Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

Spanish architect Julio Barreno has added a zig-zag covered walkway to this school building in southern Spain in order to connect what were previously separate sides for boys and girls. 

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

Called Víctor de la Serna y Espina, the school was originally designed in 1957 and had a symmetrical design allowing for the sexes to be taught entirely separately, but a new system at the school required the two halves to be joined.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The tunnel is clad in translucent polycarbonate and provides a playground shelter for pupils as well as connecting the two entrances.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The renovation project also involved painting the existing building, with neutral colours for the classrooms and circulation picked out in orange.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

More stories about education »

The information that follows is from Julio Barreno:


Víctor de la Serna y Espina public school. Ubrique, Cádiz, Spain.

The current school is located in an extended part of this city and it was the result of one of Antonio Sanchez Esteve´s works. Although the executive project was finished in 1957, the building was completed in 1963.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The plot has a rectangular shape, is almost horizontal, and is surrounded by three streets. The fourth side is occupied by the buildings that complete the block.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The intension not to occupy most of the area for the students breaks resulted in the construction of the building on two levels; the obligation to segregate the students by sex and other strict rules made the architect repeat the layout in a symmetrical way.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

This is an example of the international architectural style carried out in this part of the world. The use of inclined roof made the design get close to the vernacular constructions. It is important to realize that this is an interesting response to those complex rules from a cultural context developed from the centre of Europe to this outlying site.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The final position of the building lines up with the long sides of the plot exactly in the centre. The southern façade of the building tries to protect the main programme from the sun by locating the server program, connection spaces, toilets, etc, there. This is the entrance façade.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The northern elevation is occupied by the classrooms using bigger windows looking towards the softer northern light.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

About the current refurbishment.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

Nowadays in Spain discussion continues about whether or not it is good to separate the students by sex in education. In the case we are working on there is no doubt that this organization became dysfunctional. The layout of the building is drawn up with a clear axis of symmetry that divides it into two identical parts. The impossibility of connection between those two parts is a problem today. Adding to that the strict education rules and programme for the new construction, the final design seems to be suitable.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The need of a covered area in the playground for the breaks in winter and the connection of those two parts made us transform it into a covered path that allowed people to walk from one part to the other without getting wet when it rains, a good solution, especially for disabled people.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

It is interesting how this element and the existing building become a new entity or product without touching one to each other; a result where both pieces are interacting continuously.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The chosen geometry to generate this programmatic addition goes far from the original orthogonal geometry intentionally. This broken line connects the two entrances; at once trying to find the natural path and, at the same time, generating a personal identity.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

For its construction, it was interesting to use a material that could both provide protection from the weather and also attempt to define the volume – permitting it to have a translucent appearance. The final material used was cellular polycarbonate; it becomes a light element, a soft piece that interacts with the existing building, taking care with it.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The intervention also considered the painting of the inside and outside; for the exterior we used the contextual white, colours for the interior; a soft beige colour for the classrooms and an intense orange colour for the connection spaces to bring them out from the others, making evident the original disconnection between parts and in this sense, highlighting the solution for that.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

The electrical installation also helps us to explain the continuity of the generated spaces. In this case, it is not a fitted infrastructure but becomes a main character using it visible on the walls and ceilings. It is the blood system that brings the electricity to all parts of the building guiding the visitors in their visits.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

This case of architecture from the past with certain malfunctions that forced us to improve them using our best tool: the Architecture. On one hand, the surgery-architecture to prepare the body first, and after that the prosthesis-bypass-architecture as a complement and extension; what we obtained is a kind of synergic architecture, something where the interaction between the two elements is more than the sum of the individual effects.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

This artificial element is made so as to adapt to the body where they are installed, understanding the context and their purpose, without producing any rejection; in this case it is conceived as an alien in the patient, with a different geometry and a specific technique that generates specific identity. A quality of lightness, transportable, assembly, almost machines… generated by the constructive systems that distinguish them from the existing body.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

In the end, we have an example where architecture and its techniques save the patient from its illness far from mummifying or letting it die, and all that using strange and untransferable machines, but at the same time, understandable, handy and stimulating.

Víctor de la Serna y Espina by Julio Barreno Gutiérrez

Beautiful contemporary prosthesis, said once Manuel Gausa referring to the human prosthesis.


See also:

.

Canoes Landscape
by Julio Barreno
Living Around a Patio
by Julio Barreno
More design for
education

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

Israeli firm Schwartz Besnosoff Architects have built this library for Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee in northern Israel.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

Called The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library, the building’s facade gives way to a glass wall at ground-level to afford views over the Sea of Galilee.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

Informal seating areas are located by the main circulation route in the central area, where staircases and ramps provide access to computers, storage rooms and seminar rooms at higher levels.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

Photographs are by Amit Geron.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

Here’s some more information from the architects:


The Library Space

The space of the the Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family library enables optimal transfer of information. On the one hand, it provides the opportunity to spend time in an atmosphere that encourages concentration and study.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

On the other hand, the library space enables interaction with other people who are there for the same reason, thus constituting a social space in every sense.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

Because social and cultural activity plays a critical role in the functioning of the library, we made this a central component in our project proposal.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

Building in the Landscape, Landscape in the Building

The concept of landscape is central to our planning work. Seeking a way to incorporate the concept of landscape in the building, we created an environment, and not a building.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

We needed to meet the requirements of the general plan, but also help create a place that utilizes its surroundings, integrates them within it and enables them to pass through it.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

The Library as a Walk in Nature

The visit to the project site on the day of the meeting included a short tour among the temporary structures and the hill, with its spectacular view. We believed that the best way to instil this spirit of “place” in the building is by integrating the idea of a walk in the proposal.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

The building arises from the ground like a topographic fold, and passing through its wings is a walk through nature in every sense.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

From the central public element that continues from the outdoor courtyard, through the fold that begins in the entrance lobby, the interior space is created and designed as a internal landscape.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

The center of the building is designed like a landscape element, and the movement within it is determined and organized in relation to the landscape. All these enable the organization, inside and outdoors, of special events for the entire campus (folk dancing, a student fair in the outer courtyard, films at the top of the inner ramp and more).

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

Learning Situations

We sought a way to create a diverse, inspiring, dynamic space for situations of many types – from formal seating facing the pastoral landscape (a setting for maximum concentration) and group seating in the seminar rooms, studying at a computer and facing the landscape, to a comfortable environment for studying or sitting informally in groups.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

We wanted to organize the different situations so that they support one another, together creating a student experience on campus.The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

The resulting was the creation of a ground level with an uninterrupted panoramic view of the magical Sea of Galilee.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

This level is connected to the entrance level by stairs and an elevator, but otherwise it has no spatial connection to the library space.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

The entrance lobby, at the mezzanine level, is connected to the upper level in the central area by means of the fold; it is a system of terraces that create a sort of mini public space.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

An inner climbing street enables varied types of seating in this public space. This is the heart of the library, the center of social interaction, and it is directly connected to the book storage areas.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

We believe that this space will constitute a quality, inviting place for the students and that they will take advantage of its different spaces whenever they have free time.

The Robert and Yadelle Sklare Family Library by Schwartz Besnosoff Architects

The area is created by combining spaces that function as informal sitting areas, the entrance lobby and the display of periodicals. It does not involve the addition of space beyond that defined in the general plan. We found a suitable location for a multimedia space under the fold, where a graduated space can serve for showing films.

The planning concept regarding book storage allows broad flexibility. We propose four storage areas, however, because the space is open, and accessible from the central space it is perceived as a single homogenous unit. In addition, the compact method of storage enables use of these areas for social interaction.

Team: Gaby Schwartz, Roy Talmon, Julia Grinkrug, Abraham Rotal


See also:

.

Astana National Library
by BIG
Urban Mediaspace by
Schmidt Hammer Lassen
Knut Hamsun Centre by
Steven Holl

Hölick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund, Henrietta Palmer and Matts Ingman

Holick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund and Henrietta Palmer

Stockholm architects Mats Edlund, Henrietta Palmer and Matts Ingman have designed this timber cabin as part of a camping site in Hudiksvall, Sweden.

Holick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund and Henrietta Palmer

Called Hölick Sea Resort, the site will have homes built of wood and glass using traditional Swedish methods.

22 houses are planned for the site in total, in two designs.

Hölick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund <br/>and Henrietta Palmer

Photographs are by Jacob Nordström.

The following information is from the architects:


Mats Edlund & Henrietta Palmer

Until today Hölick Sea Resort, located in a pine forest on the coast north of the Swedish city Hudiksvall, has been a traditional camping site.

Hölick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund and Henrietta Palmer

The proposal is a total concept of living, food, services and experiences – including nature, buildings, footpaths, bridges, lighting and signage – to achieve an over-all experience, while keeping a feeling of privacy.

Holick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund and Henrietta Palmer

By focusing on an exciting architecture in wood, inspired by the former tents on the camping, the client wishes to reach more affluent customers.

Holick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund and Henrietta Palmer

The area is planned for 22 houses of two different types; 80 and 90 m2, of which the bigger one has just been built.

Holick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund and Henrietta Palmer

The plan is to start construction of the second house type during winter 2011.

Holick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund and Henrietta Palmer

Both houses are built totally in wood, using the Gotlandic traditional faltak – a wooden roof – to achieve a homogeneous wood appearance. The interiors are light and spacious, and planned for an easy Swedish summer lifestyle for families and friends.

Matts Ingman

Holick Sea Resort by Mats Edlund and Henrietta Palmer


See also:

.

Holiday Cabana at Maduru Oya
by Damith Premathilake
Container Studio by
MB Architecture
Peña Blanca by
DCPP Arquitectos

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Japanese architects Shinichi Ogawa & Associates have completed this house in Kanagawa, Japan, which features a double-height central living area connecting all the rooms. 

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Called Cube House, the project features a glazed roof that allows natural light into the atrium.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Photographs are by Satoshi Shigeta.

Here’s more information from Shinichi Ogawa & Associates:


The house is built on a 1.5M grid module in all XYZ directions.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

This site is at a corner of the new residential area in Kawasaki-shi, Kanagawa, Japan.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

The space is composed of a solid cube of 9.0M x 9.0M x 6.0M and a cubic void of 4.5M x 4.5M x 6.0M.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

The hall, children’s room, kitchen are laid out to surround the living-dining room on the ground floor.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

On the first floor, the bedroom, walk-in closet, bathroom, courtyard, are laid out to surround the double floor-height well which is 6.0M.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa Associates

Each room of the interior space is connected through the void of the living room.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

And the void cuts off the sky as a geometric form, letting the sunlight inside.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

In this house, all events, the changes of the seasons, course of time, and human activity, are created through the void.

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa Associates

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

Cube House by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates


See also:

.

House DE by
Davidclovers
House in Fukuyama by
Suppose Design Office
8 House by
BIG

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

Architects Planning Korea have designed a bridge for Seoul that will incorporate a museum, library and IT centre in pods along its length.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

Called Paik Nam June Media Bridge, the structure will carry cars, pedestrians and cyclists across the Han River between a proposed cultural centre in the former Dangi-li Power Plant on the north bank and the National Assembly in the south.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

The bridge will also be accessed from the river via docking stations for water taxis and boats, while its skin will incorporate solar panles and could be used to display video projects.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

The project is on show at the Boutique Monaco Museum in Seoul until 12 November.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

The architects hope construction will begin in 2012.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

Here are some more details from Planning Korea:


Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

Korean creative director Byung Ju Lee of Planning Korea announced a new paradigm in bridge called ‘Paik Nam June Media Bridge’ in Seoul, Korea. Connecting Dangi-li Power Plant (which has a plan to be redeveloped into public cultural space) in the north and The National Assembly Building in the south, this bridge shows the first example of ‘a city expanded to the river’.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

Compared to the Thames River and the Seine River, the Han River in Seoul is much bigger river across the center of the city.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

There are almost 30 bridges over the Han River, but most of them were made in steel structure and concrete for better traffic.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

As a futuristic and aesthetic sculptor over the Han River, Paik Nam June Media Bridge shows how to use spaces over the bridge efficiently and eco-friendly.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

Inspired by the water strider, the overall shape is organic with sleek, streamlined outline. With the total length of 1080m, this mega structure bridge is covered with solar panel to generate energy by itself.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

This bridge is not only for cars but for people those who walk and ride bicycle. People can enjoy public museum and library with IT complex mall for the foremost IT technology. In addition, water taxi, yachts and cruise ships can dock at the bottom of the bridge to access the bridge from the river. For the sustainable green space over the bridge, circulated vertical and horizontal garden is introduced on each floor using water from the river and rain with natural light and ventilation

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

To celebrate world famous video/media artist Nam June Paik, the whole skin of the bridge can be used as a canvas for media and video artist all over the world. This project is currently in the progress of reviewing to be developed in BTL (Build-Transfer-Lease) project.

Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

Location: Between Dangin-li Power Plant and The National Assembly Building
Bridge length: 1,080m
Pier height: 18m
Maximum arch height: 72.5m
Maximum width: 89m
Total floor area: 103,620m2
Area for road: 18,190m2
Area for building: 85,430m2
Program: Driveway, Pedestrian/Bicycle Road, Tourism/Shopping & Relaxation Facilities
The Han River Museum, Public library for teenagers, IT complex mall, Cruise ship dock & parking facilities


DezeenTV: Paik Nam June Media Bridge by Planning Korea

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See also:

.

Zaragoza Bridge Pavilion
by Zaha Hadid
Choisy-le-Roi bridge
by Jacques Ferrier
Pearl River Necklace
by NL Architects

Palace of International Forums Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan’s representative building is designed as a platform for hosting acts of state, congresses and other cultural highlights. Our task was..

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

A1Architects of Prague designed this little tea house with a tall roof in Ostrava in the Czech Republic.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Called Hat Tea House, the 1.8 square-meter oak structure is clad in larch with a shingle roof.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

The hearth is concealed in a drawer under a larch bench.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Portions of the walls can be folded back or liftedup to reveal the garden beyond, with sliding screens further altering the view.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

More about A1Architects »

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

The following details are from A1Architects:


Hat Tea House

OSTRAVA, CZECH REPUBLIC
LENKA KŘEMENOVÁ, DAVID MAŠTÁLKA / A1ARCHITECTS

“Hat” is the third tea house we have realised. It is a small house to gather with a cup of tea, a tiny haven under the open roof in little charming garden. The minimal space of a teahouse is a great challenge for us to search for intimate and pleasant space, which brings unique atmosphere with its own secret inside. The inner space of tea house gives distinct perspective of the outside world.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

“Hat” is the smallest of the three already designed teahouses. The name derives from its tall roof resembling a big hat in the garden. Its inner space is meant for 2 guests and a host within dimension of 1,8 x 1,8m. The seating is suit to its owners, so guests can enjoy sitting on wide larch bench.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

The Hat has expressively dwarfed rooflining, the almost square layout transforms upwards into the round shape of skylight. Hearth is designed due to the minimal size of space as a drawer hidden under the bench. The main view is oriented to unique picturesque garden towards bizarre horizon with grassy coal waste dumps of Ostrava outskirts. The view could be adjusted by sliding windows and outer shutters.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Material plays important role when designing a teahouse. We search for natural ageing materials which makes the space warm and liveable. The carpented oak structure stands on dark grey stones, which harmonize with dark larch facing and shingle roof. The main inner wall is clad with oak plywood. All the structure was realized in summer 2010 by sculptor Vojtěch Bilišič.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Big inspiration for all of our tea houses was personal meeting with Japanese architect Terunobu Fujimori and an experience with his own teahouse Takasugi-an in Nagano prefecture. As in our previous teahouses we tried to find our own interpretation of the theme, which intentionally differs from Japanese tradition a lot. We transfer it into a local situation using traditional materials and forms of Middle Europe.

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

DESIGN: Lenka Křemenová, David Maštálka / A1Architects
CARPENTER: Vojtěch Bilišič, Slovakia
BUILT AREA: 3,25 m2
REALIZATION: autumn 2010
A1Architects

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Hat Tea House by A1Architects

Hat Tea House by A1Architects


See also:

.

Takasugi-an by
Terunobu Fujimori
Tea house by
David Maštálka
Paper Tea House by
Shigeru Ban

Kiri’s House by Atelier Riri

Kiri's house by Atelier Riri

Indonesian architects Atelier Riri have designed this house in the dense residential area of Bintaro in Jakarta, Indonesia.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Kiri’s House is a compact residence built on only 90 square metres of land.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Made of four interlocking boxes, the house has an open deck down one side with glass doors illuminating the rooms within.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Floor to ceiling curtains and wheeled furniture allow for work and leisure spaces to be hidden or revealed when needed.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Photographs are by Fernando Gomulya.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Here’s more information from the architects:


Atelier Riri

In Indonesian, Kiri means left.  An analogy to represent the shape of a house that give an impression as if it’s leaning to the left.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Kiri’s House is an application of a design for a house that refers to the owner’s personal character with compact rooms to create practical living. With an area of land 6×15 meters, this house was designed to be functional.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Shape no longer became our first priority. Building mass, in fact, took the simplest form, four side geometry.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Rooms were programmed to suit the owner’s cultural life. It creates open space which was the result of spatial integration and reduction of needs that was considered less important to be placed on ground level.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Equipped with moveable furniture (wheeled), the area on ground level then provides space for complex activity.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Meanwhile, private area on the second storey is equipped with built-in furniture.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

Both levels are bound with a corridor that takes a shape like a sidecourt on the right side of the building.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri

That way, the building looks like it has only 4.65 meter width, leaning to the left. On the side of the sidecourt, there’s an open space.

Kiri's House by Atelier Riri


See also:

.

House in Fukuyama
by Suppose Design Office
Playhouse by
Aboday
House in Ekoda
by Suppose Design Office

Kim Jong-Il Gets Into Restaurant Design

Speaking of world leaders, as we were in that last post, the next time you’re vacationing in North Korea, perhaps enjoying a stay in the never-going-to-be-finished Ryugyong Hotel, you might want to think about swinging over to the Jade Stream Pavilion, “the most famous restaurant in North Korea.” The Telegraph reports that the restaurant has just finished construction on a new 60,000 ft. addition, with its design overseen by Kim Jong-Il himself. The paper reports that Kim regularly stopped by to provide “on-site guidance” during the building, which will now make the restaurant available for many more thousands of visitors (assuming they have the money to pay for it). Here’s a bit:

Kim, who has recently elevated his third son, Kim Jong-un, to a key post in the country’s military commission, thus marking him out as his heir, said the new restaurant extension was “flawless in its architectural substance and style”. Although more than two million North Koreans are thought to have died of starvation in the 1990s, KCNA said it was the intention of the ruling Workers’ Party to “bring the level of the people’s diet and food culture to the highest level”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Exhibit Opens, Groundbreaking Scheduled for George W. Bush Presidential Center

After unveiling the plans and renderings around this time last year for the Robert A.M. Stern-designed George W. Bush Presidential Library/Center on the campus of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, then watching it balloon in size, we thought for certain that construction was underway already, but apparently not (we suppose raising money and lining up contractors does take some time, after all). However, while the Library in its current state is just an empty lot and drawings on paper, groundbreaking is set for November 16th, with a completion date expected sometime in 2013. To kick off the construction, this Saturday the university’s Meadows Museum opened “Breaking New Ground,” an exhibit showing off a handful of the collection that will go into the new building once it’s complete. Running until early February, it will also display the architectural plans for the Center. Here’s a few items from the collection that they’ll be showing:

  • The pistol retrieved from Saddam Hussein upon his capture in Iraq
  • A letter from Bono to President Bush regarding AIDS relief in Africa
  • The silk dress and bolero jacket designed by Oscar de la Renta and worn by Mrs. Bush at the White House dinner with Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
  • A bronzed football commemorating the University of Texas Longhorns 2005 National Championship win, given as a gift to President Bush
  • New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.