

today through Sunday: Mandala construction viewing.ĭetails: /events/the-sacred-arts-of-tibet-tour-and-mandala/ Sunday: Sunday service followed by a mandala dissolution ceremony where monks will scatter the sand in the ocean at South Cardiff State Beach at 11:30 a.m.ġ0 a.m. $15 per person or $25 family donation.ġ0 to 11 a.m. Saturday: Tibetan Cultural Family Day with children’s instruments, storytelling, family calligraphy, small mandala workshop. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of San Dieguito, 1036 Solana Drive, Solana Beach.Ģ to 4 p.m. Tax-deductible suggested donation amounts are listed below. “We feel deeply aligned with Buddhism and the monks’ mission to share with all people their culture, as well as practices and paths to inner peace and compassion.”ĭetails on the university and the tour can be found at /.Įvents will take place in four North County cities today through Dec. “Serving the tour has enriched our lives for more than 25 years,” Susan Lieberman said.

After finishing the spectacular pieces, the monks quickly wipe them away, which Lekshey said represents their belief that by freeing themselves of possessions they can celebrate the impermanence of life.Īmong the sponsors of this year’s North County tour visit are Susan and Jeffrey Lieberman of Encinitas. The sand artworks are painstakingly built by hand, one colored sand grain at a time, and can take up to four months to complete, depending on their size, detail and how many monks are involved. The mandalas represent a birds-eye view inside the celestial palaces of the deities, Wangchuk said. A second one, dedicated to the Buddha of Compassion, will be built next week in Carlsbad. One depicting the deity White Tara is now under way at the Unitarian Universalist church in Solana Beach. Two sand mandalas will be built during this month’s tour visit.

The company has hired designers from Rapt Studio to make sure the building design is integrated into the space at the deepest level, ensuring that, despite being an office building at its core, this isn't just one more massive tech campus.ĭavid Galullo, CEO, and Cory Sistrunk, design principal, talked us through Rapt's approach to the project, offering a look inside both the facility and their design methods.(Bill Wechter/The San Diego Union-Tribune) The building itself, however, is unlike anything Adobe has ever built before. The location in the south suburbs of Salt Lake City is an up-and-coming region for tech business sometimes called " Silicon Slope." Adobe's new campus will operate as the company's digital marketing division. Sadly, the circumstances surrounding the building sound more mysterious than their reality, even with the NSA's new data center as a close neighbor. Deep in Utah's high desert, Adobe is putting the finishing touches on its latest outpost - a low-slung but stylish 280,000-square-foot compound.
