10 comments

  • johnohara 6 hours ago ago

    Kirsten did a nice job on Forestiere Gardens in Fresno, CA.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mUKRPoQKynk

    • ompogUe 5 hours ago ago

      I've watched this probably 5 times since it was released. It's all-the-way-around incredible.

    • trhway 4 hours ago ago

      looks like the fortifications and their underground parts from the previous centuries in my homecity that we were exploring as free-range children back in USSR when all those fortifications were sitting as is, unused/unattended and freely accessible.

  • davidw 3 hours ago ago

    Beautiful, but I bet those things cost a boatload.

    Also, I don't know how much 'environmentalism' is the goal there, but most Americans' CO2 output on a personal level involves heating their homes and transportation, and building isolated housing where you have to drive a lot to get to anything doesn't help. You're better off with shared walls in a walkable city if you really want to lower your impact.

    Still, that's a really beautiful part of the world and it looks well done.

  • mutagen 5 hours ago ago

    Some amazing ideas here, definitely inspiring.

    The trees right up against the above-ground structures make me weep for defensible space. While the underground structures may be survivable in the event of a wildfire and the trees are beautiful I'd be happier seeing a property that feels more survivable in the types of fires we've been seeing in California.

  • fortran77 an hour ago ago

    Were they twisty and all alike?

  • bix6 7 days ago ago

    Saving to finish watching later this is super cool

  • more_corn 2 days ago ago

    Neat!

  • trhway 4 hours ago ago

    natural question and way more complicated and interesting in its complexity here than the actual architecture - what about permits? Everybody can build, not everybody can manage getting permits for what they can build :)

    • ThereYourGo 4 hours ago ago

      They do discuss permits at ~5:50