WDC Helsinki

Tuomas Toivonen’s creative take on “embedding design in life”
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Created by the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design, the World Design Capital biennial recognizes various cities around the globe for their successful efforts in urban revitalization, primarily accomplished through innovative design. The 2012 distinction goes to Helsinki—a city Monocle magazine dubbed “most liveable” in 2011—for its continued ability to tap the creative sector as a way of stimulating economic growth. The yearlong celebration will include more than 300 events and programs both in the capital and surrounding cities, including Espoo, Vantaa, Lahti and Kauniainen.

Numerous designers and leaders from Finland’s creative community will take part in the activities, which officially begins on New Year’s Eve with a celebration in Helsinki’s Senate Square before traveling to Milan, Berlin, London, Taipei, Tokyo and St. Petersburg. Offering a glimpse of what’s to come, NYC’s Museum of Arts and Design and Fab will each host a pop-up shop beginning today, stocking a fresh supply of classics and newly-developed Finnish designs. MAD shoppers will only have one week to pick up their favorite items, while the Fab sale will run through 21 November 2011.

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One of the bright young minds that WDC Helsinki will highlight is that of Tuomas Toivonen, an architect and musician known for conceptual writings and spatial installations. Toivonen, along with his Now Office co-founder Nene Tsuboi, will build a public sauna to champion Alvar Aalto’s 1925 manifesto on the need to revive sauna culture in Finland. Launching May 2012, the sauna is actually a self-initiated project they will not only design, but also construct, finance and run. On the blog chronicling its development, the duo explains that they imagine Kultuurisauna “as special social and architectural space, a combination of baths with a public space enabling cultural activity, production and exchange.”

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For those who won’t be able to make it to Finland to take part in the public sauna, Toivonen has also designed a limited edition T-shirt for the Fab pop-up ($36), which references Le Corbusier’s polemic take on modernist architecture and the importance for his contemporaries to see what surrounds them in order to truly solve a design problem. The simplified graphic was created specifically for the WDC, and perfectly sums up this year’s theme of “embedding design in life.”


Artist Retreat by 0 to 1

Artist Retreat by 0 to 1

Guest artists will be invited to live and work inside this shard-like timber hut.

Artist Retreat by 0 to 1

New York architects 0 to 1 designed the faceted retreat for the garden of an established fine artist in south Finland.

Artist Retreat by 0 to 1

One large triangular window will allow daylight into a workspace inside, while a second will frame the outline of a first-floor sleeping deck.

Artist Retreat by 0 to 1

The sloping walls and roof will converge at a point beyond the pavilion’s entrance to surround a narrow triangular terrace.

Artist Retreat by 0 to 1

Other popular Finnish projects on Dezeen include a whitewashed funeral chapel with a copper roof and a knife shop that displays blades against chunky wooden blockssee more from Finland here.

Here’s a short description from the architects:


Artist Retreat
Fiskars, Finland

Designed to be located on the property of a Finnish Fine Artist, this house is a live-work space for a guest artist. The form was generated from local climate, Finnish culture, and  functions / guidelines provided by the Artist.

The sectional shape is a quarter of an octagon. It increases in size from building front to back creating a utility cube with sleeping loft above at the higher end, a work space in the middle and an outdoor terrace at the lower end.


See also:

.

Long Studio by
Saunders Architecture
Welham Studio
by Mark Merer
The Dovecote Studio
by Haworth Tompkins

Igloo Hotel

Découverte de cet hôtel très suprenant avec un véritable village d’igloo basé à Kakslauttanen, en Finlande. Chaque igloo est équipée de verre afin de de contempler les aurores boréales et les d’étoiles. Construit à partir de verre thermique spécial, les 20 chambres sont chauffées.



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Sonic Seascape Terrace by Decoster-Taivalkoski, Haaslahti and Montes de Oca

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

When you stand inside one of these riverside pavilions in Turku, Finland, you can hear what’s going on beneath the water’s surface.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

Speakers embedded inside the walls of the two structures transmit the real-time recordings of underwater microphones, called hydrophones, positioned in the river.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

The grey clay-covered walls of the structures are constructed from bales of lake reed and are perforated by small holes through which the sounds escape.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

Media artist Hanna Haaslahti was responsible for the design of the pavilions, while sound artist Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski designed and realised the sound recording concepts alongside Alejandro Montes de Oca.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

Other interesting pavilions featured on Dezeen include a bright green spectator stand and a shelter made from cardboard hoopssee all our stories about pavilions here.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

Photography is by Hanna Haaslahti and Thomas Söderström.

Here is a more detailed description from the artists:


Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti & Alejandro Montes de Oca

Sonic Seascape Terrace is a site-specific project, which explores connections between the seascape and sounds emanating beneath it´s surface. Two terraces, belvederes, constructed on the shorelines of Turku city in Finland are accompanied with a realtime soundscape composition, distributed on the terrace from the hydrophones hidden in the nearby body of water. The speaker system was designed as an integral part of the architecture, making the terrace itself a resonating structure.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

Conceptual description

What is the correlation between underwater soundscape and the way the sea looks on the surface? Sound can travel many kilometres under water, so it´s noisy down there, though on a surface the sea appears as a calm and peaceful entity. When we talk about the sea, we tend to refer only to what´s happening on the surface level. But underneath is a secret world, which we know very little of.

The aim of the project is to build view-point terraces, belvederes, in a city with marine shorelines. From each terrace one can hear the real-time underwater soundscape of the seascape visible from that specific view-point. The view over the seascape is framed from the terrace to the place where a number of hydrophones (underwater microphones) are located, so that a viewer/listener standing at the terrace can link the seascape and the soundscape to each other.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

The terraces form an exploration into the interaction between the sea and the land, how the sea is reflecting human activities and how city sounds merge into the underwater soundscape. In the same time, it should sharpen our senses to make observations about our surrounding environment not only with our eyes, but also with our ears.

Soundscape studies and acoustic ecology form the scientific background of the project. Acoustic ecology is a rather new field of research dedicated to the study of the sound-based social interactions of living organisms. The composer and researcher R. Murray Schafer created the term soundscape in the 60`s in parallel to the term landscape. Soundscape refers to an acoustic environment in which listeners are immersed, it includes natural acoustic elements as well as those caused by human activities in a specific place of the landscape.

In our project the contradiction between the soundscape and the seascape should raise thoughts about the invisible changes happening under a naturally serene surface. Even if the seascape still looks harmonious and beautiful, its industrial soundscape prefigures something really different.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

General description

Lake reed is a traditional building material in Baltic countries. The eutrophication of Baltic Sea has spread it along the coasts of Finland and many are rethinking it´s cabablities as a sustainable building material for contemporary architecture. The LUMO centre (Centre for the natural building materials) of the Turku University of Applied Sciences, involved in the EU project called Promoting Natural Material Know-How assisted in building the terrace from lake reed.

Lake reed has excellent acoustic qualities, thus making it a suitable material for sonic structures. Both walls of the terrace has 20 minispeakers immersed inside the lake reed bales to diffuse the soundscape composition. The walls are plastered over with clay and little holes punctured in the inner walls for sound to reach listeners. All the technology is hidden from the listener. The clay wall is a comfortable surface to lean on  and listen to the sounds moving and vibrating inside the terrace.

The terrace is facing towards the origin of the soundscape. The surrounding sounds blend with the realtime composition distributed in the terrace because of it´s open structure.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

Technical description

Underwater sounds picked up by submerged hydrophones are digitized and sent with Internet audio streaming to computer running an Max/MSP application which analyzes, processes and organizes the signals into an ambi-sonic four-channel soundscape composition. Speaker systems built inside the walls of the terrace located on the shoreline, diffuse the real-time soundscape around the listeners.

Sonic Seascape Terrace by Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski, Hanna Haaslahti and Alejandro Montes de Oca

Project Team

Sound concept: Marianne Decoster-Taivalkoski
Visual concept: Hanna Haaslahti
Realtime composition and application design: Alejandro Montes de Oca

Location: Turku, Finland
Duration: 31.05.-1.9.2011

Produced by: Capsula (Curated Expeditions on the Baltic Sea) for the Turku European cultural capital 2011

In collaboration with:
The Centre for music & technology at Sibelius Academy
Turku University of Applied Sciences, Lumo center
BalticSeaNow.info
AVEK Audiovisual promotion Center of Finland
Arts Council of Finland


See also:

.

Packed
by Chen, Zausinger and Leidi
Trufa
by Anton García-Abril
The Cross-Gate
by Ivo Pavlik

Martiini shop by Suunnittelutoimisto Amerikka

Martiini shop by Amerikka

Leather-bound blades displayed against chunky wooden blocks adorn the walls of a Finnish knife shop in Helsinki by designers Suunnittelutoimisto Amerikka.

Martiini shop by Amerikka

The specialist shop sells furry animal hides and traditional Finnish knives named Puukos, which are crafted in Lapland by manufacturer Martiini.

Martiini shop by Amerikka

The knives are affixed by magnets and each block can be lifted to reveal storage behind.

Martiini shop by Amerikka

Elsewhere, mounted timber vases display bunches of knives as if they were flowers.

Martiini shop by Amerikka

Other interesting shops recently featured on Dezeen include a kiosk made from over 1000 copies of the New York Times and a clothes store with naked mannequins on the walls and ceiling – see all our stories about retail interiors.

Martiini shop by Amerikka

The following information is from the designers:


Martiini shop

The “Puukko” is a traditional Finnish knife; a crafted object and an everyday tool. Marttiini has manufactured knives in Lapland, Northern Finland since 1928.

The new Marttiini shop is situated in the heart of Helsinki, with Senate Square and the Cathedral seen from the window. The new shop combines Marttiini’s long tradition and history with contemporary design. The materials used in the shop; wood, metal and leather, are the same materials used to construct the knives. All details have been designed with functionality in mind, allowing this small space to display more than 200 different products. The new Marttiini shop is just like the “Puukko”: beautifully functional!

Shop design: Amerikka Design Office Ltd.
Shop opened: May 2011
Address: Aleksanterinkatu 28, Helsinki, Finland


See also:

.

Aktipis Flowershop
by Point Supreme
Shop&Show by
Tracey Neuls
Streetology by
Facet Studio

Extension to the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

Extension to the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

Spanish architects MX_SI have won a competition to design an extension to a Finnish museum of art with this proposal that features recessed zigzagging windows.

Extension of the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

The timber extension to the Serlachius Museum Gösta in Mänttä will be spread over two storeys to provide a foyer, a restaurant, offices, conference facilities, reception areas and 1000 square-metres of gallery space.

Extension of the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

The existing museum is contained within a manor house and will connect to the extension via a new corridor.

Extension of the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

Construction is scheduled to start in 2012 to target a spring 2014 opening.

Extension of the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

More stories about museums on Dezeen »
More projects in Finland on Dezeen »

The following details are from the architects:


The architectural studio MX_SI based in Barcelona, is the winner of the competition for the extension of the Gösta contemporary Art Museum in Finland.

579 entries, the largest competition on Finish history MX_SI architectural studio based in Barcelona, wihich are the authors for the Federico Garcia Lorca Cultural Center in Granada, will build the extension of the Museum Gösta for Contemporary Art in Mänttä. This competition has been the largest architectural tender in Finish history with 579 participants from 42 countries.

Extension of the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

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This international open competition was organised by the Serlachius Foundation supported by the Architecture Chamber of Finland SAFA, to extend the main building that originally was not planned as a museum. This new building, Serlachius Foundation will adequate their facilities in order to host large scale contemporary art travelling exhibitions as well as defining an appropriate space for their own collection.

The jury was integrated by musem experts and professional finish architects. It was unanimously decided last 22nd of June, to give the first prize to the project presented by Mara Partida, Boris Bezan and Héctor Mendoza. According to jury’s statements, the architecture solution proposed a fine understanding on existing features such as main building, site landscape and finish traditional and contemporary culture. The jury outstands the respect that new construction has with the place, without losing own up to date architecture expression. Some other values read by the jury are the harmony of new volume with landscape. It is an integrated body taking a clever advantage of the use of wood as a main façade material. Interior spaces develop a dialogue with the exterior enriching the expressive journey.

Construction work on the extension will begin in early 2012 and the new spaces will be opened to the public in spring 2014.

Extension of the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

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The Project

The site is understood as a green plateau where the manor’s monolithic figure stands imposingly along a landscape axis, sloping gently to the banks of Lake Melasjärvi. The strategy consists in placing the building out of the zone in between the manor, the plateau-park and the Taavetinsaari island, in mimicking the new building within the forest, and finally in respecting the recently renovated park, as well as the formal garden design. The new premises are located in parallel to the access, manor and garden axis, on the west side of the principal axis. It uses the parameters of topography and distance to accommodate the program. In this sense the Joenniemi Manor keeps being the dominant built structure of the area.

The location of the new entrance reinforces the existing spacious access yard as access plaza of the whole intervention. The outside spatial quality is brought inside the new building. The heart of the building – foyer and restaurant – have the best view towards the lake and the island similar to the existing house main areas. The simple horizontal body of the extension building gathers all main areas in one great plateau: entrance, foyer, connection and exhibitions which facilitates visitors’ orientation. The new building is organized by a spacious foyer, placed at the same level of the ground floor of the manor. This space obtains visual continuity between outside and inside by introducing incisions of landscape to the main building body. To allow flexibility of exhibitions layout, the structure of the building is part of the façade liberating the whole space. All walls in the exhibition zone can be used for exposing.

Extension of the Serlachius Museum Gösta by MX_SI

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The project as a densified abstract forest. The forest in the placement where the new building will be constructed is conceptually transformed in an abstract way of parallel frames. In one hand they define the overall geometry of the new building, but at the same time they also allow transversal permeability. The result is that the parallel pattern of the structural frames is maintained from outside and inside structuring the whole building. The use of wood is a reference to the local industry’s history.

Architect: MX_SI architectural studio. Marta Partida, Boris Bezan, Hector Mendoza
Collaborators: Oscar Fabian Espinosa, Olga Bombač
Site: Mäntta, Finland
Surface: 3.000 m2
Client : Serlachius Foundation


See also:

.

Museum extension by
Nieto Sobejano
Museum Extension
by Daniel Libeskind
Museum Extension
by Rafael Viñoly

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architects

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

Avanto Architects of Helsinki have designed this whitewashed funeral chapel with a copper roof in Vantaa, Finland.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

The building comprises three chapels of varying size and a bell tower.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

The building is a steel and in-situ concrete construction with a copper roof and slate flooring.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

The entrance path leads through a courtyard with a small pond to the foyer of the chapel.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

A continuous skylight follows the route of a visitor attending a funeral, through the building to the graveyard of the older adjacent church.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

The chapel is intended to last 200 years with materials chosen accordingly, including hand patinated copper.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

More by Avanto Architects on Dezeen »
More stories about worship on Dezeen »

The following is from the architects:


Chapel of St. Lawrence

The Vantaa Parish Union held an open architectural competition in the spring of 2003 for the design of a new chapel in the vicinity of the historic Church of St. Lawrence. The area has been classified as a nationally important cultural environment. The winning entry, out of 194 proposals, was “Polku” (“Path”) by Avanto Architects.

Context, Massing
The old stone church with its bell tower remain the dominant features in the landscape. The new chapel ties together different aspects of the area without emphasizing itself. The chapel connects with the graveyard, leaving the old buildings with their own boundaries and territories untouched. It delineates the northern boundary of the graveyard and hides the service yard behind its back. The chapel has been divided in smaller parts to adapt with the scale of the surroundings. The stacked stone walls of the cemetery are echoed in the design – a series of three chapels of different sizes are nested within orthogonal masonry walls. A new bell tower in a corner of the chapel completes the composition and leads the eye skyward.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

Structure, Materials, Lifespan

The building uses similar materials as the old structures in the area. The massiveness of the load bearing solid masonry walls balances changes in temperature and moisture. The lightly plastered and whitewashed walls are a bright, tranquil background for the events taking place in the chapel spaces. Apart from the walls, the building has a steel structure. The partition walls are in-situ cast white concrete and the roof is of patinated copper, like the roof of the church. The patina in all copper surfaces in the chapel has been added by hand. The ceilings and the glazed walls toward the graveyard in the chapels are covered with a patinated copper mesh; it functions as a screen between the outside and the spaces of the chapel. The mesh also decreases heat loads from sunshine. The low stone walls flanking the small gardens and courtyards use stone extracted from the site. The floors of public spaces are of slate.

The lifespan target for the chapel is two hundred years. The main structure will certifiably last that long and the natural materials used will age with dignity. A lifespan simulation was used as an aide for the design. An important factor in choosing the materials was locality in addition to longevity; and on-site building and an emphasis on craft were distinct features of the whole project. These ways of working ground the building in its surroundings and display the traces of handcraft.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

Functionality

The experience of the mourner was the basis for the design process. The funeral is a unique and taxing event, and for it to go well and without disturbance is of the utmost importance. The architecture of the chapel is designed to assist the mourner, giving space for grief. The people attending the funeral follow a route through a series of sacral spaces, punctuated by intermediate rooms – along the route there is a continuous skylight. The intermediate spaces prepare the visitors for the next phase of the funeral. It is very silent in the chapel; the acoustics and ventilation have been designed especially with this in mind.

The spaces are situated on two levels, the sacral spaces, two chapels and a space for urn burials, and their entrance and lobby spaces, are on the ground floor. In the lobby there is an entry to the space for giving farewell to the deceased, which is located in the basement. The staff rooms are in-between the public areas, on the ground floor and in the basement. During the proceedings, the passage through the spaces is unidirectional. The routes used by different groups of visitors never cross.

The developer was committed to achieving a building of lasting quality. There was ample time given for planning and realization – there was an active dialogue between the designers and the client. The staff commented on the plans by taking part in a work group focusing on functional aspects. The designers accompanied the staff members in their daily duties so as to understand the work processes better. A uniform whole was achieved by having the interiors, furniture, artifacts and textiles, as well as the cladding for the organs designed in the same office as the architecture. The design process was aided by several models and prototypes that were commissioned during the planning stage.

Chapel of St. Lawrence by Avanto Architect

Path

The chapel’s architecture is a depiction of the passage of a Christian soul from here to the hereafter. The route passes through the chapel, into the silent graveyard. The whitewashed masonry walls and a continuous skylight next to it lead from one space to the next, from the low and dark to the lofty and light.

We approach alongside the outer wall. The wall and the bell tower at its end speak of the earthbound journey and its ending. We turn the corner and, sheltered by an overhang, follow the wall, to a small courtyard – a small pond, with natural stones at its bottom. We enter a dimly lit lobby with a low ceiling, we can glimpse the entrance court and the old garden of the vicarage behind us. Here it is possible to stop for a moment and reflect on the experiences and life shared with the deceased.

We follow the skylight to the chapel. The chapel opens up, a high space terminating in the brightly lit junction of the masonry wall, where the deceased will be met by the mourners. The wall towards the graveyard is semi transparent, glazed with a patinated copper mesh on either side, a screen between this life and the hereafter. From the chapel we exit, under the cover of an overhang, through a small garden, to the graveyard. The path turns – but continues.

Art

An open competition was held in the fall of 2007 for art to be commissioned for the chapel. The competition was scheduled before the final construction documents were drafted, so that the art could be integrated as a seamless part of the architecture. Pertti kukkonen was awarded the first prize with his work “the Way of the cross”. Kukkonen was able to utilize the solid masonry walls with his work. In addition to the main pieces, the walls have been inlaid with “spirits” that shine through the light plaster surface. Pertti Kukkonen was responsible also for the demanding work of adding patina to the copper surfaces of the chapel.

Pekka Jylhä was awarded the second prize with his work “Sacred” – his sculptures of glass reflect light around them. The shared mission for both art and architecture is comforting the mourner.

Avanto Architects Ltd / Ville Hara and Anu Puustinen
Building type: Chapel
Competition: open Architecture Competition, 1st prize, 2003
Location: Pappilankuja 3, Vantaa, Finland
Year of completion: 2010
Gross Area: 1879 sqm
Total cost: 10 m€
Client: Vantaa Parish Union
User: Vantaa Parish Union
Developer: Vantaa Parish Union

Designers:

Architects:Avanto Architects Ltd / Ville Hara and Anu Puustinen (principal designer), Architects SAFA
Assistants: Felix Laitinen, student of Architecture; Tommi Tuokkola, Architect SAFA; Jonna Käppi, Architect ARB, SAFA; Piotr Gniewek, student of Architecture; Asami Naito, student of Architecture
Interior Designer: Avanto Architects Ltd / Kai Korhonen, Architect SAFA
Landscape Architect: Landscape Architects Byman Ruokonen Ltd / Eva Byman, Niina Strengell
Structural Design: R J Heiskanen Engineers Ltd / Kari Toitturi, Helena Lomperi
HVAC Design: Leo Maaskola Engineers Ltd / Jukka Sainio, Esa Leino
Electric Design: Veikko Vahvaselkä Engineers Ltd / Rauno Nyblom, Lassi Jalava
Lighting Design: Tülay Schakir
Acoustic Design: Akukon Ltd / Olli Salmensaari
Textile Design: Avanto Architects Ltd

Contractors

Prime contractor: Rakennuspartio Ltd
Electric contractor: Lassila & Tikanoja Ltd / Building Services / Electric Services
HVAC contractor: Sähköpeko Etelä-Suomi Ltd
Timber furniture contractor: Wooden Ltd
Metal furniture contractor: Selki-Asema Ltd
Metal mesh contractor: Inlook Ltd
Artists: Pertti Kukkonen, Pekka Jylhä
Organ constructor: Urkurakentamo Veikko Virtanen Ltd
Landcape contractor: Lemminkäinen Ltd and Suomen Graniittikeskus Ltd


See also:

.

Sunset Chapel by
Bunker Arquitectura
Kuokkala Church by
Hirvilammi & Luonti
Farewell Chapel by
OFIS Arhitekti

Artek 2011

Fixtures that put light first and other revelations from Finland’s design pioneers
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In 2010 Artek celebrated its 75th anniversary. This past week as part of Milan’s design festivities, the Finnish company made a strong statement positioning themselves with a confident eye toward the future, grounded by their design heritage as they head into their 76th year. Along with a new forward-thinking line of lighting fixtures called White (pictured above), Artek announced Open Archives, an online repository of images of Artek interiors, as well as the acquisition of the rights to produce Ilmari Tapiovaara’s furniture collection, a true icon of Northern European design. (See more images of the White collection in the gallery below.

artek2.jpg

In a private showcase at Galleria Giò Marconi, we asked Ville Kokkonen, Design Director of Artek, who also heads up White about the new series of lighting solutions. Consisting of four models, the line is the upshot of in-depth research on the use of light fixtures in domestic, office and public settings. “We have studied the effects of lack of lighting in the Northern Countries,” Kokkonen shared, “and this was the starting point for the achievement of the right intensity and quality of light that we wanted. We have also interviewed creative people in order to understand how light should correctly fill working environments.”

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As a result, the White light collection is utterly essential; the strict standards and quality requirements of the light determine the design of each object. Composed solely of wood and matte plexiglas, each box-like lamp has a pure, simplistic character. “We chose not to use LEDs, because they don’t produce the diffused and uniform light we were thinking about,” Kokkonen explained. “At the end, each one of our new lamps obtained a medical certification, since they meet all the necessary characteristics required by the Finnish health associations.”

Artek_Bright_White_1_reading.jpg

Another clever new project, Open Archives showcases past and present Artek interiors from around the world, from 1935 to modern-day. The site also functions as a community for Artek’s fans; images can be shared, tagged and freely used in blogs.


Four-Cornered Villa by Avanto Architects

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

Helsinki studio Avanto Architects have completed this house with four wings overlooking four distinct views in Virrat, Finland.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

Called Four-Cornered Villa, the house is stained black on the outside and clad with light wood inside.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

The lakeside building has no running water and draws power from solar cells.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

Photographs are by Anders Portman and Martin Sommerschield.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

The information below is from Avanto Architects:


The site is situated on a horse shoe shaped island and faces north and east. The cross like shape of this simple villa reaches towards four very different views.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

The space is open and defined at the same time. The exterior is treated all black and to contrast the interior is very light.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

Dark color makes the building disappear totally when seen from the lake. The roof is flat – there is some warm irony to the clichés of modern architecture.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

The building is insulated well and heated by wood only resulting in a carbon neutral building.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

There is no running water and the electricity is provided by the sun. Vegetables and herbs are cultivated on site and the Vaskivesi Lake is known as a good place to catch pike-perch.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

The simple and ascetic life at the countryside differs dramatically from the hectic city life and provides a possibility to live a life with a minimum impact to the nature.

Four-cornered villa by Avanto Architects

Four-cornered villa
Location: Virrat
Gross floor area:78 m2 + sauna 24m2
Budget: 150 000 €
Client: The architect
Structural design: Konstru Oy / Jorma Eskola
Electrical design: Virtain Sähkötyö Oy / Väinö Sipilä


See also:

.

Shingle House by
NORD Architecture
Prefabricated Nature
by MYCC
Trufa by Anton
García-Abril

PUU-BO by BIG

PUU-BO by BIG

Danish architects Bjarke Ingels Group have won a competition to design multistorey, prefabricated wooden housing for Kouvola, Finland.

PUU-BO by BIG

The E2 (Ecology + Economy) Timber Competition aims to prototype and showcase large-scale sustainable wooden construction that can be replicated worldwide.

PUU-BO by BIG

Entitled PUU-BO, BIG’s design comprises prefabricated modules that could be reconfigured to make different building typologies in different environments, from townhouses to skyscrapers.

PUU-BO by BIG

BIG won the competition in collaboration with Pirmin Jung Engineers for Wood Constructions, AOA Anttinen Oiva Architects, Vahanen Engineers and Stora Enso.

PUU-BO by BIG

More about BIG on Dezeen »

PUU-BO by BIG

The information below is from BIG:


BIG WINS THE INTERNATIONAL E2 (ECOLOGY + ECONOMY) TIMBER COMPETITION IN FINLAND

BIG (DK) + Pirmin Jung Engineers for Wood Constructions (CH) + AOA Anttinen Oiva Architects Ltd (FI) + Vahanen Engineers (FI) + Stora Enso (FI) is the winning team to design a prototype wooden construction system for a pilot project in Kouvola, Finland that will serve as a showcase for the sustainable use of timber construction worldwide.

PUU-BO by BIG

To meet the increasingly stringent environmental requirements of Finnish industrialized construction, the E2 Ecology & Economy timber development competition aims to find a conceptual design solution for large-scale production of wooden multi-story buildings. A 15.000 m2 prefabricated wooden development in Kouvola, Finland will serve as a showcase for replicable and locally adaptable cost- and energy efficient housing. BIG’s proposal PUU-BO is today announced as one of two winning entries of the two-staged invited competition totaling 26 international proposals, which included wood construction specialists Hermann Kaufmann from Austria and wood producer Finnforest among many others.

PUU-BO by BIG

“PUU-BO was the only proposal to truly acknowledge the aspiration of the E2 Competition: to look at the surroundings of the buildings and the spaces in between as potential opportunities for green development”, Jury, E2 (Ecology + Economy).

PUU-BO by BIG

Wood as construction material brings a double benefit: remarkably reduced emissions in its production and fabrication and im proved energy efficiency of the buildings where it is used. Currently, only a fragment of multi-story buildings utilize timber construction in Finland, a country known for its timber production. BIG’s PUU-BO is a comprehensive prefab solution designed to be both extremely flexible and materially efficient. PUU-BO’s conception as a system based on best practices and not predefined standard elements, gives it an embodied intelligence and ensures its viability for the future. The system’s easy adaptability to a variety of building typologies and uses, opens up new possibilities for prefabricated wood systems beyond the residential market – the very same elements in the residential pilot project could be used in an office building or even a wood skyscraper with no loss in material efficiency.

PUU-BO by BIG

“BIG’s point of direction was to design an innovative system that can fit any built environment for any type of use. Rather than developing a system based on current market demands, we wanted to make a system so flexible it can embrace as many building typologies and functionalities as possible. Instead of making the most carbon neutral system at present; we develop a system that evolves into the future. This way the system respects the ever increasing key drivers for sustainability while being competitive with other building systems”, Thomas Christoffersen, Partner-in-Charge, BIG.

PUU-BO by BIG

A site with generous views towards public green areas and the city’s river has been specifically selected for this pilot project by the city of Kouvola. The location allows the volume of the proposed building to push from one side to the other side to integrate the park and parking along the development. BIG’s proposal follows the contours of the landscape creating semi-private pockets directly connected to the park while the height of the building is manipulated to peak towards the open areas. The pockets are surrounded by lower housing creating an intimate space where all units are connected to the ground. The areas with the best views have the most floors and the most apartments while all roofs are partially accessed by the penthouse apartments and all units at ground floor have access to private gardens to both sides.

PUU-BO by BIG

“Le Corbusier’s DOMI-NO system was developed to industrialize construction with the new technologies of concrete structures, and improve living conditions for the many. Decades later concrete housing has become synonymous with boxy and boring. By crossbreeding state of the art building technology and wood construction PUU-BO provides endless variability with infinite renewability” Bjarke Ingels, Founder and Partner, BIG.

PUU-BO by BIG

BIG’s E2 proposal combines a variety of housing typologies – from 8-story apartment buildings to low townhouses with a shared courtyard space. Along both sides of the building a pedestrian path connects the private gardens to parking and park. The path blends with the existing network, integrating the building with the park, river and city. Playgrounds, sports fields, and a community sauna in the river are strategically placed in order to activate the site. All activities are available to both the PUU-BO inhabitants as well as the citizens of Kouvola.

PUU-BO by BIG

About E2

The city of Kouvola in cooperation with the Finnish Forest Industries association, the Finnish Forest Foundation, the Finnish Funding Agency for Technology and Innovation SITRA, KSS-Energia Oy and the Regional Council of Kymenlaakso aims at fostering new solu tions for industrial production of wooden multi-story buildings through the launch of E2 Timber Development Competition and a future Centre of Competence in Timber Construction, “Wood-Inno”. The concept competition is expected to offer energy efficient solutions which reduce the carbon foot print, and could help Finland to take leadership in the field of timber construction worldwide.

PUU-BO by BIG

About BIG

BIG, founded in 2005 by Bjarke Ingels, is an architectural office currently involved in a large number of projects throughout Europe, Asia and North America. Based in Copenhagen, Denmark and with a newly opened office in New York, USA the office is led by six Design Partners, including Bjarke Ingels, Andreas Klok Pedersen, Finn Norkjaer, Thomas Christoffersen, Jakob Lange, David Zahle and two Management Associate Partners, Sheela Maini Sogaard and Kai-Uwe Bergmann. BIG’s architecture emerges out of a careful analysis of how contemporary life constantly evolves and changes, not least due to the influence of multicultural exchange, global economic flows and communication technologies that together require new ways of architectural and urban organization.

About Pirmin Jung

PIRMIN JUNG Ingenieure für Holzbau AG is a leading engineering specialist for multiple-storey timber constructions. For the past 15 years, Pirmin has worked closely with designers and architects, creating efficient sustainable and long-lasting wooden solutions worldwide.

PUU-BO by BIG

E2 INFORMATION

Name: E2 Ecology and Economy
Program: Housing
Type: Prequalified Competition
Size: 15,000m2, 8 storey prefabricated wood construction
Client: City of Kouvola, Finland
Collaborators: AOA, Pirmin Jung Holzbauingenieur, Vahanen, Stora Enso
Location: Kouvola, Finland

Partner in Charge: Bjarke Ingels, Thomas Christoffersen
Project Leader: Brian Yang
Team: Krista Meskanen, Jelena Vucic, Alina Tamosiunaite, Alessandro Ronfini, Cecilia Ho, Elisha Nathoo, Sunming Lee, Long Zhuo, Mads Bjorn Christiansen


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