Driftwood by Danecia Sibingo
Posted in: UncategorizedThis year’s Architectural Association Summer Pavilion, designed by 3rd year student Danecia Sibingo, will open in Bedford Square, London on 3 July. (more…)
This year’s Architectural Association Summer Pavilion, designed by 3rd year student Danecia Sibingo, will open in Bedford Square, London on 3 July. (more…)
London practice ThreefoldArchitects have completed Ladderstile House, a courtyard house on Richmond Park in London. (more…)
As we struggle to keep abreast of the flood of Frank Lloyd Wright-related news, contests, vintage game show clips, and egregious puns that have accompanied the outstanding Guggenheim exhibition of the architect’s globe-spanning projects, we had to make sure that you had heard the glad tidings that LEGO, too, has caught the FLW fever. In a licensing coup, LEGO’s Brickstructures partner (helmed by architectural artist Adam Reed Tucker) has struck a deal with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation to produce Frank Lloyd Wright Collection LEGO Architecture sets, which allow kids of all ages to build their own Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Fallingwater. Accompanying the sets are booklets that feature traditional LEGO building instructions as well as “exclusive archival historical material” and photographs of each building. It’s DIY FLW!
The Museum in a Shoebox, designed by renowned architect Aleksandr Kuznetsov, is a new venue for contemporary architecture, art and design that opened last month in Old Town. (more…)
Earlier this month we checked in on the progress with SANAA‘s much-anticipated Serpentine Pavilion in London, which is set to open in less than a month in it usual location at Kensington Gardens, on July 12th. And now, because it’s too cool to resist, we make the jump across the pond once again and visit the Times‘ architecture critic Tom Dyckhoff who files this great report, complete with a great slideshow interview, about the pavilion. Although clearly still feeling angry about the recent Prince Charles debacle and starting his first few paragraphs with things like “It says something about the state of British architecture when the highlight of every year is a small pavilion in a park,” Dyckhoff quickly moves on from there and gets into a great discussion with the SANAA team, Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, largely (and refreshingly) focusing on their relationship and how they’ve been able to work together for so long.
“When I first saw Sejima-san [they use each other’s surnames despite sitting beside one another and sipping each other’s glass of water], I thought, there’s someone interesting,” he says. “She’d come in to the office wearing this green golden dress with an Arabian Nights hat in rainbow colours. Totally crazy. I thought, she looks kind of nice. I felt she must become very great.”
Despite having read a couple of very negative things about how it is to work for SANAA, this piece at least comes across as very incredibly sweet and makes us even more eager to check out the finished pavilion. In the interim, we’ll have to settle for this small new batch of construction photos posted by Olll.
Danish architects Bjarke Ingels Group have won an international competition to design a new town hall in Tallinn, Estonia. (more…)
René van Zuuk Architekten have completed a pavilion for the pedestrianised central market square at Roosendaal in the Netherlands. (more…)
An exhibition featuring a giant pixelated cloud made of suspended cardboard boxes designed by architects Fantastic Norway has opened at the Centre for Design and Architecture (DogA) in Oslo, Norway. (more…)
Andrea Morgante, founder of Shiro Studio, has collaborated with D-Shape to produce the Radiolaria pavilion, a complex, free-form structure produced using the world’s largest 3D printer. (more…)