Ourense AVE Station by Foster + Partners

Ourense AVE Station by Foster and Partners

Foster + Partners have won a competition to design a high-speed rail station for the city of Ourense in northwest Spain.

Ourense AVE Station by Foster and Partners

A row of arched roofs will shelter the Ourense AVE Station, which together with a new park will oversail a set of existing railway tracks through the city. Glazed walls inside the station will give arriving and departing passengers a view of the landscape beyond, while a reflective ceiling will bounce light down onto the platforms below.

Ourense AVE Station by Foster and Partners

The proposals also include a bus station and car park that will be located underneath the station concourse. A network of pathways will cross both the station and park to reconnect disjointed routes on each side.

Ourense AVE Station by Foster and Partners

The proposals were completed in collaboration with engineers GOC and local architects Cabanelas Castelo.

Ourense AVE Station by Foster and Partners

Click above for larger image

See more stories about railway stations here, including a metro station with a UFO-like roof.

Here’s some more information from Foster + Partners:


Foster + Partners wins competition to design Ourense AVE Station

Foster + Partners, in a joint venture with engineers, G.O.C. and Cabanelas Castelo Architects, has won an international competition to design a new high-speed rail station in the city of Ourense in Galicia, north western Spain. The design combines transport infrastructure with a new park, which will create a major new public space in the city and open up pedestrian links between the districts on each side of the tracks.

The high-speed AVE train station is located over the existing track level and integrates a bus station and parking area below. Above ground, the station’s presence is discreet and transparent, with glazed facades that allow views through to the mountains beyond. The concourse is sheltered beneath a sequence of lightweight roof canopies, which rise in a sweeping arc over the station and extend to shade the plaza and entrance to the park. The underside of the roof is reflective to bounce daylight down to the platforms, and between each canopy is a glazed, linear opening.

The park extends from the station plaza and is intersected by pools of water and a formal network of pedestrian walkways, which echo the alignment of the tracks and connect the streets of Barrio del Puente to Barrio Veintiuno.

Nigel Dancey, senior partner at Foster + Partners:
“We are delighted to have been selected for our integrated design, which brings together high-speed rail and bus stations with a major new public space for the city. We look forward to working with ADIF and the City of Ourense as the project develops.”

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

Perforated metal balconies fold like ribbons around the facade of an apartment block in the Dutch city of Nijmegen.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

The irregularly shaped balconies project from each corner of the 13-storey-high tower, which was recently completed by Rotterdam studio 24H architecture.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

Named Housing Hatert, the building contains 72 apartments in its upper storeys.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

A health centre and a community hall occupy the ground floor of the block, while a car park is located beneath.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

This is the third project from the Netherlands on Dezeen this month, following headquarters for drinks brand Red Bull and an overhauled townhousesee more Dutch architecture and interiors here.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

Photography is by 24H architecture.

Here’s some more text from 24H architecture:


In the area Hatert, at the edge of the city of Nijmegen, the housing corporations Portaal and Talis organize a great renewal operation. Most of the current housing does not comply with contemporary standards or needs a substantial make over.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

For this operation the city of Nijmegen worked in cooperation with the office of Khandekar towards a masterplan in which most of the present houses are renovated or renewed. Besides this upgrading, the open areas in the neighborhood will be filled with several new housing projects.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

24H architecture designed a sturdy tower with free formed balconies around, which make a recognizable sculpture from all directions; the new ‘crown’ of Hatert.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

The parking for the apartments is organized underneath a raised deck that will function as a new public space for the citizens of Hatert. Underneath the housing program the ground floor will be used as a community health centre.

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

Click above for larger image

Project: Housing Hatert, Nijmegen
Client: Portaal, Veenendaal
Architect: 24H architecture – Boris Zeisser, Maartje Lammers
with: Albert-Jan Vermeulen, Anja Verdonk, Harm Janssen, Olav Bruin, Dirk Zschunke, Bruno Toledo
Programme: 72 apartments, health center
Site address: Cort van der Lindenstraat Nijmegen
Design: 2007-2009
Construction: 2010-2011
Construction costs: € 12.500.000
Floor area: 8.000m2

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

Click above for larger image

Persons and companies involved in the project:
Structural engineer: Adams bouwadvies, Drunen
Contractor: Giesbers Wijchen Bouw, Wijchen

Housing Hatert by 24H architecture

Click above for larger image

Materials used for walls/floors/ceilings:
Balconies and façade; Aluminium panels Verstegen Perforatie Techniek
Façade; Curamu wooden siding
Facade ground floor; Saint Gobain art panels with custom print
Windows; Alcoa Aluminium frames
Illumination, lamps (product/company): Offices; Zumtobel Staff

AIA’s Architecture Billings Index Jumps Back Up Into the Positive

While the ups and downs continue unabated, it’s always nice to end a particularly rocky year on a positive note. The American Institute of Architects have released their latest Architecture Billings Index. Following last month’s welcomed-yet-slight uptick to 49.4, this time things shot all the way up to 52.0 (anything above 50 indicates an increase in billings and gives a more general sense of where things are at in the architecture and construction businesses). Despite the good news, the AIA’s main man of math was his usual cautious self, though it’s fun to imagine that he said the following while wearing a Santa hat and a thick egg nog mustache:

“This is a heartening development for the design and construction industry that only a few years ago accounted for nearly ten percent of overall GDP but has fallen to slightly less than six percent,” said AIA Chief Economist, Kermit Baker, PhD, Hon. AIA. “Hopefully, this uptick in billings is a sign that a recovery phase is in the works. However, given the volatility that we’ve seen nationally and internationally recently, we’ll need to see several more months of positive readings before we’ll have much confidence that the U.S. construction recession is ending.”

And with that, this writer’s week has come to an end. Hope there’s happy holidays to all our readers near and far.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Miami Beach Parking Garage by Zaha Hadid

Miami Beach Parking Garage by Zaha Hadid

Zaha Hadid has become the latest in a string of architects to design a car park for Miami Beach.

Miami Beach Parking Garage by Zaha Hadid

The car park was commissioned following the popularity of other completed Miami garages by architects including Frank Gehry, Enrique Norton and Herzog & de Meuron, whose concrete and glass structure was featured on Dezeen last year.

Miami Beach Parking Garage by Zaha Hadid

The spiralling structure will be located in the Collins Park area in the northeast of South Beach.

Anyone interested in car park design can see a few more here.

Here’s some more text from the City of Miami Beach:


Legendary Architect Zaha Hadid Chosen to Design Miami Beach Parking Garage at Collins Park

Architect Zaha Hadid has been chosen by the City of Miami Beach to design its newest parking garage at Collins Park, a neighborhood that’s home to the Miami City Ballet, the Bass Museum, the City Library as well as the Gansevoort, W and Setai luxury hotels. Collins Park is also just blocks away from the Miami Beach Convention Center, the Frank Gehry-designed New World Center and the popular automobile-free Lincoln Road Mall.

Consistently sought-after, Zaha Hadid is the architect of the Aquatic Center for the 2012 London Olympics and the Cincinnati Contemporary Arts Center. Hadid is the first woman to win the Pritzker Architecture Prize – the profession’s highest honor – joins the growing list of world renowned architects who have designed and overseen construction of new parking garages in the City of Miami Beach.

“This is a great opportunity for the City of Miami Beach to expand its commitment to leading edge architectural design,”says Matti Bower, Mayor of the City of Miami Beach.“Even our parking garages are more than a group of parking spaces. Some have become destinations within themselves and have attained individual iconic status. Every building can be a work of art. We are pleased to work with Ms. Hadid and we are delighted with her contemporary and brilliant design for our newest parking garage.”

Miami Beach’s parking garages have received world-wide media attention and have become tourist attractions themselves. They include the Frank-Gehry designed, city-owned, Pennyslvania Avenue Garage; Herzog de Meuron’s minimalist, edgy space at 1111 Lincoln Road; Arquitectonica’s Ballet Valet Garage at 7th Street and Collins Avenue as well as their newest design in Sunset Harbour, which is currently under construction; Enrique Norton’s newly designed parking garage at 16th Street and Drexel Avenue; and Perkins and Will’s recent City Center Garage Project at 18th Street and Meridian Avenue. Hadid’s new design is expected to continue to raise the bar for garages worldwide. The City of Miami Beach is currently working with Ms. Hadid to determine commencement dates for the new garage’s design plans and construction.

Dezeen Screen: Pabellon Ultraligero Centrifugo by Clavel Arquitectos

Pabellon Ultraligero Centrifugo by Clavel Arquitectos filmed by Cristobal Palma

Dezeen Screen: this movie by photographer Cristobal Palma shows a project installed by Clavel Arquitectos in a Shenzhen public square, where children playing on roundabouts generate electrical power for three spinning parasols. Watch the movie »

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Japanese architect Kimihiko Okada has completed a spiralling house on stilts in Hiroshima.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Raised up by metal columns, the two-storey residence, named Toda House, wraps around a courtyard garden.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Residents can walk underneath the building into this central courtyard, where a staircase leads up into a first floor lobby.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

From here, rooms wind anticlockwise around the building and incrementally climb upwards.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Balconies are located at both ends of the coil and overlook the sea beyond.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Two other stories we’ve published about Kimihiko Okada feature mountains of aluminium foil – see them both here.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Photography is by Toshiyuki Yano.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Here’s some more text from the architect:


The site is located in a residential area developed on a gentle perch in Hiroshima, overlooking a far view of the Inland Sea and Miyajima.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

The land of this area is developed into platforms form with several levels.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

The architecture was requested to have a view over the roof of the neighboring house, standing one level lower, and to consider security, for the site is located at the edge of the residential area, and to leave some space for extension when the client opens a small shop in the future.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

To respond to the requests, the house is lifted from the ground.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Like a bird’s nest, it called up architecture’s primary function of relief from disturbance.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

The house is open to the view and yet protected from the fear and environment.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Slab and roof consists of one continuous plate.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

The variations of circulation and diverse spatial relations were achieved by placing a penetrating staircase.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

The extended plate made possible the future extension and softened the impression from the ground level.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Spandrel wall changes its height accordingly to the thickness of slab.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Together with the slab, the spandrel wall creates the continuous but various environments.

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Location: Hiroshima, Hiroshima

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Principal use: private residence (extension; shop)

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Structure: steel structure two-storey

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Building area: 90.21sqm
Total floor area: 114.26sqm

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Structural Engineer: Structured Environment
Mechanical Engineer: System Design Laboratory

Toda House by Kimihiko Okada

Museum der Kulturen by Herzog & de Meuron

Museum der Kulturen by Herzog & de Meuron

Architects Herzog & de Meuron have positioned a scaly crown over the top of this Basel museum (photographs by Roland Halbe).

Museum der Kulturen by Herzog & de Meuron

The renovated Museum der Kulturen reopened in September and exhibits ethnographic artefacts and images from around the world.

Museum der Kulturen by Herzog & de Meuron

The architects added a new gallery floor to the building, beneath the irregularly folded roof of shimmering ceramic tiles. A steel framework supports the roof, creating a column-free exhibition area.

Museum der Kulturen by Herzog & de Meuron

On the existing storeys the architects extended a selection of windows down to ankle-height and removed a floor to create a new double-height gallery. The entrance to the museum is relocated to the rear, where a courtyard slopes downs to lead visitors inside.

Museum der Kulturen by Herzog & de Meuron

Dezeen visited Basel back in October and talked to Herzog & de Meuron partner Christine Binswanger about the recently opened museum – listen to the podcast here.

Click here to see more stories about Herzog & de Meuron.

Here’s some more text from the architects:


The Museum der Kulturen Basel goes back to the middle of the nineteenth century. Replacing the Augustinian monastery on the Münsterhügel, the classicist building by architect Melchior Berri opened in 1849. The “Universal Museum,” as it was then called, was the city’s first museum building. Designed to house both the sciences and the arts, it now holds one of the most important ethnographic collections in Europe thanks largely to continuing gifts and bequests. In 1917, with holdings of some 40,000 objects, an extension by architects Vischer & Söhne was added. A second extension was projected in 2001 to accommodate what had, by now, become holdings of some 300,000 objects. Modifications would include an entrance especially for the Museum, thereby giving it a new identity.

Extending the building horizontally would have meant decreasing the size of the courtyard, the Schürhof. Instead the Vischer building of 1917 has been given a new roof. Consisting of irregular folds clad in blackish green ceramic tiles, the roof resonates with the medieval roofscape in which it is embedded while functioning at the same time as a clear sign of renewal in the heart of the neighbourhood. The hexagonal tiles, some of them three-dimensional, refract the light even when the skies are overcast, creating an effect much like that of the finely structured brick tiles on the roofs of the old town. The steel framework of the folded roof allows for a column-free gallery underneath, an expressive space that forms a surprising contrast to the quiet, right-angled galleries on the floors below.

Up until now, the Museum der Kulturen and the Naturhistorisches Museum shared the same entrance on Augustinergasse. The former is now accessed directly from Münsterplatz through the previously inaccessible rear courtyard, the Schürhof. The courtyard, in its patchwork setting of the backs of medieval buildings, has now become an extension of the Münsterplatz. Part of the courtyard has been lowered and an expansive, gently inclined staircase leads down to the Museum entrance. Hanging plants and climbing vines lend the courtyard a distinctive atmosphere and, in concert with the roof, they give the Museum a new identity. We look forward to having the courtyard become a social meeting place for all kinds of Museum activities and celebrations.

The weighty, introverted impression of the building, initially concealing its invaluable contents, is reinforced by the façades, many of whose windows have been closed off, and by the spiral-shaped construction for the hanging vegetation mounted under the eaves of the cantilevered roof above the new gallery. This is countered, however, by the foundation, which is slit open the entire length of the building and welcomes visitors to come in. These architectural interventions together with the vegetation divide the long, angular and uniform Vischer building of 1917 into distinct sections. The white stairs, the roof overhang, the climbing plants, the series of windows in the “piano nobile” and the glazed base lend the courtyard direction and give the building a face.

The windows were closed up not just to enhance the weight and elegance of the building; the additional wall space provided by this measure was equally important. The few remaining openings have been enlarged and now extend to the floor. The window reveals are so deep that they form small alcoves that look out onto the old town.

The sequence of rooms follows the same pattern on all three gallery floors. Only two rooms stand out: on the second floor, directly above the entrance, a large room with windows on one side faces the courtyard. Further up, a ceiling has been removed, creating a two-story room with a narrow window slit, where larger objects in the collection can be displayed. Visitors can look down on this new anchor room from above, much like the room containing the Abelam House, thus also providing orientation within the Museum.

The renovation of the galleries followed similar principles throughout. The older rooms have classicist coffered ceilings; those added later have concrete beams in one direction only. With the goal of restoring the original structure of the rooms, dropped ceilings were removed and technical services integrated as discreetly as possible into existing architectural elements.

Project Name: Museum der Kulturen
Address: Münsterplatz 20, 4051 Basel, Switzerland
(formerly Augustinergasse 2)

Project Phases: Concept Design: 2001-2002
Schematic Design: 2003
Design Development: 2003-2004
Construction Documents: 2008-2010
Construction: 2008-2010
Completion: 2010
Opening: September 2011

Project Team 2008-2010 Partner: Jacques Herzog, Pierre de Meuron, Christine Binswanger
Project Architect: Martin Fröhlich (Associate), Mark Bähr, Michael Bär
Project Team: Piotr Fortuna, Volker Jacob, Beatus Kopp, Severin Odermatt, Nina Renner, Nicolas Venzin, Thomas Wyssen

Project Team 2001-2004 Partner: Jacques Herzog, Pierre de Meuron, Christine Binswanger
Project Architect: Jürgen Johner (Associate), Ines Huber
Project Team: Béla Berec, Giorgio Cadosch, Gilles le Coultre, Laura Mc Quary

Tabletop Architecture Homages

0lccovers.jpg

Something like Stick Figure Theater for architecture geeks, Luis Urculo’s short film Covers depicts recreations of iconic structures using common domestic items. The New Museum, Falling Water, the Farnsworth House and more all get the treatment.

And of course, what would an architecture video be without the attendant architecture-speak seemingly designed to be impenetrable to laypeople:

Covers is an investigation about architecture as a consumption object or souvenir and its relation with the domestic non-specialized language of everyday things. The work is a reconstruction and review of iconic monumental pieces of architecture whose image is built by objects to change the perception of this universal masterworks….

(more…)


Gehry’s Memorial in More Jeopardy, A New Santiago Calatrava Fight, and More Architecture News

It’s the week before what, for many people, will mean either a full week off, or just a time when all their companies will require them to be is mildly-conscious and sitting at their desks (if that), but surprisingly, there’s still a bunch going on. Let’s dig in.

As is tradition this time of year, critics have begun filing their top lists of best and worsts. Here in Chicago, the Tribune Blair Kamin has filed his worst list, which we enjoyed maybe more than his best. WBEZ‘s Lee Bey, has filed his as well. Meanwhile, over at The Irish Times, the paper reminds us that the connection between architecture and Chicago didn’t end with developer Garrett Kelleher‘s Chicago Spire debacle. Instead, there’s a long tradition of the Irish in the city (also it would help to ignore that incident with Mrs. O’Leary burning down the first Chicago).

Speaking of the Chicago Spire: fresh off the architect of that failed project’s recent unpleasantness with the Denver Airport redesign project, Santiago Calatrava has found himself a part of a new fight. After a board member blasted the architect at a meeting for the State University System of Florida Board of Governors for both the architect’s tendencies to run over budget, as well as for being Spanish (“Why do we need someone from Spain, when we need jobs right here in America?”), concerning a new building project he is working on at USF Polytechnic, Calatrava and his wife and business partner shot back. Thus far, we are still at a stand-still between the opposing sides.

To the far west of Chicago, and even further from Florida, Christopher Hawthorne has also filed his best/worst list for Los Angeles.

And finally, it looks as though Frank Gehry might soon be having to wait on that groundbreaking ceremony next year for his Eisenhower Memorial in Washington DC. The Eisenhower family, who have raised their voices about Gehry’s designs somewhat quietly up to now, have now become more publicly vocal, speaking out directly against what the famous architect has planned for it, despite the two parties apparent personal get togethers and talks since the last concerns were raised.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centreby H2o Architects

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Brightly coloured and patterned panels chosen by different groups in the local community adorn a new library and learning centre in Melbourne, Australia. 

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

The combinations of ceramic tiles, timber, powder-coated steel, fritted glass and composite panels were selected in consultation with the centre’s intended users, many of them Middle Eastern.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Designed by H2o Architects of Australia, the project offers an upgrade to the existing gymnasium on the site plus a new building to house the library and learning centre.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

The main, larger block contains the library while a more compact adjoining volume contains study rooms and a foyer.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Photography is by Trevor Mein.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre

Form

Twin-conjoined volumes -one high for the taller and much larger library space and the other low mostly containing cellular rooms plus foyer – define the form. The new building is surrounded by adjacent car parking and landscaping and linked to the existing upgraded  gymnasium.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Sustainability

The building was conceived as being low-energy, naturally-ventilated, heated and cooled, thermally efficient and utilising appropriate materials with low or no off-gassing. The saw-tooth roof form allows maximum south light with no sun penetration into the library.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Contexturalism

The site is a highly public one. Opposite is a MacDonald’s restaurant en route to the local shopping strip  including rows of brightly coloured garages. The adjacent intersection carries high volumes of traffic. The design reflects its eclectic neighbourhood and attempts to recall atypical Anglo Saxon imagery for its mostly immigrant local residents.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Special qualities

The specific building type of the centre evolved in an unusual manner. The facility was originally briefed as a Community Centre with two principle components – a 200 seat flat floor Multipurpose Hall for hire by local community groups and associated staff areas, foyer, amenities and flexible, wireless classrooms.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Mid way through construction the brief changed to a Community library. The high ceilinged south lit MPR simply adapted to reading and reference area, support spaces generally maintained the same functions and one classroom was converted to a Computer Lab.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Originality

Deliberate choices were made of brightly coloured Trespa panelling as the primary cladding and the feature end wall palette of ceramic tile, timber, powder coat steel, alucobond and fritted glass to reflect the material choices and vivid colourings of the largely Middle Easern users.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

We felt strongly that public acknowledgement of the built form aspirations of these cultures by Melbourne designers had been largely ignored.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Innovation

Materials and colours were selected from examples amongst local building stock.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Site plan

The buildings innovative and iconography reinterprets the lurid colourings and exaggerated realities of well-known Australian artists, Barry Humphries and Howard Arkley in their depictions of the ‘Oz’ suburb.

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Ground floor plan

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

Section


Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

East elevation

Avondale Heights Library & Learning Centre by H2o Architects

South elevation

Designer: H2o Architects
Architects: Tim Hurburgh, Mark O’Dwyer
Project Team: Natasha Wheatland, Matthias Ott, Vanja Joffer, Soizic Bernier, Anne-Claire Deville, Adriana Stelmach, Julie Buckton
Structural Engineer: Felicetti Consulting Engineers
Services Engineer: Fryda Dorne Associates
Landscape Architect: Rush Wright Associates
General Contractor: Ireland Brown Constructions
Client: Skills Victoria
Project Manager: Coffey Projects
User: Moonee Valley City Council
Location: Corner of Military Road and Clarendon Street, Avondale Heights, Victoria, Australia
Built Area: 1,625m2 / 835m2 (new building), 790m2 (existing gymnasium)
Completion (date): October 2010

Finishing Materials:

Facade: Trespa Meteon high pressure laminate from HH Robertson
Feature wall (south elevation): Vogue System Ceramic tiles from Classic Ceramics, grey ironbark recycled timber with expressed joints, digitally printed glazing from Digiglass, CNC routed Trespa custom-designed routed panels from Alclad Architectual, Alucobond composite panel cladding