scholarly journals Repairing fractured landscapes: new connections to the Western Toronto waterfront

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicia Kingdon

The project presents a new vision for the Western Toronto Waterfront. The project proposes a design to reimagine the forgotten territories in Parkdale and reconnect the historic waterfront resort community to Lake Ontario. Using tools supplied by landscape urbanism and the architectural practice of landform building, the project seeks to reimagine the territories left abandoned because of their close proximity to road and rail infrastructure.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicia Kingdon

The project presents a new vision for the Western Toronto Waterfront. The project proposes a design to reimagine the forgotten territories in Parkdale and reconnect the historic waterfront resort community to Lake Ontario. Using tools supplied by landscape urbanism and the architectural practice of landform building, the project seeks to reimagine the territories left abandoned because of their close proximity to road and rail infrastructure.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir H. Ameri ◽  

The cultures that in their divergent multiplicity were once effectively segregated in space and time, find themselves in close proximity, dialogue and potential competition and conflict in both literal and virtual space as a direct consequence of globalization. Coupled as globalization is with the technologies of the information age, it has dramatically and fundamentally transformed our cultural and cross-cultural modes of communication and exchange, and along with it our cultural experience of space and time. These transformations are not formal and aesthetic per se, but more profoundly cultural and ideological. As such, they are measurably changing all cultures involved in unforeseeable directions. These changes, along with a multi-cultural context to architectural practice in a global economy require a shift of emphasis in architectural pedagogy to better prepare the next generation of architects to meet the unique demands of a plurality of cultures in a state of flux and change.


1978 ◽  
Vol 56 (10) ◽  
pp. 1274-1279 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Semple

The chromosome numbers of individuals from 48 sites in southern Ontario and 12 sites in the eastern U.S.A. were determined. Twenty-one populations in Ontario of Aster pilosus var. pringlei were found to be hexaploid with 2n = 48 (first report for taxon). Sixteen populations of Aster pilosus var. pilosus were tetraploid 2n = 32 (first report for this ploidy level) and 11 populations were hexaploid 2n = 48. In southwestern Ontario, hexaploids of var. pilosus were found concentrated in one region on glacial sand, till soils, and coarse gravel fill, while tetraploids were only found on finer textured silt plains and limestone outcropping. In Ontario, the two varieties are nearly allopatric, only growing in close proximity on Presqu'ile Point on Lake Ontario. Both tetraploid and hexaploid plants of var. pilosus were found in the United States. The hexaploids were common near the Great Lakes but rare further south. Aster pilosus var. demotus was treated as a synonym of var. pilosus, since nearly glabrous plants produced pilose shoots when transplanted to the greenhouse at the University of Waterloo.


Author(s):  
John L. Beggs ◽  
John D. Waggener ◽  
Wanda Miller

Microtubules (MT) are versatile organelles participating in a wide variety of biological activity. MT involvement in the movement and transport of cytoplasmic components has been well documented. In the course of our study on trauma-induced vasogenic edema in the spinal cord we have concluded that endothelial vesicles contribute to the edema process. Using horseradish peroxidase as a vascular tracer, labeled endothelial vesicles were present in all situations expected if a vesicular transport mechanism was in operation. Frequently,labeled vesicles coalesced to form channels that appeared to traverse the endothelium. The presence of MT in close proximity to labeled vesicles sugg ested that MT may play a role in vesicular activity.


Author(s):  
Oliver C. Wells ◽  
Mark E. Welland

Scanning tunneling microscopes (STM) exist in two versions. In both of these, a pointed metal tip is scanned in close proximity to the specimen surface by means of three piezos. The distance of the tip from the sample is controlled by a feedback system to give a constant tunneling current between the tip and the sample. In the low-end STM, the system has a mechanical stability and a noise level to give a vertical resolution of between 0.1 nm and 1.0 nm. The atomic resolution STM can show individual atoms on the surface of the specimen.A low-end STM has been put into the specimen chamber of a scanning electron microscope (SEM). The first objective was to investigate technological problems such as surface profiling. The second objective was for exploratory studies. This second objective has already been achieved by showing that the STM can be used to study trapping sites in SiO2.


Author(s):  
R.H.M. Cross ◽  
C.E.J. Botha ◽  
A.K. Cowan ◽  
B.J. Hartley

Senescence is an ordered degenerative process leading to death of individual cells, organs and organisms. The detection of a conditional lethal mutant (achloroplastic) of Hordeum vulgare has enabled us to investigate ultrastructural changes occurring in leaf tissue during foliar senescence.Examination of the tonoplast structure in six and 14 day-old mutant tissue revealed a progressive degeneration and disappearance of the membrane, apparently starting by day six in the vicinity of the mitochondria associated with the degenerating proplastid (Fig. 1.) where neither of the plastid membrane leaflets is evident (arrows, Fig. 1.). At this stage there was evidence that the mitochondrial membranes were undergoing retrogressive changes, coupled with disorganization of cristae (Fig. 2.). Proplastids (P) lack definitive prolamellar bodies. The cytoplasmic matrix is largely agranular, with few endoplasmic reticulum (ER) cisternae or polyribosomal aggregates. Interestingly, large numbers of actively-budding dictysomes, associated with pinocytotic vesicles, were observed in close proximity to the plasmalemma of mesophyll cells (Fig. 3.). By day 14 however, mesophyll cells showed almost complete breakdown of subcellular organelle structure (Fig. 4.), and further evidence for the breakdown of the tonoplast. The final stage of senescence is characterized by the solubilization of the cell wall due to expression and activity of polygalacturonase and/or cellulose. The presence of dictyosomes with associated pinocytotic vesicles formed from the mature face, in close proximity to both the plasmalemma and the cell wall, would appear to support the model proposed by Christopherson for the secretion of cellulase. This pathway of synthesis is typical for secretory glycoproteins.


2012 ◽  
Vol 43 (7) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
ALICIA AULT
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document