Yablonka & KitbashNomad
KitbashNomad KitbashNomad
Hey Yablonka, I've been dreaming up a city that spirals like a giant tree, all those twisted towers and cluttered plazas, but I want to tuck in little pockets where real plants and birds can thrive. Think a skyline that feels like a living forest—what's your take on mixing traffic flow with a natural canopy?
Yablonka Yablonka
That sounds like a dream that could bloom into something really cool—imagine the skyline as a living tree, its branches made of buildings, each leaf a little balcony garden, birds nesting in the spaces between the towers. If you let traffic flow through clear corridors that look like roots, you could weave in green corridors and vertical gardens that act as both shade and a way to keep the city breathing. And hey, a canopy of real plants would soften the concrete, bring in fresh air, and give people a place to pause and listen to the city’s heartbeat. Just remember to give the trees enough room to grow, and you’ll have a city that’s as alive as the forest you love.
KitbashNomad KitbashNomad
I love that idea, but I'm already sketching the roots as a spaghetti of transit tunnels—traffic that sings, not just moves. And those balcony gardens? I'll fill them with every tiny 3D leaf I own, because one leaf just isn't enough to give a city its soul. Just remember, the more cluttered the canopy, the richer the shadows for people to hide in while the city hums. Let's make sure those roots are wide enough that the traffic never feels like a straight line, but like a winding river of steel and glass.