Jeanne Gang, the Anti-Zaha

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Not recently named to the British order, but perhaps well on her way to starchitecture is Jeanne Gang, the architect behind Chicago’s Aqua skyscraper, the world’s tallest building yet designed by a woman. The New Yorker‘s Paul Goldberger, who we’ll always welcome here to Chicago, files this great profile on Gang, who he describes as something of the exact opposite of starchitects in general, including the most famous female of the group, Zaha Hadid. “Hadid,” he writes, “is a brilliant shaper of form, but her buildings are nothing if not arbitrary, and the combination of her fame and her flamboyant designs has insidiously led people to assume that female architects tend to favor shape-making over problem-solving.” The critic goes on to introduce women who are similar to Gang, bucking that misconception, along the way providing a great profile on a rising star in the industry and on the beautiful building itself. Here’s a bit more about Gang from the close of his piece:

Gang has no interest in establishing a look that marks her buildings as hers. Her instincts are modern, but style alone doesn’t shape her work; materials, technology, and an ongoing attempt to see from the perspective of the people who will use the buildings mean much more to her. “You know, a lot of architects get into fetishized objects,” she said to me. “But when you can design anything you want without actually having to make it, you do wild things that can’t work. And that’s not what I want to do.”

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Gordon Wu CityLocal by Aberrant Architecture

Tokyo studio Aberrant Architecture have proposed a mobile office canteen so that people working from home in residential areas can feel like they’re part of a big company. (more…)

Paddling Home by Kacey Wong

Hong Kong artist Kacey Wong has created a tiny floating house as part of the Hong Kong & Shenzhen bi-city Biennale of Urbanism/Architecture. (more…)

Sta Columbina Chapel by Luis Ferreira Rodrigues

Portuguese photographer Nelson Garrido has sent us his photographs of a chapel in Bragança, Portugal, designed by architect Luis Ferreira Rodrigues of Porto. (more…)

Mumbai to Combat Gridlock with Skywalks

mumbai.jpgIt’s onward and upward for Mumbai. The tightly packed Indian city (population: 13,662,885) will soon be home to more than 50 “skywalks”—elevated sidewalks that sprout from the city’s train stations and allow pedestrians to avoid the traffic-choked roads, many of which are without sidewalks. “Skywalks are quick to build, relatively inexpensive, and only require land the city already controls,” writes Eric Bellman in The Wall Street Journal, which offers a wee stippled rendering of a skywalk along with photos. Plus the city plans to recover the $300 million tab for the skywalks project by selling advertising space on them. So everyone’s happy, right? Of course not. Retailers are grumbling about the drop in foot traffic, while residents complain that the skywalks obscure views and encourage the curious to sneak a peak into private homes. And then there are the design challenges:

While the walkways run over government roads, there still often isn’t space on the ground to plant enough supporting columns. Longer stretches between columns mean the city has to spend more on stronger, lighter materials and thicker columns. Commuters found the early skywalks too boxy and bright, so new ones use curved roofs, dark colors and chrome.

When engineers started digging to build the foundations, they found the chaos on the street continues underground. A few feet down, they ran into uncharted water, electricity, and phone lines as well as sewers, forcing them to redesign whole skywalks. Trying to get the city water authorities or state-run telephone company to shift infrastructure would take too long.

On the bright side? A promising candidate for a Mumbai skywalk mascot has emerged, as the locals have dubbed the first bright, twisting structure “the yellow caterpillar.” Paging Eric Carle!

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Working Test of Michael Arads Sept. 11th Memorial Unveiled

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Back in 2007, we told you that Michael Arad‘s September 11th Memorial, “Reflecting Absence,” had been pushed back several years. Instead of opening in late-2009, it was set to open hopefully sometime before the 10th anniversary of the attack. The rebuilding of the World Trade Center site has been plagued with delays from the very start (in that same post, we said that Daniel Libeskind‘s Freedom Tower was expected to open some time in 2010, but that’s been pushed to around 2013 now). However, it looks like there’s been some positive movement recently on Arad’s project. A small test model of the waterfall memorial has been built out in Brooklyn and was unveiled to reporters late last week (the BBC has some great video). The moving sculpture looks promising (and it actually works) and the plans are still supposedly on schedule, with building commencing soon at the WTC site, finished by spring of next year, and hopefully all running smoothly by September 2011.

“One of the things I wanted the water and the design to do is to mark this continuous sense of absence,” Arad said. “These voids, even though water falls into them…they never fill up, they always remain empty, and that was very important to me,” he added.

The waterfall-filled pools are the centerpiece of a memorial plaza that will take up half of the 16-acre site at ground zero. The pools will be surrounded by hundreds of sweetgum and white oak trees on a cobblestoned plaza; a memorial museum is being built below ground that will open about a year after the memorial.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Freya’s Cabin by Studio Weave

London designers Studio Weave have completed a visitors’ shelter made of wooden profiles depicting trees and plants overlooking Kielder Water in Northumberland, UK. (more…)

Frame House by The Marc Boutin Architectural Collaborative

Canadian studio The Marc Boutin Architectural Collaborative have completed a timber-clad house designed to frame views from a hill in Invermere, Canada. (more…)

Cultural Centre Association by RMDM Architects

French Architects RMDM have completed a cultural centre near Paris, clad with horizontal strips of poplar wood and ceramic tiles. (more…)

72 Collective Housing Units by LAN Architecture

Paris studio LAN Architecture have designed apartment blocks for Bordeaux where each residence will have an adaptable loggia. (more…)