Urn en Vogue

What’s the deal with archetypical urns looking so drab? Friends, if you’re reading this, please make sure my ashes end up in something a little sexier! Like the Urnel by Formboten-  it’s a minimal and modern approach to the outdated object for people who want to be stylish even after they’ve passed! Put me in the black one, k, thnx.

Designer: Formboten


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(Urn en Vogue was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Death Valley Dreamlapse

Sunchaser Pictures nous propose de découvrir avec cette vidéo un timelapse incroyable du ciel depuis les dunes Eureka dans le Death Valley National Park. Cette vidéo, tournée au Canon 5D et 7D et montée sur la musique de Moby « Stay Down », a été réalisée la nuit du 13 décembre 2012.

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Malaria Illustration

Coup de coeur pour Edson Oda qui a réalisé ce magnifique court-métrage mélangeant avec talent illustrations, origamis, kirigamis, timelapses et d’autres techniques pour livrer un rendu unique. Appelée « Malaria », cette vidéo narre l’histoire de Fabiano, un jeune mercenaire. L’ensemble est à découvrir dans la suite en vidéo.

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Commemoration

Memories preserved in the physical form by UK design grad Greg Smith

Commemoration

Commemoration, a range of poetic capsules designed by recent Kingston University grad Greg Smith, preserves nostalgia in a tangible realm. Smith’s elegantly crafted airtight vessels “preserve traces of personal scents to trigger memories” after a person has passed away. The secular series not only allows for greater personal sentiment,…

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Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

A sharply pointed gable rises above the walls of this stone funeral chapel in a small German town by Bayer & Strobel Architekten (+ slideshow).

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

The triangular profile frames the interior of a double-height funeral hall, which is lit from above by a long narrow skylight.

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

“To do justice to its significance within the cemetery complex, the funeral is clearly marked with a gabled roof,” said architect Peter Strobel. “This creates an interior that feels dignified and solemn as well as simple and appropriate to its purpose.”

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Glass walls allow guests to look out from the hall to two private courtyards, which are enclosed behind the stone facade of the building.

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Strobel explained how the walls “block off the cemetery from the street, enclosing it as a place of peace and contemplation.”

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Other rooms in the building are arranged in a single block that runs alongside the chapel, providing a series of smaller meeting rooms and waiting areas.

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Other memorial buildings we’ve featured include a boulder-shaped mausoleum in Mexico and a chapel with a copper roof in Finland.

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

See more chapels on Dezeen »

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Photography is by the architects.

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Project Details:

Competition: 10/2008 – Bayer & Strobel Architekten with jbbug Landschaftsarchitekten
Project start: 06/2009

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Start of construction: 01/2011
Completion: 05/2012

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Client: Stadt Ingelheim am Rhein
Architect: Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Co-worker: Christian Köhler
Landscape architect: jbbug Johannes Böttger Büro Urbane Gestalt

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Structural engineer: Ingenieur-Gesellschaft Tragwerk Angnes + Rohde mbH
Mechanical services: Planungsbüro Stoffel

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Cross section one – click above for larger image

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Cross section two  – click above for larger image

Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim by Bayer & Strobel Architekten

Long section – click above for larger image

The post Funeral Chapel in Ingelheim Frei-Weinheim
by Bayer & Strobel Architekten
appeared first on Dezeen.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

This crematorium in Seoul by Korean firm HAEAHN Architecture folds up from the landscape and curls around a peaceful courtyard and pool of water.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Gardens and ponds run alongside the two-storey building, while grass and plants cover the entire roof.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Visitors enter beneath a sheltered canopy, before following a procession through the building that trails around the courtyard and ends at one of the gardens.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Skylights bring natural light into the building from above and are reflected in the polished marble floors.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

We’ve previously featured a few crematoriums, including one with fortress-like walls and dozens of square windows.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Photography is by Park Youngchae.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Seoul Memorial Park

Secluded by mountain hills from a bustling highway gateway, Seoul Memorial Park rests in a serene valley area of the Woo-Myun Mountain on the outskirts of Seoul, South Korea. Seoul Memorial Park is a crematorium constructed in harmony with the natural terrain of the site, which previously lent calming scenic views to meditative passing-by hikers, and is now converted to a sanctuary for solemn rituals concluding life’s journeys.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Canvas for Land Art

To overcome the unwelcomed response from the community, this crematorium was sought to be a “non-erected” building. Instead, Seoul Memorial Park emerges as a form of “land art” sculpted into the existing topography with a flowing array of architectural forms and motifs. Concaved at the center of the Park, lies a courtyard encompassed by a series of ritual spaces devoted to separate functions.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Site plan – click above for larger image

These spatial layers bordering the courtyard resonate from a distance with the surrounding mountain trails and ridges. The 2-storey high crematorium facility configured in the curvilinear belt along the courtyard has roof structures linked in the way flower petals pinwheel one another, punctuated by a reflective pool at the very heart of the courtyard.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Comfort in the Final Journey

Families in bereavement take the final journey of parting as they encircle the courtyard along a path reminiscent of spiritual spaces with vaulted ceilings and indirect lighting. Towards the cremation alcove, the ceiling rises drastically as a clearstory above a triforum. Upon completion of the path, a meandering garden comforts the bereft.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

East elevation – click above for larger image

As the water from the mountain flows down and gives life to the garden, one might be reminded of the transfiguration of sorrows in praise of the harmony in nature. The garden shimmers with sunlight, whispers with snowfalls, and dances with spring rains. Season by season, tranquility is discovered and the spirit is renewed. Just as nature was dissolved into a building to rest in the valley, Seoul Memorial Park was embodied in a piece of land art to celebrate life and transfigure sorrows.

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

North elevation – click above for larger image

Date of Completion: 2012
Site Area: 36,000 m2
GFA: 18,000 m2
Client: Seoul Municipal Facilities Management Corporation

Seoul Memorial Park by HAEAHN Architecture

West elevation – click above for larger image

2009 winning competition entry and 2012 built project by HAEAHN architecture.

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by HAEAHN Architecture
appeared first on Dezeen.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Overlapping walls of curving concrete encase this funeral chapel in Graz by Austrian architects Hofrichter-Ritter.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

The three walls never meet, but are connected to one another by panels of glazing that denote entrances at the front and back.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

The chapel of rest is at the centre of the building and can seat up to 100 guests at a time, although the glazed facade can also be opened up to accomodate larger parties.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

The middle concrete wall curls around the end of this hall to screen views out the cemetery beyond.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Ancillary rooms are wrapped around the eastern side of the building.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

We’ve featured a few concrete church buildings in recent months, including one lined with crushed volcanic rocks. See all our stories about buildings for worship here.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Photography is by Karl-Heinz Putz.

Here’s a project description from Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten:


“Father, into your hands I commend my spirit” (Luke 23:46)

The chapel of rest for the Steinfeld cemetery is designed in the form of two curving formwork elements made of reinforced concrete and appearing as two carefully receptive hands. It is the centrepiece of the redesigned Cemetery Centre which was begun by the municipal parish of Graz under episcopal vicar Dr Heinrich Schnuderl, continued by Christian Leibnitz, the new municipal parish provost, and finally built to a design by Hofrichter-Ritter Architects in 2011.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

From the perspective of urban development the building site had become a peripheral location due to the construction of the new, exclusively pedestrian tunnel underneath the railway line. Upgrading the site and, as a result, the Steinfeld cemetery was a matter of importance for Graz’s urban planners. Consequently, the cemetery has regained its significance as a public space and park.

A new concept for taking final leave of deceased loved ones has been developed in dignified and pleasant surroundings:
1. The chapel of rest serves as a chapel of rest and place of final blessing in one.
2. After the farewell ceremony the deceased is accompanied in a funeral procession through a separate entrance out of the building to the burial ground.
3. Due to increased demand on the part of the bereaved members of the family, technical multimedia facilities enable the farewell ceremony to be arranged in a highly individual way, if so required.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Depending on the particular choice of seating arrangement, the chapel of rest can accommodate up to about 100 people. In special cases larger funerals can also be held by opening up the northern glass wall and by using the spacious dimensions of the open forecourt. Cultural events may also take place at this site. Vital ancillary and service rooms have been positioned in the eastern part of the hall to facilitate smooth operations at the cemetery. These rooms are encompassed by a wall which runs along the length of the road and also acts as a necessary noise barrier to the Südbahn railway line. To the south, the wall goes on to define a green area with a columbarium grove and wall and with urn graves. Amenities such as a florist, stonemason, phone box and a public toilet are also situated right at the forecourt.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

The chapel of rest:

The area for the farewell ceremony is regarded as the key space: the central location, size and above all the height of the room makes it the heart of the service centre. This space is used in three phases. These can be staged differently, depending on how the room has been arranged, especially with regard to the openings and lighting effects. The sequence is as follows: laying out – farewell – accompaniment of the deceased to the burial ground. An approx. 150 m² chapel of rest, surrounded by two shell-like walls (see ground plan) with a ceiling height of about 4.80-5.0 m, forms the main structural element of the building. An overlap between the two shells hides the view of the exit to the columbarium grove and cemetery grounds.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Ancillary rooms:

The ancillary rooms used for running all of the cemetery’s operations and arranging funerals are joined to one side of the chapel of rest. They consist of the rooms required for the funeral (lounge, preparation, work room, store room and frigidarium), for the priest and for the cemetery’s administrative staff. These rooms cover a total area of about 120 m². The outer wall of the ancillary rooms described above is formed by the “new cemetery wall”.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Cemetery wall:

The intention is to build a new cemetery wall flanking the ancillary rooms and the new columbarium grove. Much of it will form the outer wall of the ancillary rooms. Made of white concrete, this wall features different slants: where it performs a space-enclosing function, the wall slants towards the building; where it has the sole function of a “boundary wall” it slants away from the site (cf. photo of model). A second, relatively small structure has also been included in the overall design; it accommodates two small business premises and a public toilet.

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Time sequence:

Start of planning: May/June 2010
Completion period: November 2010 – November 2011

Chapel of Rest in Graz by Hofrichter-Ritter Architekten

Layout review:

Chapel of rest: approx. 150 m²
Ancillary rooms: approx. 120 m²
Sheltered area at the front: approx. 40 m²
Length of the new cemetery wall: approx. 75 m² (height varies from approx. 2.00 to 3.50 m)
Columbarium grove / park-like area: approx. 550 m²
Paved forecourt: approx. 500 m²

The Boundaries of Life and Death

The Boundaries of Life and Death est une vidéo d’animation magnifique pensée par Saskia Kretzschmann pour un projet d’étude à l’Anhalt University of Applied Science. Basée sur une citation d’Edgar Allan Poe sur la frontière entre la vie et la mort, voici une création splendide.



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Crematorium in Kėdainiai byArchitektu Biuras G.Natkevicius ir Partneriai

Slideshow: dozens of square windows are scattered across the facade of this crematorium in Lithuania with fortress-like concrete walls.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Designed by Lithuanian studio Architektu Biuras G.Natkevicius ir Partneriai, the single-storey building is located on an industrial site alongside sugar mills and fertiliser factories.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

One cluster of windows reveals the location of a private courtyard behind the perimeter wall, which also parts in two places to create entrances.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Interior surfaces are finished in materials with muted colours including concrete, glass and white plaster to maintain a sombre mood.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

See more stories relating to funerals and memorials here.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Photography is by G.Česonis.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Crematorium in Kėdainiai

This is the first crematorium in Lithuania. The idea to build a crematorium was born in the interwar period, but at that time only furnace to reduce medical waste in Kaunas hospital was built. Increasing cremation traditions Lithunians use cremation services in Latvia and Poland.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

To make a path for the first crematorium in Lithuania wasn’t easy. Despite the big enthusiasm, the catholic mind and political hypocrisy, the lack and imperfections of environmental and other laws were overcome only in 2011. The owners of Kedainiai crematorium, doctor and environmentalist, showed the strength.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Building site- industrial town Kėdainiai with 31000 inhabitants in the center of Lithuania. The area for the building was chosen in industrial park. New building is surrounded by a chaotic, unaesthetical industry: sugar mills, fertilizer factories with smoky chimneys. So the surroundings don’t even have a smell of sacred place.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

At the beginning of design process we analyzed the experience of other countries: inspiring examples of crematoriums such as Treptow crematorium in Berlin, Dresden crematorium and crematorium designed by Toyo Ito in Japan, Gifu. These examples were impressive, large monumental buildings with inspiring scenario however crematorium in Kedainiai- small building of 770 m2 and there were almost no place to create sacred script.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Unaesthetical industrial environment provoked to create minimalistic and even ascetic scenario. It is one storey concrete building which external and internal quality and unity was created with concrete surfaces. In order to distance itself from the industrial environment the building was designed closed like a human introvert. Even the chimney, which cause bad feelings, is hidden in the volume of building. The main goal of the script- to create the inner Japanese style courtyard with a growing pendulum elm before the main entrance. Yard creates an intimate space, the accumulation zone before entering the building. Being inside the yard visually expands the space. It creates like an emotional filter to reduce human’s experience of stress.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Crematorium interior scenario: courtyard- lobby with resting area- two final disposition halls- cremation hall, cremation equipment room with chimney. The interior is created with four surfaces: concrete, wood veneer, glass with aluminum and white plaster. The ascetic inside allows families to concentrate on a solemnly sad hour with no interference of a colors and details. Every man and his face become very important part of the interior.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Three levels of modern cremation and exhaust air cleaning equipment, conforming to the strictest environments requirements was produced by known German firm IFZW. The building is fully equipped for two line cremation.

Crematorium in Kėdainiai by Architektu Biuras

Location: Metalistų st., Kėdainiai, Lithuania
Completed: 2011
Building area: 775 m2
Architects: G.Natkevičius, A.Rimšelis
Structural engineering: JSC CONSTR, Adomas Sabaliauskas/ JSC KONSTRUKTORIŲ CECHAS, Kęstutis Matijošaitis
Lighting: PROMODUS IO

Brush with Death

Le studio Corridor Digital propose dans cette vidéo “Brush With Death” d’opposer avec dynamisme un ange du graffiti face à la mort dans un combat entre le blanc et le noir. Ce court-métrage de qualité use avec intelligence du graffiti pour mettre en scène ce duel. A découvrir dans la suite.



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