Floatastic by Qastic

American studio Qastic has created an inflatable pavilion with a floating roof held down by fabric veils (+ slideshow).

dezeen_floatastic_by_qastic_16

Called Floatastic, the structure was designed by Connecticut firm Qastic for a wedding ceremony. They intended to create a temporary shelter without imposing any loads on the ground.

dezeen_floatastic_by_qastic_sq_1

A giant horizontal white balloon is filled with helium. As it rises upwards, a series of fixed fabric veils keep the inflatable overhead and appear to dangle like jellyfish tentacles. “Buoyancy is achieved through the efficient harnessing of a noble gas,” said Qastic.

Floatastic by Qastic

The designers said that the floating pavillion is the result of research into buoyancy and structures that are made by reversing the position of the load.

Floatastic by Qastic

“Since the surrounding environment and microclimate fluctuate in every 24-hour cycle, our studies found that the floating pavilion will experience many buoyant conditions which are unique but steady,” said the firm.

Floatastic by Qastic

Here’s a film featuring the structure floating in the wind:

We’ve featured other stories about inflatable structures recently, including a pop-up pavilion that looks like a soap bubble and a twisted tubular inflatable pavilion installed in east London.

Floatastic by Qastic

See more inflatable architecture and design »
See more pavilion design »

Photographs are by Net Martin Studio.

Here’s more from Qastic Lab:


Floatastic

Balance Through Buoyancy is a research base pavilion called “Floatastic” by QASTIC Lab, which was designed and built for a private client to serve as a temporary shade pavilion for a wedding ceremony in Edgerton Park, in New Haven Connecticut – an Olmsted planned landscape.

Floatastic by Qastic

This deployable structure aims to create a floated shelter which avoids imposing any loads to the ground, which traditional structures require. Instead it proposes a well-fabricated balloon, which is filled with Helium to raise the imposed loads of fabric veils and any possible dynamic environmental loads toward the sky.

Floatastic by Qastic

Buoyancy is achieved through the efficient harnessing of a noble gas. The idea of ‘flesh’ is explored through the pavilions possible functions and effects, by which an abstracted mass can impose on fabric surfaces in both relaxation and tension.

Floatastic by Qastic
Elevation with Floatastic at full height – click for larger image

It is within this dialogue of the helium container and the loads that we can test possible architectural and spatial effects, with articulation between Balloon edges and fabric veils exploring the possibilities in which the complex surface veils are relaxed or in tension in double curvature configurations.

Floatastic by Qastic
Floatastic shown at different heights – click for larger image

Making use of the method of reversing load bearing systems, the form of the pavilion is defined by geometrically precise formwork that is then fabricated with randomly varying edges both for the horizontal balloon and the PVC pipes on the ground to allow for varied functions at different heights, climates and locations.

Since the surrounding environment and microclimate fluctuate in every 24 hours cycle, our studies found that the floating pavilion will experience many buoyant conditions which are unique however steady.

Floatastic by Qastic

Metaphorically, Floatastic envisioned to be a surrealistic and breathtaking imitation of the Jellyfish that appear alive and tries to swim against the external forces in the water. However, rather than being in the water, Floatastic questions its audiences to unconsciously know if they are floating in the sea or on the ground.

Floatastic by Qastic

Architects: QASTIC Lab
Location: Edgerton Park, New Haven, Connecticut. USA
Constructor: QASTIC Lab
Client: Jahangir Mohamadzadeh
Designer & Team Leader: Mahdi Alibakhshian
Design and fabrication Team: Ali Sadeghian, Reza Zia, Ahmad Jamei, Carlos Bugatti, Delara Zarrinabadi, Lili Saliani
Design & Fabrication Consultant: Nathaniel Hadley, Mohamad Reza Mojahedi
Conceptual & Visualization Consultant: Gregory Hurcomb
Exhibition Period: July 2013

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ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

Vietnamese architects Sanuki + Nishizawa have adapted the prototypical Vietnamese tube house to create a tall, narrow residence that lets daylight penetrate its walls and floors (+ slideshow).

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

Located in Ho Chi Minh City, the four-storey family residence is 21 metres deep but just four metres wide, typical of the tube houses that are common throughout Vietnam’s cities.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

These proportions make it difficult to bring natural light and ventilation through the buildings, which have no side windows, so Sanuki + Nishizawa introduced light wells, exposed staircases and flexible partitions to the interior spaces of ANH House.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

“The main theme of this house is to explore the possibility of a new lifestyle in Vietnam, in which such dark and humid spaces can be improved drastically into bright and open ones,” said the architects.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

The ground floor features a double-height living room sandwiched between a pair of open-tread staircases, creating a well-lit family area with a raised dining room and kitchen at one end.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

Woven bamboo screens enclose bedrooms on all four floors and can be folded back when necessary.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

The texture of this wood is echoed in the surface of the concrete floor plates, which were set against bamboo formwork.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

Large planters allow spaces for tropical plants throughout the house, including on the three balconies that front the street-facing elevation. Meanwhile, some of the light wells double up as cooling pools of water.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

“We can feel the natural wind and live comfortably without air conditioning in this house, which [offers] a lifestyle connecting to the outside natural environment,” said Sanuki + Nishizawa.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

Sanuki + Nishizawa previously collaborated with Vo Trong Nghia Architects on a house with half of its floors screened behind hollow concrete blocks and the other half exposed to the elements.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

Other modern takes on the Vietnamese tube house include a renovated home with a narrow atrium in Hanoi and a residence with a vertical garden on its facade.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

See more houses in Vietnam »
See more residential architecture »

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

Here’s more information from Sanuki + Nishizawa:


ANH House

This house, designed for a thirty-year-old-women and her family, is built on the plot of 4m wide and 21m deep in Ho Chi Minh City, which is very typical for urban tube houses in Vietnam. The main request from the client was to realise a bright and open space filled with natural light and greenery.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

Tube house, the most typical housing style in Vietnam, itself has a critical difficulty in getting enough natural light and ventilation firstly because there’s no opening on the two long boundary sidewalls and secondly because Vietnamese people tend to have lots of fixed partition walls for separating many bedrooms. Therefore, the main theme of this house is to explore the possibility of a new lifestyle in Vietnam, in which that such dark and humid space need to be improved drastically into a bright and open one.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

The house is designed with 4 solid thick slabs and no normal fixed partition walls. Each slab, stuck in the different height, has several voids that lead natural reflection light from the top-light, façade and backside into the house. In addition, each slab is set out with several holes of terrazzo bath-tub and foot-space for sitting, especially the 15 holes for greenery with different kinds of tropical plants to make the space attractive and fresh. Furthermore normal familiar fixed partition walls are replaced into light, movable and translucent partitions for separating bed spaces, adjusting balance between the privacy for each individual space and the fluency of whole big space according to the lifestyle’s request.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

These partitions are the folding or sliding doors with woven bamboo as a shade and jalousie windows system which are easily opened for the natural wind circulation to go through the whole house spaces. Briefly, all of design intents are to fulfil the tube house spaces with greenery, brightness, well-ventilations then transform the narrow, dark, humid passive residential housing into “the space connecting to the outside natural environment” – where the people can feel real outside atmosphere.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

The house structure is a RC frame structure with reversal beams system. Besides, using the woven bamboo sheet as concrete work’s frames for engraving the bamboo pattern on the exposed concrete ceiling, not only emphasises the continuous slab and natural lighting effect, but also creates stronger aesthetic effect together with real woven bamboo of doors system. All these materials and techniques adopted into this house design are local and widely common in Vietnam.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa

We can feel the natural wind and live without air conditioner comfortably in this house that has the “lifestyle connecting to the outside natural environment”. Somehow, this sustainable and ecological proposal is considered as a re-definition of the Vietnamese traditional lifestyle connecting to the outside environment in the contemporary housing. We really hope this simple, bright and open lifestyle can be one of the effective alternatives in the modern lifestyle in Vietnam.

ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa
Concept diagram – click for larger image
ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa
Ground floor plan – click for larger image and key
ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa
First floor plan – click for larger image and key
ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa
Second floor plan – click for larger image and key
ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa
Third floor plan – click for larger image and key
ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa
Roof plan – click for larger image and key
ANH House by Sanuki + Nishizawa
Long section – click for larger image and key

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Sanuki + Nishizawa
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Proof that Less is More

To say that Igor Sirotov’s Frame house is minimal doesn’t begin to do it justice! Everyday interior elements like seating, beds, lighting and tables are few in number but full of interesting and thoughtful textures and materials, making them a perfect foreground to highlight the steel, wood and concrete canvas. A stunning example of minimalism, the Frame house proves it’s not about what’s inside, it’s about what’s not!

Designer: Igor Sirotov


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(Proof that Less is More was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Bien! Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

Upside-down plant pots, bare lightbulbs, exposed ducting and raw materials feature in this São Paulo restaurant by Suite Arquitetos (+ slideshow).

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

Brazilian studio Suite Arquitetos refurbished a two-storey building in the south of Brazil’s largest city Brazilian capital into a healthy-eating restaurant called Bien!

The architects used a combination of wood, metal, yellow and blue furniture and greenery and intended to create an open-plan dining environment with a raw industrial twist.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

Windows wrap around the corner of the ground-floor restaurant facades, allowing the interior materials and fixtures to be seen from the outside. Filipe Troncon of Suite Arquitetos told Dezeen: “We demolished everything, creating a big glass facade to make more natural lighting and communicate with the pedestrians.”

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

Pine-topped tables, designed by the architects, feature yellow steel legs and look like study desks. Blue chairs and cushions were chosen to add an additional colour to the restaurant and provoke a “sustainable and healthy sensation”.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

The walls and pillars are covered with wood panelling and the bar area is lined with steel sheets that compliment exposed air-conditioning ducts overhead.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

White plant pots and greenery dangle above the tables, interspersed with exposed bulbs and angled yellow lamps.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

A large metal box formed by perforated metal plates houses the first floor and contains a kitchen, storage areas, office and bathrooms.

“The first floor exterior material is a laser perforated metallic plate, that the pedestrians can not see inside, but the cooks and the manager can see out,” Troncon told Dezeen.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

Other restaurants we’ve featured recently include a fantasy bar and restaurant that appears to be stitched together with thick black thread, an Italian restaurant in Shanghai with a raw industrial interior and a 1920s style renovation of a Basel bar and brasserie.

See more features from Brazil »
See more restaurants and bars »
See more interior design »

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos

Photography is by Ricardo Bassetti.

Here’s more from the architects:


Bien! restaurant

The architecture of Bien! Restaurant is oriented toward the street and toward the City of São Paulo.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos
Ground floor plan

The small two floor building occupies a discrete corner in the middle of itaim, in the capital’s South Zone, and was refurbished to receive a natural food restaurant, opened only during the day, in which the light enhances the colours and emphasises the movements.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos
First floor plan

The joining of these two factors, light and city, defined for the space and almost industrial, but comfortable, design and contemporary concern for the environment.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos
Section – click for larger image

Young architects Carolina Mauro, Daniela Frugiuele and Filipe Troncon, from Suite arquitetos, had, as a starting point, the expansion of the possible limit.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos
Section – click for larger image

In the ground floor a transparent glass box surrounds the area of the dinning-room and gives it continuity while revealing to passerby the raw materialness of the tables, chairs and coatings.

Bien Restaurant by Suite Arquitetos
Facade – click for larger image

One floor up, a detached metal box, formed by perforated metal plates protects the kitchen’s volume, closets, bathrooms and office, and allow the light and air in without revealing the traditional framework of doors and windows.

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Suite Arquitetos
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The Dune House by Min2

Dutch architects Jetty and Maarten Min have completed their own house and studio in North Holland with an arched rooftop, tiled walls and exposed tree-trunk columns (+ slideshow).

The Dune House by Min2

Jetty and Maarten Min, of Bergen office Min2, designed the three-storey Dune House on a coastal dune in Bergen and used unfinished timber, clay tiles and curved profiles to help the building fit in with its rural setting.

The Dune House by Min2

“An important design topic was to connect the form and the materialisation of the house with the place where it is situated,” they explained. “The high tall form had to fit in the dune landscape. During the design process this form became one of a dune or of a windswept group of trees sloping along with the worn landscape near the sea.”

The Dune House by Min2

Offering a twist on the traditional mansard roof, the house is wrapped on three sides by a skin of clay tiles, which were designed by Jetty Min with bespoke dimensions.

The Dune House by Min2

“These tiles give the impression of pot-lid shelves,” said the architects. “The brown/purple appearance of the British clay with its rough finish has to visually match the bark of the surrounding firs.”

The Dune House by Min2

Horizontal slices through this skin create a series of sea-facing windows on the north elevation, while a double-height window frames a view of the dune landscape to the south.

The Dune House by Min2

Inside, the house contains studio spaces on its ground floor, while the living areas comprise a two-storey loft above.

The Dune House by Min2

“One of [our] wishes has always been to live on the upper storeys because of the marvellous views of the sea and the dune area,” said the architects.

The Dune House by Min2

Kitchen, living and dining areas occupy a larger open-plan space on the first floor, surrounded by the chunky Douglas fir columns. Arched wooden joists are visible overhead, plus a boxy poplar staircase leads up to a mezzanine bedroom.

The Dune House by Min2

A similar staircase links the house with the studio below, which features a generous workspace, a meeting and conference room and a library. The houses’s bathroom is also located on this floor.

The Dune House by Min2

Poured concrete was used for the flooring on the two main levels, while the uppermost floor is covered with a carpet made from seaweed.

The Dune House by Min2

Other Dutch houses completed recently include a residence with a thatched exterior and a renovated townhouse with a triple-height kitchen and a spiral staircase.

The Dune House by Min2

See more houses in the Netherlands »
See more residential architecture »

The Dune House by Min2

Here’s a project description from Jetty and Maarten Min:


The Dune House of the architects Jetty and Maarten Min, Bergen aan Zee

Min2 bouw-kunst is a Dutch architecture office, located in Bergen, in the north of Holland, at the sea. The work of the office is a co-design between architecture and art.

The owners of the office designed their own house in the dune area of Bergen aan Zee (NH). An important design topic was to connect the form and the materialisation of the house with the place where it is situated.

The Dune House by Min2

Design

The building enjoys a dominant position on a dune crest, alongside a local road, but it is almost invisible because of altitude differences and of tall pine trees, guarding the house closely. The house faces on the other side of the dune a drinking water treatment area. From here it marks the landscape, even from a large distance. They therefore have chosen for a strong “object-quality”.

Handling the building plan as a starting point within the zoning plan and the existing building regulations was also a challenge.The admissible constructing surface was 20 x 8 metres, with a gutter height of 3 metres. The ridge height was not indicated and therefore a ridge height of max. 15 metres was possible. These proportions made it possible to build the house vertically, an opportunity achieved by realising three high storey.

The Dune House by Min2

Because of the positive reactions from the local government they succeeded quite well in such vertical design. By solving this and other similar problems, the plan became more and more exciting.

One of the main concerns was that, in its appearance, the high tall form had to fit in the dune landscape. During the design process this form became one of a dune or of a windswept group of trees sloping along with the worn landscape near the sea.

The openings in the roof surface of the storey were designed from within: at the sea side as horizontal window strips and at the dune side as a huge window, where it is possible to imagine oneself in the midst of the dune landscape. The flat facade on the eastside eventually allows for a lift and balconies.

The Dune House by Min2

Materialisation

For quite some time they have been looking for the appropriate materials on the outside. Because the house is only 300 metres from the sea, they took the logical decision to choose for natural, sustainable and low maintenance materials. They called this approach a low-tech approach.

For the oblique facade and roof skin they thoroughly searched for an existing material that would fit into the rough romantic scenery. In the end, Jetty came up with the idea to design herself a tile that would fit the desired agenda. Following the remarkable Kolumba brick (Petersen Tegl) which was to be used for the dressing of concrete columns, a long ceramic flat tile was developed of 53 centimetres long, 17 centimetres high and 4 centimetres thick.

These tiles give the impression of pot lid shelves, but ones which are much more low maintenance. The brown/purple appearance of the British clay with its rough finish has to visually match the bark of the surrounding firs. Thanks to all these characteristics, the building perfectly fits into its surrounding environment.

The Dune House by Min2

This developing process took one and a half year. It has also been helped by the excellent cooperation of the professionals of Petersen. The roof tile, now called “Athene Noctua” (in German: Steinkauz), has now been included in the collection of Petersen.

The finishing of the eaves has been carried out in zinc and has been pre-treated against ionisation, which beautifully matches the tiles. The untreated wooden frames are made of Iroko, FSC approved and carefully handpicked to have the longest parts, in order to avoid gluing as much as possible. The reason to make use of untreated wood at this location stems from its low maintenance aspect, which also fits into the natural surroundings.

Where, if necessary, a lift can be build, the concrete stabilisation drives have been closed with untreated western red cedar parts.

The building facade has a timber frame with a high insulation value. Because of this starting point they could easily design the bent and beveled forms as a basis. The basis of these elements consists of whitewood collar beams with multiplex sheets. These are built in several prefab parts, made in the workshop, for a smooth progression of the building process and to generate as less disturbance in the protected green area as possible.

The Dune House by Min2
Concept sketches – click for larger image

Interior

The low-tech approach continues also on the inside of the house. They wanted the two floors as one big, rudimentary finished space, which can then be used as a flexible living space, a new loft.

One of the wishes has always been to live on these upper storey because of the marvellous views of the sea and the dune area. In the penultimate version the starting point was a house with columns to be built above an existing bungalow: a second house above the first. After deliberation with the constructional engineer, it was finally decided to demolish the existing house because of the poor condition of its foundation. The carrying grid with its column structure emerged from this history.

The Dune House by Min2
Site plan – click for larger image

They were also inspired by warehouses, by the farmhouses in the north of Holland, and by translating the Maison Domino by Le Corbusier into a handy craft level.

By applying Douglas firs with bark, they wanted to bring the effect of windswept trees around the house also into the interior, but in an abstract way. The floor of the first storey has been made as a wooden prefabricated element, hanging between the Douglas firs. Galvanised steel coupling agents have been designed. The concrete elements in sight are untreated.

The Dune House by Min2
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

On the ground floor are storage, studio, bathing room, library, working room and conference room. The inner walls and doors on the ground floor are non bearing, so to be as flexible as possible, and made of ecoplex and mdf. Sometimes a book cast is also acting as the separating wall between spaces.

The Dune House by Min2
First floor plan – click for larger image

The stairs have been placed into the space as loose elements. They are made of fast growing poplar, so as to be as environmentally friendly as possible. This kind of wood is soft but very dense, and has no knots. The beautiful light colour does not turn yellow, so it can remain untainted. Only the stair steps can use some extra protection.

The floor finishing consists of poured concrete and the hanging wooden floor slab between the trees has been covered with sea weed carpet.

The Dune House by Min2
Second floor plan – click for larger image

High-tech and sustainability

They aimed to achieve as high as possible value of the materials and the goal was to reach a Rc of 5,0. The choice was made for superior insulating glass with as less as possible colour fading taken into account. For the studio we choose for colourless glass, in order not to have our work with colours influenced by the green radiation of glass.

The ventilation system is on demand controlled and offers smart solutions for the intake of fresh air. A vacuum cleaning system has been installed for a better interior environment. The domestic system is a basic one, but can be enlarged in future. The electricity supplies are provided in floor ducts.

The Dune House by Min2
Long section – click for larger image

In relation to the energy supply they do not make use of a natural gas installation. They use an air pump (because of the location on a dune), and glass vacuum tubes providing the heating – or cooling – of the floors and hot water. The next step which is in preparation is the installation of an Energy Ball (wind energy) for the generation of electrical power.

The Dune House by Min2
Cross section – click for larger image

They very closely follow the evolution of sustainable power generation and very soon interesting products will emerge on the market which also will be aesthetically interesting. Those new products can be added in the present layout.

At this moment they monitor their power consumption to see which amendments will be necessary in order to reach the best values.

The Dune House by Min2
North elevation – click for larger image

The designer as contractor

They carefully searched for the parties best suited to build specific parts. In this way is was quite natural to be working with wood and consult specialists as boat builders and woodworkers. They experienced that, with this attitude, they could inspire and stimulate other people. This is the basis for further developments.

They now live in the house and decisions concerning the interior, functions and forms are just starting to emerge. Piece by piece they handle the interior the same way as they handled the building process.

The Dune House by Min2
East and west elevations – click for larger image

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FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma and Associates

A contemporary art centre with a chequered glass facade by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma is the latest in a string of cultural buildings to complete this year in Marseille.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Roland Halbe

The FRAC (Fond Regional D’art Contemporain) Marseille was designed by Kengo Kuma and Associates as a local art centre for the Provence Alpes Cotes d’Azur (PACA) region of France and it joins buildings by Boeri Studio and Rudy Ricciotti in the city’s harbour-side district.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Roland Halbe

Hundreds of opaque glass rectangles create a chequerboard of solid and void across the glazed exterior of the six-storey-high building and are arranged at opposing angles to create a variation between light and shadow.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Roland Halbe

“By this treatment, the building is given openness and transparency that are hard to gain from a conventional glass box,” said the architects.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Roland Halbe

This uniform facade is punctured in just two places. The first opening is for a street-level window, while the second is an upper-level terrace that can be used for exhibitions, events or meetings.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Nicolas Waltefaugle

“What we wanted was not a closed gallery but an elevated street that could work as an exhibition space and a workshop,” added the architects. “In this way inside and outside can be effectively linked, and this is what FRAC has aimed for since its inception.”

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Nicolas Waltefaugle

The building occupies a triangular site alongside Rue Vincent Leblanc. The larger southern section of the building accommodates the exhibition galleries, a research centre and offices, while the taller northern end contains an auditorium and children’s workshop.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Erieta Attali

Archives are housed in the basement, plus there’s accommodation for artists in residence.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Erieta Attali

Marseille is the designated European Capital of Culture for 2013. Other buildings completed in the city this year include a filigree-clad Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations, an archive and research centre with a cantilevered exhibition floor and an underwater conference suite and an events pavilion with a polished steel canopy. See more architecture in Marseille »

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Erieta Attali

Kengo Kuma and Associates also recently completed a timber-clad culture centre elsewhere in France and is currently working on a new outpost of the V&A museum in Scotland. See more architecture by Kengo Kuma »

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Nicolas Waltefaugle

The project description below is from Kengo Kuma and Associates:


Fonds Regional d’Art Contemporain
Marseille, France 2007-2013

The project of the contemporary art centre (FRAC) for the region Provence Alpes Cotes d’Azur (PACA) is the 3D version of the “museum without walls” invented by André Malraux, famous French writer and politician. It is a museum without a museum, a living and moving place, where the art pieces are in a constant movement and join the logic of diffusion and interaction with the visitors.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Axonometric diagram

KKAA thought the FRAC as a signal in the city, which allows a better visibility to contemporary art.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Site plan

The building stands up as a landmark which identity is clearly asserted.

It is composed with two recognisable parts:
» The main body along the street Vincent Leblanc contains the exhibition spaces and documentation centre
» A small tower with auditorium and children’s workshop, offers an upper terrace on the main boulevard.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Ground floor plan – click for larger image and key

These two clearly identified entities are connected between them by a set of footbridges and are unified by the envelope made by a glass skin, composed with panels with changing opacity.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
First floor plan – click for larger image and key

The building explores the theme of the windows and openings on different scales. KKAA wishes to create a particular space of creation and life, which action and effect is bounded to the entire city, as well as the surrounding district and neighbourhood (cafe-terrace…).

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Second floor plan – click for larger image and key

Location: Marseille, France
Period: 2007-2013
Design: Kengo Kuma & Associates
Local architect: Toury et Vallet

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Third floor plan – click for larger image and key

Client: Région Provence Alpes Côte d’Azur, AREA
Structure engineer: CEBAT ingénierie
Mechanical engineer: ETB Antonelli
Facade engineer: ARCORA

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Fourth floor plan – click for larger image and key

QS: Campion
Acoustic: ACCORD acoustique
HGE: Tribu

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Fifth floor plan – click for larger image and key

Total floor area: 5757 sqm
Site area: 1,570 sqm

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Long section – click for larger image and key
FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
East and north elevations – click for larger image

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and Associates
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Zaha Hadid, UNStudio and Snøhetta compete to design Expo 2017

News: a host of international architects including Zaha Hadid, UNStudio, Snøhetta and Safdie Architects have been shortlisted to design the World Expo 2017 exhibition in Astana, Kazakhstan.

Shortlist for World Expo 2017
This image: Safdie Architects, main image: Zaha Hadid

Coop Himmelblau, J. Mayer H, Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture and Massimiliano and Doriana Fuksas are also among the 45 architects competing to masterplan the 2017 world fair, which will take place for three months in the summer of that year.

dezeen_UNStudio
UNStudio

Also in the running are Mecanoo, HOK, Stefano Boeri, GMP Architekten and Serie Architects.

Shortlist for World Expo 2017
J. Mayer H.

Bearing the title Future Energy, the Astana Expo 2017 is set to be centred around the promotion of sustainable energy sources and technologies.

Shortlist for World Expo 2017
Snøhetta

“The theme of our exhibition is closely related to ‘green economy’, which takes into account the possibility of using alternative energy sources and the autonomous water and heat provision in each of the constructions,” said Kazakhstan president Nursultan Nazarbayev, who suggested that some of the proposals could be combined to form a “symbiosis project”.

Shortlist for World Expo 2017
Coop Himmelblau

The competition attracted over a hundred applications from 20 different countries. The proposals being taken forward will be revealed in September.

Coop Himmelblau
Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture

Astana Expo 2017 will follow the Milan Expo 2015, which is named Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life. The most recent Expos to take place were the Yeosu Expo 2012 in South Korea and the Shanghai Expo 2010, which featured Thomas Heatherwick’s Seed Cathedral.

Shortlist for World Expo 2017
Mecanoo

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compete to design Expo 2017
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Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

Two towering walls of Corten steel lead into this four-bedroom guesthouse at the Cloudy Bay winery in Marlborough, New Zealand (+ slideshow).

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

Australian firm Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects teamed up with local studio Paul Rolfe Architects to design the house, which accommodates visitors such as distributors, journalists and wine sellers. It replaces another that burnt down in 2009.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

Named Cloudy Bay Shack, the house is orientated so that glazed walls face out towards the scenic landscape. “We shaped the building to gain vistas along the vineyards to the Richmond Ranges, whose silhouette adorns each bottle,” explained the architects.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

The two weathered steel walls frame entrances at both ends of the house and were designed to reference the rural architecture of the surrounding region.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

“[The exterior is] evocative of rustic buildings seen nestled in the pastoral landscape. This ensures that the building as an object sits comfortably in its environment,” said the architects.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

The interior is lined with timber, and includes a series of zig-zagging panels that separate living and dining spaces from the central corridor.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

Set down by three steps, these rooms feature floor-to-ceiling glazing that allows them to open out to the garden.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

Bedrooms and bathrooms occupy the first floor, screened behind louvred panels that hinge open.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

Other houses we’ve featured from New Zealand include a building on a sled that can be towed off the beach and a weekend cabin with a blackened timber facadeSee more architecture in New Zealand »

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

Here’s a project description from Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects:


Cloudy Bay Winery
Shack II Guest House

Cloudy Bay Shack establishes the connection between the image on the wine label and the direct experience of the vineyard. We shaped the building to gain vistas along the vineyards to the Richmond Ranges, whose silhouette adorns each bottle.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects

An entry sequence has been established to deliberately dramatise the ‘Cloudy Bay’ view. On arrival, visitors face two weathered steel walls, resembling someone holding their arms out to welcome an old friend. When the door is opened, a warm timber interior is revealed and the view is obscured by a series of concertina timber panels. As guests enter, the view is revealed by degrees until they walk down three steps to the entertaining level where the full view of the receding vines and Richmond Ranges are presented.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects
Site plan

Bedrooms and bathrooms are focused on the same view, with the added benefit that the visitors can be concealed behind their personal timber screen or gain the view directly by opening the screen.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The exterior is composed of materials typical of the region: weathered steel and timber, evocative of rustic buildings seen nestled in the pastoral landscape. This ensures that the building as an object sits comfortably in its environment. To provide unexpected contrast, the interior is lined in well detailed, sophisticated timber and stone.

Cloudy Bay Shack by Paul Rolfe Architects and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image

Project team: Tim Greer, Elizabeth Muir, Ben Daly in association with Paul Rolfe Architects, NZ
Client: Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy (LVMH Group) and Cloudy Bay Vineyards
Location: Marlborough, NZ
Timeframe: 2010 – 2012
Project Value: $1.4 million

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and Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects
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The Forest House

L’agence d’architectes EMA crée La Casa en el Bosque à Mazamitla, dans l’Etat mexicain de Jalisco. Une maison dont les matériaux comme l’architecture respectent et s’inscrivent dans l’environnement montagneux et boisé qui l’entoure. Un projet magnifique à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

An inflatable pavilion that looks like a soap bubble, by architects Plastique Fantastique, has been popping up around Copenhagen this month (+ slideshow).

Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

Aeropolis is a transparent blow-up structure, designed by Berlin temporary architecture firm Plastique Fantastique, that can be inflated in any location and used as an enclosed event space.

The structure is made from a fire-proof PVC and when inflated industrial ventilators are used to retain the air pressure required to keep the bubble’s shape. Visitors enter the bubble through a zipped door on the side.

Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

The Aeropolis pavilion has been used as an event hub for the Metropolis Festival 2013 in Copenhagen and has been erected in 13 locations, including a green park, under a bridge and inside a church.

Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

Events held inside the bubble have included a light installation, dance performance, a star-gazing evening and a music concert.

Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

Plastique Fantastique director Marco Canevacci told Dezeen the firm is looking to install the pop-up bubble at Remake Festival in Berlin.

Watch Aeropolis in use inside a church:

Here’s another movie, that features a yoga class taking place inside the bubble:

Our other stories that feature blow-up design include the entrance to last year’s Design Miami fair that was covered by inflatable sausages, a twisted tubular inflatable pavilion installed in east London and news that a giant inflatable rubber duck with be exhibited during Beijing Design Week 2013.

See more inflatable architecture and design »
See more pavilion design »

Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

Here’s more information:


Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

The Aeropolis community centre breathes new life into the city, and make the invisible visible.

The architecture of the 100 m2 pneumatic installation allows maximal mobility and will be installed in 13 different locations during the Metropolis Festival in August 2013. On its tour of the various Copenhagen districts, it will be a base for urban activities with all kinds of changing themes – all curated together with staff from the local community centres.

Aeropolis by Plastique Fantastique

The scenography changes with the specific environment: there’s meditation and yoga by the lake, it opens up towards the sky above us in a cemetery, it invites us to a soundless discotheque at one of the noisiest intersections in the city, it provides performance at Islands Brygge, martial arts at Superkilen and Karom competitions in Versterbro, it blows up inside a church and shows a future cultural centre in Valby.

About Plastique Fantastique

Plastique Fantastique is a collective for temporary architecture that samples the performative possibilities of urban environments.

Established in Berlin in 1999, Plastique Fantastique has been influenced by the unique circumstances that made the city a laboratory for temporary spaces.

Plastique Fantastique’s synthetic structures affect surrounding spaces like a soap bubble does: similar to a foreign body, it occupies and mutates urban space. Their interventions change the way we perceive and interact in urban environments. By mixing different landscape types, an osmotic passage between private and public space is generating new hybrid environments.

Regardless the way people view a bubble, walk around its exterior or move inside it, the pneumatic structure is a medium to experience the same physical setting in a temporary extraordinary situation. A Plastique Fantastique installation has the ability to remove a subject from its surrounding context and transfer them into a new spatial realm.

Plastique Fantastique creates light and fluid structures that can lie on the street, lean against a wall, infiltrate under a bridge, squeeze into a courtyard, float on a lake and invade an apartment to generate an “urban premiere”.

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Plastique Fantastique
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