Urban Pollination

 Posted by on October 2, 2012
Oct 022012
 

Rincon
SOMA

The Lansing Street Pollinator Garden is a temporary garden and art installation at the 45 Lansing street site in the Rincon Hill Neighborhood of San Francisco. Rebar is collaborating with the Pollinator Partnership and the property owners of the 45 Lansing Street Site to bring you a pollinator garden and educational exhibit. The garden was installed in the spring of 2010 and will be on display for the 1-2 years before development plans move forward on the site.

The garden features circular planting beds made from rice straw wattle— tubes of straw wrapped in burlap. This material is entirely biodegradable. Beds are planted with a variety of pollinator attracting plants including: purple lupines, white yarrow, blue gilias, flax, orange California poppies, baby blue eyes, pink and white clarkias, red chinese houses, and purple owl’s clover.

Appearing in the garden are a series of pollinator sillhouettes. These silhouettes are large scale versions of the very types of species that are likely to appear in the garden over the coming year including the Mission blue checkerspot, Mission Bay checkerspot, Anna’s humming bird, and the honey bee.

The Rebar studio is a cross-disciplinary practice for solving the design problems of the commons.

They believe that the human environment—public space in particular—should be infused with ecological knowledge, resilient to changing social conditions, responsive to creative impulses, and filled with opportunities for benevolence, conviviality and delight, and design to make that happen.

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Jun 062011
 
Corner of Leland Avenue and Bayshore Boulevard – Viscitation Valley – San Francisco

“Sprouting” from the sidewalk like stalks of organically grown street furniture, Street Life is a large-scale sculpture composed of surplus parking meter heads, painted dark orange, attached to tall, arcing steel poles. The sculpture marks the gateway to the entrance of what locals refer to as “downtown” Visitacion Valley.

The installation is by a team of artists called Rebar. According to Rebar founder Matthew Passmore, “Street Life encourages viewers to imagine new possibilities for automobile infrastructure that is outmoded. The street furnishings of today may well be the art supplies of tomorrow.”
Rebar’s website is a feast of eye candy for sculpture fans like me.  Their projects are just amazing.
This project was funded by the San Francisco Art Commission for $38,000.
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