Sunday, June 29, 2025

Wild built environment habitats






Human sprawl tar concrete encrusted architectural scape is now spreading like prolific malignant cancer across the earth. Gobbling up lush forests and laying waste to age old eco systems. Our architectural landscapes wrap the earth and force the beautiful wild into limited islands before obliterating these eco systems completely.

Im not here to glue myself to the very highways i use to drive. Or spray paint red on the very cars i use. Im as much of the problem as big corporate. I live my little life with all the conveniences of a wrap the earth fanatic, whilst obliterating the wild. The very thought of a pride of lions lolling about in my back garden leaves me cold.

However this nagging thought of letting the wild be 80% of earths coverage. Whilst us humans learn to occupy 20% this notion keeps persisting. 

That welcome speech from Pandora resonates to my idea. "We not in Kansas anymore ....... " The wild scape should be first and our architectural built environment second. If we can create our lived in architecture between the wild spaces, to my mind we will have achieved an equilibrium. Islands of architectural human habitat between the vast ocean of wild space. Our buildings could snake between herds of wildebeest. We could embrace the wild earth by creating raw eco friendly spaces that allow the wild to florish. 

As we now head to Mars to tame another planet we have not even 1% gained the mastery of this one. The virus of man is a mindset and 99% of people are infected. I write this to the 1%. Wild space can be the future of architectural urban developement. Creating human living spaces between herds of animal species could be key to our survival. Creating architectural environments that survive between the wild savanna.

A human fort city solution within mostly wild space. 

The current live in there own filth and decay litter mongering urban dwellers can still simply continue to live in areas of there own choosing. Just now between me and a pride of wild lions.