Apocalypse: A Bill Callahan Tour Film: A personal portrait of the celebrated musician as he toured across the US

Apocalypse: A Bill Callahan Tour Film


Each track Bill Callahan crafted during his (thus far) 24-year career posses unfathomable depths of beauty and thought. There’s an ever-intimate progression within the singer/songwriter’s lyrics—moving, melodic and masterful—which all the while keeps his message…

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Kensington Tours: Explorers in Residence Series: Rare, remote excursions around the globe led by internationally acclaimed explorers

Kensington Tours: Explorers in Residence Series


Jeff Willner isn’t your average CEO. The thoughtful, charismatic mastermind behind Kensington Tours clocked over 120,000 miles while driving around the globe as a brand ambassador for Land Rover. This modern-day explorer, who has touched down…

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Blue Train: Pretoria to Cape Town: A peek into the “Window to the Soul of South Africa” aboard the legendary locomotive

Blue Train: Pretoria to Cape Town


by Laura Feinstein One of the most iconic symbols of luxury in South Africa, the famous Blue Train line has spent the last 67 years taking visitors on an adventure through the country’s stunning and diverse…

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Vantigo San Francisco: Changing the way people see the city with personalized tours in a refurbished ’71 Volkswagen van

Vantigo San Francisco


Erik and Amy Hormann felt that as a young, entrepreneurial couple, they needed some justification for buying a bright red 1971 Volkswagen Van—as if owning a bright red 1971 Volkswagen Van wasn’t justification alone. With so many on-the-go services on the rise…

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Transformative Travel with Epic Road: Luxurious, first-hand encounters with the remote, rare and ancient

Transformative Travel with Epic Road


“Travel has the ability to change perceptions, elevate awareness, evoke true empathy and galvanize leaders,” according to Epic Road. Their inspirational and tailor-made trips provide access to the remote, the ancient and the rare. In what…

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ListenUp : Prince turns 55, Wu-Tang reunites, Vampire Weekend throws a dinner party and more in our weekly music recap

ListenUp


Vampire Weekend: Diane Young Any music video featuring a saxophone as a giant bong is worth spending a moment enjoying, but Vampire Weekend gives plenty of reasons to stick around and put it on repeat with “…

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Gogo City Guides: Insider tips for where to go on either side of the Channel

Gogo City Guides

Anyone landing in London Town this week for all of the Frieze festivities will want to pick up or download a copy of the latest Gogo city guide—an essential travel companion for those who like to stay in the know and off the beaten path. Originally launched as a…

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Kings County Distillery

Touring and tasting at the NYC distillery’s new Brooklyn Navy Yard locale

Kings County Distillery

“People are often expecting something more intense from the moonshine,” said Kings County Distillery co-owner Colin Spoelman as he passed out samples of the signature clear, unaged white corn whiskey made at his Brooklyn-based micro-distillery. The tasting took place at the end of a recent tour of the distillery’s…

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Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Paris firm Moussafir Architectes have blanketed the roof of this concert hall in Tours, France, with a synthetic material that looks more like a quilt.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Named Le Temps Machine, which translates as The Time Machine, the venue contains two auditoriums that burst up through its roof, one displaying a glowing digital clock.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

The glazed facade and entrance are sheltered beneath a canopy of projecting eaves.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

The walls of the remaining elevations are exposed concrete, as are those in the corridors of the building.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Above: photograph is by Benoît Faure

We’ve featured quite a few concert halls on Dezeen. You can see them all here.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Photography is by Jérôme Ricolleau, apart from where otherwise stated.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Here’s some extra information from Moussafir Architectes:


‘Le Temps Machine’, Concert Venue, Joue-Les-Tours, France

The former Joué-lès-Tours youth centre was a blocky, opaque, inward-looking building that failed to interact with the surrounding public space and no longer met current standards and requirements. The architectural design for the new music facility responds to a three-fold objective: to open the building up to its surroundings, to improve the way the opaque block integrates with existing buildings, and emphasise the festive dimension of the facility by making a unique architectural statement.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Above: photograph is by Luc Boegly

We chose to situate the new building where the old one stood, and to reinterpret some of the latter’s salient features (such as its prow-shaped auditorium) while offering the space a radically new image by opening it up to its context.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

With its generously glazed street-side entrance, the building’s exterior features deep projecting eaves and a strongly cantilevered auditorium providing both an impression of lightness and a sense of hospitality vis-a-vis the public space and dwellings nearby.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

To improve its contextual integration, we have divided the structure into two parts functioning in different registers: a determinedly horizontal 2m50 tall concrete and glass base housing a fluid, open interior space, and a roof with the three main components of the design brief (the two performance areas and the resource centre) bursting through it like opaque excrescences.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

This duality is emphasised by the use of contrasting materials: hard on the outside (raw concrete, glass, stainless steel) and soft on the inside (membrane stretched over exterior insulation materials).

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

With its complex volumetrics and textured outer surface, the new building stands out like a beacon in the urban landscape.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

The contradictory image we were aiming at is one of a unique yet familiar object that is challenging and yet invites appropriation: a sculptural design that refers to nothing that already exists, but which users can easily engage with, both in functional and symbolic terms.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Client: TOUR(S) PLUS (Tours City Council)
Address: 49, rue des Martyrs, 37300 JOUE-LES-TOURS

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Above: photograph is by Benoît Faure

Brief: Concert facility to replace the existing youth centre, including a concert space for a standing audience of 650, a 150-seat cabaret-style space, a resources centre, and 3 rehearsal studios with service areas.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Materials: Colourwashed raw concrete, solvent- and plastics-free FPO roofing membrane by Sika Sarnafil, glazed stainless steel, Fibracoustic panels of wood fibre and rockwool, door/windowframes aluminium (exterior), steel and wood (interior).

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Budget: 5,300,000 €. ex tax.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

NSA: 1,753 sq m.

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Architects: Jacques Moussafir avec Nicolas Hugoo, Alexis Duquennoy, Narumi Kang, Sofie Reynaert, Jérôme Hervé and Virginie Prié

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Partner engineers: A&T (stage designers), Ayda (acoustic designers), Batiserf (structural engineers), LBE (mechanical engineers), Bureau Michel Forgue (quantity surveyor).

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Contractors: DV Construction (general contractor), AMG Féchoz (stage machinery), Bideau (stage electrics), VTI (wooden stage flooring), Edmond Petit (stage fabrics).

Le Temps Machine by Moussafir Architectes

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

French studio Explorations Architecture have completed a sports hall in Tours, France, with a curving timber roof that sags in the middle.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

The entire north facade of the Monconseil Sports Hall is glazed to maximise natural light, while timber batons shade the south facade from direct sunlight.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

The suspended roof spans the 50 metre-wide hall, which can seat up to 700 spectators.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

The building provides a venue for sports that include basketball, handball, volleyball and gymnastics.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Back in 2008, Explorations Architecture designed an entrance-pavilion for the Chateau de Versailles – see the story here.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Other public sports halls on Dezeen include one near Sydney with a steel shell exterior and another in California supported by exposed fir trussesclick here to see more stories relating to sports.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Photography is by Michel Denancé.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Here’s a short description of the project from Explorations Architecture:


Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Explorations architecture has just completed the Monconseil sports hall in Tours, 150km southwest of Paris.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

This public building is exemplary of Explorations’ approach to sustainable design.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Click above for larger image

The project emphasis is on natural light, the innovative use of natural materials and renewable energy:

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

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1. The northern facade is fully glazed in order to avoid the use of electrical lighting in the main hall.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Click above for larger image

2. The composite suspended timber/steel roof spans close to 50m to allow for future uses.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Click above for larger image

3. The southern facade is clad with a photovoltaic “brise-soleil” in order to reduce energy consumption from the grid.

Monconseil Sports Hall by Explorations Architecture

Click above for larger image

Design team: Explorations architecture + Integrale 4 engineers
Client: City of Tours
Brief: Sports hall (basketball, handball, volleyball, gymnastics) with 700 seating
Net Area: 2700 m²
Cost: 5m €
Timeframe: 2006-2011


See also:

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Yountville Community Centre
by Siegel & Strain Architects
Milson Island Sports Hall
by Allen Jack+Cottier
Sports Hall in Vienna
by Franz Architekten