PublishedMelbourne Books, August 2011 |
ISBN9781877096433 |
FormatSoftcover, 144 pages |
Dimensions30cm × 21cm |
Originating as a RMIT university pamphlet in 1989 for the purpose of critiquing student work and discussing the discourse of landscape architecture, Kerb has evolved into a progressive cross disciplinary design publication. Published annually, the journal now boasts a diverse selection of both international and local contributors, focusing on contemporary landscape architecture themes.
The journal is unique in being compiled and edited each year by a small group of students, who select a range of articles pertinent to the chosen theme of each edition. Kerb seeks to set the agenda for designers and landscape architects, establishing a platform for new ideas and contemporary design theory. Kerb Journal is now featured on university reading lists around the world.
Kerb Volume 19 discusses how the development of these bio-technological possibilities will shape the way we create landscapes where the city environment could transform into a dynamic, interactive organism of limitless potential; and considers if current wild speculation about a future predicting synthetic biological ecologies, trans-natural robotic systems and post-natural organisms will ever be realised, if it is useful in meeting our collective ideals and what it means for our understanding of 'nature'.