Most Beautiful Bookshop in the World….

This Must Be the Most Beautiful Book Shop in the World!

Completed in 2007 by Merkx + Girod Architecten, the Selexyz Dominicanen Bookstore in Maastricht in the Netherlands is an incredible church conversion that was originally consecrated in 1294. Located between Maastricht’s two major squares (the Markt and the Vrijthof), the bookstore is run by a large Dutch chain in collaboration with the city council of Maastricht.

beautiful book store

The location has not been used as a church for over 200 years. Before becoming a bookstore it served as a bicycle storage, exam hall for students, a Christmas market and venue for various shows and events. While some may find this usage peculiar, there are actually a significant number of abandoned churches in the Netherlands, many of them hundreds of years old.

beautiful book store

With land being a premium in the country, local governments have opted to convert and restore (just look at those ceilings!) rather than demolish these historic abandoned buildings. For those interested in more information, there’s a great write-up on this building at Crossroads Magazine.

beautiful book store

beautiful book store

beautiful book store

beautiful book store

beautiful book store

source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Chinese Farmers Turn Rice Paddies Into Stunning Works Of Art….

Farmers in Shenyang, China, created these dazzling rice paddy images to pray for blessings, according to Imagine China. The locals inLiaoning province, members of the Xibo ethnic group, create a 3D effect with different varieties of rice saplings. The finished works span about 25 acres.

Imaginechina / Corbis
A 3D rice paddy painting is displayed at a paddy field in Shenyang city, in northeast China’s Liaoning province, on June 22.
Source…www. huffingtonpost.com
Natarajan

Incredible Works Of Art By The Bangalore Crocodile Artist…

Recently, Baadal Nanjundaswamy, an artist from Bangalore, made headlines for planting a life-sized crocodile in the middle of a road after civic authorities failed to repair a pothole.

Nanjundaswamy’s efforts paid off and the Bangalore municipal corporation covered up the pothole in just a day after the pictures went viral.

Read this: How A Bengaluru Artist’s ‘Crocodile’ In The Middle Of A Busy Road Got A Pothole Fixed

But, this isn’t Nanjundaswamy first has used his art for civic activism. The artist who covers streets with his 3-D painting has been making a mark for a while now. Here’s a look at some of his other work.

Indian artist Badal Nanjundaswamy uses the opening of an unattended manhole in the middle of a road as a canvas to depict the Hindu God of death ‘Yama’ waiting to gobble up unwary pedestrains or motorists in Bangalore. (Manjunath Kiran/AFP/Getty Images)

The 3-D artist creates an impression of holding a box in this picture. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Sometimes, he sits on his painted car. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/ Facebook)

This is one of Baadal’s new 3-D work. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Baadal’s artwork has also fixed uneven road dividers in Bangalore. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Is that a real elephant? No, it isn’t. It is one of Baadal’s life-like paintings. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Last year, he drew a cobweb around a manhole in Kanakanagar main road to get the civic authorities’ attention. That too was fixed. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Source….Adrija Bose in http://www.huffingtonpost.in

Natarajan

” 57 Storey Skyscrapper in 19 Days…!!!

A simple design innovation let a Chinese entrepreneur build a 57-storey skyscraper in 19 days…

Broad Sustainable Building, a Chinese architecture company, recently constructed a 57-story, 800 apartment building in 19 working days.

It’s called Mini Sky City. The man behind it is Zhang Yue, a Chinese entrepreneur with an Elon Musk-ian streak for launching revolutions.

As the BBC reports, Zhang wants to start a revolution in building.

Which you can see from Mini Sky City’s three-floors-per-day construction.

The full video is nuts.

But as the ‘mini’ in its name implies, Mini Sky City is just the beginning.

Broad Group wants to build the tallest building in the world, higher than the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.

It’ll be called Sky City, standing a full 220 stories high.

Founder Zhang Yue tells the BBC that Broad Group will build Sky City in a fraction of the time. While it took the Burj five years to be completed, Zhang says that Sky City will only take seven months.

It’ll come complete with everything you need to “live vertically,” like an indoor farm or a helipad.

The key? A little hack called modular construction.

The Modular Building Institute defines it like this:

Modular construction is a process in which a building is constructed off-site, under controlled plant conditions, using the same materials and designing to the same codes and standards as conventionally built facilities – but in about half the time. Buildings are produced in “modules” that when put together on site, reflect the identical design intent and specifications of the most sophisticated site-built facility – without compromise.

Modular design has been used at a smaller scale for a while now.

We probably know it most intimately through the work of Ikea, a company with a  furniture empire that has come to dominate the world.

Here’s how Ikea describes its sectional sofas:

The great thing with a modular sofa is that you can create your own combination, so you get exactly what you want. Then you can adapt or add on to what you have if your needs change. And with our big choice of styles and covers, it’s easy to get the look that suits you, too.

Broad Group’s skyscrapers are kind of like the Ikea sofas of construction

As BBC reports, the process for building is the same: steel comes into Broad Group’s factories, and it gets welded into modules like a column or cross beam.

Then those modules get trucked out.

Crane them up.

And snap them into place, Tetris-style.

“With the traditional method they have to build a skyscraper brick by brick, but with our method we just need to assemble the blocks,” company engineer Chen Xiangqian told the Guardian. “This is definitely the fastest speed in our industry.”

To read the full BBC feature on Broad Sustainable Building, go here.

Source….Drake Baer in http://www.businessinsider.in

Natarajan

NASA’s Mission to Pluto …!!!

It’s been over 3,000 days and nearly three billion miles since NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft set out for Pluto.

It’s a mission that faced countless roadblocks and setbacks before it ever got off the ground. Now the spacecraft is closing in on Pluto and its moon system that sit at the very edge of our solar system.

This will be the first time we’ve ever visited the distant dwarf planet.

The National Space Society put together an incredible video preview of the history-making moment. It has the vibe of a movie trailer, complete with epic narration and stunning visuals, and it perfectly captures why space enthusiasts are so psyched about the New Horizons mission.

The video sweeps you through a timeline of the last half century of space exploration using beautiful images of each planet we’ve explored, starting with Venus in 1962 and ending with Neptune in 1989.

New Horizons will reach Pluto and its moons on July 14, and they will be “the farthest worlds ever to be explored by humankind,” the video says.

So far that the sun appears as a faint dot:

And the moment we reach Pluto, we’ll get an up close look at a world no one has seen before. All we’ve glimpsed of Pluto are fuzzy, far-away images captured by the Hubble Space Telescope. New Horizons will send back images thousands of times closer.

“Who knows what wonders await us at these new horizons.”

We’ll have to wait and see.

NASA is already counting down the days, hours, minutes, and even seconds until the arrival.

You can watch the whole video below, which we definitely recommend:

Source….www.businessinsider .in and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

Amazing Vertical Take Off…Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner…!!!

IT has to be seen to be believed.

In the lead-up to the Paris Air Show, which begins on June 15, Boeing has set the bar high after releasing a video of its newest version of the Dreamliner aircraft — the 787-9 — performing some impressive aerial moves.

But it’s the takeoff which has everyone talking as the passenger jet makes an almost vertical ascent seconds after leaving the ground.

The steep climb looks impressive, though it has its doubters.

Boeing 767 pilot Patrick Smith told CNN: “It looks like the takeoff is at a near vertical 90 degree angle — trust me it’s not.”

He said a 787 with passengers making a 20 degree pitch-up on takeoff would be pretty strong.

“Presumably the plane was very light because it wasn’t carrying any passengers, probably had a very light fuel load, no freight, so it would have been able to perform a steeper than normal ascent — but not to the extent the video seems to show,” Smith said.

That’s steep ... the Boeing Dreamliner 787-9 takeoff

That’s steep … the Boeing Dreamliner 787-9 takeoff Source: Supplied

video clip..

Source….www.news.com.au and http://www.youtube.com

Natarajan

Jamshedpur’s Plastic Roads…An Eye Opener for all Indian Cities…

Disposal of waste plastic is no longer a problem in the steel city with Jamshedpur Utility and Services Company (JUSCO) using bitumen technology on waste plastic, ranging from polybags to biscuit packets, for constructing roads.

Tata nagar roads jamshedpur

JUSCO, a 100 per cent subsidiary company of Tata Steel which maintains and provides municipal services in Tata command area of the city, has constructed 12-15 kms road in the steel city as well as Tata Steel Works besides widening 22 roads using the environment-friendly technology of utilising waste plastic.

Tata nagar roads jamshedpur -jusco

As far as we know, Jamshedpur is the only city in eastern India where bitumen technology (Dry Process) patented by Thiagarajar College of Engineering (TCE), Tirupparankuram, Madurai, has been implemented on accumulated waste plastic for the first time”, Gaurav Anand, Senior Manager (Quality Assurance) of JUSCO, said today.

Claiming that there is no maintenance cost involved for the first five years, Anand, who is an environment engineer, said that for every stretch of such one km long and four metre wide road, one tonne of bitumen costing Rs 50,000 is saved.

The use of bitumen has been reduced by 7 per cent ever since JUSCO began using waste plastic in road construction work, he said, adding that the quality and longevity of roads made of waste plastic-aggregate-bitumen was two times better than bitumen road.

roads made from plastic by JUSCO

Describing plastic tar road as a “new pathway”, Pratyush Dandpat, Deputy Manager (Quality Assurance) of JUSCO, said that the technology turned out to be successful.

Besides being water resistant, it has better binding property, higher softening point, can withstand high temperature and higher load, has lower penetration value, costs less as compared to bitumen road and has no toxic gas emission, Dandpat said.

Though there is great demand for the technology, including from Chattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Jharkhand governments, but “we do not have any plan to commercialise it but to serve society. We have even received a request from Nigeria, which wants to replicate it in their country”, Anand said.

Due to the JUSCO initiative, the city will now have strong, durable, eco-friendly roads which will also relieve the residents from the sight of heaps of plastic waste.

Source…www.indiatimes.com

Natarajan

Nek Chand…Creator of Rock Garden …

Five things you must know about Rock Garden’s creator Nek Chand

Nek Chand hailed from Shakargarh region (now in Pakistan) of Gurdaspur district. HT Photo

Nek Chand, the creator of the Rock Garden, died aged 90 at Post-Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER). He breathed his last at 12.11am on Friday…..12 June 2015.

He is known across the world for creating the iconic Rock Garden that is twenty five acres of several thousand sculptures made of recycled material set in large mosaic courtyards linked by walled paths and deep gorges, combining a series of interlinking waterfalls.

Here are few things that you must know about this artistic wonder and its brilliant creator:

1.The creator belonged to Shakargarh region (now in Pakistan) of Gurdaspur district.
2.In the early 1960s, Chand began to clear a little patch in a forest near Sukhna Lake to make himself a small garden. He set stones around the little clearing and before long sculpted a few figures recycled from discarded and recyclable materials he found at hand.

https://i0.wp.com/www.hindustantimes.com/Images/2015/6/606c5a61-9918-413e-96fc-fd992f904354Wallpaper1.JPG

3.A road inspector by day, he worked at night for fear of being discovered by the authorities but when he was found out, they decided to give him a salary and a workforce of 50 labourers to help him fulfil his dream.

https://i0.wp.com/www.hindustantimes.com/Images/2015/6/720a0961-10b8-4858-b4c4-1a9f3c8a58b6Wallpaper1.JPG

4.The garden was inaugurated as a public space in 1976, bringing him immediate recognition.

https://i0.wp.com/www.hindustantimes.com/Images/2015/6/5107905d-7470-4ed1-a04a-7e593bd1ed7eWallpaper1.JPG

5.The Rock Garden is now acknowledged as one of the modern wonders of the world and receives over 5,000 visitors each day.

https://i0.wp.com/www.hindustantimes.com/Images/popup/2015/6/01_compressed.jpg

Source….www.hindustantimes.com

Natarajan

Who Invented the Internet …?

 

The Story of the Internet: Who REALLY Invented It?

Who was the genius who came up with all of that? The internet is such a crucial tool in our daily lives today that we hardly remember that it hasn’t been here forever. But yeah, it is actually not that old. We still have fuzzy memories about the time before the first thing in the morning was to check email and browse our favorite blogs and youtube channels. Well, let’s explore how the internet came into existence and why.

Forget the radio and the television. When it comes to completely changing the world as we know it, the internet, or the world wide web, must be the most significant invention of the 20th century. In a few short decades, it has seeped into every homE
,intoevery business, and has re-shaped the work force as we know it. But do you know who started it all? Who was the man behind this development? What really happened in the beginning of it all? These are stories worth knowing.

 

Source……..www.ba=bamail.com and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

 

“How IIT Kharagpur Researchers are ‘Leading a Green Revolution’ …”

Indrani Roy/Rediff.com traces how researchers at IIT-Kharagpur have managed to turn barren land of surrounding villages to multi-crop farmland

Prof PBS Bhadoria speaks to farmers

Dr P B S Bhadoria of IIT-Kharagpur speaks to the farmers of Khentia village in Kharagpur.

Jagannath Das, a farmer in his late 40s is surveying a farmland at Khentia village in Kharagpur.

The summer sun is merciless.

With the mercury at cruel 42 degrees, Das is sweating profusely but is smiling a happy smile.

“Five years ago, we could not imagine producing even a handful of paddy in this barren land of Khentia.

“But thanks to IIT Kharagpur professors, we can now grow paddy for our own consumption and can also farm soyabean, sweet corn, sesame, peanut etc,” Das tells  rediff.com.

Dilip Kumar Swain and PBS Bhadoria

Dilip Kumar Swain (left) and Dr PBS Bhadoria at Khentia village.

A group of researchers at the IIT-K, which is about 10 kms from the Khentia village, have ‘adopted’ 14 acres of erstwhile barren land and turned it productive.

The farmers of Khentia who are working in tandem with the IIT team now can not only grow their own food but can also nurture the dream of selling the extra produce directly to retailers bypassing the greedy middlemen.

“We are really happy to be involved in this project. We can now grow our food and can also make money by selling the cash crops like sweet corn, peanut, soyabean that we have started growing in our land,” says 70-year-old Gora Das.

According to the IIT team, Das is one of the most hardworking farmers of Khentia.

“During the initial months of land preparation, we saw him working round the clock de-weeding the fields and tilling it from dawn to dusk,” says Abhishek Singhania, a young member of the IIT team.

Baby steps

Vermicomposting

The IIT team helped the farmer prepare a special low-cost vermicompost.

“Our biggest challenge was to prepare this land, which has been lying unused for years, suitable for cultivation,” says P B S Bhadoria, an IIT faculty member who is leading this initiative along with 29 other teachers.

“The project was conceived a year back when our director Partha P Chakrabarti approached the central government and expressed his intent to do something on food security.

“The central government lauded the idea and agreed to support the move,” Bhadoria says.

The harvesting machine

Farmer Jagannath Das demonstrates the harvesting machine.

Thereafter, 14 acres of land from 14 farmers of Khentia was chosen for the Rs 16-crore (Rs 160-million) project.

The field work for the project started in October 2014.

The project involves three departments of IIT-Kharagpur — agriculture and food technology, biotechnology and industrial engineering.

At present, there are about 30 experts assisting Bhadoria.

The total span of the project is three years.

Convincing the farmers wasn’t easy

“Convincing the farmers was a daunting task. Initially, the farmers were not ready to hand over their land to the IIT people. There was some political tension as well.

“Farmers with differing political views tried to create complications,” Bhadoria tellsrediff.com.

“But these problems were sorted out after long discussions and we got the farmers’ nod to go ahead with our experiments on these barren lands,” he adds.

“Perhaps, the farmers too did not like the fact that the land was lying unproductive for years,” Bhadoria says.

Storage pit for crops

A storage pit for crops.

How the land was prepared

“Small adjacent pieces of land belonging to a single farmer were merged,” says Dilip Kumar Swain, associate professor, agricultural and food engineering department.

“Primary and secondary tillage was done by tractor-driven plough followed by levelling in November,” he adds.

“We did soil testing, which helped us determine the amount of fertiliser needed.”

“Earlier, the farmer would randomly use chemical fertiliser which often affected the land’s fertility.

“However, the 14 farmers who have partnered with us, now know the importance of soil testing before applying chemical fertiliser”, Swain says.

‘We gave importance to partnership’

“We wanted to bring the farmers into the project’s fold right from the beginning,” Bhadoria tells rediff.com.

“It had to be a collaborative project,” he adds.

“The understanding is, for one year, we will provide the farmers technical assistance, machines while they will provide free labour,” Swain tells rediff.com.

Peanut

Apart from paddy, the farmers of Khentia are also growing peanuts.

“And after a year, we plan to hand over the entire project to the farmers,” he adds.

“This way, the farmers will attain self sufficiency,” Swain says.

The farmers have been asked to form a cooperative wherein they will distribute the produce of the land according to their percentage of ownership.

“While this creates a bonding among them, it also instills a sense of competitiveness among the tillers of the soil,” Swain says.

Irrigation was the key

The IIT team developed an irrigation facility in December by:

  • installing a deep tube well in the area;
  • constructing a pump house and
  • by providing fencing protection of the cropped land

As part of the irrigation system development, a pond in the area was renovated to store rain water and grow fish. The pond was plastered with bentonite clay to check seepage.

According to Singhania, “The pond now takes care of the irrigation of the farmland to a large extent,” Singhania says.

The Khentia land

The Khentia village project.

How production was enhanced

The farmers were given training on the production technology of System of Rice Intensification.

This technology saves 80-90 per cent seed and 40-50 per cent water.

The farmers were introduced to organic rice production technology.

They were taught to supply essential nutrients to their crops by using organic manure.

Trainings were given on effective and proper use of bio-pesticides.

“With the help of these technologies, farmers of Khentia could now produce as much as two tonnes of rice per acre,” Swain tells rediff.com.

“Moreover, they were able to minimise the loss of crops occurring out of unseasonal rains this year,” says Bhadoria.

Agrees farmer Swapan Das.

“Apart from growing rice in abundance, we doubled the production of other crops as well. It’s a miracle,” Das tells rediff.com.

Initially, the farmers of Khentia wanted to grow rice only.

However, after studying the land, its water demand and fertility, the IIT team introduced high value, soil restoring crops like sweet corn, sesame, soybean and peanut.

Jagannath Das and Swapan Das

Farmers Jagannath Das and Swapan Das.

A low cost vermicompost is of great help

The IIT team helped the farmer prepare a special low-cost vermicompost by rotting cow dung, water hyacinth, farm wastes with 2.5-3 kg of eisenia foetida, a special species of earthworm in each bed of size 1.8mx1.2mx1m.

Each bed is expected to produce 100 kg of vermicompost in a single cycle of 60 days.

“Earlier, the farmers would burn the farm waste, causing pollution,” Singhania tells rediff.com

Soyabean cultivation

An IIT team member shows a soyabean fruit.

“We taught them to convert the farm wastes into an environment-friendly vermicompost which will cause any pollution but will give them a tool to practice organic farming,” he adds.

Singhania has his hands full making a sustainable farming-cum-marketing model so that once the IIT team leaves, the farmers can do everything on their own.

“We want to make them self-sufficient. They should grow their food, sell the extra produce to the retailers sans the middlemen and improve the condition of their land for sustenance,” Singhania says.

Future looks bright

The IIT-Kharagpur initiative has drawn accolades from the Union Human Resource Development Ministry, which has awarded the institute a grant of Rs 26 crore (Rs 260 million) to replicate the experiment in nine other villages.

The project has also been made a part of the Narendra Modi government’s Unnat Bharat Abhiyan.

The IIT has adopted surrounding villages of Polisa, Chakmakarampur, Paparara I and II, Sankua, Lachamapur, Kaliara-1 and 2 and Changual to replicate the experiment there.

IIT-Kharagpur director Partha P Chakrabarti couldn’t have been happier.

“To focus on food security is an absolute must and we just can’t afford to ignore agriculture,” he tells rediff.com.

IIT Kharagpur director

IIT Kharagpur director Partha P Chakrabarti.

“We often see farmers falling preys to advertisements and other marketing gimmicks,” says Chakrabarti.

“They have very little knowledge of technicalities of farming, quality of fertilisers and pesticides and end up paying for only those that are the most advertised.

“But as technical experts, we felt we should impart them the knowledge about farming.

“Since Kharagpur is surrounded by villages, we thought of starting the experiment here. “We are happy that our years’ of research in agriculture laboratories has borne fruit”, the director says.

Other Indian states like Bihar have approached the institute to start similar projects there.

Photographs: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Indrani Roy / Rediff.com

Source….www.refiff.com
Natarajan