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Inspired by Design: Surf, Live, Paint
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04:10
Inspired by Design: New Gen, Next Gen
The 100K house, led by Brain Phillips of IS Architects and developer Chad Ludeman of PostGreen, is a modern case study in housing design that aims to prove that building green can be more affordable than traditional construction. Built mainly on vacant city sites and costing a mere 100 dollars per square foot, it is the highest level of sustainable home currently being built in the United States. Designed for an emerging creative class that has an eye for design but also a desire for sustainability, the 100k house creates a social and functional home that poses an important question: How much space does an individual really need?

To find out more, visit babelgum.com/inspiredbydesign.
04:10
Inspired by Design: A House for Blake
Building a house for her son Blake started off as an antidote to city life when mom and music industry executive Debbie Gibbs embraced the idea of a prefab home. The stigma of these houses has drastically changed over the last 10 years. It is now about mass customization where each house responds to each individual. Thanks to the folks at RESOLUTION: 4 ARCHITECTURE, Debbie was able to customize a home that enabled her family to have their indoor and outdoor lifestyle flow together seamlessly with high design and a low environmental impact. Having spent a winter in their new home Debbie has come to realize that she is getting as much pleasure out of it as her son.

To find out more, visit babelgum.com/inspiredbydesign.
03:19
New Urbanism ep 7 - Grow Shelter
The Grow Shelter is a living environment where humans, plants, and animals co-exist. It consists of three connected spheres covered in earth and seeds. The habitat evolves with the seasons showing the cycle of life. The concept is to bring people closer to the environment. For more episodes in this series, visit: New Urbanism
03:58
New Urbanism ep 13: Mobile Office
Kyle Minor, a San Francisco-based designer and artist, bought an industrial-grade double wide trailer from some fisherman with the intention of moving it onto a piece of land and living outside of the city. When he dragged it down to the end of a pier on San Francisco Bay next to his shop, he realized it worked better right where it was. Now he has sold it as an alternative office space to a group of prolific inventors.Stills courtesy of Karolirene at www.atelierkism.com and Kyle Minor at www.kyleminordesign.com. For more episodes in this series, visit: New Urbanism
04:29
GOOD: The Highline
The Next Generation of American Public Spaces. An original GOOD Video presentation on the Highline.
05:29
New Urbanism ep 8 - Rooftop Dwelling
Terreform, a nonprofit architecture collective transforms the rooftop of a building in downtown Brooklyn into a shelter and farm for urban refugees- people displaced by the mortgage crisis. Their two-week project, called Terrefarm, used only materials found in the building, and involved students and teachers from around the world. For more episodes in this series, visit: New Urbanism
01:58
New Urbanism: ep 1 teaser - NYC Waterpod
The Waterpod is a floating eco-habitat that will study self-sufficient, water-based living. Four artists will rotate living on board the 30-by-100-foot barge as it moves to different sites around NYC for the next five months. For all other episodes, interesting links, more info, check out Babelgum's New Urbanism
02:19
Baggu Bags
Baggu's ingenious design makes for the most functional and stylish eco-bag out there—an example of how one small, well-executed idea might just change the world. In this video, co-founder Emily Sugihara fills us in on the design process and shows us some of the more unusual uses for a Baggu.
04:08
Architype - Sustainable Buildings
Architype won an Ashden Award for Sustainable Energy in 2009. The company designs buildings that require minimal heating, cooling and lighting through insulation, passive solar gain, natural ventilation and well placed windows.
03:17
Robert Hammond at The 99% Conference
In this video, Friends of the Highline co-founder Robert Hammond tells the story of how he helped reinvent a gritty elevated railway into what is NYC's most celebrated public space since Central Park. He shares images and animations of what the park (due to open in June) will look like at a talk for our recent 99% Conference and shares how he feels after a decade at work at the brink of its debut.
 

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