Χώρα Μεσσηνίας - Chora Messinias
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Το ΑΡΧΕΙΟΝ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΣΜΟΥ, παρουσιάζει το ντοκυμανταίρ του
ΓΙΩΡΓΟΥ ΛΕΚΑΚΗ "Η ΧΩΡΑ ΤΡΙΦΥΛΙΑΣ η ΧΩΡΑ του ΝΕΣΤΟΡΟΣ"
Συμμετέχουν οι:
ΤΑΣΟΣ ΚΑΛΟΓΕΡΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ
Καθηγητής Παραδοσιακών Χορών
ΒΑΣΙΛΗΣ ΛΑΜΠΡΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ
Δρ Χημικός Μηχανικός-Καθηγητής Συντήρησης Μνημείων
Πανεπιστημίου Δυτικής Αττικής
ΑΓΓΕΛΙΚΗ ΝΙΚΟΛΟΠΟΥΛΟΥ
Πρόεδρος Λαογραφικού Ομίλου Μεσσηνίας
ΚΑΜΕΡΑ - ΗΧΟΣ - ΜΟΝΤΑΖ
ΠΑΝΑΓΙΩΤΗΣ ΜΠΑΝΤΑΛΑΚΗΣ
ΦΩΤΟ: Γ. ΛΕΚΑΚΗΣ, Β. ΛΑΜΠΡΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ, ΜΥΚΟ, ΜΟΥΣΑΙΟΣ.
ΠΑΡΑΔΟΣΙΑΚΗ ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗ
Κανονάκι - ΑΝΤΙΓΟΝΗ ΠΑΠΑΗΛΙΑ
Κλαρίνο - ΚΩΝ. ΚΟΠΑΝΙΤΣΑΚΗΣ
ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗ: BG & DG
ΑΡΧΕΙΟΝ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΣΜΟΥ
c+p 2018
ΠΑΛΑΤΙ ΝΕΣΤΟΡΟΣ - NESTOR PALACE
3D αναπαράσταση του μυκηναϊκού ανακτόρου στον Άνω Εγκλιανό Πυλίας, γνωστό ως Ανάκτορο του Νέστορα. Περίπου 1300-1200 π.Χ
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Έκθεση αστικού σχεδιασμού για το "υπόλοιπο 90%" των πόλεων του κόσμου
Ξεκινάει στις 15 Οκτώβρη 2011 στο κτίριο του ΟΗΕ, έκθεση αστικού σχεδιασμού για το "υπόλοιπο 90%" των πόλεων του κόσμου.
Στην έκθεση συμμετέχουν πολλοί αρχιτέκτονες μεταξύ των οποίων και το τμήμα MAS Urban Design του πανεπιστημίου ΕΤΗ Zurich.
Αξίζει να σημειωθεί ότι σχεδόν αρκετοί από το τμήμα είναι Έλληνες.
Γεώργιος
Αλεξάνδρου, Ξενοφώντας Διαλεισμάς, Καλλιόπη Κόντου (Χώρα) , Δανάη Λάσκαρη,
Χάρις Μακεδονοπούλου, Ειρήνη - Κωνσταντίνα Μόρφη, Ανθή Σκούπρα, Θεόδωρος
Τούσας.
Να ευχηθούμε καλή επιτυχία...
Design with the Other 90%: Cities," the second in a series of themed exhibitions by Cooper-Hewitt that demonstrate how design can address the world's most critical
issues, opens October 15 at the United Nations and runs through January
9, 2012. Organized by Cynthia E. Smith, the museum's curator of
socially responsible design, the exhibition will feature more than 60
projects from 22 countries around the globe.
The exhibition will
explore design solutions to the challenges created by rapid urban
growth in informal settlements, commonly referred to as slums. Close to
1 billion people live in informal settlements, and that population is
projected to swell to 2 billion people by 2030. This accelerated urban
expansion will take place primarily in developing and emerging
economies in an increasingly climate-challenged world. Projects and
products at every scale will be included, with a focus on designs that
are informed by end users: alternative housing design, methods and
materials; low-cost clean water; accessible education initiatives;
sanitation and solid-waste management; transportation solutions;
innovative systems and infrastructure; and urban design and planning.
"Cooper-Hewitt
is delighted to present this free exhibition at the United Nations,
where visitors from all over the world will be able to see how design
can address the most critical issues in developing and emerging
countries," said Bill Moggridge, director of the museum.
"Cities"
will be divided into six themes: Exchange, Visibility, Adapt, Include,
Livelihood and Access. To orient the visitor, compelling information
will be presented in the form of maps, comparative statistics and a
video and sound installation organized by urban videographer Cassim
Shepard.
Exchange
Increasingly,
local and regional authorities cannot keep up with the unprecedented
growth of informal settlements or slums. This section of the exhibition
showcases innovative solutions that have emerged as the informal and
formal cities exchange design knowledge to meet this demand.
Among
the projects on view are community-generated solutions by Shack/Slum
Dwellers International that build the capacity of poor urban communities
by addressing secure land tenure, housing, basic amenities and
livelihood through community-to-community exchanges throughout Africa,
Asia and Latin America; the Urbanism Manual for Precarious Settlements,
designed and produced for use in Buenos Aires, Argentina, which
provides a free "how-to" urban design manual for newly arriving
settlers; and the Incremental Housing project in Iquique, Chile, and
Monterrey, Mexico, which produces half-finished houses that are
completed by the residents and contain only the essentials of a built
home-bathroom, kitchen, structure and roof-in order to stretch
resources further to meet the rapidly growing demand for housing.
Other
projects in this section explore building methods, materials and
manufacturing, including a full-scale shelter installation representing
an alternative gabions construction method used in Mexico City, in
which mesh and wire containers are filled on-site with locally
available materials. This low-cost, flexible system can easily adapt to
accommodate a range of needs. Also on view will be a plastic formwork
kit to produce cast-in-place mortar structures using mostly indigenous
materials, in order to quickly, efficiently and cost-effectively
produce homes.
Visibility
The projects on
view in this section increase awareness of the scope and scale of the
conditions in informal settlements, which are often invisible and do
not show up on official maps or on census roles.
Highlights of
the included projects are the Praça Cantao Favela Painting project in
Santa Marta, Rio de Janeiro, where artists engaged community members to
paint the building exteriors in their neighborhood, calling
international media attention to their need for improvement; and the
open-source mapping project Map Kibera in Nairobi, Kenya, which engages
local youth to map the settlement in order to locate and number the
hundreds of thousands of people living there and document the lack of
basic services of the informal settlement.
Adapt
Designers
and architects are collaborating with communities to create design
solutions that respond to the local terrain, urban or climate conditions
of the region.
Featured works on view in this section include
the Integral Urban Project in the neighborhood of San Rafael-Barrio
Unido in Caracas, Venezuela, which upgraded the extremely vertical
settlement with an improved network of stairs that integrate drainage,
sewage and clean water infrastructure; and the Floating Community
Lifeboats in Bangladesh, which provide space for solar-powered schools,
libraries, clinics and community centers in response to rising waters
and extreme density.
Include
There is a
growing urban divide in many of the world's cities. The "include"
section features design solutions that seek to include those who had
been marginalized by the established city-the poor, women, youth and
entire communities.
Among the featured projects are the Jiko ya
jamii (Community Cooker), a large-scale oven that uses trash as fuel to
power a communal cooking facility in Kibera, Nairobi; the city of
Diadema, Brazil, where the mayor worked directly with the informal
communities through participatory planning and budgeting to reurbanize
the settlements, including widening and paving what were once narrow
streets, cooperatively building social housing, establishing a new
system of land tenure and providing quality health care to all
residents; and Kaputei Town in Kenya, developed by Jamii Bora Trust, a
micro-finance organization started by 50 street beggar families who
saved enough money to found the Trust in 1999. Jamii Bora members
receive loans to start small businesses and save enough to purchase a
house in the town, where social amenities, facilities and open spaces
are maintained by neighborhood management associations.
Livelihood
Informal
communities often form as people from rural areas migrate to urban
centers in search of jobs and better lives. The projects in this section
create work opportunities, such as Spaza-de-Move-on in Durban, South
Africa, a portable, durable device that provides dignity and convenience
to informal street vendors; M-PESA, a mobile money transfer service
that enables urban migrants in Kenya to send money back to their
villages via a mobile device; and in Bangalore, India Babajob.com, a
social-networking service, connects impoverished job seekers with
employers through chains of personal connections, replicating the
process by which Indians hire in real life.
Access
Informal
settlements lack access to basic services. The largest section of the
exhibition includes design solutions to improve access to water,
sanitation, food security, electricity, health, transportation and
education.
Projects on view include the SONO Water Filter from
Bangladesh, a low-cost, reliable and user-friendly household system to
remove arsenic from drinking water through a series of buckets filled
with locally available materials that act as natural filters; the
BioCentres in Nairobi are complexes that feature toilets and washrooms
accessible to the disabled, with free child only toilets, water kiosks
selling affordable clean water and ancillary rooms for community and
livelihood activities on the upper floors; Garden-in-a-sack in Kibera,
Nairobi made from inexpensive, available materials to maximize the small
amount of space available in the settlement for micro-agriculture; the
Bicycle Phone Charger, a simple device made from bicycle and radio
parts that is attached to a bicycle to generate enough power to charge a
cell phone; the Shasthya Shebika (Health Volunteer) Kit, a portable
pharmacy kit for health volunteers throughout informal communities in
Dhaka, Bangladesh; the Guangzhou Bus Rapid Transit system in Guangzhou,
China, services nearly 1 million riders per day and the cost is 10
times less expensive than the metro; and the Digital Drum in Kampala,
Uganda, a solar-powered information access point made from two durable,
low-cost oil drums welded together, rugged keyboards, solar panels and
low-power tablets.