Carnival of Piers
My colleague at architecture and morality has launched a carnival of architecture and urbanism blogs here.
How it works:
Mainly, this "carnival" will be a resource for interested readers who wish to know what the blog world is saying about architecture, community and urban design, and related topics such as public spaces and commons, green space, development and financing, social behavior in designed spaces, vacant property policies...you get the drill.
You can visit the carnival on a regular basis. Or you can enrich it by offering up your blog posts on appropriate topics.
Even if you are not a blogger yourself, you can submit any interesting links you find (though they do need to be from a blog) via this form.
If you are unsure just how to do this, email me and I will be helpful.
Caveat: This is how it started for me, by being a passive blog reader. Before you know it, you want your own little corner of the Internet:
"It's deep in the race for a man to want his own roof and walls and fireplace. And we're helping him get those things in our shabby little office."
But I digress.
More of the same here.
trackback to a+m
My colleague at architecture and morality has launched a carnival of architecture and urbanism blogs here.
How it works:
Mainly, this "carnival" will be a resource for interested readers who wish to know what the blog world is saying about architecture, community and urban design, and related topics such as public spaces and commons, green space, development and financing, social behavior in designed spaces, vacant property policies...you get the drill.
You can visit the carnival on a regular basis. Or you can enrich it by offering up your blog posts on appropriate topics.
Even if you are not a blogger yourself, you can submit any interesting links you find (though they do need to be from a blog) via this form.
If you are unsure just how to do this, email me and I will be helpful.
Caveat: This is how it started for me, by being a passive blog reader. Before you know it, you want your own little corner of the Internet:
"It's deep in the race for a man to want his own roof and walls and fireplace. And we're helping him get those things in our shabby little office."
But I digress.
More of the same here.
trackback to a+m

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