Boom SP Design

From Friends With You prints to a recent architectural marvel, highlights of São Paulo’s annual design conference

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Already in its fourth edition, the annual São Paulo conference Boom SP Design is evolving quickly—much like the Brazilian designers that it helps to bring to international attention. Inviting boldface names to participate in the cultural exchange, last week’s conference brought dozens of talks with such major figures in design, art and architecture as Karim Rashid, Dror Benshetrit and Matali Crasset. On top of a host of workshops, exhibits and parties, Friends With You flew down to launch eight special prints specially designed to commemorate their arrival in Brazil. Envisioned by the conference’s founder Roberto Cocenza as a place to connect local and international designers, architects and retailers, the three-day event also puts the focus on Brazilian creativity.

Recalling an earlier trip to Brazil, Crasset questioned the Campana brothers’ effect on Brazilian design. “You see now it’s arriving, it’s very personal and connected with the Brazilian way of doing things,” she observed. “In Europe we use nature as a portal to decoration; here, it’s more evident. Nature already has potential.”

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During the day, participants heard everyone from São Paulo’s own Rodrigo Almeida to Miami, Florida-based Chad Oppenheim and others speaking about their experiences and future projects. Sprinkled in between were others on the cusp of breaking big internationally, such as Glaucio Diogenes, a graphic designer and illustrator who was named the event’s designer of the year.

Another up-and-comer photographer Paul Clemence pushes the boundaries between architecture and other disciplines. His short video collaboration with Aksel Stasny uses the seemingly moving elements of buildings by architects like Zaha Hadid as a base and inspiration for animation.

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One evening dedicated to Friends With You launched their posters that will sell through local design store Coletivo Amor de Madre. One of the building’s facades now also features a painting by the FWY crew. “The belief of magic and empowerment is strong here,” Friends With You’s Sam Borkson said when asked about parallels between his work and Brazil. “We’re like a mix of all those religions, changing acts of ritual into play to evoke things in people.”

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One of the newest additions to this rich cultural milieu comes in the form of the Heliopolis Residential Condominiums. We had a chance to see the complex first-hand when Japanese-Brazilian architect Ruy Ohtake (known for visually-prominent structures like Hotel Unique that form part of São Paulo’s landscape and history) invited a group to visit the infamous favela, the second-biggest in Latin America.

Comprised of 21 buildings slated to open next month, the government housing project is the latest in Ohtake’s seven-year involvement with the Heliopolis community. (He took us to his favorite haunts, including a small bar inside Heliopolis). The work stands out not only because of the bright colors and rounded design that contrast with the city’s straight angles, but because it’s designed by one of Brazil’s few starchitects that doesn’t limit his talents to just the private sector.


V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

Here’s the next house in the series of eleven by Rotterdam studio Pasel Kuenzel Architects on the site of a former slaughterhouse in Leiden, Netherlands.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

Named V12K0102, the house and its neighbours form part of an area masterplan by Dutch architects MVRDV.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

The 30 metre-long building alternates between one and two storeys-high and is clad in a chequered pattern of timber and white render.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

The house also features long narrow windows and a camouflaged front door.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

A private courtyard splits the house into two halves, one occupied by the children and the other used by the parents.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

This courtyard can be surveyed from a first floor deck, which also overlooks a second smaller courtyard on the opposite side of the building.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

We’ve previously featured four houses from this series on Dezeen – see the projects here and see all our stories about Dutch houses here, including one with perforated fabric tacked onto its facades.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

Photography is by Marcel van der Burg.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

Here are a few additional words from Pasel Kuenzel Architects:


V12K0102 – 30 running meters of house!

On the site of a former slaughterhouse in the historical heart of the Dutch university city of Leiden, emerges one of the biggest urban developments of private dwellings in the Netherlands.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

In their series of eleven, Rotterdam based architects pasel.künzel architects present yet another spectecular house giving a new interpretation of the classical Dutch housing typology.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

With their V12K0102 residence pasel.kuenzel architects created a remarkable project on an almost triangular building plot, the remnant of an inner city housing block.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

On a 30 metre long one-storey high base, two building volumes were placed on opposite side, one being the ‘children’s house’ and the other serving as the ‘house of the parents’.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

The two parts facing each other allow for visible eye contact, but are furthermore physically separeted.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

Collective spaces for living, dining and playing are situated on the ground floor, meandering around two intimate courtyards and establishing an immediate relation between ‘life inside and outside’ – an oasis in the city.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects

Towards the city, the introvert house reveals his inner life by only two gigantic glass panes that also permit the characteristic Dutch light to reach deep into the museum like spaces.

V12K0102 by Pasel Kuenzel Architects


See also:

.

V36K08/09 by Pasel
Kuenzel Architects
V21K07 by Pasel
Kuenzel Architects
V21K01 by Pasel
Kuenzel Architects

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Paris architects Nadau Lavergne have completed a rusted steel winery on a World Heritage Site in the south of France.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The Chateau Barde-Haut winery in Saint-Emilion comprises two Corten steel blocks, one of which nestles between two existing stone buildings with matching pitched roofs.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

A two-storey building with a chunky-concrete frame and timber cladding is concealed inside one of the warehouse blocks.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Vintage barrels of wine are stored behind glass screens on the ground floor of this internal building.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Above is a room that overlooks the warehouse floor.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Hot air pumps regulate the temperature inside the buildings.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

We also recently featured a story about refurbished wine cellars in Spain – see our earlier story here and see all our stories about wineries here.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Photography is by Philippe Caumes.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The following text is from Nadau Lavergne:


Composes in time

The Chateau Barde-Haut is a 17-hectare domain situated in Saint-Emilion, at the end of the tray.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Registered in 1999 on the UNESCO world heritage, the jurisdiction of Saint-Emilion is a remarkable example of a historic wine landscape, which survived intact. In 2005, we had rehabilitated of former winery in a building of traditional stone.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Sought again in 2008 for a project of a bigger scale. The existing site is characteristic of the form of the Gironde wine landscape: an island of stone low houses of the 19th century, contain offices and the other dependences, appear from rows of vineyards. In the North of this island gets loose a volume everything in length: the wine storehouse.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The project takes advantage of this architectural context which makes the identity of the country. We would have certainly been able to work a rather linear architectural coherence, to answer the justifiable expectations of a landscape the timeless face of which is security of a tradition.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Nevertheless, the identity of a country is not dependent on an architectural gesture which would content with reproducing the characteristics of the existing. In a time when the business of the wine becomes international, where the French production is competed by foreign wines, the wine country of Saint-Emilion remains a strong entity, both for the beauty of its landscapes and for the brilliance of its naming.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The production of the wine is a tradition multimillennium; this secularity hires it in an era today which was able to frighten the profession. Of new requirements in term of fermentation and wine making, the expectations of warned customers, a necessary export, so many signs of the inescapable modernization of the viniculture. How to reconcile from then on the identity of a ground, its exception and its stamp and the technical innovations?

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The choice of contemporary architecture answers this visible contradiction. Two volumes rise on the existing site: on one hand workshops, the configuration of which in length allows to structure the entire space of the site and to redesign the roads; on the other hand cuviers and reception hall, which skip in the hollow of the space left by stony buildings. Both get dressed of sheets of rusty steel, the aspect of which metamorphoses according to climates; the volumes hurry of nuances pastels, ochre and sienna.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The choice of this material was imperative(led) with a certain evidence: the strength of the place required architecture in the asserted minimalism, the architectural presence which did not think in term of competition or rivalry, but dynamics. The existing wine storehouse and the workshops had been dug to mitigate the leveling of the ground.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

A dynamic contact of the architectures.

Noting the configuration of the built, and quite particularly this space between the wine storehouse and the very dense set towards, the project thus comes to fit partly into the stony case; the welcoming volume cuviers and reception hall skips between the traditional buildings, the witnesses of a secular memory. Its facade is aligns itself with the line of built existing (wine storehouse and diverse dependences); it marries the length of the wine storehouse to present on the West a facade which fits on the width of the building. So by overlaying this volume in the pronounced lines, as cut from the corten steel, from the stony heart, we wished to open up the architectures.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

This unexpected closeness of a contemporary building and one built traditional, their contact, create an interesting dynamics. An interaction which authorizes a new story; The identity of every sequence is as raised by the unusual presence of the other architectural temporality. An attention on the temporality being inspired by the alchemy which shapes the character of a wine, a mouthful of which lets guess the spring rains, the burning sun of August, the wooded accents of the oak.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The architectural lines of the project borrow their simplicity and their dynamics from wefts of the rows) of vineyards. The cover of rusty steel which dresses both buildings creates a visual coherence and declines the colors of the country. However a strong identity characterizes each of them.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Canadian wells were dug along the line of built formed by the wine storehouse, the volume contains cuviers and reception hall, and the existing stony buildings. They allow to reduce the thermal amplitudes for the internal spaces of the wine storehouse and the cuvier. Hot air pumps, settled in studios (workshops), distribute the air(sight) chill and regulate the process. Buildings (ships) are isolated around for an optimal thermal slowness.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The végétalisée roof that covers workshops has three different functions it favours the insertion of the contemporary volume in the site; it contributes its slowness by strengthening the insulation; she allows finally to filter rainwater, which are got back. Wine-producing waters are handled, managed towards a water-treatment plant. A wind turbine fixed to the roof of workshops enlightens the outside.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

A volume dug in the ground.

Workshops, directed east-west, consist of 4 sequences indicated by the play of the roof, the division of which in visible accordion in facade revisits the industrial architecture of the 1950s. Inside, the first three sequences communicate between them (from north to south: workshop(studio), premises and cloakrooms(changing rooms), shelter material two high doors of panels of steel lacquered on rails open in the East. The last sequence is a huge room for vintagers, whose inside gets dressed of wood.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

A wide plate glass window totally opens the space on a wooden terrace; it cuts a panoramic centring on the valley of Saint-Emilion. Half-buried in the North to mitigate the leveling of the ground, the whole building presents a favorable thermal slowness, to which contributes the presence of a vegetalized roof.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

In the North, a wind turbine fixed to a hurt metallic structure allows to feed all the outside lighting. It indicates the presence of the building which seems to go out gradually of the ground. The vegetalized roof plays with the singular topography of the ground, by creating the illusion of a building dug in the ground.


See also:

.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia
by Salas Studio
Faustino Winery by
Foster + Partners
Bodegas Protos by Rogers
Stirk Harbour + Partners

Despite Opening, Controversy Continues to Plague MLK Jr. Memorial

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What fools we were to believe that, after years of contentious debate, delay after delay and turmoil of varying degree, now that the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington DC is finally finished and sitting in its new, permanent home, everything would be fine. Instead, the seemingly always troubled monument has continued to suffer through controversy. First, and certainly the minor issue at hand, the memorial was intended to be given a full dedication on August 28th, which was cancelled due to the closing in of Hurricane Irene. However, now that the storm has passed, it’s not entirely clear when the dedication will happen. “The official Dedication ceremony will be moved to a date yet determined in September or October,” the MLK Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation writes in a press release. “We will announce those details when we have them.” Second, and certainly the most contentious, is the issue over the inscription carved at the base of the memorial, a paraphrased version of King’s “drum major” sermon, reading “I was a drum major for justice, peace and righteousness.” Critics, like the poet Maya Angelou, write that the stripped down line makes him sound like “an arrogant twit” and ignores the fact that the original “drum major” speech wasn’t boastful in the humblest sense. The Washington Post has a great recap on all the controversy surrounding said inscription, including the executive architect’s response to all of the criticism, saying there are no plans to re-do anything about the memorial and it will stay as-is.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Recent works by Spanish studio Herreros Arquitectos are on show at the ROM Gallery in Oslo.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Top and above: Garoza Home, Ávila, Spain

Maquettes, videos and full-scale prototypes of architectural projects are arranged around a large dining table, where three symposiums will take place during September and October.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Above: Country House, Artá, Mallorca

Featured projects include the competition-winning proposals for the new Munch Museum, a gallery that will be located next to the Opera House in Oslo – see our earlier story here.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Above: Country House, Artá, Mallorca

The exhibition runs until 16 October 2011.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Above: Munch Museum, Oslo, Norway

Dezeen announced that Herreros Arquitectos had won the competition to design the Munch Museum back in 2009 – see our earlier story.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Above: Munch Museum, Oslo, Norway

Here are some more details about the exhibition:


The Spanish studio Herreros Arquitectos exhibits their latest work in Oslo

The ROM Gallery, in Oslo, will present an exhibition of work by the Spanish studio Herreros Arquitectos from August 25 to October 16 2011.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Above: Reform of the Satellite Control Centre Hispasat, Madrid, Spain

The exhibition, besides showing maquettes, videos and real-size prototypes which reflect the imaginary and the particular work method of the team led by Juan Herreros, will be accompanied by a programme of events called ‘banquets’, with contributions by international figures in the world of art and architecture such as Moritz Küng, Knut Eirick and Joseph Grima.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Above: Reform of the Satellite Control Centre Hispasat, Madrid, Spain

ROM, an Oslo gallery specialising in art and architecture, will present an installation featuring the latest work by Herreros Arquitectos from August 25 to October 16. The Banquet is the title of this curious installation in which maquettes, images and objects will share a space presided over by a big table with 12 chairs, a reproduction of the one designed for the restaurant at the Museo Reina Sofía, around which a series of 3 symposiums or ‘banquets’ will be held with the purpose of reflecting on the relationships between art, architecture and the city. On the basis of precepts like ‘Art & Architecture’, ‘New Museums’ and ‘Culture as Infrastructure’, guests from both Norway and abroad will engage in conversations open to the public with the aim of fostering contemporary reflection on the new role of cultural infrastructures in the development of cities and on the importance of dialogue when it comes to sharing experiences applicable to future projects.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

Above: Contemporary Art Centre, Ávila, Spain

In the words of Henrik der Minassian, director of the ROM Gallery, ‘It was high time that Oslo should pay homage to one of the international architects most committed to this city by virtue of his contribution to its modernisation and to its re-encounter with the sea. Juan Herreros has brought a new breath of innovation to Oslo in the form of projects which, though audacious, are nonetheless grounded on maximum intellectual proficiency. Engaging in reflections on the public content of architecture that Herreros proposes implies forming part and sharing the concerns of the international avant-garde in their quest for the meaning of the contemporary city in a world full of contradictions. Ample evidence of this is the profusion of media and forums all round the world that have echoed the project for the Munch Museum and its area.’

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

In Greek, the word BANQUET is synonymous with ‘symposium’; indeed, the philosopher Plato used the word as the heading for one of his dialogues. The sum of both meanings added to love, the subject of conversation among the philosophers who had gathered at Plato’s banquet, served as the inspiration for the configuration of this exhibition which, according to the architect, ‘brings together the materials that bear the imprint of the enthusiasm and effort needed to make ideas shine that are first intuitively perceived and subsequently developed, adapted and corrected a thousand and one times in a process of trial and error, both physical and intellectual’.

The Banquet by Herreros Arquitectos at the ROM Gallery

The exhibition will display fragments of real façades, such as that of the Hispasat office building; videos of industrialised architecture montages like the Garoza House or the Camera Oscura project; maquettes of experiments conducted in the sphere of rural development, such as the Fundación Ibarrola and the house in Artá; prototypes of projects under development like the series of Tensegrity lamps or the ‘Miombos Arco’; and large format images of projects such as the Torre Panamá and the ‘Urban Hut’ in Korea. However, the exhibition’s star attraction is the Munch Museum and its surrounding area. Exhibits related to this ambitious project will include a series of maquettes illustrating the laborious adjustment process, experiments with façades at different scales, 1:1 drawings, versions still being discussed of housing typologies and a film in which Juan Herreros himself explains the project, which is destined to change the city’s physiognomy and, together with the Snøhetta Opera House, is already regarded as constituting the Oslo postcard for the year 2015. On the strength of this project, Juan Herreros was awarded the 2010 ‘architect of the year’ prize by the journal AD and, by virtue of its quality and stringency, he was given the special mention in the category of urbanism at the latest edition of the Bienal de Arquitectura Española.


See also:

.

Munch Museum
competition winner
Opera House Oslo
by Snøhetta
2010 Around the World by
Iwan Baan at Villa Noailles

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Narrow skylights create bands of light across the red bright ceiling of a sheltered school courtyard in Porto, Portugal.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

The covered terrace separates two new buildings designed by Portuguese architect Ricardo Bak Gordon at the Garcia D’Orta Secondary School.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

The first two-storey building houses a library and auditorium, while the second has a cafe-bar on the ground floor and study rooms above.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

The chunky canopy is suspended between the two buildings at first floor level and is the height of an entire storey.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Another school building by Bak Gordon also features the colour red, except it is on the floors rather than the ceilings – see the story here and see all our stories about Bak Gordon here.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Here are some more details from Bak Gordon:


Garcia D’Orta Secondary School

The modernization project of the School Garcia de Orta, based on the construction of a new building, whose location, program and relationship with the existing built and empty spaces, can set a new centrality in the plot, providing the school new program areas essential to the new times.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

This building, placed longitudinally in relation to school grounds, and an intermediate elevation view of the morphology of the terrain, allows the creation of a covered outdoor plaza that will serve as the epicenter of the whole school life, and supports two built spaces where we find the library, auditorium, bar / cafeteria, laboratories as well as other support equipment.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Location: Boavista, Porto
Design phase: 04.2008
Constrution phase: 2010-2011

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Client: Parque Escolar EPE
Architect: Ricardo Bak Gordon

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Collaborators: Luís Pedro Pinto, Nuno Velhinho, Pedro Serrazina, Sonia Silva, Vera Higino, Walter Perdigão
Engineering consultants: Estruturas BETAR, Infraestruturas RGA / BETAR, Paisagismo FCAP
General contractor: Cantinhos / ACF

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Site area: 26.250 m2
Built area: 3280 m2
Cost: 11 M.€

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Click above for larger image

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Click above for larger image

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Click above for larger image

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Click above for larger image

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Click above for larger image

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Click above for larger image

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon


See also:

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Youth Centre by
Mi5 Arquitectos
University Library by
Studio Roelof Mulder
Les Cabanyes by
Arqtel Barcelona

Nakahouse by XTEN Architecture

Nakahouse by XTEN

The rooms of a black and white house in California lead out to a series of stepped terraces with a view of the famous Hollywood sign.

Nakahouse by XTEN

The single-storey house, named Nakahouse, was designed by American studio XTEN Architecture and sits upon the foundations of a 1960s house that has been demolished.

Nakahouse by XTEN

A living room and kitchen-diner wrap around the largest of the terraces, from which a steel staircase leads up to a deck on the roof.

Nakahouse by XTEN

Elsewhere, sliding glass panels disappear into the walls to open bedrooms out to smaller terraces.

Nakahouse by XTEN

XTEN Architecture also designed a gallery perched on top of an art collector’s house in Los Angeles – see our earlier story here.

Nakahouse by XTEN

Other monochrome projects on Dezeen include an apartment in Paris filled with blocks and a Singapore hotel where white statues have their heads in the clouds.

Nakahouse by XTEN

Photography is by Steve King.

Here is some text from the architects:


Nakahouse, Hollywood Hills, California

Nakahouse is an abstract remodel of a 1960′s hillside home located on a West facing ridge in the Hollywood Hills, just below the Hollywood sign.

Nakahouse by XTEN

To the South and West are views of the Beechwood Canyon; to the East is a protected natural ravine, with a view of Griffith Park Observatory in the distance.

Nakahouse by XTEN

The existing home was built as a series of interconnected terraced spaces on the downslope property.

Nakahouse by XTEN

Due to geotechnical, zoning and budget constraints the foundations and building footprint were maintained in the current design.

Nakahouse by XTEN

The interior was completely reconfigured however, and the exterior was opened up to the hillside views and the natural beauty of the surroundings.

Nakahouse by XTEN

A large terrace was added to link the kitchen/ dining area with the living room, with a steel stair leading to a rooftop sundeck.

Nakahouse by XTEN

Terraces were also added to the bedroom wing and the upper master bedroom suite to extend the interior spaces through floor to ceiling glass sliding panels that disappear into adjacent walls when open.

Nakahouse by XTEN

The exterior walls are finished in a smooth black Meoded ventetian plaster system, designed to render the building as a singular sculptural object set within the lush natural setting.

Nakahouse by XTEN

A series of abstract indoor-outdoor spaces with framed views to nature are rendered in white surfaces of various materials and finishes; lacquered cabinetry, epoxy resin floors and decks and painted metal.

Nakahouse by XTEN

The contrast between the interior and exterior of the house is intentional and total.

Nakahouse by XTEN

While the exterior is perceived as a specific finite and irregular object in the landscape the opposite occurs inside the building.

Nakahouse by XTEN

Once inside the multitude of white surfaces blend the rooms together, extending ones sense of space and creating a heightened, abstract atmosphere from which to experience the varied forms of the hillside landscape.

Nakahouse by XTEN


See also:

.

Sapphire Gallery by
XTEN Architecture
Villa Topoject
by AND
House R by
Bembé Dellinger

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Two refurbished wine cellars in Spain feature undulating oak ceilings and stainless steel trees.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

The cellars were designed by Spanish interior designer Fernando Salas and provide storage for barrels of a new wine by manufacturer Vega-Sicilia.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

A reception with an illuminated ceiling is located on the ground floor of the building, while cellars occupy both this floor and the basement.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Granite-covered columns divide the large rooms and integrate backlit grilles of stainless steel.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Terracotta-coloured ceramic tiles cover the walls and align with the existing clay tiles of the floor.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Large red Corian doors branded with the company logo separate the ground floor cellar from the reception, while oak doors lead through to the deliveries area.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Other winery buildings featured on Dezeen include one at the foot of a volcanic hill in Hungary and another clad in Corten steel shinglessee more stories about wineries and wine cellars here.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Photography is by Rafael Vargas.

Here are some more details from Salas Studio:


Alteration and Refurbishment of the Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia

The hidden air conditioning systems in the ceiling and the lighting in the pillars were the basic project premises, followed to achieve a neat and clear space to receive the wine barrels.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

As for the interior skin of the space, clinker type tiles were used as cladding for the side walls, fitted in a cross-linked manner, creating a resemblance with the existing floor.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

This way the floor and vertical faces in the warehouse become a ceramic U, covered by the undulated wooden ceiling.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

The reception hall, between the exterior and the wine cellars, is conceived as a ceramic box with a ceiling formed by a reticula of stainless steel profiles which support opal glass panes through which this transition space is very tenuously illuminated.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

This ceiling is also used to allow the installation of all the air conditioning related systems above it.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

This access area includes a new staircase leading to the underground level, cladded in granite and becoming a sculptural element altogether.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

One single transparent glass pane acts as a railing surface on both levels.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Between this access and the cellars appears a new enclosure, consisting of an automatic sliding door of stainless steel structure lined with pompey red Corian panes, with the cellar’s logo incrusted in white, and an integrated backlight system which creates a light profile outlining the company brand on the great burgundy tone surface.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

On the opposite side of the cellar we find the renovated freight lift, used to distribute the barrels, which is hidden behind automatic sliding doors finished with wooden planks of whitened oak.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Using the same solution, the machinery and the access door to the contiguous warehouse also remain hidden.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Beside the freight lift is the second staircase going to the underground cellar, renovated using projecting steps with a stainless steel frame and solid oak wood tread, supported on one side by the side wall and on the other welded to the vertical rods which form the sculptural lattice/rail of “branches” which goes through both floors and is lighted up at the edge of the floor framework in between.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

In its essence, the alteration project was begging for a reduction and simplicity in the variety of materials; the main protagonist of the project were the wine barrels, so the concept of the project must have been based on resolving certain technical requirements and new systems, dignifying the architectural finish and achieving a globally harmonic space, functional and elegantly sober for the sanctuary of one of the “unique”, excusing the repetition, best wines in the world.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

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Location: Ctra. N-122 Km 323, 47359 – Valbuena de Duero (Valladolid, Spain)
Author: Salasstudio Fernando Salas
Collaborators: Lara Pujol
Architect: Jesús Manuel Gómez Gaite

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Foreman builder: Francisco Moretón
Construction manager: Miguel Ángel Hernández
Construction company: Eusebio Sánchez Contract S.L.
Construction started: Winter 2010
Construction finished: Spring 2011
Execution time (months): 5 months
Project surface (m2): 1860 m2
Client: Vega Sicilia S.A

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

List of collaborating companies and industrialists:
Construction company and Execution, carpentry and Corian: Eusebio Sánchez Contract S.L.
Metalworkers: FEMISA INDUSTRIAL
Building work: Juan Carlos Roz
Lighting: SES
Electrician: Luis Miguel Aceves Inelma

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Cladding: TV MAC S.L
Granite: Marmolería Vallisoletana
Air conditioning: RUBIS CONCEPT
Glass: CRIVASA
Corian: Eusebio Sánchez Contrat S.L.
Painting: Pinturas Cesar
Vinyl: Rotulación Álvaro Martin

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia by Salas Studio

Main materials:
Solid American oak wood dais (undulated ceiling)
Oak Wood planks treated with talc (Motorized siding doors)
Clinker ceramic tiles (General Wall cladding)
Flamed granite (Pillars and secondary staircase)
Burgundy red Corian (Main sliding door with incrusted logotype)
Stainless steel (bambu railing/ backlit grid in pillars)


See also:

.

Faustino Winery
by Foster + Partners
Winery by Rogers Stirk
Harbour + Partners
Bazaltbor Badacsony
by Plant

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaëlle Segond

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Stairs lead past lumpy cork-covered walls to a rooftop swimming pool at a house in the south of France by architect Raphaëlle Segond.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

The pool and a ground floor bedroom occupy one part of the two-storey Maison Beauvallon, while an adjoining concrete block accommodates a living room, kitchen and additional bedrooms.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

The open-plan living room covers the majority of the first floor and opens out to the pool and terrace.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Floors throughout the house are of polished concrete.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Other French houses on Dezeen include one with stone screens and another with black-painted bricks and larch window framessee more projects in France here.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

See also: more stories about swimming pools in our special feature.

Photography is by Philippe Ruault.

The following text is from the architects:


House in Beauvallon, Var (83), France

The first glimpse at this house is a wall of cork which separates the site in two from a North-South diagonal creating a garden along the street for the entrance and a garden on the side of the valley protected from wind and from the sounds of the street.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

In Beauvallon, the slopes are planning to protect both the sights and the period of sunshine.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Actually, houses are arranged in staggered rows leading a way of sight towards mid-day.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Three metres above the highest point on the site, the Mediterranean See is in front of us.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

In fact, seeing the sea from the lounge and the swimming pool was an important request of the client in the program of this house.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Thus, at this height, in a forest of oaks and strawberry trees, we dispose the lounge facing the view.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

And from the lounge we reach the swimming pool which is struggled between two walls of cork.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Under the lounge, the natural slope of the site was kept in order to hold the next part of the program : five rooms with individual bathrooms and a kitchen-dining room.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Rooms are consuming more than the half of the living surface.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

They are melted in the natural and built landscape, this way all the bedrooms are crossed and passed through.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

The continuation is quite simple: concrete, glass, aluminium and rough steel were the only ones materials used in this house.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Concrete is used for the structure and floors, walls were confined in wooden boards and floors were polished.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Doors and cupboards were made of wood then steel and glass were used for the facades between structure elements.

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

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Client: private
Type of construction: holiday house of 250 m2 with a swimming pool

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

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Completion: 2011

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

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Location: Domaine de Beauvallon, Township of Grimaud (83, France)

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

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Architect: Raphaëlle Segond, workshop located in Marseilles (13, France)
Project Manager : Jonhattan Inzerillo

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond

Concrete & masonry: Paul Ciotta & Fils, maçons
Windows crafters: Maria Aluminium
Electrician: Nicolas Espitalier électricité

Maison Beauvallon by Raphaelle Segond


See also:

.

House on Paros Island
by React Architects
Villa Paya-Paya by
Aboday architects
House in Andros
by KLab architects

Biophilia at One Bryant Park

cook_fox.jpeg

Richard Cook of Cook+Fox Architects recently took the time to highlight some of their design decisions for the first LEED Platinum certified commercial skyscraper in the world. As the second tallest building in New York City, The Bank of America Tower at One Bryant Park was completed in 2009 and stands out not only against the skyline of the city, but as an example of biophilia, a term coined by the biologist E.O. Wilson to suggest that people subconsciously seek out connections with nature and natural systems. With a focus on health, well-being and the interconnectedness of people and nature, the Bank of America Tower creates 4.7 megawatts of onsite power with almost 3x the efficiency of the grid. Follow along as Cook explains material choices considered when designing the building.

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