Blogarama - The Blog Directory
Showing posts with label The most unique tree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The most unique tree. Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Amazing Tree Houses

Wilkinson Residence


Architect, artist, magician, Robert Harvey Oshatz is all of That and so much more. He is the organic architect Responsible for this magnificent home up in the canopy; the coolest house in the trees That Likely Will you ever see. The unique Wilkinson Residence graces the wooded landscape outside of Portland, Oregon. This Treehouse would turn even the Swiss Family Robinson green with envy. More than Likely you too Will have a more than a twinge of desire to live in it. 


 
Spider's Leg Tree house
We're no Strangers to Germany's tree house Baumraum makers extraordinaire, so When We saw another brilliant arboreal home design from Them, We Knew We had to share it with you! The house resides at the World of Living, a showspace / amusement park for sustainable housing company WeberHaus and greets visitors with its curvy body perched atop a spider-like super skinny "legs". The unusual shape and clean lines are Baumraum's signature, and there are a lot of other cool features, so check Check it all out in our slide show. 


 
Tree house Teahouse
Japanese professor of architecture Terunobu Fujimori built his boyhood dream in his father's garden in 2004. It's a Teahouse on DanceInternasional.Stilt. 



 
Tree House Restaurant

The Naha Harbor Diner in Okinawa, Japan, lies at the very top of a huge Gajumaru tree about 20 feet above the ground. Sadly, that is not a real Gajumaru tree, it's Actually concrete. Actually Customers have to get in an elevator inside the trunk to reach the restaurant.


 
Yellow Tree House
The Yellow Tree House by Pacific Environment Architects is built around a redwood tree, the which is over 40m high and has a 1.7m diameter at its base, located north of Auckland, New Zealand. The structure is made of plantation poplar slats and used extensive natural lighting throughout. The tree house restaurant was built as a marketing promotion for New Zealand Yellow Pages.
The concept of building a tree house on a redwood tree was quite Challenging and required a range of consultants to get your resources and building consent, and to get construction underway in the limited time of four months. The design is an organic oval form wrapped around the trunk and structurally tied up the top and bottom, with a circular arrangement, split apart on the axis with a raised floor portion. The binding timber forms the base of the main structure. Glue-laminated poplar plantation pine has been used for the slats. It is around 10m wide and 12m high with seating over 10m off the ground. The kitchen and toilets are on the ground. It has the capacity to occupy 18 people with all the comforts Such as bars, structural soundness, and unobstructed views into the valley.


 
Beach Tree House Rock
This Treehouse by Japanese builder Kobayahsi Takashi was constructed with the express purpose of communicating with outer space. "A sparkling beacon Among Treetops, it is easy to imagine the dome succeeding at its mission to make contact with alien life," writes Nelson. 


 
Wood Island Bogwon Tree house
The Island Wood "Bogwon" Treehouse in Washington is supported by a single tree. Engineer Jake Jacob and his team from the TreeHouseWorkshop fixed the house to the trunk with a series of limb-hugging rings. "Our trees are perched Actually, as opposed to nailed in," he toll us. "The tree Might move in the wind and We do not want to inhibit the tree to be Able to move in the wind." 


 
97-Foot Tree house
Horace Burgess's tree house may be as close to heaven as a body can get inCumberland County. It Rises 97 feet into the sky, the support provided by a live, 80-foot-tall white oak 12 feet in diameter at its base. Six other trees brace the tower-like fortress, but Burgess says its foundation is in God. Most of his materials are recycled pieces of lumber from garages, storage shedsand Barns.The tree house has 10 floors, averaging nine to 11 feet in height by Burgess's reckoning. He has never Measured its size but estimates it to be about 8.000 to 10.000 square feet. He did count the nails That he has Hammered into the wood - 258,000, give or take a Few hundred. And he guesses he has sunk about $ 12,000 into the project. 


 
Peter Lewis's Tree House
Any kid in Bridgton, Maine, would want to have Peter Lewis's Playhouse in his backyard. And no wonder. Lewis has tricked it out with a Drawbridge and two spiral staircases. Best of all, the whole thing floats 21 ft.. off the ground. Lewis, however, is no kid, and his masterpiece - a two-story, 6000-pound clubhouse slung from an Eastern white pine - bears scant resemblance to the banged-together Shacks of childhood. His Treehouse is held aloft by a well-engineered suspension system That imparts nary a scratch to the pine's bark. Hearty beams and mortise-and-Tenon joints Lend a built-for-the-ages solidity. Weather-sealed windows, insulation and a coal-burning stove deliver year-round enjoyment, even in icy Maine. 


 
Crystal River Tree House

There is always a place for fun and frivolity in architecture! David Rasmussen, Treehouse resident expert, designed and built this "Treehouse" with log columns as the main support, since the trees on the property are not strong enough to build on. 


Source : Odde.Com

Monday, January 10, 2011

Lone Cypress

This is "The Lone Cypress Tree" that stands on the rock for more than 200 years (some web sites claiming more than 250 years). I learned from a colleague Don that the trees that stood as a symbol of stability weathering time was the inspiration behind the Cypress.

Circus Trees

In 1945, Erlandson's daughter and wife took a trip to the ocean near Santa Cruz, California. There they saw people lined up to pay to see the strangeness like building tilted in Mystery Spot. They returned home and mentioned (once only) that Axel's trees could draw people who would pay to see them if they are in a good travel route.
Axel jump on the idea and bought a small plot of land in Scotts Valley, California on the main road between Santa Clara Valley and the sea, and began the process of planting a tree is best for their new home. Tree Circus opened in the spring of 1947.

On June 4, 1947, Erlandson wrote to Robert Ripley sent him two photos of trees and invited him to visit. The tree appears in the column Erlandson Robert Ripley's Believe It or Not! twelve times.

To create the "Basket Tree", Erlandson planted six fig tree in a circle, topped them all on one leg, then approach-grafted them together with each other to form a diamond pattern. For the first 2.5 meters (8 '), he left the opening at the top. Today, this specimen appears as a center of Gilroy Gardens.

Giant Sequoias

Giganteum Sequoiadendron (giant sekuoya, Sierra Redwood, Redwood Sierran, or Wellingtonia) is the only living species in the genus Sequoiadendron, and one of three types of tree species known as konifera red wood, belongs to the family Cupressaceae in the subfamily Sequoioideae, co-with Sequoia sempervirens (Coast Redwood) and Metasequoia glyptostroboides (Dawn Redwood).
A common use of "sequoia" generally refers to the name Sequoiadendron, which occurs naturally only in the garden at the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.
Sequoias are the giant treesin the the world'slargest in terms of total volume ( technically,only 7 living Giant Sequoia exceed 42,500 cubic feet (1,200m3 )of Monarch Lost Coast Redwood trees ,see Biggest tree ). They grow an average height of 50-85 meters (160-279 feet) and 6-8 meters (20-26 feet) in diameter. Record trees have been measured to be 94.8 meters (311 feet) high and 17 meters (56 feet) in diameter [1] The oldest Giant Sequoia based on the number of rings. 3,500 years. Sequoia bark fibrous, furrowed, and perhaps 90 cm (3.0 feet) thick at the base of columnar trunk. It provides significant fire protection for the trees. Leaves green, awl-shaped, 3-6 mm long, and ordered spiral in bud. Seed cones 4-7 cm long and mature in 18-20 months, although they usually remain green and close to 20 years; cone each having 30-50 scales arranged spiral, with several seeds on each scale giving an average of 230 seeds per cone. Seeds dark brown, 4-5 mm and 1 mm wide, with wings 1 mm wide, yellow-brown on each side. Several seed warehouse when the cone scales shrink during hot weather in late summer, but most seeds released when the cone dries from the heat of fire or damaged by insects.Giant sequoias regenerates by seed. Trees to about 20 years to produce stump sprouts after injury. Giant sequoias of all ages can grow from the trunk when the branch long lost to fire or damage, but (like the coast redwood), mature trees do not grow from the stump is cut. Young trees start to bear cones at the age of 12 years.


At any given time, a large tree can be expected to have approximately 11,000 cones. The top of the crown of any mature Giant Sequoia has always produced a larger number of cones from the lower part. A mature giant sequoia has been estimated to disperse from 300,000 to 400,000 seeds per year. Winged seeds can be up to 180 m (600 ft) from the parent tree.

Lower branches die fairly readily from shading, but trees less than 100 years old retain most of their dead branches. Mature tree trunks in gardens are generally free branches to a height of 20-50 m, but solitary trees maintain a low branch.

Coast redwood

Coast redwood range from southern Oregon to central California, extending not more than fifty miles inland only as far as the coastal climate has its influence. Fog plays an important role in the survival of trees, protecting them from the summer drought conditions typical of this area. They also need abundant winter rains and moderate temperatures year round. In ideal conditions a coast redwood can grow 2-3 feet high every year, but when trees stressed from lack of moisture and sunlight they can grow as little as one inch per year.

Because this tree is so tall, needle Treetop exposed to dry heat over a needle branches in dense canopy below. To compensate for this, redwood needles grow Treetop with tight spikes of conserving water, because surface vaporize a bit. The branches are lower, on the other hand, produces flat needles to capture additional light through the thick canopy of branches.


These trees have shallow root systems that extend more than a hundred yards from the bottom, entwined with the roots of other redwoods. This increases their stability during high winds and flooding.


Redwood is naturally resistant to insects, fungi, and fire because of their high tannin and do not produce resin or pitch. Their thick, reddish, pithy skin also provides protection and insulation for the tree. Even took a tree to survive this blackened hollows you'll see when you walk through the grove was caused by fires in 1926, and is evidence of extraordinary ability trees' survival.

Redwood trees flower in the months of wet and rainy December and January. They produce cones that matured in the autumn. Redwood cone about an inch long and they produce small seeds, about the same size as the tomato seeds. While each tree can produce 100,000 seeds per year, very low germination rates. Most redwood sprouts grow more successful than that formed around the base of the tree, taking advantage of the nutrients and tree root systems mature. When the parent tree dies, a new generation rose tree, creating a circle of trees is often called fairy rings.
 

Allouville-Bellefosse


The Chene-Chapelle (Chapel-Oak) of Allouville-Bellefosse is the most famous tree in France - in fact, more than just a tree: it is a building and religious monument all in one.

In 1669, l'Abbe du Detroit and du Cerceau decided to build a chapel on the (then) that 500 years or so oak (Quercus robur) tree made hollow by a lightning. The priests built a small altar to the Virgin Mary. Then, a second chapel and staircase were added.

Now, the parts of a dead tree, the crown continues to become smaller and smaller every year, and part of the bark, which fell due to old age, covered by protective oak shingles. Poles and cables support the aging tree, which in fact, can not live much longer. As a symbol, however, it seems that the Chapel-Oak of Allouville-Bellefosse can live forever.