petak, 9. ožujka 2018.

Arch Daily

Arch Daily


Stowe School / MICA

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 07:00 PM PST

© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers
  • Architects: MICA
  • Location: National Trust Stowe, New Inn Farm, Buckingham MK18 5EQ, United Kingdom
  • Area: 800.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2017
  • Photographs: Richard-Chivers
  • Structural Engineer: Price & Myers
  • M&E Consultant: RED Engineering Quantity Surveyors Michael Edwards & Associates
  • Landscape Consultants: Quartet Design
  • Acoustic Consultants: Sandy Brown Associates
  • Project Manager: Stowe School
  • Cdm Coordinator: Vance Miller Health and Safety
  • Approved Building Inspector: Salus
  • Main Contractor : Stepnell
  • Form Of Contract: JCT Intermediate with Contractors Design
  • Construction Cost: £2.8m
  • Construction Cost Per M2 : £3,890
  • Client: Stowe School
  • Cad Software Used: Microstation
© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers

Text description provided by the architects. In the southwest of Stowe Gardens, a new girls' boarding house has been introduced into the setting of one of the pre-eminent examples of the English Landscape Movement. Sheltered at the edge of a long dividing strip of structured woodland known as Pyramid Wood or Rook Spinney defining the edge of the Western Gardens, the area is concealed from the historically constructed grazing land once of English longhorns and rare breeds.

© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers

An outskirt of the pleasure gardens, the landscape apron has long been a place for surprise and delight. In the undergrowth, a ruined foundation and base of Vanbrugh's last work at Stowe is still visible; a 60-foot Egyptian-style pyramid, completed by Gibbs after Vanbrugh's death and dedicated to his memory.

© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers

Since Stowe School's founding in 1923, there has been incremental development along the fringe of the Western Gardens and inside the linear tree belt. In 1935 R Fielding Dodd added a set of three repeating outlying masters' residences known as the Home Park Houses. Now sheltered by mature trees from the historic landscape, the Neo-Georgian street is a suburban adjunct to the Arcadian dream.

© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers

A snaking path links the Home Park boarding settlement to the main school campus to the north, cranking through woods and over sloping ground to meet a cluster of two-storey houses. The site hugs tightly to the houses and outbuildings, performing as a gateway to the landscape.

© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers

The plan is split into two blocks, a low- lying two-storey block with external terrace and main shared facilities. The second is partially sunken into the ground plane over three floors and connected by a bridge over the path running between. Utilising the path, the new accommodation runs alongside the three houses, continuing a loose concatenation of line, materiality and form, enclosing a courtyard as a bridging element to the fourth house.

Floor Plans Floor Plans

The adjacent houses are simple rectangular footprints of earthy brown brick tones and white steel framed windows. The three houses are connected by single storey wings traced by a brick string course and a common eaves level marking tall chimneys and steep pantile roofs .

© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers

Path, topography, woodland, and surrounding massing are playfully integrated in response to the setting. Arranged over two blocks linked at high level, the silhouette is refracted into groupings of taller volumes framed by terraces and parapets.
The path is enclosed by solid walls of finely detailed brick and sentried by a solemn drum and tower elements, into a small courtyard. Bedrooms at ground are sheltered by the deep set tree belt offering long views across the open landscape.

© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers

Datums are taken from adjacent houses – the common eaves level marks a parapet, with a soldier course regulating ground and first floor divisions. From these guides, volumes shift, rise and fall in curtains of brick. Windows are loosely arranged in open plan spaces or aligned behind stacks of accommodation, in crisp white arrangements. A faintly noticed change in brick pointing above the string course rewards closer observers.

© Richard-Chivers © Richard-Chivers

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Z House / Ronnie Alroy Architects

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 06:00 PM PST

© Amit Geron © Amit Geron
  • Construction Engineer: Meir Bahryr
  • Project Menager: Assaf Lipman
  • Landscape Design: Moran Givon
© Amit Geron © Amit Geron

Text description provided by the architects. Natural landscape is the starting point for this spacious, sloped, 4000 sqm plot in a rural setting.  The concept maintains the gradual slope of the site. The house is traced on the landscape much like a meandering path - creating a changing dialogue between the house and its surroundings.

© Amit Geron © Amit Geron

The house is in a rural agricultural surrounding. The sloping entrance path and one-story silhouette assimilate the house to its surrounding. The orthogonal geometry of the house is wrapped in a diagonal outer geometry. The spaces between the two geometries create open, yet covered, exterior spaces which are accentuated by wood. The wood coverings create a connection with the natural landscape, while warmly absorbing and diffusing the natural light thus further blurring the distinction between interior and exterior spaces.

© Amit Geron © Amit Geron

The Layout of the house is the shape of letter "Z".  The interior of the house is in a constant dialogue with the exterior landscape. The natural slope, on which this single-level house is situated, creates a changing interaction between the interior/exterior at each of its ends.  The northern end of the structure floats above the landscape. The southern end of the house digs itself into the ground creating an intimate yard.

Plan Plan

The main wing of the house stretches from east to west. An entire glazed facade faces the sloping garden and the pool.  Glass panels slide to one side, extending the living room into the main pergola, creating a continuity for entertaining inside and outside as one expansive space. The pool extends the plane of the southern wing of the house while the land slopes downward.  Water from the pool overflows on the far side of the pool to emphasize the tension between what has been built and Nature.

© Amit Geron © Amit Geron

The landscape retaining walls, benches and stairs are all created from exposed concrete. The plasticity of the concrete enables the constructed forms to follow the natural slope of the plot. The landscape design preserves the nature of the site's natural slope so that the house can both appreciate and enhance the site's nuances.

© Amit Geron © Amit Geron

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Atelier_142 / Atelier Wilda

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 04:00 PM PST

© David Foessel © David Foessel
  • Architects: Atelier Wilda
  • Location: Paris, France
  • Lead Architects: Willy Durieu
  • Area: 45.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2017
  • Photographs: David Foessel
  • Contractor: ProARt
  • Client: Christine Lesoin
© David Foessel © David Foessel

Text description provided by the architects. The project consists of the renovation of the old painter Pierre Lemaire's studio (1920-2007), in order to create a minimalist loft in the heart of Paris. The entire existing interior design and the slab was demolished, only the load-bearing walls and the roof were preserved. It is originally a large volume in openspace in which the client wants to create a housing necessarily involving the partitioning of spaces. However, neither the client nor the architect are willing to sacrifice the spatial quality of the workshop.

© David Foessel © David Foessel
Plans Plans
© David Foessel © David Foessel

The project consists in revealing the entire volume by the demolition of the ceilings and household many holes in the internal partitions so that at any point of the housing can perceive the entire volume and thus retain the feeling of space. The light floods this beautiful volume with its large glass façade (10 linear meters) and generous roof windows. In order to amplify the sense of space the project presents little variation of color and materials.

© David Foessel © David Foessel
Isometric Sketch Isometric Sketch
© David Foessel © David Foessel

White walls highlight the wooden elements (beech) that soften and warm the light. As it is a small area, the custom furniture has been designed to the smallest detail in order to optimize all possible storage spaces while adapting perfectly to the uses. In response to the client who wanted an extra room despite the small area, the architect proposed a very bright cabin perched at the top of the volume with a bird's eye view of the living room. It has a workspace with storage and a fold-away desk and a large bed for two people.

Sections Sections

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Inside Outside House / Tamara Wibowo Architects

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 02:00 PM PST

© Fernando Gomulya © Fernando Gomulya
© Fernando Gomulya © Fernando Gomulya

Text description provided by the architects. Located on a corner lot of a hilly neighborhood in the city of Semarang, Indonesia, the house opens up to its surrounding as much as it embodies a comfortable living spaces in the interior of the house. The house, consisting of grey masses that have wood lined openings, is arranged geometrically based on functions. One mass is the living quarter, one mass is office and garage, and the other is the service quarter.

© Fernando Gomulya © Fernando Gomulya

All these masses surround a void in which an existing mango tree has been growing since tens of years ago. This void then becomes the entry point of the house. The house focuses on creating sequence of experience that brings the focus back to nature through spatial overlapping of indoor rooms and outdoor rooms and presence of light coming through skylight and large openings.

© Fernando Gomulya © Fernando Gomulya
First floor plan First floor plan
© Fernando Gomulya © Fernando Gomulya
Second floor plan Second floor plan
© Fernando Gomulya © Fernando Gomulya

The house has tall and wide recessed openings throughout not only to maximize visual connection to its surrounding but also to let the house breaths by bringing protected light and air into the house. The articulation of the openings allows them to create an uninterrupted and boundless relationship between outside and inside of the house. The house uses contrasted but complementary materials of warm orange wood and cool grey concrete. These materials, kept in their raw conditions, create integrity and honesty to the architecture of the house through their unique natural characteristics.

© Fernando Gomulya © Fernando Gomulya

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Hui Coffee Lifestyle / Vanished Architecture

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 12:00 PM PST

Facade. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang Facade. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang
  • Architects: Vanished Architecture
  • Location: Baoding, Hebei, China
  • Architect In Charge: Jiahe Zhang
  • Construction: Baoding Ruisi Decoration Co. , Ltd
  • Area: 200.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2017
  • Photographs: Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang
Facade. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang Facade. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang

Text description provided by the architects. The street store project is located in a residential area in Baoding, Hebei Province of China. The shops with street frontage combined with residential neighborhood is common in the region. In such a city background, the attitude of intervention became start point of design concept.

1F space. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang 1F space. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang

Influenced by the Xiong An District policy, Baoding, like other fast growing cities in China, have built large quantities of tower residential communities, which contributes to the indifferent look of the city. People tend to hide into these buildings, being protected by iron and concrete, searching for a sense of security psychologically. As a result, interpersonal communication transformed from real life to social media, where ego is extrated from reality and enveloped by a non-homogeneous screen to meet and interact with others under disguise in this virtual world.

Mutual barriers Mutual barriers

Depending on the people we meet with, the openness of oneself varies - in some cases the screen of both sides gradually become transparent as the relation grows deeper, making the profile of each other more and more clear, eventually they would enter the inner world of each other. In other cases, however, due to the difficulties in communication or contradictions in purpose, the screens become thicker, the egos are hidden from each other and finally go their seperate ways.

1F spatial detail. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang 1F spatial detail. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang

As most of us have to meet with different kinds of people, our screens are in a complicate dynamic process, changing from thick to thin, lucid to opaque, open to close. Endowed with the dimension of everchanging time, the screen between human relationships are like a four-dimension object - and our design is to cut it into slices and deduce the dynamic form of it within three-dimension space.

Space axonometric drawing Space axonometric drawing

First, we created a simple, pure and transpant storefront, extracting the store space from chaotic surroundings. The store is designed as an intergral visual image in resistance of excessive signboards and advertisements of surroundings. At the same time, from carefully placed windows the multi-layer space of inside can be perceived.

Facade. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang Facade. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang

I used several materials that varies in transparency and texture in the first floor, such as Ultra-white glass, Colorful glass, ground glass, mirror glass, U-Profile-Glass, glass brick. The glasses are used not only as divisions of space but also section slices of the four-dimension screen to redefine human relationships in the space. people move from one place to another in the space, with their perceptions of others changing among transparency, vagueness and reflection, the whole experience constructs new meaning of the screen. To people inside, it is also exploration of relations with theirselves and others.

1F plan 1F plan

After the cognition in the first space, people would enter a dim starry tunnel, the changing colour of which implies the character of second floor.

1F to 2F starry tunnel. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang 1F to 2F starry tunnel. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang

In the end of the tunnel is the second floor with warm colour. Through the porous metal wire and windows on the wall, multiple layers and interfaces of space can be seen, expressing a vague and ambiguous attitude. The surreal playground of second floor consists of a golden track, a prolonged ping-pong table, a vertical basketball court on the wall, a hanging miniature sliding pool and a summer swimming pool filled with bubbles.

2F spatial detail. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang 2F spatial detail. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang

It is as if the space is extended, compressed, or becomes unstuck due to the overturn of inherent human perception of scale and gravitation, and the screens between people have also vanished. At this time, people are freed from real and virtual world, entering the ego of each other, after fusion and reation there emerged a new form, eventually, the self awareness of human together with the space, achieved a transcedence to upper dimension.

Facade. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang Facade. Image © Entong Li, Jiahe Zhang

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Camberwell House / AM Architecture

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 11:00 AM PST

© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape
© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape

Text description provided by the architects. The site is located in Camberwell, Victoria on a unique L shape block, overlooking a leafy park. The existing architecture is rendered precast at first floor, sitting on external clinker brick planes at its base. Its living areas were originally situated at first floor.

© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape
Floor Plans Floor Plans
© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape

The brief was mostly pragmatic. More space for a large family, better zoning, and importantly to create a better connection to the outdoors but not lose the stunning views of the neighbouring parkland.  To resolve this common negotiation, we created a new split level for the living areas and the entry experience was re-routed to this new centre which now served as a connecting element to very clear zoning, Kids, Parents, Guests, Living and outdoors.

© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape
© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape

The feeling of being in the new space is of standing on-top the fence, in total connection with the park, with the split level allowing a lofty ceiling to accept the leafy aspect. The pavilion concept emerged organically from here. Timber posts form the boundaries of a "pavilion" and support a timber lined canopy overhead. The rhythm of these posts creates a tactility and depth to the edg-es of the space, modulating the hardness of the glass surface. The external clinker brick planes re-appear to bookend the new interior, suggesting that the living areas are an external space. Sim-ple ceramic pendant lights drape down at each post location and a dramatic fireplace reinforce the verticality of both the space and the neighbouring trees.

© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape

The space defers to its mid-century roots in its horizontality, honesty in steel connections and braces, natural materials and joinery details. An external venetian blind enlarges the ubiquitous 50's venetian, and the space is furnished with mid-century but forward looking furniture.

© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape

The new living areas have been sited to face north east and north west. Large expanses of glass are utilized take in the natural beauty and allow winter sun to penetrate deep into the space. To bal-ance the large expanses of glass, we used a high performance insulated glazed unit with a low E coating. 

Elevations + Section Elevations + Section

Large internal walls of face brick have been judiciously placed to allow their thermal mass to ac-cept morning, midday and afternoon sun, and regulate internal temperatures all year around. Sun penetration is regulated with northern eaves and an external venetian that spans the entire length of the main north eastern and north western façades.

© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape

All new spaces are naturally cross ventilated, and all natural timber Is native plantation oak. High level clerestory windows are protected from the late western sun by deep fins than mirror the rhythm of glazing and architectural breakup on the existing home. These serve to block hot sun, but also catch the colour of the late afternoon sun to create a warm ambience in the lofty spaces.

© Dianna Snape © Dianna Snape

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Thick / Spinagu

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 09:00 AM PST

© Joshua White Photography © Joshua White Photography
  • Architects: Spinagu
  • Location: 960 E 3rd St, Los Angeles, CA 90013, United States
  • Lead Architects: Maxi Spina, Jia Gu
  • Area: 1460.0 ft2
  • Project Year: 2017
  • Photographs: Joshua White Photography
  • Fabrication Coordinators : Ravyn Crabtree, Rishab Jain
  • Sci Arc Student Workshop: Cheryl Linn, Saul Kim, Marianna Girgenti, Leo Liu, Luiza De Souza, Nicholas Perseo, Yunki Cheung, Bianca Hernandez, Cindy Liu, Adriane Yi, Rebecca Wiscombe, Daniel Arismendys Taveras-Hernandez, Siddardha Chalamala, Melissa Alvarez, Borja Lopez Calvino, German Diaz, Anna Bahudian, Justin Elliot, William Chen, Sammi Liang, Tucker van Leuwen-Hall.
  • Sci Arc Fabrication Shop: Brandon Youndt, Rodney Rojas, Josh Wallin, Hector Solis
  • Additional Fabrication Assistance: Jared White, Eastbridge Studio
  • Special Thanks: Hernan Diaz Alonso, Stephanie Atlan, Kate Merritt
© Joshua White Photography © Joshua White Photography

Text description provided by the architects. Thick is a research project that explores material thickness as a site of an architectural investigation. Alluded to in section, camouflaged in the figure-ground, and presented as a foil in the developed surface drawing, material thickness is an understudied architectural condition. Thickness evades the elevation and hides out in the edges of projective drawing. As such, it is often considered a mere inconvenience of the real within systems of representation, and has served as an elusive site for many acts of design. The project explores the peripheral role of material thickness within historic and contemporary processes of tooling and production. 

Thick 01 Thick 01
Thick 02 Thick 02
Thick 03 Thick 03

The condition of thickness — the necessity of thickness — carries no central import in any era of architectural thinking, but still manages to circulate through different eras of architectural thinking. Its condition is linked to (but is not central to) the history of stereotomy and stone construction; in the emergence of new forms of architectural drawing (see Robyn Evans' "The Developed Surface"); and in the classic problem of the Doric order. Even in the Modernist obfuscation of solid form, it remains an unavoidable consideration in the Miesian corner and Kiesler's endless surfaces. It is the consequence of architecture's lack of medium-specificity, in its constant migration between the drawing, the picture plane, the screen, the tool path, the material, and the assembly.

© Joshua White Photography © Joshua White Photography
© Joshua White Photography © Joshua White Photography

Thickness is a constructive problem as much as it is a representational one. In our present day standards of construction, thickness has become synonymous with material offset due to the predominance of sheet material, as opposite to stereotomy, in which thickness is derived from subtraction and removal of mass. As such, thickness becomes a tectonic default rather than a techne to be designed. In today's digital environments, thickness has become mere afterthought. The digital model is infinitely thin. Its default property is a single line or algorithmic curve, and its "thickness" must be added. It appears as an offset, an extrusion, or an enclosed surface.  Here we begin to confront the limits of representation with its correspondent properties of material reality.

© Joshua White Photography © Joshua White Photography

The project culminates with a two-month exhibition in the SCI-Arc gallery space, featuring new work by Spinagu. The work is spatial (operating within / between / upon the literal walls of the gallery) as well as representational. Coupled with a public discussion, the exhibition expands on the problems of material thickness through the topic of sections, ruins, fragments, constructions, figurations, simultaneity, and representation.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

New Renderings Revealed of The Shed at Hudson Yards as ETFE Cladding is Installed

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 08:00 AM PST

The Shed under construction as seen from the High Line, February 2018. Photo by Ed Lederman The Shed under construction as seen from the High Line, February 2018. Photo by Ed Lederman

New renderings and details of The Shed at Hudson Yards have been revealed as the structure's ETFE panels continue to be installed ahead of its Spring 2019 opening date.

The new images show how some of the cultural venue's interior spaces will look, including the galleries and the vast event space created when the wheeled steel structure is rolled out to its furthest extents. This space will be known as "the McCourt," named after businessman Frank McCourt Jr, who donated $45 million to the project.

Designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group, the 200,000-square-foot cultural center was envisioned as a spiritual successor to Cedric Price's visionary "Fun Palace," a flexible framework that could transform to host different types of events.

Rendering of The McCourt, courtesy of Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group Rendering of The McCourt, courtesy of Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group
The Shed under construction. February 2018. Photo by Ed Lederman The Shed under construction. February 2018. Photo by Ed Lederman

The Shed also announced the first group of commissions that will occupy the building during its inaugural season. True to the center's concept, the opening works will cover a wide range of topics and media forms, largely including those "informed by cutting-edge technologies."

"The original idea for The Shed was relatively simple: provide a place for artists working in all disciplines to make and present work for audiences from all walks of life," said The Shed's Artistic Director and CEO Alex Poots. "Our opening programs begin to show how these artists, art forms and audiences can thrive together under one roof."

Rendering of The McCourt with seating, courtesy of Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group Rendering of The McCourt with seating, courtesy of Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group
Rendering of The McCourt with standing room, courtesy of Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group Rendering of The McCourt with standing room, courtesy of Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group

The program includes:

  • a new live production celebrating the unrivaled impact of African American music on art and popular culture over the past 100 years, conceived by acclaimed filmmaker and artist Steve McQueen, developed and produced with music industry legend Quincy Jones, respected NYU Professor Maureen Mahon, and preeminent hip-hop producer Dion 'No I.D.' Wilson
  • a live performance/exhibition pairing works by master painter Gerhard Richter with a new composition by Steve Reich and extant composition by Arvo Pärt
  • a reinvention of Euripides' Helen by poet Anne Carson, starring Ben Whishaw and Renée Fleming
  • an original live production co-conceived by Chen Shi-Zheng and Kung Fu Panda screenwriters Jonathan Aibel and Glenn Berger, with songs by Sia and choreography by Akram Khan
  • expansive exhibitions devoted to extant and newly commissioned work by trailblazing artists Trisha Donnelly and Agnes Denes
  • An unprecedented opportunity for New York City-based, early-career artists of all disciplines to develop and showcase their work throughout The Shed's spaces via an Open Call commissioning program

The Shed under construction as seen from the north, February 2018. Photo by Timothy Schenck The Shed under construction as seen from the north, February 2018. Photo by Timothy Schenck
Rendering of the Gallery on Level 4, courtesy of Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group Rendering of the Gallery on Level 4, courtesy of Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Rockwell Group

Poots also announced the appointment of Serpentine Galleries curator Hans Ulrich Obrist as The Shed's Senior Program Advisor. In this role, Obrist will collaborate with the curatorial team to "develop and commission a wide range of new work in all disciplines."

News via The Shed

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Elache Residence / Elmor Arquitetura

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 07:00 AM PST

© Fernando Zequinão © Fernando Zequinão
  • Colaborators: ION Engenharia, Interpam, Florence
© Fernando Zequinão © Fernando Zequinão

Text description provided by the architects. Located in a residential neighborhood of Curitiba, with a single-story building and a large wooded area, the project is an annex of a house and serves as a leisure area and support an indoor pool. The project intends to enrich the architectural set through a new volume that aesthetically expresses its residential character in a contemporary way without creating a dialogue with the existing construction. In the program requested by customers accessibility has always been at the top of the list of requirements and all spaces, dimensions, circulations and materials were designed to meet all types of special needs.

© Fernando Zequinão © Fernando Zequinão

The annex is a rectangular volume of 18 meters long by 8 meters wide, executed in exposed concrete (with slatted wood forms) and glass (aluminum frames with double glass) conforming a contemporary and timeless architectural set, robust in durability but lighter on compositional lines. Living room, dining and gourmeterie are integrated to shelter social activities. The large sliding glass doors open completely allowing free access to the outside, duplicating the living area. The pool, garden and several adjoining terraces provide multiple uses and occupations for various activities. Its occupants can float between spaces as the sun and light move until dusk.

© Fernando Zequinão © Fernando Zequinão
Section A Section A
© Fernando Zequinão © Fernando Zequinão

On the north facade of the residence a terrace is covered by a wide concrete marquee with a large opening to frame the moon. In this environment the coffee table can turn into a fireplace to warm everyone around the fire under the moonlight. Following some principles of sustainability, the framework design received "flags" (maximum-air openings above sliding doors) that allow cross-ventilation throughout the day by cooling the building. The flooring is a quartz and marble composite, which combines sustainability with the practicality and resistance that the site demands. All the project's illumination was performed on LED lamps of low consumption and high durability. Two large "L" shaped rulers - designed by the architect Jorge Elmor (executed by Design Selo) - emanate a soft light diffused on the concrete ceiling, valuing the texture and volumetric of the roof.

© Fernando Zequinão © Fernando Zequinão

Inside the concrete of the vertical closures gives space for large panels of wood (Italian walnut) - a material of low environmental impact that in addition to its aesthetic attributes affects temperature and shelter for its users. These panels, behind the generous caeser stone bench (4.5m long) in the gourmetrie, hide the cabinets and the grill. The same feature was used in the living room, where Italian walnut covers the home theater and camouflages the bathroom door. A formal entry for the gourmet space has not been created. The possibility of accessing the interior by any of the glazed sliding doors, located on the perimeter of the entire building, enhances the physical and visual permeability of the building, eliminating any barriers between the main house, the annex and the surrounding gardens. This concept allows to create several levels of privacy, offering the possibility of isolation or social interaction.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Electric Planes and Driverless Cars: Plans Unveiled for World's First Energy-Positive City Airport

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 06:00 AM PST

Courtesy of Forbes Massie Courtesy of Forbes Massie

In an era defined by globalization, and 'speed-driven economies,' urban environments are becoming more entwined with airports, giving rise to an architectural phenomenon of the 'Aerotropolis' across the world. In OsloNorwegian firms Haptic Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture have aimed higher, seeking to design the world's first energy-positive airport city for the Norwegian capital.

Courtesy of Haptic Architects Courtesy of Haptic Architects

The 4 million-square-meter Oslo Airport City (OAC) masterplan embodies the Norwegian government's ambition to move from an oil-based economy to one powered by renewable energy. Embracing low carbon features and green technologies, the Airport City will have the capacity to sell surplus energy to surrounding buildings. More than a city of present abilities, the scheme will serve as a test-bed for future technologies, including electric driverless cars, auto-lighting, smart waste, and perhaps most ambitiously, a fleet of electric aircraft.

Courtesy of Forbes Massie Courtesy of Forbes Massie

Oslo Airport City will be a catalyst for high-value economic activity in Norway. We expect it to deliver long-term, highly skilled jobs creating science and technology-based products. As long-term city developers with focus on sustainable, innovative solutions, we believe the future of airport city development in Norway and Oslo is not a matter of if, but when! – Thor Thoeneie, Managing Director, Oslo Airport City

More than a playground for a technological age, OAC incorporates human-centred strategies for its predicted 40,000 population. Public parksgreen spaces and leisure centres cater to Norway's passion for sports and outdoor activities. A car-free city centre is proposed, with citizens never more than five minutes from public transport nodes.

Courtesy of Forbes Massie Courtesy of Forbes Massie

This is a unique opportunity to design a new city from scratch. Using robust city planning strategies such as walkability, appropriate densities, active frontages and a car free city centre, combined with the latest developments in technology, we will be able to create a green, sustainable city of the future. – Tomas Stokke, Director, Haptic Architects

Courtesy of Forbes Massie Courtesy of Forbes Massie
Courtesy of Forbes Massie Courtesy of Forbes Massie

Construction of the Oslo Airport City is expected to begin in 2019, with the first buildings completed in 2022.

Oslo Airport Expansion / Nordic - Office of Architecture

82 Text description provided by the architects. Designed by Oslo-based practice Nordic-Office of Architecture, the 115,000 sqm expansion to Oslo Airport sets new standards in sustainability. The competition-winning design, which uses snow as a coolant, has achieved the world's first BREEAM 'Excellent' sustainability rating for an airport building.

News via: Haptic Architects

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Butantã House / Simone Mantovani Arquitetura

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 05:00 AM PST

© Joao Ribeiro Fotografia © Joao Ribeiro Fotografia
  • Engineer: Manuel Prego Aldin
© Joao Ribeiro Fotografia © Joao Ribeiro Fotografia

Text description provided by the architects. This 350 square meters urban residence, located in the city of São Paulo, was conceived in 2 floors, based on bold design, giving maximum emphasis to space integration, a range of rooms, comfort, and privacy.

© Joao Ribeiro Fotografia © Joao Ribeiro Fotografia
Ground Floor Plan Ground Floor Plan
© Joao Ribeiro Fotografia © Joao Ribeiro Fotografia

The space integration and ample rooms define the project, especially in the social areas, that faces the backyard garden and pool. This concept provides much privacy for the entire residence, and at the same time, integrates all the house throughout its garden. 

© Joao Ribeiro Fotografia © Joao Ribeiro Fotografia
Section A and Right Elevation Section A and Right Elevation
© Joao Ribeiro Fotografia © Joao Ribeiro Fotografia

The social areas, fully glazed in sliding glass panels, with full openings, brings the garden to inside. The grey tone given to the finishings, emphasizes the details in natural wood and matt black painting. The steel plate stair stands sculpturally between social spaces, as a functional divider.

© Joao Ribeiro Fotografia © Joao Ribeiro Fotografia

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Snøhetta and Local Studio Unveil Wooden Archway Honoring Archbishop Desmond Tutu in South Africa

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 04:00 AM PST

Sited between South Africa's National Parliament and St. George's Cathedral, the seat of the Archbishop of Cape Town, the Arch frames the public entrance to a landscaped promenade known as the Company's Garden, which boasts many of the city's cultural institutions. Image © David Southwood Sited between South Africa's National Parliament and St. George's Cathedral, the seat of the Archbishop of Cape Town, the Arch frames the public entrance to a landscaped promenade known as the Company's Garden, which boasts many of the city's cultural institutions. Image © David Southwood

The Arch for Arch, an intertwined wooden archway honoring Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, has debuted in downtown Cape Town, South Africa on a site near Parliament where Tutu held many of his anti-Apartheid protests.

Designed by Snøhetta and Johannesburg-based Local Studio, in collaboration with Design Indaba and Hatch engineers, the Arch for Arch consists of 14 woven strands of Larch wood, representing the 14 chapters of South Africa's constitution. Reaching nearly 30 feet tall (9 meters), the structure invite visitors to pass through and be reminded of the location's prominent role in their country's history on their way to the Company's Garden, one of the most popular public spaces in the city since its establishment in 1652.

Cape Town's iconic Table Mountain provides a natural backdrop to these governmental buildings and cultural institutions. Image © David Southwood Cape Town's iconic Table Mountain provides a natural backdrop to these governmental buildings and cultural institutions. Image © David Southwood

The archway uses structure as a metaphor for integrity and strength.

"A traditional arch is supported by opposing forces pushing against one another, held together by a keystone," explain Snøhetta. "These structural properties emerged as a core concept for the design, where the Arch stands as a metaphor for the integrity of the country's democracy whose conceptual keystone is the Constitution of South Africa."

"Together the arching wooden elements inscribe a globe, celebrating Archbishop Tutu's role as a unifying figure for the international peace movement."

The Arch is formed of 14 strands of Siberian Larch wood, a highly durable and resistant material that will weather gracefully over time, taking on the elements of its surroundings. The warmth of wood was intentionally selected to lend the Arch an intimate, tactile quality, that invites people to interact with the structure in a way that differs from the conventional materials people might expect for a memorial structure, such as concrete, steel, or stone. Image © David Southwood The Arch is formed of 14 strands of Siberian Larch wood, a highly durable and resistant material that will weather gracefully over time, taking on the elements of its surroundings. The warmth of wood was intentionally selected to lend the Arch an intimate, tactile quality, that invites people to interact with the structure in a way that differs from the conventional materials people might expect for a memorial structure, such as concrete, steel, or stone. Image © David Southwood
Courtesy of Design Indaba Courtesy of Design Indaba
Courtesy of Design Indaba Courtesy of Design Indaba

The Larch wood selected for the Arch is highly durable and weather-resistant, which will allow the structure to age gracefully. The material's warmth is also unusual for a memorial, which typically convey messages of solidity and permanence through materials like stone or concrete. This choice was made to encourage people to interact with the structure in a friendlier way.

"The Arch for Arch is more than a monument for Archbishop Tutu. It builds on the legacy of South Africa's foremost campaigner for democracy to create a platform for public participation in upholding the Constitution," continues Snøhetta. "The Arch will stand as a permanent tribute to what was sacrificed in the pursuit of democracy, and the vital necessity of protecting these rights for generations to come."

Pictured at far right: Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the 2017 Design Indaba Conference, where the design was first unveiled. Image Courtesy of Design Indaba Pictured at far right: Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the 2017 Design Indaba Conference, where the design was first unveiled. Image Courtesy of Design Indaba

The Arch was first unveiled for Archbishop Desmond Tutu's 86th birthday on October 7, 2017. A second, smaller version of the Arch was also erected on Constitution Hill in Johannesburg, near the Constitutional Court, on December 10th honoring the 21st anniversary of the signing of the South African Constitution.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art / SO-IL

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 03:00 AM PST

© Iwan Baan © Iwan Baan
  • Architects: SO-IL
  • Location: Davis, CA, United States
  • Area: 29000.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Iwan Baan
  • Lead Architects Realization: Florian Idenburg, Ilias Papageorgiou, Jing Liu, Danny Duong, Kevin Lamyuktseung, Alvaro Gomez-Selles Ferndandez
  • Lead Architects Competition: Florian Idenburg, Ilias Papageorgiou, Jing Liu, Danny Duong, Seunghyun Kang, Nile Greenberg, Pietro Pagliaro, Andre Herrero, Madelyn Ringo, Jacopo Lugli
  • Associate Architect: Bohlin Cywinski Jackson
  • Contractor: Whiting-Turner
  • Structural Engineer: Rutherford & Chekene
  • Mechanical Engineer: WSP
  • Sustainability: WSP
  • Lighting: Fisher Marantz Stone
  • Canopy Engineer: Front Inc.
© Iwan Baan © Iwan Baan

Text description provided by the architects. The Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art at the University of California at Davis is the first contemporary arts museum for the university and for the city of Davis. Paying close attention to the museum's many contexts, we designed an innovative organization of its architectural spaces, intermingling public areas with gallery and event space, both indoor and outdoor. The result offers a model for the future museum that is neither isolated nor exclusive, but open and permeable. Rather than a static shrine, it is a constantly evolving public event that welcomes diverse audiences.

Site Plan Site Plan

The design amplifies the museum's variety of arts programming and reflects the legacy of avant-garde art- making at the university, where talents like Wayne Thiebaud, Robert Arneson, and William T. Wiley were nurtured. With formal classrooms and art studios that open into the lobby, the museum is a living experiment for teaching, making, and interacting with art. Smooth zones of the corrugated façade allow for outdoor screenings and a glass-walled courtyard also functions as an outdoor sculpture gallery.

© Iwan Baan © Iwan Baan
© Iwan Baan © Iwan Baan

A Grand Canopy is the museum's signature element. We created a rolling form like an undulating quilt patchworked with aluminum beams that stretches over both the site and the building. The canopy responds to the university's abundant natural landscape and agricultural context, echoing the grids of farming fields. As a visual signal, it also announces the museum as a new social node and emblem for the university as a whole.

© Iwan Baan © Iwan Baan

Beneath the canopy, the spatial qualities of diversity and transparency underscore the museum's democratic stance. Casually emerging at the edge of the campus, the unique form of the canopy draws visitors from a distance. The subtle interplay of light and shadow across the public plaza helps blur the boundary between civic and institutional spheres. Inside, a glass-walled lobby invites interaction, situated at the intersection of areas for viewing, learning, and making. These interconnected interior and exterior spaces create informal opportunities for experiencing art, supporting the museum's mission to have all visitors become students.

© Iwan Baan © Iwan Baan

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

3 Tips for Designing Quiet Apartment Buildings on Abnormally Noisy Sites

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 01:30 AM PST

© Alexander Severin © Alexander Severin

New York-based Stephen B Jacobs Group has almost completed construction on a pair of towers at 29-26 Northern Boulevard in Long Island City. Dubbed the QE7 for its adjacency to the Q, E, and 7 trains (not to mention its cruise ship-like amenities), the pair of towers will contain 467 units, including 13 floors dedicated to the largest co-living development in North America.

What makes this building so unique, however, is how the architects and engineers devised a solution to overcome noise generated by the three neighboring subway lines.

© Alexander Severin © Alexander Severin

 Modern cities, especially New York, are always looking for ways to increase density, which often means building in locations that were once overlooked due to their particular site conditions. Earlier this week, we spoke with Principal Isaac-Daniel Astrachan of SBJGroup to explain how his firm managed to reduce noise levels on this site.

Programmatic Space Planning

Astrachan first explained the surrounding context of the tricky site: the area is situated right where three subway lines lines diverge, and at the intersection of several busy thoroughfares. SBJGroup realized immediately that the design of the apartment complex would have to be extremely innovative and carefully planned to reduce as much noise from the area as possible.

© Alexander Severin © Alexander Severin

One of the first steps they took to reduce the noise was to move the building footprint as far away from the tracks as possible. SBJGroup then located public spaces and amenities that could tolerate the noise, such as the two-story gym on the lower levels, in the areas of the floor plate that would be closer to the rumble of the subway lines. Soaring up above, the 43 stories of apartments, rooftop lounge, and other desired quiet areas, are further from the reach of the train noise.

Architectural Design

The elements used in the building design also played a large role in how the noise pollution was reduced. Astrachan explained how the design team quickly realized that the windows would be the "weak link and they needed to influence the design of the building in some way." The team designed various window sizes that allow for different levels of noise to come through depending on the program inside. The lower level punch windows measure at 3 x 5 feet (0.9 x 1.5 meters), and allow for only minimal noise penetration. As the floors go up, they feature larger windows until the glass completely wraps the building at the top.

The 37th floor features setbacks which not only allow for even more amenity space, but also a reduction of noise at the building's higher levels.

Acoustical Engineering

SBJGroup followed The New York City Noise Code, which was devised to reduce the "making, creation or maintenance of excessive and unreasonable and prohibited noises within the city" which it states "affects and is a menace to public health, comfort, convenience, safety, welfare and the prosperity of the people of the city." The code states that the sound level in any area must not exceed 35 decibels. For reference, a normal whisper is around 30 decibels and typical midtown Manhattan traffic measures in anywhere from 70-85 decibels.

To take a further step in reducing the constant noise pollution, architects at SBJGroup sat down with a team of acoustical engineers from AKRF and used technology that simulated the sounds of the rattling and squeaking subways through different glass panels to find the best solution to the noise issue. Together, they took on a new adaptation of existing technology, by triple glazing the glass, resulting in noise levels of 37 decibels from floors 23 to the roof and 39 decibels from the ground floor to the 22nd floor.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Morthoe / McLean Quinlan

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 01:00 AM PST

© Will Scott © Will Scott
  • Engineer: Frank Van Looch Associates
  • Quantity Surveyor: Hoskin Parks
  • Landscape Consultants: Fox Fearnley Landscape Office

Text description provided by the architects. This house in located in a small village on the north Devon Coast. The site is accessed down a long drive and the building is tucked up against the slope of the site, to make the most of the long views down to the sea from the upper levels.

© Will Scott © Will Scott

A stone gable end is the first glimpse you get of this building, with an industrial chimney, dark against the grey stone. The clients asked us to include some elements of a New England beach house, and so an external material of green oak boarding was used together with the local stone.

Ground floor plan Ground floor plan

Built as a family holiday home, and designed to maximise the number of bedrooms and open living space, the building is simple in form - a neat pitched volume coupled with a generous entrance porch. This porch provides a formal entrance as well as direct access to a large mud room for drying wetsuits from days out surfing and muddy boots from walking the costal paths.

© Will Scott © Will Scott

The building is split down the middle by a central stair. On entering, the hall opens up to a double height space with views of the garden. The main living space is open plan, with a separate games space for the children and the practical necessities of a large larder and laundry.

Section 01 Section 01

Up the open tread stairs, on the first floor, the split volumes separate the master bedroom suite from the main bedroom wing. Here, a long corridor with a single pane window at the far end, leads to four double bedrooms. Half way along the corridor is a secret stair, tucked among the linen cupboards, which winds up to two further attic bedrooms above.

© Will Scott © Will Scott

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Help Us Recognize the Women that are Shaping Architecture Around the World

Posted: 08 Mar 2018 12:00 AM PST

© Danae Santibañez © Danae Santibañez

At ArchDaily we want to see more women showing their projects to the world and receiving the recognition they deserve for their work. Today, we celebrate International Women's Day and, with the help of our readers, we want to continue to give visibility to the valuable contribution made every day to the field of architecture by millions of colleagues.

We invite all women who run their own architecture offices, and haven't had the opportunity to see their projects published in ArchDaily yet, to participate in this open call by showing us their work. Share a link to your portfolio with us, showing at least 3 architecture projects of your own. They can be built or unbuilt, participation in competitions, renders, etc.

Of the portfolios that we receive, we will select a diverse sample, from different parts of the world and age groups, of the best architecture works by women.

Important: Send us a link to your portfolio as a pdf. You can also send us your website, but we prefer it if you narrow down the scope of work you are presenting. If you don't have a portfolio or website, you can send us a link to a Google Drive or dropbox folder. Please do not send files that are larger than 8MB. Please do not send any compressed files (.zip, .rar, etc).

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Landscape and Building Merge in New Czech Forestry Commission Centre

Posted: 07 Mar 2018 10:00 PM PST

Estimated Forest Growth. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof Estimated Forest Growth. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof

A design team under the direction of Chybik + Kristof has won the international competition to design a new administrative center for the Czech Forestry Commission in Hradec Králové. The project focuses on a symbiotic relationship between the building and the adjacent forest, where the natural landscape outside begins to mingle with the office spaces within.

Exterior Visualisation. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof Exterior Visualisation. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof

Ondřej Chybík, a founding partner of Chybik+Kristof, explains that the inspiration for the design came from their initial site visit, where they explored the adjacent Hradec forest after visiting the current headquarters of the Forestry Commission. They noticed a stark difference between the hot indoor offices and the cool environment of the forest, which led to their design philosophy of creating a space where the workplace relates to and is reminiscent of the forest in which it sits. "What we sought to do was create a transparent, yet intimate and highly presentable working space. Having this concept in mind, we opted for a radial office layout relying on a central courtyard from which the building penetrates the wooded areas and the wooded areas penetrate the building," he says.

Education Opportunities. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof Education Opportunities. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof

The two-story central courtyard holds a visitor's center, meeting room, library and cafeteria, forming the social center of the overall design. It is lit by roof skylights and the supporting columns are used to remind visitors of tree trunks within a forest.

Courtyard Interior. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof Courtyard Interior. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof

Extending radially from the courtyard are five 'fingers', each representing an independent administrative unit. These office areas are designed with the architects' intent of 'workplace as forest' in mind. It uses a modular system to create an open space with sub-centers that hold central staircases, storage areas and kitchenettes. By segmenting the ground floor plan into the five sections, it ensures that all areas receive sufficient amounts of sunlight during the day.

Office Spaces. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof Office Spaces. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof

An integral part of the design is the nature trail that surrounds the building. Beginning on the roof of the building with a presentation on sustainable forestry, the trail continues with a slide that takes visitors down to the courtyard. It then takes the visitor on a winding path outside, around the other five sections of the design. The five sections will provide different local forest experiences such as spruce, beech and fir, pine and birch, and oak and hornbeam forests. Over the years, these surrounding forest experiences will grow and change, with the trees acting to cool the building.

Nature Trail. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof Nature Trail. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof
Tree Types. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof Tree Types. Image Courtesy of Chybik + Kristof
  • Architects: CHKAU, K4, Ivan Stolek, Jan Stolek,
  • Landscape Architects: Tomas Babka, breathe.earth.collective
  • Project Year: 2017

News via: CHYBIK+KRISTOF.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Buitenhuis / Chris Collaris Architects + Dutch Invertuals

Posted: 07 Mar 2018 09:00 PM PST

© Tim van de Velde © Tim van de Velde
  • Collaborators: Daphna Laurens, Dutch Invertuals
  • Contractor: Jatin Chaletbouw,
  • Carpentor: Luc Schoenmakers
  • Client: Droomparken
© Tim van de Velde © Tim van de Velde

Text description provided by the architects. On behalf of Droomparken, Chris Collaris Architects and Dutch Invertuals (Daphna Laurens) designed 'the buitenhuis', a holiday home which was launched at dutch design week 2017. 

© Dutch Invertuals & Ronald Smits © Dutch Invertuals & Ronald Smits
Floor Plan Floor Plan
© Tim van de Velde © Tim van de Velde

The buitenhuis is a small two-story house with the second level right under the roof. Chris Collaris and Daphna Laurens only used pure materials and natural colors for the finishes in this very first version of the holiday home. The buitenhuis intention is to make its guests forget their daily routine. It's a cozy home and starting point for visitors to retreat peacefully into nature.

© Dutch Invertuals & Ronald Smits © Dutch Invertuals & Ronald Smits
Section Section
© Dutch Invertuals & Ronald Smits © Dutch Invertuals & Ronald Smits

Situated in different locations all over the Netherlands, droomparken is a company developing numerous holiday parks, where everyone can rent a house and enjoy nature's offerings. The buitenhuis will soon be available to all guests at droomparken locations. Every buitenhuis will have a customized interior designed by Dutch Invertuals artists based on the wishes and needs of the client. 

© Tim van de Velde © Tim van de Velde

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Nema komentara:

Objavi komentar