Photo credits: Kevin Conger (top left), Nancy Conger (top right), Tom Fox (bottom)
The Crack Garden is an award-winning project by CMG Landscape Architecture in San Francisco, California. The project transforms a desolate concrete landscape into a lush garden:
Inspired by the tenacious plants that pioneer the tiny cracks of urban landscapes, a backyard is transformed through hostile takeover of an existing concrete slab by imposing a series of "cracks". The rows of this garden contain a lushly planted mix of herbs, vegetables, flowers, and rogue weeds retained for their aesthetic value.
I came home from work to find a fine specimen each of dandelion and thistle amidst a barren waste.
She's learned a lot since then and does most of the floral gardening now and a large part of the allotment.
I thought butt-crack, too. It doesn't help that there's a guy bent over in one of the pix!
It does look nice, but if they were just going to go through the trouble of making these cracks in the concrete, just do a little bit more work, and take out big slabs of it to expose the earth underneath.
And I too, was thinking "I thought they made crack in a lab".
Maybe "The Cement Garden" would have been better:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cement_Garden
"In The Cement Garden, the father of four children dies. His death is followed by the death of the children's mother. In order to avoid being taken into care, the children hide their mother's death from the outside world by encasing her corpse in cement in their basement. Two of the siblings, a teenage boy and girl, enter into an incestuous relationship, while the younger son starts to experiment with transvestism."
You just can't win with this thing. Whichever way you go it conjures up images of drugs, incest and mayhem.