UNESCO regonition seems to carry a heavy burden of opportunity.
La Huasteca canyon, an ecological park in Cumbres de Monterrey National Park in north-eastern Mexico, may soon become part of a high-end residential development and golf course.
Last October, the municipality of Santa Catarina approved a 900 million dollar project to build more than 9,000 housing units and a 27-tee golf course in this place. Just a few days earlier it had been made part of a UNESCO biosphere network. Monterrey will also host the second Universal Forum of Cultures in 2007.
La Huasteca is a frequented family outing, camping and climbing site. One third of the drinking-water in Monterrey (pop. 3.7 million) comes from La Huasteca. There are over a thousand species in the area, seventy-three of which are endagered. See photos here.
The state and federal governments have pretty much washed their hands off the issue while local politicians, including a brother of the Governor, own part of the land.
Media coverage and activists have forced the new municipal authorities to claim they would freeze the project for at least three years, but they are now hinting they could give it the go-ahead this week.
Two activist websites are lahuasteca.org and voluntariosgreenpeace-mty.blogspot.com. Subcomandante Marcos shows his support to activists in this audio file.
See La Huasteca at Flickr, or read about it in Crain’s and La Jornada
A great action in NYC, taping placards over those outdoor video billboards attached to subway entrances. The typography is composed of holes in the board, illuminated by the video ad beneath.
The project is Light Criticism, brought to you by the Anti-Advertising Agency and the Graffiti Research Lab.
In form, it reminds me of the work of Moose, writing his name on walls by cleaning them.
In context, it’s a lot like this guerilla wayfinding campaign, a grassroots, illegal action for civic improvement.
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