Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznań Projekt and mode:lina architekci

Flashes of blue stand out against the stark white and grey interior of this police headquarters in Poland by Poznań Projekt and mode:lina architekci (+ slideshow).

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

The Voivodeship Police Headquarters in Poznań was redesigned to improve disabled access to the building and create a modern interior for the police department.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

Inside the building, sharp corners have been smoothed off and the walls, floors and ceilings are painted white and dark grey.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

The flashes of blue on the reception desk and chairs hint at the official function of the building.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

The interior was completely remodelled but the design of the exterior was partly determined by the building’s heritage status.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

Last September, mode:lina created an audio installation from plastic tubes for Dezeen Platform at Dezeen Space in Shoreditch, and they also told us about the project in a filmed interview.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

See all our stories about police stations »

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

Photographs are by Marcin Ratajczak.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Pracownia Architektoniczna and Poznań Projekt, in collaboration with mode:lina architekci, have designed the main entrance to the Voivodeship Police Headquarters in Poznań, situated in a building which is a part of a historic urban structure.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

The aim of this renovation was to adjust the entrance for disabled users as well as set a new standard for police interiors. In order to provide equal chances to enter the building some rough cuts and changes were made. While the exterior part had to be approved by city’s heritage conservator, architects had a free hand to design the interior.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

‘Simple and clear’ – that was how we planned to design the interior. We decided to use white and dark grey as a background for blue – an official police colour. The main circulation is marked in white both on the floor and the Barrisol LED-lit ceiling.

Voivodeship Police Headquarters by Poznan Projekt and Modelina Architekci

Click above for larger image

Blue splashes on the reception desk and furniture leave no doubt that you are in the Police Headquarters. Even though being a policeman is tough, we softened the appearance of the interior by rounding all the angles and corners.

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Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Almost everything that goes on inside this house in Valencia by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos is on show to visitors though a transparent glass facade (+ slideshow).

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

The L-shaped house is entitled Casa del Atrio, or Atrium House, in reference to the glazed elevation and skylight that bring light into the eastern wing.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

A large living/dining room occupies this space and offers residents a view out over the landscape of the Sierra Calderona.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

A basement floor is buried just beneath, but emerges on the southern facade to reveal a bedroom, study and gym that open out to a sunken terrace.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Two more bedrooms are located in the northern wing of the ground floor and are screened behind partitions for privacy.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

We also recently featured another house by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos: a wedge-shaped building that thrusts out from a rock face.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

See more stories about houses in Spain »

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Photography is by Fernando Alda.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Here’s a project description from Fran Silvestre Arquitectos:


Casa Del Atrio / Atrium House

Godella, Valencia

A house in a urban area parts of the desire to maximize the feeling of spaciousness.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Two strategies are used. The principal is to release the largest possible in the middle of the site allowing you to enjoy a private space with a height and volume incalculable. It enhances the perimeter of contact with the outside housing, land and housing understood as a continuum. On the other hand uses the existing slope to the ravine next to illuminate the basement, which enables you to host the program.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

The building is developed along the southern and western boundaries of the parcel, which together with the elements of urbanization of the site, form a kind of atrium, whose diagonal flight to a distant vision of the Sierra Calderona.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Access is accompanied by the south facade to find the point of intersection. At this point of view inside the distributor is located next to the stairs and the kitchen form the backbone of the operation of housing.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

The southern zone where the rooms are available during the day, dematerialized their presence due to the overhead light.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

In the west the rooms fall to a portion of parcel with a more domestic scale, while the master bedroom overlooking the lift light reflected on water.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

In the dark basement and garage are in the cellar. All other uses of the program look into the ravine through which light up.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Architecture: Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Project Team:

Fran Silvestre – Principal In Charge

María José Sáez – Principal In Charge

Jose V. Miguel – Collaborator Architect

Ángel Ruíz – Collaborator Architect

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Structural Engineer: David Gallardo / Upv

Building Engineer: Carlos García

Interior Design: Alfaro Hofmann

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Client: Naves Y Fábricas, S.L. | Guillermo Caballero De Luján

Contractor: Coarco

Location: Urbanización Santa Bárbara, Godella, Valencia

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Site Area: 1150,00 sq m

Built Area: 782,85 sq m

Atrium Area: 340,00 sq m

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Basement floor plan – click above for larger image

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Cross section 1 – click above for larger image.

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Long section 1 – click above for larger image

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Cross section 2 – click above for larger image

Casa del Atrio by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Long section 2 – click above for larger image

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House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

There’s a special staircase for dogs at this renovated house in Ho Chi Minh City by architecture studio 07Beach.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

The pets’ route features narrower treads and shorter risers than the adjacent one for humans, making it more suited to canine strides.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

This also means the dogs’ staircase is nearly twice as long so it curls round the back of the TV towards the front door.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

We’ve previously featured a house where shelves create a route for a pet cat, as well as a house with a ceiling ledge for a cat to curl up on.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

Photography is by Hiroyuki Oki of Decon Photo Studio.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

Ground and first floor plans – click above for larger image

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Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

This crematorium in Seoul by Korean firm HAEAHN Architecture folds up from the landscape and curls around a peaceful courtyard and pool of water.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Gardens and ponds run alongside the two-storey building, while grass and plants cover the entire roof.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Visitors enter beneath a sheltered canopy, before following a procession through the building that trails around the courtyard and ends at one of the gardens.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Skylights bring natural light into the building from above and are reflected in the polished marble floors.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

We’ve previously featured a few crematoriums, including one with fortress-like walls and dozens of square windows.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Photography is by Park Youngchae.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Seoul Memorial Park

Secluded by mountain hills from a bustling highway gateway, Seoul Memorial Park rests in a serene valley area of the Woo-Myun Mountain on the outskirts of Seoul, South Korea. Seoul Memorial Park is a crematorium constructed in harmony with the natural terrain of the site, which previously lent calming scenic views to meditative passing-by hikers, and is now converted to a sanctuary for solemn rituals concluding life’s journeys.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Canvas for Land Art

To overcome the unwelcomed response from the community, this crematorium was sought to be a “non-erected” building. Instead, Seoul Memorial Park emerges as a form of “land art” sculpted into the existing topography with a flowing array of architectural forms and motifs. Concaved at the center of the Park, lies a courtyard encompassed by a series of ritual spaces devoted to separate functions.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Site plan – click above for larger image

These spatial layers bordering the courtyard resonate from a distance with the surrounding mountain trails and ridges. The 2-storey high crematorium facility configured in the curvilinear belt along the courtyard has roof structures linked in the way flower petals pinwheel one another, punctuated by a reflective pool at the very heart of the courtyard.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Comfort in the Final Journey

Families in bereavement take the final journey of parting as they encircle the courtyard along a path reminiscent of spiritual spaces with vaulted ceilings and indirect lighting. Towards the cremation alcove, the ceiling rises drastically as a clearstory above a triforum. Upon completion of the path, a meandering garden comforts the bereft.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

East elevation – click above for larger image

As the water from the mountain flows down and gives life to the garden, one might be reminded of the transfiguration of sorrows in praise of the harmony in nature. The garden shimmers with sunlight, whispers with snowfalls, and dances with spring rains. Season by season, tranquility is discovered and the spirit is renewed. Just as nature was dissolved into a building to rest in the valley, Seoul Memorial Park was embodied in a piece of land art to celebrate life and transfigure sorrows.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

North elevation – click above for larger image

Date of Completion: 2012
Site Area: 36,000 m2
GFA: 18,000 m2
Client: Seoul Municipal Facilities Management Corporation

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

West elevation – click above for larger image

2009 winning competition entry and 2012 built project by HAEAHN architecture.

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Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route opens

Next month marks the official opening of the Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route; a scenic mountain road that begins at a wooden viewing platform perched 650 metres above Norways’s longest and deepest fjord (+ slideshow).

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route

The 30-mile road is a popular detour for travellers and winds across the Aurlandsfjellet mountain plateau from one branch of the Sognefjord to another.

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route

The Stegastein Viewing Platform was the first completed project on the route and was designed by architects Todd Saunders and Tommie Wilhelmsen.

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route

Architect Lars Berge later added a toilet stop within a tilted concrete cube, as well as a winding concrete pathway and bench offering views from the north-eastern end of the plateau.

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route

Most recently this path has been extended to lead into a cave, where artist Mark Dion has placed a sleeping model bear on top of a pile of human junk to question whether it is man or animal that reigns over civilization.

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route is one of 18 national tourist routes in Norway and will be officially opened on 7 September.

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route

Stops on some of the other tourist routes that we’ve written about include cantilevered viewing platformspublic toilets in a rusty steel cabin and a memorial commemorating suspected witches by Peter Zumthor.

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route

See all our stories about the Norwegian tourist routes »

Aurlandsfjellet Tourist Route

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Quote of Note | Rick Owens


“People ask why I do monochromatic clothes; the reason is because I’m thinking in proportion to the world. In this room, your head is going to look so much more interesting if it’s on a monochromatic column. Whereas I think people think of outfits and gets a little too fussy, a little too detailed. I’m always thinking of the line of a person standing with their head in a room and I always feel like a stalk, or a stem, or a pillar is nicer. I always think of everything architecturally. The furniture ended up being a natural extension of the clothes. Architecture is what energizes me most for clothes anyway. Looking through architecture books is probably by biggest stimulation.”

Rick Owens, in an interview with Terry Jones in the “lights, camera, action” issue of i-D

Pictured: Rick Owens’s black plywood and alabaster “Boudeuse” (2012)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

London 2012 Olympic Park legacy plans unveiled

Dezeen Wire: plans to develop the London 2012 Olympic Park after the Games end in September were unveiled by mayor of London Boris Johnson yesterday, including the transformation of the press centre into a technology, design and research centre, and the creation of up to 8000 new homes in addition to the athletes’ village (+ movie).

The area will be renamed Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park and the first phase, the North Park, is set to open on 27 July 2013, exactly one year after the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games.

The second phase, South Plaza, will open in spring 2014 and include the main stadium and Aquatics Centre, which will open for public swimming.

Five new neighbourhoods are planned for the next 20 years, including schools, health centres, playgrounds and 102 hectares of open space.

Read more on the project website, see a 360 degree tour here or the Olympic Park Legacy Company’s brochure here.

See our interactive aerial photo of the Olympic Park here and see all our stories about the London 2012 Olympics here.

Here’s some more information from the Mayor of London’s office:


“A golden Games to be followed by an incredible legacy” says Mayor

After delivering what are expected to be the best Olympic Games ever London is now set to deliver an incredible legacy that will set the benchmark for future host cities to follow, the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson said today.

Even before the world had witnessed London’s incredible opening ceremony, followed by impressive organisation of the competitions, it had hit all its milestones on the road to the 2012 Games on time and budget. It had also secured the future of six out of the eight venues on the Olympic Park – something that had never been achieved before, with serious and credible plans on the table for the Olympic Stadium and the Press and Broadcast Centre.

Speaking at his London 2012 Legacy Press Conference he was joined by some of the major investors inspired by the opportunities the Games and the regeneration of east London are providing. This includes ICity who outlined their proposals for transforming the Park’s media centre into a technology, design and research centre with the potential to generate more than 4,000 jobs. This will build on the 10,000 jobs being delivered by Westfield Stratford City whose owners brought forward their investment plans for east London by at least 15 years after seeing the potential of the area from staging the 2012 Games.

What was once an industrial wasteland is also seeing private money from around the world transforming it into a brand new district of thriving communities with 10,000 new homes planned over the next 20 years served by new schools and medical facilities. Developers Taylor Wimpey and London & Quadrant explained how it will be building nearly 8000 new homes mainly for families as well as the brand new educational academy at Chobham Manor.

But the London 2012 legacy doesn’t end at the boundaries of the Olympic Park as the Mayor is continuing to promote the incredible investment opportunities across the capital including The Royal Docks, Silvertown Quays, Vauxhaull and Nine Elms as well as in riot-affected Tottenham and Croydon where the Mayor is investing £70 million from his regeneration fund. All these areas are benefitting directly and indirectly from the £6.5 billion upgrade of the capital’s transport network as it prepared to stage the Games and with the arrival of Crossrail in 2017 London will be the best connected city for business in the world.

The Mayor of London Boris Johnson said: “The doom and gloom merchants who said our great city would implode as we tried to stage the greatest show on earth have been proved wrong. And they will be proved wrong again as we use the catalyst of the games to attract investment into the wealth of opportunities arising in London now and in the coming years. Put simply there is no other place on the planet where investors will see greater returns.”

Daniel Moylan, Chairman of the London Legacy Development Corporation said: “Central London is moving east. Bringing the Games to east London has accelerated investment in an already growing area and now the world’s attention is focused on this fantastic part of the city.

“The Legacy Corporation, working with partners, will harness the momentum of the London Games to create a new piece of the city, bringing together the best of east London and the Olympic spirit to provide jobs, homes, schools, sports and entertainment opportunities to local residents, Londoners and visitors.”

Gavin Poole CEO iCity said: “We are really excited about the opportunity to transform the Press and Broadcast Centres into a world-class centre of technological innovation and enterprise. iCITY will create thousands of jobs, provide investment and highly advanced infrastructure for East London’s flourishing creative industries, and deliver a sustainable legacy for the local community, London and the UK.

Peter Redfern CEO Taylor Wimpey who were recently appointed to construct the first of five new neighbourhoods in the Olympic Park said: “We are delighted to have been chosen to deliver the first phase of new housing in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. Taylor Wimpey are already one of the biggest contributors to new housing in London and our plans for Chobham Manor provide a unique opportunity to develop an exciting new residential quarter in one of the key growth areas of the UK.

Chobham Manor was designed with families in mind and will provide East London with much needed spacious homes designed by a team of signature architects. The exemplar design and sustainability credentials combined with the unprecedented transport connections and lifestyle amenities will provide a new residential address of the highest quality.

Speaking on behalf of Qatari Diar Delancey, appointed to transform the athletes village, Stuart Corbyn said “East Village will be a place for everybody to enjoy the best of city living; new homes will be joined by first class education, outstanding sports and leisure facilities, local shops, cafes and restaurants, and unrivalled connections to the rest of the capital. This will be one of the most exciting places to live in London.

East Village provides much needed homes, investment and jobs in East London, and reconfirms our long term commitment alongside Triathlon Homes to the local community, quality, partnership and sustainability.”

Transforming the Park

After the Games, the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) will begin a £300m construction project to transform the Olympic site into the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. This will involve removing temporary venues, transforming permanent venues into everyday use, building new roads and bridges and the first neighbourhood.

» The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park will be an exciting new visitor destination. Iconic venues and attractions will sit alongside new homes, schools and businesses, amongst open green spaces and pieces of art in the heart of London’s East End.

» The new Park will open in phases from 27th July 2013, exactly one year after the opening ceremony of the London 2012 Games. The LLDC was set up three years before the Games in 2009.

» The Park will be 560 acres (226 hectares) in size, equivalent to Hyde Park or 357 football pitches.

Venues and Sport

» The future of six of the eight permanent venues has already been secured (Aquatics Centre, Orbit, Multi-Use Arena, Olympic Village, Velodrome, Eton Manor).

» We are in advanced stages of work to complete the remaining two (Stadium and the Press and Broadcast Centre).

» The Park offer sporting programmes for everything from grass roots community use to high performance competitions.

» Price pledge: the cost of a swimming in the Aquatics Centre or court hire in the Multi-use Arena will be the same as that of a local leisure centre.

Employment

» Up to 8,000 permanent jobs on the park by 2030 plus 2,500 temporary construction jobs

» Training and apprenticeships with a focus on opportunities for local people

» Venues such as the Press and Broadcast Centres have been developed so they can be adapted for commercial use after Games.

New Neighbourhoods

» Five new neighbourhoods developed over 20 years

» Up to 8,000 new homes in addition to the 2,800 in the athletes’ village

» A target of 35% affordable housing

» 3 schools

» 9 nurseries

» 3 health centres

» 29 playgrounds

Transport

» Best connected most accessible place in Europe.

» Direct connections to a third of London’s rail and underground stations.

» There are nine public transport lines feeding into Stratford station; after the Games this will increase to ten. This means that a train could arrive at the station every 15 seconds.

» By 2016, it’˙s estimated that the number of passengers using Stratford station each morning will reach 83,000.

Visitor Attraction

» Expected to become one of London’s Top 10 visitor destinations by 2020 attracting local, regional, national and international visitors.

» The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park could attract more than 9million visitors per year from across London, the UK and abroad from 2016.

Green Space

» Over 22 miles of interlinking pathways, waterways and cycle paths.

» 252 acres (102 hectares) of open space.

» 6.5 kms of rivers and canals running through the Park

» 111 acres (45 hectares) of biodiverse wildlife habitat on the Olympic Park, including reedbeds, grasslands, ponds and woodlands, with 525 bird boxes and 150 bat boxes.

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Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific

New Zealand architects Studio Pacific have created public toilets shaped like headless dinosaurs in Wellington (+ slideshow).

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

Red steel armour plates cover the roofs of the two structures, which each contain a single toilet cubicle.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

A long neck cantilevers out from the chunky concrete base of each one for natural ventilation.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

The architects liken the structures to crustaceans or sea creatures, evoking “the crusty saltiness of the sea” in the harbour nearby.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

Other unusual toilets we’ve featured include some resembling origami cranes and tree-mounted urinals.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

See more stories about toilets on Dezeen »

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

Here’s a project description from Studio Pacific Architecture:


Kumutoto Toilets, Wellington, New Zealand

These public toilets are located at the Synergy Plaza in the Kumutoto Precinct, situated at the northern-most end of Wellington’s waterfront.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

As well as taking into account practical considerations such as security, hygiene and vandalism, the brief was to create a structure with a sculptural form, something iconic, highly visible and unusual that was also well integrated into the visual and historical context of the surrounding precinct.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

To be seen in the round, the design comprises two elongated, irregularly curved forms, instantly recognisable from all key pedestrian approaches and terminating a sequence of spaces and elements along the laneway.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

These organic forms, eye-catching and instantly memorable, are suggestive of crustaceans or sea creatures, as if the structure was a kind of fossilised husk that had been discovered and inhabited. Recalling the waterfront’s shipping past, they evoke the crusty saltiness of the sea in the smooth levelness of the precinct, clinging to its surface like barnacles to the underside of a boat.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

Along with adding a playful element to its surroundings, this aquatic reference also links back to the origins of the name Kumutoto, a former pa and ancient stream running under the reclaimed land.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

Each form contains one accessible public toilet, with one of the two also including cleaning facilities. Their robust concrete construction is appropriate to the surrounding maritime environment. A metal rainscreen, painted the brick red of the neighbouring sheds, ties them into the heritage context and enhances their visibility.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

While they contrast with the linear architecture of the surrounding buildings, again contributing to their visual distinctness, the curves of the new structure also echo some of the ornate detailing on the nearby sheds. Cantilevered ‘tails’ provide natural ventilation.

Kumutoto Toilets by Studio Pacific Architecture

Architect: Studio Pacific Architecture
Project team: Stephen McDougall, Bret Thurston, Guy Marriage, Peter Mitchell
Client: Wellington Waterfront Ltd
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
Size: 26.5m2
Completion: September 2011
Materials: Concrete, steel

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Studio Pacific
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Tornado Proof House by 10 Design

Tornados would pose no threat to this conceptual house by architects 10 Design, which can tuck itself beneath the ground just like a turtle retracts its vulnerable head away from danger (+ movie).

Tornado Proof House by 10 Design

A system of hydraulic levers would be used to push the moving structure up and down, out of a sunken dock beneath the ground.

Tornado Proof House by 10 Design

Photovoltaic cells on the exterior would provide energy to power the mechanisms, and maybe even harvest fuel from pollution in the air.

Tornado Proof House by 10 Design

When the house is secured for safety, a watertight seal would protect it from intense winds and thunderstorms.

Tornado Proof House by 10 Design

The architects envision entire communities of the houses, where any residence can sound an alarm to warn others of approaching tornados.

Tornado Proof House by 10 Design

The first prototype is currently in development.

Other ambitious concepts we’ve featured recently include a skyscraper that makes energy from algae.

See more stories about conceptual architecture »

Here’s some more explanation from Ted Givens of 10 Design:


Isn’t the Wizard of Oz a clear example of the awesome force that a tornado can muster? How can Jaws drive people out of the ocean screaming when a house blown through the sky brings back nostalgic memories? Please stay out of the water… but feel free to build your home below flood level and out of cards in the wind. There is an urgent need to shift from an outmoded logic, ignorant of the forces of nature, to a point where the unabashed rush for profit and development can be balanced against the basic goal of providing shelter. Humanity is inexplicably driven to build in places where it should not-accepting the unavoidability of this folly is the first step to breathing in a new vision. We sought a way of turning the seemingly destructive acts of nature into creative blooms.

Kinetic architecture is the innovation which we believe will form the foundation for the habitation of the future. This type of architecture learns from technological innovation and amps up its incorporation into the home, custom tailoring existing mechanisms in new ways. The revised conception of the home finds itself somewhere between garage doors, flowers, and the survival mentality of a turtle. A series of simple hydraulic levers are used to push the home in and out of the ground and deflect and warp the outer skin in response to external stimulation. The key activators of this motion being the high velocity winds associated with thunderstorms and tornadoes. A series of solar cells on the outer skin rotate and flex to attain maximum solar intensity. A translucent outer skin consisting of clear insulation sandwiched between two layers of Kevlar provides the weather barrier and lets diffuse light into the structure. We are also exploring the application of photocatalytic coatings and carbon nanotubes on the skin to absorb and clean pollution turning it directly into fuel for the home to power the hydraulics.

A water tight seal locks the roof of the collapsed home making the structure water and wind proof. There have been a series of studies since the mid 90’s showing homes that float up and out of harm’s way. This solution does not anticipate the velocity of the water, and more importantly the grinding power of the debris contained in the water. The safest place is down.

Neighborhoods will become interwoven and connected together through sensor networks that interpret weather data. After warning sirens entire suburbs can be collapsed in seconds. The whole neighborhood will behave as an organism fit for a collective response to the challenges brought by the natural environment. The image of technology as a fire breathing train slicing a trail of black smoke through the innocent forest painted by Hawthorne is slowly replaced by a desire to respond to nature and not seek to dominate it. The tornadoes and storms can burn and blow with all their fury while the suburb safely sleeps.

Can we spin this violent ever present soup into a stabilizing direction? We seek a new mobility for the home that is controlled not left to “chance” (there is nothing accidental about 100 year old weather patterns). We are currently working on the development of a prototype with a group of ship builders in the US and Africa.

Design Team: Ted Givens, Trey Tyler, Mohamad Ghamlouch, Shane Dale, Dougald Fountain

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Hypercubus by WG3

Hypercubus by WG3

Austrian architects WG3 have designed a mobile hotel room that could be delivered to all kinds of outdoor locations.

Hypercubus by WG3

The small modular container, named Hypercubus, provides enough space for two people to stay inside comfortably.

Hypercubus by WG3

Instead of creating a rectilinear container, the architects designed a room that tips upwards at the front and lifts the entrance off the ground.

Hypercubus by WG3

The prepaid accommodation was planned for sites with available facilities, but each room still comes with its own sink and toilet.

Hypercubus by WG3

Although just a prototype at present, the mobile rooms could be used for hire at large outdoor events.

Hypercubus by WG3

Other mobile architecture we’ve featured includes a booth for napping at airports and a tiny travelling theatre.

Hypercubus by WG3

Photography is by Karin Lernbeiß.

Here’s some explanation from WG3:


Hypercubus Mobile Hotel room for 2 people

The Hypercubus concept is based on three fundamental concepts:
» the use of open areas with available infrastructure (alternatively also self-sufficient)
» the construction of small modular living units that are transportable
» the creation of a new concept in tourism (the prepaid apartment) with a uniform corporate design.

Hypercubus by WG3

The project develops an idea for tourism in the respective region. The ‘minimal housing’ apartments use existing resources, are transportable thanks to their mobile construction and are used where they are needed depending on the season. In this way, the very same object can be used at various locations during the year, according to wherever there is demand at the time. This means that location-dependent deficits in utilisation can be compensated out of season.

Hypercubus by WG3

Plan

For larger events, the living units can be brought together from across the region. The apartments create their own corporate design and thus form an identity for each (new) location.

Hypercubus by WG3

Section – click above for larger image

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