Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

Milan 2014: Venetian designer Luca Nichetto has reimagined a traditional Tyrolean chair for his latest collaboration with Casamania, debuting in Milan this week.

Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

Luca Nichetto‘s La-Dina is a contemporary reinterpretation of traditional wooden chairs from the Dolomite mountain range in west Austria and north-east Italy.

Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

Its name is a pun on Ladin – Ladina in Italian – the language spoken by the people who once built their settlements in the region.

Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

Luca Nichetto has simplified the form, using rounded lines and including a small upside-down triangular hole that punctures the back rest.

Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

The legs are fixed into the solid wood of the seat, which in turn is secured to the backrest using a clamping wedge.

Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

La-Dina is made from ash wood and is available in a range of colours.

Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

The design marks Casamania‘s 30th anniversary and the 10th anniversary of its collaboration with Nichetto.

Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

The brand is exhibiting at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile, Hall 16 Stand D39, in Milan until 13 April.

Casamania launches La-Dina chair by Luca Nichetto at Milan design week

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Curving concrete creates a tunnel through Tokyo house by Makiko Tsukada

A concrete tunnel slices through the base of this Tokyo house by Japanese architect Makiko Tsukada, creating a round hole in the facade that reveals the underside of a staircase (+ slideshow).

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

Makiko Tsukada designed Tunnel House for a site facing a T-junction, so her concept was to produce a form that appears as a continuation of the road. The result is a curving container that cuts through the entire ground floor.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

“Our design intention is to provide a visual extension of the street on the site so that it creates a virtual crossroads,” said Tsukada.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

The rest of the house is planned around the tunnel, creating a series of unusual features that include a floating steel floor, a dining table beneath a staircase, a triple-height courtyard and a bedroom without a ceiling.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

The architect categorises these spaces as uchi, which means “in the tunnel”, and soto, which means “out of the tunnel”.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

“One of the visitors’ comments was that ‘tunnel-uchi’ and ‘tunnel-soto’ betray one’s sense of space, as one feels like being outside while actually being inside the house,” she explained.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

A glazed wall exposes the full outline of the tunnel from the house’s entrance. Inside, the structure is revealed to be wrapping around a pair of lidless boxes that contain the main bedroom and bathroom.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

“From the bedroom box, one can see the view of the entire ‘tunnel-uchi’ space as if seeing an exterior view from a rooftop,” said Tsukada.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

Two double-height spaces behind the curving concrete accommodate a small study and a toilet. Glass doors lead out from spaces into the simple courtyard, which is sandwiched in between.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

A staircase leads up onto the top of the tunnel, which doubles as a mezzanine walkway. Residents can then access a guest bedroom and dining room, located on the suspended steel floor that provides the uppermost storey.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

The dining table sits over the stairwell and has a mirrored underside that creates upside-down reflections.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

Photography is by Shinkenchiku-sha.

Read on for a project description from Makiko Tsukada:


Tunnel House

The site is at the end of a T-junction. Our design intention is to provide a visual extension of the street on the site so that it creates a virtual cross road. The interior space and the exterior space are connected by carving out a part of the volume along the extended axis of the street. The tunnel-like configuration is intended to activate both “uchi” (in the tunnel) and “soto” (out of the tunnel) spaces.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

The open side of the quarter cylinder is enclosed by glass. The “tunnel-uchi” comprises two small boxes containing a bedroom and a bathroom respectively. The bedroom is enclosed by screen-like partitions and its ceiling is open. From the bedroom box, one can see the view of the entire “tunnel-uchi” space from there as if seeing an exterior view from a rooftop.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

The opening at the side of the tunnel is connected to the “tunnel-soto” space. “Tunnel-soto” space is an interior space where the light that is cascading down along the tunnel surface from the oblong top light and the light coming down from the courtyard intersect each other three-dimensionally.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

When going up the stairs, one can see the entire “tunnel-soto” space. From the gap of the floating steel floor, one can see the reflected image of “tunnel-soto” space on the mirrored surface on the rear side of the tabletop on the second floor. The floating steel floor and the super-thin 6mm thick table give the space a surreal atmosphere of floating and expansion, while creating a sharp contrast with the immense volume of the tunnel.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

One of the visitors’ comments was that “tunnel-uchi” space and “tunnel-soto” spaces betray one’s sense of space, as one feels like being outside while actually being inside the house. By experiencing repeated reversals of the interior and the exterior spaces (betrayed feelings), one probably can feel a sense of expansion and openness in this tunnel house.

Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada

Location: Suginami-ku, Tokyo
Structure: Reinforced Concrete and Steel
Principal Use: Residence, Office
Site Area: 82.39m2
Total Floor Area: 87.17m2 (43.65m2/1F, 43.52m2/2F)
Structural Engineer: Taizen Nieda and Taizo Komatsu

Ground floor plan of Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
First floor plan of Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada
First floor plan – click for larger image
Second floor of Tunnel House by Makiko Tsukada
Second floor plan – click for larger image

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Herzog & de Meuron wins contest for Danish forest hospital

News: Herzog & de Meuron has won a competition to design a hospital in a Danish forest, with plans for a building shaped like a four-leaf clover (+ slideshow).

New North Hospital by Herzog & de Meuron

Located north of Copenhagen in Hillerød, the New North Zealand Hospital will be Herzog & de Meuron‘s first project in Scandinavia and will be completed in collaboration with local firm Vilhelm Lauritzen Architects.

New North Hospital by Herzog & de Meuron

The building is conceived as a low-rise pavilion-like structure that never exceeds four storeys in height. A total of 24 medical departments will be housed inside and a large garden will be located on the roof.

New North Hospital by Herzog & de Meuron

Herzog & de Meuron says the structure will demonstrate that architectural ambition and functionality can be combined within a hospital.

“The choice of the jury is a seminal sign to architects and the entire health-care sector: low, flat hospital buildings can be better integrated in the city or the countryside than the high-rises structures that were often realised in the last decades,” said the studio.

New North Hospital by Herzog & de Meuron

“The hospital organically reaches out into the wide landscape. Simultaneously its soft, flowing form binds the many components of the hospital. It is a low building that fosters exchange between staff and patients, and it has a human scale despite its very large size.”

New North Hospital by Herzog & de Meuron

The building is scheduled to open in 2020, but could also facilitate an expansion in 2050.

New North Hospital by Herzog & de Meuron

“Herzog & de Meuron have designed a patient-centred hospital – a beautiful, healing and functional building that supports our patients’ recovery in the best possible way,” said hospital director Bente Ourø Rørth. “The hospital’s great strength is its highly successful and fundamental fusion of form and function.”

New North Hospital by Herzog & de Meuron

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Coop Himmelb(l)au’s House of Music invites orchestras to Aalborg

Austrian firm Coop Himmelb(l)au has completed a major new concert venue and music school in the Danish city of Aalborg, which claims to be “one of the quietest spaces for symphonic music in Europe” (+ slideshow).

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

Located on the edge of the Limfjord – the body of water that bounds the city – the House of Music was designed by Coop Himmelb(l)au as a cultural hub that accommodates both a 1300-seat performance venue and a music college.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

The architect worked closely with an acoustic consultant to develop a curvaceous auditorium that will offer exemplary acoustics. This is encased within a U-shaped volume that contains the classrooms and rehearsal areas of the school.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

“The idea behind the building can already be read from the outer shape. The school embraces the concert hall,” said Coop Himmelb(l)au principal Wolf D. Prix.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

Externally, the building’s facade is a composition of boxy volumes, undulating roof canopies, circular windows and latticed walls of glazing.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

According to Prix the design is intended to represent the unity between music and architecture: “Music is the art of striking a chord in people directly. Like the body of musical instruments this architecture serves as a resonance body for the creativity in the House of Music.”

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

Visitors enter through a five-storey-high atrium with a concrete staircase winding up through its centre. This provides access to different levels of the auditorium, but also leads to an observation area facing out over the fjord.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

Windows within the interior offer glimpsed views into the auditorium from the surrounding spaces. There are also three smaller performance spaces located underneath the foyer.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

Water-filled pipes run through the concrete floor slab to provide heating in winter and help keep the building cool in summer. This will be controlled as part of an intelligent building management system.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

The House of Music opened with a thirteen-day extravaganza of concerts, performances, film and fireworks.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

Scroll down for the project description from Coop Himmelb(l)au:


House of Music as a creative centre for Aalborg

After four years of construction, the “House of Music” in Aalborg, Denmark was ceremoniously opened on March 29, 2014 by the Danish Queen Margrethe II.

This cultural centre was designed by the Viennese architectural studio Coop Himmelb(l)au as a combined school and concert hall: its open structure promotes the exchange between the audience and artists, and the students and teachers.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

U-shaped rehearsal and training rooms are arranged around the core of the ensemble, a concert hall for about 1,300 visitors. A generous foyer connects these spaces and opens out with a multi-storey window area onto an adjacent cultural space and a fjord. Under the foyer, three more rooms of various sizes complement the space: the intimate hall, the rhythmic hall, and the classic hall. Through multiple observation windows, students and visitors can look into the concert hall from the foyer and the practice rooms and experience the musical events, including concerts and rehearsals.

Coop Himmelb(l)au's House of Music concert hall in Aalborg, Denmark

The concert hall

The flowing shapes and curves of the auditorium inside stand in contrast to the strict, cubic outer shape. The seats in the orchestra and curved balconies are arranged in such a way that offers the best possible acoustics and views of the stage. The highly complex acoustic concept was developed in collaboration with Tateo Nakajima at Arup. The design of the amorphous plaster structures on the walls and the height-adjustable ceiling suspensions, based on the exact calculations of the specialist in acoustics, ensures for the optimal listening experience. The concert hall will be one of the quietest spaces for symphonic music in Europe, with a noise-level reduction of NR10 (GK10). Thanks to its architectural and acoustic quality, the concert hall is already well-booked: there will be concerts featuring the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra with violin soloist Arabella Steinbacher and the Danish National Radio Orchestra with soprano Mojca Erdmann in April.

Site plan of Coop Himmelblaus House of Music invites orchestras to Aalborg
Site plan – click for larger image

The foyer

The foyer serves as a meeting place for students, artists, teachers, and visitors. Five stories high with stairs, observation balconies, and large windows with views of the fjord, it is a lively, dynamic space that can be used for a wide variety of activities.

Ground floor plan of Coop Himmelblaus House of Music invites orchestras to Aalborg
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The energy concept

Instead of fans, the foyer uses the natural thermal buoyancy in the large vertical space for ventilation. Water-filled hypocaust pipes in the concrete floor slab are used for cooling in summer and heating in winter. The concrete walls around the concert hall act as an additional storage capacity for thermal energy. The fjord is also used for cost-free cooling.

First floor plan of Coop Himmelblaus House of Music invites orchestras to Aalborg
First floor plan – click for larger image

The piping and air vents are equipped with highly efficient rotating heat exchangers. Very efficient ventilation systems with low air velocities are attached under the seats in the concert hall. Air is extracted through a ceiling grid above the lighting system so that any heat produced does not cause a rise in the temperature in the room.

Second floor plan of Coop Himmelblaus House of Music invites orchestras to Aalborg
Second floor plan – click for larger image

The building is equipped with a building management program that controls the equipment in the building and ensures that no system is active when there is no need for it. In this way, energy consumption is minimised.

Third floor plan of Coop Himmelblaus House of Music invites orchestras to Aalborg
Third floor plan – click for larger image

Planning: Coop Himmelb(l)au, Wolf D. Prix & Partner ZT GmbH
Design Principal/ CEO: Wolf D. Prix
Project Partner: Michael Volk
Design Architect: Luzie Giencke
Project Architect: Marcelo Bernardi, Pete Rose
Design Architect Interior: Eva Wolf

Fourth floor plan of Coop Himmelblaus House of Music invites orchestras to Aalborg
Fourth floor plan – click for larger image

Local Architects: Friis & Moltke, Aalborg, Denmark
Acoustics, Audio-Visual & Theatre Design and Planning Consultant: Arup, New York, USA
Landscape Architect: Jeppe Aagaard Andersen, Helsingør, Denmark
Structural Engineering: Rambøll, Aalborg, Denmark;
B+G Ingenieure, Bollinger und Grohmann GmbH, Frankfurt, Germany
Mechanical, Electrical and Fire Engineering: Nirás, Aalborg, Denmark
Cost consultant: Davis Langdon LLP, London, UK
Lighting Design Consultant: Har Hollands, Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Interior Design Consultant: Eichinger Offices, Vienna, Austria

Section of Coop Himmelblaus House of Music invites orchestras to Aalborg
Section – click for larger image

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Kvadrat’s Divina fabric interpreted by 22 contemporary designers

Milan 2014: Werner Aisslinger, Martino Gampa and Robert Stadler are among 22 contemporary designers that have interpreted Danish textile brand Kvadrat‘s Divina fabric for a show in Milan this week (+ slideshow).

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Layers Cloud Chair by Richard Hutten

Known for its wide-ranging palette of colours, Kvadrat‘s felt-like fabric was originally created by Danish painter and graphic artist Finn Sködt in 1984.

“We didn’t choose the name for nothing, we used it because it gave some inspiration as to which colours we could put into the scheme,” said Sködt. “Every colour is divine if you ask me, every colour is nice. It’s only a question of using them right or wrong.”

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Lasagne by Philippe Nigro

The designers were invited to create their own one-off piece using the fabric, which comes in 56 colours. “Divina is so intense that it is almost like paint, or something that has been sprayed onto a surface,” said Anders Byriel, CEO of Kvadrat. “You could not have a colour that is more vivid or clearer than this.”

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Nesting Hexagons by Werner Aisslinger

German designer Werner Aisslinger‘s Nesting Hexagons reference Joe Colombo’s 1969 Tube chair, a piece comprising hollow cylinder modules fixed together in different formations, which can be dismantled and used separately like cushions.

Here, Aisslinger uses the hexagon shape as a basis to create a piece designed for lounging, which can then be stored by slotting each hexagon inside of each other. “Our concept came from the idea of a picnic, with a blanket in the grass and pillows around,” said Aisslinger. “The hexagons are ideal for lolling around or relaxing on the ground, both indoors and outdoors.”

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Afternoon Nap by Martino Gamper

Working between art and design, London-based Martino Gamper has created Afternoon Nap, his second project with Divina, which features upholstered solid geometric volumes in various coloured triangulations of the fabric.

“For me, this simple shape, mixed with the complex and colourful fabric, creates a landscape where I could imagine having an afternoon nap,” said Gamper.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Pli Bleu, Pli Violet by Robert Stadler

Austrian designer Robert Stadler‘s interpretation entitled Pli Bleu and Pli Violet uses two very similar shades of blue, emphasised by the folds in the piece. “My intention was to show the quality of the textile in the most pure and direct way possible,” said Stadler. “The two pleated monochromes catch the ambient light in a subtle way.”

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Divina Chandelier by Lindsey Adelman

New York designer Lindsey Adelman has created a chandelier comprised of thin brightly coloured strips of the Divina fabric layered on top of one another while London designer Max Lamb has designed a series of oversized smocks.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Smock by Max Lamb

Richard Hutten’s Layers Cloud chair is made from 545 layers of the textile shaped in clusters of spheres. The fabric also hangs taut from pegs to create the triangular-shaped Divina Hangers by Klemens Schillinger. Francois Dumas’ Knapsack sofa fixes together horizontal lengths upholstered in a range of Divina’s colours.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Divina Hangers by Klemens Schillinger

Other designers to interpret the Divina fabric include Philippe Nigro, Peter Marigold, Bethan Laura Wood, Big-Game, Jerszy Seymour and Anton Alvarez.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Knapsack by Francois Dumas

The Divina exhibition will take place at Arcade, Via San Gregorio 43 in Milan from 9-13 April.

Photography is by Casper Sejersen.

Here’s some information from Kvadrat:


A special exhibition showcasing 22 contemporary interpretations of Divina by international designers

‘We didn’t choose the name for nothing – we used it because it gave some inspiration as to which colours we could put into the scheme. Every colour is divine, if you ask me – every colour is nice. It’s only a question of using them right or wrong.’ Finn Sködt.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Thread Wrapping Architecture by Anton Alvarez

In celebration of Divina, one of its most iconic textiles, Kvadrat has invited 22 international designers to reinterpret the fabric in the context of contemporary design and to create a one-of-a-kind piece. The exhibition will be presented in Milan during the Salone Internazionale del Mobile, 8 – 13 April 2014.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
East-West Fan by Jonas Merian

Divina is known for its extraordinary range of colours, first created in 1984 by the Danish painter and graphic artist Finn Sködt and regularly updated by him ever since. It is a full-cloth textile with a smooth, directionless and uniform surface, very similar to the properties of felt.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Bagpacker by Silvia Knüppel

Divina translates as ‘heavenly,’ or ‘divine,’ and the name has been chosen because of the way colours can be expressed in the material. It is one of the finest products in Kvadrat’s range for showing-off colours in all their glory. The textile comes in three different variations: Divina (56 colours), Divina Melange (25 colours) and Divina MD (27 colours).

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Guadalupe Daybed by Bethan Laura Wood

Finn Sködt, now 70, still continues his practice from his studio in Denmark; he is most noted for his instinctive understanding of colour. Sködt first worked with Kvadrat in the 1970s on their visual identity, soon after the company was founded, and later designed patterns and colour ranges for textiles such as Divina.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Daybed by Muller van Severen

Designers and Curators

Designers selected for the Divina exhibition include Lindsey Adelman, Werner Aisslinger, Anton Alvarez, Big-Game, Duangrit Bunnag, Gonçalo Campos, Jonas’ Design, François Dumas, Martino Gamper, Graphic Thought Facility, Richard Hutten, Silvia Knüppel, Max Lamb, Peter Marigold, Studio Minale-Maeda, Philippe Nigro, Klemens Schillinger, Muller Van Severen, Jerszy Seymour, Robert Stadler, Katharina Wahl and Bethan Laura Wood.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Divina Calendar by Graphic Thought Facility

Curators include Njusja de Gier, Richard Hsu, Hans Maier-Aichen, Yves Marbrier and Constance Rubini. Kvadrat celebrates Divina during Salone Internazionale del Mobile, Milan 2014.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Stripe Daybed by Big-Game

‘We are delighted to be celebrating our iconic Divina textile coloured by Finn Sködt, a great friend and collaborator who has lent his painterly eye to Kvadrat since our early days in the 1970s. Over 30 years Divina has continued to be one of our most successful textiles, with a texture that lends itself to an intense and vibrant representation of colour. It is exciting to see the interpretations of this diverse group of contemporary designers and to pay tribute to Divina’s incredible range.’ Anders Byriel, CEO of Kvadrat.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Garlands by Studio Minale-Maeda

The Divina exhibition follows on from the success of the Hallingdal 65 exhibition in Milan in 2012, inspired by one of the company’s first and most popular textiles, designed in 1965 by Nanna Ditzel. A special book with an essay by Hettie Judah and edited by Henrietta Thompson will accompany the exhibition.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Obese Door, Voluptuous Door by Katharina Wahl

In addition to celebrating Divina a new collection of knitted fabrics by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec will be launched in Kvadrat’s Milan showroom. The company’s sister brand, Danskina will showcase a new collection of rugs created under its newly appointed Design Director Hella Jongerius; Kinnasand will open a new Milan showroom designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Toyo Ito; and the launch of Kvadrat’s new textile collection with Raf Simons (Creative Director, Dior) will be celebrated with the Italian retailer Spotti.

Kvadrat's Divina fabric to be reinterpreted by 22 designers
Meeting a lot, meeting a little by Goncalo Campos

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David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition

News: “An architecture challenge doesn’t come much better than this,” says David Chipperfield, who has been named winner in the competition to design a new home for the Nobel Prize in Stockholm (+ slideshow).

David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition

David Chipperfield Architects saw off competition from Swedish studios Wingårdh and Johan Celsing Arkitektkontor to land the prestigious commission to create the Nobel Center – an exhibition centre and events venue for the award that recognises advances in science and culture.

David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition

“I think all projects are important but this project has enormous meaning, not just for the city of Stockholm but internationally. An architecture challenge doesn’t come much better than this,” said Chipperfield.

David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition

The architect’s vision is for a shimmering brass-clad building on the waterfront. It will be fully glazed on the ground floor, opening out to a new city park on the sunny south-eastern side of the site.

David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition

“The jury finds the lightness and openness of the building very appealing and consistent with the Nobel Foundation’s explicit ambition to create an open and welcoming centre for the general public,” said Nobel Foundation executive director Lars Heikensten, who was a member of the judging panel.

David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition

“We view the winning proposal as a concrete interpretation of the Nobel Prize as Sweden’s most important symbol in the world. Stockholm will gain a building – magnificent but without pomp, powerful yet graceful – with qualities like those the City Hall gave the capital a century ago.”

David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition

Fellow jury member Per Wästberg added: “We view the winning proposal as a concrete interpretation of the Nobel Prize as Sweden’s most important symbol in the world. Stockholm will gain a building – magnificent but without pomp, powerful yet graceful – with qualities like those the City Hall gave the capital a century ago.”

David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition

As well as hosting the annual award ceremony each December, the building will provide a public centre for exhibitions, educational activities, events and meetings.

David Chipperfield triumphs in Nobel Center competition
Proposed site plan

“It can be spectacular on its greatest night, but also it can be very useful and functional and working the rest of the year,” said Chipperfield.

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Community library in China turns a roof into a playground

Children can clamber onto the curved roof of this community library in China, which architects John Lin and Olivier Ottevaere designed for an earthquake-damaged village in Yunnan Province (+ slideshow)

THE PINCH by John Lin

Ottevaere and Lin led a team from the University of Hong Kong to design The Pinch, a library and community centre built as part of a government reconstruction following the 2012 Yunnan earthquakes.

THE PINCH by John Lin

Situated in the mountain village of Shuanghe in south-west China, the library and surrounding plaza offers a meeting place for local residents, as well as a space where children can play and read.

THE PINCH by John Lin

“Villages in China often prioritise building houses over community spaces and community programs, even though it is an important aspect of village life,” Lin told Dezeen.

THE PINCH by John Lin

“Although the government provided an open plaza for the reconstruction, we wanted to help introduce a program which would activate the site. By adding the library, we have created an important public and communal facility in the village,” he explained.

THE PINCH by John Lin

The library features a twisted shape that bends out to meet an elevated stretch of pavement, allowing visitors to walk over the roof and look out towards a new basketball court.

THE PINCH by John Lin

Inside, rows of books sit on shelves made from interlocking timber frames, which are suspended from the ceiling and hover just above the floor.

THE PINCH by John Lin

Simple school benches offer flexible seating, while polycarbonate plastic doors and windows front the building.

THE PINCH by John Lin

The project was part-funded by the University of Hong Kong. Forming part of a knowledge exchange project, the design team worked with a local timber company to learn about native wood and regional construction techniques.

THE PINCH by John Lin

Here’s a project description from the design team:


The Pinch: library and community centre

The Pinch is a library and community centre in Shuanghe Village, Yunnan Province, China. The project is part of a government-led reconstruction effort after an earthquake in Sept 2012. The majority of village houses were destroyed, leaving the residents living in tents for up to one year. After the earthquake the government has sponsored new concrete and brick houses and a large central plaza. During the first site visit, the houses remained incomplete and the plaza was a large empty site.

THE PINCH by John Lin

The University of Hong Kong decided to sponsor the design and implementation of a new library building. Located in the new but empty public plaza, it would serve to activate the community and provide a physical memorial for the event. The site of the library is against a 4 meter high retaining wall. The design spans across this level difference and acts as a bridge between the rebuilt village and the new memorial plaza. Emphasising its location in a remote mountain valley, the design responds visually to the space of the valley, offering stunning views across a dramatic double curved roof. The structure itself rises to a peak, a monument to the earthquake and rebuilding effort.

THE PINCH by John Lin

As a Knowledge Exchange Project, the construction involves collaboration with a local timber manufacturing factory. The process resulted in the development of a surprisingly diverse form through simple means. A series of trusses is anchored between the upper road level and lower plaza level.

THE PINCH by John Lin

The form of each truss changes to create both a gradual incline (to bring people down) and then a sharp upward pitch (to elevate the roof). The trusses were covered in an aluminium waterproofing layer and timber decking. On the interior, the trusses extend downward to support a floating bookshelf. Simple traditional school benches are used as chairs. The polycarbonate doors can open to create a completely open space extending out to the plaza.

THE PINCH by John Lin

Rather than submitting to the abandonment of wood construction (as with the houses after the earthquake), the project reasserts the ability to build contemporary timber structures in remote areas of China.

THE PINCH by John Lin
Construction diagram

Location: Shuanghe Village, Yunnan Province, China
Design: Olivier Ottevaere and John Lin / The University of Hong Kong
Construction: Kunming Dianmuju Shangmao Company
Funding: Supported by the Knowledge Exchange Impact Award, HKU
Project Team: Crystal Kwan (Project Manager), Ashley Hinchcliffe, Connie Cheng, Johnny Cullinan, Jacky Huang
Size: 80 sqm
Cost: 130,000 rmb
Unit Cost: 1600 rmb/sqm

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MAPA’s XAN House in Brazil combines raw concrete with slatted timber

An austere concrete wall screens the transparent lower floor of this house in southern Brazil, while the overhanging upper storey is masked behind a layer of timber slats (photos by Leonardo Finotti + slideshow).

XAN House by MAPA

Designed by MAPA, an architecture collective based in Brazil and Uruguay, XAN House is a summer residence located near the beach in Xangrilá, a small town south of Porto Alegre.

XAN House by MAPA

The ground floor is dedicated to the family’s communal activities while the upstairs level contains bedrooms, and the architects chose to highlight this difference through the use of different external materials.

XAN House by MAPA

A single-storey concrete wall stretches across the site, from the north-west to the south-east, screening the ground floor from the street. Behind it, the rest of the walls feature floor-to-ceiling glazing that allows residents to open their living spaces out to the landscape.

XAN House by MAPA

“A summer house is a space full of freedom, a place to enjoy an outdoor life,” said the architect. “This fact conditioned the way the project was faced.”

XAN House by MAPA

The positioning of furniture divides the space up into different zones for cooking, dining, reading and relaxing. The ceiling overhead is exposed concrete, while the floor is covered with tiles that continue outside the walls.

XAN House by MAPA

Upstairs, large balconies extend the length of the floor, creating overhangs that shelter both the front entrance and a rear patio. One balcony belongs to the master bedroom and en suite, while the other sits alongside two smaller bedrooms.

XAN House by MAPA

Both balconies and rooms are surrounded by the timber screen, but sections of it fold open to reveal windows.

XAN House by MAPA
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

“Visual filters in the expansion spaces next to bedrooms allow open-air experiences of another nature,” added the architect.

XAN House by MAPA
First floor plan – click for larger image

Photography is by Leonardo Finotti.

XAN House by MAPA
Section – click for larger image

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Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam’s Kraaiennest metro station

Laser-cut stainless steel creates an intricately patterned surface on the walls of this upgraded metro station in Amsterdam by architecture firm Maccreanor Lavington (+ slideshow).

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

Maccreanor Lavington‘s Rotterdam studio overhauled the 1970s Kraaiennest station in the Bijlmermeer neighbourhood of Amsterdam, increasing its capacity and modernising its facilities.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

The decorative steel screens surround the new ground-level entrance, allowing natural light to filter inside during the day. After dark, lights glowing from within transform the structure into a glowing beacon that makes it easy for locals to find.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

“At night time the design allows the station to be a lantern for the local neighbourhood,” said the architect in a statement.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

As well as the laser-cut panels surrounding the base of the station, the opaque upper walls are also made from stainless steel. The architect says this material will age well and need little maintenance.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

Unlike the old station, which only offered stairs, the new facility incorporates a series of escalators to transport passengers up to the platform. This will help it offer regular transport to around 100,000 local residents.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

The upgraded Kraaiennest station is the latest in a series of infrastructure improvements underway in the 1960s neighbourhood. It follows the 2008 completion of Grimshaw’s Bijlmer Station, which was shortlisted for the RIBA Stirling Prize.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

Photography is Luuk Kramer.

Here’s a project description from Maccreanor Lavington:


New €14 million Metro Station completed in Amsterdam

London and Rotterdam based architecture firm, Maccreanor Lavington has completed a major new metro station in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

The new 550m² station and 1,880m² platform in the neighbourhood of Bijlmermeer started on site in 2010 and sits on the site of the original station, built in 1970.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station

The metro station features a ground level entrance with new escalators to take passengers up to the platforms, a major improvement for citizens as the old station only had stairs. The ground level entrance provides the main focal point of the station with an elegant stainless steel facade with a floral design. The laser cut design allows plenty of natural light to flow through the entrance, helping the passenger journey to seamlessly flow from the external surroundings into the station.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station
Site plan – click for larger image

At night time the design allows the station to be a lantern for the local neighbourhood, creating a sense of warmth on street level and creating an instantly recognisable feature for the station. The architects’ chose stainless steel for the external facade due to its durability and low maintenance enabling the station not to need constant upkeep.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station
Station plan – click for larger image

Since the beginning of the late 1990s the area has seen massive investment transforming it from its previous negative public opinion and now making it a thriving suburb of Amsterdam.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station
Sections – click for larger image

Now completed, the station will be in use by over 100,000 residents in Bijlmermeer, a vast increase on the number of users from when the station first opened and completes one of the biggest urban regeneration projects in Europe in recent history.

Maccreanor Lavington overhauls Amsterdam's Kraaiennest metro station
Section and elevation combined – click for larger image

Architects: Maccreanor Lavington Architects
Contractor: Strukton Bouw
Client: Dienst infrastructuur Verkeer Vervoer, GVB, Stadsdeel Zuidoost
Interiors: Maccreanor Lavington
Structural engineer: Ingenieursbureau Amsterdam
M&E engineer: Arcadis
Lighting Consultant: Sjoerd van Beers, Beersnielsen

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Kraaiennest metro station
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Sarah Lucas uses concrete breeze blocks to create first furniture range

Milan 2014: British artist Sarah Lucas presents her debut furniture collection, made from concrete blocks and MDF, in Milan tonight (+ slideshow).

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

The 14 limited-edition pieces have been created for the Sadie Coles gallery in London in collaboration with the London Art Workshop.

The range includes tables, chairs, benches, a desk, and a free-standing partition wall made from materials previously used as plinths and platforms to display Lucas’ artwork. Each piece is numbered, stamped and signed by the artist.

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

The concrete breeze blocks used in the pieces are identically sized and have been embedded horizontally or vertically into the pale wooden frames, creating a grid-like appearance.

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

Lucas said she used the materials because they are “meaningful in terms of their uses in the outside world. They say a lot and are also low key, they don’t overwhelm the sculptures.”

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

The rough concrete and the smooth but sharp-edged MDF are in stark contrast to one another. Lucas said the result was “surprisingly stylish” and the texture and colour “both seem very real'”.

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

The largest piece in the collection is the freestanding partition wall, a structure made from 10 by 10 concrete blocks that have been set in a uniform grid.

The smallest is a table made of just one block that can slide in and out of its frame.

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

Other pieces include a bench and chair, both of which Lucas intended as stand-alone pieces for a gallery.

The bench is made of 16 blocks set vertically in the MDF frame. It uses blocks for both the back and the seat and can seat four people. The chair consists of eight blocks set horizontally into the MDF.

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

The collection will be shown in a private view from 17.00 – 20.00 today at Via San Gregorio 43 / Via Casati 32
20124 Milano.

Here’s some more information about the collection:


Sadie Coles HQ presents Sarah Lucas Furniture

From 8th to 12th April 2014, Sadie Coles HQ presents 14 limited edition, numbered, stamped and signed new furniture designs by the British artist Sarah Lucas, on display at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile di Milano. These limited editions – each numbered, stamped and signed – mark a dramatic new development in Lucas’s practice. Materials that previously acted as plinths and platforms for her artworks have been reconfigured into stand-alone pieces including tables, chairs, benches, a desk, and a freestanding partition wall.

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

Produced in collaboration with specialist fabricators the London Art Workshop, Sarah Lucas Furniture (2013) comprises mass-produced, basic construction materials – concrete breeze blocks and MDF – that have pervaded Lucas’ art for several years. For each of the pieces, identically sized and exactingly arranged breeze blocks have been embedded into hard edged, minimalist MDF frameworks, creating a brutalist kind of inlay or ‘intarsia’, the antique practice of setting wood or stone within a surface.

Lucas describes the concrete and MDF materials as “surprisingly stylish”, pinpointing their appeal through their “texture, colour – both of which seem very ‘real'”. To Lucas, using these versatile materials is “meaningful in terms of their uses in the outside world. They say a lot and are also low key, they don’t overwhelm the sculptures.”

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

In Lucas’ furniture, concrete fulfils both a functional and aesthetic role, serving as durable readymade building blocks while investing the furniture with a uniform utilitarian appearance. Indeed the grid-like appearance of the breeze blocks in the objects call to mind the modular compositions of Minimalist artists such as Donald Judd and Carl Andre.

This can be witnessed especially in the monumentalism of the free standing wall from the series. Certain of the works have been specifically designed by Lucas as gallery furniture – as seats to be placed within a larger exhibition of the artist’s work.

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

Sarah Lucas Furniture also echoes the artist’s long-term use of furniture as anthropomorphic sculptural apparatus. Chairs especially have often featured in sculptures as stand-ins for the human body. In the series, Bunny (1997 – onwards), the chair was a key component of the work – stuffed tights clamped to chair legs implied splayed legs in an ambiguous expression of either sexual availability or vulnerability. One implication of this new body of work is that real human bodies have assumed the place, or status, of sculptures.

Sarah Lucas furniture for Sadie Coles HQ

Overt and often comic literalism has long been a hallmark of Lucas’ work, above all in her use of found real-life objects such as toilets, cigarettes and furniture. That literalist quality is extended in these functioning pieces: their radical blurring of art and life recalls earlier conflations of sculpture and useable furniture by artists such as Franz West, with whom Lucas collaborated on several occasions, and the American artist Scott Burton.

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to create first furniture range
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