Now Hear This: Yale Symposium to Explore ‘The Sound of Architecture’

Ready your tympanic membranes, design fans, because the fall runneth over with auditory delights. Mere weeks after the publication of David Byrne’s How Music Works (McSweeney’s), the Yale School of Architecture will present “The Sound of Architecture,” an interdisclipinary symposium exploring the auditory dimension of architecture (you may recall that Byrne himself is a pioneer of the building-as-musical instrument mode).

Yale professor Kurt Forster and Ph.D. candidate Joseph Clarke have lined up a veritable orchestra of experts—from fields as diverse as archaeology, media studies, musicology, philosophy, and the history of technology—to address the largely unconsidered aural dimension of architecture. Sessions include a keynote lecture by Elizabeth Diller (Diller Scofidio + Renfro), who will reflect on the role of sound in her firm’s early media artworks and its more recent architectural interventions at New York’s Lincoln Center; Brigitte Shim (Shim-Sutcliffe Architects) on the architectural calibration of a house designed for a mathematician and amateur musician; and John Durham Peters of the University of Iowa on the “theologically embedded soundspace” that is the Mormon Tabernacle. Also not to be missed is Yale professor Brian Kane’s discussion of “Acousmatic Phantasmagoria,” which only sounds like the affliction of a doomed Edgar Allen Poe protagonist. The symposium, which is free and open to the public (pre-registration will be available soon here), takes place October 4-6 at the Yale School of Architecture. Fingers crossed for an opening Frank Sinatra medley by Bob Stern!

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

What Shipping Containers Have in Common with Cobblestones. Plus Falcon Containers’ Mobile, not Global, Village

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As we’ve discussed here before, trading ships used to leave American east coast cities loaded up with goods and bound for Europe. They’d return loaded up with cobblestones–cheap, heavy, easily stackable–for ballast. They’d then ditch the stones here, load up with more goods, rinse and repeat. And our municipal forefathers used the cobblestone surplus to pave streets on the cheap.

From a surplus perspective, the modern-day equivalent to cobblestones is shipping containers, even though the trade balances have shifted. America receives tons of stuff from Asia in shipping containers, and once emptied, they’re not worth the price of shipping them back. And as these things stack up, creative companies try to figure out what to do with them.

Most recently we’ve seen the Snoozebox shipping container mobile hotel, though that’s a UK-based project. Stateside, we’ve got a company out of Texas called Falcon Containers that’s doing something similar, but without the concierge: A mobile village for oil field workers in Texas’ burgeoning Eagle Ford Shale.

“We wanted to design and provide a housing solution that would be cost effective, easy to set up and easy to move,” said Stephen Shang, CEO, Falcon Containers. “The use of repurposed shipping containers in our mobile village design allows for the inclusion of unique structures for different purposes, each of which supports a comfortable living environment for these oil field work camp employees.”

Temporary work camps have been created in growing numbers to support the overwhelmingly male workforce flooding into the oil drilling Texas region. A cross between a college dormitory and a military barracks, these structures include sleeper units housing multiple bunks, dining facilities, a separate laundry and shower unit as well as a multi-purpose office, recreation or first aid facility.

Some unsolicited advice for Falcon’s PR team: Can you guys maybe call it something other than a “work camp?” What happened, was “gulag” already taken?

In addition to their forthcoming mobile village design, Falcon repurposes shipping containers as offices, residential homes, and even military training facilites. Learn more at Falcon’s comprehensive blog on all things shipping container related.

(more…)


Mobile Living With Glam

Monohedron is a prefab house that is mobile and suits almost any environment or climate. The idea is to move away from the predictable comfort of a brick and concrete home to something more versatile as this. With the options of adding layers of floors as per needs, the concept of your dream home takes on a whole new meaning. Customized and prefab are two words that don’t usually gel together well, but looks like this mobile home has sort of nailed it.

Designer: Andrej Cverha


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(Mobile Living With Glam was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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  3. Glam Cam For Extreme Conditions

Horizons Steel

Focus sur le talent de Neil Dawson, un sculpteur qui aime impressionner avec ses œuvres surréalistes. Avec des trompe-l’œil géants construits à base de feuilles en acier, le résultat est hallucinant. Des œuvres réunies sous le nom et la série « Horizons Steel » à découvrir dans la suite de l’article en images.

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CTV building flaws known 20 years before deadly New Zealand quake, admits designer

CTV building by Tony Burton

Dezeen Wire: the man whose company designed the CTV building in New Zealand that collapsed during an earthquake has admitted he was aware of problems with its design just five years after it was completed, and two decades before the deadly 2011 earthquake, reports the New Zealand Herald.

The Christchurch headquarters of Canterbury Television collapsed during the February 2011 earthquake, killing 115 people. Now Alan Reay, the principal of Alan Reay Consultants, has told an inquest that he had known about problems in the building’s structure following an inspection in 1991.

He admitted that the building needed drag bars installed to support its horizontal floors, but said he would not have called for a full inspection even after identifying the structural weaknesses.

Reay placed the blame on his engineer David Harding, who headed the project. “This situation arose because of the trust I placed in what I understood to be a competent and appropriately experienced engineer,’ he told the inquest. The Royal Commission will present its findings to New Zealand’s Governor-General in November.

See more stories about New Zealand »

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deadly New Zealand quake, admits designer
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New plans for Olympic Park tours to preserve post-Games “afterglow” – Independent

Arcelor Mittal Orbit

Dezeen Wire: the ArcelorMittal Orbit tower and other areas of the Olympic Park in Stratford are now likely to be kept open to paying visitors after the end of the Paralympic Games, reports The Independent.

The Orbit had been due to close for 18 months as the entire Olympic Park undergoes redevelopment, but Daniel Moylan, chair of the London Legacy Development Corporation, said it would be “tremendously advantageous” to invite people into the grounds in the meantime.

“They’d see that there really is activity behind the hoardings,” he explained. “What we might lose is some of that Olympic afterglow, and we’d like to do everything we can to keep it”.

Last week we reported on the unveiling of legacy plans for the Olympic Park, announced by Mayor of London Boris Johnson, which include the transformation of the press building into a technology, design and research centre, and the creation of up to 8000 new homes in addition to the athletes’ village.

See all our stories about the London 2012 Olympics »

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post-Games “afterglow” – Independent
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Out My Window

Découverte de Gail Albert Halaban qui nous présente cette série de photographies baptisée « Out My Window ». Avec des clichés d’appartements et des moments de vie capturés, ces images parviennent à montrer un instant ou une ambiance. Une série d’excellente qualité à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

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Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

This holiday home by Swiss architects Hurst Song Architekten is partly embedded in the steep slopes of the Swiss Alps (+ slideshow).

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Located in Lumbrein in the Swiss canton of Graubünden, the house is vertically clad in black-stained timber.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The roof is made from copper and will eventually discolour to blend in with the dark timber.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The gabled roof has been positioned perpendicular to the hill, as is customary for local buildings.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

A concrete frame has been inserted around the entrance at the lower corner of the house.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The underground parking area also provides a separate internal entrance to the house.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The interiors make use of concrete and spruce, with darker materials on the lower levels and lighter materials throughout the upper floors.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The kitchen and living room have spruce walls and concrete floors, and are divided by a central concrete wall.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The bedrooms are finished in spruce and some have beds that fold out from the walls.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The project was commended in the AR House 2012 prize this year.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Another house in the Swiss Alps we’ve featured on Dezeen is a concrete extension to a stone house and barn.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

See all our stories about Switzerland »

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Here’s some more text from the architects:


The building is located at the periphery of the village and ascribed to the landscape of a sloping field. The new road curves below the parcel which necessitates a steep berm where a small incision is made to allow access to the garage and provide entry to the house through the basement.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The gabled roof is oriented perpendicular to the slope following local custom.The building volume is rotated to face the street and to optimize the stunning views.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The resulting crystalline geometry emphasizes a dynamic relationship to the landscape. This reading is enhanced by the absence of roof eaves.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The sheathing, composed of verticle wooden planks, is treated with a weatherproof dark stain which relates to the materialtiy of the aged barns in the region.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The standing-seam copper roof will age in a short time to the same hue as the facade.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The interiors are primarily composed out of concrete and spruce. The surfaces interlock and graduate in proportion from the cellar to the attic from heavy to light.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

In the living room a rugged concrete floor matches the concrete walls and in the bedrooms the wood floors are made from the same material as the timber walls and ceilings.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Holzkristal
Single Family House
Lumbrein, GR 2009-2010
Switzerland
Minergie-P (Passive House Standard)

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Architektur: Hurst Song Architekten, Zürich
Ingenieur: Clemens Arpagaus, Vella

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Haustechnik: BSP-Energie, Zürich
Bauphysik: Raumanzug, Zürich

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Holzkonstruktion: Alig & Co, Vrin
Fenster und Türen: Alig & Co, Vrin

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Schreinerarbeiten: Alig & Co, Vrin
Küche: Alig & Co, Vrin

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Sanitärapparate: Catalano
Küchenapparate: V-Zug
Beschläge: D-Line

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

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Hurst Song Architekten
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Writer’s Studio by Cooper Joseph Studio

Budding novelists will lust after this writer’s hideaway in upstate New York designed by New York City architects Cooper Joseph Studio (+ slideshow).

Writer's Studio by Cooper Joseph Studio

The exterior is clad in black stained cedar to absorb sunlight during the cold winters, and a built-in ladder leads up to the roof.

Writer's Studio by Cooper Joseph Studio

The interior is sparsely furnished with custom-made pieces made from walnut, including a desk, a magazine table and even the sink in the bathroom.

Writer's Studio by Cooper Joseph Studio

See more dreamy places to work on Dezeen »

Writer's Studio by Cooper Joseph Studio

Photographs are by Elliott Kaufman.

Writer's Studio by Cooper Joseph Studio

Here’s some more information about the project:


Writer’s Studio
Ghent, New York

The writer’s studio is a place for one person to work, read and listen to music. Open vistas to a pond and fields are to one side, the other side is immersed in deep woods. The overall impression of the structure is deceivingly simple. Each façade is composed with distinct apertures specifically arranged to the light, the views and tailored, like a bespoke suit to his size and eye level. The inside is, uncluttered and elegant, unified by the use of walnut.

Writer's Studio by Cooper Joseph Studio

Design solution

Minimalist detailing, open glazed corners and transparency running the length of the structure challenge the simplicity of the “box”. Given harsh winters, the fireplace becomes the visual center, anchoring the asymmetrical composition with large, richly conceived hearth. On a structural level, the fireplace also anchors the large cantilevered corners to either side.

The studio volume is a small, rectilinear and restrained single-room space in the woods. The entire interior is immersed in walnut in varied ways. The rigid orthogonal geometry of the room is juxtaposed with dynamic sculptural designs of the furniture – a desk, a side table and two black leather armchairs. The sliding doors are walnut plank, the pantry counter is walnut, the floors are highly polished walnut, the sink in the bathroom is made of walnut as well as some of the wainscoting in the main room.

On the outside, cedar received a matte black stain, the same surface treatment for the flat broader, horizontal boards and the highly textured, thinner slats. Each was a precisely laid and mitered at the corner. Copper trim and scuppers set off the forms. The choice of using only wood framing was pragmatic, but it worked very well for even the large cantilevered roof sections over corner glass-to-glass windows at the north side of the building.

Energy and sustainability

Our strategy involves efficient equipment, passive heating and cooling, locally available materials and a wood-burning fireplace that uses wood fuel from trees on the property. The stone is black slate.

By locating the house in the deep deciduous woods, we are able to take advantage of the leaves as sun shading in the summer months. In the winter, when the trees lose their leaves, the building’s black exterior absorbs sunlight and with the fireplace, there is a reduction in fuel consumption.

Interior finishes:

The interior walls are a composition of walnut slats and white surfaces. A bookshelf, the kitchen and the window seat are all entirely of solid walnut allowing for uniformity of texture and color. The sliding door to the kitchen is walnut as well. As sunlight is filtered through the trees, the floor becomes a key surface, reflecting natural light with a warm hue. It’s high polish balances nicely with the lower intensity sheen on the walls and horizontal surfaces.

The fireplace has a river stone surround (to code) set flush to the wood slats. Next to it is the wood storage area. The wood enters this alcove from behind, as there is a hidden door in the north façade of the building allowing the fire to be easily maintained without having to bring the wood through the front door.

Bathroom:

With a shower wall entirely in glass and a ceiling-mounted “rain” fixture, it feels like being outdoors. Its drains are all hidden so that there is virtually no reading of the shower except when in use. The same slats continue in the bathroom on the entire entry wall and elsewhere above the local black slate. We designed the bathroom sink in walnut as well. Here we used solid stock with channels cut to carry the water to a trench drain cut into the wall. The channels are sloped. They are closer together near the faucet and further apart to the edges there providing more surface for a cake of soap or glass.

Furniture:

As there are very few objects within the space, it was critical that their design and materiality work well with the minimal interior finishes. Again, for the desk and table we turned to walnut for its warmth, strength and texture.

The desk is located on axis with a fireplace with views around it north to a pond and fields beyond, but it has an asymmetric relationship to the elements of the room. Technically, it was an achievement to make a large, heavy, wood top cantilever and its sculptural form makes this possible. In this way, when you enter the room, there is no visible structure and the plane of the surface floats freely. Below, on the backside there is a shelf (with hidden pencil drawer) for the printer. The electric connection is under the open base, and only a small slot for the cord disturbs the desk surface. The “scholar stone” sits above this slot.

The magazine table echoes the form of the desk nearby but with a ribbed construction that relates to the slatted walls in the room. Once more, the triangulated geometry sets it apart from the architecture. Each rib differs in configuration from its neighbor so that viewed in one direction it emphasizes the angular surfaces and from the other the surfaces blend to appear as solid planes. It’s a bit of an optical illusion due to the precise geometry. The form holds the books or newspaper on the open shelf against the lounge chair so that the room still appears free of clutter.

Project Name: Writer’s Studio
Location: Ghent, NY 12075
Completion date: Fall 2007
Size: 525 sq ft
Project Team: Wendy Evans Joseph, FAIA – Principal in charge
Thruston Pettus- Project Manager
Farzana Gandhi
Jonathan Lee
Landscape Architect: Peter Rolland
General Contractor: Romanchuk and Sons
Project Scope: One room building with bathroom, pantry, fireplace. Cantilevered glass corners.
Project Materials: Exterior: cedar siding, stained matte black. Interior: walnut, local grey slate, riverstone.

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Cooper Joseph Studio
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House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

A tall and narrow entrance slopes down to a low and wide living space at this triangular house in Japan by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Located in Toyota in Aichi Prefecture, the black wooden house is arranged between two frames at either end, one vertical and the other horizontal.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

The frames create a sloping roof and walls between them as the two-storey entrance diminishes to a single storey at the rear.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

A series of wooden frames have been arranged throughout the interior as freestanding doorways.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

At the lower end of the house is the main living area with full-length sliding windows looking out onto a train track.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

The upper floor contains two bedrooms and loft space for another bed, as well as a terrace overlooking the entrance.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Other projects by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates we’ve featured on Dezeen include a house with sliding doors between each room and a house with a triangular facade.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

See more stories about Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates »

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Photographs are by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Project introduction:

Site: As the surrounding of a site, a residence stands in a row in the north-and-south side, and the east-and-west side is a place where a comparatively good field of view.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Frame (outside): For this site which has good view, we put two “frames”. One is vertical frame at east. The other is horizontal frame at west.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

The space consists of connecting the two frames. It’s a space horizontally opened while reducing height gradually and a space vertically opened while reducing a plan gradually. The “one room” is expanding vertically and horizontally.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

One room: I have an idea that the residence should be one room. However, the monotonous one room which can see the whole feels in many cases that there are few choices of an air and a life. So we have made “one room” which can connect family without seeing directly.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

We proposed preparing “the boundary of air” connecting good fields of view in the east-and-west and gaining depth and density to the space.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Frame (inside): Concretely, we use wooden frame which use auxiliary as window or door frame. We think wooden frame itself takes a part of specifying space boundary.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

It is distinguished as somewhere else at the same time the space before and behind that is connected because there is a wooden frame. It is constituted as space with moderate tolerance.

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Project details
Location: Toyota Aichi Japan
Site Area: 466.49m2
Built Area: 74.52m2
Total Floor Area: 83.48m2
Type of Construction: wooden
Exterior Materials: wooden boards + oil paint finish
Interior Materials: paint finish

House in Toyota Aichi by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates_

Design time: September 2010 – September 2011
Date of completion: July 2012
Design team: Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates
Structure company: Tatsumi Terado Structural Studio
Construction company: Toyonaka Construction Ltd

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Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates
appeared first on Dezeen.