BMW 2 Series Coupe

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Yarn Bombed Tree Squid

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10 Facts About The Simpsons

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Bad British Basketball Commentary

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Romain Jerome – A Sailor’s Grave

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Immanuel Church and Parish Centre by Sauerbruch Hutton

Diagonally laid timber planks create zig-zagging patterns across the exterior of this church in Cologne by German architects Sauerbruch Hutton (+ slideshow).

Immanuel Church and Parish Centre by Sauerbruch Hutton

Sauerbruch Hutton arranged the buildings of the Immanuel Church and Parish Centre around an existing parish garden, creating a series of wooden structures that nestle amongst a group of trees.

Immanuel Church and Parish Centre by Sauerbruch Hutton

A bell tower marks the entrance to the site from the street. A winding pathway leads up to the main church building beyond, then on to a small chapel used for private prayer and a columbarium where funeral urns are stored.

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Each building is constructed from timber and clad with the diagonal panels. “Their character is defined by simplicity of form combined with straightforward construction and honest materiality,” said the architects.

Structural columns are exposed inside the church, creating a sequence of ribs that punctuate the pale wooden walls.

Immanuel Church and Parish Centre by Sauerbruch Hutton

A low foyer brings visitors into the central nave, which is designed as a flexible space for hosting various community events. Seating can be moved into different arrangements and extra chairs can be utilised from a first-floor space above the foyer.

Immanuel Church and Parish Centre by Sauerbruch Hutton

Two wings flank the nave on either side, accommodating a sacristy where the priest prepares for services, community rooms, a music room and a kitchen.

The organ is concealed behind a coloured timber partition, while a matte glass window catches light and shadow movements from outside.

Immanuel Church and Parish Centre by Sauerbruch Hutton

Sauerbruch Hutton is a Berlin studio led by architects Matthias Sauerbruch, Louisa Hutton and Juan Lucas Young. Past projects include the colourful Brandhorst Museum in Munich, completed in 2009.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Immanuel Church and Parish Centre

The new Immanuel Church in Cologne is approached through an existing parish garden defined by a circle of mature trees. Offering itself for outside activity and worship, this garden becomes the central element of a new ensemble that comprises a bell tower, the church, a small chapel for private prayer, as well as a columbarium.

The bell tower marks the entrance to the site from the street. A visitor enters the church through a simple rectangular entrance into a low foyer that opens out into a central nave flanked by two low wings, somewhat reinterpreting the classical section of a basilica for a small, modern parish. The wings accommodate the sacristy, community rooms, music room and kitchen. The central nave provides a clear space with loose chairs that can be rearranged for community events, while a tribune rising above the foyer provides additional seating.

Immanuel Church and Parish Centre by Sauerbruch Hutton
Site plan – click for larger image

Behind the altar a coloured timber screen reaches up to the roof, hinting at the location of the organ that lies behind. Daylight enters the church from above illuminating the altar wall, and from the rear above the tribune bringing light and the play of leaf shadows onto a matt glass screen. In the evening low hanging lamps provide an atmosphere of warm light and create an intimate scale.

Standing alone, the small, simple chapel is screened from the outside bustle. Behind the chapel a new columbarium is nestled amongst the trees. The bell tower, church and chapel are clad externally with diagonally laid timber planks. Their character is defined by simplicity of form in combination with straightforward construction and honest materiality.

Immanuel Church and Parish Centre by Sauerbruch Hutton
Exterior drawing – click for larger image

Gross floor area: 880 sq m
Completion: 2013
Brief: Protestant church and community centre
Client: Ev. Brückenschlag-Gemeinde Köln-Flittard/Stammheim

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by Sauerbruch Hutton
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The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones

Welsh designer Kieren Jones has devised a concept for harnessing the destructive power of erupting volcanoes by using lava flows to cast components for buildings.

The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones
Scale model of building elements

Having discovered that the current method for controlling lava from the world’s most volatile volcanoes is to redirect it using huge concrete barriers or cool it with sea water, Kieren Jones developed an alternative scenario in which the lava pours into casting beds excavated in the shape of structural building blocks.

The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones
Drawing showing the casting process – click for larger image

“Not only would these casting beds protect the population at the base of the volcanoes but they will also provide them with a constructive material in which to aid the recovery of a community post eruption,” Jones explained.

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Scale model of building elements

The designer believes that the accuracy with which volcanic activity can be predicted using sophisticated geological data could enable the casting beds to be positioned at the most effective points to capture the molten rock.

“Lava as a material is naturally light and thermally insulating and has the potential to be a strong building block,” said Jones.

The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones
Models of the 16 Decade Volcanoes

Models of 16 of the world’s most active and researched volcanoes, known as the Decade Volcanoes, were presented alongside drawings and scale models at an exhibition called Blanks in Between, curated by Workshop for Potential Design during this year’s London Design Festival.

The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones
Model of Mount Vesuvius

Here’s some more information from the designer:


The Volcano Project
By Kieren Jones

In 2013 there are 16 volcanoes that have been identified by the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior of being of particular interest to study due to their history of destructive eruption and proximity to populated areas – these 16 volcanoes are known as the Decade Volcanoes.

Traditionally people have toyed with living at the base of volcanoes, as the ground is highly fertile fuelled by the ash and molten lava of past eruptions. Within the immense destruction of these often vast and bubbling mounds lies potential for a constructive future.

The United Nations are currently able to predict with relative accuracy when each Decade Volcano is likely to erupt and determine the direction in which the lava will flow. At present the method for mitigating the destruction of lava flows is to place large concrete blocks in the predicted path of the flowing lava and spraying it with sea water in order to try and cool this molten material.

Intrigued by the potential that these destructive happenings have and keen to find a way to harness this powerful flow into something constructive I have been investigating the potential of creating architectures from the flowing lava. Lava as a material is naturally light and thermally insulating and has the potential to be a strong building block. In fact the early Romans created some vast domed structures using this molten material.

Therefore instead of placing large concrete blocks in its path, I propose to create large casting beds into which the lava can flow, creating building blocks for future shelters. Not only would these casting beds protect the population at the base of the volcanoes but they will also provide them with a constructive material in which to aid the recovery of a community post eruption.

On the occasion of the Blanks in Between exhibition during the London Design Festival 2013, I presented a series of experiments and investigations into the potential that the Decade Volcanoes have to build future architectures providing constructive solutions out of natural destruction.

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by Kieren Jones
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Daran symbiotic side table

Space saving Daran table lives in symbiosis with sofa, bed or lounge chair and is simply clipped under the furniture’s foot.In the hollow leg you can ..

Laser Cut in 800 Blocks of Wood

Nando Costa nous invite à découvrir «The New American», une vidéo en stop-motion d’une beauté incroyable utilisant 800 blocs de bois découpés au laser. Une superbe vidéo dont quelques éléments peuvent être achetés sur la page Etsy de l’auteur. A découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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