Mexico and its Living Streets

During my time living and working abroad in Mexico, I perceived a concept which shaped me personally and professionally. It was a notion which was unfamiliar to me at the time but that is now fundamental: the idea of the living streets. Initially, to think of the street was to think of my car. It was understood the street was intended for vehicular traffic, minimal pedestrian movement and nothing else. It felt as if I were to cross the street, I would be invading the space meant for the car.

Mexico City radically reshaped this notion for me. Once there I was shocked, not by the cracked pavement or the large puddles, but by the activity on them - an ever-ending motion which was active, dynamic, energetic, as I like to say, pulsing. It was the interaction between neighbors and strangers, the echo of chatter and laughter, the flow of people moving from space to space like the flow of water. These spaces not only transported cars, even better, they served as pedestrian highways, meeting points, leisure areas, commercial venues and music stages. All of these activities which before seemed to occur in different locations, they were now happening in the same place, the streets.

 

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Studio Outside Puts Hearts and Hammers into Home Renovation Project

A normal week at Studio Outside involves a lot of drawing and design, client meetings, site visits, and guiding the construction of landscape architecture projects all around the country. But every once in a while, we get the opportunity to impact our community in Dallas not just by designing something, but by building it with our own hands. 

Last month, Outsiders gathered at a south Dallas home to partner with the Hearts & Hammers organization, whose mission is to refurbish qualified homes owned by low income citizens within the Dallas Metroplex, in renovating the outside of the home.

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