The Cannibal's Cookbook fiercely consumes the body of past cyclopean
constructions. It assembles, re-packages, and offers this latent
knowledge for your contemporary consumption. It is a manual for the
hungry, for those who are not satiated by the careless building
practices of the present.
With one foot in the past and another in the present, the cookbook
bridges the realities of our ancestors and ourselves. We propose a
series of architectural "recipes" after dining on this body of past
expertise. The recipes are deciphered from ancient cyclopean masonry
systems, but with a contemporary twist. They cannibalize leftover
debris--building rubble that typically stuffs our landfills--to
construct new buildings