House R by Bembé Dellinger

House R by Bembe Dellinger

This house cantilevering out from the landscape in Schondorf am Ammersee, Germany, is by German architect Bembé Dellinger.

House R by Bembe Dellinger

Called House R, the building features 380 acrylic cylinders that puncture the building’s façade right through to the interior walls.

House R by Bembe Dellinger

Floor-to-ceiling glazing wraps around the building, providing panoramic views of the landscape and flooding the interior spaces with natural light.

House R by Bembe Dellinger

Photographs are by Stefan Müller-Naumann.

House R by Bembe Dellinger

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House R by Bembe Dellinger

The text that follows is from the architect:


House R

Schondorf on Lake Ammersee has become an attractive place to live due to its location, its good infrastructure, the short distance to Munich and the airport.

House R by Bembe Dellinger

A mansion for a business couple, curious, brave and interested in design.

House R by Bembe Dellinger

A house with complex functional sequences.

House R by Bembe Dellinger

A framed view of the sculptural landscape. 380 massive acrylic glass cylinders perforating the building’s exterior skin.

House R by Bembe Dellinger


See also:

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Mountains & Opening House
by EASTERN Design Office
Ormond Esplanade by Judd Lysenko Marshall ArchitectsRibbon House by
G2 Estudio

Hillier Wing of RMJM Files Suit Against Parent Company Over Unpaid Bills and Siphoned Cash

0622merger.jpg

All of the issues plaguing the mega-architectural firm RMJM, which we reported on back in early November, seem to have now made their way over here to the States. The Star-Ledger is reporting that the Princeton, New Jersey-based wing of the firm, formerly known as Hillier Architecture before they merged with RMJM in 2007, thus creating one of the largest architecture companies in the world, has filed suit against their parent company, citing a breach of contract and hundreds of thousands of dollars “in unpaid bonuses and shares that were due in January 2009.” Furthermore, the paper reports that the suit claims that “RMJM was siphoning off millions of dollars from its Hillier subsidiary.” Certainly doesn’t seem at all like a very friendly collaborative environment, and likely not the news RMJM wants added to all the press they received late last year about all the layoffs, staff exits and starchitect Will Alsop not yet landing any jobs for them. From their camp, they’ve denied any wrong-doing, telling the paper that “the firm had faced financial issues but called allegations of asset-stripping ‘both outrageous and utterly untrue.’”

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La Halle du Robin by AP 5 Architects

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

This multi-purpose sports hall by Parisian studio AP 5 Architects has shutters in the facade to open the lower part of the building.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Called La Halle du Robin, the top part of the rectangular building is clad in larch batons, with the exception of one side, which is clad in wood and clear polycarbonate panels.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The lower portion is made up of Corten steel panels, 9 of which can be opened up and secured by steel cables.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The architects intend the appearance of the building to change over time, with the steel turning a deep red colour and the wood darkening with age.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Photographs are © T. Guyenet unless otherwise stated.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The following information is from the architects:


LA HALLE DU ROBIN
Robin Sports Center Hall

Transform the box according to events or seasons. River running in the valley of the Plaine near the town center.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Next to the various buildings, the shape of the frame is based on the lean-to and utilitarian buildings in the vicinity. The roof inclination of the Sports Center is the same as the nearby petanque club’s forming a harmonious whole.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects
The roofing is of an average height of 4,5 meter. It is supported by a white lacquered steel frame covered with thin strips glued together. A large wooden cantilever portico is maintained by small metallic poles on the other three sides.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects
A waterproof layer made of steel tanks on the roof and of polycarbonate and larch sheets over the entire upper part of the building.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The façade is covered with wooden lath to shield it from wind and sun. The lower part of the structure is in corten steel sheets over a steel frame closing the building.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The equipment can be moved around from a room to the open space based on needs and seasons. When it is cold the building is shut when there are large events or in warm periods, 9 front panels are opened so as to allow free circulation and open view on the scenery.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

This open space configuration makes it easy to see the river and to open up indoor activities outside. The doors are opened and kept open by gas spring struts and secured with a stainless steel cable.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

A large sliding door is the final part of the existing building that allows a wide opening of the building on the outside during events.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The simple shape of the building changes with the moveable façades, the materials change appearance and the facing adapting to orientation all changing with the seasons.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The wood and the metal sheets are all from local origin. The gradual evolution of those perishable materials will change the outside aspect of the whole building.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Above photograph is courtesy of the architects
The wood will turn gray and the metal sheets orange. The façades will bear the mark of time.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Above photograph is courtesy of the architects

Materials
Frame: glued strips, galavanized steel + rustproof white paint
Siding: corten steel sheets, polycarbonate and larch panels

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Intervenants
– AP 5, Architect and landscaping agency
Architect: Stéphane Lemoine,
Architect collaborator: Toshiharu Kudo

– Team AP 5 with bet 2C (structure, economist), Ouest coordination (construction site)

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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– Contractors Section 1: Grennevo, shell / Section 2: Haas Weissrock, structure / Section 3, roofing / Section 4: Mellé, locksmithery /

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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Site: Raon l’Etape (department 88)
Program: Space for multiple purposes: Sports training center hall

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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Size: 300m2 (3229 sq ft)
Client: Township association of the Vallée de la Plaine
Type of mission: full mission conception and build

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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Architect: AP5 architects
Cost: 0.3 million euros
Year: 2010


See also:

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Sports centre by
Batlle i Roig Arquitectes
Football Training Centre Soweto by RUFprojectPrefabricated Nature by
MYCC

Integral House

house1

Designed by Shim Sutcliffe, this Toronto house was recently built for Dr. James Stewart, who made millions writing calculus textbooks.

The residence is located in Rosedale, and cost $24 million to build.

Via: the cool hunter

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

Tree Hotel by Tham and Videgard Arkitekter

Here are some photographs of the completed Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter, a mirrored glass box suspended round the trunk of a tree in Harads, northern Sweden.

Tree Hotel by Tham and Videgard Arkitekter

The 4x4x4 metre cube is accessed by rope bridge and reflects the surrounding forest and sky.

Tree Hotel by Tham and Videgard Arkitekter

The plywood interior is designed to accommodate two people, containing a double bed, bathroom, living room and roof terrace.

Tree Hotel by Tham and Videgard Arkitekter

The hotel was opened to the public in July 2010.

Tree Hotel by Tham and Videgard Arkitekter

More about the Tree Hotel in our earlier story.

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Tree Hotel by Tham and Videgard Arkitekter

Photographs are by Åke E:son Lindman

The information that follows is from Tham & Videgård Arkitekter:


Tree hotel in Harads (2008-2010)

A tree hotel in the far north of Sweden, near the small village of Harads, close to the polar circle.
 
A shelter up in the trees; a lightweight aluminium structure hung around a tree trunk, a 4x4x4 meters box clad in mirrored glass.

Tree Hotel by Tham and Videgard Arkitekter

The exterior reflects the surroundings and the sky, creating a camouflaged refuge.

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

The interior is all made of plywood and the windows give a 360 degree view of the surroundings.

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

The construction also alludes to how man relates to nature, how we use high tech materials and products when exploring remote places in harsh climates (Gore-tex, Kevlar, composite materials, light weight tents etc).

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

The functions included provides for a living for two people; a double bed, a small bath room, a living room and a roof terrace.

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

Access to the cabin is by a rope bridge connected to the next tree.

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

To prevent birds colliding with the reflective glass, a transparent ultraviolet colour is laminated into the glass panes which are visible for birds only.

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter
The tree hotel in Harads focuses on wild life-/eco tourism where one encounters and experiences the pristine nature of Sweden.

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

Architects: Tham & Videgård Arkitekter, www.tvark.se
Chief architects: Martin Videgård and Bolle Tham.
Staff: Andreas Helgesson, Julia Gudiel Urbano, Mia Nygren.

Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

Client: Brittas Pensionat, Britta Lindvall and Kent Lindvall,


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.

More about
this project
More about Tham & Videgard
Arkitekter
Dezeen’s top ten:
hotels

Getting the Story Straight on St. Louis’ Pruitt-Igoe

While much of the most recent national talk about St. Louis has been about revitalization, there’s a history in that city, and many like it, about architectural and urban planning projects run afoul. Such is the subject of what looks to be a fascinating documentary, The Pruitt-Igoe Myth: an Urban History. The film, directed by Chad Freidrichs, tells the story of America’s urban renewal projects in the 1950s and 60s, St. Louis’ famous Pruitt-Igoe framing the discussion. Built in the mid-50s and designed by Minoru Yamasaki (who also designed the World Trade Center towers), the housing project was seen as the savior of the inner city working class. Yet some decade and a half after it was built, living conditions at deteriorated and the city had it demolished. On a base level, the project was labeled as a failure of colossal proportions. The film, however, looks to want to dig into the stories of how it came to be, what went both right and wrong, and in general “set the historical record straight.” Here’s some thoughts Archinect has on the film and Pruitt-Igoe itself and here’s the trailer:

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BGU University Entrance Square by Chyutin Architects

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

Stripes of paving, plants and lighting form the entrance to Ben- Gurion University campus in Be’er Sheba, Israel, designed by Israeli firm Chyutin Architects.

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

The landscaped garden sits in a sunken plaza with a long lawn area on one side.

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

Rectangular concrete plinths coming up from the ground serve as benches.

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

The square serves an an entrance area for the university and also for an art gallery, which is planned for the site.

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

Photographs are by Sharon Yeari.

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

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BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

Here’s some more information from the architects:


BGU University Entrance Square & Art Gallery

‏The Deichmann square and the Negev Gallery constitute a link between Ben-Gurion University campus and the city of Be’er Sheva. ‏The square serves as an entrance gate to the western side of the campus, surrounded by existing buildings and the future Negev Gallery. The square offers an outdoor space for cultural and social activities for students and for the city population.

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

The square is bordered by the elongated structure of the gallery facing both the city and the campus. Towards the city, the gallery’s continuous façade (160 meter in length) unifies the heterogeneous appearance of the existing buildings behind the gallery into a cohesive urban unit. The city façade is accompanied by a sculpture garden creating a green edge to the campus. The two story high monolithic body of exposed concrete emerges from lawny topography of the northern part of the campus and hovers above an entrance courtyard in the southern part, where it appears to be leaping towards the urban space.

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

The gallery hosts exhibition spaces, museology faculty, workshops and auditorium contributing to the outdoor activities on Deichmann Square. Since the square was designated to accommodate intensive congregation of youth and students, the preferred solution was to allocate limited areas for vegetation. The design of the square with various elements of exposed concrete connects the surrounding buildings both physically and visually, accentuating their common features.

BGU University Entrance Square and Art Gallery by Chyutin Architects

Click for larger image

The square appears as a carpet of integrated strips of concrete paving, vegetation and lighting with concrete benches and trees scattered randomly. The strips of vegetation consist of lawn, Equisetopsida and seasonal plants. ‏The first phase to be realized was the Deichmann square to be followed by the Negev Gallery.

Project Name : BGU University Entrance Square & Art Gallery
Architects: Chyutin Architects Ltd.
Location: Beer sheba, Israel
Client: Ben-Gurion University
Deichmann square team: Bracha Chyutin, Michael Chyutin, Ethel Rosenhek, Joseph Perez
Art Gallery team: Bracha Chyutin, Michael Chyutin, Ethel Rosenhek, Joseph Perez, Jacques Dahan,
Gallery Area: 2500 Sq. M
Square Area: 4500 Sq. M
Project year gallery: 2008 –
Project year square: 2009 –


See also:

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The High Line by
Diller Scofidio + Renfro
Nursing Home Garden
by Estudio Caballero Colón
Medical Herbman Café Project by EARTHSCAPE

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

This tomb for a family on the mountainside in Arganil, Portugal, is by Portuguese architect Pedro Dias.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

The pre-fabricated tomb is clad in softened black granite and finished on the inside with stainless-steel panels.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

The rectangular volume frames the surrounding landscape, while a plinth inside supports coffins during ceremonies and provides seating for contemplation at other times.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

A cruciform aperture is cut into the roof.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

Photographs are by Pedro Dias.

More architecture on Dezeen »

The following information is from the architect:


Family Tomb in the Açor Mountains, Portugal

“a tomb is a prison, but also a “monumentum”; that is, an object which keeps the “memory” or the recollection of an absent person alive… and only monuments are architecture… all other buildings are simple constructions for ephemeral beings, technical or artisanal products, not works calling on technique: authentic creations, visionary and inspired…”

Adolf Loos

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

Concept: Sepulchral Void

The concept behind this small, rather unusual but challenging project was the creation of a simple, restrained and minimalistic architectural object that, apart from containing the basic program presented by the client (capacity for 8 coffins), playing in a dignified way its role as a “tribute to the memory ” and integrating itself in the cemetery, would interact directly with the impressive surrounding mountain landscape (without blocking its view), by literally framing it, in order to use the moment of its quiet contemplation as a “transmission vehicle” for transcendental communication between the “living” and “missing” ones.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

In the approach to this concept two specific moments of the tomb use where taking into account… During the funeral ceremony, how would this ritual take place and how would a coffin be handled, in other words, how would the “farewell” take place?… And during a sporadic visit of a family member or a friend to the site, how to create the ideal conditions for a comfortable spiritual recollection?

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

The result was the design in the interior of the tomb of an open space, accessible to all, equipped with a bench, which serves both as such as well as a surface for placing the coffin during the mentioned funeral ritual.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

Ultimately, the creation of a contemplative “spatial void”, which fulfills the “emotional void” caused by a feeling of loss that can be briefly translated into this abstract concept of “Sepulchral Void”…

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

Architectonically speaking, the tomb is a simple volume that appears to levitate quietly over the ground, clladed on the outside by slices of softened black granite stone and on the inside, on all surfaces, by hairline finishing stainless steel panels, in clear contrast and material dichotomy between the “shell” and its “content”.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

Inside, details like a cross cutted on the ceiling and a flower deposit integrated on the bench reinforce the obvious symbolic meaning of this object.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

Constructive Process

The idea behind the construction of this tomb consisted on the full assembling of its pre-fab metal structure in a factory, formed by steel profiles, tubes and rods (as well as all its stainless steel surfaces), in order to assure right from the start a greater precision in its execution.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

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Subsequently, this structure was put into a truck, transported from the factory to the cemetery, and then placed on site by a crane (on a concrete plinth built in-situ).

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

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Finally, concrete was poured over this structure (slabs and side walls) and the stone cladding was done.

Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

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Project Technical Data / Credits

Name: Family Tomb in the Açor Mountains
Location: Monte Frio, Arganil / Portugal
Design: 2006
Construction: 2007 – 2009
Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

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Client: Familia Duarte
Size: 12.9 m2
Total Cost: 12.000 €
Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

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Architecture: Pedro Dias . Arquitecto
Engineering: DX2 Engenharia, Lda
Family Tomb by Pedro Dias

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Contractor: Construções Castanheira & Filipe, Lda
Structure / Metal Works: Madeljor – Metalúrgica Saraiva Ribeiro, Lda


See also:

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The Cross-Gate by
Ivo Pavlik
Ortona Cemetery by
Giovani Vaccarini
Farewell Chapel
by OFIS Arhitekti

Quote of Note | David Chipperfield


Neues maker: Berlin’s Neues Museum, rebuilt and restored by David Chipperfield Architects in collaboration with Julian Harrap.

“There is a danger when every building has to look spectacular, to look like it is changing the world. I don’t care how a building looks if it means something, not to architects, but to the people who use it.”

David Chipperfield in the January issue of ARTnews. He will receive the Royal Gold Medal for architecture in a ceremony at the Royal Institute of Architects in London on February 10.

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Gable House by FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

An adjacent busy road is screened from this house by Japanese firm FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects, hidden behind a wall suspended over the terrace edge to line up with the boundary wall.

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

Called Gable House, the project is located in Shiga, Japan.

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

Behind the shielding wall the terrace is open to the sky, and skylights within funnel light down into the living space.

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

More about FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects on Dezeen »

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

Photographs are by Takumi Ota.

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

The information that follows is from the architects:


Gable House

The site is faced with the heavily traveled arterial road. Living in such an environment, the client would like to have an open and tranquil space where you would not be conscious about surrounding lines of sight.

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

The house was carefully designed to connect the exterior and interior – the concrete wall is built to interrupt lines of sights and noises from the road, and the hanging wall is also established in front of the opening.

The top and bottom of the hanging wall are opened.

Gable House by FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects

The light that goes through the top opening is projected on the wall, and the reflected soft light is introduced into the room.

Gable House by FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects

The bottom opening is designed to view the yard.

Gable House by FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects

The two walls play a role in extending visual expansion into the inside of the house while protecting privacy.

Gable House by FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects

The casing of the opening is raised a little from the floor. It is designed so that people spontaneously gather and stay around while sitting on or using it as a table.

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

The vertical intense light from the top light in the living room, combined with the horizontal line of sight controlled by the two walls and the soft light reflected from the hanging wall, realizes the open and tranquil habitation space.

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

The volume with the simple gable roof, which is determined for snow accumulation, incorporates the expanding inner space of the highly calculated design.

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

Architects: FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects
Location: Shiga:Japan
Client: Private

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

Construction Year: 2010

Site Area:165㎡

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects

Constructed Area: 82m2

Gable House by FORM Kouichi Kimura Architects


See also:

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House of Reticence by
FORM/Kouichi Kimura
House of Resonance by
FORM/Kouichi Kimura
House of Spread by
FORM/Kouichi Kimura