The Downtown Tucson 2050 Project's vision is to achieve year 2050 carbon and water neutrality targets without sacrificing either livability or projected growth in downtown Tucson, Arizona. It is a multi-year collaboration that offers a replicable model for academia, practice, and the public sector to join together to envision bold solutions to some of our largest urban challenges: climate adaptability, local resiliency, and future livability.
One Water: Downtown Tucson 2050 is a book and exhibition by students from the University of Arizona, School of Architecture; sponsored by GLHN Architects and Engineers; and supported by five community mentors from Tucson Water, Pima County Regional Flood Control, and Pima County Regional Wastewater Reclamation.Experience the future of downtown Tucson in 2050 where all water is a potential resource and we thrive within a sustainable supply!
How do people, in both the past and the present, think about moments of social and political crisis, and how do they respond to them? What are the interpretive codes by which troubling events are read and given meaning, and what part do these codes play in suggesting specific strategies for coping with the world? In Past Convictions Courtney Booker attempts to answer these questions by examining the controversial divestiture and public penance of Charlemagne's son, the Emperor Louis the Pious, in 833. Historians have customarily viewed the event as marking the beginning of the end of the Carolingian dynasty. Exploring how both contemporaries and subsequent generations thought about Louis's forfeiture of the throne, Booker contends that certain vivid ninth-century narratives reveal a close but ephemeral connection between historiography and the generic conventions of comedy and tragedy. In tracing how writers of later centuries built upon these dramatic Carolingian accounts to tell a larger story of faith, betrayal, political expediency, and decline, he explicates the ways historiography shapes our vision of the past and what we think we know about it, and the ways its interpretive models may fall short.
The Downtown Tucson 2050 Project's vision is to achieve year 2050 carbon and water neutrality targets without sacrificing either livability or projected growth in downtown Tucson, Arizona. It is a multi-year collaboration that offers a replicable model for academia, practice, and the public sector to join together to envision bold solutions to some of our largest urban challenges: climate adaptability, local resiliency, and future livability.
One Water: Downtown Tucson 2050 is a book and exhibition by students from the University of Arizona, School of Architecture; sponsored by GLHN Architects and Engineers; and supported by five community mentors from Tucson Water, Pima County Regional Flood Control, and Pima County Regional Wastewater Reclamation.Experience the future of downtown Tucson in 2050 where all water is a potential resource and we thrive within a sustainable supply!
Featured are forty of Milne's stunning color photographs of the surface of his outdoor swimming pool, captured over the course of a decade (2000-2010) with the spiritual musings and reflections of a broad array of local and international personalities. The Pool Project is both a celebration of Milne's unique ability to capture the qualities of light, color, and texture and an opportunity for visitors of all backgrounds to contemplate aspects of the spiritual through art.
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