Bite of the Great White! (Shark Week remix)
Posted in: UncategorizedThe Silver Anniversary of Shark Week wraps up this weekend, YouTuber melodysheep made the above vide..(Read…)
The Silver Anniversary of Shark Week wraps up this weekend, YouTuber melodysheep made the above vide..(Read…)
Do you have iPad’s and a 13-inch MacBook? The InSync Transport Case is able to charge 16 iPads..(Read…)
Spain and Kuwait-based AGi Architects have designed three seafront houses in Kuwait for three siblings and their families (photos by Nelson Garrido).
The S Cube Chalet comprises three small houses connected by walkways and a central staircase, each with private terraces overlooking the sea.
Two of the houses are mirror images of each other and are separated by the staircase, which leads up to the third house on the upper level.
The buildings have been situated to limit their exposure to the sun on the south facade and increase shaded space on the north side which looks out to sea.
The floors, stairs and a dividing wall between two of the houses are clad with Indian sandstone.
Photographs are by Nelson Garrido.
Here’s some more information from the architects:
S Cube family chalet is made up of three intertwined beach houses. The owners – two brothers and their sister each with their own families – want to continue enjoying the same exceptional environment in which they grew up, but with complete independency and privacy from each other.
For these reasons, the design of these three small houses calls for a duplicated programme that maintains privacy while benefiting from outdoor areas and sea views by the use of several terraces.
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Architectural solutions proposed by AGi
In order to create private and independent houses for each family – comprising three young couples with two small children each – AGi architects have divided the plot into two units composed of two houses that are mirror images of each other, named S2 and S3. These units are separated by a staircase leading towards the third house, located at the higher level. The third house is positioned on top and across from the two residences, enjoying a large roof terrace with direct views towards the sea. Each of the three houses enjoys an individual outdoor area that is open to the sky, privacy from its neighbor, and extended sea views.
The highly dense programme in the intertwined houses is manipulated to create outdoor spaces which harvest the prevailing winds and enhance their circulation within the courtyards, allowing people to comfortably reside in them. The building is carefully situated to protect its exposure to the sun on the southern façade, whilst increasing shaded space on the northern side to frame views out to the sea as well as create a pleasant outdoor environment.
The outdoor spaces on the ground floor and the roof terrace of the third house on the upper level are the main distinguishing elements and spaces of this project; from which the three houses are organized around them. They are beach houses designed to optimize and enhance the outdoor experience.
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Programme
S Cube chalet is developed into three levels:
S2 and S3 houses comprise mirrored programmes, occupying two levels:
Ground floor: Main bedroom, bathroom, kitchen, living room and a large courtyard open to the sea.
First floor: Two bedrooms, bathroom and a terrace with side views to the sea, designed as a playing area for children.
The terraces of both houses are visually separated by a grid.
S1 house is developed in two separate levels:
First floor: Main bedroom, bathroom, kitchen, living room, and a terrace connected to the S3 terrace.
Second floor: Two bedrooms, bathroom and a large terrace facing the sea.
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Materials
The flooring, stairs and dividing wall between S1 and S2 are all are clad using Indian sandstone. Interior walls and ceilings are finished using plaster and paint, while handrails are cladded with wood.
The interiors have been designed by AGi architects. All materials used in the S Cube project are locally manufactured. The loose furniture produced by Spanish brands, supplied by Gunni & Trentino.
Design Team: Joaquin Pérez-Goicoechea, Nasser B. Abulhasan, Salvador Cejudo
Architectural team: Robert A. Varghese, Abdul Hafiz, Mohammed Mónica Marqués, José Á ngel del Campo
Project Name: S Cube Chalet
Type: Residential 750 m2
Location: Kuwait
Date: 2007-2011
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by AGi Architects appeared first on Dezeen.
London architects Liddicoat & Goldhill added an extension to a south London home with an oak-screened staircase and double-height windows.
The 1930s house was originally built on sloping ground, which left the living spaces at the back hanging one storey over the garden.
The architects came up with an extension in the style of an orangery, with double-height windows to draw light into the lower levels.
An oak staircase is bordered by a screen of vertical strips of oak which mirror the steel frames of the glazing.
A glass balustrade has been positioned on the other side of the stairs, allowing light to reach into the rooms behind.
An unusual double-height white door leads out to the back garden.
Projects by Liddicoat & Goldhill we’ve previously featured include another glazed extension to a period house in London as well as the architects’ own home which makes use of black bricks and white marble.
See all our stories about residential extensions »
Photographs are by Keith Collie.
Here’s some more information from the architects:
The family moved to their 1930s house in Southfields in 1989. Since then, they has gradually outgrown the house: in 2011 they asked Liddicoat & Goldhill to adapt it to theirs and their four teenage sons’ ever-evolving needs.
The original house, one of a collection built on a hill overlooking south London, apparently ignored the sloping ground on which it was built. Viewed from the street, it sits comfortably on the site. But at the rear, the living spaces hang one storey above the mature garden – they are left aloof and separate.
This disconnection was also felt inside: the large basement spaces were dimly lit and truncated from the upper parts of the house.
Liddicoat & Goldhill’s solution is conceived as an Orangery. By stripping away the lower part of the rear facade, the Architects created space for this new double-height extension, floating half-way between the ground floor and basement.
The Orangery acts as a lantern, gathering sunlight into the living spaces deep within the house.
The kitchen is afforded wide views over the verdant rear gardens, while the split levels allow for separate and private operation of each of the living spaces.
Slender steel-framed glazing gives the new structure a sense of fine fragility, while the handmade oak furniture, staircase and kitchen – designed specifically for the project by the architects – creates a continuity between the new spaces and the old.
Project Particulars:
Site: London, SW18
Architect: Liddicoat & Goldhill LLP
Main Contractor: Considerate Building
Structural Engineers: Fluid Structures
Completion date: March 2012
Extension floor area: 56m2
About Liddicoat & Goldhill
Architects David Liddicoat & Sophie Goldhill are focused on making. Their interest lies in the haptic and the imagined, the poetry of practical things. They work with humble materials in contested environments to create the unexpected.
Their work has been critically acclaimed and published and exhibited worldwide. Named as one of Wallpaper* Magazine’s ‘Future 30’ in 2009, they were longlisted for Young Architect of the Year Award in 2011.
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Liddicoat & Goldhill appeared first on Dezeen.
The popularity of a staircase designed for dogs (bottom right) we published this week reminded us that pets often creep into architecture and interior photo shoots on Dezeen, so we’ve compiled them all into our latest Pinterest board dedicated to animals. Over 26,000 people now follow us on Pinterest – join them here.
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See all the stories that feature animals on Dezeen »
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Architecture studio Tredje Natur is redesigning a Copenhagen neighbourhood to better handle the floods expected as climate change leads to fewer but heavier rain storms.
When heavy rainfall strikes Saint Kjeld’s Kvarter, the water will be collected above ground in parks and squares to simultaneously relieve the sewer systems and create new recreational areas around the pools.
A giant ring in the main square will spray out a cooling mist on hot days, while excess water will be channelled along new cycle lanes that will double as storm drains, leading to canals and out to the harbour rather than into people’s basements.
The architects and local government hope the scheme will become a model for green urban planning and a showcase for climate adaptation technology.
“Only last year, three cloud bursts cost the society over 5 billion DKK in damage to the buildings and infrastructure,” says Flemming Rafn Thomsen, partner at Tredje Natur. “The climate adaptive plans in Copenhagen, and whole of Denmark really, are humongous and will probably have a time frame longer than 20 years, but the political will to get something done soon is pretty strong.”
Flemming Rafn Thomsen and Ole Schrøder won the competition to re-design the site as part of the Europan architecture competition in 2011, after which the city of Copenhagen signed them up to advise on the strategic development of the area.
The detailed plans will be unveiled to Copenhagen residents tonight and construction is due to begin in 2013, with completion scheduled for 2015/16.
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Here’s some more information from Tredje Natur:
Copenhagen based architecture firm TREDJE NATUR develops Denmark’s first climate adapted neighborhood.
On the 18th of August 2012 the plans for Copenhagen’s first climate adapted neighborhood is presented to the public. The project’s visions to transform Saint Kjeld’s Quarter into Copenhagen’s greenest neighborhood are presented at a grand opening by Danish Environmental Minister, Ida Auken,
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The climate is changing behavior. The Copenhageners can look forward to fewer but heavier rain showers, as the city has already been experiencing over the last two summers. In Saint Kjeld’s Neighborhood a comprehensive urban development project seeks to demonstrate how the city can be arranged so rainwater can be managed in the streets in a more natural and effective way. The project was designed by the newly established architectural firm TREDJE NATUR, and promotes new solutions for how we adapt to the climate changes and develop our cities.
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“The increase in rainfall is a major challenge for our city. But by tackling the challenge the right way, we can secure the city from cloudbursts while also bringing the city new recreational values. The ideas in Saint Kjeld’s Neighborhood are a really good example of this,” says Technical and Environmental Mayor of Copenhagen, Ayfer Baykal (SF).
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Pragmatic and Innovative Urban Development
TREDJE NATUR’s project offers a wide range of pragmatic strategies to meet the many expectations in the area. As a key principle the architects reclaim 20% of the street area by optimizing the infrastructure and parking lots according to current standard. The obtained area counts potentially 50,000 square meters and is to be used for new urban space development. It is also an important parameter not to compromise the city’s existing functions.
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In the large urban spaces, such as Saint Kjeld’s Square and Tåsinge Square the office has put a great effort into creating new kinds of urban experiences founded in the city’s and nature’s changeability. A gigantic floating ring sprays a cooling rain mist out on the hot summer days, hundreds of plant species secures an attractive nature all year round and a hilly terrain invites you to play and stay.
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“At Saint Kjeld’s Square and Tåsinge Square we optimize the terrain effectively doubling the urban space’s surface area. This provides new space for a comprehensive volume of natural value, a better micro-climate and hence more urban life and better rain water management. The large spaces will be both striking and natural hot spots in the district. It is also possible to integrate new cafes and playgrounds in the optimized terrain,” says Partner in TREDJE NATUR, Flemming Rafn Thomsen.
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Naturally the water plays a particularly important role in the project. A key concept is the idea that the urban spaces are flooded when it rains and that the water remains in the urban spaces a little longer than usual. This relieves the sewer systems, and also helps to transform the experience and the use of the urban spaces.
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Copenhagen’s Greenest Neighborhood
The project introduces bicycle paths that act as storm water channels, water towers, green roofs, urban gardens, green houses and canals that carry water out from the neighborhood to the harbor. And simultaneously give rise to greater biological diversity in the city. These are just some of the ideas for new ways to adapt to the climate change that will emerge over the coming years. The City of Copenhagen plans to transform the densely populated neighborhood into a showcase area for climate adaptation technology. It is hoped to become a place that exhibits how we at one hand ensure our cities to future climate challenges, and moreover upgrade our urban spaces and streets significantly.
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“By far the greatest challenges our society face lies in the existing city. The goal is to upgrade the city to residents’ expectations as to how the city must perform in terms of sustainable, social and health related issues. Our key concepts are driven by the notion that a coherent and natural design creates the most powerful strategy and solution for the neighborhood as a whole, but also comprise a sensitivity to individual spaces, places and the people in the area,” says partner in TREDJE NATUR, Ole Schrøder.
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Adaptation to the climate changes should not only deal with larger sewers or rising taxes. Therefore, the project will instead operate with the city’s visible surface and make the city greener, so that water is both delayed and the urban spaces are simultaneously transformed into wondrous places for the city’s residents to hang out or exercise.
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“In Copenhagen we must secure the city against the heavy rains we expect in the future,” says City Architect Tina Saaby. “The projects in this neighborhood show how we at once can create beautiful, green streets and spaces and at the same time establish an effective technical solution that leads the rainwater in our streets to the harbor – instead of into our basements. It is architecture that integrates art and aesthetics in a new and very exciting way, “says Tina Saaby, City Architect of Copenhagen.
About TREDJE NATUR
In the latest edition of A10, the prestigious international architecture magazine, TREDJE NATUR is singled out as Shooting Stars together with 10 other young leading architectural practices in Denmark. The newly established office, based in Copenhagen, has experienced an impressive debut on to the Danish architectural scene. With a three-year scholarship awarded by The Danish Arts Council in 2011 Ole Schrøder and Flemming Rafn Thomsen realized the vision of a new architectural practice where the distinction between nature and architecture are revoked. TREDJE NATUR recently entered successfully into the final stage of the largest Danish planning competition in the City of Aalborg and is also shortlisted for the international competition on new major campus buildings in Kongsberg, Norway.
About Saint Kjeld’s Neighborhood
The architectural office TREDJE NATUR got the assignment in December 2011 by winning the European competition coalition EUROPAN11. The competition proposal comprised a visionary plan for how the district’s streets and open spaces can become more diverse by letting the rain and natural phenomena merge with the urban life. In few years the neighborhood will be able to showcase the new solutions in real life and the ambition is to create a model area, which both nationally and internationally will inspire broadly and strengthen Denmark’s position in urban water management and urban design.
The Opening Party is held at Tåsingegade in Copenhagen on Saturday the 18th August at 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. See The City of Copenhagen’s own website for more info.
Responsible Partners: Flemming Rafn Thomsen and Ole Schrøder
Design Team: Monica Galiana, Anna Sissela Michalsdottir, Joan Melgaard Rasmussen, Lotte Randeris Kristensen, Louise Fiil Hansen and Hans H. Bærholm
Location: Saint Kjeld’s Kvarter, Copenhagen.
Client: The City of Copenhagen
Size: 105 Ha
Project period: 2011-16
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by Tredje Natur appeared first on Dezeen.
Dezeen archive: after publishing a photography studio with herringbone parquet walls and flooring this morning, we’ve decided to compile all of our stories that feature herringbone patterns. See all all the stories »
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Zaha Hadid will present a pleated metal funnel at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2012 later this month (+ movie).
Called Arum, the structure is derived from research into combining lightweight shells and tensile structures.
It will be surrounded by documentation of the firm’s research and work on similar themes by others, including German architect Frei Otto, in order to place Hadid’s work as part of a clear lineage of investigation.
The installation will be on show as part of the Common Ground exhibition in the Arsenale from 28 August to 25 November. Watch director of the biennale David Chipperfield talk to Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs about his theme and the current architecture scene in our movie interview.
See all our stories about Zaha hadid »
Here’s some more information from the architects:
This year’s Biennale theme ‘Common Ground’ shows how the work of the major protagonists of contemporary architecture – often regarded as independent individual creations – is in fact based on historical lineages of collective research. This is also true of the work of Zaha Hadid Architects. It is well known that the early work was initially inspired by Russian Suprematism.
In our installation and exhibition at the Biennale we want to show that – apart from the dialogue with the work of contemporary competitors that existed all along – our recent work connects to a rather different historical strand of research. The more our design research and work evolved on the basis of algorithmic form generation, the more we learned to appreciate the work of pioneers like Frei Otto who had achieved the most elegant designs on the basis of material-structural form-finding processes. From Frei Otto we learned how the richness, organic coherence and fluidity of the forms and spaces we desire could emerge rationally from an intricate balance of forces. We expanded Frei Otto’s method to include environmental as well as structural logics, and we moved from material to computational simulations.
One particular area of research we would like to explore with our installation is the domain of lightweight shells in combination with tensile structures. We have already designed a number of complex shells as well as some tensile structures. Here, for the first time, we would like to integrate these two worlds. The Arum shell is an installation made from pleated metal. We will surround the installation with the documentation of our research, including key reference projects of the pre-eminent precursors in this line of research.
We will show the work Frei Otto, Felix Candela, Heinz Isler among others and include work by Philippe Block, a young, contemporary researcher of stone compression shells.
Venice Architecture Biennale 2012 Room 1.9, Corderie dell’ Arsenale 29th August – 25th November 2012
With the support of Permasteelisa Spa and ARTE & Partners
Design: Zaha Hadid with Patrik Schumacher
Exhibition Design: Woody Yao, Margarita Valova
Installation Design and Presentation: Shajay Bhooshan, Saman Saffarian, Suryansh Chandra, Mostafa El Sayed
Structural Engineering: Rasti Bartek, Buro Happold, UK
Material & Fabrication Technology: Gregory Epps, RoboFOLD
Coordinator: Manon Janssens
In collaboration with:
» Studio Hadid, Universität für angewandte Kunst, Vienna – Johann Traupmann, Christian Kronaus, Mascha Veech, Robert Neumayr, Mario Gasser, Susanne John
» The BLOCK Research Group, Institute of Technology in Architecture, ETH, Zurich – Philippe Block, Matthias Rippmann
» Faculty of Architecture, ETH, Zurich – Toni Kotnik
» Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios de Posgrado, Faculty of Architecture, UNAM, Mexico – Juan Ignacio del Cueto Ruiz-Funes
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Venice Architecture Biennale 2012 appeared first on Dezeen.