Movie: Tadao Ando’s art and design school for University of Monterrey

This movie by Mexican film agency Nation tours the school of art, design and architecture that Japanese architect Tadao Ando completed last year at the University of Monterrey in Mexico.

The Centro Roberto Garza Sada, also known as the Gate of Creation, is a chunky concrete block designed by Tadao Ando with triangular slices across its two sides to create the appearance of a twisted structure.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

Rectangular voids at each end expose stairwells and an open-air amphitheatre, while entrances are located beneath the shelter of the building’s raised underside.

The six-storey interior is organised so that each floor accommodates different departments, encompassing digital facilities, visual arts, textiles, photography, model-making and fashion. Overall, the building accommodates studios and teaching rooms for 300 students.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

See more photographs of the Centro Roberto Garza Sada in an earlier story on Dezeen.

Photography is by Roberto Ortiz. Movie is by Nation.

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for University of Monterrey
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The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

Japanese architect Tadao Ando has added an auditorium with a curving concrete interior to the Palazzo Grassi – a contemporary arts centre inside an eighteenth-century palace in Venice (+ slideshow).

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

The Teatrino is the third phase of Tadao Ando’s renovation of the Palazzo Grassi, which is now owned by luxury goods tycoon François Pinault. After converting both the main building and the accompanying Punta della Dogana into contemporary art galleries, Ando added this extra building as a venue for conferences and performances.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

Curving concrete walls separate the 220-seat auditorium from reception areas, dressing rooms and storage areas, providing a blank canvas for hanging artwork or film projection.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

Lighting fixtures are tucked around the edges of a suspended ceiling in the main lobby, while triangular skylights offer a source of daylight.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

The Teatrino occupies a space that once served as the palace’s garden. More recently it had functioned as a theatre, but has been closed to the public since 1983.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

Only the facade of the original building remains, with the new structure erected behind.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

Another designer to have worked on spaces at the Palazzo Grassi is Philippe Starck, who completed the adjacent Palazzina Grassi hotel in 2010. See more stories about Venice »

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

Other recent projects by Tadao Ando include a school of art, design and architecture at the University of Monterrey in Mexico. See more architecture by Tadao Ando »

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

Photography is by Orsenigo Chemollo.

Here’s a project description from the design team:


The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi

The François Pinault Foundation is strengthening its implementation within the artistic and cultural life of Venice. A new site, created for conferences, meetings, projections, concerts, etc., will be added to the ensemble of Palazzo Grassi-Punta della Dogana-François Pinault Foundation: the Teatrino, which will open its doors to the public in June 2013.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

After the restoration of Palazzo Grassi in 2006, followed by that of Punta della Dogana, inaugurated in 2009, the rehabilitation of the Teatrino in 2013 constitutes the third step of François Pinault’s broad cultural project for Venice. Conceived and conducted by Tadao Ando in close collaboration with the Municipality of Venice and the competent authorities and services (including the Superintendent of Architectural Assets and Landscapes of Venice), this restoration will maintain the spirit of architectural continuity of the preceding renovations. Work will begin in summer 2012 and last ten months.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando

Spread over a surface of 1,000 square meters, the Teatrino will be equipped with an auditorium of 220 seats, completed by reception areas and spaces for technical equipment (boxes, equipment for stage management and simultaneous translation, etc.). Thus, it will provide Palazzo Grassi-Punta della Dogana-François Pinault Foundation with optimal technical conditions (including acoustics) in a comfortable setting, in order to develop more fully the cultural dimension of its activities: meetings, conferences, workshops, lectures, concerts, performances, research, … with an emphasis on the moving image (cinema, artist, films, video, video installations, …). It will also reinforce the Foundation’s role as a forum of exchange, meeting, and openness towards the city.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando
Construction photography

Located on the Calle delle Carrozze, alongside Palazzo Grassi, the Teatrino was conceived in 1857 to serve as the palace’s garden. A century later, it was transformed into an open-air theatre, which was renovated and covered in 1961. It was abandoned in 1983 and has been closed to the public ever since.

The Teatrino of Palazzo Grassi by Tadao Ando
Construction photography

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by Tadao Ando
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Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

This bulky concrete school of art, design and architecture was completed by Japanese architect Tadao Ando at the University of Monterrey in Mexico and is one of over 300 projects being showcased this week for the World Architecture Festival in Singapore (+ slideshow).

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

Housing studios and teaching rooms for over 300 students, the Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño was designed by Tadao Ando as a six-storey concrete block with a huge triangular void at its centre.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

This void exposes the underside of the building, creating the appearance of a twisted structure, and creates a large sheltered entrance for staff, students and visitors below.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

Additional openings elsewhere around the building provide outdoor corridors and meeting areas, as well as an open-air amphitheatre.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

The six storeys of the building accommodate different creative disciplines. Digital facilities occupy the first two floors, while visual arts can be found on the second floor. Textiles and photography share the third floor, model-making workshops are grouped together on the fourth floor and the top storey is home to the fashion department.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

The building was completed earlier this year. It was nominated in the Higher Education and Research award category at the World Architecture Festival and received a commendation from the judges earlier today. Follow Dezeen’s coverage of WAF 2013 »

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

Japanese architect Tadao Ando is best known for projects that combine raw concrete with slices of light, such as Church of the Light (1989) and Row House (1976). Other recent projects by the architect include a concrete house on the edge of a cliff in Sri Lanka and the Issey Miyake Foundation research centre in Tokyo. See more architecture by Tadao Ando »

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

See more university buildings »
See more architecture in Mexico »

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

Photography is by Roberto Ortiz.

Here’s a project description from the design team:


Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño

Roberto Garza Sada Center for Arts, Architecture and Design (CRGS) is a 6 storey building with height of 5.4 metres between each level. Built in an area of 20,700 square metres. The building has a modulation of supports (columns) arranged in a grid of 9 metres per side, having 3 modules in the short side and 11 in the long one.

The main support structure is based on 4 frames in the long direction, spaced 9 metres one from another, and describing free spaces of about 80 to 65 metres. The main frames are stabilised trough a secondary structure which allows it to have the required stiffness to be structurally stable.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

The structural concept is based on the principle of composite action, that is, elements of structural steel-lined concrete and united so that both receive and transmit efforts jointly (the concrete is not only architectural but structural).

The finishes of the building are:
» Granite floors or concrete polishing, epoxy-coated
» Apparent concrete walls, plaster, drywall or resin panel
» Ceiling drywall or prefabricated resin panel

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

Additionally it has windows of aluminium (profiles with thermal break) and insulated glasses with a low-e face are included in areas of direct exposure to the sun’s rays. The windows system is reinforced by a system of automated blinds and linked to the lighting control system for a more efficient system. Architectural design concentrates most of the windows in three main holes that come from the rooftop to the floors below that allow the natural lighting and ventilation of the building.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

The VRV air conditioning system provides high efficiency in electricity consumption for the divided spaces configuration of the building. Lamps are high efficiency and with electronic ballast that is linked to an intelligent system that detects heat, motion and daylight by sensors strategically located through the building. The system regulate the environment of each space providing the lighting required for the development of activities, while they save energy by allowing most of the lighting to be natural.

Centro Roberto Garza Sada de Arte Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando

Electric and voice-data systems feature the best technology, in order to provide users with the most suitable conditions for the performance of academic functions in each space of the building.

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Arquitectura y Diseño by Tadao Ando
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“World’s tallest tower ‘Sky Tree’ opens in Tokyo” – The Independent


Dezeen Wire:
 the world’s tallest broadcast tower designed by Japanese architect Tadao Ando opened to the public for the first time today in Tokyo – The Independent

The 634-metre-high structure, named the Sky Tree, overtakes the Canton Tower in China, which is 34 metres shorter.

The world’s tallest building (which comes under a different category in the Guinness World Records) is currently the 828-metre-high Burj Khalifa in Dubai, although a skyscraper of over 1000 metres is set to overtake it in Jeddah.

See more stories about skyscrapers here.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando photographed by Edmund Sumner

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Japanese architect Tadao Ando has completed a concrete house on the edge of a cliff in southern Sri Lanka, writes Yuki Sumner.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Designed for a married couple, the three-storey house incorporates a glazed study for the husband and an artist’s studio for his wife.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Light floods into this ground floor studio though a two storey-high window, which is divided into four by a large steel cross.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

A staircase wraps around this room and leads up to a first floor mezzanine.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

The glazed study is located on the first floor and is accessed via a zig-zagging staircase, which ascends from the 20 metre-long living room.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Outdoor terraces also step between the ground and first floors, while an infinity pool projects over the living room roof.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Furniture throughout the house is monochrome, including a teak and cardboard table designed by Shigeru Ban.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Tadao Ando also recently completed a misty water feature in London – see our earlier story here.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Photography is by Edmund Sumner.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

The text below was written by Yuki Sumner:


The House in Sri Lanka, or so called by the Japanese architect Tadao Ando who designed it, is set against a paradise on earth.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

White sandy beaches, dotted with coconut palm trees and huts draped with leaves from these trees, weave in and out of cliffs in Mirissa, located at the southern tip of Sri Lanka. Crocodiles and water snakes splash in its rivers, black monkeys, wild elephants and even leopards roam freely on its land. Local fishermen languorously wait for fish to swim towards them on wooden sticks firmly wedged into the sand along the edge of the sea.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

The name of the house is perhaps enough to suggest its majestic presence: clad in exposed concrete, the house perches on top of a cliff, as if it were indeed a leopard whose claws edge towards the Indian Ocean.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

The house was a gift from a husband to a wife. Sri Lanka has been the Belgian couple’s home for the past 30 years. The inscription on a slab of stone placed outside the house gate at the end of a meandering private road is almost too romantic for me. It says: “To Saskia.”

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Pierre Pringiers is an industrialist who has successfully built up a regional tire-manufacturing firm into a global business that now supplies over 40% of the industrial tires worldwide. He wanted his wife, Saskia, an established artist, to have her own studio.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Pierre tells me: “One day I asked her if she were to choose her favourite architect in the world, who would it be? She said Tadao Ando.” The iconic images of Ando’s Church of Light, built in 1989, had made a deep impression on the artist.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

With this house, Ando has evidently taken a slightly different approach from his previous work, which tended to be introspective, with only small gaps for light to seep in.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Here, the architect abandons the house to the elements of nature. Saskia, who finds inspirations for her artwork in “the sky and the sea of this tropical island,” wanted to see nothing but the sky and the sea from the house. Ando says he “aimed to create an airy architecture like many of the native houses.”

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

The architect has parcelled the house, which threatens to take off, into four different sections. One box contains the reception, kitchen, master bedroom and Pierre’s “mediation room,” while the one parallel to it contains four guest bedrooms, each one complete with a sea view and an en-suite. Another box, containing the elongated living room almost 20 meters long, dynamically slices through these two parcels of concrete at an angle. The window at the end of this box can be made to roll down and dematerialise into the ocean below.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

The interstitial spaces, or what we call ‘ma’ in Japan, created by the criss-crossing lines, are cleverly filled in. A grand stairway from the entrance patio gently unfolds onto a large airy loggia, the sprawling of which is accentuated by an infinity pool jutting out at an angle in one corner. The pool sits atop the living room, which means that it is as long and expansive as the room below it. There is the feeling that the parcels in this house have been left open.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

And indeed, the panorama from this open loggia spans nearly 360 degrees, over the Indian Ocean to the front and over the jungle at the back. Solid square columns of concrete hold up the horizontal rooftop, which is also made of concrete, while a mixture of timber and stone floors subtly divide the area into smaller, more manageable sections.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

From this loggia, we can see Geoffery Bawa’s Jayawardene House in the distance. It was the last project that the singularly most revered architect of Sri Lanka had worked on. You begin to understand then that this house is Ando’s nod to Regional Modernism, the likes of which was embraced by Bawa.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Where should the focus of a house with no apparent end be? Pierre’s study is snugly fitted right in the centre of the house, created inside the interstitial space on the ground floor. It is a room made of glass, playfully reached via the living room through a zigzagging ramp, which wraps around the triangle void created by a well of intersecting angles.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Hundreds of miles away from Japan, we can still witness the perfect detailing Ando is known for. Never mind the fact that the architect had actually never set his foot on site; every nook and corner of the house is still cleverly accounted for. The near-invisible room is not, however, the anchor of the house, even if it is placed at the centre of the house. The tour of this sprawling house ends with Saskia’s studio, the raison d’être of the house. The studio is purposefully set apart from the rest of the house.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

A circuitous route from the upper level down to the lower level of the studio, complete with a floating steel bridge at the middle of the room, adds to its heightened religious feel. Saskia’s studio has a resonance with Ando’s Church of Light, except that it is set in reverse. Unlike the living room, the large window at the end stays put and is fitted with a steel framework that forms a large cross.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Here, the cross is made not with light but with shadow. Furnishing in the room, as in the rest of the house, is monochrome, complimenting Saskia’s paintings, as well as Ando’s play of light and shadow. Top Mouton, the design company based in Belgium responsible for the interior fit out of the house, knew not to bother with soft furnishing in Ando’s house.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Jacob Pringiers, one of the couple’s grown children, has some of his collection scattered around the house. Shigeru Ban, another Japanese architect who ended up designing a house for the client’s other son nearby as the result of Ban’s meeting with the industrialist on a tsunami relief project, has custom-made the couple’s dining room’s table with a teak top and cardboard legs, all painted suitably in black.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Saskia’s artworks are hung on the wall. The artist paints directly onto unstretched canvases, which are then stored rolled up like the Japanese emaki. Interestingly, the sky and the sea of Sri Lanka are always painted in dark grey in her work.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Click above for larger image

The darkness comes perhaps from the artist’s own acknowledgement that paradise is not what it seems. In 2004, the work on the house had to be temporary halted after the area was badly hit by the tsunami.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Click above for larger image

Her husband immediately put an effective rehabilitation programme together, drafting, for example, the Belgium army to set up the emergency housing for the locals who lost homes. In the end, he was able to raise enough funds to build 700 permanent houses, as well as a new community centre and a Buddhist temple, a new village, in fact, tucked away in the hills, away from the threatening sea.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Click above for larger image

David Robson, who recently published the monograph of Geoffery Bawa, writes that Regional Modernism “rejects the banalities of mass consumerism but welcomes the positive achievements of globalization, while seeking to support and revalidate local cultures.” The House in Sri Lanka similarly stands at the juncture where regional and global forces meet.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Click above for larger image

Its success comes from a collaboration of people from all over the world. Two Japanese specialists, Kiyoshi Aoki and Yukio Tanaka, flew out from Japan to oversee the entire process of casting concrete, which required the position of every plughole to be exact. Such skills, heretofore unknown in Sri Lanka, have now been passed onto the local engineers and builders.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Click above for larger image

PWA Architects, the local architectural firm, played a vital role as a mediator, relaying messages to and fro Japan. The project architect Hidehiro Yano from TAAA made many trips to Sri Lanka to check on the progress and be the eye of Ando.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Click above for larger image

Although it was Pierre and Saskia who approached Ando, it was apparently Ando who made the final decision to work with them. It took Ando nearly three weeks to reply yes to their request, and only after insisting that the client write an essay about who they were and what they liked about the architect’s work.

House in Sri Lanka by Tadao Ando

Click above for larger image

Ando has always insisted that as an architect, he is merely designing a box, that it is the client who puts the soul into it. In Pierre and Saskia, then, the ex-boxer-com-visionary architect has finally met his match. The result of the match is a tour-de-force of concrete, as uncompromising and defiant as the humanistic idealism that is behind it.


See also:

.

Absalon by Denzer
& Poensgen
Hiedaira House by
Thomas Daniell Studio
The House with Balls by
Matharoo Associates

Silence by Tadao Ando and Blair Associates

Silence by Tadao Ando

Clouds of mist erupt from the base of two trees in this London water feature designed by Japanese architect Tadao Ando.

Silence by Tadao Ando

The trees sit in a raised granite-edged pool in front of the Connaught Hotel in Mayfair.

Silence by Tadao Ando

Atomisers hidden at the base of the trees create clouds of water vapour for fifteen seconds every fifteen minutes.

Silence by Tadao Ando

Glass lenses below the surface of the water contain fibre optics that illuminate the basin by night.

Silence by Tadao Ando and Blair Associates

The feature, which forms part of a wider project to upgrade the surrounding streets, was delivered in collaboration with UK architects Blair Associates.

Silence by Tadao Ando

More stories about landscape architecture on Dezeen »

Silence by Tadao Ando

Photography is by Adrian Brookes.

Silence by Tadao Ando

Here are some more details from developer Grosvenor:


Mount Street unveiling marks completion of first phase of street improvement

Grosvenor is celebrating the end of the first phase of the property company’s £10million programme to improve key streets across its London estate in Mayfair and Belgravia. The ambitious project is being undertaken in partnership with Westminster City Council.

Silence by Tadao Ando and Blair Associates

‘Silence’, a new water feature designed by the Japanese architect philosopher Tadao Ando, will be unveiled at the event. The feature was jointly commissioned by Grosvenor and the Connaught hotel. The street improvements are based on the understanding that the space between buildings is as important as the buildings themselves. Ever-increasing traffic volume, and a mass of unnecessary signage and other ‘clutter’, have diminished the quality of London’s streets. The works aim to enhance the experience for all those who live, work and visit, particularly pedestrians. Unnecessary signage has been removed and pavements upgraded and extended, with two new pedestrian areas introduced to the street. The completion of the works on Mount Street follows a similar scheme on Elizabeth Street in Belgravia.

Silence by Tadao Ando

Commenting ahead of the Mount Street event Peter Vernon, Chief Executive, Grosvenor Britain & Ireland, said: “With over 300 years experience of managing and developing property in Mayfair and Belgravia we recognise that places are about more than buildings. The appearance of streets, and the public space around buildings, is fundamental to the long-term success of the London neighbourhoods we manage. “Large-scale works like these require a long-term outlook but we can already see the results. This is only the first phase of our programme, plans for the next wave of projects are already well underway.”

Silence by Tadao Ando

The improvements to Mount Street and Elizabeth Street were delivered through an innovative funding arrangement. Westminster City Council invested the funds need to pay for the work with Grosvenor, a long-standing property owner in the area, delivering the improvements. After five years from completion of the works Grosvenor will make a refund to Westminster equivalent to the project cost.

Silence by Tadao Ando

Cllr Colin Barrow, Leader of Westminster City Council, said: “We are delighted with the works which will bring huge improvements to this historic part of the capital. Our innovative finance agreement means significant enhancements to local streets, roads and open spaces, with the council’s initial investment being reimbursed by the land owners, who will also benefit from a boost in the value of the area in the long term. It is particularly poignant that the fountain outside the Connaught Hotel bears a memorial to Sir Simon Milton, who as Leader of the council did so much to pioneer the joint working between the private and public sector that has brought such improvements to the city.”


See also:

.

Tsunami Memorial by
Carmody Groarke
Chimecco by
Mark Nixon
Spontaneous City by
London Fieldworks