UFO by Ross Lovegrove

British designer Ross Lovegrove has installed a silver spaceship in the rafters of a railway station in Lille, France.

UFO by Ross Lovegrove

UFO was commissioned by arts organisation Lille 3000 for Fantastic 2012, a festival of futuristic concepts in design and the arts.

UFO by Ross Lovegrove

In addition to the ring of LEDs around its perimeter, the aluminium spaceship intermittently sends a central shaft of light down to the ground, where it appears to select a passenger to beam up into the craft.

UFO by Ross Lovegrove

“Giving people a chance to see at first hand an alien craft, designed albeit by a human being and in decidedly Earth-based terrestrial materials, will be an instant shock,” explains Lovegrove, “showing us how primitive, oily and unimaginative we are.”

UFO by Ross Lovegrove

This isn’t the first UFO we’ve featured on Dezeen – we also reported on a ball of light over Gdansk in Poland created by artist Peter Coffin and lighting designers Cinimod Studio.

UFO by Ross Lovegrove

See all our stories about Ross Lovegrove »
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Photographs are by Simona Cupoli.

Here’s a statement from Lovegrove:


For Fantastic 2012, the most advanced presentation of futuristic concept in design, art, cuisine, literature, dance, clubbing and much more, Lille3000 has commissioned a brand new work by British designer Ross Lovegrove to be experienced at the Lille Flandre Station, directly on the tracks, opening on October 5th.

Ross Lovegrove, at ease with questions and dilemmas about our own future – he was for example the host of CNN Just Imagine documentary presenting a vision of the world 2020 – has challenged himself to create an innovative, and yet modernistic archetypical, means of transport. The visitors and travellers gathering at the Lille Flandre Station will find on the trails a shocking surprise: a UFO has just landed on the sidewalk and it is able to transport human beings from Lille to Paris in as little as 30 seconds.

This unexpected machine, shaped like an organic dish, is conceived with terrestrial materials and yet delivers an unprecedented imaginary form. Ross Lovegrove’s UFO was born through a speculation on our own identity. This pure and pristine object destroys the boundaries between art and design, technology and science, spirituality and physics, nature and religion. Ross Lovegrove has realised this new vehicle following his instinct: the inhabitants of our planet do not have any clear idea on how these objects are realised, or if they even exist.

Lovegrove explains his inspiration for this recently landed U(nidentified) F(lying) O(bject): “Blurry photos and obscure film footage is all we have, along with interviews from Area 51 scientists assigned to analyse propulsion systems and materials previously unknown to man. Can all these people who talk so matter of fact all be part of some broader conspiracy to act it all out? The mystery remains as a discourse between imagination and reality, people divided and derided on a subject that could be so profound and life changing for the whole of humanity if one day there will be a clear visitation to experience in the clear light of day the wonders that we are being slowly primed for.”

To visit to the Lille Flandre Station can explain some about these universal mysteries through the visions of one of the most innovative designers or our time.

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Outside (Outside) ((Outside)) by a.a.+H

This house by Japanese architects a.a.+H has two roofs and four more tiny houses inside (+ slideshow).

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

The house in Saitama, north of Tokyo, has two sets of of roof beams which create an intermediate balcony space between them.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Half of the inner roof is covered with polycarbonate sheets which seal off the space while allowing light through to the ground floor.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

The other half is uncovered, allowing a view to the outer roof which is clad in wooden panels.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Four small houses have also been built on each corner of the ground floor, nestling against the beams of the inner roof.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

The tiny houses have corrugated slate roofs and chipboard screen doors in the traditional Japanese style, and they contain the bedrooms, bathroom and living room.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

This isn’t the first house within a house we’ve featured on Dezeen – similar projects from Japan include an inside-out house that lets in rain and wind and a house hidden behind a facade of unglazed openings.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Other Japanese houses we’ve featured recently include a shimmering steel tower in Kyoto and a wedge-shaped house coated in gravel.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

See all our stories about Japanese houses »

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Photographs are by Hiroshi Ueda.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Under a tree, under the tarps, Under the hut…
The concept was to configure the internal structure of the house to create the illusion that the inside of the home acts as the outside of ‘a house within a house’. By incorporating a layout that promotes ample natural lighting, outdoor living is brought into the residence.

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Location: Saitama, Japan
Site area: 142.94m2

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Building area: 71.55m2
Total floor area: 86.41m2
Type of Construction: wooden

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Exterior Materials:
Corrugated metal roofing, corrugated slate, glass fiber reinforced polyester
Interior Materials: OSB, fiber reinforced cement board, corrugated polycarbonate

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Above: ground floor plan

Design time: May 2010 – Jun 2011
Date of completion: Dec 2011

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Above: first floor plan

Design: Kaoru Kuzukawa + Masatoshi Shikada (a.a.+H)
Structural engineer: Taro Yokoyama (LOW FAT structure Inc.)

Outside Outside Outside by a.a.+H

Above: section

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Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Glass bottles rest on rows of hand-made iron nails along the walls of this Aesop skin and haircare shop in Paris by French designers Ciguë (+ slideshow).

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Located in one of the city’s oldest neighbourhoods, Aesop Tiquetonne was inspired by old-fashioned workshops and garages, where tools are often fixed to the walls with hooks or nails.

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Architect Hugo Haas told Dezeen that he had bought the nails during a visit to Japan, and had decided later to use them to create an entire shelving system. ”The main idea with Aesop is to find different ways of displaying their products,” said Haas. ”The bottles are so classical they have their own existence. They just need a good background to help them levitate.”

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

The square-sectioned nails form neat rows along the sycamore-covered walls, creating spaces to hang and stand products of different sizes. ”These old nails are pretty hard to control, so to make sure we had straight lines we laser-drilled them to the wall,” explained Haas.

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Unlike other Aesop stores designed by Ciguë, the counter and sink are separated from one another, due to the narrowness of the shop.

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

The taps and pipes are made from unpolished steel, and the architects chose to fit them themselves instead of consulting a plumber.

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Pale blue paint gives the shop a colourful exterior. “The only place we wanted to put colour was the window,” said Haas. “We didn’t want to use colour in the store, as we prefer to use the colours that are inherent to materials. It seems a more natural process for us.”

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Aesop regularly commission designers to come up with unique concepts for their stores and this is the fifth one created by Ciguë. Others we’ve featured by the studio include one filled with steel caps from the city’s plumbing network and one modelled on a medical laboratory.

See all our stories about Aesop »

Here’s some text from Aesop:


Aesop’s latest Parisian signature space, a fresh collaboration with Cigue, opened in rue Tiquetonne in mid-June. Home to many tradesmen in the mid-twentieth century, the area features a number of workshops that have remained unchanged for decades. The store’s design is entirely in keeping with this aesthetic – reminiscent of a garden workshop housing well-worn tools that defy obsolescence.

The design makes ingenious use of the most humble materials; shelving is fashioned from rows of large, hand-made square-sectioned wrought iron nailed – on which Aesop products are arranged like lovingly ordered implements. Walls feature stone and raw sycamore maple wood, which is also used for a large sink. A waxed concrete floor and pipes and taps of unpolished steel add further references to modest industry. The interior represents not only respect for local tradition, but a marriage of intelligent design, straightforward functionality and unadorned beauty.

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Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

Visitors can play in the rain without getting wet in this installation by interactive designers rAndom International at the Barbican in London (+ slideshow).

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

Located in The Curve gallery, Rain Room is a perpetual rain shower which lets visitors feel the moisture in the air and hear the sound of rain while remaining untouched by drops of water.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

Cameras installed around the room detect human movements and send instructions to the rain drops to continually move away from visitors.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

The water drips through a grid in the floor where it is treated before being sent back up to the ceiling to fall again.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

Formed in 2005 by former Royal College of Art students Hannes Koch, Florian Ortkrass and Stuart Wood, rAndom International has created a number of installations involving audience participation.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

“Rain Room is the first time that we’ve extended the level of our experimentation to the huge public space that is The Curve at the Barbican,” rAndom International told Dezeen.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

“Our other work has performed on a more intimate scale in terms of size and engagement, but what’s common to most of our projects is that they extract interesting behaviour from the viewers,” they added.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

Their proposal to create a rain shower inside the gallery didn’t faze the curators. “The curatorial team around Jane Alison has not blinked once in view of the actual implications of realising the Rain Room at The Curve – a never-done-before project featuring thousands of litres of water above a BBC recording studio and right next to a theatre and concert hall in a public art gallery.”

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

The designers have also collaborated again with British choreographer Wayne McGregor, whose Random Dance company will perform short ‘interventions’ in the Rain Room to a score by Max Richter on selected Sundays during the exhibition.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

“Working with Wayne and Random Dance has always been very rewarding, as his perspective seems to complement our way of working extremely well,” said the designers. Earlier this year Dezeen featured their collaboration for the Future Self project at MADE in Berlin, in which a lighting installation mapped and replicated human movement.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

Rain Room isn’t the first weather-related art installation to appear on Dezeen – we’ve also featured a moving cloud of raindrops in a Singapore airport and an LED sign in a London park displaying yesterday’s weather.

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

See all our stories about weather »
See all our stories about art »
See all our stories about the Barbican »

Rain Room by rAndom International at the Barbican

Photographs are by Felix Clay.

Here’s the full press release from the Barbican:


Rain Room by rAndom International at The Curve, Barbican Centre, London
Admission Free
4 October 2012 – 3 March 2013

The exhibition is supported by Arts Council England. Rain Room has been made possible through the generous support of the Maxine and Stuart Frankel Foundation for Art.

Known for their distinctive approach to digital-based contemporary art, rAndom International’s experimental artworks come alive through audience interaction. Their largest and most ambitious installation yet, Rain Room is a 100 square metre field of falling water for visitors to walk through and experience how it might feel to control the rain. On entering The Curve the visitor hears the sound of water and feels moisture in the air before discovering the thousands of falling droplets that respond to their presence and movement. Rain Room opens in The Curve on 4 October 2012.

Kate Bush, Head of Art Galleries, Barbican Centre, said: The Curve has previously played host to guitar-playing finches, a World War II bunker and a digital bowling alley. rAndom International have created a new work every bit as audacious and compelling – Rain Room surpasses all our expectations.

At the cutting edge of digital technology, Rain Room is a carefully choreographed downpour – a monumental installation that encourages people to become performers on an unexpected stage, while creating an intimate atmosphere of contemplation. The work also invites us to explore what role science, technology and human ingenuity might play in stabilising our environment by rehearsing the possibilities of human adaptation.

rAndom International said: Rain Room is the latest in a series of projects that specifically explore the behaviour of the viewer and viewers: pushing people outside their comfort zones, extracting their base auto-responses and playing with intuition. Observing how these unpredictable outcomes will manifest themselves, and the experimentation with this world of often barely perceptible behaviour and its simulation is our main driving force.

Finding a common purpose as students at the Royal College of Art, rAndom International was founded in 2005 by Hannes Koch, Florian Ortkrass and Stuart Wood. Today the studio is based in Chelsea – with an outpost in Berlin – and includes a growing team of diverse talent. With an ethos of experimentation into human behaviour and interaction, they employ new technologies in radical, often unexpected ways to create work which also draws on op art, kinetics and post-minimalism.

rAndom International have gained international recognition, inspiring audiences from broad multidisciplinary interests. A breakthrough work of 2008, Audience, marked rAndom’s first installation with audience participation. Motorised mirrors disconcertingly respond to human activity in their midst in inquisitive, synchronised movements, with the viewer becoming both active agent and subject of the piece. Swarm, a light work of 2010, emulates the behaviour of birds in flight: the sound created by the presence of visitors causes the abundant individual light sources to respond in swarm-like formations. With Future Self, a new commission by MADE Berlin in 2012, the studio explores the direct interaction of the viewer with the full body image of the self, represented in light in three-dimensions.

Other notable commissions include Reflex, a large scale light installation that inhabited the windows of London’s Wellcome Trust for one year, and the studio’s scenography for Wayne McGregor’s production, FAR, presently on world tour. rAndom International’s kinetically responsive sculpture Fly was premiered at the last Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art, while intelligent light installation Swarm Study / III is on display permanently at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London.

rAndom International are represented by Carpenters Workshop Gallery, London and Paris. An overview of their work, Before the Rain, is on show in Paris 8 September – 21 December 2012. Prior to this they have exhibited at Tate Studio at Tate Modern, Pinakothek Der Moderne, Munich and Museum of Modern Art, New York. They have won a number of awards including Designer of the Future 2010, Prix Ars Electronica – Honourable Mention, CR – Creative Futures Award, Wallpaper* Award and were listed in the Observer’s Top Ten Creative Talent in the UK. Earlier works form part of the permanent collections at the Frankel Foundation for Art, the Victoria & Albert Museum and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.

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Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Stone bleachers climb onto the roof of this cultural centre in Molde, Norway, by Danish architects 3XN, creating open-air seating for visitors to the jazz festival hosted there each year (+ slideshow).

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Located in the heart of the small town, the Plassen Cultural Centre will become a hub for the July event, which is one of the oldest jazz festivals in Europe and attracts around 100,000 tourists.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

The external staircase adjoins the northern wall of the building, linking the neighbouring market square with a roof terrace that accommodates a sunbathing lounge, an exhibition area and a sculpture garden.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

The entrance to the three-storey building is positioned at the foot of the stairs, and leads into a concert hall through a triple-height atrium.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

“There must be room for celebration in this building, both inside, on top of it and around it,” said 3XN’s Jan Ammundsen.”It must be able to withstand being invaded by happy people throughout the year, year after year.”

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

A jazz museum is also included inside the building, alongside a library, a small gallery and a series of rehearsal studios.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

The architects used granite for all the exterior surfaces, which they claim “gives the building a bright monochrome expression” that contrasts with the “warm red light” that shines out through the windows.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Other projects completed by 3XN in the last year include another culture centre with glass hills outlined on its facade and an experimental food laboratory.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

See more stories about 3XN »

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

See more buildings in Norway »

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Photography is by Adam Mork.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Here’s a project description from 3XN:


Cultural Center ‘Plassen’
Molde, Norway

‘Plassen’ (meaning the square or the space in Norwegian) is formed like a giant paper cutting. The building literally grabs the city square, Gørvellplassen. It cuts and folds the surface, resulting in a building where the inside and the outside, the surface and the roof, merges into one. This compact and well-functioning structure with its highly usable and easy accessible areas maintains the public space of Gørvellplassen, and even enhances the flexibility of the square.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

The flowing transition between the stages, the gallery, and the café creates the illusion that the inner and outer spaces are one. Emphasizing this principle, the windows of the building can be described as wide horizontal openings allowing plenty the daylight, and providing a splendid view from within as well as from the outside. The relatively low-rise building consists of just three floors that make room for the local theatre, ‘Teatret Vårt’, ‘The Bjørnson Festival’ and Molde’s International Jazz festival which attracts famous jazz musicians and a wide audience when it takes place every summer in July.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Contemporary and innovative, but at the same time simple and blunt, the design of the building resists any excesses. Hence, it is in accordance with the surrounding sober and regularly shaped buildings. Use of the same local stone on both walls and floors, creates a calm atmosphere. The exterior is dominated by the broad staircase. This created a lot of space for people to rest in nice weather. The staircase provides the jazz festival with a big open-air stage that may become a new focal point for the town.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

The heart of the building is the main concert hall, solved in “box in box” room, to ensure optimal acoustics. Therefore, the concert hall is rectangular and stripped of fancy shapes. Finally, ‘Plassen’ contains a library and an arts centre with a gallery facing the upper square. The library is situated in the eastern wing with a strong exposure to the square.

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Architect: 3XN
Project type: Cultural Center
Functions: Theatre, concert hall, café, gallery, library
Client: Molde Kulturbyg AB

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Construction: 2009 – 2012
Official Opening: 14th of July, 2012
Size: 5,800 m2
Cost: 187 mio. norwegian kroner / / 25 mio euros
Engineer: Norconsult AS

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Site plan – click above for larger image

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

First floor plan – click above for larger image

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Second floor plan – click above for larger image

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Long section – click above for larger image

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

Cross section – click above for larger image

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

North elevation – click above for larger image

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

East elevation – click above for larger image

Plassen Cultural Centre by 3XN

South elevation – click above for larger image

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H House by Budapesti Műhely

This gabled farmhouse by architects Budapesti Műhely is a contemporary interpretation of a traditional Hungarian peasant house (+ slideshow).

H House by Budapesti Műhely

“The requirements for a country house have changed a lot during the past hundred years, but using the old Hungarian peasant house’s archetype was a good starting point for the design in a situation where the strict local building regulations tie the architects’ freedom,” said writer Brigi Bugya.

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Like the older houses, the building is set back from the road by approximately 50 metres and features a pitched roof that “follows the peasant architecture’s symmetrical, 41-degree form.”

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Typical wooden shingles clad three of the exterior walls, but the fourth is covered with metal panels to “give variety” to the facade.

H House by Budapesti Műhely

The structure of the house is formed from 12-metre-wide modules, which split rooms into two rows with a corridor in between.

H House by Budapesti Műhely

A living room spreads across four of the modules and features a double-height space that stretches up into the attic.

H House by Budapesti Műhely

The roof projects outwards at one end of the building, creating a sheltered terrace that the owners can also use as a driveway.

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Other projects we’ve featured in Hungary include a lookout point for a ruined palace and a faceted stone concert hall.

H House by Budapesti Műhely

See more projects in Hungary »

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Photographs are by Tamas Bujnovszky.

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Here are a few details about the project from Brigi Bugya:


H House by Budapesti Műhely
A family house in Sóskút, Hungary

Not far from Budapest, on the fringes of a forest, there stands Tamás Dévényi’s shingle covered new house. The disarmingly simple building creates generous spatial relations on the 1,5 hectare land. The proximity of the bustling city life doesn’t mean that we can not relish the convenience of nature and the separation of a farmhouse. Borrowing its form and use of materials from the Central-European peasant architecture, the building’s modular structure follows contemporary design thinking.

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Project: H House
Location: Sóskút, Hungary
Leading architect: Tamás Dévényi – Budapesti Műhely
Associate architects: István Kovács, Eszter Mihály, Orsolya Takács, Viktor Vadász
Landscape: Zsuzsa Bogner

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Design period: 2006 – 2011
Construction period: 2008 – 2011
Gross Floor Area: 180 sqm

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Site plan – click above for larger image

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Cross section – click above for larger image

H House by Budapesti Műhely

Longitudinal section – click above for larger image

H House by Budapesti Műhely

South-west facade – click above for larger image

H House by Budapesti Műhely

South-east facade – click above for larger image

H House by Budapesti Műhely

North-east facade – click above for larger image

H House by Budapesti Műhely

North-west facade – click above for larger image

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Dacha’s Origami by Peter Kostelov

This all-white summer house outside Moscow by architect Peter Kostelov has sunbeds and a see-saw but no windows or doors.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The house was designed for a Russian TV programme in which the clients and the architect meet only once to exchange ideas before the architect takes the project through to completion.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The clients were an active family who wanted their dacha, or summer house, to be a place for sport and exercise as well as sunbathing, barbecues and parties.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The only requirement from the parents was that the architect didn’t add a basketball court, so this gave Kostelove “complete freedom for fantasy and creativity,” he said.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

Kostelov designed a building that’s open to the elements, with rolled-up blinds fitted into the wall openings to provide shelter when needed.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The built-in sunbeds are positioned alongside a small sunken bathing area at one end of the house.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

A small cubicle with a bucket of water suspended above it allows residents to cool off after a session in the sauna room next door.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

Horizontal bars have been fitted on the wall behind the see-saw where they function as a simple gym.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The roof terrace is accessed by sets of stairs at either end or by the central ladder. Sheltered underneath the roof terrace is a kitchen and dining area as well as an indoor shower.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

Other projects by Kostelov we’ve featured include a Moscow apartment with metal walls and a summer house made of patchwork wood.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

See all our stories about Peter Kostelov »
See all our stories about holiday homes »
See all our stories about Russia »

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

Photographs are by Zinon Razutdinov.

Here’s some further information from the architect:


The project was specially done for the TV programme Dachniy Otvet. In the frame of the programme the customer and the author of the project meet only once, and then time comes for projecting and construction which is the matter of the architect exclusively. After the project is fully done it is filmed and customers are invited to view and evaluate it.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The first meeting with the customers defined and specified the project vector and its functionality. The customers are a family with strong sport background. Consequently they would rather get the place for summer recreation including sports than for doing gardening.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

In addition the people in the family are quite hospitable and active, especially the elder daughter who hosts young people, so quite often these meetings turn into informal youth parties.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

As for the parents there was the only remark from them: “Anything but basketball arrangement please!” So this short remark gave a complete freedom for fantasy and creativity. Surely to get unforgettable village pastime there must be a variety for it: barbecue, open air pool, summer cinema, volleyball ground, horizontal bars and modernised enhanced sport facilities.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The territory was divided into five functional zones:
1. The Swimming and bathing zone has a pool, a shower and a bucket for dousing after sauna. A small overpass adjoins this zone with a well to get water from. A significant detail of this area is a solar battery which massively contributes to an environmentally sustainable usage of the watering system especially when it comes to unpredictable Moscow weather.
2. The Lying in the sun zone has a few beach beds, podiums, armchairs; there must be a shelter to hide from the sun, to relax, to read a book etc.
3. The Gym has simple but enhanced sport facilities: horizontal bars, parallel bars, “health disks”, and swing, badminton and volleyball playgrounds. There also must be a referee’s chair too. Finally a chest for changing clothes and towels and other things is a must.
4. Kitchen and dining room should have a small kitchen, grill-barbeque, firewood stock, dinner table, summer cinema, and stereo-system and hammock chair.
5. Observation point is in fact the second level which is intensively used for sunbathing. So there are a few check beds and watering system.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The weather in Moscow district is unpredictable and changeable which is quite typical and which defines the functionality of the project.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

All components of the project like shelter, fragments of dead walls, horizontal and vertical ledges which cover light hatches depending on weather conditions and which either let the light through or prevent it from the sun, rain or wind. Due to zone planning and plain transformation the project creates maximum comfort for anyone in whatever weather conditions.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

Initially the idea of so called architectural “origami” seemed well turned. Surely in the course of construction the project was being transformed but the idea of a folding book, the saw cuts of which created new capacities, shapes and spatial ties-in appeared quite a winning one. More than that such approach made it possible to create tie-ins between closed and open spaces, between horizontal and vertical plains; as a result it makes the space interwork in a new way.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

The project lives as double functional one: on the one hand it returns to nature and on the other the project protects from the wind, rain and sun heat. These two interworking forms have subtle boundaries and complement each other, working as all-in-one-piece project. The white colour was chosen to support the white buildings of the house and sauna.

Dacha's Origami by Peter Kostelov

Architecture: Peter Kostelov
Building: 2012
Constraction Area: 71 m2
Total area: 100 m2
Specifier: TV Channel NTV, programme Dachniy Otvet
Location: village Zenkino, Moscow region, Russia

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Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

This art museum by architect Renzo Piano straddles a canal in Oslo’s harbour (+ slideshow).

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Named the Astrup Fearnley Museet, the museum of contemporary art opened to the public this weekend and was completed in collaboration with local firm Narud-Stokke-Wiig.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

A curving roof of fritted glass unites the three timber-clad buildings that comprise the complex, while two bridges cross the canal to link them at ground level.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The architects selected naturally weathered timber for the facades and interiors of each block, to reference the traditional Scandinavian construction of local buildings and boats.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Ten galleries are split between the three buildings, and one block also contains offices within four of its upper storeys.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Between the buildings, promenades stretch along both sides of the canal to lead to a sculpture park and sandy beach on the southern side of the water and a local ferry terminal on the northern side.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Other recent projects by Renzo Piano include The Shard, which opened earlier this summer, and the new wing at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

See all our stories about Piano here, including a past interview with the architect.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Photography is by Nic Lehoux.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Here’s a project description from Renzo Piano Building Workshop:


The Tjuvholmen development commissioned by Selvaag Gruppen / Aspelin Ramm Gruppen in Oslo is located southwest of the centre of the city and is a continuation of the Aker Brygge development built in the 90’s. The site of the Tjuvholmen project is one of the most beautiful places in Oslo. The project will transform the formerly closed harbour into a public area connecting the Fjord and the centre of the city.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The RPBW project is on the western part of this development and consists of cultural programmatic elements as part of an agreement with the City of Oslo: the project includes 3 different buildings under a unique glass roof, one for Offices and Art exhibition and two exclusively for the Art Museum, the landscape design with bridges over the new canals and a small Sculpture Park.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The urban design creates a visual link between this cultural platform and the City centre of Oslo, developing the visual axis from Aker Brygge to the new complex. The integration of Art related activities in all three buildings and the mix with offices and leisure activities, makes the complex a vibrant part of the new urban fabric that will attract a very broad public.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The Design

Overlooking the fjord, it seems inevitable to continue the sightline from the city along the Aker Brygge promenade to the far end of the new development. The entire promenade along the sea will be 800m long. Almost half of that length will consist of the new promenade of the project. The promenade will start at the bridge on the dock at Aker Brygge and continue along Strandhagen over to Skjaeret until it ends at a floating dock, from where a ferry may depart to other destinations along the inner Oslo Fjord.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The promenade along the canal will provide to the visitors the visual contact with the sea and nature, as an important experience of the journey.

On Skjaeret, the promenade is embraced by the building complex and the location of the art building along the canal, instead of along the sea as proposed by the city’s zoning plan, creates an active dialogue between the 3 buildings.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Between the art museum and the sea a softly undulating sculpture park fills the rest of Skjaeret and finishes in a sandy beach, protected by the wind and from the waves. It will be an open space for children and their parents to play and swim, to enjoy nature and the sea.

A café is planned alongside the beach with a facade that can be opened during good weather to enjoy views of the park and the wind gusts from the fjords as well as to extend the relatively small internal area of the café.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Across the canal over a wide bridge that links the two opposite banks, visitors will find the entrance to the other exhibition spaces at the quay level. A wide stair between them leads up to an urban Piazza where café’s, shops and entrances to other functions find their place.

Visitors will be able to continue along the quay of the canal to the tip of the new development which allows a spectacular view out over the Fjord, but also back to the centre of Oslo.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The Roof

The roof is a curved surface which covers all three buildings to emphasize their interaction as a cultural destination and the architecture of the complex.

The design strongly identifies the project. Its curved shape, formed by laminated wood beams, crosses the canal between the buildings. The beams are supported by slender steel columns, reinforced with cable rigging, which refer to the maritime character of the site.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The roof geometrical shape is derived from a section of a toroid and it slopes down towards the sea. On Skjaeret, the roof almost touches ground in the Park, over a small water pond that prevents people to climb on the glass.

The roof surface is fully glazed and a ceramic fritting gives the glass the right solidness and the right transparency where needed. Some of the exhibition spaces, the museum lobby as well as the office atrium will receive daylight through the roof.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The edges of the roof extend generously outwards to reinforce the lightness of this glass plane and while obstructing daylight to a minimum, giving protection from rain and wind.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Exhibition Spaces

The project will have different kinds of exhibition spaces: visiting the museum will be a cultural journey going from one space to the other. This journey includes all three buildings on both sides of the canal and will bring the visitor through a series of 10 rooms, each with a different ceiling height, material and shape.

The exhibition spaces of the Art Museum on the north side of the canal will house the permanent contemporary art collection, which expands at ground level under the office building. This part is an open flexible space, extending under the Tjuvholmen Allee and the main stair between the quay level and the upper Piazza. In this area also educational activities of the museum will take place.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Site plan – click above for larger image

The building on Skjaeret, on the south side of the canal, will be for the temporary exhibition. The main exhibition space consists of two floors: one floor at ground level and one on the mezzanine, with natural light from a spectacular skylight in the roof. On the second floor a generous roof terrace will allow for the placement of sculptures outside. A small cafè is located next to the lobby and its terrace extends to Park and the beach.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Cross section – click above for larger image

Office Building

The office building along the Tjuvholmen Allee, has four floors and a mezzanine under the roof. A naturally lit atrium in the centre of the building connects the office floors. All floors will be rented to one tenant, which was very much involved the layout of the offices. The conference rooms as well as the common areas for the occupants are on the upper floors, taking best advance of the views and the terraces on these floors.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Long section – click above for larger image

Materials

The materials for the new buildings are few in order to emphasize the unity of the complex and are subdued to emphasize the roof as the most important architectural element.

The roof structure will be made of laminated wood beams, sometimes with steel elements, supported by steel columns. The glass of the roof has a dotted pattern, resulting in a light colour, a white ceramic frit that covers the whole surface reducing the transparency of the glass by 40%.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Elevation – click above for larger image

The facades have glazed areas on the ground floor where the public view is desired. The glazing is executed with low iron glass, as much as possible without coatings to enhance the transparency and to minimize the discoloration of the light into the exhibition spaces. The office glazing and less public facades may need coatings, with internal shades for glare control.

External sun shades on the facades, will make them more dynamic and will bring some color to the monochromatic wood facade.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Cross section detail – click above for larger image

The lobby to the temporary art space is completely glazed and allows the visual contact with the park and the sea, even from the Piazza on the Tjuvholmen Allee.

Naturally weathered timber was selected for the opaque parts of the façade (Aspen), which in a short time acquires a soft silver-grey color due to its exposure to the weather, The wood planks have a particular shape and the gaps between the planks increase where ventilation of the buildings is required.

Astrup Fearnley Museet by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Sectional perspective – click above for larger image

The use of wood as a material for structural elements, for the bridges, exterior paving and in the interiors, follows Scandinavian traditions. The use of wood is also a reference to the materials used for boats, while the slender steel elements in the bridges and the columns relate to the masts in the Oslo harbour, anchoring the building complex even more in its location.

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Renzo Piano Building Workshop
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Youth Centre by Cornelius + Vöge

This bright red youth centre in Denmark by architects Cornelius + Vöge is coloured to match the fishing cabins of the surrounding village (+ slideshow).

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

The architects renovated and extended an existing building, cladding the roof and every wall in red-painted panels of steel and timber.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

“The colour of the building is an important issue,” architect Dan Cornelius told Dezeen. “The traditional old fisherman’s cabins are one of the most characteristic elements of the village.”

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

The walls of the two-storey building turn inward at the junction between the original structure and the extension, lining the edge of an outdoor play area.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

A external staircase climbs down from the first floor to meet this play area, creating a space that the architects describe as a “small stage”.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

A double-height sports hall occupies one end of the building and features a protruding corner window where children can work or play in small groups.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

We’ve featured a few all-red buildings on Dezeen, including a psychiatric centre in Spain and a chocolate museum in BrazilSee all our stories about red buildings »

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

Photography is by Adam Mørk.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Youth Centre, Roskilde, DK, 2012

The project is a conversion and extension of an existing building. The main approach is to make a new interpretation of the red barn buildings and fishermen cabins of the old part of the village where the building is located. The extension to the old building starts where the building takes a turn making a more intimate feeling surrounding the outdoor play areas.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

The building is located between an old village and a seventies development, so in order to underline a regional identity to the building it was coloured all red. The red colour follows the tradition of the old fishermen cabins of the village. The roof has the same colour as the facades to make the shape of the building more precise and simple underlining the basic shape of the building.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

First floor plan – click above for larger image

The building is renovated into a low energy building, covered with new facade materials and reorganized into a more open, playful and modern building. New covered areas, balconies and stairs integrates more intimate corners and living areas both outside and inside.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

Section one – click for larger image

The surrounding green areas are more integrated and daylight optimised. The extension includes a flexible multi purpose hall for concerts, theatre, playing and sports activities including an integrated climbing wall.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

Section two – click above for larger image

Several façade elements breaks the basic shape of the building into a smaller scale: a stair functions as a small stage area, covered entrances and the corner window which cantilevers from the building and creates a more intimate living space for the children to sit in smaller groups – a private space being a part of the interior and exterior at the same time.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

End elevation one – click above for larger image

Type: Transformation, renovation
Team: E. Troelsgaard engineers
Area: 600 m2
Client: Roskilde Municipality

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

End elevation two – click above for larger image

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Cornelius + Vöge
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Zapata y Herrera lawyers’ office by Masquespacio

Spanish design studio Masquespacio have turned a dilapidated Valencia art gallery into an office for a law firm, featuring clusters of empty picture frames on the walls (+ slideshow).

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

The 100 square metre office has been divided into compact work areas with full-length glazed walls.

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

The original wooden ceiling beams were restored to complement the wood of the tables, counter and chair legs.

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

The overlapping wooden picture frames on the meeting room wall are “a metaphor of the diplomas usually displayed in a law firm,” the designers explained.

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

Thin strips of wood hanging vertically on the walls are partially painted in the company’s colours of grey and black, which are also picked up in the furniture around the office.

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

Other buildings in Valencia we’ve featured include a house with a glass facade that reveals what’s going on inside and a nursery with circular holes in its concrete walls.

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

We’ve featured lots of offices on Dezeen, most recently a Russian internet company with walls designed to look like pixels – see all of them here.

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

See all our stories about offices »
See all our stories about Valencia »
See all our stories about Spain »

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

Photographs are by David Rodríguez from Cualiti.

Here’s more information from the architects:


Masquespacio present their last project realised in an emblematic building from the end of the 19th century, situated in the historic centre of Valencia, Spain. The project designed for the law office Zapata y Herrera starts from his historic values to which are added the firm’s corporate values by the use of colours black, grey and natural wood tones.

At first the old beams have been restored, making them an essential element of the project. The noble wood is one of the protagonists of the office, not wanting to stand out, but in order to transmit confidence as one of the most important values of Zapata y Herrera. The grey colour takes over, symbolising stability and professionalism, while the powerful black transmits certain elegance and especially the seriousness with which the firm practices its profession.

Down the noble wooden entry stairs is standing out the combination of different sensations transmitted by the office. Some will call it elegant and sophisticated, while others call it sober and robust. Going further into the description of the lawyers’ office, on the left we can find the offices where the central element is a curtain of wood strips that repeats the colours of the firm’s values. The small space was maximised using L-shaped tables positioned above the storage lockers. The three pillars from the entry garden at their time are repeating the primary colours.

Zapata y Herrera lawyers' office by Masquespacio

Above: office plan

In front of the last offices and behind the reception we can find the interns’ area with a sense of green offered by a range of aloe vera plants matching with the Green chair from Javier Mariscal, 100% recycled and 100% recyclable

On the other way of the entrance we find the boardroom starring a bunch of frames proposing a metaphor of the diplomas usually exposed in a law firm. The oeuvre, as well as the wood strips curtains where created by Masquespacio’s creative director, Ana Milena Hernández Palacios. At last, alongside the boardroom is situated a lobby in which we can recognise the Float couch, the latest design from Karim Rashid for Spanish brand Sancal.

Masquespacio in this project didn’t want to fall into the usual clichés of a law firm, so they converted them into metaphors. The law office Zapata y Herrera can be considered as an example of a corporate space that transmits its values, giving more importance to the work of their employees highlighting their seriousness, professionalism and confidence, with a vanguardian look unusual for a law firm.

Finished: 22/09/2012
Space: 100 m2
Client: Zapata y Herrera
Address: Plaza San Nicolas 3, 46001 Valencia
Design: Masquespacio
Address: Paseo de la Alameda 65, 34 B, 46023 Valencia
Designer: Ana Milena Hernández Palacios
Graphic Design, oeuvre and interior design by Ana Milena Hernández Palacios
Materials:
Construction: José Manuel Paz Agra Construcciones
Visitor office chairs: De Vorm
Director chairs: Inclass
Couch and lobby tables: Sancal
Intern chairs: 114 Mobles
General lighting: Arkos Light
Reception lighting: Luzifer
Lobby and boardroom chairs: Hay
Storage lockers: BM2000
Floor: Rapidmix

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by Masquespacio
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