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Windshield greenhouseRecycled windshields are busting out of the woodwork, from French country gardens to swank sub/urban surfaces. The protective pupa shown here ("la serre" is French for "greenhouse") transforms more motive motives into regenerative ones, à la auto glass gone wild, nailed to firewood beams and each other and slated for a greenhouse roof. "I like the idea of recovery," says maker Sebastien Ramirez, who created this warm cocoon without a budget.1
Windshield greenhouseRecycled windshields are busting out of the woodwork, from French country gardens to swank sub/urban surfaces. The protective pupa shown here ("la serre" is French for "greenhouse") transforms more motive motives into regenerative ones, à la auto glass gone wild, nailed to firewood beams and each other and slated for a greenhouse roof. "I like the idea of recovery," says maker Sebastien Ramirez, who created this warm cocoon without a budget.2
Windshield greenhouseRecycled windshields are busting out of the woodwork, from French country gardens to swank sub/urban surfaces. The protective pupa shown here ("la serre" is French for "greenhouse") transforms more motive motives into regenerative ones, à la auto glass gone wild, nailed to firewood beams and each other and slated for a greenhouse roof. "I like the idea of recovery," says maker Sebastien Ramirez, who created this warm cocoon without a budget.3
Windshield greenhouseRecycled windshields are busting out of the woodwork, from French country gardens to swank sub/urban surfaces. The protective pupa shown here ("la serre" is French for "greenhouse") transforms more motive motives into regenerative ones, à la auto glass gone wild, nailed to firewood beams and each other and slated for a greenhouse roof. "I like the idea of recovery," says maker Sebastien Ramirez, who created this warm cocoon without a budget.4
Windshield greenhouse interiorRecycled windshields are busting out of the woodwork, from French country gardens to swank sub/urban surfaces. The protective pupa shown here ("la serre" is French for "greenhouse") transforms more motive motives into regenerative ones, à la auto glass gone wild, nailed to firewood beams and each other and slated for a greenhouse roof. "I like the idea of recovery," says maker Sebastien Ramirez, who created this warm cocoon without a budget.5





