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Earth Choreographer: Remediating Obsolete Grounds of the Future

Received: 22 May 2021     Accepted: 11 September 2021     Published: 14 September 2021
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Abstract

Earth Choreographer is a design methodology that focuses on choreographing, scoring, and de-territorializing the landscape of an obsolete oil field. The project introduced in this article, titled Earth Choreographer, explores the imperatives and opportunities in remediation and repurposing of obsolete industrial sites, aiming to continuously investigate the potential of the land and possible scenarios over decades — even when the intended life cycle of the industrial site is over. It presents a design process that recognizes the ruination of the ground and the landscape. By acknowledging the evolving technologies and ever-increasing preoccupation with natural resources, it answers the following questions: 1) What happens when a productive landscape is sought to be both partially preserved and recreated? 2) How to represent a ground plane that is being constantly reconfigured by machines with ever-changing boundaries of spaces for human and non-human occupy? And 3) what does a site that constantly erases and reconstructs itself look like? With several scenarios from 2025 to 2080, this project acts as a prototype for inhabiting obsolete landscapes by addressing climate change and depletion of resources. Its dynamic design methodology allows the site to constantly evolve and change over time based on the needs and interests of its occupiers.

Published in International Journal of Architecture, Arts and Applications (Volume 7, Issue 3)
DOI 10.11648/j.ijaaa.20210703.14
Page(s) 77-86
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Oil Extraction, Obsolete Landscape, Remediation, Repurposing, Prototype, Rammed Earth

References
[1] Ritchie, Hannah, and Max Roser. “CO2 Emissions by Fuel.” Our World in Data.
[2] McGlashen, A. (2020, April 14). Oil Market Woes Raise Concerns That More Wells Will Be “Orphaned”.
[3] McKenna, J. (2018, December 21). Abandoned Mines Could Become the Farms of the Future.
[4] Brock, Andrea, and Alexander Dunlap. “Normalising Corporate Counterinsurgency: Engineering Consent, Managing Resistance and Greening Destruction around the Hambach Coal Mine and Beyond.” Political Geography. Pergamon, October 12, 2017.
[5] Wilkes, William and Parkin, Brian. “A Coal Mine Is Devouring a 12,000-Year-Old Forest” Bloomberg December 3, 2018.
[6] 6 Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. “Zollverein Coal Mine Industrial Complex in Essen.” UNESCO World Heritage Centre.
[7] “History of Inglewood Oil Field.” Inglewood Oil Field, October 22, 2020.
[8] “Inglewood, CA Demographic Data.” Neighborhood Scout.
[9] Jill E. Johnston, Esther Lim, Hannah Roh, “Impact of upstream oil extraction and environmental public health: A review of the evidence”, Science of The Total Environment, Volume 657, 2019, Pages 187-199.
[10] Oil Spill at Inglewood Oil Field Sends Over 1,600 Gallons Flowing Near Communities. Sierra Club. (2021, April 7).
[11] Norimitsu, O. (2014, July 7). A California Oil Field Yields Another Prized Commodity.
[12] Olalde, M., & Menezes, R. (2020, February 6). The Toxic Legacy of Old Oil Wells: California’s Multibillion-Dollar Problem.
[13] E. Allison and B. Mandler. “Petroleum and the Environment. Abandoned Wells: What happens to oil and gas wells when they are no longer productive?”, Part 7/24 for AGI, 2018.
[14] Bringezu, S. “Toward Science-Based and Knowledge-Based Targets for Global Sustainable Resource Use”. MDPI. (2019, August 6).
[15] Markoff, J. (2012, August 18). Skilled Work, Without the Worker.
[16] Ghosn, R., & Jazairy, E. H. (2019). Geostories: Another Architecture for the Environment. Actar Publishers.
[17] Taylor, A. (2014, August 26). The Urban Oil Fields of Los Angeles. The Atlantic.
[18] Banham, R. (1990). Los Angeles: the Architecture of Four Ecologies. Penguin.
[19] Reed, Chris. (2016). The Agency of Ecology. Essay. In Ecological Urbanism. Zürich, Switzerland: Lars Müller Publishers.
Cite This Article
  • APA Style

    Anna Korneeva, Irmak Turanli. (2021). Earth Choreographer: Remediating Obsolete Grounds of the Future. International Journal of Architecture, Arts and Applications, 7(3), 77-86. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijaaa.20210703.14

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    ACS Style

    Anna Korneeva; Irmak Turanli. Earth Choreographer: Remediating Obsolete Grounds of the Future. Int. J. Archit. Arts Appl. 2021, 7(3), 77-86. doi: 10.11648/j.ijaaa.20210703.14

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    AMA Style

    Anna Korneeva, Irmak Turanli. Earth Choreographer: Remediating Obsolete Grounds of the Future. Int J Archit Arts Appl. 2021;7(3):77-86. doi: 10.11648/j.ijaaa.20210703.14

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ijaaa.20210703.14,
      author = {Anna Korneeva and Irmak Turanli},
      title = {Earth Choreographer: Remediating Obsolete Grounds of the Future},
      journal = {International Journal of Architecture, Arts and Applications},
      volume = {7},
      number = {3},
      pages = {77-86},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ijaaa.20210703.14},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijaaa.20210703.14},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijaaa.20210703.14},
      abstract = {Earth Choreographer is a design methodology that focuses on choreographing, scoring, and de-territorializing the landscape of an obsolete oil field. The project introduced in this article, titled Earth Choreographer, explores the imperatives and opportunities in remediation and repurposing of obsolete industrial sites, aiming to continuously investigate the potential of the land and possible scenarios over decades — even when the intended life cycle of the industrial site is over. It presents a design process that recognizes the ruination of the ground and the landscape. By acknowledging the evolving technologies and ever-increasing preoccupation with natural resources, it answers the following questions: 1) What happens when a productive landscape is sought to be both partially preserved and recreated? 2) How to represent a ground plane that is being constantly reconfigured by machines with ever-changing boundaries of spaces for human and non-human occupy? And 3) what does a site that constantly erases and reconstructs itself look like? With several scenarios from 2025 to 2080, this project acts as a prototype for inhabiting obsolete landscapes by addressing climate change and depletion of resources. Its dynamic design methodology allows the site to constantly evolve and change over time based on the needs and interests of its occupiers.},
     year = {2021}
    }
    

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Author Information
  • School of Architecture, Syracuse University, Syracuse, USA

  • School of Architecture, Syracuse University, Syracuse, USA

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