House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

The roof of this house in Hashimoto, Japan, by designers Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates folds around to become an exterior canopy with triangular reveals.

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

Behind the shade of the orange canopy, the glazed facade of House of Wakayama has sliding doors that open to expose the interior spaces to the elements.

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

On the first floor an open plan room projects out across the building entrance to meet the canopy.

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

More residential architecture on Dezeen »

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

The following project details are from the architect, as well as some text in Japanese:


Family House

location: wakayama
site area: 175.19 sqm
total area: 93.34 sqm

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

design development: 2009.4-2010.8
construction: 2010.8-2010.12

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

structure: wooden
structure engineer: HN

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

max. height: 6.04m
stories: 2

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

和歌山県橋本市の閑静な住宅地に建つ、夫婦とその子供達の専用住宅の計画である。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

廻りには低層の住宅が立ち並び穏やかな風景が広がり、大きな空がよりいっそういっそう大きく感じられ、比較的身近に自然を感じられる敷地であった。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

自然を出来るだけ生活空間へ取り込む事が設計の与条件として感じ取る事が出来た。

『内部と外部の境界線をあいまいとする。』

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

外の要素と内の要素を近ずける為に、建物で大きな軒下の日陰を作り、生活空間として最小限のエリアを建具で囲う事により

建具の開閉により内部と外部の境界線をあいまいにする事を考えた。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

また、内部と外部の境界線をよりいっそう無くすよう、1階への柱をもうけないように、屋根から2階の床を細いスチールの柱により

吊り上げている。その柱は2階の空間へリズムを与える役割として存在している。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

外壁においては、大きな風景として存在している、空の色と補色関係のオレンジ色とした。

補色の色関係による、相乗効果を狙ったものである。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates


See also:

.

House by
Hidehiro Fukuda Architects
Ogaki House
by Katsutoshi Sasaki
House in Fukawa
by Suppose Design Office

Portal del Priorat

Architect Alfredo Arribas’ ambitious Spanish winemaking projects
barcawineportrait.jpg

What happens when an architect turns vintner? In the case of Spanish architect Alfredo Arribas, the move spawned not just one winery but two—both infused with artistry from the wine itself down to illustrated labels, and of course the beautifully modern buildings housing them too. Based in the emerging wine-making regions of Priorat and the neighboring Montsant, Arribas’ project has been quietly breathing new life into the region starting in 2001 when he established Portal del Priorat.

After restoring the neglected terraced plots called closters, they were planted with clones of traditional grapes (Grenache, Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah), as well as a few experimental varieties, which are all grown organically. Methods include densely planting the vines according the soil’s composition (mostly slate) and the topography The resulting wines bear witness to their creator’s ingenuity, winning praise from oenophiles for their lightness while still rich with complex flavor notes.

barcawine4.jpg

When I had the privilege of tasting some of the wines with Arribas himself (thanks to the design organization Red) recently at one fo Barcelona’s newest wine bars Monvinic, he explained that the taste of his wines is no accident but (of course) by design. His concept loosely revolves around adding what can only be described as the Arribas twist to reinvent both traditional winemaking but perceptions of Spanish wine.

barcawine2.jpg

Negre De Negres accomplishes the feat most dramatically with a blend of grapes that results in a mix of minerals, herbs and fruits, balanced by a freshness as well as a dense warmth on the palate. The inspiration for it, Arribas explained, was the experience of drinking young Greek wines but wanting to add something a little more complex to the profile. Somni, on the other hand, is more robust with oaks and tannins following a lightness that comes from black fruits.

barcawinebottles.jpg

While the wines from Portal del Priorat are all reds, more recently Arribas introduced Tossos, a red and a white wine resulting from expanding into the neighboring land of Montsant. Those along with an olive oil suggests there might be much more to look forward to from the burgeoning label.


Josephine Baker schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This group of schools outside Paris by French architects Dominique Coulon & Associés has walls, ceilings and details picked out in bright orange.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The Josephine Baker schools include a primary school on the west of the site and a nursery school to the east.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Classrooms in the nursery are located on a floor that cantilevers across the building’s entrance.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The project includes playgrounds for both older and younger children, a canteen and a library, as well as a sports ground on the library roof.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Internally, brightly coloured hooks fill the walls outside of the classrooms, giving children a place to hang their coats.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

More stories about educational buildings on Dezeen »

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

More stories about projects in France on Dezeen »

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

Photography is by Eugeni Pons apart from where stated.

Here are some further details from the architects:


The ‘Josephine Baker’ group of schools recently completed by Dominique Coulon in La Courneuve manages to fit into the difficult context of the ‘Cité des 4000’ neighbourhood, on a site marked by the painful memory of the demolition of the ‘Ravel’ and ‘Presov’ longitudinal blocks of flats. However, it is also capable of opening up inside itself, creating a different landscape, a different place, a utopia.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

The project is part of the very subtle town planning scheme adopted by Bernard Paurd, in an attempt to pull together the different signs and traces that are superposed on the site like the various writings on a palimpsest.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The scheme reorganises the neighbourhood on the basis of the right-angled intersection of two historic axes, one leading from Paris – from the Saint-Michel fountain – to St Denis’ Cathedral, the other starting from the cathedral and heading towards St Lucien’s church.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This crossing of X and Y axes highlights the surfacing of various traces – ruins of a Gallo-Roman necropolis stand where the scarred landscape bears witness to the demolition of the ‘Ravel’ and ‘Presov’ blocks of flats, dynamited on 23 June 2004. As if the map had marked the territory with a tattoo.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Delphine George

The group of schools occupies a trapezoid-shaped plot of land obliterated by the non-aedificandi area corresponding to the location of one of the two buildings that were demolished.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Dominique Coulon stays in line with the scheme and the intentions of Bernard Paurd, but seems to consider this scar as the substratum for an act of resilience – a psychological process analysed by Boris Cyrulnik that makes it possible to overcome traumatic situations – rather than the stigma of an irreversible situation. He thus returns spontaneously to his work on twisting shapes, a theme that recurs constantly in his projects.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The requirement to refrain from constructing closed volumes based on the rectangle that is a feature of the plot of land, combined with the constraints in terms of density and height, has enabled him to question the separation of the primary and nursery schools in the brief.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

His proposal therefore sketches out a unitary organisation, deployed with virtuoso skill in the three dimensions of the space between two poles linked by a system of ramps. Thus the nursery school classrooms are pushed to the east, on a floor cantilevered above the entrance, and the primary school classrooms occupy areas to the west overlooking interstitial gardens.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The older children’s playground merges into the area reserved for the younger children, which already contains the shared canteen, while the sports areas have been placed on the roof of the other block, which contains the library shared by the two schools.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Despite its sliding volumes, folds and asymmetry, the building gives a first impression of an enclosed shape with few openings. The primary school classrooms, superposed on the site, only opens up to any real extent to their gardens at the side. Although on the outside the verticality is dominant as a result of the many indentations that break up the façades, it is paradoxically the horizontal aspect that is more evident once through the entrance.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

As if an infinite universe was opening up inside a strictly defined area, welcoming a heterotopia reserved for the children. An initiatory place where the pupils can be cut off from the adult world, so that they can adopt the necessary distance and momentum the better to dive into it in due course.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Particular attention seems to have been paid to passages from one space to another, to thresholds: entering the school, taking off your coat and hanging it up before going through the door into the classroom and sitting down in front of the teacher; laughing as you leave the classroom, and shouting out in the playground at playtime. That is how the building works, from the entrance onwards, in a subtle two-fold movement of advance and retreat.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

An arrangement that recalls the curves and counter-curves of the façade of the St-Charles-aux-Quatre-Fontaines church completed in 1667 by Francesco Borromini. In a protective gesture, the upper floor projects forwards to welcome the children, while the glazed ground floor withdraws and digs in to defuse the drama of separating the child from its parents.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The corridors change shape and expand in front of the classroom doors and receive abundant natural light from the zenith, as if the better to define themselves as areas for decompression before taking a deep breath and plunging into the work areas. Lastly, the canopy of the playground thrusts out well beyond the ramp that leads up to the rooftop sport areas.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This play of compression and expansion, giving an organic feel to the concrete structure, is further accentuated by use of the colour orange. It covers the floors and occasionally spills over onto the walls and ceilings, rendering the slightest ray of sunshine incandescent and lighting up the roof area.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This has the appearance of an open hand beneath the complementary blue of the sky, revealed in all its power. All too frequently, as in Jules Ferry’s time, schools seem to be designed as areas for adults reduced to the scale of children. The sequences of traffic paths and classrooms are witness here to a different relationship between the child’s body and space, one that is all the more fused together in that is it not yet totally mediatised by language.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The classrooms, corridors and playgrounds of the ‘Josephine Baker’ schools stretch out and break up around an indefinite body, a body in perpetual transformation, a body of feelings ready to be touched by the slightest ray of sunshine and to perceive a thousand opportunities for play in the slightest variation in the weather.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The use of natural products – such as linoleum on the floors, and wood for the door and window frames – and the attention paid even to the smallest details contribute to making the building an almost luxurious place, a place hailed enthusiastically at its inauguration by a population of parents and pupils who are keen to turn the page of the demolitions and look resolutely to the future.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Type of project: Group of schools (nursery + primary)
Client: City of La Courneuve
Team: Dominique Coulon & Associés, Architectes
Dominique Coulon, Olivier Nicollas, Architectes
Sarah Brebbia, Benjamin Rocchi, Arnaud Eloudyi, Florence Haenel, Architects assistants

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Batiserf: Structural Engineer: Philippe Clement, Cécile Plumier, Frédéric Blanc
G. Jost, Mechanical Engineer : Marc Damant, Annie Pikard
E3 Economie : Cost calculation
Bruno Kubler : Paysagiste

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Program: Lecture room, auditorium, administration
Primary school – 10 classrooms
Nursery – 6 classrooms
Leisure center – 6 classrooms
Restaurant
Office for the academy

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

Surface Area: 4500 m2 SHON, 6500 m2 SHOB
Cost: 8 000 000 euros H.T

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés


See also:

.

Médiathèque d’Anzin
by Dominique Coulon
Tellus Nursery School
by Tham & Videgård
Azahar School
by Julio Barreno

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

This colourful series of public toilets recently completed by Japanese architects Future Studios in Hiroshima have been designed to resemble origami cranes.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

The 17 Hiroshima Park Restrooms come in three different shapes, but each one has a unique colour.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

The restrooms are constructed entirely from concrete, which is punctured to create very small circular windows.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

The paint used to colour each restroom can be wiped clean to allow easy maintenance.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

More Japanese architecture on Dezeen »
More public toilets on Dezeen »

The following is from the architect:


Hiroshima Park Restrooms – Absolute Arrows

Hiroshima City Planning chose the design from a competition to be the standard. It is the unique public project that approximately 5 restrooms are mass-produced in parks per year as regular design of the city

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

First of all, I considered that what should embed in “city”. I was aware of designing “multitude” strongly, which is not “a ” restroom in a park. And they should be given a meaning as a whole of the infrastructure in the city.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

I aim to make an absolute axis in the city by being embedded the direction in infrastructure building in the city. The mass-produced urban facilities have a triangular roof pointing north.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

By building in same direction, each restrooms have same space by sunshine. The same space of restroom is omnipresence all over Hiroshima.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

I designed 3 variations of plans in this project. I provide with 2 entrances of east and west side, so that the plan is able to turn the other way around as it functions whichever entrance.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

Structure of the restroom is box frame type reinforced concrete construction. The roof is also made by concrete. Concrete is poured by the ruler of stainless steel in the edge of the acute angle part of the roof.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

The roof finishes by a fluoric resin topcoat after FRP waterproofing. Therefore it is possible to put the different color every roof of the restrooms. Each location has a different color roof that matches the playground.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

I incline the roof, the north side is high, the south side is low, to be able to look at the roof facing north from eye-level. A slit-shaped top light goes to the south and north in the center of the roof and creates lines toward north inside and outside of space.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

Acrylic lighting windows and round ventilation holes in eastern and western wall, and acrylic lighting windows in southern wall, are inlayed.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

They function that controlling the environment of the internal space. For the finish of the outer wall, I adopted the photocatalytic coating paints that the dirt is easy to come off.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

17 restrooms in 17 parks are completed in May in 2011. It is built around five places sequentially every year. The public restrooms with absolute arrows are being embedded infinitely in all over Hiroshima-city.

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

Project data
Name of the project : Hiroshima Park Restrooms –Absolute Arrows-
architect: Bunzo Ogawa
Location : Hiroshima, Japan
Use: Public Restroom
Client: Hiroshima-city
Building area : A type 15.56sqm, B type 11.88sqm, C type 7.62sqm
Gross area: A type 13.09sqm, B type 10.10sqm, C type 5.30sqm
Building coverage ratio / 2%
Building scale / 1 story
Structure system / RC
Period of design / 2008.9-2009.2
Period of construction / 2009.4-

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

Click above for larger image

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

Click above for larger image

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

Click above for larger image

Hiroshima Park Restrooms by Future Studios

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Public toilets
by Plastik Architects
Royal Flush
by Chris Briffa Architects
Lavatories by
Shuichiro Yoshida Architects

American Institute of Architects Elects 2013 Officers

Per usual, the American Institute of Architects has already elected their officers for well off into the future, more than a year away. The results of the election for their representatives through 2013, held at the organization’s annual convention which was in New Orleans this year, have been announced. Already the current vice-president of the AIA, Mickey Jacob will serve as its next president for 2012 through 2013 (we believe that’s the first time in AIA history that there’s been this sort of immediate succession, so the guy must be a favorite), with Russel Davidson and Debra Kunce coming on as Vice Presidents for that same period, and Gabriel Durand-Hollis as the organization’s treasurer. Here’s a bit about the new top man in charge:

Jacob, managing principal at Urban Studio Architects, a seven-person firm in Tampa, has more than 25 years of AIA participation holding numerous leadership positions with AIA Tampa Bay, AIA Florida, and AIA National. Following his term as president of AIA Florida in 2004-2005, he served as the 2007-2009 AIA Florida/Caribbean Regional Director on the AIA National Board of Directors. In 2009, he was elected to a two-year term as an AIA vice president.

Jacob also has been active in government advocacy, including serving as chair of the Florida Architects Political Action Committee, of ArchiPAC, and of the AIA Board Advocacy Committee. Participating in the development of several advocacy initiatives, including as a cofounder of the AIA Breakfast of Champions program, Jacob has helped raise the awareness of the importance of political engagement, and is a vocal advocate to position AIA members to attain leadership positions.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partners

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partners

This garden, filled with a maze of grey brick arches interspersed with willow trees, has been completed by Martha Schwartz Partners as part of the 2011 Xi’an International Horticultural Expo currently taking place in China.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 is one of nine gardens designed under the theme ‘the harmonious co-existence of nature and the city’.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

The impression of endless pathways and arches is created by mirrors fixed to the brick walls, which on finding the dark exit corridor are revealed to be one-way glass, allowing a view back to those still lost in the maze.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Over 1,000 small bronze bells hang from the branches of the willow trees, which chime in the breeze.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Photographs 1-3 are by MSP. Photographs 4-11 are by Gen Wang. Photograph 12 is by Jake Walker.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

More stories about the 2011 Xi’an Expo on Dezeen »
More projects by Martha Schwartz Partners on Dezeen »

The following information is from the architects:


Xi’An International Horticulture Exhibition Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6

Xi’An, China

Completion: 2011
Size: 900 sqm

MSP was one of nine international landscape design firms to be invited to design a small garden installation on the theme of “the harmonious co-existence of nature and the city” at the 2011 International Horticulture Exhibition in Xi’An, China. The garden will be seen by up to 12 million people between April and October 2011 and may by left permanently as part of the legacy strategy for long-term development of the site. This project is commissioned by Xi’an International Horticultural Exposition Organizing Committee. The owner’s brief specified that the designer should consider the limitations of local building materials and methods, and that the garden should be accessible to the Chinese point of view. Plot 6 measures about 30 meters square on a flat site.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Materials

The garden is composed mainly of only four elements: traditional grey brick walls and paving, willow trees, mirrors, and bronze bells. The exit corridors are covered with a flat steel and rubber membrane roofing system.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Concept: An Endless City

The theme of this installation is “City and Nature”. It is a simple theme that allows many interpretations. The bottom half of the garden is made of brick and is a maze of hallways and corridors. The city has a roof of green.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

The “city” is entirely walled by simple, 3 meter high brick walls that seem to have no entrance. One enters the “city” through two ends of an open hallway created by a blank but totally mirrored wall facing a façade of 5 archways. These archways penetrate 1.5 meter thick walls and connected to a series of corridors. The numbers of possible archways to move through increase as one begins to walk through the space, creating a situation where people must begin to choose where to go and what route to try – an endless choice of routes through the maze. At the same time, no one quite knows where they are going and what to expect. It creates an experience of fun, discovery and perhaps some anxiety.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

These thick archways lead to perpendicular hallways, none of which are parallel, resulting in a strange dislocation and signalling that things are not quite normal in this environment. The hallways are all mirrored at their ends creating a doubling of these spaces and corridors that bend and sometimes seem to go into infinity. As one goes through the doorways and hallways, some of them lead to “dead-end” rooms that are completely mirrored spaces and immediately remove you from the bricked environment. If one continues deeper into the maze, you come to a mysterious grove of willows, an illusion created by a 3-sided room with mirrored walls that endlessly reflect the willow grove to create a sense of endless forest.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

As one starts to go down the exit corridors, it is only then that the real surprise of this garden is revealed. The mirrored surfaces are all 1-way mirrors allowing the people in the corridors to watch all the people moving through the maze and in the mirrored rooms. The viewers are able to watch the others perform without the people in the maze knowing. This arrangement provides endless entertainments, quite like the currently popular “reality” TV shows, and allows the viewers a vicarious view to performances and amusement thanks to the people who are performing completely oblivious to the fact that they are being watched. The only thing that is more amusing than looking at ourselves, is watching others when they don’t know they are being watched! The corridors are a “fun-house” where people laugh and photograph the performance in the maze from the sides.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

At each end of the transverse corridors are mirrored walls which create an illusion of infinite space. As one penetrates the last of these corridors, one enters a dark, enclosed exit corridor and is confronted with a wall of one-way mirror facing a mirrored garden room with a grid of willow trees and bright green groundcover that seems to go on forever. Exiting via one of two dark covered corridors, one discovers that many of the mirrors they had encountered on the way through the transverse corridors are actually one-way mirrors, through which they can observe others from the hidden dark corridor.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

The combination of living willow and solid grey walls is an expression of the harmonious co-existence of nature and city. The garden is a minimalist work of contemporary land art that speaks to the antiquity and timelessness of China, the flexibility and durability of its culture and people. It is Ying and Yang, light and heavy, dynamic and eternal, masculine and feminine. It is rich by its own simplicity. Everybody can sense it in their own way.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partners

Project Team

Principal Design Director: Martha Schwartz
Project Manager: Don Sharp
Project Designers: Liangjun Zhou, Mattia Gambardella, Chris Wong, Tao Jiang
Associated Team: Professor Wang / Atelier DYJG


See also:

.

Square
by Martha Schwartz Partners
Garden
by Groves-Raines Architects
Garden
by West 8

The Guangyun Entrance by Plasma Studio

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

This illuminated, webbed steel structure at the 2011 Xi’an International Horticultural Expo in China is the second project to be featured on Dezeen this week by London architects Plasma Studio.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

The structure is named the The Guangyun Entrance, as it frames the main visitor entrance to the expo site.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

It is anticipated that climbing plants will grow over the trellis frame and create a green roof.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

See all of our stories about the 2011 Xi’an Expo on Dezeen »
More projects by Plasma Studio on Dezeen »

The following details are from the architects:


The Guangyun Entrance

The Guangyun Entrance operates as infrastructure and fulfils the role of bridging the main road that dissects the site. It channels visitors from the plaza at the entrance where they congregate and orient themselves, plotting their direction. Their path over the bridge rises 7m and offers vantage points to gain an overview of the different zones of the Expo displayed ahead.
Bridge design often has two lanes: one for incoming and another for outgoing traffic. However in this case, the flows are uneven and change throughout the day.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

With inspiration taken from rush hour escalator traffic in the London Underground stations, the bridge has been devised with three lanes, so the middle lane can switch direction from incoming in the morning to outgoing later in the day.
 These three bands read as interwoven braids, and together with a surrounding trellis roofed structure, they give the appearance of bands of landscape peeling off and rejoining the mass at the end of the journey. Between the three bands are green areas and a water feature for visitors to stop, rest and enjoy the view.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

Above, an open trellis steel structure forms the shading device that is intended to become naturally overgrown with climbing plants, thus forming a green roof, and suggests the theme of the Expo to distant onlookers.
The lightweight roof has been developed together with Arup engineers as an innovative integral structure that appears as beams seemingly free-floating in space.

The Guangyun Entrance has been conceived as a landbridge with a tensegrity trellice structure that will gradually become overgrown by greenery.

International Competition: 1. Prize, 2009
Project: 2009-2011
Opening: April 28th 2011
Completion: March 2011
Client: Chan-Ba Ecological District
Architecture: Plasma Studio, BIAD
Landscape Design: GroundLab, LAUR Studio, Beijing Forestry
University 
Engineers: John Martin and Associates, Arup


See also:

.

The Creativity Pavilion
by Plasma Studio
Hotel
by Plasma Studio
Tetris Haus
by Plasma Studio

Dezeen archive: Shenzhen

dezeen archive shenzhen

Dezeen Archive: we’ve published a number of stories recently on projects in Shenzhen, including the series of movies we filmed at the 2009 Shenzhen & Hong Kong Architecture Biennale. Here’s a roundup of all of the stories from the Dezeen archives. See all the stories »

See all our archive stories »

EDP Foundation Cultural Centre by AL_A

EDP Foundation Cultural Centre by Amanda Levete Architects

Amanda Levete Architects have sent us these images of their proposals for a new cultural centre in Lisbon with a roof that spirals around from the existing riverfront pathway.

EDP Foundation Cultural Centre by Amanda Levete Architects

Visitors to the EDP Foundation Cultural Centre would be able to walk both around and over the building.

EDP Foundation Cultural Centre by Amanda Levete Architects

A series of steps up from the riverside lead to an entrance for the centre.

EDP Foundation Cultural Centre by Amanda Levete Architects

More projects by Amanda Levete Architects on Dezeen »

The following is from Amanda Levete Architects:


EDP Foundation Cultural Centre

The EDP Foundation Cultural Centre in Lisbon is a project about water, light, reflections and people – a building that captures the essence of the unique riverside site and the extraordinary southern light of Lisbon.

The site is of strategic importance. Acting as the gateway to the culturally rich area of Ajuda / Belém, the building will be a magnet, drawing people from the heart of the city to the panoramic views along the Tagus estuary. The currently neglected riverfront area will be activated, and the cultural centre will become one of Lisbon’s leading destinations.

This project is also about democracy. It is a building for the people – for the people of Lisbon, for cultural visitors and for tourists. It is a building for culture and leisure that defies the boundaries between public space and building. A simple and organic gesture creates a topographic form that blends into landscape making a fluid and natural relationship between inside and outside – people move over as well as through the building.

The building creates an attractive landscape, stepping down into the river Tagus. At high tide the steps are covered with water creating a constantly changing space that converses with the tide and the reflections from the water. The reflections play with the overhanging façade to give unexpected lighting effects both inside and out, capturing and magnifying the unique light qualities of this south facing site. An area of welcome shade is naturally created by the cantilevered structure.

The roof offers panoramic views towards the river as well as across the cultural area of Ajuda / Belém. In relationship to the Museu da Electricidade next to it the building is modest in height. It reflects the horizontal emphasis of the riverfront and is designed to have minimum visual impact on views from the city. Lisbon’s rich heritage of complex cobble stone patterns is subtlety reinterpreted and used to merge the existing materiality of the pathways with new public spaces that speak of modernity.


See also:

.

Station by
Amanda Levete Architects
Showroom by
Amanda Levete Architects
Exhibition design by
Amanda Levete Architects

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

Dutch architects MVRDV have designed this creative industries office block in Amsterdam that has letters of the alphabet cut out of the facade.

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

Each cut-out is the window to an office unit and each letter signifies the address extension for the occupying business.

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

On the east facade of the Alphabet Building a series of dotted windows spell out the number 52, relating to the address.

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

All letters of the alphabet have been used apart from I and Q. The original design included Q (as shown in top image) but was later replaced by Z .

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

The project is scheduled for completion in 2012.

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

More projects by MVRDV on Dezeen »

The following details are from MVRDV:


Alphabet Building Amsterdam

MVRDV designs creative industry hub

Amsterdam based project development corporation NIC started sale of the MVRDV designed Alphabet building. In Amsterdam small and mid-size creative companies have trouble finding suitable office space. The Alphabet building communicates through a clear exterior design which reveals on the East façade the house number and at the main façade its extension for each company, a letter of the alphabet. The interior is highly flexible and completed with a rough and pure finishing. The 3200m2 creative industry building will be completed in 2012 according to high energy efficiency standards.

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

  • On the East facade the house number, on the front facade its extension.

The creative industry has seemingly unrealistic demands when it comes to office locations: a incubator of creative ideas which is spacious and inspiring with a differentiating design at a great location with car access. The Alphabet building in the Amsterdam port refurbishment Minervahaven unites all these qualities. The former port is currently refurbished to become a creative hub.

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

  • Behind each letter is a flexible office unit

The building is on a relatively small site of 30 x 30 meters and consists of a transparent plinth with a compact office block on top. Behind each letter of the façade the building offers a flexible unit of 128m2, the units can be sold independently or as a series of letters. Design studio Thonik will occupy the top floor or the letters A to F. As it was impossible to put the entire alphabet on the façade the letters I and Q are missing: the IQ is inside the building.

Alphabet Building by MVRDV

  • Interior finishings are concrete, aluminium and steel

The interior finishing follows the demand of creative companies, large loft like spaces with a rough finishing: no double ceilings, exposed materials such as concrete, aluminium and steel. A number of sustainable technologies give the building an excellent energy profile. Parking is located inside the plinth, circulation and spacious outside areas at the back of the building.


See also:

.

Type the Sky
by Lisa Rienermann
Jewish Community Centre
by Manuel Herz Architects
Republic of Korea Pavilion
by Mass Studies