floor location deter you from having a nice crop of sweet corn?


My brain, short-circuited and junk-stuffed as it is, quickly made the association to an illustration in an architecture magazine I’d looked at in the 1980s. The project was the Atlantis, a condominium tower by the Miami-based firm Architectonica. Aside from vibrating with Memphis-inspired early-80s colors, the condominium complex featured this amazing architectural gesture, a swimming pool and a single, large palm tree planted in a cube cut out of the center of the building, a hundred feet up.

Aerial palm at the atlantis, Miami
Aerial palm at the atlantis, Miami
Architectonica. The Atlantis, 1982. [ source ]


Pretty wild, I thought at the time. And the photo still looks cool today. How would it hold up to a petite category-1 hurricane visiting town? I wonder. But hey, this is art. Who cares if the fabulous car with triangular wheels can drive you to the mall?

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