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abluegirl:

Living Wall

These vegetated surfaces don’t just look pretty. They have other benefits as well, including cooling city blocks, reducing loud noises, and improving a building’s energy efficiency.What’s more, a recent modeling study shows that green walls can potentially reduce large amounts of air pollution in what’s called a “street canyon,” or the corridor between tall buildings.

For the study, Thomas Pugh, a biogeochemist at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany, and his colleagues created a computer model of a green wall with generic vegetation in a Western European city. Then they recorded chemical reactions based on a variety of factors, such as wind speed and building placement.

The simulation revealed a clear pattern: A green wall in a street canyon trapped or absorbed large amounts of nitrogen dioxide and particulate matter—both pollutants harmful to people, said Pugh. Compared with reducing emissions from cars, little attention has been focused on how to trap or take up more of the pollutants, added Pugh, whose study was published last year in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.

That’s why the green-wall study is “putting forward an alternative solution that might allow [governments] to improve air quality in these problem hot spots,” he said.Compared with reducing emissions from cars, little attention has been focused on how to trap or take up more of the pollutants, added Pugh, whose study was published last year in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.

That’s why the green-wall study is “putting forward an alternative solution that might allow [governments] to improve air quality in these problem hot spots,” he said.

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tattr:

VOLKO MERSCHKY and SIMONE PFAFF
Würzburg, Germany
www.buenavistatattooclub.com
Phone: (+49) 931 702656      
Email: tattoo@trashpolka.com
Kodachrome 1968 by pareli on Flickr.
Not my photo, not my family, just an adorable old Kodachrome picture…i love the quality of that now dead film.
cruello:

Children Play Wearing Gas Masks, 1941. 
Photo: Hulton-Deutsch/corbis
censu:

   Klaus Leidorf
Ice Edge by Aerial Photography on flickr
String of Pearls by Aerial Photography
This is seriously one of my favorite flickr photostreams EVER.
Something about seeing these aerial photographs always fills me with a sense of wonder. Like if i am having a bad day it really cheers me up, but in sort of an abstract way.  I think part of that is that one can feel so stuck, seeing and doing similar things day in and day out…it makes my brain feel alive to see things from such odd unusual angles.
This is not even my most favorite photo of his, but something about the composition, colors and shapes really captivated me and made me smile.
nnokka:

(via: weandthecolor): Staircase Photography by Thomas Holtkoetter.A very archaic concrete staircase in earth color at the Museum Kueppersmuehle in Duisburg, Germany.
kelp-forest:

German New Year’s postcard from 1913.
[Click-Through].

It reads “Lots of luck in the New Year!”
oxane:

Der                Mensch als Industriepalast (Man as Industrial Palace)
Stuttgart,                1926. Chromolithograph. National Library of Medicine.
Fritz                Kahn (1888-1968) [author]
Kahn’s                modernist visualization of the digestive and respiratory system                as “industrial palace,” really a chemical plant, was conceived                in a period when the German chemical industry was the world’s                most advanced.
ice-creamcastles:

fuckyeahfolklore:

Schneewhittchen, “Snow White,” from a 1919 German anthology of fairy tales entitled Märchenbuch.
Lake Wörth
by Aerial Photography

I love this guy’s amazing photos!! <3