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Scott Carver team declares its commitment to sustainable transformation on Earth Day 2021
architectureanddesign.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from architectureanddesign.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
TAFE s Design Course Offering more than just a Certificate
architectureanddesign.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from architectureanddesign.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Wynyard NSW 2001
Located at the rear laneway of the award-winning, FJMT-designed EY Centre is a micro whiskey bar.
Designed by design studio Scott Carver, the hidden ‘Alleyway’ in Sydney sits on a small site of just three metres in width and makes use of an unused lift lobby.
“Alleyway is the perfect example of how a tiny, unused space in a premium location can be transformed into a cosy micro whiskey bar, breathing life into a corporate hub and augmenting Sydney’s emerging laneway scene. When design is considered and clever, any space can be activated,” says the interior designer.
Origin
The squat, four-legged wombat may be one of Australia’s most charismatic animals, but it is also the only known species in the world that is capable of producing cube-shaped poops. Now, scientists believe they may have finally explained why. In January 2021, an international team of scientists reported that a uniquely evolved gastrointestinal system was likely the result of the Rubik’s cube-shaped scat, and not the result of a square-shaped anus at the point of exit as was previously described.
As opposed to the cylindrical feces that most animals excrete, wombats produce “uniform, clean-cut, cubic feces” that have long mystified the scientific community. The first recorded evidence of wombat poop was obtained in 1960 by Tazmanian zoologist Eric Guiler, who described the “droppings of wombats” as a “characteristic rectangular shape.” Previous work found that the feces change from a liquid-like state to one that is solid, with small, separated cubes and the in
The Way the World Works
The Staten Island Zoo is weathering a storm of controversy over the prediction made by its resident groundhog, Staten Island Chuck, on Feb. 2 an annual event at the zoo. Chuck popped up on a Facebook livestream at the designated hour, on the designated day, but something seemed . off. After hours of accumulating snow in the New York area, the
New York Post reported, Chuck was seen to emerge into bright sunlight with no snow on the ground, his handlers wearing sweatshirts. So there ya have it, folks, we re gonna have an early spring, announced zoo executive director Ken Mitchell. Viewers weren t fooled, one commenting, Welppp, this isn t live. Previous Groundhog Day celebrations at the zoo have also raised a ruckus. In 2014, a stand-in groundhog named Charlotte died after being dropped by Mayor Bill de Blasio, and in 2009 Chuck bit Mayor Mike Bloomberg s finger.
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