Let’s have a look at some archictecture designed to make the desert countries nice to live in. Yep, not really seeing a lot of similarities to Houston.
As /u/hank hints. it’ might be possible if you build the buildings under some mass, like in Arakkis or Pompeii or North Africa - Your stone house has a central courtyard. Your street is in the shade between houses. Any public building rising above the rooflines has a wind-catcher. Really big public spaces are catching winds.
Literally anything better than an above-ground structure (skyscraper) with exterior glass (greenhouse) walls!
I mean, most people could survive almost anywhere for a day. Yeah, people need shade, just like all animals do; which is naturally provided by trees, shrubs, big rocks, terrain features etc. It’s true that there are places where humans have deliberately made the outdoors inhospitable by removing those features, but you can fix that by putting them back.
Large factories like steel mills always have their own train network. At leas there in Europe.
I life close to an old steel mill that was turned into a landscape/architecture park.
The railways were turned into bicycle lanes and make up about 80 % of my daily commute to work.
Let’s have a look at some archictecture designed to make the desert countries nice to live in. Yep, not really seeing a lot of similarities to Houston.
The best architecture for desert cities in the US:
Don’t build cities in deserts. There’s tonnes of space in parts of the country that aren’t actively trying to kill you for half the year.
As /u/hank hints. it’ might be possible if you build the buildings under some mass, like in Arakkis or Pompeii or North Africa - Your stone house has a central courtyard. Your street is in the shade between houses. Any public building rising above the rooflines has a wind-catcher. Really big public spaces are catching winds.
Literally anything better than an above-ground structure (skyscraper) with exterior glass (greenhouse) walls!
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I mean, most people could survive almost anywhere for a day. Yeah, people need shade, just like all animals do; which is naturally provided by trees, shrubs, big rocks, terrain features etc. It’s true that there are places where humans have deliberately made the outdoors inhospitable by removing those features, but you can fix that by putting them back.
What, you don’t like our culturally significant stripmall and 16-lane highway architecture? /s
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I watched a documentary about a man who lives on a train with his family. He drives the train around a steel mill. The train never leaves the mill.
Large factories like steel mills always have their own train network. At leas there in Europe. I life close to an old steel mill that was turned into a landscape/architecture park. The railways were turned into bicycle lanes and make up about 80 % of my daily commute to work.
I know, I am very lucky.
I wonder when we start to dig holes in the ground to live in in areas with hot climate.
Coober Peby.
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If architects would engage on the level that you are thinking, I would be so happy!
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It may be called Moorish architecture but they can’t fit as many unpaid interns in those!
Houston is a swamp not a desert
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