#naturehumaine

Artanux - Simon LefortArtanux@framapiaf.org
2025-11-16

Cette vidéo du #vortex avec @Hackingsocial est extraordinaire :

L'extrême droite se trompe sur la nature humaine ! @hacking-social I ARTE
youtube.com/watch?v=ICyTl1Gvdf4

#Chayka démontre avec brio que la nature humaine, ce n'est pas une agressivité innée envers ses semblables mais plutôt que l'empathie et les comportements prosociaux sont câblés à l'intérieur de notre cerveau.

Ça me rappelle «L'entraide, l'autre loi de la jungle» de #PabloServigne.

#NatureHumaine #empathie #prosocial

C'est ça, Francis sans plus!chatkipete@onjase.quebec
2025-10-07
2025-04-04

MATRIX ET BOURDIEU - LE MIRACLE DU SOCIAL

skeptikon.fr/w/bKjMfQn6CnRJ9D4

Mauvais Profilmauvaisprofil
2025-02-17

Durant le siècle des Lumières, il apparaît que « la thèse du changement anthropique fonctionne aussi en tant qu’opérateur de hiérarchisation des sociétés et des trajectoires de civilisation  », dans la mesure où l’on oppose aux peuples européens, qui maîtrisent l’agriculture, les peuples jugés « sauvages » du Nouveau Monde, qui n’auraient pas été capables de tirer parti de leurs terres.
shs.cairn.info/revue-dix-huiti

Christic AcademyChristicAcademy
2024-06-30

Les témoignages de l’humanité charnelle de Jésus : Preuves historiques et bibliques

Découvrez les témoignages des apôtres, des frères de Jésus et des contemporains du Christ qui attestent de sa nature humaine. Les psaumes, les foules et même les pharisiens reconnaissent sans ambiguïté la plénitude de son incarnation. Explorez les preuves célestes et historiques dans cette vidéo captivante.

christicacademy.wordpress.com/

Christic AcademyChristicAcademy
2024-04-19

Qu’est-ce que l’homme pour que tu t’en souviennes, ô Dieu !

Découvrez une réflexion profonde sur la nature humaine et notre lien avec notre créateur. Explorez notre unicité en tant qu'êtres humains et notre connexion avec l'ancien des jours. from Christic Academy

christicacademy.wordpress.com/

2023-02-25

#naturehumaine brille par la qualité de sa construction et la profondeur des enjeux que #sergejoncour y a logés (si, si, j'ai écrit "logé" !).
Ce roman est d'autant plus séduisant que ces qualités sont presque maquillées par un style extrêmement accessible. J'ai beaucoup aimé.

dezeen (unofficial)dezeen@ծմակուտ.հայ
2022-04-20

MC Escher works inform Montreal home by Naturehumaine

An angular steel staircase crosses through this Montreal residence by Naturehumaine, which was inspired by the fantastical paintings of Dutch artist MC Escher.

The Escher House, located in the Rosemont-La-Petite-Patrie neighbourhood, used to be a duplex. Local studio Naturehumaine converted it into a single-family home.

The Escher House is located in Montreal

The project included a complete overhaul of the interiors, new cladding, and the addition of a mezzanine, which contains a sitting room and patio. It now encompasses 2,560 square feet (238 square metres).

A new staircase was the centrepiece of the renovation. It is top-lit from a skylight, and visible from every common space.

On the ground floor, the layout was converted into an open-concept space

"All the spaces in the house are organised around the periphery of the staircase, which becomes the central entity of the project," said Naturehumaine.

Black steel plates form the sides and guardrails of the staircase, contrasting its lighter wooden treads. "Imposing, phantasmagorical, the staircase with its crossing of flights enlivens the space and personalises the entire house," the studio explained.

Naturehumaine took cues from artist MC Escher for the sculptural staircase

Naturehumaine said that the angular layout of the staircase was inspired by Maurits Cornelis Escher, a Dutch artist born in 1898 who achieved recognition for his depictions of architecturally impossible spaces.

On the ground floor, the layout was converted to an open-concept kitchen, living and dining room, with large openings that expand the living space out onto a terrace in the summer months.

Black steel plates form the sides and guardrails of the staircase

All three bedrooms are located on the first floor. At the front are the two children's bedrooms, separated by a door that used to be the entrance to the upstairs apartment.

The wide landing that separates these smaller bedrooms from the primary bedroom accommodates a desk nook. This overlooks the kitchen below.

[

Read:

Naturehumaine adds rodded stairwell to Bessborough Residence in Montreal

](https://www.dezeen.com/2018/07/17/naturehumaine-adds-rodded-stairwell-bessborough-residence-renovation-montreal/)

The primary bedroom is at the end of the hallway and features a gently curved wall that faces onto the backyard. Irregular punched windows and white-painted wood siding help this volume stand out when seen from the exterior.

The topmost level of the home acts as a secondary sitting area. It was added to the building during the renovation, and its exterior is made of fibre-cement panels left exposed.

Naturehumaine kept to a mostly neutral palette across the interiors

The rear facade of the house is clad in charred wood, punctuated by vertical pine slats and raw-fibre cement panels.

Naturehumaine kept to a mostly neutral palette on the interiors, with exposed wooden floors and simple white walls. On the ground level, shades of green were used to mark the entrance of the home.

A skylight brings natural light into the home

Other projects by the Montreal-based firm include the renovation of an apartment from a similar time period, into which the team inserted mint green cabinets and curved walls, and a extension to a townhouse that includes a new plywood staircase with a hidden play nook for the children.

The photography is byRonan Mézière.

The post MC Escher works inform Montreal home by Naturehumaine appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #residential #architecture #steel #canada #staircases #québec #residentialextensions #montreal #naturehumaine #residentialconversions

imageEscher HouseMontreal house by NaturehumaineStaircase by Naturehumaine
dezeen (unofficial)dezeen@ծմակուտ.հայ
2022-04-04

Naturehumaine splits Quebec ski cottage La Brèche in two

A narrow passageway divides this cottage with a metal roof by Naturehumaine, marking the entrance to the home and providing privacy to a detached guest suite and atelier.

The opening lends the cottage its name, La Brèche, which roughly translates to The Fault. This was the driving concept for the second home near Quebec's Orford ski resort.

Naturehumaine constructed a two-part cottage in Quebec

"The client's functional needs are strategically distributed inside two independent volumes connected by a walkway forming a breach through the house," said the Montreal-based architects.

"The main volume hosts the living and sleeping spaces, while the second volume contains functional areas such as a workshop and a guest bedroom loft with its own bathroom," Naturehumaine explained.

A modern window is cut into the rustic facade

The building's exterior was inspired by the vernacular constructions of the area, a region of Quebec known as the Eastern Townships.

"Combining the desire for both a contemporary expression and inspiration from traditional architecture, the volume of the house adopts a gabled roof combined with sleek details such as the absence of roof projections, a mullion-less glazed corner with silicone joints and frameless window openings," said Naturehumaine.

The corner window of the main living space looks out into the foilage

The smaller, secondary volume contains the garage and a workshop, which has a lofted bedroom above and its own bathroom. Its size and shape match the main part of the primary volume, as if the two had been continuous but then cut in half.

"The overall impression gives the illusion that a natural phenomenon has split an initial entity into two distinct parts," said Naturehumaine.

The entryway into the primary envelope also appears as a fault line

"Mostly, this passage offers a dramatic perspective framing the landscape behind the house," the team added

The larger portion contains two bedrooms near the entrance.

[

Read:

Cedar cottage outside Montreal by Ravi Handa maximises its compact footprint

](https://www.dezeen.com/2021/10/01/chalet-pic-bois-cedar-cottage-quebec-ravi-handa/)

A hallway leads past them to an open-concept kitchen, living and dining space with tall windows that look out onto the site's dense wooded surroundings.

At the back of the property, a compact terrace is adjacent to the living room, offering a place to sit in the warmer months.

The interiors are minimal, in contrast to the exterior

Contrasting the exterior, the interiors have a monochrome palette. Subtle details including a polished concrete floor running throughout, white walls with no baseboard or molding, and vaulted ceilings that follow the roof's outline all contribute to the contemporary feel.

Naturehumaine was founded in 2004, and has completed a variety of residential commissions within and around Montreal. Other residences by the studio include a compact cabin with a pointed titanium roof, and an extension to a Montreal townhouse with a plywood staircase that conceals a children's play space.

The photography is byRonan Mézière.

Project credits:

General contractor: Constructions Boivin
Structural engineer: Geniex

The post Naturehumaine splits Quebec ski cottage La Brèche in two appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #residential #architecture #houses #canada #québec #holidayhomes #gables #canadianhouses #woodenarchitecture #naturehumaine #cottages

imageLa Breche ski cottage by Naturehumaine in QuebecLa Breche Quebec ExteriorLa Breche Quebec Cottage with modern window
dezeen (unofficial)dezeen@ծմակուտ.հայ
2021-11-18

Naturehumaine revives 1920s apartment in Montreal with contemporary finishes

Traditional details were kept throughout this ground-floor apartment in Montreal that local studio Naturehumaine renovated to bring in more natural light and create an improved connection to the rear yard.

Originally built in the 1920s, the apartment was filled with classical details such as ornamental columns and a stained-glass doorway at the entrance of the home.

The entrance to the apartment has a stained-glass doorway

It is located in Little Burgundy, an area with working-class roots that has undergone a transformation in the past several years.

Not only did Naturehumaine keep these details, they drew inspiration from them to complete their contemporary overhaul of the apartment.

Existing period details were incorporated into the new design

"The intervention tends to preserve the original character and several existing decorative elements to draw subtle inspiration from them," Naturehumaine explained.

The 1,500 square-foot-apartment (139 square metres) encompasses three bedrooms. As is typical in many Montreal apartments, the common areas are laid out as an enfilade on one side of the home, separated from the bedrooms by a corridor.

A dine-in kitchen is included in the design

"The layout was reconfigured around the primary need to open the apartment from front to back while maintaining the existing wall pattern as much as possible," the architects explained.

In the hallway, a new green cabinet provides extra storage and is the first indication of the refresh that visitors see when they enter.

A 'green water' shade appears throughout the apartment

At the back of the home, the dine-in kitchen enjoys direct access to the yard through new sliding glass doors. The green hue of the cabinets matches the apartment's existing stained glass doors.

"The 'green water' shade influenced by the colors in the stained glass and the ceramics found in the existing vestibule becomes one of the key elements of the overall architectural concept," Naturehumaine explained.

The kitchen also features curved cabinets and a rounded kitchen island, which the architects say facilitates the flow of the space.

[

Read:

Room-sized shower "big enough for two" features inside Montreal apartment McGill 120

](https://www.dezeen.com/2020/01/26/mcgill-120-loft-la-firme-montreal/)

A wall of rounded wooden slats separates the kitchen from the dining room. According to the team, these were inspired by two ornamental columns found in the living room.

The architects extended this approach to the bathroom, which features similar curved walls and is covered in new white tiles but incorporates a restored clawfoot tub at its centre.

Naturehumaine added a clawfoot tub to the bathroom

Naturehumaine has completed several renovations to existing apartments in Montreal. For another project that combined two floors of an existing building, the team added a new plywood staircase to connect both levels, which includes a hidden play area for the owner's children.

When tasked with renovating a mid-century house, they added a plant-covered wall in the centre of the home.

The photography is byRonan Mézière.

Project credits:

General contractor: CDO Renovation
Structural engineer: Geniex
Woodworking: CST Ébénisterie

The post Naturehumaine revives 1920s apartment in Montreal with contemporary finishes appeared first on Dezeen.

#residential #all #interiors #apartments #canada #kitchens #montreal #naturehumaine #colour

imageQuesnel ApartmentQuesnel apartmentMontreal apartment by Naturehumaine
Se7h 💻 🐃 🐧 ⏚ ☮Se7h@mastodon.xyz
2017-10-03

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