Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Hong Kong’s new design institute by French architects Coldefy & Associés, Architectes Urbanistes features a glazed box raised seven storeys above the ground on four lattice-steel towers that rest on a sloping, grass-covered podium.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The institute will educate up to 4,000 students. CAAU won the project at a competition held in 2006.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The institute, which opened in November last year, has an urban park on top while the podium conceals four auditoriums, a cafe, a sports hall, a gallery and a flexible event space.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

A 6om escalator ascends from street level to the suspended box. More projects in Hong Kong on Dezeen »

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Photography is by Sergio Pirrone.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The following information is from the architects:


Hong Kong Design Institute

The Hong Kong Institute of Design project was won at the end of 2006 by Coldefy & Associés, Architectes Urbanistes / CAAU, winners of the two stage international competition in which 162 teams from 23 countries took part. The CAAU studio was entrusted with the task of designing the project with architectural project management of the site directed by its Hong Kong partner, P&T Group. Intended to welcome 4, 000 students of artistic and multimedia disciplines in around 42, 000 m², the HKDI is commissioned by the Vocational Training Council Hong Kong. The HKDI is the first major facility built in Hong Kong by a French architect.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

2006, the competition

Thomas Coldefy and Isabel Van Haute, equipped with solid international experience, decided at the beginning of 2006 to take part in the international competition for the building of the Hong Kong Institute of Design. One hundred and sixty two teams submitted entries to the competition, the two architects were selected in August 2006 from five teams invited to take part in the second phase. They then went to Hong Kong, to collaborate with local partners architect, engineers, and a quantity surveyor partner according to the rules of the competition. They are named as winners in November 2006 by the international jury which included in particular, the American architect, Richard Meier.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Thomas Coldefy and Isabel Van Haute move to Hong Kong for five months at the beginning of 2007 to develop the project on site, to set up the team and to speak with the partners and clients and to immerse themselves in the spirit of the location.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Presented to the Hong Kong community and to future users, the project seduces them with its answer which is welltuned to educational needs, solicitous of the environment and local context, but also bold, ambitious and very open to the outside. In autumn 2008, work starts on the site after 18 months of project development led on site by the CAAU practice. And eighteen months later the HKDI – 42, 000 m² – is delivered. The first students take the giant, mechanical escalator at the beginning of the academic year in September 2010. This creation merited Thomas Coldefy and Isabel van Haute the “40 under 40″ prize, organised by the European Centre for Architecture, Art Design and Urban Studies and the Chicago Athenaeum.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The urban context

The building is located in the Tiu Keng Leng area, to the north east of Hong Kong Island, in the Sai Kung district, adjacent to the Tseung Kwan O area and Junk Bay. The area is served by the metro, on the Tseung Kwan O line, 20 minutes from HK Central, and also has a bus station. Although activity there is mainly residential and commercial, nature is also very much present for the site is surrounded by green hills and the view over Junk Bay is everywhere.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The building, located in the heart of the area, may provide the community with a meeting place by making its sports areas and auditoriums available; at the same time, it will bring an energy to the social life of the area by the presence of 4, 000 students within the campus, the numerous exhibitions and activities organised around the urban space it has created.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The project offers spatial reinterpretation of its built-up city context, where social interactions are teeming in the various bases of the buildings whereas they disappear vertically; the extra height provided by one part of the programme allows one to envisage interactions on different levels and creates new connections with the ground.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The architectural project

Metaphor for creativity about to burst forth, the “Blank Sheet” expresses the project’s intentions : bringing together and then presenting the multidiscipline nature and targets of the future Institute of Design. In concrete, glass and steel, its radical architecture, light and transparent, invites one to reflect on the combination of multiple and opposing situations : introversion and extroversion, modesty and exhibition, exclusivity and wide accessibility, micro and macro city, classicism and experimentation …

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Each functional element, first decomposed, amalgamates and interpenetrates or cuts itself off, by offering the project an immediate clarity from the outside which is very resonant in the city. The flexible and evolutionary plan allows one to envisage future liaisons with the neighbouring campus, LWL. The base of the building, the giant “ urban lounge “ favours meetings and exchanges, whilst taking advantage of internal and external green spaces and views of the countryside, thus fulfilling the liaison with the city.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The podium, whose gentle slope stands 7m below the King Ling Road, designed as a landscaped extrusion of the ground, directly linked to the urban environment on two levels – a common space and at the same time an external gallery – is characteristic of Hong Kong infrastructures. Open, sheltered by the platform above, it can host multiple events. The podium is made up of four auditoriums, a café, a space for exchanges with the design industry, a sports hall and an exhibition hall. For the roof, an urban park and sports grounds are available to the students and visitors from nearby. The large auditorium, with capacity for 700 seats, is intended to host conferences, seminars or classical music concerts, but also more recreational activities, fashion shows, pop music concerts, contemporary dance spectacles.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

An aerial platform

Covered in glass which is screen printed white, the immaculate and minimal volume of the platform, “like “an aerial city”, floats above the towers. It groups together the library, school administration offices as well as various related spaces. Its landscaped roof is accessible during exceptional events. The towers are at once the soul of the Institute, its structure and its vertical distribution. They express the diversity and the specific nature of the disciplines represented in the Design Institute. Their appearance accentuates the platform’s immateriality, a poetic sensation and reflection of a creative environment. This overall composition, emerging from the interpenetration of interlinked elements, defines the Institute as a timeless building and unveils its ambition of synergy, of a cutting edge school, of publicity and interactivity, destined to become a bright beacon in the city.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The materials

Concrete, glass and steel, three classic materials are implemented for a radical architectural process, a building of a different age reduced to its fundamental functions. The steel, processed into a white trellis, is used as a structural skin for both the inside of the platform and the outside of the towers. The glass of the platform gives it great permeability which strengthens the sensation of tension between the architectural elements. The structural cement of the podium is combined with glazed facades to exceed mere functionality and create a strong visual and spatial impact.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The construction system

The overall stability of the towers is ensured by a vertical steel trellis structure called “diagrid”, equipped with a conventional beam-slab floor system in reinforced concrete. This “diagrid” system in steel offers excellent lateral rigidity supporting both the floating platform and the framework of the escalator which spans a length of 60m. HKDI is a pioneering project in Hong Kong, due to the choice of a peripheral steel trellis structural system.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

An innovative structure in composite reinforced concrete /steel trellis – with upper frameworks which are pre-stressed and post-stressed, diagonal beams in steel and lower frameworks in reinforced concrete – has been introduced and developed in order to support the floating platform which spans an area of 100 m x 100 m. The composite trellises are either simply supported, or placed overhanging from the towers in steel trelliswork. Uniformly distributed on the floating platform in two orthogonal directions, they are used to support the beam-slab floor system in reinforced concrete.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

This composite structure not only provides the floating platform with rigidity and sufficient resistance, it also meant construction costs could be optimised, in so far as the budget set by the client was not exceeded. The implementation of the project also required that the architects design a 60 m long escalator structure – the longest escalator in Hong Kong – supported by a three-dimensional steel structure without any immediate support. Over and above the general design of the infrastructure work, the dynamic analysis carried out meant there could be a guarantee that thevibrations caused by the escalator engines do not cause discomfort to users. Independently of the design, the ability to construct the floating platform has been, from the initial creative stage, one of the major concerns.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Sufficient tests were carried out in order to ensure that the proposed structure would be built without any risk and within a reasonable timeframe. Several construction methods have been researched, including preassembly of the main frame of the floating platform on the ground and then having it elevated into final position using heavy lifting appliances.  After assessing risks, difficulty and costs linked to construction in this way, the in situ manufacturing method with complex on site assembly procedures was adopted.  Finally, to reduce on site preassembly work to a minimum, the majority of secondary structural elements of the floatingplatform were built after completion of the main structures and removal of the scaffolding which supported them.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Technical

Programme: 4 departments for the four major disciplines taught :

  • Department of Design,
  • Department of Fashion and Textile,
  • Department of Printing and Digital Media,
  • Department of Multimedia and Internet Technology.

Competition: Prize winning project, 2006
Client: Vocational Training Council Hong Kong
– Architect: CAAU / Coldefy & Associes Architectes Urbanistes
Project leaders Thomas Coldefy + Isabel van Haute
– Associate architects: P & T Group Hong-Kong
Structural Engineers: ARUP Hong Kong
MEP Engineers: PBA Hong Kong
Landscape architect: ACLA Hong Kong
Acoustician: SHEN, MILSOM & WILKE Hong Kong
Cost: Estimated total for works : 78, 212, 112 € excl tax
Area: 42 000 sq m
Schedule: Start of work October 2008
Delivery: September 2010
Official Opening: 25 November 2010


See also:

.

Institute of Natural History
by Arkís
French Pavilion by
Jacques Ferrier
IPost Building by
studiobv36

Doomsday by Kacey Wong

Hong Kong artist and designer Kacey Wong has designed another topical robot-shaped survival suit, this time intended to protect people from radiation leaking from nuclear power stations.

Designed for one person and made of lead, the suit serves as a mobile home that unfolds to create a bed and features solar panels to power electrical devices the inhabitant may need during radiation alerts.

Previous robot-like mobile homes by Wong include this one designed for rich people made homeless by the credit crunch and another that doubles as an office for homeless people.

Wong also designed a tiny floating house that measures just 1.2 metres.

Here’s some text from Wong:


Doomsday

Natural and man-made disasters killed tens of thousands of people and many more lost their home, Hong Kong being much closer to the Daya Bay Nuclear Power Station than to the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant, maybe it is about time to reflect and address the potential risk and hazard produced by nuclear energy.

Doomsday is an anti-nuclear radiation mobile living unit made of lead panels for one person, when lay flat on the ground the four solar panels could generate 15 volts of electricity for small electronic appliances. People often have blind faith towards the machine and think they could resolve all of nature’s problems.

Unfortunately, this time our machines turned around and destroyed the most important life supplies in nature, polluting water, food, and the air.


See also:

.

Famiglia Grande
by Kacey Wong
Robox by Fabio
Novembre
Tin Man No. 11
by Kacey Wong

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Photographer Manuel Alvarez Diestro has sent us these photographs documenting growing high-rise cities in Asia.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above and top: Busan, South Korea

The Natural series illustrates high-rise buildings situated on city peripheries in China, South Korea, Hong Kong and Japan.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Busan, South Korea

Each photograph depicts the contrasts between the large scale urban developments and the surrounding landscapes.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Busan, South Korea

More photography stories on Dezeen »

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Busan, South Korea

Below is some more text explanation from the photographer:


As a visual artist using photography as medium to challenge our appreciation of cities could not resist to the possibility of documenting my perspective of the Asian Metropolis nowadays.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Hiroshima, Japan

In the peripheries of Bejing, Busan, Hiroshima, Bangkok, Hong Kong, Fukuoka, Seoul or Chongqing I discovered the multiple relations of the growing mega city and its surroundings. Somehow, I witnessed the confrontation between nature and the imposing satellite towns.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Hong Kong

In these dehumanized landscapes I pretended to unveil the beauty that unfolds in the city limits of Asia’s new towns.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Hong Kong

At the end, as I did with other photographic works I wished to portray the current changes in the world’s metropolis.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Hong Kong

I truly believe that cities transform with the passage of time same as human beings.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Hong Kong

The more aware we are of these changes and the fragil environments that they generate the more we will be capable of understanding ourselves.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Hong Kong

While living in Cairo, Egypt I decided to travel to those Asian cities with a large amount of city developments and potentially vertical.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Chongqing, China

My eyes were too accommodated in the horizontal new towns in the desert.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Chongqing, China

I needed to challenge myself and search for new towns with a heavy concentration of structures in the city outskirts.

Above: Chongqing, China

At a first stage I selected Chongqing, Beijing, and Hong Kong. In a second trip I have traveled to South Korea, followed by Japan and later Thailand, and Malaysia. Previously I photographed other cities such as Manila, Macau, or Taipei.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Chongqing, China

All the images were captured in an unplanned way and under the effects of the jet lag. I normally walked for hours in the margins where the metropolis meets the wilderness.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Chongqing, China

Once in Hong Kong I even walked from the airport to the city and experienced the suburbs at a first hand. My strategy was to take any form of public transportation which would take me to the last station. From there, I got lost with the camera in purpose with no map or GPS. For the coming days I would cover the rest of the stations until I covered the city perimeter.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Chongqing, China

This series of photographs that I entitled “Natural” are a product of pure enjoyment and unpredictable visual challenge.

Natural by Manuel Alvarez Diestro

Above: Chongqing, China


See also:

.

Heygate Abstracted
by Simon Kennedy
Shophouses 4 x 8 m
by Peter Nitsch
Burj Khalifa
by SOM

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

OMA have completed this office interior in Hong Kong for management consultancy McKinsey & Company.

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

The reception area is finished in timber, with tree patterns carved into the walls.

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

The open-plan office has desks interspersed with glass telephone booths that glow either orange or red, depending on whether or not they are vacant.

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

Photography is by Philippe Ruault.

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

More stories about OMA on Dezeen »

The following details are from OMA:


McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office

The design by OMA for the new McKinsey & Company Hong Kong office caters to the consulting firm’s need for a more intimate space that offers a greater sense of collaboration and community. McKinsey confronted OMA with a design question: How to rethink their work space in a way that is innovative and enhances the McKinsey experience?

The new office plan draws inspiration from the black bands on a universal barcode. Different functional spaces are organized in a set of horizontal bands arranged across the office. This design deviates from the traditional corporate office by emphasizing openness yet allowing for confidentiality where needed. Each band respectively accommodates rooms for partners, research teams, staff and clients. Rooms are no longer isolated cubicles solely occupied by one person, but rather a space that different staff members can share depending on their needs. Double glazed glass walls enhance the openness of the office while providing the levels of privacy that the client needs.

The band above the curved bay overlooking prosperous Central employs an open plan for both traveling consultants and some of the full time Hong Kong staff. The traveling consultant can choose where to sit when in town, while Hong Kong based staff have permanent seating. Flexible seating encourages efficient utilization of office space while accommodating the needs of a highly mobile consulting staff. The openness of the area also encourages interaction among the staff, echoing the spirit of teamwork that is central to how McKinsey works internally, as well as with clients.

The central band, with common areas for staff of all levels, is dedicated to promoting interaction between all staff members and cultivating a stronger sense of belonging. The warm wood of the reception area, fashioned into a playful tree pattern, welcomes visitors as they step into the office. This tree pattern extends into the office, suffusing the main work area with a strong hint of nature. The lounge at the eastern end of the central band, boasting a stunning view of Victoria Harbour, offers the best location for McKinsey Home Fridays. This monthly event gathers the frequent travelling and the Hong Kong based staff to share their experiences as a unified office. During regular work days, the staff can bring their laptop to the lounge and work while enjoying the Harbour view. At the other end of the central band is the Quiet Area, a secluded corner for contemplation or rest.

With staff sitting mostly in open areas, a feature of the new design is the addition of several dedicated spots for private conversations. Four circular glass telephone booths are located throughout the open area and lounge for this purpose. The phone booths glow red or orange depending on their vacancy. The colors not only add life to the neutral palette of the office, but also serve the functional purpose of letting staff know when a booth is available. A larger phone booth is provided for conference calls requiring more space for participants.

The new McKinsey & Company Hong Kong office accommodates the needs for both privacy and interaction, promoting efficiency in terms of the use of space while boosting staff productivity as well as their sense of community.

Project: McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office
Status: Construction. Completion: May 2011
Client: McKinsey & Company
Cost: N/A
Location: Hong Kong
Site: 40/F, ICBC Tower, Citibank Plaza, 3 Garden Road Central, Hong Kong
Program: Offices

Partner in charge: David Gianotten
Project Architect: Alejandra Blanco Ackerman
Design Team: Karbi Chan, Yin Ho, Michael Kokora, Katja Lam, Mike Lim, Ted Lin, Catherine Ng, Jesung Park, Elaine Tsui, Patrizia Zobernig

Main Contractor: EDM Construction Ltd.
Acoustic Consultant: Shen Milsom & Wilke Ltd.
Furniture: EDM Construction Ltd., USM, Herman Miller
MEP Consultant: Ferrier Chan & Partners
Electrical Works: Cheung Hing E&M Ltd.
Plumbing & Drainage, MVAC Works: The Great Eagle Engineering Co. Ltd.
Fire Services: Keysen Engineering Co. Ltd.
Security Consultant: Chubb Hong Kong Ltd.
AV Consultant: Ultra Active Technology Ltd.


See also:

.

The Surgery
by Post-Office
Skype office
by PS Arkitektur
Google office
by Scott Brownrigg

Tregunter by Davidclovers

Tregunter by David Clovers

Ceiling recesses lined with wood draw the eye upwards from the matching floor in this apartment designed by Davidclovers of Hong Kong.

Tregunter by David Clovers

Called Tregunter, the renovation project in a tower overlooking Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbour also involved creating built-in storage and seating, painted white to match the walls.

Tregunter by David Clovers

Artificial lighting and air conditioning is incorporated into the curved ceiling depressions.

Tregunter by David Clovers

More about Davidclovers on Dezeen »

Tregunter by David Clovers

Here are some more details from the designers:


Tregunter Residence (2010) by davidclovers

Nestled amongst a forest of towers on Old Peak Road above Central Hong Kong, the Tregunter tower holds unique layered views of Victoria Harbour. The abundance of bay windows, structural walls and beams that are common to residential towers would appear to constrain the possibilities of the apartment.

Tregunter by David Clovers

However, by turning constraints into opportunities, davidclovers re-works the volumes of this apartment by using the ceiling and the floor. Subtly elongating, pressing upward, and sloping downward, the ceiling produces variable sensations of compression and expansion – making the apartment seem larger than it is, drawing delicate lines that separate dining from living.

Tregunter by David Clovers

Skillfully dodging and maneuvering around air-conditioning units and structural beams, the ceiling integrates artificial light and various materials – re-orienting the apartment toward the exterior.

Tregunter by David Clovers

The minimal use of wood and plaster shift the elevation of the apartment (typically on the walls) to the horizontal surfaces – enhancing the outward/upward thrust of the ceiling.

Tregunter by David Clovers

Cabinets painted white, thicken and absorb storage, entertainment systems and integrate bench seating.

Tregunter by David Clovers

Materials are used three-dimensionally throughout the apartment. Wood rotates from floors and ceilings to walls in the kitchen and mosaic tiles brighten toward windows in the bathrooms making the illumination from windows seem even brighter.

Tregunter by David Clovers

Design: davidclovers

Design Team:
David Erdman, Clover Lee, Jason Dembski, Mui Fuk Man, Katrina Lee, Spencer Mak

CLIENT: Brain Ltd.
LOCATION: The Peak, Hong Kong
TYPE: 2400sf apartment renovation
STATUS: completed

Photography:
Courtesy of davidclovers
Assisted by Ziyin Zhou

Furniture provided by Lane Crawford Pacific Place Home Store


See also:

.

House DE by
Davidclovers
Barker Residence
by Davidclovers
Yud Yud by Davidclovers
and C.E.B. Reas

Guinness – Dark Life

Un superbe spot pour la marque de bières irlandaise Guinness, autour du coté sombre et de la baseline “There’s more life in the Dark” : la noirceur envahit des villes telles que New York ou Hong-Kong. Une réalisation de Frédéric Planchon, produit par Academy Films et AMV BBDO.



dark2

dark3

Previously on Fubiz

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TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

Here are some photos of Studioilse’s latest project, a five-storey apartment building in Hong Kong.

TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

Located at TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road, the project incorporates one apartment on each floor.

TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

Bronze screens shield the double-height lobby from the road outside, while floor-to-ceiling windows in each home overlook the gardens below.

TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

Internally, screens are used to divide the space as required by residents.

TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

More about Studio Ilse on Dezeen »

TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

More interiors on Dezeen »

TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

Photographs are by Magnus Marding.

TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse

The information below is from Studioilse:


A Frame for Life at TwoTwoSix

Hong Kong development with a sense of solidity and permanence

Hollywood road, in Hong Kong’s cultural district is to gain a landmark building that connects to the scale and soul of the area. Studioilse joins forces with Hong Kong property developer Blake’s to create a site that enhances the identity of the area.

From concept and architectural direction through to interiors, Studioilse use left and right brain intelligence, to create a real, authentic home. TwoTwoSix will have a sense of solidity, permanence and its own modern identity; yet tell the on-going story of the place, with street interaction. The units are now for sale.

Blake’s executive directors, Alan lo and Darrin Woo, with Ilse, share a common vision: to revive neighbourhood living that has become so rare in Hong Kong today. ‘Blake’s leads the way for a new class of creative developer, one who revitalizes neighbourhoods. TwoTwoSix will be a catalyst for such developments. Aimed at the cultured buyer, it will be the Portobello road of Hong Kong.’ Ilse Crawford.

Using a whole brain approach, Studioilse use a combination of empirical research and human understanding. Always starting from the context, the client, plus the social and economic realities, the studio then addresses human needs. For TwoTwoSix, the studio looked to Hollywood road for their starting point. The studio then built a physical and sensorial world that ties into the surroundings, often shut out by other local developments.

The Architecture

Studioilse took great care in the scale of building, to root it to the neighbourhood. The architectural materiality used appeals to the senses and importantly, creates a sense of warmth often missing in more conventional Hong Kong flats. As you walk off Hollywood road, discretely hidden behind a bronze architectural screen, you enter the double height light filled lobby, with verdant planting. A 5-storey development, with an apartment per floor of approximately 1,500 sq ft, is a generosity of space virtually unknown in Hong Kong. The ‘One room living’, uses dividers to give flexibility throughout the evolving life of the contemporary owner, yet provide a continuity between the former shapes of the room. The floor to ceiling windows overlook Hollywood Gardens and bring nature into the home.

The Show flat

The show flat appeals to world travellers, nomads who want a place to call their own. The design is international but reflects the eclectic mix of the area. The apartment is a ‘Frame for Life’. It’s art meets antiques, telling the on-going story of new inhabitants yet still connected to the neighbourhood.

‘When I look at spaces, I don’t just look at the visual. I’m much more interested in the sensory thing, in thinking about it from a human context, the primal perspective, the thing that touches you.’ Ilse Crawford.

Crawford has a whole approach to design, by focusing on human life; she brings soul to a project and creates new realities.

More on Studioilse

Ilse Crawford heads her design company Studioilse, alongside her brand consultancy. A figurehead for design that puts the human being at the centre, she is fascinated by what drives us, brings us together and ultimately makes us feel alive. Studioilse manifests this through the design of brands, buildings, furniture and products that are a frame for life.

More on Blake’s Advisors

Partners Alan Lo and Darrin Woo are two of Asia’s best-known young entrepreneurs, co founders of Press Room Group and known for actively for promoting design, creativity and tourism in Hong Kong. Blake’s Advisors (real estate), lead the way for a new class of creative developer, one who adds to the life of the neighbourhood, rather than just bulldozing over them. www.blakes.hk

More about Hollywood Road

Hollywood road lies in the heart of the Sheung Wan district, an area much loved for its heritage. Sheung Wan was one of the earliest settled places by the British, and is otherwise known as the Gateway district. It’s distinctly low rise compared to the soaring high rise of most of Hong Kong. Its characterful streets are home to galleries of modern art, artefacts and vintage finds, neighbourhood shops with shop fronts, rather than the faceless shops of the ubiquitous mall.


See also:

.

Aesop store
by Studio Ilse
Matsalen and Matbaren
by Ilse Crawford
Interview with
Ilse Crawford

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

Hong Kong studio Davidclovers have covered the interior of this house in aluminium strips to create patterns of light and shadow that change throughout the day.

House DE by Davidclovers

Situated at Clearwater Bay in Hong Kong and called House DE, the design merged two existing homes into one,  joined by three staircases.

House DE by Davidclovers

The undulating fins admit natural light through the ceiling during the daytime while emitting artificial illumination at night.

House DE by Davidclovers

Photographs are by Almond Chu.

House DE by Davidclovers

Here’s more from the architects:


Davidclover

House DE is an “infill” townhouse, spectacularly sited on a hillside above Clearwater Bay, Hong Kong.

House DE by Davidclovers

Combining two existing units into one, the design uses the volumes of three staircases to blend, burrow and interlock spaces vertically across four floors.

House DE by Davidclovers

Each “interaction” is materially monolithic, using stone, wood and a series of delicate aluminum fins.

House DE by Davidclovers

Defined by these fins, the texture and form of the lantern-volume subtly changes shape and depth, casting shadow and emitting light in different ways throughout the day.

House DE by Davidclovers

Each stair-volume pries open the house vertically and horizontally, pulling in daylight and emitting artificial light.

House DE by Davidclovers

Thickening the existing building enclosure and stretching it across the front and rear, the bedrooms and new master suite on the upper floors are protected from the elements, yet opens up to views of the natural surroundings.

House DE by Davidclovers

Towards the South, the facade thickens and torques, providing shade for bedrooms and balconies; while on the North, the facade transforms into a garden trellis for an outdoor dining terrace.

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers


See also:

.

Barker Residence by
Davidclovers
Yud Yud by Davidclovers
and C.E.B. Reas
House in Fukuyama by
Suppose Design Office

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

This staircase curls between two floors of an apartment designed by Hong Kong studio Davidclovers.

Called Barker Residence, the home commands a view over Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbour.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

Twisting and sloping walls join together storage, entertainment systems and a fireplace, with the floor and lower part of the walls finished in wood.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

See all our stories featuring spectacular staircases »

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

Here’s some more information from the architects:


BARKER RESIDENCE (2010) by davidclovers

At eye-level with the top of IFC, the tallest building in Hong Kong, the Barker Residence holds stunning views of Victoria Harbor.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

The project is the first of a series of projects designed by davidclovers for a developer of residential properties in Hong Kong.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

The basic approach is to hone in on the most potent areas of the existing layout, and enhance them.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

At Barker Residence, davidclovers reworks the unit horizontally and vertically using a series of subtly inflected walls and artificially-lit ceilings to bend space around corners and through floors.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

The design thoughtfully subdues the palatial scale of the flat while delicately intensifying its hidden potentials.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

The existing vestibule is broken open to the full panorama of the skyscrapers along the “fragrant harbor”, gently combining the living area and entry. Subtly twisting walls organize various elements such as cabinetry, fireplace, desk and TV.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

A stair unfurls to interlock the lower and upper levels. It is washed in an effervescent glow from a custom-designed chandelier above. Previously cave-like bathrooms are thrust into spaces capturing views.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

The kitchen, bar and dining areas are cracked open and lit above by textured glowing ceilings.

Barker Residence by Davidclovers

Design: davidclovers
Design Team: David Erdman, Clover Lee, Mui Fuk Man, Jason Dembski, Damien Hannigan, Katrina Lee, Spencer Mak
CLIENT: Ample Source Holdings Ltd.
LOCATION: The Peak, Hong Kong
TYPE: 4000 sf townhouse renovation

Barker Residence by Davidclovers


See also:

.

Yud Yud by Davidclovers
and C.E.B. Reas
Staircase by Caruso St John
and Jean-Francois Bodin
Staircase by
Manuel Maia Gomes

Small Apartment becomes 24 Rooms

Un travail incroyable par l’architecte Gary Chang dans cet appartement de 30 m2 à Hong Kong. Il a construit un studio modulable de 24 pièces en exploitant l’espace au maximum, et en créant une série de parois coulissantes entre la chambre, la cuisine, le salon ou la salle de bains.



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Previously on Fubiz