Logistics Centre Partyrent by Jarosch Architektur
Posted in: UncategorizedJarosch Architektur of Darmstadt have completed a logistics centre clad in black lacquered tiles in Frankfurt, Germany. (more…)
Dove of Peace by Sunlay Design
Posted in: UncategorizedBeijing studio Sunlay Design have designed a church for Ordos in Inner Mongolia, which has a plan based on the profile of a bird in flight. (more…)
Atelier Wong by Cottam Hargrave
Posted in: UncategorizedArchitects Cottam Hargrave of Austin have completed a house and studio for a photographer in Austin, Texas. (more…)
China Hills by MVRDV
Posted in: UncategorizedA conceptual model for a future city by Dutch architects MVRDV, featuring terraced buildings that look like mountains, is on show at the Beijing Center for the Arts. (more…)
German Architects Hate the Burj Dubai?
Posted in: UncategorizedWell, yesterday saw the big opening of the Burj Dubai and with it came dozens upon dozens of reviews and photos and video. The professional critics generally seemed to deem it nifty that the world had a new tallest tower and had mostly positive things to say about it, though always reminding us what a huge investment this was for an emirate that hasn’t been doing so hot lately and how disastrous it might be, should the massive building not fill its millions of square feet of available space. But again, fairly positive throughout. That wasn’t the case in Germany however, where, according to South Africa’s Business Report, many of the country’s architects hate the Burj Dubai and all it stands for. Most of the quotes came from members of the DAI, the German architects association, and say that they find the whole thing much too large, far too un-green, and not at all practical:
“One thing is sure though: what has become a glass and ferroconcrete desert hardly represents a sustainable contribution to building practices around the world,” [DAI’s president Christian Baumgart] added.
German architect Meinhard von Gerkan called the skyscraper “an economically pointless symbol of prestige, representing the power of money.”
So not everyone is excited about the new building, we find. However, we shouldn’t believe that all German architects share this opinion, or that these quotes even came from actual Germans, given that the Business Report also says that the Burj’s architect, Adrian Smith, is British. Unless they’re handing out UK citizenships for we here in the Midwest, we’re pretty sure he’s still Chicago born and raised.
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Sowa Unit by Kensuke Watanabe
Posted in: UncategorizedTokyo architect Kensuke Watanabe has completed a rehabilitation centre for people suffering with mental illness near Tokyo in Japan. (more…)
Housing 137 by H Arquitectes
Posted in: UncategorizedBarcelona studio H Arquitectes have completed an apartment block in Barcelona where shutters seem to disappear into the stone-clad facade. (more…)
Redhill Apartment by Studio SKLIM
Posted in: UncategorizedBeijing architect Kevin Lim of Studio SKLIM has completed the renovation of a public housing apartment in Singapore, where the space is organised by large wooden cabinets. (more…)