Green Energy Futures: Chris Turner, author of The Leap and Geography of Hope with Calgary's wind-powered LRT - 1
Green Energy Futures: Chris Turner, author of The Leap and Geography of Hope with Calgary's wind-powered LRT - 2
Green Energy Futures: Chris Turner, author of The Leap and Geography of Hope with Calgary's wind-powered LRT - 3
Green Energy Futures: Chris Turner, author of The Leap and Geography of Hope with Calgary's wind-powered LRT - 4
Green Energy Futures: Chris Turner, author of The Leap and Geography of Hope with Calgary's wind-powered LRT - 5
Green Energy Futures: Chris Turner, author of The Leap and Geography of Hope with Calgary's wind-powered LRT - 6
Green Energy Futures: When the Calgary Tower opened in 1967 the developer said the tower was only 614 feet tall.
Green Energy Futures: The Calgary Tower now looks up at some of the towers of the energy industry - 2
Green Energy Futures: The Calgary Tower now looks up at some of the towers of the energy industry - 3
Green Energy Futures: Calgary is seeing some higher density housing, but it remains as one of the lowest desnity cities anywhere.
Green Energy Futures: Interesting reflections from one of the many office towers in downtown Calgary.
Green Energy Futures: The car is the dominant transportation in Calgary and ahs been the dominant architect of the citiy's urban design.
Green Energy Futures: The 58 storey Bow Tower in Calgary, Alberta began opening in phases in the Spring of 2012.
Green Energy Futures: Calgary's downtown is served by wind-powered LRT that reachs the NE, NW and south regions of the city.
Green Energy Futures: A visitor to the Calgary Tower stands on glass and ponders downtown Calgary.
Green Energy Futures: The view striaght down from the Calgary Tower. At 191 m tall it was the tallest structure of its kind for many years, but it now looks up to the Bow Tower at 226 m tall.
Green Energy Futures: The glass ceiling, or is it floor