Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

This winery by Melbourne studio Folk Architects is embedded into the side of a hill in Australia‘s Yarra Valley winemaking region (+ slideshow).

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Folk Architects was approached by owners of a family-run winery to design a new wine-making facility on the site of their existing “cellar door building”, where customers are invited to sample wines.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

One half of the building nestles into the hillside, but it is fronted on two sides by concrete walls that protrude like blades from the sloping landscape.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Part of the northern facade is clad in polycarbonate that allows daylight to filter in during the day, but also becomes translucent when illuminated at night.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

The ground floor contains a large winemaking space with storage tanks and fermenting facilities, as well as a cool room and a barrel storage area.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Upstairs, an office, meeting room and tasting space open out to a grass roof terrace that meets the hillside.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

This roof is also used to collect rainwater. Each year around 500,000 litres of water will be recycled and filtered for use in wine production.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

“The landscaped green roof over the subterranean barrel store provides both a raised terrace with views to the surrounding landscape as well as thermal insulation for the stored wine below, reducing the requirement for the mechanical cooling,” added the architects.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Medhurst Winery was shortlisted at the recent 2013 World Architecture Festival in Singapore, in the production energy and recycling category. The overall winner was an art gallery in New Zealand with a wooden entrance canopy.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Other wineries we’ve featured include a restaurant, guest house an wine showroom inspired by the sprawling Portuguese landscape, a winery featuring towering walls of Corten steel and another featuring huge terracotta vaults concealed beneath its vineyard.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

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Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Photography is by Peter Bennetts.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Medhurst Winery, Yarra Valley, Victoria, Australia

Medhurst Winery is the first completed project by Folk Architects, a small practice from Melbourne.

The brief was to create a new 250-tonne winemaking facility to complement its existing cellar door. The winery produces a number of varieties and its objective is to produce premium, quality estate-grown wines using small-batch winemaking techniques.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

The building is embedded into a north facing slope, and defined by a series of horizontal elements that follow the contours of the site.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Nestled quietly into the existing hill to reduce its visual impact on the landscape, the building accentuates its natural setting by framing views to the surrounding Warramate forest.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

The programmatic requirements, orientation, and restrained materials palette were thoroughly evaluated and considered in order to reduce the buildings energy use, ongoing maintenance and provide a sustainable outcome.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

The landscaped green roof over the subterranean barrel store provides both a raised terrace with views to the surrounding landscape as well as thermal insulation for the stored wine below, reducing the requirement for the mechanical cooling.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects

Similarly, the heat reflective, polycarbonate cladding to the northern facade of the wine-making area replaces artificial lighting with filtered natural sunlight.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

At night the wall becomes translucent, exposing the profile of the winemaking equipment within. The winery roof captures approximately 500,000 litres of water annually that is harvested and filtered for use in wine production.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image

The new winery sits adjacent to an existing cellar door, and is very much intended to enable public engagement with the wine making process. A meandering path leads patrons from wine tasting, through a series of landscaped spaces, to views of the production area and vines beyond.

Medhurst Winery by Folk Architects
Sections – click for larger image

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House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

This house in Hyogo, Japan, by local architect Shogo Aratani is made up of overlapping concrete slabs that accommodate an interior of staggered floors and ramped corridors (+ slideshow).

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

The three-storey house is located at the junction of two roads, one inclining gently upwards and another sloping down, and Shogo Aratani wanted to use these existing levels to generate the floors inside the building.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

“We thought that a new development of another level was pointless,” he said. “It was more natural to follow the context.”

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

The architect designed a split-level floorplate that corresponds with the highest and lowest parts of the road, then incorporated a mediating floor between that matches the level of a neighbouring plot.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

“The activities brought out from the characteristics of this site constitute this building, rather than the building determining people’s movements,” added Aratani.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

A network of staircases and slopes connects the three ground-floor levels, and also lead up to a pair of bedrooms on the first floor.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

Angular concrete forms emphasise the non-linear arrangement, creating sliced window openings through both the walls and rooftops.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

Other concrete houses we’ve featured from Japan include one designed for a resident in a wheelchair and one designed to be deliberately alien to its neighbours.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

See more Japanese houses »
See more concrete architecture and design »

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

Photography is by Shigeo Ogawa.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


House in Hyogo

The site is located on a corner lot of a fancy residential area on a hill, and faces toward sloped roads on the west and north sides. This residential area was developed about a half century ago. As time has passed, small-scale developments have been undertaken due to dividing and uniting lots.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

Just like the other sites, due to an arbitrary assumption of the developer, this site also has a recently built high wall on the west side, as if rejecting an approach to the site. However, construction of an in-ground garage may have been assumed, and there is level land and a slope to connect the 3m height difference on the southwest side. There is also a slope from the road on the north side, and the flat ground is about 1m high. The flat ground was probably set based on the neighbouring lot.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

Therefore, this lot has 3 levels due to the relationship between the roads on the west and north sides, and the neighbouring lot. We thought that a new development of another level was pointless. No matter what the situation was, the context of this location included the current situation and it was more natural to follow the context. Three floor levels, adjusted to each height, were individually made. By connecting these, the entire space was constituted.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

Based on the required volume, the three areas were partly layered and connected with stairs and slopes from the entrance to the roof. Volume studies were conducted in order to create a form to materialise such activities. The activities brought out from the characteristics of this site constitute this building, rather than the building determining people’s movements. As a result, the building was constituted with three crisscrossed monolithic forms, as if they were responding to the road on the west side that slopes up from south to north.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

The west-side volume in the lowest part of the site has an entrance and a guestroom, and the southeast volume in the highest part has private spaces such as a bedroom. The third volume connects them and also has a garage that is accessible from the north side, and a living space that is the centre of living.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

Location: Hyogo, Japan
Date of Completion: July, 2013
Principal Use: House
Structure: Reinforced Concrete
Site Area: 359.64m2
Building Area: 166.23m2
Total Floor Area: 202.80m2 (47.61m2/BF, 119.33m2/1F, 35.86m2/2F)
Structural Engineer: S3 Associates Inc.
Construction: Atelier Eight Co., Ltd.

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates

Exterior Finish: Exposed Concrete / Repellents
Floor: Medium Density Fiberboard t6 / Oil Paint
Wall: Plasterboard t12.5 / Emulsion Paint
Ceiling: Wooden Fibre Cement Board t15 / Heat Insulation t50

House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates
Level one plan – click for larger image
House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates
Level two plan – click for larger image
House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates
Level three and four plan – click for larger image
House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates
Sections – click for larger image
House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates
Sections – click for larger image
House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates
South and west elevations – click for larger image
House in Hyogo by Shogo Aratani Architect & Associates
North and east elevations – click for larger image

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City Guides Spotlight: Chicago: A dose of art, music, fresh cuisine and more in America’s “Second City”

City Guides Spotlight: Chicago


Sponsored content: It’s time to dismiss the “Second City” nomenclature, as Chicago takes the backseat to nobody. As a haven of early modern architecture in the US, with towering historic structures lining the…

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Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

A hotel shaped like a giant horseshoe by Ma Yansong of Beijing studio MAD is set to open later this year on the edge of a lake in Huzhou, China.

Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

The Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort was designed by MAD as a pair of curvaceous towers that connect on the upper levels to create an arched profile. Located on the edge of Taihu Lake, the building’s iconic shape is reflected in the still waters.

Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

Architect Ma Yansong says the form was inspired by the traditional bridges depicted in old Chinese paintings.

Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

“Throughout China’s history, people have always pursued a harmonious relationship with nature and this has become a major part of Chinese culture and tradition,” he said. “Huzhou itself is a place famous for traditional ink paintings and splendid water views, and the arch bridge is one of the key elements of traditional architecture.”

Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

He added: “By incorporating this iconic ring-shape, my goal was to design a contemporary resort that seamlessly integrates with the surrounding environment while evoking the beautiful arch bridge over Taihu Lake.”

Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

The 27-storey building contains a total of 282 guest rooms, but also encompasses 39 villas with access to hot springs. Additional facilities are contained within separate buildings and offer a variety of restaurants, a ballroom, conference suites and a wedding centre.

Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

Although some rooms are already available, the building will officially open in December.

Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

Other projects completed by MAD in the last year include an icicle-shaped museum for wooden sculptures in northeast China and a pair of curvaceous twisted skyscrapers in Canada.

Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

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Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort by MAD

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Village House by Powerhouse Company

A cluster of five gabled cabins make up this summer retreat in northern Denmark by architects Powerhouse Company (+ movie).

Village House by Powerhouse Company

Powerhouse Company designed the holiday home for a family in northern Sjælland as a twist on the traditional Danish summer house, with five interconnected cabins arranged in a five-fingered plan.

Village House by Powerhouse Company

“This solution faithfully reflects the rather different desires of the family members,” said the architects. “One wanted a picturesque, cosy and archetypal summer house, while another wanted a spacious and contemporary feeling.”

Village House by Powerhouse Company

Externally clad with blackened timber boards, the cabins overlap one another to create a central living area that opens out to a series of wooden outdoor decks.

Village House by Powerhouse Company

“Summerhouses are traditionally family spaces but when children grow older they need more independence from their parents, hence the ‘village of cabins’ organisation, with radiating individual spaces that are united in the centre,” the architects added.

Village House by Powerhouse Company

The living room, kitchen and dining area occupy three of the cabins, while one contains a master bedroom and another houses two smaller bedrooms.

Village House by Powerhouse Company

White walls and timber flooring feature throughout the house and angled skylights bring extra daylight into each cabin.

Village House by Powerhouse Company

Other projects by Powerhouse Company include a house in the woods with overhanging floor plates, a proposal for a dance and music centre in The Hague and a spiral-shaped house extension.

Village House by Powerhouse Company

See more projects from Powerhouse Company »
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Village House by Powerhouse Company
Plan sketch – click for larger image

Photography is by Åke E. Son Lindman.

Here’s some information from the architects:


Village House

Powerhouse Company was asked to design a weekend house for a young family in northern Sjælland, Denmark. Village House is an exploration on the possibilities of the Summer cabin, the traditional Danish vacation home. While keeping the cabin’s footprint small, spatial as well as sustainable, there is a wide range of spatial possibilities, by using a five-fingered floor plan.

Village House by Powerhouse Company
Site plan – click for larger image

The house is a cluster of five wings, like miniature cabins. These fan out like a hand spreading five fingers over the site, generating a variety of views, light effects and outdoor areas. This variation means the house provides an enjoyable environment all year round and at all times of day. For example, a large window above the living room allows sunlight to bathe the dining table at around midday. Summerhouses are traditionally family spaces, but when children grow older they need more independence from their parents. Hence the ‘village of cabins’ organisation, with radiating individual spaces that are united in the centre.

Each member of the family effectively has the option of privacy when they need it. Meanwhile a star-shaped central space, uniting the living room and kitchen, forms the shared area which nevertheless offers pockets of seclusion to spend time alone while still in the family circle. This solution faithfully reflects the rather different desires of the family members. One wanted a picturesque, cosy and archetypal summerhouse, while another wanted a spacious and contemporary feeling. Both desires are united in the design.

Village House by Powerhouse Company
Floor plan – click for larger image

In basing Village House on the classic Danish summerhouse, while adding modern ideas of space, Powerhouse Company has created a contemporary harmony. The elementary wooden structure has a pitched roof, and it is black, the most discreet colour in nature, like the dark shadows in the surrounding woods. Inside, the uniform white surface maximises the northern light. The rustic but modern solution is low maintenance, which is more important for a holiday home than offering lots of space. From an architectural point of view, its close relationship to the context is especially significant in a holiday home. The house contrasts with the routine home of the clients, and provides the basis for a separate lifestyle. Isn’t that what we are looking for when we go on holiday?

Village House by Powerhouse Company
Section – click for larger image

Location: Sjælland, Denmark
Partner in charge: Charles Bessard
Project leader: Lotte Adolph Bessard
Team: Charles Bessard, Lotte Adolph Bessard, Ted Schauman, Kristina Tegner, Peter Nilsso
Structural engineering: Ove Heede Consult ApS
Energy consultancy: Ellehauge & Kildemoses

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OMA completes Shenzhen Stock Exchange

News: OMA has completed the Shenzhen Stock Exchange – a skyscraper with a skirt at the heart of the city’s Central Business District (+ slideshow).

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

As one of OMA‘s best-known designs, the 250-metre skyscraper nicknamed “the miniskirt” features a three-storey podium that has been elevated 36 metres above the ground to sit around the body of the tower, creating a sheltered public plaza below and a roof garden on top.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

This suspended structure provides the large trading rooms of the stock exchange, which are framed behind a sequence of zigzagging trusses that contrast with the grid of square windows on the building’s main facades.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

“The Shenzhen Stock Exchange embodies the Pearl River Delta’s phenomenal transformation over the past thirty years,” commented Rem Koolhaas, whose firm won a competition to design the building back in 2006.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

He said: “We are greatly excited about the building from an architectural standpoint, but I believe its true significance emerges when viewed in an economic, political, and ultimately social context. We are immensely honoured to contribute to Shenzhen’s twenty-first century landscape.”

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

“It is exciting to see OMA’s extensive research on Shenzhen materialise as a building in the city,” added OMA partner David Gianotten. “The experience of building in Shenzhen further informs our vision for the future of the city. SZSE has a simple and powerful concept – it transcends a generic form into an innovative prospect through the simple gesture of lifting the podium.”

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

The Shenzhen Stock Exchange is OMA’s second major project to complete in China, following the CCTV Headquarters in Beijing.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

The firm is also now working on a second Shenzhen tower – the 180-metre Essence Financial Building.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

See more architecture by OMA »
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Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

Photography is by Philippe Ruault.

Here are some extra details from OMA:


OMA completes the Shenzhen Stock Exchange HQ in China

The new headquarters for the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) has been completed in Shenzhen’s Central Business District. The 180,000 m2 building is OMA’s next completed building in China after the CCTV Headquarters in Beijing.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

Defying the conventional building typology of tower-on-podium, SZSE’s three-storey base is cantilevered 36m above the ground, allowing for a generous public space below and a lush roof garden on top. The raised podium contains the listing hall and offices of the Stock Exchange; in its elevated position, it can “broadcast” the activities of the stock market to the entire city.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

While the generic square form of the tower blends in with the surrounding homogenous buildings, the façade of SZSE is differentiated through its materiality: a translucent layer of patterned glass wraps the tower grid and raised podium, rendering the façade mysterious and enigmatic, while revealing the construction behind. The façade changes continually with the weather, becoming a reflection of its environment.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

The SZSE project was led by OMA partners Rem Koolhaas and David Gianotten, and associate Michael Kokora, in collaboration with partners Ellen van Loon and Shohei Shigematsu.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

Construction was overseen by OMA Asia’s Hong Kong office and OMA’s on-site office in Shenzhen, working day-to-day with the client and contractors throughout the construction process. OMA’s team consisted of over 75 architects at various points in the design and construction phases.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange by OMA

SZSE was developed in collaboration with the local design institute SADI, and consultants DHV, Inside Outside, L&B and Arup. OMA won the competition for SZSE in 2006 and construction began in October 2008. OMA is currently designing a number of other buildings in China, including the Tencent Headquarters in Beijing and the Prince Bay Masterplan in Shenzhen.

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Holiday House Vindö by Max Holst Arkitektkontor

This wooden holiday house by Swedish studio Strömma Projekt Max Holst Arkitektkontor is perched on the edge of a gorge in Vindö, an island on the Stockholm archipelago (+ slideshow).

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Strömma Projekt Max Holst Arkitektkontor designed the single-storey house on a series of black concrete plinths, elevating it above the gorge so that surrounding trees appear at eye level from the windows.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

The dark timber exterior is surrounded by a sheltered deck, leading into a combined kitchen, living and dining room, while two children’s bedrooms are connected to a playroom and sit adjacent to a bathroom and sauna.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Large windows offer views out into the woodland from all four sides of the house, while wooden ceiling beams are left exposed beneath the gabled rooftops.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Timber lines the walls, ceilings and floors throughout the house, complemented by wooden furniture and kitchen units.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

“The material palette is simple and essentially rooted in local building traditions,” said the architects.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Wooden steps lead down to an exposed deck beneath the main house, then onwards to a small shed stacked with firewood at the end of a narrow walkway.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Other holiday homes we’ve featured include a cluster of holiday apartments around terraces connected by small alleys, a tiny wooden cabin containing a sauna and bedroom and a riverside house raised on tree trunks to prevent flooding.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

See more holiday homes »
See more Swedish architecture and design »

Photography is by Hannes Söderlund.

Here’s some information from the architects:


Holiday house Vindö

The site is located on Vindö, an island in the Stockholm archipelago, Sweden. Upon first glance the site appears a fairly typical archipelago plot with granite outcrops, pine trees and blueberry bushes but soon reveals it’s unusual dramatic topography presenting an exciting opportunity to the architect Max Holst as well as for the developer Strömma Projekt.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

The building stands on a ridge bordering a 10 m deep drop into a gorge. In which a number of magnificent trees, mostly pine but also some hardwood grow. On the sheltered terrace and in the house one finds the tops of these trees at eye level.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

The orientation of the ridge dictates the building’s form and the spatial subdivisions and the spatial emphasis is on the large living, dining and kitchen space, which leads onto to a large sheltered terrace towards south/east.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Children’s bedrooms are of a modest scale with a master bedroom located to the east. As a buffer between the living and sleeping areas, a bathroom and is located.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
Site plan – click for larger image

The hallway acts as a spacious playroom to the neighbouring the children’s rooms. The material palette is simple and essentially rooted in local building traditions.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
Floor plan – click for larger image

Tectonically, the house is composed on black concrete plinths and exposed timber rafters highlight the repetition of a 120mm module on which the construction is based. The only setback from this strict systematisation occurs in the bathroom where the room is simply not suited for these measurements.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
Section – click for larger image

Room dimensions fell easily into place, becoming an exercise in creating dynamic spaces with a constant connection to the sky and surrounding forest, all within this framework.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
North elevation – click for larger image
Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
East elevation – click for larger image
Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
South elevation – click for larger image
Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
West elevation – click for larger image

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New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Corten steel columns alternate with floor-to-ceiling glass to bring stripes of light and shadow into this funeral home outside Barcelona by Spanish firm Batlle i Riog Arquitectes (+ slideshow).

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Located west of the city in the town of Sant Joan Despí, the stark concrete building nestles against a hillside and was designed by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes with a sloping grass roof that appears as an extension of the landscape.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

At the front of the building, this roof pitches back up again to frame a long and narrow facade, where columns are arranged in two rows with a glazed perpendicular entrance in between.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

“The steel pillars generate a light gradient, establishing visual filters and protecting the interior from the direct sunlight,” explained the architects.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

The interior is divided into two sections that separate ceremonial activities from preparation areas. At the front, a succession of spaces lead guests from a spacious reception area into the main auditorium, then out via a private courtyard.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Each of these spaces features an assortment of raw materials that include stone floors, concrete ceilings and timber wall panels, as well as the vertical Corten elements.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Small plant-filled courtyards also intersperse the interiors and are surrounded by glazing to allow them to function as lightwells.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

“The materiality generated by the assortment of exposed structural element textures together with the natural light qualify and determine the atmospheres of each space, accompanying the visitors’ mourning at every turn,” added the architects.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

The rear spaces contain preparation areas where coffins can be housed before funerals take place.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Other funeral homes featured on Dezeen include a stone chapel with a sharply pointed gable in Germany and a whitewashed hall with a copper roof in Finland. See more memorial architecture »

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Photography is by Jordi Surroca.

Here’s a project description from Batlle i Riog Arquitectes:


New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí

The building integration on site parts from the adaptation to the existing topography, with a set of pitched roofs on the terrain. The vegetation treatment of part of these roofs pretends to fade with the adjacent green slopes and improve the vision of the ensemble from the perimeter streets, on a higher level. With this strategy, in addition, the apparent building volume is reduced, lowering the vision of the construction and increasing the green surfaces.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

The floor plan of the building, lays out an organisation in two areas clearly differentiated, by a public area composed by set of rooms designed to serve the users of the facility and a private area composed by the needed service rooms for the deceased preparation and the coffins movement between them. A system of patios completes the layout of the floor plan, these patios organise, rank and illuminate the spaces and establish filters between different ambiances.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

The structural system is composed of walls and reinforced concrete slabs formed with pinewood boards and Corten steel pillars made of flat bars. All these elements define the building image and character providing simplicity to the materiality of the piece. The materialisation is completed with natural stone pavements and wooden vertical facing producing interior warmth. The steel pillars generate a light gradient, establishing visual filters and protecting the interior from the direct sunlight.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes
Site plan – click for larger image

The materiality generated by the assortment of exposed structural element textures together with the natural light qualify and determinate the atmospheres of each space, accompanying the visitor’s mourning at every turn. In this way each space is illuminated by a specific light different from the rest. In essence, light and matter.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes
Floor and roof plan – click for larger image

Authors: Enric Batlle I Durany, Joan Roig Duran, Albert Gil Margalef, Architects
Collaborators: Miriam Aranda, Architect / Dolors Feu, Agricultural Engineer & Landscape Designer / Diana Calicó, Elisabeth Torregrosa, Technical Architects / Sj12, Albert Colomer, Installation Engineering / Static, Gerardo Rodríguez, Structural Engineering

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes
Site section – click for larger image

Builder: Vopi4
Surface: 700 Sqm
Location: Sant Joan Despí, Barcelona
Project & Execution Date: 2009-2011

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes
Cross section – click for larger image

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Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

Here are the first photographs of Zaha Hadid’s Library and Learning Centre at the Vienna University of Economics and Business, which opened last week in the city’s second district.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The library and learning centre is one of seven buildings that make up a new campus at the Vienna University of Economics and Business (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien), designed to accommodate 24,000 students and 1800 staff.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The most distinctive feature of Zaha Hadid’s 28,000-square-metre building is a large black volume that is perched over the roof and cantilevers out across a public square at the main entrance.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

This structure houses the main library, as well as function rooms and an elevated cafe, and is clad externally in Rieder glass fibre-reinforced concrete panels.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

To contrast, the rest of the building is finished in white panels and accommodates the non-public areas, including classrooms, an auditorium, workspaces and offices.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The facade is inclined at an angle of 35 degrees, allowing floorplates to increase in size towards the top of the building.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid Architects won a competition to design the library and learning centre in 2008. We recently featured an animation by London visualisation firm Neutral giving a tour of the building.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The architect has also recently completed the Innovation Tower at the Polytechnic University in Hong Kong and is finishing off an undulating cultural centre in Azerbaijan.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

See all our stories about Zaha Hadid »
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Photography is courtesy of Rieder.

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Luis de Garrido designs football-shaped eco-mansion for Lionel Messi

News: Spanish architect Luis de Garrido has designed a conceptual mansion that looks like a football for Argentine footballer Lionel Messi (+ slideshow).

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Lionel Messi

The One-Zero Eco-House designed by Luis de Garrido features a two-storey property shaped like a football. It is proposed for the Llavaneres Sant Andreu municipality – 36 kilometres north of Barcelona, Spain – and intends to reflect the interests and lifestyle requirements of FC Barcelona and Argentina footballer Lionel Messi.

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Leo Messi

From above, the building looks like a football with a hexagonal-shaped centre and six walls angled outwards from each point.

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Leo Messi

The property would be entered via a block at the edge of a rectangular plot and a path crosses a lawn leading up to the main house. A large pool surrounds the rear half of the building.

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Leo Messi

De Garrido’s renderings show how wooden decking would surround all sides of the property on the ground and first floors. Most of the roof would be covered in turf and a glass roof would cover the rear of the mansion.

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Leo Messi

The design forms part of the 33 BIP VIP (33 Architectural Birthday Presents for Very Important People) architectural research project to design conceptual eco-houses for 33 celebrities including Angelina Jolie, Barack Obama, Beyonce, Brad Pitt, James Cameron, Johnny Depp, Lady Gaga, Madonna, Mark Zuckerberg, Oprah Winfrey and Stephen Hawkins.

“The homes are designed specifically for each person and are completely personalised according to the information we have obtained from their life and career,” explained the designers.

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Leo Messi

The project is led by Luis de Garrido and managed by research centres National Association for Sustainable Architecture (ANAS) and the International Federation for Sustainable Architecture (IFSA).

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Lionel Messi
Plan – click for larger image

“These advanced homes should be able to be real, and therefore must be designed to fully meet the needs of each of the persons elected,” explained the designers. “At the same time [they] should serve as a reference for future generations, for different manifestations of a new paradigm in architecture, perfectly integrated into the natural ecosystem.”

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Lionel Messi
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

Luis de Garrido, known for his work in sustainability, has also designed conceptual celebrity mansions including an eye-shaped property with a central done for supermodel Naomi Campbell. He is a visiting professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and director of the Master in Sustainable Architecture in Spain.

One-Zero Eco-House by Luis de Garrido for Lionel Messi
First floor plan – click for larger image

Earlier today we also published a story on a concept for a transparent football that changes colour when it passes over the goal line.

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Images are courtesy of Luis de Garrido.

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