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Living Garden of Knowledge Made From 40,000 Books
Posted By
Bridgette Meinhold
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Architecture,Art,Design,Gardening |
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The colorful discarded books were stacked to create garden walls, benches and carpets that are integrated within the site and structure of the forest. In an amazing example of book architecture, the books are stacked like bricks, while open volumes form cushioned carpets on the forest floor. Latourelle worked in collaboration with Folkerts of 100Landschaftarchitecktur to design the ‘utopian’ garden as a compelling new way to experience the forest — as an information platform as well as a return to nature.
“The garden engages the mythical relation between knowledge and nature integral to the concept of ‘paradise’. By using books as material in the construction of the garden, we confront these instruments of knowledge with the temporality of nature. And by exposing these fragile and supposedly timeless materials to transformation and disintegration, we invite an emotional involvement of the visitor.“
Colorful book plates support the book structures, bind stacks together, and also act as bookmarks that mark a location within the pages. The books also serve to nourish and support new life. Eight different edible fungi varieties such as Winecap and Oyster mushrooms are cultivated within the pages of the books, where they will grow and root over time. The mushrooms support the idea of temporary space, which changes over time — after the festival the temporary garden will be deconstructed and the books will be composted or recycled.
An astounding living library built from 40,000 reclaimed books has sprouted in the middle of the forest as part of the 11th International Garden Festival in Métis, Quebec. Designed by Thilo Folkerts and Rodney Latourelle, Jardin de la Connaisance, or a
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The temporary garden centers around the festival’s theme of paradise and specifically the tree of knowledge, which was located in the center of the Garden of Eden.
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The garden brings the books back to their birthplace in the forest while providing visitors with a new way to experience nature.
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The garden of knowledge acts more like a temporary library and reading room, offering visitors a quiet place to reflect and read.
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The garden is built from 40,000 discarded books, which are used to form walls, benches and even a carpet. The carpet is created by burying the books in soft sand, leaving the spines exposed.
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Cultivated edible mushrooms are inserted into the pages of the books, where they will grow and root deeper over time.
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The mushrooms enhance the temporary qualities of the garden — they work to deconstruct the structure of the installation as they grow.
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The books were gathered from libraries and other storehouses that hoped to sell the books if the price of pulp rose enough. The pulp price never rose, so they sat in storage.
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Now the 40,000 books form the temporary garden for visitors to enjoy, browse, learn, and reflect upon.
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Colorful wooden plates act as bookmarks in the stacks of books, helping to support the structure and tie the books together.
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The International Garden Festival in Métis opened on June 26th. The 21 temporary gardens will be open to visitors until October 3rd, 2010.
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From the designers: “Invoking the mythic relation between knowledge and nature integral to the concept of ‘paradise’, we expose these supposedly timeless cultural artifacts to the process of decomposition.”
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“The garden becomes a sensual reading room, a library, an information platform, an invitation to a different realm of knowledge.”
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“The books are organized between structural colored plates, while their deterioration is further stimulated and accentuated by mushrooms that are cultivated on the books.”