Lady Gaga pilots “first flying dress”

News: Lady Gaga wore the world’s “first flying dress” at the launch party for her latest album last night.

Lady Gaga was strapped into a white fibreglass suit shaped to look like a haute-couture gown and flown by six battery-powered rotors at the event in Brooklyn.

The rotors lifted the singer half a metre off the ground and propelled her forward several metres – as shown in the video below.

The high-tech outfit named Volantis was designed by the popstar, London company Studio XO and TechHaus, the technology division of the star’s Haus of Gaga creative team.

Its rotors are surrounded by white cylinders arranged hexagonally and connected to a central node above the suit, which rests on the ground using a circular stand when not in flight.

Lady Gaga unveiled the project at the ArtRAVE party for the launch of her third studio album ARTPOP.

“I wanted to make today about something even more important to me,” she told attendees at the event. “That something is the youth of the world. Benjamin and Nancy [the dress’ engineer and designer] are here with me today. Their minds are just so boundless. I will be a vehicle today for their voices… Youth all over the world.”

Photograph from Getty Images.

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Sibling’s wifi-blocking ON/OFF installation creates a disconnected “cold spot”

This temporary event space by Australian design collective Sibling features a cage that blocks mobile reception and Wi-Fi signals, creating the “ultimate disconnection space” (+ slideshow).

ON:OFF exhibition by Sibling_dezeen_1sq

Sibling‘s installation, called ON/OFF and presented at the University of Melbourne earlier this autumn, featured a Faraday cage – an electrified mesh enclosure that blocks electromagnetic signals and creates a “cold spot”.

ON:OFF exhibition by Sibling

The designers created the cage in order to achieve the opposite of what most contemporary design and technology tries to achieve: to disconnect people, rather than connect them.

ON:OFF exhibition by Sibling

“Connection is a popular motif in design,” write the designers. “All types of infrastructure – bridges, pathways, transportation, service systems, forums and applications – wish to tie into the urban fabric and make things productive.

“However, there is also an opposite tendency: the act of disconnection. Sibling asks: How can one remove oneself from connectivity?”

ON:OFF exhibition by Sibling

The outside of the cage was clad in mirrors while the interior had perforated surfaces. “We used circle-perforated sheeting in order to symbolise the interior as being off the grid, as one is disconnected from technology,” said Sibling’s Timothy Moore.

ON:OFF exhibition by Sibling

“This is the reality as one will notice upon entering and sealing the door that their smartphone Wi-Fi bars will drop slowly until they turn off,” he added.

ON:OFF exhibition by Sibling

Faraday cages were invented by English scientist Michael Faraday in 1836 and are used to conduct sensitive experiments and protect delicate equipment from interference by electromagnetic waves.

On/Off was installed at the University of Melbourne from 13 September- 4 October as part of the ABP Alumni Survey Series. Talks took place within the cage, which accommodated up to ten people.

Photography by Tobias Titz.

Here’s some more information from Sibling:


The right of connection – to housing, health, education, the internet, financial capital – allows humans to improve the spaces they occupy in the world. Heightened connectivity also demands an opposite tendency: the ability to switch off. On/Off takes an extreme position on connectivity through the construction of a type of Faraday cage. Discovered by Michael Faraday in 1836 it is a structure covered by a conductive material that prevents electromagnetic charges reaching its interior. It is the ultimate disconnection space.

Within the mirror-clad monolith created by SIBLING sits a starkly warm space where smartphone reception is blocked. It is a gesture to physically connect people in a space with architecture creating a filter (or temporary firewall) between the individual and the world. The space of disconnection is situated within a red grid, which provides a flattened interior without hierarchy or end. This vastness is reflected by the mirror into infinity creating a neutral environment from which to begin social experiments in cold spots.

On/Off was an exhibition at the University of Melbourne from September 13 – October 4 as part of the ABP Alumni Survey Series. During the exhibition a series of events occurred – arduino workshops, well-being seminars and lunches – to experiment within a space of disconnection. A film and book also accompanied the exhibition.

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La Ascensión del Señor by AGi architects looks more like a factory than a church

The industrial materials used to construct this church in Seville, Spain, make it look more like an edge-of-town manufacturing plant than a place for worship (+ slideshow).

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

Spanish-Kuwaiti firm AGi architects designed the church for an area built in the last 15 years on the outskirts of the city, which required a new church as well as a place for community activities.

The different planes that form the roof feature apertures that allow light to reach the interior and help to distinguish the various interior spaces, which perform different liturgical functions. “One of these folds steeps up to become the bell tower, though no bells have been installed due to the economic situation,” the architects told Dezeen.

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

“The shape of the building relates to its context through the idea of unfolding a cover that creates a place for meeting and fraternisation, in contrast with the rigid look of the dwelling buildings where the individualised everyday life takes place,” the architects said.

The church adjoins a large courtyard that connects it to the existing facilities of a community parish centre, and its industrial aesthetic reflects the contemporary nature of its surroundings.

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

The stone-tiled courtyard that provides a meeting space for community activities extends into the building’s interior and a series of doors can be opened to unite the two spaces.

The architects described the tiled floor as “a stone carpet that is unfolded to enter the main space of the church in an arrangement that facilitates the participation of the entire assembly in the liturgy.”

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

Two smaller courtyards connected to the spaces containing the baptismal font, the penitential chapel and sacristy are used to host activities including markets, cinema screenings, religious teaching classes and as a place for contemplation.

Budgetary restraints led the architects to specify simple, economical materials, including the corrugated steel sheet covering the roof, false ceilings and partitions made of gypsum board, and concrete blocks used for the outer shell.

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

“White plaster finish links with more traditional architectures while the sheet of the roof is a technical solution that makes a reference to present, the period in which this urban development was carried out,” the architects added.

Structural girders form a cross at the church’s entrance, which has “an open shape that recalls traditional religious architecture”.

The angular aesthetic of the walls and roof is echoed in the shape of the wood and stone pulpit.

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

Photography is by Miguel de Guzmán.

Here are some more details from AGi architects:


La Ascensión del Señor Church

This building proposed by AGi architects means the completion of the Parish Center and its empowerment as focus of community activity for the neighborhood. The project aims at strengthening the Parish Center as a meeting and fraternization place, in order to develop spiritual and welfare tasks. It has been designed by economical savings and sustainability premises, simple construction techniques and materials, while endowing the district with an image and sign of identity.

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

The spatial scheme of the building is structured through three different qualifying voids: the large central courtyard that belongs to the first phase of the Parish Center, which now articulates the relationships between worship spaces and the rest of facilities. Its stone surface is prolonged inwards to enter the main space of the church and, bending towards the walls, creates a huge vessel that houses the congregation of believers. There are other two smaller scale courtyards, one of them linked to the area of the baptismal font, the other to the penitential chapel and sacristy.

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

Due to security reasons, the nature of shelter and interaction inherent to the project are only revealed to the outside in the main entrance that plays a relevant role as an open attraction space to welcome and invite users inside.

The shape of the roof, which unfolds freely to cover the assembly space by joining various inclined planes, allows the introduction of natural light inside, to achieve a clear qualification of the different areas needed to comply with liturgy requirements.

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

According to AGi architects’ team, “this church is very close to the community, reaching the transcendental through the existing social problems and needs. Our goal has been to open the space for community use, making it more human”.

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects

Project Name: La Ascensión del Señor Church
Type: Religious | 1,150 sqm | Competition – First prize
Location: Seville, Spain
Date: 2010-2013
Client: Archdiocese of Seville
Cost: Confidential

Design Team:
Joaquín Pérez-Goicoechea
Nasser B. Abulhasan
Salvador Cejudo

Architectural team:
Daniel Muñoz
Gwenola Kergall
Bruno Gomes
Stefania Rendinelli
Javier Alonso
Daniel Bas

Consultants:
Singe K, Ingenieros Consultores, S.L
Javier Drake Canela

La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects
Floor plan – click for larger image
La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects
Cross section – click for larger image
La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects
Cross section – click for larger image
La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects
Long section – click for larger image
La Ascension del Senor Church by AGi architects
Long section – click for larger image

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British architecture “showing a clear recovery”

London skyscrapers under construction

News: British architects are enjoying their busiest period since the financial crisis began in 2008, while the Italian market looks set to decline by 14% this year, according to new industry research from Arch-Vision.

Almost 60% of British architects saw their order books increasing during Q3 of 2013 and the sector is set to grow 2% this year, says Arch-Vison in its latest quarterly European Architectural Barometer report. Further growth of 1% is expected in both 2014 and 215.

“The UK has been showing a clear recovery during the last six quarters and especially during the last nine months,” says the report. “In Q3 2013, the British market keeps on improving. This quarter is marked by a strong positive order book and turnover development.”

The German architecture sector can expect a similar 2% growth this year, the report says, while Belgium is also improving. However France, Spain and the Netherlands continue to shrink, while Italy is showing “no signs of any improvement yet,” with a downturn of 14% predicted this year. Arch-Vision “predicts shrinkage of the market by 14% in 2013, by 5% in 2014 and by 2% in 2015.”

Across the EU, the report expects a 3% decline in future building volumes to €766, with zero growth next year followed by a modest 1% increase in 2015.

“Italy had a very difficult quarter again, while France and Spain show slight indications of improvement,” says the report in summary. “For the first time in two years more than 30% the Dutch architects reported growing order books. Germany is still offering the best market conditions.”

The European Architectural Barometer is based on surveys of 1600 architects in eight European countries.

Image of London skyscrapers under construction is courtesy of Shutterstock.

Here’s the full press release from Arch-Vision:


Italy continues to deteriorate. The British architects had their best quarter so far. The future looks brighter for the Dutch.

In Q3 2013, almost 60% of the British architects saw increasing order books, marking the best quarter for the UK market since 2008. Italy had a very difficult quarter again, while France and Spain show slight indications of improvement. For the first time in two years more than 30% the Dutch architects reported growing order books. Germany is still offering the best market conditions. These are some of the conclusions of the Q3 2013 European Architectural Barometer report, a quarterly research among 1,600 architects in eight European countries. European architects act as a leading indicator for the construction activity.

The UK has been showing a clear recovery during the last six quarters and especially during the last nine months. In Q3 2013, the British market keeps on improving. This quarter is marked by a strong positive order book and turnover development. More than half of the architects (59%) reported to have experienced increasing order books in comparison with Q2 2013. The share of those with still declining order books has shrunk significantly to the lowest ever measured by Arch-Vision 13%. The British market is on the right track and the recovery is getting more stable with every quarter being better than the previous for a larger part of the architects. Despite the obvious improvement, the number of architects expecting an empty order book in the next 12 months is the same as in the previous quarter: 27%. Arch-Vision predicts a 2% rise of the market in 2013 and an increase of 1% in 2014 and 2015.

Both the German order book and turnover development were positive again. More architects reported increase in their order books (31%) than those experiencing a decline (13%). In general, for half of them times are stable and no big changes from quarter to quarter can be seen. In Q3 only 5% expect an empty order book, an indicator which also remains quite the same during the last measurements (Q2 2013: 3%). For 2013 (+2%), 2014 (+2%) and 2015 (+3%) a growth of the German construction market is expected.

In Q3 2013, French architects saw new drops in the order book and turnover, reaching the lowest point since 2008. After Q1 2013 when 50% of the French architect reported decline in their order books, the situation seems to be slightly improving with every passing quarter. In Q3 2013, 24% of the French professionals saw their order book increasing, while 44% experienced a decrease. In Q2 2013 a growing feeling of optimism was observed among the French architects, back then 14% expected an empty order book for the coming 12 months. With the situation improving much slower than expected, more pessimists can be found amongst them this quarter: 22%, going back to the Q1 2013 level. Arch-Vision expects that the French construction market will decrease in 2013 (-4%) and 2014 (-1%), but will grow in 2015 (1%).

The Spanish architects are still experiencing decrease, but the positive thing is that both order book and turnover developments seem to be declining less sharply than in the previous quarters. Q1 2011 was until now the best quarter for the Spanish architects when 22% of them reported increasing order books. The current quarter seems to be the second best quarter for the Spanish architects: 22% saw their order book growing in Q3 2013, against 34% who experienced a declining order book (in Q2, 14% saw an increase and 41% a decrease). Despite the slight positive developments, the Spanish architects are still far below the order book levels of 2008 and there is a significant number (35%) of them expecting an empty order book in the coming 12 months (44% in Q2). A further decline of the Spanish construction market by 5% is to be expected for 2013, while 2014 will see a 3% decrease and 2015 will bring a 1% increase of the market.

After a very bad second quarter in 2013, Italy again has experienced a big drop in the order book and turnover development. Italy has almost reached the levels of Spain, but with no signs of any improvement yet. Only 6% of the architects have seen a growth in their order books, while for 75% the order books are still declining. This quarter, despite of the ongoing bad results, Italian architects are less pessimistic regarding having an empty order book in the next 12 months (32%) in comparison to Q2 (52%). Many obviously think that the bottom has been reached and hope for positive months ahead. Arch-Vision predicts shrinkage of the market by 14% in 2013, by 5% in 2014 and by 2% in 2015.

Again, the Dutch order book and turnover development was negative. This is however better than in the previous quarter. Although the architects reporting declining order books still prevail (39% vs. 35% with increasing order books) this is the first quarter since Q3 2011, when the share of architects experiencing increasing order books is above 30%. If the positive tendency continues, it can be expected soon that there will be a change in the Dutch picture, i.e. more Dutch architects with growing than with decreasing order books. At the moment 24% are expecting an empty order book within the coming 12 months, which is less pessimistic than in the previous quarter (31%). A decline in 2013 (-3%) and 2014 (-1%) is to be expected. By 2015, the market will be recovering slowly (1%).

The positive developments observed in Belgium since the start of the measurements for this country (Q4 2012) continue in Q3 2013 as well. The number of architects indicating an increasing order book (32%) is higher and the number of architects experiencing a decreasing order book is lower (24%) than the previous quarter (28% and 26% resp.). Only 4% expect an empty order book, which is only comparable to the German results.

26%of the Polish architects reported an increase and 42% a shrinkage of their order book. Since Q1 2013 the results have become more positive every quarter. Still it has to be noted that the quite significant share of the Polish architects expecting an empty order book within the next 12 months (31%) remained quite stable.

These and many other results and trends of the developments of the European construction market can be found in the European Architectural Barometer, an international market research conducted among 1,600 architects in Europe. This study is conducted in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Belgium and Poland by Arch-Vision four times a year. Besides indicators to forecast the European building volumes, a specific topic is highlighted each quarter. The topic in Q3 2013 was “Sustainability”. Architects can be used not only as a reliable source for future building volumes information, but their role is very important as they have great influence on how projects are built and which materials are used.

www.arch-vision.eu

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Ta đi Ôtô mini-skyscraper on a tricycle by Bureau A

Swiss architecture firm Bureau A created a seven-storey mobile performance space and street kitchen, mounted it on a tricycle and rode it round the streets of Hanoi in Vietnam (+ movie).

Tadioto by Bureau A

Geneva studio Bureau A designed the project for Tadioto, a local bar and cultural centre, as a multipurpose structure to be used for anything from a vertical street-food restaurant to an exhibition space.

Tadioto by Bureau A

Made from a framework of blue-painted steel tubes, the mobile structure also has a small PVC roof and a battery-powered fan and lights.

Tadioto by Bureau A

The tricycle was originally owned by the steel worker who built the structure and they adapted it to fit in the bottom section.

Tadioto by Bureau A

“When we were there [in Vietnam] we crossed the whole city with it, from the outskirts in the fields where the bike was actually made to the very centre of Hanoi where we had a small party,” said architect Daniel Zamarbide.

Tadioto by Bureau A

“The main purpose of this mobile device was to do a sort of humble ‘performance’ using local know-how and culture,” he added.

Tadioto by Bureau A

There have been a few mobile structures that can be cycled to wherever they’re needed in the city recently, including a group of tiny pedal-powered mobile parks in Baku and a mobile town square that features a miniature clock tower on the back of a bicycle.

Photography is by Boris Zuliani.

Here’s a short description from Bureau A:


Ta đi Ôtô

Everything is dense in Hanoi, including the milk in your coffee. Everything is used. In unexpected ways “things” live different lives, they reincarnate continuously into new functions, passing from one life to another without a moment of respite. In Hanoi, this magic of creativity ends up in everyday life as opposed to art museums. The blue, a vertical Bia Hoi for Tadioto accompanies this creative movement.

Tadioto by Bureau A
Concept diagram

Conceived as a support for small pieces of lives, as an ephemeral house or as a vertical street food restaurant, it might deviate from its original yet wide function and become something else, an unexpected urban animal. A mini-concert hall? A poetry podium ? It probably just needs to circulate, to stroll around the busy streets of Hanoi and then it’ll decide by itself which disguise to adopt.

Tadioto by Bureau A
Detailed section

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Secondary School Ergolding with quadruple-height assembly hall by Behnisch Architekten

This secondary school in Germany by Behnisch Architekten features a spectacular combined quadruple-height atrium and assembly hall (+ slideshow).

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

The foyer acts as the school’s entrance, circulation and social hub, with a series of staggered staircases that descend through the space linking the classrooms on the upper floors to the facilities on ground level.

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

“The heart of the new, middle school is a large open atrium that serves as an assembly hall, an interior meeting point, and a visual connection between the school’s various departments and functions,” said Stefan Behnisch, founding partner at Behnisch Architekten.

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

“Through this central hub, students can easily and intuitively find their way through the building from the classrooms in the upper levels down to towards the music and art rooms, gymnasium, cafeteria, and recreational spaces, all situated a ground level.”

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

The school, located in the town of Ergolding, 70km northeast of Munich in Bavaria, is arranged over four storeys and the architects designated a different colour for each floor, which can be seen from outside and from the large central foyer.

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

Throughout the building, raw concrete and industrial sound insulating panels contrast with smooth, brightly-coloured surfaces and wood used for the benches, staircases and banisters.

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

Hallways open up into wider spaces that Behnisch describes as “extensions of the classroom”. “These provide the students, teachers and parents with informal meeting points for gathering, planning extracurricular activities, and exchanging information,” he says. Breakout areas between clusters of classrooms can be used as alternative teaching spaces.

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

Classrooms for the natural sciences on the third floor can be used as large lecture halls or divided with partitions to create smaller rooms.

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

The school is surrounded by natural and manmade landscaping, with classrooms looking out onto the playing fields and a nature reserve and pond.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Secondary School Ergolding
Ergolding, 2001-2013

For the beginning of school-year 2013-2014, the District of Landshut has decided to construct a new secondary school (grades 5-12) and gymnasium. The building site sits in the town of Ergolding along the Highway 11/15 beside an existing Special-Education School within a far-stretching natural and artificial landscape. The schools will be nestled together between a nature reserve with a pond, a meadow, several sport fields, a few residences, and a community centre.

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

One enters the new building at a central point on the site, approaching from either the north, east or west over an extensive car-free pedestrian landscape. The visitor enters the building directly into a naturally-lit open foyer which functions as the central hub connecting all of the building’s four levels. Directly next to the foyer sits the school administration and the teacher’s area where they can easily supervise the entrance and the schoolyard simultaneously.

Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten

This large open foyer acts as the heart of the new school, functioning also as the assembly hall, an interior meeting point, and a visual connection between the school’s various areas. Through this open hub, students can easily and intuitively find their way from the classrooms on the upper levels down to the music area, gymnasium, cafeteria, and recreation rooms that sit on the ground level. For school events, exhibitions, and theater performances the foyer offers a direct connection to the schoolyard with a view of the nature reserve and the pond beyond.

Site plan of Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten
Site plan – click for larger image

To optimize the natural lighting and temperature of the classrooms, large windows have been oriented to the north. Clusters of classrooms are separated by de-centralized “Learning Stations” where alternative interactive educational opportunities can be developed. The hallways are considered “Extensions of the Classroom” providing informal meeting points for gathering and exchanging information between students, teachers, and parents.

Floor plan of Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten
Floor plan – click for larger image

On the third floor are the areas for the natural sciences; Physics, Chemistry, and Biology. Following advice from educational consultants the Teachers’ preparation and work rooms have been divided into smaller units, placed between the individual lecture room and laboratories. For each of the three natural sciences a classroom is planned that can be used as large lecture hall, or can be divided into smaller classrooms with a partition wall.

All in all, here stands a simply structured, technically optimised, open-spaced school building that reacts to and reinforces the qualities of its local community and environment.

Section of Secondary School Ergolding by Behnisch Architekten
Section – click for larger image

Client: District of Landshut
Architect: Behnisch Architekten
Architekturbüro Leinhäupl + Neuber
Competition: VOF 2011, 1st prize
Planning and construction: 2011–2013
Gross: 135,000 sq.ft. (12.500 m²)
Volume: 1,940,000 cu.ft. (55,000 m³)

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Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon visualised by Virtual Design Unit

Swiss studio Virtual Design Unit has created realistic renderings of a theatre that was designed for Zurich by Sydney Opera House architect Jørn Utzon in 1964, but never built (+ slideshow + interview).

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

The Danish architect won a competition 50 years ago to design the Schauspielhaus on the spot next to the Kunsthaus in Zurich, but after a decade of planning the project was abandoned and remains unrealised.

Local opposition to David Chipperfield’s proposed extension to the Kunsthaus on the same site prompted Virtual Design Unit, co-founded by architects Susanne Fritz and Patrick Schöll, to revisit Utzon’s design in the hope of demonstrating that the building could still be an icon for the city today.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

“We saw the project that Utzon did in 1964 and we were curious if this project could still be there today, or would be better than all the suggestions that have been made in the last 20 years,” Susanne Fritz of Virtual Design Unit told Dezeen.

She explained that using hyper-realistic visualisation techniques it’s now possible to create convincing renderings of buildings that were never actually constructed.

“The greatest possibility is that you can make these designs accessible to everybody,” she said. “It’s a theory that [Utzon’s] project wasn’t successful because the people of Zurich couldn’t imagine what it would look like – there was a wooden model built but I think [digital] visualisations make architecture assessable for many people… the visualisation shows, in a photorealistic way, the building in context where it could be.”

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Their 3D construction was based on documents from the city’s archives and plans belonging to Utzon’s family. They knew the son of Utzon through a friend and he helped to advise them on details as well as putting them in touch with the project manager who worked on the original design.

“We were detectives putting things together and building this thing in 3D,” said Fritz. “We had to have a lot of creativity in the interior; we still don’t know how the interior would look because they didn’t go too much into the detail on the plans.” The team made decisions about how Utzon may have designed the auditorium based on details of the Sydney Opera House, and chose lighting and fixtures based on knowledge of suppliers who were around at the time.

The most striking feature of Utzon’s design for the Schauspielhaus is the wavy concrete roof. “He was always a fan of these concrete shells and he was always trying to get the climax of the diameter of the concrete,” she said. “His shells were kind of the same concept as in the inside of the Sydney Opera House: they were very good for the acoustics.”

The building was designed to step up gradually from the plaza so the entrance was on the same level as a park on the opposite side. “It’s a very horizontal building but I think this platform is the main attraction of the building – that you were on another level of the city, above the ground and a bit in another world.”

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

The 3D model was created in Cinema 4D and rendered in V-Ray, then the post-production work was done in Photoshop. They chose to show the building in a modern context with a slightly weathered facade, as though it had been build ten years ago. “We talked about whether we wanted to make it look like in the 1960s – rendering cars and people from the 1960s – but we wanted to put the building in today’s context rather than looking at the past because we think there’s a discussion about what to do with this place,” said Fritz.

Having made the detailed 3D model, she believes Utzon’s proposal could still be suitable for construction on the site today. “There’s different money going into different studies and competitions, so you could pull out this super nice project and it could be built now. I mean they would have to modify it, but yes, it could be built now.”

She also thinks that rendered environments need to look a little worn in order to seem credible. “A lot of people do lots of renderings that look sleek and clean. They all look the same because the building standard is similar,” she explained. “The most difficult thing to do is render old bricks. It’s really hard to make it look real. Or natural textures and surfaces, or even [old] furniture.”

While it’s now possible to produce convincing photo-realistic renderings, Fritz thinks the next step is towards realistic animations. “I think there will always be beautiful stills but I think it’s moving more towards moving image and animation,” she told us. “We are close to really super nice animation where rivers flow and people walk around.”

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Looking further ahead, she believes that in ten to 20 years it will be possible to create a photo-realistic environment where the user can look around and explore wherever they want. “That’s something I always hear from clients: they want to walk around in the rendering. Not on a path that somebody sets for them, but interactively.”

She explained that this isn’t possible yet due to the current limitations of computing power. “If you have a rendering that you can walk around in, your eyes capture thousands of images in seconds. It has to be rendered in real time and nobody can provide that in the quality that you want.”

The Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon is the first project by the studio to create a virtual version of a building that was never constructed, though most of their work involves creating virtual environments that will never be built, to feature in catalogues.

Virtual Design Unit is now talking to Marianne Panton about creating a “virtual refurbishment” of the famous canteen designed by her late husband Verner Panton for the Hamburg headquarters of the publishers of the Spiegel magazine in 1969. “The difference this time is that we have photo material showing what it actually was, so there’s less interpretation about the furniture they used,” Fritz noted. “There is a desire to revisit this building and this way you could revisit it virtually.”

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Here’s a transcript of the interview with Susanne Fritz:


Rose Etherington: How did the project come about?

Susanne Fritz: In Zurich there is a political discussion about what is going to happen to this place – whether it’s going to be an extension of the Kunsthaus museum – and then we saw the project that Utzon did in 1964 and we were curious if this project could still be there today, or would be better than all the selections that have already been made in the last 20 years.

We had been digging into the city’s archives and we found all these plans for the competition but no detailed drawings. Then, knowing the son of Utzon, we called him to ask if it would be okay to give us more information and plans out of their archives. He did so and put us in contact with the project manager who worked on the competition but lives in Turkey now.

They gave us more detailed information about the building and helped us out. We were detectives putting things together and building this thing in 3D, then we showed them the images and they liked it.

Rose Etherington: How much detail was included in the archive material? Did you have to use some creativity and fill in the blanks?

Susanne Fritz: We had to have a lot of creativity in the interior. We still don’t know how the interior looks because they didn’t go too much into the detail of the plans. Looking at the interior of the Sydney Opera house, we came to some conclusions about how we could have done that. Then let’s say for the lighting, in Scandinavia there weren’t so many lamps available compared to today so it was kind of an interpretation thing but it was signed off by Jørn Utzon’s son.

Rose Etherington: Do you think this building would have been a better building for the site than the one that is being proposed?

Susanne Fritz: Well it would definitely be a very interesting building but the problem is that Utzon didn’t pay a lot of attention to the site and the whole restructuring of the whole area would be necessary and demolition of buildings which are under protection.

So I think the architectural project is great but you also have to pay attention to the people who are quite conservative. They don’t want to demolish buildings which are of heritage or historical value and I think if you are an architect, you have to pay attention to that sensitivity in the project. From only an architectural point of view, I think it would have been a great building in the right position.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: Is that why it wasn’t realised at the time? Because it wasn’t right for the site?

Susanne Fritz: It was because they wanted to spend 27 million on the project and then he changed the building so they had to reorganise the traffic. First they tried to put the traffic underground and then through the building, it got a totally different dimension, and suddenly it was more than twice [the budget] and it got really expensive. The demolition of these old buildings was also an issue.

There was this rumour from Sydney. What happened [with the Sydney Opera House] was that Utzon couldn’t finish the project and started changing things. He wrote a letter to the minister and said that he can’t work under these conditions and the minister thought that this was him resigning from the project and obviously quit with Utzon and hired another architect.

All the other architects were against this and voted for Utzon but of course there were also people who thought it was his fault, that he didn’t have the capacities or the experience to do that large building, so there was some stress and some people thought that he couldn’t be trusted.

I think it was a combination of a couple of things [that led to the Zurich project being abandoned] and no one knows for sure. We don’t know what the City Council talked about in their session. They suddenly abandoned the project after seven years of planning.

Rose Etherington: Can we talk about Utzon’s design? What his main idea for the building?

Susanne Fritz: He was always a fan of these concrete shells and in Sydney they thought that it couldn’t be possible to do such a big shell. He is always trying to get the climax of the diameter of the concrete. Concrete shells were his speciality and he applied that [with the Schauspielhaus] again. His shells were kind of the same concept as in the inside of the Sydney Opera House: they were very good for the acoustics. He said that he wanted to transfer the image of the wave to this building.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: Are there other features that are distinctive to his work in this building?

Susanne Fritz: The original idea that the Zurich people liked was the main hall was not a hierarchic interior, where you have different levels and then the balconies. He skipped the balconies and ended up with one big floor, and there’s no social distinction between the first and second balcony.

Rose Etherington: What would it have been like for the visitors of the building?

Susanne Fritz: I think for him how you approach a building was very important, so the building kind of slowly rises and steps over the place and there’s a little hill with a park on the other site. So when you go up to the entrance you would have been on the same level as the park opposite. I think it would have been very a very nice view and also you’d be above the ground and a bit in another world. And then you could wonder in this building into the different halls. It’s a very horizontal building but I think this platforms is the main attraction of the building – that you were on another level of the city.

Rose Etherington: It looks like there’s a waterfall coming off the edge of the roof.

Susanne Fritz: Yes thats an interpretation. We thought that could be nice, but we don’t know if it was planned.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: Have you always been a fan of his work or was it this particular project that got you interested?

Susanne Fritz: I really love his work and I really love concrete architecture. I mean Utzon was also a great engineer. Of course he worked with Ove Arup, but all the architects gave up because they couldn’t solve this big shell problem. Because he was always studying bionics, he looked at nature and he took the static rules of nature and translated them into building. He was one of the first architects to do that and that’s really admirable.

Rose Etherington: What capabilities do realist rendering techniques give us now?

Susanne Fritz: The greatest possibility is that you can make these designs accessible to everybody. It’s a theory that [Utzon’s] project wasn’t successful because the people of Zurich couldn’t imagine what it would look like. There was a wooden model built but I think [digital] visualisations make architecture assessable for many people.

Some say that these visualisations don’t leave room for interpretation, which is true. With a sketch you can have much more interpretation and I’m sure if he made detailed imagery it might have had the same effect. But the visualisation shows, in a photorealistic way, the building in context where it could be.

Rose Etherington: Do you think if Utzon had access to these kind of visualisation techniques at the time that the project might have been successful?

Susanne Fritz: I think it could have been a way, because people are open to many kinds of aesthetics and architecture. I think [Switzerland] is a really progressive country in terms of architecture and there could have been more people who supported the project because the people of Zurich have a voice and they will raise it and they will raise issues if they want something or if they don’t want something.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: What will you do with the images now?

Susanne Fritz: We are planning an exhibition but we want to wait a bit because we have another project in the pipeline. I met Marianne Panton, the wife of Vernor Panton. The famous Spiegel Canteen [designed by Panton for the Hamburg headquarters of the publishers of the Spiegel magazine in 1969] is not there anymore and there are lots of images for it, but actually the project isn’t documented very well. So we want to get out the plans again and work with Marianne Panton to get books and information. We might also rebuilt this building, and the building was once there and it’s not there anymore, so we’re doing a virtual refurbishment. We thought we could do both things and then make an exhibition about both things.

Rose Etherington: Is there anything different about doing a virtual refurbishment rather than a virtual build?

Susanne Fritz: The difference this time is that we have photo material showing what it actually was, so there’s less interpretation about the furniture they used etc. Right after we heard about it, they rebuilt the canteen in an exhibition because the canteen is so famous. That proves that there is a desire to revisit this building and this way you could revisit it virtually.

Rose Etherington: Have you ever recreated a building from the past?

Susanne Fritz: No, the Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon is the first. Normally we’re creating architecture which we know is never going to be built, though. There are companies who want to place their product in a context of architecture, so we design the architecture for them virtually and place the product and shoot a photo which they use for marketing purposes. We act as architects, we draw plans, we built it in 3D to be built. We’re working on a catalogue. We would also write the text for it. We’re acting as art director and visualisation and text provider.

Rose Etherington: Did you want to try and make the Schauspielhaus appear as if it was new or as if it had been there since the 1960s?

Susanne Fritz: If you look at the images now it looks like a concrete building after a facade clean. We don’t make it look old or used. The the way [the images] look now is as if it was built 10 years ago, but if it would have been built in the 1960s, it would look different.

We talked about if we wanted to make it look like in the 1960s, rendering cars and people from the 1960s, but we wanted to put the building in today’s context rather than looking at the past because we think there’s a discussion about what to do with this place. There’s different money going into different studies and competitions, so you could pull out a super nice project and it could be built now. I mean they would have to modify it, but yes it could be built now.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: Do you think renderings need to look a bit dirty to seem real?

Susanne Fritz: A lot of people do lots of renderings that look sleek and clean. They all look the same because the building standard is similar. You have parquet flooring, furniture that is minimal, Modern architecture with big windows – beautiful architecture -but I think they all look the same. The most difficult thing to do is render old bricks. It’s really hard to make it look real. Or natural textures and surfaces, or even furniture. I love furniture but in all the magazines we see, vintage is mixed with modern furniture and it often makes something special, because there’s some heritage in it. I think that’s the most difficult thing to render.

Rose Etherington: How do you think architectural rendering should change?

Susanne Fritz: The human level in renderings – nowadays they put a ball in the image with shoes lying around, but people have decided now to create blankets. I think there will always be beautiful stills but I think it’s moving more towards moving image and animation. We are close to really super nice animation where rivers flow and people walk around.

I guess that you can walk around interactively in a rendering and thats not possible now, because it has to be rendered in real time and nobody can provide that in the quality that you want. But that’s something I always hear from clients. They want to walk around in the rendering. Not on a path that somebody sets for them but interactively and nobody can do it. They render for hours and hours but if you have a rendering that you can walk around in room, your eyes capture thousands of images in seconds, the designer would have to render all these thousands of images per second when you look at it and there’s no computer that can do it. In ten to 20 years you can look at it in a really photorealistic quality as if you looking at your room now.

The post Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon visualised
by Virtual Design Unit
appeared first on Dezeen.

Jørn Utzon’s unbuilt Schauspielhaus digitally resurrected by Virtual Design Unit

News: Swiss studio Virtual Design Unit has created a computer model of an unbuilt Zurich theatre designed by Jørn Utzon in 1964, to show that the building “could be built now” (+ slideshow + interview).

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

“We saw the project that Utzon did in 1964 and we were curious if this project could still be there today, or would be better than all the suggestions that have been made [for the site] in the last 20 years,” said Susanne Fritz of Virtual Design Unit. “It could be built now.”

Utzon, the Danish architect best known for the Sydney Opera House, won a competition 50 years ago to design the Schauspielhaus on the spot next to the Kunsthaus in Zurich, Switzerland, but after a decade of planning the project was abandoned.

Local opposition to David Chipperfield’s proposed extension to the Kunsthaus on the same site prompted Virtual Design Unit, co-founded by architects Fritz and Patrick Schöll, to revisit Utzon’s design in the hope of demonstrating that the building could still be an icon for the city today.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

The images show the building as it would appear today, with a slightly weathered facade as though it had been build ten years ago. Fritz said the images could help show the people of Zurich how the building would fit into the cityscape – something Utzon was unable to do at the time.

“It’s a theory that [Utzon’s] project wasn’t successful because the people of Zurich couldn’t imagine what it would look like,” Fritz told Dezeen. “There was a wooden model built but I think [digital] visualisations make architecture assessable for many people. The visualisation shows, in a photorealistic way, the building in context where it could be.”

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

The project is the first known example of an unrealised architectural icon from the past being resurrected in this way. In a recent interview with Dezeen, rendering expert Peter Guthrie said 3D visualising techniques made architecture easier for the public to understand. “It makes un-built architecture more immediate and allows for greater conversation about the built environment,” he says.

Virtual Design Unit’s reconstruction was based on documents from the city’s archives and plans belonging to Utzon’s family. They knew the son of Utzon through a friend and he helped to advise them on details and put them in touch with the project manager who worked on the original design.

“We were detectives putting things together and building this thing in 3D,” said Fritz, who created the 3D model in Cinema 4D and rendered in V-Ray, then the post-production work was done in Photoshop. “We had to have a lot of creativity in the interior; we still don’t know how the interior would look because they didn’t go too much into the detail on the plans.”

The team made decisions about how Utzon may have designed the auditorium based on details of the Sydney Opera House, and chose lighting and fixtures based on knowledge of suppliers who were around at the time.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

The most striking feature of Utzon’s design for the Schauspielhaus is the wavy concrete roof. “He was always a fan of these concrete shells and he was always trying to get the climax of the diameter of the concrete,” she said. “His shells were kind of the same concept as in the inside of the Sydney Opera House: they were very good for the acoustics.”

The building was designed to step up gradually from the plaza so the entrance was on the same level as a park on the opposite side. “It’s a very horizontal building but I think this platform is the main attraction of the building – that you were on another level of the city, above the ground and a bit in another world.”

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Virtual Design Unit is now talking to Marianne Panton about creating a “virtual refurbishment” of the famous canteen designed by her late husband Verner Panton for the Hamburg headquarters of the publishers of the Spiegel magazine in 1969. “The difference this time is that we have photo material showing what it actually was, so there’s less interpretation about the furniture they used,” Fritz noted. “There is a desire to revisit this building and this way you could revisit it virtually.”

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Here’s a transcript of the interview with Susanne Fritz:


Rose Etherington: How did the project come about?

Susanne Fritz: In Zurich there is a political discussion about what is going to happen to this place – whether it’s going to be an extension of the Kunsthaus museum – and then we saw the project that Utzon did in 1964 and we were curious if this project could still be there today, or would be better than all the selections that have already been made in the last 20 years.

We had been digging into the city’s archives and we found all these plans for the competition but no detailed drawings. Then, knowing the son of Utzon, we called him to ask if it would be okay to give us more information and plans out of their archives. He did so and put us in contact with the project manager who worked on the competition but lives in Turkey now.

They gave us more detailed information about the building and helped us out. We were detectives putting things together and building this thing in 3D, then we showed them the images and they liked it.

Rose Etherington: How much detail was included in the archive material? Did you have to use some creativity and fill in the blanks?

Susanne Fritz: We had to have a lot of creativity in the interior. We still don’t know how the interior looks because they didn’t go too much into the detail of the plans. Looking at the interior of the Sydney Opera house, we came to some conclusions about how we could have done that. Then let’s say for the lighting, in Scandinavia there weren’t so many lamps available compared to today so it was kind of an interpretation thing but it was signed off by Jørn Utzon’s son.

Rose Etherington: Do you think this building would have been a better building for the site than the one that is being proposed?

Susanne Fritz: Well it would definitely be a very interesting building but the problem is that Utzon didn’t pay a lot of attention to the site and the whole restructuring of the whole area would be necessary and demolition of buildings which are under protection.

So I think the architectural project is great but you also have to pay attention to the people who are quite conservative. They don’t want to demolish buildings which are of heritage or historical value and I think if you are an architect, you have to pay attention to that sensitivity in the project. From only an architectural point of view, I think it would have been a great building in the right position.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: Is that why it wasn’t realised at the time? Because it wasn’t right for the site?

Susanne Fritz: It was because they wanted to spend 27 million on the project and then he changed the building so they had to reorganise the traffic. First they tried to put the traffic underground and then through the building, it got a totally different dimension, and suddenly it was more than twice [the budget] and it got really expensive. The demolition of these old buildings was also an issue.

There was this rumour from Sydney. What happened [with the Sydney Opera House] was that Utzon couldn’t finish the project and started changing things. He wrote a letter to the minister and said that he can’t work under these conditions and the minister thought that this was him resigning from the project and obviously quit with Utzon and hired another architect.

All the other architects were against this and voted for Utzon but of course there were also people who thought it was his fault, that he didn’t have the capacities or the experience to do that large building, so there was some stress and some people thought that he couldn’t be trusted.

I think it was a combination of a couple of things [that led to the Zurich project being abandoned] and no one knows for sure. We don’t know what the City Council talked about in their session. They suddenly abandoned the project after seven years of planning.

Rose Etherington: Can we talk about Utzon’s design? What his main idea for the building?

Susanne Fritz: He was always a fan of these concrete shells and in Sydney they thought that it couldn’t be possible to do such a big shell. He is always trying to get the climax of the diameter of the concrete. Concrete shells were his speciality and he applied that [with the Schauspielhaus] again. His shells were kind of the same concept as in the inside of the Sydney Opera House: they were very good for the acoustics. He said that he wanted to transfer the image of the wave to this building.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: Are there other features that are distinctive to his work in this building?

Susanne Fritz: The original idea that the Zurich people liked was the main hall was not a hierarchic interior, where you have different levels and then the balconies. He skipped the balconies and ended up with one big floor, and there’s no social distinction between the first and second balcony.

Rose Etherington: What would it have been like for the visitors of the building?

Susanne Fritz: I think for him how you approach a building was very important, so the building kind of slowly rises and steps over the place and there’s a little hill with a park on the other site. So when you go up to the entrance you would have been on the same level as the park opposite. I think it would have been very a very nice view and also you’d be above the ground and a bit in another world. And then you could wonder in this building into the different halls. It’s a very horizontal building but I think this platforms is the main attraction of the building – that you were on another level of the city.

Rose Etherington: It looks like there’s a waterfall coming off the edge of the roof.

Susanne Fritz: Yes that’s an interpretation. We thought that could be nice, but we don’t know if it was planned.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: Have you always been a fan of his work or was it this particular project that got you interested?

Susanne Fritz: I really love his work and I really love concrete architecture. I mean Utzon was also a great engineer. Of course he worked with Ove Arup, but all the architects gave up because they couldn’t solve this big shell problem. Because he was always studying bionics, he looked at nature and he took the static rules of nature and translated them into building. He was one of the first architects to do that and that’s really admirable.

Rose Etherington: What capabilities do realist rendering techniques give us now?

Susanne Fritz: The greatest possibility is that you can make these designs accessible to everybody. It’s a theory that [Utzon’s] project wasn’t successful because the people of Zurich couldn’t imagine what it would look like. There was a wooden model built but I think [digital] visualisations make architecture assessable for many people.

Some say that these visualisations don’t leave room for interpretation, which is true. With a sketch you can have much more interpretation and I’m sure if he made detailed imagery it might have had the same effect. But the visualisation shows, in a photorealistic way, the building in context where it could be.

Rose Etherington: Do you think if Utzon had access to these kind of visualisation techniques at the time that the project might have been successful?

Susanne Fritz: I think it could have been a way, because people are open to many kinds of aesthetics and architecture. I think [Switzerland] is a really progressive country in terms of architecture and there could have been more people who supported the project because the people of Zurich have a voice and they will raise it and they will raise issues if they want something or if they don’t want something.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: What will you do with the images now?

Susanne Fritz: We are planning an exhibition but we want to wait a bit because we have another project in the pipeline. I met Marianne Panton, the wife of Vernor Panton. The famous Spiegel Canteen [designed by Panton for the Hamburg headquarters of the publishers of the Spiegel magazine in 1969] is not there anymore and there are lots of images for it, but actually the project isn’t documented very well. So we want to get out the plans again and work with Marianne Panton to get books and information. We might also rebuild this building, and the building was once there and it’s not there anymore, so we’re doing a virtual refurbishment. We thought we could do both things and then make an exhibition about both things.

Rose Etherington: Is there anything different about doing a virtual refurbishment rather than a virtual build?

Susanne Fritz: The difference this time is that we have photo material showing what it actually was, so there’s less interpretation about the furniture they used etc. Right after we heard about it, they rebuilt the canteen in an exhibition because the canteen is so famous. That proves that there is a desire to revisit this building and this way you could revisit it virtually.

Rose Etherington: Have you ever recreated a building from the past?

Susanne Fritz: No, the Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon is the first. Normally we’re creating architecture which we know is never going to be built, though. There are companies who want to place their product in a context of architecture, so we design the architecture for them virtually and place the product and shoot a photo which they use for marketing purposes. We act as architects, we draw plans, we built it in 3D to be built. We’re working on a catalogue. We would also write the text for it. We’re acting as art director and visualisation and text provider.

Rose Etherington: Did you want to try and make the Schauspielhaus appear as if it was new or as if it had been there since the 1960s?

Susanne Fritz: If you look at the images now it looks like a concrete building after a facade clean. We don’t make it look old or used. The the way [the images] look now is as if it was built 10 years ago, but if it would have been built in the 1960s, it would look different.

We talked about if we wanted to make it look like in the 1960s, rendering cars and people from the 1960s, but we wanted to put the building in today’s context rather than looking at the past because we think there’s a discussion about what to do with this place. There’s different money going into different studies and competitions, so you could pull out a super nice project and it could be built now. I mean they would have to modify it, but yes it could be built now.

Schauspielhaus by Jørn Utzon for Zurich virtually constructed in realisticc renders by Virtual Design Unit

Rose Etherington: Do you think renderings need to look a bit dirty to seem real?

Susanne Fritz: A lot of people do lots of renderings that look sleek and clean. They all look the same because the building standard is similar. You have parquet flooring, furniture that is minimal, Modern architecture with big windows – beautiful architecture -but I think they all look the same. The most difficult thing to do is render old bricks. It’s really hard to make it look real. Or natural textures and surfaces, or even furniture. I love furniture but in all the magazines we see, vintage is mixed with modern furniture and it often makes something special, because there’s some heritage in it. I think that’s the most difficult thing to render.

Rose Etherington: How do you think architectural rendering should change?

Susanne Fritz: The human level in renderings – nowadays they put a ball in the image with shoes lying around, but people have decided now to create blankets. I think there will always be beautiful stills but I think it’s moving more towards moving image and animation. We are close to really super nice animation where rivers flow and people walk around.

I guess that you can walk around interactively in a rendering and thats not possible now, because it has to be rendered in real time and nobody can provide that in the quality that you want. But that’s something I always hear from clients. They want to walk around in the rendering. Not on a path that somebody sets for them but interactively and nobody can do it. They render for hours and hours but if you have a rendering that you can walk around in room, your eyes capture thousands of images in seconds, the designer would have to render all these thousands of images per second when you look at it and there’s no computer that can do it. In ten to 20 years you can look at it in a really photorealistic quality as if you looking at your room now.

The post Jørn Utzon’s unbuilt Schauspielhaus digitally
resurrected by Virtual Design Unit
appeared first on Dezeen.

New Pinterest board: bridges

Pinterest- bridges

Our new Pinterest board features a proposal for a wavy pedestrian bridge in ChinaBritish designer Thomas Heatherwick’s proposed Garden Bridge across London’s River Thames and a bridge in Denmark that has a musical instrument made out of hanging metal pipes from the underside.

See our new bridges Pinterest board»

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The post New Pinterest board:
bridges
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Swedish shopping centre’s swooping entrances “drag people inside” says architect

Movie: in this exclusive video interview from Inside Festival, Joakim Lyth of Wingårdhs explains how the Swedish architecture firm used brightly-coloured curved glass to draw customers inside its Emporia shopping centre.

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

Emporia, which won the Shopping Centres category at this year’s Inside Festival, is a shopping mall located to the south of the city of Malmö in Sweden.

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

It features two gaping entrances made out of brightly-coloured curved glass, one amber and one blue.

“Two main entrances lead people into the shopping centre,” says Lyth. “They are formed by a double-curved glass [structure]. They should drag people inside the shopping centre.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

The use of coloured glass continues throughout the building to help lead customers through the shopping centre’s figure-of-eight plan.

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

“The coloured glass goes through the whole of the building, different colours are used in different circulation hubs,” Lyth explains. “One of the problems with a shopping centre is that they’re usually quite hard to find your way around. So [using] strong colours, giving a strong atmosphere and identity to different hubs seemed like a reasonable idea.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

He adds: “The figure-of-eight is quite a common feature when it comes to shopping centres. The curved shape gives you a hint of what’s hiding behind the next corner.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

The building features residential and office units on the levels above the shopping centre, as well as a publicly accessible roof garden on the top.

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

“The municipality demanded that the greenery we took with the shopping centre should be given back,” Lyth says. “The roof has no commercial value, so it’s just a place where you can relax.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

The whole project took five years to complete. Lyth says a shopping centre the size of Emporia only became viable in Malmö when the Öresund Bridge, which connects Sweden to Denmark, opened in 2000.

“It made part of Malmö, where Emporia now is situated, closer to the international airport of Copenhagen than Copenhagen itself,” he says. “That was a tremendous shift in the region and made it possible for [the site where Emporia was built] to gain a lot of new value.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

Despite the large number of shopping centres in the area, Lyth believes Emporia stands out.

“The building is performing pretty well,” he says. “I think that people really like the atmosphere, the ambience. It’s something different than the normal shopping centre.”

Joakim Lyth of Wingardh Arkitektkontor
Joakim Lyth of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Inside Festival 2013 took place at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore from 2 to 4 October. The next Inside Festival will take place at the same venue from 1 to 3 October 2014. Award entries are open February to June 2014.

The post Swedish shopping centre’s swooping entrances
“drag people inside” says architect
appeared first on Dezeen.