Floating House by Hyunjoon Yoo
Posted in: UncategorizedKorean architect Hyunjoon Yoo has completed a house overlooking the river Han in Seoul, Korea. (more…)
Korean architect Hyunjoon Yoo has completed a house overlooking the river Han in Seoul, Korea. (more…)
Tokyo Designers Week 09: Tokyo Designers Week has started and Dezeen produced the official guide to the event. In this first in a series of short interviews commissioned for the guide, architect Shigeru Ban responds to the festival’s theme, green design. (more…)
Beautiful as our architecture is here in Chicago, a lot of it wasn’t built with the green, LEED-happy practices we use today. Fortunately, there’s been movement toward revising some of those negatives, as Julie Wernau reports in her piece about architect Sara Beardsley‘s efforts to turn the Willis Tower (formerly the Sears Tower) totally green. The project, which would make the US’s tallest building energy efficient, is through local super firm Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture and is expected to run somewhere between $200 to $300 million, doing things like replacing all of its windows and adding all sorts of green rooftop additions some hundred stories above the ground. It’s an ambitious project, to be sure, and hasn’t picked up full steam yet, with plans for funding this massive endeavor still in the works, but here’s to hoping it all works out and inspires other older buildings to do the same. Here are some of the details on the changes:
In design plans, the “green roof” project would be expanded to the building’s multiple roofs, along with wind turbines and solar panels. But those rooftops would be more symbolic than anything else. The real energy savings will be culled from the 16,000 windows that will be replaced and from lighting automation and reduction.
The window project is estimated to be enough to cut heating needs by 50 percent and allow for new, smaller mechanical systems with a significantly lower environmental impact. A plumbing upgrade is expected to reduce water usage by 24 million gallons a year.
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Architectural photographer Leonardo Finotti has sent us his photos of a house in Argentina by Estudio Aire, based in Rosario, Argentina. (more…)
Photographer Julien Lanoo has sent us his photographs of a community centre near Avelgem, Belgium, designed by Belgian architects Dierendonck Blancke. (more…)
Despite the hopefully-misguided beliefs of apparently a lot of people in China that starchitect Rem Koolhaas wants nothing more than to mock them with his buildings’ designs, there’s some positive news coming from the neighbor to his “controversial” CCTV Tower, the badly charred Mandarin Oriental hotel he also designed. It was one of the big architecture tragedies at the start of this year, when an errant firework found its way inside the building, setting it totally ablaze almost instantly, taking with it a firefighter’s life and nearly $800 million poured into the about-to-open project (here’s our report on personally seeing the damage up close back in May). But now Koolhaas’ firm, Office for Metropolitan Architecture, has been back to the scene and have announced that despite its utterly-apocalyptic appearance, the building still seems structurally sound and that the damage might all be fixable. OMA hasn’t said that they will for sure be working to rebuild, plans to move forward do seem likely, and that means that maybe the worst option has been diverted, that the Mandarin would have to be demolished completely.
“The preliminary findings are that the building can be repaired,” said architect Ole Scheeren, the building project’s leader. “It’s still intact and safe. There will mainly be a repair effort, but not a complete rebuilding.”
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Chile-based architect Veronica Arcos has completed an angular house in the El Arrayán area of Santiago, Chile. (more…)
Copenhagen- and Rotterdam-based architects Powerhouse Company have completed a spiral-shaped extension to a house in Burgundy, France. (more…)
Copenhagen practice Nord Architects have completed a cylindrical education centre in Bjerringbro, Denmark. (more…)