Bamboo construction for Haiti wins Foster + Partners Prize 2013

News: Architectural Association graduate John Naylor has won this year’s Foster + Partners Prize with his proposal to introduce bamboo to the construction industry in Haiti, which is still struggling to recover from the 2010 earthquake.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor

Presented annually to an Architectural Association diploma student who best addresses themes of sustainability and infrastructure, the prize is awarded to John Naylor for his Bamboo Lakou project, which combines a sustainable bamboo-growing infrastructure with the development of the vernacular “Lakou” communal courtyard typology.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor

Naylor explains that Haiti’s current construction practices contributed to the massive devastation caused by the earthquake, which caused the collapse of 280,000 buildings and killed 316,000 people, even though a far more powerful quake in Chile caused the deaths of just 525. “This was a disaster of Haiti’s lack of lightweight building materials, working practices, and construction, not nature,” he says.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Lakou workshops

As Haiti has massive deforestation, Naylor wants to establish a long-term bamboo planting strategy and then gradually introduce it as an earthquake-resistant replacement for concrete.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Lakou earthquake resilience

“In a proud culture such as Haiti, preaching a new form of building to the construction sector is riddled with problems,” he explains, citing low skills, lack of equipment and illiteracy as obstacles. “This rematerialisation of a construction industry and subsequent demand aims to engender bamboo growth in Haiti.”

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Settlement scale – click for larger image

Naylor proposes a four-stage strategy that will begin with assessing the existing stock of bamboo available. A small group of workers would learn the techniques and as the material became more widely available the systems could be introduced nationwide to construct thousands of new Lakou courtyard houses.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Lakou one-hectare sample – click for larger image

AA director Brett Steele commented: “John Naylor’s project demonstrates the ways in which infrastructural ideas and architectural imagination might today expand beyond the cliches of Modernism to become life itself, literally breathing life into communities, cities and entire countries, today and long into the future.”

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Deforestation spiral – click for larger image

Past winners of the Foster + Partners Prize include a community for scientists in the treetops of the Amazon rainforest and a sanitation infrastructure concept, also for Haiti. See more projects by Architectural Association students.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Bamboo graph – click for larger image

See more stories about bamboo in architecture and design, including prototypes for modular homes in Vietnam.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Site masterplan

Here’s a project description from John Naylor:


John Naylor – Bamboo Lakou

At the local time of 16:53 on 12th January 2010 an earthquake of 7.0 hit one of the most densely populated suburbs of Haiti’s capital, Port au Prince.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Lakou cross section – click for larger image

An estimated three million people were affected by the quake. 250,000 residences, 30,000 commercial buildings collapsed, a million people homeless and 316,000 people dead. One month later an earthquake 500 times more powerful, hit central Chile resulting in the deaths of 525. This was a disaster of Haiti’s lack of lightweight building materials, working practices, and construction, not nature.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Lakou long section – click for larger image

Set in the context of Haiti, a country with massive deforestation and threatened by earthquakes, only heavy concrete and cement are the building materials of choice. As an integral part of a wider reforestation strategy, this project merges a sustainable bamboo infrastructure along with the vernacular ‘Lakou’ communal courtyard typology.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Design sequence – click for larger image

This aims to encourage the physical use of bamboo in the Haitian construction sector. The material properties of bamboo provide design opportunities to provide resilience to hurricanes and earthquakes, and affords an assembly logic which intends to communicate a parallel understanding of bamboo’s application beyond the building site. This rematerialisation of a construction industry and subsequent demand, aims to engender bamboo growth in Haiti, a material with wider ecological benefits.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Construction sequence – click for larger image

Introducing any new practice of working is difficult in any field. In a proud culture such as Haiti preaching a new form of building to the construction sector is riddled with problems. Low skills, lack of equipment and illiteracy, not to mention theft from a project, whether political corruption or material theft on site, all cause an environment not in a position to implement quality output which is all the more dangerous in Haiti, a site of huge seismic and natural threat. Materials in this location are defined by skill and natural resources. A lack of timber due to deforestation has resulted in concrete becoming the 21st Century vernacular and as a result any skills associated with construction have been aligned to work with concrete.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Building components – click for larger image

Initially the ‘Lakou’ courtyard house forms the fundamental urban block and this itself is broken into four stages.

(1) Occupational Strategy; which aims to determine a means of developing solutions of occupation for the local population grounded in the existing Haitian ‘Lakou’ typology of courtyard living.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Construction facade panels – click for larger image

(2) Material Strategy; looks at what is available in Haiti right now and speculates on how what is available can be compounded in the short term with bamboo. The typology and properties of materials will then determine any subsequent strategies.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Components – click for larger image

(3) Structural Strategy; looks at how bamboo can be implemented into a structural system which allows for the Haitian vernacular ‘Lakou’ design to be implemented. The structural strategy also looks at the limits of design versus materials in seismic areas and tests compounds of materials as well as seismic building techniques to develop a low cost, easily buildable structural system with proven seismic credentials.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Construction and facade frame – click for larger image

(4) Construction and Assembly Strategy; will produce an assembly logic explicit enough to work initially in a workforce mostly illiterate and yet can result in the successful implementation of aspects 1, 2, and 3. It is also designed that this logic has aspects of construction and material awareness which can propagate nationwide. This being either skill or outsourcing construction beyond the proposed new urbanism. This aims to create standards, knowledge, respect for the material and new economic opportunities.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Construction column and beam – click for larger image

This technical strategy forms an integral part of making a new timber and bamboo urbanism possible in Haiti. Through initially encouraging the physical use of bamboo in the Haitian construction sector at the building scale, the material properties of bamboo provide design opportunities to provide resilience to hurricanes and earthquakes, and affords an assembly logic which intends to communicate a parallel understanding of bamboo’s application beyond the building site.

Bamboo Lakou by John Naylor
Social function – click for larger image

This rematerialisation of a construction industry and subsequent demand, aims to engender bamboo growth in Haiti, a material with wider ecological benefits and lay the foundations of a new biodiverse dynamic Port au Prince.

The post Bamboo construction for Haiti
wins Foster + Partners Prize 2013
appeared first on Dezeen.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

Students from London’s Architectural Association have suspended a giant wooden cocoon between the trees of Hooke Park in Dorset, England (+ slideshow).

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

The wooden structure, designed and built by four students on the AA Design & Make programme, was envisioned as a quiet woodland retreat where an inhabitant can sit and watch the sun set beneath the surrounding tree canopy.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

“The Cocoon represents a journey through the forest, inviting and challenging the visitor to anticipate, imagine, explore and discover the natural beauty of the forest from a completely different perspective,” says the design team.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

Using four untreated sheets of plywood and one locally milled cedar tree, the students constructed a temporary frame and then used a bandaging technique to build up a facade of thin and flexible layers inside it.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

Once the structure was stiff enough, it was suspended around three trees so that it appears to weave between them.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

To enter the structure, a step ladder leads in through a hole at one end, while a smaller hole on the opposite side forms the window. Light also penetrates the interior though small gaps in the walls.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

The Architectural Association owns the 140-hectare Hooke Park and runs a number of workshops and courses at its workshop and studio facilities there. Last year, students built an assembly and prototyping workshop at the park, while in projects in 2011 included a pod-shaped hideaway.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

Other pavilions built by AA students include a 2009 structure referencing driftwood and a shell-like shelter from 2008. See more stories about the Architectural Association.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

Photographs are by Hugo G. Urrutia, one of the design students.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make

Here’s some extra information from the design team:


AA Hooke Park – Cocoon

Shelter was prefabricated, transported and successfully installed, hanging and weaving over three selected trees in Hooke Park, Dorset, UK.

The Cocoon is a design derived from the experience of walking through the forest of Hooke Park in Dorset. Its design explores the relationship between natural light, material and occupational space. The Cocoon represents a journey through the forest, inviting and challenging the visitor to anticipate, imagine, explore and discover the natural beauty of the forest from a completely different perspective. Even though it uses the trees as vertical support, the design is site specific as it weaves through 3 selected trees in the forest.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make
Construction process

The structure emerged through a process of ‘bandaging’ until it was stiff enough to hang it from the trees. This process provided a unique spatial transformation of the interior spaces through articulation and penetration of natural light, and a strong tectonic language, achieved by the imperfection but novel materials and form.

An inhabitable suspended ‘cocoon’, that takes its form from a precise weaving through three trees at the fringe of a forest clearing, becomes Hooke Park’s premiere vantage spot to view the winter sunset.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make
Installation

The Cocoon, provides a unique visual and tactile experience through its undulated canyon-like forms created by the form-finding cladding.

The selection of materials for the project was based on the team’s design ambition to maximise the use of material from Hooke Park. Four sheets of plywood and one western red wood cedar tree was milled to create this unique ergonomically design shelter with interior spaces that provide areas for relaxation and enjoyment of the amazing framed views of the winter sunset. An important characteristic and advantage of the green and untreated timber is the high flexibility achieved after milling into thin strips, permitting the cladding strips to bend and take new form.

The Cocoon by AA Design & Make
Concept visualisation

The interior spaces of The Cocoon enable the visitor to have a unique visual and tactile experience through its undulated canyon-like forms created with the cedar cladding, the fresh smell of the wood and the articulation of the light, bringing the visitor closer to the canopy of the trees and surrounding environment. Architecturally, the team’s ambition was accomplished thanks to the unique material characteristics, the spatial transformation of the interior spaces through articulation and penetration of the natural light, and a strong tectonic language, achieved by the imperfection but novel materials and form.

Designed and made by: Hugo G. Urrutia, Abdullah Omar, Ashgar Khan, Karjvit Rirermvanich
Designed for: Architectural Association/ M.Arch Design & Make programme 2013

The post The Cocoon by
AA Design & Make
appeared first on Dezeen.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng wins Foster + Partners Prize 2012

Architectural Association student Yvonne Weng has won the 2012 Foster + Partners Prize with designs that would allow scientists to live in the treetops of the Amazon rainforest.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

The prize is presented annually to the AA diploma student whose final project best addresses themes of sustainability and infrastructure.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

Weng’s proposals are for a series of lightweight pods and platforms where scientists can study and harvest the medicinal plants of the jungle.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

Research laboratories would be contained inside a series of suspended pods that can be lowered to the ground when necessary, while a second set of pods would provide living quarters.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

A web of synthetic fibres and steel supports would hold each of the pods in place and provide a solid canopy above the trees.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

Last year’s prize was awarded to a sanitation infrastructure concept in Haiti by graduate Aditya Aachi.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

We previously published another concept for a treetop research centre – see it here.

Here’s some more information from Foster + Partners:


The Architectural Association Foster + Partners Prize 2012

The Architectural Association and Foster + Partners are pleased to announce the award of the Foster + Partners Prize, which is presented annually to the AA Diploma student whose portfolio best addresses the themes of sustainability and infrastructure. The recipient is selected jointly by the AA and Foster + Partners at the end of each academic year.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

Click above for larger image

This year’s prize has been awarded to Yvonne Weng, of Diploma Unit 17, for her project ‘The 6th Layer – Explorative Canopy Trail’. Set in the context of Brazilian Amazon rainforest, the project recognizes the reciprocal relationship between humanity and the forest and sees the forest as a natural infrastructure to work with, instead of against.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

Click above for larger image

The design focuses on creating an ultra-lightweight, self-sustaining and easily deployable architectural system, which occupies the space at the top of the tree canopies. The extra layer of space created opens up a new territory that inspires new ways in which to perceive, occupy and experience the forest.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

Click above for larger image

Yvonne Weng, and the other six shortlisted candidates, will be invited to exhibit their work in the gallery in Foster + Partners’ studio in October, when there will be a formal reception and a cheque will be presented. The themes of sustainability and infrastructure that underpin the award were selected to highlight themes of common interest to the AA and Foster + Partners and for their significance in contemporary architectural discourse more globally.

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

Click above for larger image

Mouzhan Majidi, Chief Executive of Foster + Partners, said:
“This is the third year we have awarded this prize and in Yvonne Weng’s project we see it gaining strength. We hope very much that the debate this prize generates will encourage students to address themes that are of increasing relevance to architecture today.”

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

 Click for larger image above

Brett Steele, Director of the Architectural Association School of Architecture, said:
“The AA School is delighted once again to have participated in the judging of the Foster + Partners Prize. The work of this year’s winner indicates the enthusiasm and imagination shown by AA Diploma students in addressing challenging, topical issues in architecture. We are grateful to Foster + Partners for their continued support of the prize and the innovative work it encourages.”

Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng

Click above for larger image

Yvonne Weng, winner of the 2012 Foster + Partners Prize said:
“Programmatically, the project is centred on scientific exploration and harvesting medicinal plants, which provides an alternative use of the forest without destroying it. At the same time, the positive occupation of the territory it enables could provide a level of surveillance that helps to protect both the endangered environment and the indigenous population.”

The post Explorative Canopy Trail by Yvonne Weng
wins Foster + Partners Prize 2012
appeared first on Dezeen.

Hooke Park Big Shed by AA Design & Make

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

Students from London’s Architectural Association have designed and built a faceted wooden workshop in the woods in Dorset, England.

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

This structure, which was completed as part of the AA Design & Make programme, is based within the 350-acre Hooke Park forest owned by the school and will be used as an assembly and prototyping workshop by future students.

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

The larch used to construct the building was sourced both from within the park and from local woodlands.

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

A system of columns and trusses made from unmilled tree trunks comprise the building’s structural framework.

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

The project was overseen by course director Martin Self, as well as by British architect and tutor Piers Taylor.

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

We previously featured a pod-shaped retreat that AA students completed in the same woodland – see it here or see more projects by AA students here.

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

Photography is by Valerie Bennett.

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

Here’s a little more text from Piers Taylor:


A new workshop building designed by the Architectural Association Design and Make students, on which we are acting as executive architects.

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

The building is constructed using prototypical techniques developed through testing in the material science laboratory at Bath University and using material extracted from the Hooke woodland, which has been constructed by a team put together by Charley Brentnall.

 

Hooke Park Big Shed by Piers Taylor and AA

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

This pod-shaped woodland retreat floats on a net between the trees in Dorset, UK.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

American designer Jesse Randzio completed A Separate Place in 2007 with the help of twelve students from the Architectural Association during a month long workshop in Hooke Park, Dorset.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

Above: photograph is by Paxo Paxton

Materials were supplied locally and the pod is made of red cedar planks which overlap in the style of a clinker boat.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

Copper rivets pin the shell together and a steel chimney pokes through the roof.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association

The pod rests within a net attached to a metal ring that is in turn suspended from the surrounding trees using tensile cables.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

Above: photograph is by Paxo Paxton

After climbing up the rope netting, a small elliptical door gives access to the intimate interior where a fire can be lit in the miniature stove and elevated views glimpsed out over the forest.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

Above: photograph is by Martita Llorens-Echegaray

Swinging gently with the movement of its occupants, it almost feels like being inside the hull of a boat.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

Photography is by Jesse Randzio,  apart from where otherwise stated.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


The AV Custerson Award was given annually to a member of the Architectural Association community to fund a project promoting the use of timber at Hooke Park. 2007 recipient Jesse Randzio, 3rd Year, organized a month long summer workshop to build a Separate Place, a hanging retreat in the forest.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

The project was exhibited at the Architectural Association, London, in 2008.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

A Separate Place is a red cedar sitting room for just a few people. There is no building footprint, only shadow, and so minimal site impact. It is tailored specifically to its location but adaptable to any. The door is high and very small, but once inside it’s a fine safe place; there’s a warm fire burning and tea in the kettle.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

Jesse designed and built the 4½ square meter floating capsule with the help of a dozen students from throughout the AA. The group visited local industries in Lyme Regis and in Bridport to learn boat building and rigging techniques.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

The pod is built of western red cedar in the style of a clinker boat, with copper rivets and trim, and a steel chimney and stove. The timber was felled in the Hooke Park forest, and other materials were supplied locally.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

We suggest a future of AV Custerson Award projects that are continuously under examination. Every five years, matching the cyclical forest management plan, a project should be reevaluated and steps should be taken to address the relevance of each project and its relationship to other Hooke Park programs.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

In this way, we can ensure that Hooke Park remains an active, vibrant, and productive facility. A Separate Place is coming into its fifth year and is due for reconsideration.

A Separate Place by Jesse Randzio and Architectural Association students

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

Students at the Architectural Association in London have constructed leaf-like sculptures that curl down from a fourth-floor roof terrace to a ground level courtyard.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

Top: photograph by Valerie Bennett

Strips of plywood from recycled exhibition panels were twisted into pairs and fastened together using cable-ties to create the three separate parts of the 3013 installation.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

The suspended sculptures are draped over the brick walls of the AA building at Bedford Square.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

Led by artist Lawrence Lek, industrial designer Onur Ozkaya and architect Jesse Randzio, students designed and fabricated the installation for a unit on the summer programme.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

Temporary timber pavilions constructed outside the AA in the past have resembled logs, mushrooms and shellssee more stories about AA projects here.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

Photography is by the unit, apart from where otherwise stated.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

Here are some more details from the AA:


3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

In a thousand years, London will be saturated. Constrained by the green belt around it and freed from restrictions on building skyscrapers, the city will grow inwards and upwards. Within this scenario of extreme density, students at this AA Summer School unit led by artist Lawrence Lek, industrial designer Onur Ozkaya, and architect Jesse Randzio imagined how public space could evolve and adapt to smaller, vertical sites.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

The unit developed a sequence of three skins to connect the upper terrace and lower courtyard at the AA in Bedford Square. The surfaces were formed from pairs of twisted plywood strips cut from salvaged exhibition panels. These were joined together at their edges to form flexible skins tailored to the site. The upper skins were suspended from above, lightly touching the existing brick walls for support; the fabric-like behaviour of the surfaces allowed their final form to be determined by how they rest naturally under gravity.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

This installation revealed the hidden relationships between different levels of the building, creating temporary shelters and flexible gathering points that address how the city might be occupied today and in the future.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

Students: Agni Kadi, Ehsan Ehsari, Frances Liu, Galo Carbajo Garcia, Hande Oney, Harsh Vernaya, I Ching Chu, Joaquin Del Rio, Julia Kubisty, Leonardo Olavarrieta, Marina Olivi, Masayo Velasco, Paco Alonso, Pedro Domingues, Summer Lin, Tess Zhang

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association

The project was one of five units at the AA’s Summer School 2011 programme.


See also:

.

Grompies
at the AA
Driftwood pavilion
by AA Unit 2
Swoosh Pavilion
at the AA

2011 Foster + Partners prize awarded to AA School student for Haiti proposals


Dezeen Wire:
AA student Aditya Aachi has been awarded the 2011 Foster + Partners Prize for a sanitation infrastructure concept in Haiti, which was severely damaged by an earthquake in 2010.

2011 Foster + Partners prize

The annual prize is presented to an Architectural Association School of Architecture diploma student whose portfolio best addresses the themes of sustainability and infrastructure.

Aachi’s project, entitled Haiti Simbi Hubs, proposes the introduction of hygiene points that would include areas for bathing, laundry, lavatories, food storage and food preparation.

The winning project and the other six shortlisted entries will be exhibited at Foster + Partners’ studio in October.

See Aachi’s winning project here.

More stories about Foster + Partners on Dezeen »
More stories about the Architectural Association on Dezeen »

Here are some more details from the AA School:


Helping Haiti’s Cholera Battle Wins AA School and Foster + Partners Sustainability and Infrastructure Prize

The Architectural Association School of Architecture and Foster + Partners are pleased to announce the award of the 2011 Foster + Partners Prize, which is presented annually to the Architecture Association School’s Diploma student whose portfolio best addresses the themes of sustainability and infrastructure.

The recipient is selected jointly by the AA School and Foster + Partners at the end of each academic year.

This year’s prize has been awarded to Aditya Aachi, of Diploma Unit 7, for his project Haiti Simbi Hubs. The project proposes sanitation infrastructure for Haiti and draws on the unprecedented need for cooperation between the Haitian Government and NGOs to combat cholera outbreaks.

A network of hygiene points known as ‘Simbi Hubs’ is planned, providing localised sanitation processes. Each Simbi Hub includes areas for lavatories, bathing, and laundry, as well as facilities for food storage and preparation. Water and sewage are treated on site and the hubs address issues relating to storm drainage and earthquake safety. All the elements required to build the new infrastructure are designed to be made locally, using established craft skills.

Aditya Aachi, and the other six shortlisted candidates, will be invited to exhibit their work in the gallery in Foster + Partners’ studio in October, when there will be a formal reception and a prize will be presented.

The themes of sustainability and infrastructure that underpin the award were selected to highlight themes of common interest to the AA and Foster + Partners and for their significance in contemporary architectural discourse more globally.

Mouzhan Majidi, Chief Executive of Foster + Partners, said: “This is the second year we have awarded this prize and in Aditya Aachi’s project we see it going from strength to strength. We hope very much that the debate this prize generates will encourage students to address themes that are of increasing relevance to architecture today.”

Brett Steele, Director of the Architectural Association School of Architecture, said: “The AA School is delighted to have participated in the judging of the Foster + Partners Prize. The work of this year’s winner indicates the enthusiasm and commitment shown by AA Diploma students to address challenging, topical issues in architecture. We are grateful to Foster + Partners for its continued support of the prize and the innovative work it encourages.”

Aditya Aachi, winner of the 2011 Foster + Partners Prize said: “The Earthquake and cholera outbreak of 2010 exposed the lack of both governmental and physical infrastructure in Haiti. The vision for this intervention is not only to create a sustainable system of public sanitation, which will be freely available to all, but also help to make sense of the largely unplanned city by making interventions that reinforce the public realm.”

Dezeenwire

Back to Dezeen Wire »
Back to Dezeen »

Grompies

Brendon Carlin and fellow students at the Architectural Association Design Research Laboratory have generated an architectural structure by filling Lycra with liquid plaster and then letting it set. (more…)

OMA Book Machine at the Architectural Association

A 40,000-page book binding together 35 years of writing by architects OMA is on show at the Architectural Association in London. (more…)