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The trees have been cut down, but again the trunks without bark. Neighbors wonder what the hell this is for something.
(Notifies Oslo): The old Tøyenbadet has been demolished and the foundations for a new facility are being built. According to the plan, the new Tøyenbadet will open in the summer of 2023.
In connection with all the work being done on the site, several trees have been felled. But unlike normal preliminary work, where trees are often uprooted, the lower part of the trunk remains. At the same time, the crust is removed. Should it really be like this? Did they forget to remove the trees? Is it modern art?
Sent email to the municipality
The last option was proposed by one of the residents of the project. He was so curious that he sent an email to the municipality.
As you scream in the woods, you get answers. And sometimes the echo of can be a bit surprising. These are insect hotels.
“The lower part of the tree trunks has been conserved to create the conditions for pollinating insects, called ‘insect hotels’, writes the municipality’s project manager, Stian Gundersen, in his reply to the curious citizen of Oslo.
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Insect hotels
According to the Museum of Natural History, insect hotels are “simply settlements where eggs and larvae of bees, bumblebees and wasps can develop.”
So of course it can look brutal on a construction site when the trees have been fully or partially removed and construction machinery is turned on in the dark December morning. But when all the sulamite is finished, there will actually be more trees on the site than when the work started.
According to the document “Explanation of how trees are conserved and integrated into the project, including the soil protection plan”, a total of 63 trees will be removed, but at least 65 new ones will be planted. Our natural carbon traps will be at least two more than when the demolition started.
Read more cases at Avisa Oslo here!
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