Monday, July 9, 2018

Alexandria Architecture Magazine ® a story for the Ponies After People universe

A trade magazine for designing buildings and other structures made for modern people, published by the Alexandria School of Architecture ®

Page 3:  Table of contents

Page 8:  Bioluminescent plants, a cost-effective alternative to gas or electric street lighting?

Page 10:  Are heated by magic cobblestone sidewalks, to keep these clear of snow and ice, a good investment or a waste of resources?

Page 16:  How you can become a featured speaker at next year’s Alexandria Architecture Expo (AAE).

Page 18:  Building your first beautiful and functional Cloudominium that is also expandable for a growing family.

Page 22:  Our editors give you their creative ways to rebuild human structures for modern people.

Page 27:  Designing outdoor playgrounds for the young of all species.

Page 32:  Designing city walls that are pleasing to the eye, yet difficult for attackers to overcome.

Page 44:  Why does your architectural firm need architects from all three pony species, plus at least two persons who are bipedal with hands, to create an effective design team?

Page 46:  What is better for designing architecture, VR made by computers or VR made by unicorn magic?

Page 48:  Honor Roll:  Senior class projects created by the Alexandria School of Architecture students.  This visual essay will prove that architecture is the world’s greatest art form.

Page 65:  Legal advice:  What happens when a returnee returns in or to your pre-Event structure and then claims that they own your structure?

Page 67:  Nurturing our youth by creating those who can develop their talents their entire adult working lives, instead of 25-year-old wonderfoals who burn out their talents before they reach fifty.

Page 69:  What ingenious article ideas do you have for Alexandria Architecture Magazine?  These are our latest submission guidelines for text, photos, and graphics for our magazine.

Page 70:  Humorous architecture spotlight:  The Hayburger Barn is a popular restaurant chain whose twelve standalone buildings appear as red barns, complete with functional haylofts.  The founder Wheat Harvest has a three meter tall, bronze statue of herself as she is now as an Earth pony within the front entrance hall of her flagship store in Alexandria.  An inscription on the statue’s base says:  “If I had known that I’d become a pony, I would have eaten more cheeseburgers as a human.”

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