Northface by Element

Northface by Element

The top floor of this periscope-like wooden house in Stavanger, Norway, cantilevers northwards towards the sea.

Northface by Element

Top: photograph is by the architects

Oslo architects Element renovated the 40-year-old house in 2010, choosing to reconfigure the existing two lower storeys and to completely replace the original upper floor.

Northface by Element

A long window stretches across the entire width of the cantilever to provide a view across the water from the new open-plan living and dining room.

Northface by Element

Residents enter the house at this level, while the floors below step down in tandem with the steeply declining hillside.

Northface by Element

Above: photograph is by the architects

Photography is by Dinesen, apart from where otherwise stated.

Northface by Element

Here’s some more information from Element:


The existing house was built in 1969 as a “twin” to the neighbouring building. It did not function well to the demands of 2008-living, neither in the room sizes nor in their solutions, and it had generally a need for restoration work.

Northface by Element

Element, together with the client, has come to a solution where mainly the bottom two stories are rehabilitated while the top story is replaced with a lighter and more open construction which opens up towards a grand view of “Byfjorden.”

Northface by Element

This is a big change from the earlier situation where it was necessary to go down a level to see the view.

Northface by Element

The volume on top is also pulled further away from the road to make room for a larger sun deck towards the south and to let more light into the building. This deck is also thereby sheltered from the northern wind.

Northface by Element

The architectural expression strengthens the qualities on the site and reflects its northern orientation. At the same time it respects the existing constructive principles.

Northface by Element

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Sustainability: massive wood construction; reuse of the old foundation and walls.
Program: single family house
Location: Lauvastølveien 20, Stavanger, Norway

Northface by Element

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Client: Ingvild Sæther
Collaborators: Florian Kosche AS, Moelven Massivtre AS

Northface by Element

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Size: 277 m2
Status: completion 2010

Dezeen’s top ten: planning cheats

Dezeen's top ten: planning cheats

In the last few weeks we’ve published a few projects where architects have come up with inventive ways of getting around restrictive planning requirements. Here’s a roundup of the most popular buildings we’ve featured on Dezeen where disguises, moving walls and even skis have been employed to skirt around these obligations.

l House by moomoo architects

1. at the top of the list are these designs for a plastic-covered house in Poland, which feature an extra wall where the planning authorities wanted the facade to be.

Sliding House by dRMM

2. in second place is Sliding House, a glazed house that can be transformed into a typical English barn by a 50-ton mobile structure that slides over the top.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

3. next up, architect Jack Woolley concealed this house and workshop behind a brick wall with a secret door so that no one would notice it was there.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

4. at number four is a leisure complex inside a former bullring, where architects Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners were able to retain the historically sensitive facade by lifting it up off the ground.

Balmain Archive by Innovarchi

5. a copper-clad house extension comes in fifth place, after the architects got around the stipulation for a pitched roof by designed the whole building as if it were one.

Wickstead Lodge by Baynes & Co

6. number six is a house with an electronically controlled stone wall that slides across the facade to hide a large window that wouldn’t otherwise have been allowed.

Denizen Sauna by Denizen Works + Friends

7. in seventh position is a sled-like sauna on skis that can be towed out onto a lake, which was constructed after the client was refused permission for a permanent structure.

House N by Sharon Neuman and Oded Stern-Meiraz

8. coming in eighth is a modern rectangular residence that hides behind a brick wall shaped like the silhouette of a gabled house.

The Round Tower by De Matos Ryan

9. this house, number nine in our countdown, was hidden underground in order to maintain sight lines towards a listed stone tower on the site.

University of Liverpool Heating Infrastructure by Levitt Bernstein

10. last but not least is an energy centre designed to look like a row of gabled houses.

See you next month for another top ten!

See all our top ten stories »

Kilden performing arts centreby ALA Architects

Slideshow: the undulating oak underbelly of four auditoriums bursts through the glazed facade of this concert hall in Kristiansand, Norway.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Designed by Finnish architects ALA, the Kilden performing arts centre opened in January.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The curving wooden wall cantilevers out across the building’s entrance, creating a huge canopy that projects out towards the harbour.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Behind the glass, a sprawling entrance lobby spans the length of the building and leads onto a 1200-seat auditorium, a 750-seat theatre and two smaller halls.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Production facilities are located to the rear of the halls, as are workshops, storage areas and staff rooms.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Aluminium zigzags across the remaining exterior walls of the building and a series of windows create a grid within the folds.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

We originally wrote about the project in 2008, when construction was first underway – see a set of visualisations here.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Photography is by Hufton + Crow.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Here’s a full project description from ALA Architects:


“KILDEN”, Performing Arts Center for Sørlandet

DESCRIPTION

The Performing Arts Centre “KILDEN” will house three organizations: the ‘Agder Theater’, the ‘Kristiansand Philharmonic’ and the ‘Opera South’.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The four performance halls are lined up in the mid-zone of the building leaving the production -spaces to the east and audience -spaces to the west side.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Further on the west along the waterside, a huge cantilevered roof will cover both the public city-space by the sea and the foyer space which provides access to the shows.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Waterfront-facade clad with local oak follows the forms defined by the halls and creates a surface separating real world from the illusional.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

URBAN IDENTITY

The urban character of the new theatre- and concert hall building should not only express the functionality of the project. The building will have a major impact on the cultural identity of the city of Kristiansand and the whole region. The architectural expression has to be instantly recognisable and unique. There is a strong demand for a cultural landmark building.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Often in theatres the fly tower reflects the buildings function, acting simultaneously as a landmark. On this shore the role of the tower has already been taken by the silo. The signature image of the performing arts centre should be built with other means.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The main concept of the Teater- og Konserthus design is the series of performance spaces, which has been shaped out to act as a sign in the cityscape. This undulating, unified surface forms a dramatic lobby and foyer between the performance halls and the shoreline. The relationship of the building with the canal and the sea has strong tension and drama.

ARCHITECTURAL EXPRESSION

The undulating main façade acts as a surface separating reality from fantasy. This line is crossed as you step into the hall from the foyer. The other façades consist of a vertical folded surface giving the building a subdued elegant form, enhancing the foyer wall as the signifying form of the building. The audience is instinctively drawn towards the public foyer. The building has a desire to please the public, to be popular and understandable to everybody.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The foyer wall is built of local wood, most likely oak. This further emphasises the warm, inviting character of the foyer space. The vertically folded dark facades are made of sharply detailed, stained metal sheets, most likely of brass or copper.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The building is a sharp object with an almost exaggerated clarity of expression. It stands proudly in the rough industrial surroundings. The building creates elegant public and performing spaces and rough, functional production facilities. All this is combined into a shape of an elegant machine –a building as an instrument.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

FUNCTIONAL CONCEPT

The striking exterior appearance of the project is the first thing the visitor experiences. It is, however, a result of a careful analytical design process. The main functional concept is to organise all the production facilities of the building along a straight indoor street wide enough for trucks and deliver sets, instruments and materials. The performance halls are arranged to the other side of the street.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The order of the auditoriums is determined by the relations to the production facilities, the relations to the exterior logistics, and the relations between the auditoriums themselves. The main stage theatre hall is located so that the stage opens directly to the set-building workshops. This unit is on the southern end of the building to allow for easier loading and unloading of material. The flerbruksal and the biscene are located on both sides of the main stage for easy co-operation and share of facilities.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The concert hall is located at the northern end of the production street. The underbelly of the auditorium creates a memorable beginning for the curving foyer wall. The support facility zone diminishes next to the concert hall, allowing for the chamfered corner of the volume at the tightest corner of the building site.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

FOUR ZONES

The Theater- og konserthus consists of four parallel zones. The public foyer zone is the expressive, free flowing area of improvisation. The public meets each other. Temporary exhibitions and performances are presented. Parties and congresses are held. The foyer zone is easy to navigate- the public can easily find their way to the different auditoriums and support functions.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The auditoriums form the second zone between the foyer and the production street. They are conceived as individual, high-performance instruments for music and theatre production and performance. The architectural expression of the halls is formal and precise. They have a touch and feel of units with multiple uses and a very high level of technical functionality.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The production street is the third functional zone. The street is six meters wide and has full-height doors in both ends. The street ensures great flexibility between the auditoriums and the production facilities. The street also acts as an extra production and assembly space, as well as short-term storage.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The fourth functional zone consists of the production workshops, storage units and workplaces for the staff. This zone opens both to the production streets and the corridors directly above it, and to the outside through windows of the long eastern elevation.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

SUSTAINABILITY

Public buildings are an integral part of a socially sustainable environment.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The materials are of local sources. Kristiansand was built on the export of oak to Europe in the 16th century: The main undulating façade of Kilden is built of local oak, CNC milled and fully treated in Kristiansand.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The other three facades are to be made of aluminium from the factory across the fjord. The concrete factory supplying the building site is located 200 meters down the pier. Where relevant, local companies are supplying the project with their expertise, workforce and materials.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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The building is heated and cooled by district systems covering the whole of central Kristiansand.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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Kilden will become a truly local social hub.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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LOCATION:
Kristiansand, Norway

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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STATUS:
International Architecture Competition 2005, 1st prize
Construction start 2007
Core finished October 2010
Construction work complete July 2011
Opening January 2012

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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COMPETITION TEAM:
ALA Architects ltd
Juho Grönholm, Antti Nousjoki, Janne Teräsvirta, Samuli Woolston

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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PROJECT TEAM:
ALA Architects ltd / Helsinki, Kristiansand
in collaboration with:
SMS Arkitekter AS / Kristiansand

Acoustical designer:
BSA: RUP Acoustics / London with BS akustikk / Oslo
Theatre technical designer:
Theatre Projects Consultants / London
Building engineering:
Multiconsult AS / Oslo, Kristiansand
Mechanical Engineering:
Sweco Groner / Oslo
Electrical Engineering:
COWI / Oslo, Kristiansand

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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CLIENT:
Teater- og Konserthus for Sørlandet IKS

Hjem

PROGRAM:
Approx. 27000m2
Concert hall with 1200 seats, Theatre-/Opera hall with 750 seats, multipurpose hall and small theatre hall, offices, workshops, rehearsal spaces, car park for 400 cars.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

Australian architects Demaine Partnership have completed a marble-fronted dental surgery in Victoria.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

Large frameless windows wrap around the corners of the polished facade, which folds back towards a glazed entrance.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

Grooved recesses in the white-rendered rear walls divide the three-storey building into a row of blocks, pierced by a set of openings.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

An apartment is located above the clinic on the top floor.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

Other dental clinics from the Dezeen archive include one in Prague with illustrated walls and another in Austria with an interior coloured like toothpaste.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

Photography is by Peter Clarke.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

The text below is from the architects:


Beaumaris Dental

This project began when two dentists, who are also father and son, decided that they needed a new building for their growing dental practice – a building that would reflect the quality of their dentistry and modern equipment and a building that would serve their business well into the future.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

Our first task was to assist the clients realise the potential of the site and to understand the projected local urban development. This exploration led to the brief being for a three storey mixed use building that provides the ground level for their dental business, a second level for a commercial tenant and a third level as an apartment for the son to occupy.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

For the design of the building, we began by reflecting upon the aesthetic ideals of dentistry and the role of the dentist to sculpt and shape teeth. We took this as our starting point for the architecture.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

We developed the design to achieve a considered interplay of the qualities of translucency, reflection, depth, solidity, surface and composition with the aim of giving proper expression to the craft of dentistry. This attempt to evoke allusions to dentistry harks back to the tradition of buildings communicating the service or trade that occurs within.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

The street facade of this building is a smooth veneer of polished marble and glass. The pattern of the stone and the configuration of openings convey a homogenous surface.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

As the light changes those glazed surfaces that previously offered solidity via their reflections become deep punctures in the monolithic quality of the stone and, like an x-ray, it is the (uppermost) edges that appear most translucent.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

This facade folds in from the adjacent buildings to offer a forecourt and a modest expression of civic presence. The angled surfaces articulate the building as a cluster of elements and provide a sense of depth and movement via the manipulation of perspective sightlines.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

The rear facades employ sharp incisions to white rendered surfaces to dissolve transform an otherwise box-like form into a cluster of crisp, white elements. Deep window reveals provide requisite shading and an expression of mass.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

The interior spaces offer a picturesque circuit via the staircase and moments of vista. At the first floor large windows provide the strong visual connection with the street sought by tenants and the windows to the north are screened to respect the sensitivity of the residential interface.

Beaumaris Dental by Demaine Partnership

Throughout the apartment baroque-like concealed light sources suggest spatial extension; surfaces toy with reflection and the incised motif is again used to suggest mass.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

Extra large windows frame the interiors of this shingle-clad cabin in Victoria, Australia.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

Surrounded by bushland, the single-storey house was designed by Australian studio DesignOffice with a square-shaped plan.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

The shingled exterior comprises grey asphalt tiles, while corrugated metal covers the building’s shallow-pitched roof.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

A terrace folds around the rear of the building, where the glazed openings lead inside to dining and living rooms that are naturally day-lit through two central skylights.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

You can see more interesting houses from Australia here, including one with walls that fold like origami.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

Photography is by Scottie Cameron.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

Here’s some more text from DesignOffice:


Goldfields Dwelling / Victoria

DesignOffice have just completed this simple home located in the heart of Victoria’s Goldfields region, just over an hour from Melbourne. The 100sqm pavilion sits on an elevated site surrounded by native bushland.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

Conceived as a simple single volumetric form, the building is uniformly clad in warm grey asphalt shingles. This cladding provides a tonal and textural response to the vernacular roofing of corrugated metal sheets whilst giving scale to the building’s geometric sculptural form.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

Large apertures and carvings are then made in the skin in response to internal arrangement, aspect and orientation.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

An open kitchen is adjacent to both the dining and living areas and is animated by the daylit apex of the pavilion. This also serves to provide daylight and ventilation to the bathroom behind.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

The main living area to the west is conceived as a tiered timber landscape reflecting the natural topography of the site. A simple interior palette of concrete, white oak and ceramic tile provide a calm and simple backdrop for living.

Goldfields Dwelling by DesignOffice

Despite Family’s Objections, Eisenhower Memorial Commission Remains Committed to Frank Gehry

In the end, it apparently takes a whole lot to topple a famous architect and his heavy pillars. After months of discussion, and an increasingly vocal group of family members speaking out against the project, the Eisenhower Memorial Commission has released a statement (pdf) of full support behind Frank Gehry, who designed the national tribute, set to be built (someday) in Washington DC’s National Mall. As early as last week, Susan Eisenhower, the former president’s granddaughter, had spoken at a congressional hearing, asking for a redesign. However, it was to no avail, at least to the Commission, who write in their statement that they “will work to address the outstanding issues that remain” but seemed to waiver not a touch when it came to Gehry’s plans:

We confirm our selection of him, confirm our enthusiastic endorsement of his design concept, and express our regret and sadness at the tone and nature of the selected comments that have been made on Mr. Gehry’s design for the memorial.

The whole debate hasn’t ended here though. The National Capital Planning Commission, which we learned from the lengthy battle over the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial can sometimes be a tricky group to work with, will have the final say on Gehry’s design. Onward with the battle!

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Linear House by Architects EAT

Linear House by Architects EAT

This wood and steel house by Melbourne studio Architects EAT has a huge projecting roof that shelters a first floor barbeque deck.

Linear House by Architects EAT

Named Linear House, the seaside residence provides a family holiday home on the south-west coast of Australia.

Linear House by Architects EAT

A circular skylight punches through the roof of the terrace to create an outlet for smoke from the grill.

Linear House by Architects EAT

A concrete wall splits the building into two long narrow halves. The architects planned both of these sides using the visual metaphor of “beads on a string”, which dictates that rooms are arranged in a linear series.

Linear House by Architects EAT

Ground floor bedrooms and a first floor dining room are positioned on the north side of the house, where they have a view towards neighbouring tennis courts.

Linear House by Architects EAT

A first floor living room is located to the south, adjacent to the outdoor deck.

Linear House by Architects EAT

Architects EAT also designed another steel and wood house that we featured a few years ago – see it here.

Linear House by Architects EAT

Photography is by James Coombe.

Linear House by Architects EAT

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Linear House

Linear House is situated on a slight hill, 500m away from the Portsea back beach. The site is a relatively large and newly subdivided lot of 2600m2, and the client wanted a holiday house that will eventually become their permanent family home.

Linear House by Architects EAT

The siting of the house is simple; we placed the house at the highest point of the site, so that its complete elevations can be observed when one approaches the site. This also allows us to orientate the house lengthwise towards the north for passive solar benefit.

Linear House by Architects EAT

We call the underlying principle of our design: ‘beads on a string’ (it is a term borrowed from our 2nd year architectural course where we were required to design a linear house). Revisiting this principle produces an architecture of a pathway where journey is spatially defined by a series of unfolding spaces.

Linear House by Architects EAT

It also deals with spatial narrative as a combination of the memory of the place where one has just passed through in comparison to the expectation of what might be next. This singular pathway has coincidentally become our solution to avoid having pool fences around the lap pool, by providing a child safe sliding door that encloses the dining room.

Linear House by Architects EAT

To further accentuate the linearity, the exterior of the house is encased in horizontal spotted gum cladding, expressed steel beams, as well as sliding timber slats screens. Therefore the house is conceived as a linear timber pavilion with a double-storey concrete masonry spine wall running in parallel to the depth of the site.

Linear House by Architects EAT

The plan is straightforward – bedrooms and dining room along the north look out to the tennis court and down the slope towards Portsea Foreshore. Service areas are on the ground floor to the south, as well as the living room on the first floor, designed to be a winter talking pit or theatherette.

Linear House by Architects EAT

The journey ends with a large entertainment deck on the first floor where friends and family can enjoy a barbeque together in the afternoon, watching the sunset in summer, while kids swim in the pool above the garage.

Linear House by Architects EAT

The project was achieved with a modest budget. All the rooms are relatively small, and instead of open plan, the living room, dining and kitchen are separated to create intimacy in a large house.

Linear House by Architects EAT

The project considers sustainability at a strategic level: space zoning, cross ventilation, solar orientation and thermal mass, as well as utilising rain water storage, solar electricity, insulation and double glazing to further enhance the sustainable outcome of the house.

Linear House by Architects EAT

Architects EAT
Project Team: Albert Mo, Eid Goh, James Coombe, Peter Knights, Shereen Tay, Gerhana Waty

Linear House by Architects EAT

Builder: Mark Southwell
Structural Engineer: K H Engineering
Building Surveyor: Mike Neighbour
ESD Consultant: Sustainable Built Environment (SBE)
Arborist: Arbor Co
Landscape Management: SMEC

Sulzberg-Thal Fire Station by Dietrich Untertrifaller

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich Untertrifaller

Hoses hang inside an illuminated glass tower at this timber-clad fire station in western Austria by architects Dietrich Untertrifaller.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The timber that cloaks that building’s exterior is silver fir, which is typical of architecture in the surrounding village of Sulzberg-Thal.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

Behind the cladding, the fire station has a masonry-constructed ground floor and a timber-framed first floor.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

A large room on the ground floor houses two fire engines beside a slightly elevated radio and control room, while a classroom, an archive and an office are located on the level above.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

We’ve never had a fire station on Dezeen before, although we have featured a couple of unusual police stations – see them here.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

Photography is by Bruno Klomfar.

Here’s some more information from Dietrich Untertrifaller:


Fire station, Sulzberg-Thal

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The prominent location of the new fire station at the boundary of the village and engaged in a spatial dialogue with Gasthaus Krone (inn) required a sensitive and discreet integration of the new building into the villagescape.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The building is ideally sited in relation to the topography, with forecourts forming a separate square within the village fabric. This way fortified structures are reduced to a minimum and the road layout remains intact.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The square is located between the fire station and Gasthaus Krone, forming a scenario which is typical for Sulzberg Thal.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The building features a clear separation into vehicle depot with control room and all other uses that are grouped according to room height and temperature into compact units.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The radio and control room is slightly elevated, overlooking both the vehicle depot and the forecourt with the crew entrance. Parking for emergency operations is planned as gravel lawn lining the road.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The building has ground-level access from the main road, with the slightly projecting top floor marking and shielding the entrance area.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The control area and locker rooms adjoin the entrance. The top floor with a classroom, village archives, an office and auxiliary rooms opens to the village boundary, thus signaling the public function of the building.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The vehicle depot is built as a solid structure, while the top floor is planned as a timber construction. The facade features silver-fir-cladding, which gives the building a uniform appearance as is typical for the village.

 Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The large continuous glazing structures the building, creating an air of lightness and transparency to all angles. External shading protects the interior from overheating.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

The tube-shaped tower is built as timber construction with glass on two sides, revealing a glimpse of the activities taking place at the fire station.

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

Client: Municipality of Sulzberg

Architectural design: Dietrich | Untertrifaller

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

Project management: R. Grups
Competition: 2008

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

Construction: 2009 – 2010
Location: A-6934 Sulzberg-Thal

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

Floor space: 604 m²
Volume: 3,060 m³

Fire Station, Thal by Dietrich | Untertrifaller

Building costs: 1.26 m Euro
Partners: Structural engineering – concrete: Mader Flatz, Bregenz | Structural engineering – timber: Merz Kley, Dornbirn | Building services engineering: Pflügl Roth, Bregenz

Healthcare Centre for Cancer Patients by NORD Architects

Slideshow: Danish studio NORD Architects have completed a cancer care centre in Copenhagen shaped like a cluster of houses.

Healthcare Centre for Cancer Patients by NORD Architects

The gables of each block are different, creating an irregularly faceted roof that the architects describe as being like origami.

Healthcare Centre for Cancer Patients by NORD Architects

The building has a hollow centre where a series of first floor balconies overlook a large courtyard.

Healthcare Centre for Cancer Patients by NORD Architects

Rooms inside are styled like domestic interiors to help recovering patients feel at home while they receive follow-up treatment.

Healthcare Centre for Cancer Patients by NORD Architects

We’ve also published a few Maggie’s cancer care centres from the UK – see them all here.

Healthcare Centre for Cancer Patients by NORD Architects

Here’s a project description from NORD Architects:


A Place for Recovery

Background

Getting cancer is like embarking on a journey, you don’t know where will end. It requires strength to cope with the disease and take on the new identity as a cancer patient. Research shows that architecture can have a positive effect on people’s recovery from sickness. A human scale and a welcoming atmosphere can help people to get better. Despite of this, most hospitals are hardly comfy. Just finding the way from the reception to the canteen can be difficult. If we want people to get better at our hospitals, we need to deinstitutionalize and create a welcoming healthcare. The Healthcare Centre for Cancer Patients designed by Nord Architects Copenhagen does just that.

Design concepts

The Healthcare Center for Cancer Patients in Copenhagen is conceived as an iconic building, which create awareness of cancer without stigmatizing the patients. Designed as a number of small houses combined into one, the center provides the space needed for a modern health facility, without losing the comforting scale of the individual. The houses are connected by raised roof shaped like a Japanese paper art origami, which gives the building a characteristic signature.

Entering the building you find yourself in a comfy lounge area manned by volunteers. From here you move onto the others parts of the house, which includes a courtyard for contemplation, spaces for exercises, a common kitchen where you can learn to cook healthy food, meeting rooms for patients groups etc.

Site conditions

The building is situated close to the city centre of Copenhagen in the same area as Copenhagen University Hospital (Rigshospitalet), so that patients can go to the healthcare center after their treatment at the hospital. On the other side of the road is the Panum Institute of Medicine.

Client: Municipality of Copenhagen Place: Copenhagen, Denmark
Year: 2009 – 2011
Size: 2500 m2
Budget: 56 mill kr
Architects: NORD Architects, Copenhagen
Engineer: Wessberg
Landscape Architect: NORD Architects, Copenhagen
Client advisor: Moe og Brødsgaard

The LowLine: How Do the Remote Skylights Work?

At this point you’re probably familiar with Dan Barasch and James Ramsey’s ambitious Kickstarter campaign, the LowLine. Dare I go so far as to say it’s the most ambitious Kickstarter project ever, especially now that they’ve doubled down, asking backers to help them raise $300,000 instead of the original $100,000? The extra funds will allow them to do more than just build and present the technology needed to sustain an underground park, it will enable them to start work on the park itself, which means that by next Winter there just might be a warm, sunny underground park to retreat to.

There are only a few days left to raise the extra money. The good news is that even if they don’t met their new goal, the Remote Skylight, the system they developed to filter sunlight underground, will still get made. The process is a bit complicated, but Dan and James simplify it..

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“The system uses a system of optics to gather sunlight, concentrate it, and reflect it below ground, where it is dispersed by a solar distributor dish embedded in the ceiling. The light irrigated underground will carry the necessary wavelengths to support photosynthesis—meaning we can grow plants, trees, and grasses underground. The cables block harmful UV rays that cause sunburn, so you can leave the SPF-45 at home.”

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