Before They Were Famous #3 – Oscars 2015 Edition
Posted in: UncategorizedScreen Junkies back with more clips of your favorite stars before they were famous – this time..(Read…)
Screen Junkies back with more clips of your favorite stars before they were famous – this time..(Read…)
Fifty-two white-topped cubes make up the residences of this retirement home near Lisbon by Guedes Cruz Architects, but a roof turns bright red if someone inside sounds the alarm (+ slideshow).
The Alcabideche Social Complex provides supported living for its elderly members in an environment designed by local office Guedes Cruz Architects to offer a mixture of private and public spaces influenced by Mediterranean living.
Modular living units, each measuring 53 square metres, features cast-concrete walls, while translucent plexiglass boxes sit on top to create a smooth contrasting surface.
At night, the roofs are lit from within to create the appearance of glowing lanterns, providing ample illumination for navigating the complex without the need for additional street lighting.
The roof lighting is also linked to an emergency alarm that occupants can trigger to alert the central control station and turn the roof from white to red as a distress signal.
The site is operated by Portuguese trade union Fundação Social do Quadro Bancário, which represents the banking sector.
Each of the small houses are spread in staggered rows across a 10,000-square-metre plot that also accommodates a large support building, as well as a series of pools and public terraces.
“The Social Complex of Alcabideche aims to reconstitute a Mediterranean lifestyle in which the outdoor spaces of streets, plazas and gardens are like an extension of the house itself,” said the architects in a statement.
The pathways that weave across the site are influenced by the maze-like streets of the medinas found in North African cities. They provide routes that are shaded from the sun during the day and illuminated at night by the lights of the adjacent buildings.
Floor-to-ceiling glazing allows plenty of natural light to enter each of the houses. Each one contains an open lounge, kitchen and dining space adjacent to the entrance, while a bedroom and large en-suite are situated behind a sliding door at the rear.
To keep the interiors cool during the summer, ventilation filters in through the junction between the concrete walls and white plastic roof, which also reflects the sun’s rays.
In winter, solar panels power underfloor heating that warms the exposed concrete floor. A cushion of air created between the roof and the living area helps prevent warmth from escaping through the roof.
Photography is by Ricardo Oliveira Alves.
Project credits:
Promoter: Fundação Social do Quadro Bancário
Architecture: Guedes Cruz Arquitectos – José Guedes Cruz, César Marques, Marco Martinez Marinho
Architecture Collaborators: Patrícia Maria Matos, Nelson Aranha, Tiago Rebelo, João Simões, Isabel Granes
Structure: PPE
Special installations: Espaço Energia
Landscape Architecture: Paula Botas
Construction Consortium: FDO + JOFEBAR
Supervision: Mace
The post White rooftops turn red during emergencies
at retirement home by Guedes Cruz Architects appeared first on Dezeen.
Tel un vrai plasticien, l’artiste digital Espen Kluge sculpte des bustes, des portraits et des formes conceptuelles en 3D. Son travail, au style très contemporain propose des effets des textures saisissants et très recherchés. À découvrir à travers une sélection dans la galerie.
Heather Roblin is a metalsmith and jeweler based in Toronto…(Read…)
Le studio de design Prokk conçoit des revêtements muraux multi-fonctions. En alliant originalité, sens du style et innovation, l’agence propose une collection variée de matériaux dont certains feront office de rangements intégrés alors que d’autres émettront de la lumière éco-responsable tout en offrant à la pièce un design esthète. À découvrir.
A ribbon of pale wood wraps the interior of this split-level flat renovated by architect Carl Trenfield, encompassing kitchen units, storage cupboards and a staircase.
The birch ply lining sweeps around the upper floor of the apartment, before becoming a staircase that features balustrades perforated with a design of dots and crosses.
These steps lead down to a master bedroom, guest room and bathroom.
Carl Trenfield designed the integrated furniture for a 72-square-metre split-level apartment within a Victorian property in Snaresbook, east London, which is used by a couple as their second home.
“Our approach sought to introduce a new datum, that effectively wraps the upper floor, hosts built-in furniture and continues to form the new stair, terminating at the lower ground level,” said Trenfield.
“We like to think of this datum, or ribbon of sorts, as a reinterpretation and reinstatement of the traditional dado rail and panel – often found in such properties.”
The period property had been stripped of many of its original features in earlier renovation works, “rendering the sleeping spaces both visually cold and unwelcoming”, according to the architect.
The perforated pattern on the staircase was added as a reference to the ornamentation the property would have had, and allows a little extra light to filter down to the lower floor.
The staircase and bespoke furniture was hand-crafted by joiner Adam Stevenson, who has collaborated with the studio on several previous projects. Stevenson used a combination of CNC and laser cutting, as well as hand-turning, to create the pieces.
Photography is by Daniel Hewitt and Carl Trenfield Architects.
Project credits:
Architect: Carl Trenfield Architects
Master craftsman: Adam Stevenson
Plywood CNC fabrication: Cut and Construct
Woven vinyl flooring: Bolon
Sanitaryware: Villeroy and Boch
Supplier of laminated worktop and table: Burton Laminates
The post Carl Trenfield adds perforated timber around
the rooms and stairs of a London home appeared first on Dezeen.
How do you properly pay tribute to a New York TV talk show pioneer? For starters, you tell it like it was.
Here’s the lede sentence from James Barron’s New York Times obit:
Joe Franklin, who became a New York institution by presiding over one of the most compellingly low-rent television programs in history, one that even he acknowledged was an oddly long-running parade of has-beens and yet-to-bes interrupted from time to time by surprisingly famous guests, died on Saturday in a hospice in Manhattan.
Another worthy, respectful angle is to remind just how much Franklin loved to do what he did. From the top of the CNN.com obituary by Andreas Preuss:
“The last two weeks were the first time he ever missed a broadcast in over 60 years” friend and former producer Steve Garrin said.
Franklin, a veteran of WJZ-TV, WOR-TV and most recently the Bloomberg Radio Network’s Bloomberg on the Weekend, was 88. The cause of death was cancer. RIP.