elBulli Pavilion by Rodero Beggiao Architects

This mobile pavilion for a travelling chef by Barcelona studio Rodero Beggiao Architects will comprise two wedge-shaped modules that can be reconfigured to suit each new home.

elBulli Pavilion by Rodero Beggiao Architects

The lightweight aluminium structure of the elBulli Pavilion will be clad in polycarbonate and perforated metal panels, with interiors decorated by local artists from each location.

elBulli Pavilion by Rodero Beggiao Architects

It will be used as a travelling restaurant, workshop and showcase for Catalan chef Ferran Adrià’s elBulli Foundation, a gastronomic research initiative that also has a permanent home at his restaurant in Roses, northern Spain.

elBulli Pavilion by Rodero Beggiao Architects

The elBulli Foundation and Pavilion are set to open in 2014.

elBulli Pavilion by Rodero Beggiao Architects

Other mobile architecture we’ve featured recently includes a guest house installed by a helicopter and a tiny travelling theatre.

See all our stories about mobile architecture »

Here’s some more information from Rodero Beggiao Architects:


With the slogan “Freedom to create”, elBulli foundation will open in 2014 and will have two objectives. First will be the archive of elBulli Restaurant, both physically (documents, books, objects) and digital. Second, it will be a center of creativity, with the idea to create and then share ideas and discoveries through the Internet.

The project is a space for representation of the foundation and its values anywhere in the world, a platform to show the various initiatives and to accommodate multiple functions (think tank, informative space, workshop, restaurant, wine tasting ..).

It’s a modular, lightweight, removable and transportable pavilion, intended to be placed in scenic and unexpected places. It consists of two identical triangular modules and thanks to its various formal combinations, it has a flexible interior space to accommodate different possible configurations. The international character of the pavilion will be emphasized with the fact that its interior spaces will be decorated by local artists.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

This snaking concrete ramp by Norwegian studio Reiulf Ramstad Architects winds down from a road to the beach along the edge of the Arctic Ocean.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Benches wrap around the curved walls, while the floor slopes down gradually to allow easy access to the water for wheelchair users as well as those on foot.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Circular openings of different sizes pierce the concrete walls.

Havoysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Last year Reiulf Ramstad Architects completed a glass restaurant with jagged edges – see it here.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

See all our stories about Norway »

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Here’s some explanation from Reiulf Ramstad Architects:


Havøysund Tourist Route Project

The objective is quite simply to single out and magnify the experience of walking from the roadside down to the seaside at this very special place.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Therefore a chief concern was to slow down this movement and make the path itself a means of refocusing the experiential mode: a measured, restrained approach that creates awareness.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The primary functional concern was universal accessibility. Instead of opting for a dual solution with staircase and ramp, we came up with the notion of making the ramp the common entryway and develop it into the integral character of the project.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Because of the inclination of the site, and in order to create the reductive motion, the ramp had to be very long.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The winding river of the path prolongs the approach and in so doing opens up new perspectives and experiences for the visitor.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Located in the extreme north of Norway, in a landscape almost lunar in its barren and inhospitable beauty, the facility should ideally be completely self-sustainable in terms of power input and waste output.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The general notion was to create a human detail in the vastness of the landscape that is as timeless as the landscape itself and that brings attention to the relationship between the duration of experiences and the hugeness of the spatial circumstance.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Location: Havøysund, Finnmark Norway

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Program: Development and Design National Touristroutes Havøysund

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Client: Norwegian public roads administration

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Architect: Reiulf Ramstad Architects: Reiulf Ramstad, Anja Strandskogen, Kanog Anong Nimakorn, (Kathrine Næss)

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Commision type: Direct Commission (2007),

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

Dutch firm DUS Architects have created a pavilion made of bubbles.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

Visitors to a Rotterdam square had to construct the soapy walls themselves by lifting metal frames from five-sided steel pools.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

Anyone standing in one of these pools became enclosed inside one of sixteen massive bubbles.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

The pavilion was open to the public for less than three weeks and was completed as part of the International Architecture Biennial Rotterdam, which continues until August.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

We recently rounded up all our projects featuring bubbles, including a lamp that blows its own temporary shades. See them all here.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

Here’s some more explanation from DUS Architects:


Announcing: The Bubble Building!

The World’s most temporary pavilion entirely made out of soap bubbles, in Rotterdam, NL

At the very centre of breezy Rotterdam, lies the world’s most fragile and temporary pavilion: The Bubble Building. The temporary pavilion does justice to its name, as it is entirely made of soap bubbles.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

On invitation by the IABR (International Architecture Biennial Rotterdam) and the ZigZagCity Festival, DUS architects designed a pavilion that instigates interaction, as the pavilion only appears when visitors build it themselves. The Bubble Building opened to the public on April 20th and can still be visited until Sunday May 6th, at the Karel Doormanhof in Rotterdam, NL.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

The Bubble Building is made from 16 hexagonal shaped mirroring ponds; a shape derived from the natural shape of connected foam bubbles. Positioned in a square plan, the steel ponds create a 35 m2 reflective soap surface, strong enough to carry human weight. This creates a surreal scene, as visitors wearing rubber boots seem to stand on a reflective water surface. No sign of a pavilion, just a few handlebars that hint at what needs to be done.. What happens next, is an instant spectacle: When visitors pull up the handlebars, massive soap walls emerge in a split second. The soap walls appear as super slim glass, wavy, curvaceous, and always different; A multitude of soap walls and a rainbow of colours. Old and young join in to make the pavilion appear, over and over again.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

Economic bubble

While the building is temporary, it refers to monumental architectural themes such as the re-building of Rotterdam. In order to make the building appear, you must erect it yourself, until it pops again. This way, the Bubble Building also is a reference to the current bursting of the economic bubble. Moreover, the Bubble Building is about collective building, as it takes at least two people to erect one cell of the pavilion. The more people join in, the larger the pavilion becomes.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

Mental Monument

Visitors are invited to eternalize their own momentary version of the pavilion in a bubble snapshot, and upload these images to the ZigZagCity website. Online, a multitude of different bubble buildings appear. In these pictures lies the true beauty of the pavilion: the remembrance. As ultimately, the Bubble Building is about beauty.

The Bubble Building by DUS Architects

It is said that temporary experiences are perceived as more beautiful, because they only last for a short time. Rotterdam philosopher Erasmus said ‘Homo Bulla Est’ – ‘man is a soap Bubble’. Life is momentary. So go build the Bubble Building, because it will only be there for an instant!

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The first New York Frieze Art Fair took place last weekend inside a 450 metre-long snaking white tent designed by Brooklyn architects SO-IL.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Located between Manhattan, Bronx and Queens on Randall’s Island, the structure comprised six rented rectangular tents connected with wedge-shaped corner sections.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Strips of white tent fabric overhanging the two gabled ends were fanned out and fastened to the ground, creating partially sheltered entrances.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

This is the first year that the Frieze Art Fair has taken place in New York as well as London.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

See Carmody Groarke’s timber pavilions for last year’s London event here.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

See more stories about SO-IL here, including a temporary pavilion with reflective purple scales created for an arts festival in Beijing.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Photography is by Iwan Baan.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Here’s some more information from SO-IL:


Frieze Art Fair NYC

Working with a prefabricated rental structure forced us to be inventive with a limited vocabulary.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Randall’s Island, situated in between Manhattan, Bronx and Queens is one of the few pieces of open land in New York City large enough to accommodate the 225,000sf, 1500 ft long structure.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Pie-shaped tent section wedges are inserted between six tent sections to relax and open up the standardized system, and offer amenities at each section as a moment of recess.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The wedges bend the otherwise straight tent into a meandering, supple, shape.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The winding form animates it on the unusual waterfront site, as well as establishing the temporary structure as an icon along the water.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The wedges divide the relentless length of the fair into manageable sections.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Rather than exposing the end gable section at each end of the tent, we extended the tent roof fabric in stripes, dissolving the tent into the ground.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The playful entrances introduce visitors to the experience within.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Client: Frieze Art Fair

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL
Location: New York

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL
Program: exhibition spaces, event space, cafes

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL
Area: 20.900 m² / 225,000 sf

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 by Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 by Herzog and de Meuron and Ai Weiwei

The Serpentine Gallery in London has unveiled plans by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron and Chinese artist Ai Weiwei for this summer’s Serpentine Gallery Pavilion: they’ll conduct an archaeological dig to find traces of past pavilions on the site then line the resulting trenches with cork.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 by Herzog and de Meuron and Ai Weiwei

The plan involves excavating down to groundwater level, revealing buried traces of the past eleven annual pavilions and creating a well at the bottom that will also collect rainwater.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 by Herzog and de Meuron and Ai Weiwei

A pool of water will also cover the surface of the circular roof, supported just 1.4 metres above the ground by twelve columns that represent pavilions past and present. It will be possible to drain this water down into the well to create an elevated viewing platform or dance floor.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 by Herzog and de Meuron and Ai Weiwei

The temporary pavilion will open to the public on 1 June and will remain in Kensington Gardens until 14 October.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 by Herzog and de Meuron and Ai Weiwei

The twelfth annual pavilion follows previous structures by architects including Peter ZumthorJean NouvelSANAA and Frank Gehry. You can see images of them all here, watch our interview with Peter Zumthor at the opening of last year’s pavilion on Dezeen Screen and read even more about the pavilions in our Dezeen Book of Ideas.

See also: more stories about Herzog & de Meuron and more stories about Ai Weiwei.

Here’s some more information from the Serpentine Gallery:


Serpentine Gallery reveals plans for Pavilion designed by Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei

The Serpentine Gallery today released plans for the 2012 Serpentine Gallery Pavilion designed by Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei. It will be the twelfth commission in the Gallery’s annual series, the world’s first and most ambitious architectural programme of its kind.

The design team responsible for the celebrated Beijing National Stadium, which was built for the 2008 Olympic Games, comes together again in London in 2012 for the Serpentine’s acclaimed annual commission, being presented as part of the London 2012 Festival, the culmination of the Cultural Olympiad. The Pavilion is Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei’s first collaborative built structure in the UK.

This year’s Pavilion will take visitors beneath the Serpentine’s lawn to explore the hidden history of its previous Pavilions. Eleven columns characterising each past Pavilion and a twelfth column representing the current structure will support a floating platform roof 1.4 metres above ground. The Pavilion’s interior will be clad in cork, a sustainable building material chosen for its unique qualities and to echo the excavated earth. Taking an archaeological approach, the architects have created a design that will inspire visitors to look beneath the surface of the park as well as back in time across the ghosts of the earlier structures.

Julia Peyton-Jones, Director, and Hans Ulrich Obrist, Co-Director, Serpentine Gallery, said: “It is a great honour to be working with Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei, the design team behind Beijing’s superb Bird’s Nest Stadium. In this exciting year for London we are proud to be creating a connection between the Beijing 2008 and the London 2012 Games. We are enormously grateful for the help of everyone involved, especially Usha and Lakshmi N. Mittal, whose incredible support has made this project possible.”

The Serpentine Gallery Pavilion will operate as a public space and as a venue for Park Nights, the Gallery’s high-profile programme of public talks and events. Connecting to the archaeological focus of the Pavilion design, Park Nights will culminate in October with the Serpentine Gallery Memory Marathon, the latest edition of the annual Serpentine Marathon series conceived by Hans Ulrich Obrist, now in its seventh year. The Marathon series began in 2006 with the 24-hour Serpentine Gallery Interview Marathon; followed by the Experiment Marathon in 2007; the Manifesto Marathon in 2008; the Poetry Marathon in 2009, the Map Marathon in 2010 and the Garden Marathon in 2011.

The 2012 Pavilion has been purchased by Usha and Lakshmi N. Mittal and will enter their private collection after it closes to the public in October 2012.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Slideshow: we’ve already featured three artists’ studios from Canadian Fogo Island, making this wooden hut on legs the fourth (photographs by Bent René Synnevåg).

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Designed by Saunders Architecture of Norway, Bridge Studio has an angled body that projects out towards a lake.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

A wooden bridge connects the square glazed entrance with the lichen-coated granite of the surrounding terrain.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

The base of the building slopes at the same angle as the roof to create two tiered floors inside.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

On the upper tier is a built-in desk that faces a large window, while a wood-burning stove and small kitchen occupy the lower level.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

A solar panel mounted further up the hill generates all the electricity the studio needs.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

So far four of the six planned studios are complete. You can see the other three here.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Here’s some more information from Saunders Architecture:


Bridge Studio Deep Bay, Fogo , Newfoundland

As with all the Fogo Island Arts Corporation’s Art Studios, Bridge Studio is paired with a traditional Newfoundland Saltbox house, this one is located in Deep Bay, the smallest community on Fogo Island with a population of one hundred and fifty people. The Bridge Studio’s Saltbox House is a freshly painted, in sharp contrast to its dilapidated condition, only a few months previous. A local carpenter who is putting the finishing touches on the house, points out the project’s double-hung, wood frame windows that were crafted at the local woodshop, initiated and operated by the Shorefast Foundation.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

The trek to the Bridge Studio from the Deep Bay House looks short on a map. Of course, on the ground is a different matter as the topography enters the equation and one navigates the rocky landscape of the lichen clad granite outcroppings on this sublimely beautiful stretch of coastline leading to Bridge Studio, an art studio, completed in June 2011 by the Fogo Island Arts Corporation.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Along the winding path one encounters short runs of wooden stairs and ramps, installed in critical locations to help visitors ascend some of the trail’s steeper inclines. After walking about twenty minutes, the first sign of the Bridge Studio is an isolated solar panel (and battery enclosure) mounted on a hilltop to take full advantage of the Island’s limited sunshine. These solar cells generate electrical power for the near-by Bridge Studio, dramatically located on a steep hillside overlooking the calm waters of an inland pond.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

The first impression of the Bridge Studio is its abstract quality. From the side elevation, it ap- pears as a windowless wood-clad parallelogram, hovering above the landscape, propped up by four piers and connected by a sixteen-foot bridge to the adjacent hillside. As one approaches the three hundred and twenty square foot studio, it becomes more transparent – with a generous glass entry and a large square window at the other end of the room.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Viewed from the glass entry, the ceiling from the entry slopes up to the top of a large picture window at the opposite end of the room. The picture window’s sill is flush with a built-in desk, the perfect place to write and contemplate the view. To mirror the sloped ceiling, the floor of the Bridge Studio is composed of two levels. The lower area, that accommodates an entry area, long counter and wood-burning stove is divided from the upper area by a short run of stairs. From the entry, the perspectival aspect of the project is augmented by alignment of the four-inch painted spruce planks that line the ceiling, the walls and floor.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

From the aerial photographs, the isolation of the Bridge Studio becomes apparent, a highly restrained, slightly distorted, elongated box sited on an outcropping of rock, overlooking a sheltered pond of water. The form, although resolutely contemporary recalls a traditional Newfoundland fishing stage (in the local nomenclature) a wooden vernacular building, typical of traditional buildings associated with the cod fishery in the province. It was in these fishing stages, equipped with cutting tables, that fishermen would clean and salt the once plentiful codfish that was distributed worldwide.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

It is an interesting twist that the Bridge Studio echoes this vernacular form, once a typical sighting in any Newfoundland outport. The fishing stage and the cod give way to the studio and the production of art. The Fogo Island Arts Corporation creating an opportunity for a roster of accomplished artists to generate works of art that in turn enrich the international scene of contemporary art.

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Client: Shorefast Foundation and the Fogo Island Arts Corporation
Architect: Saunders Architecture – Bergen, Norway
Team architects: Attila Béres, Ryan Jørgensen, Ken Beheim-Schwarzbach, Nick Herder, Rubén Sáez López, Soizic Bernard, Colin Hertberger, Christina Mayer, Olivier Bourgeois, Pål Storsveen, Zdenek Dohnalek
Associate Architect: Sheppard Case Architects Inc. (Long Studio)

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Structural Engineer: DBA Associates (Long Studio)
Services Engineer: Core Engineering (Long Studio)
Builder: Shorefast Foundation
Construction Supervisor: Dave Torraville
Builders: Arthur Payne, Rodney Osmond, Edward Waterman, Germain Adams, John Penton, Jack Lynch, Roy Jacobs, Clarke Reddick
Construction photos: Nick Herder
Text: Michael Carroll

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Size: 130 m2
Location: Fogo Island, Newfoundland, Canada
Status: Finished 2011

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture

Photography: Bent René Synnevåg

Bridge Studio by Saunders Architecture


Here are the other three Fogo Island studios we’ve featured:

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

Long Studio by Saunders Architecture

Long Studio by Saunders Architecture

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Slideshow: here’s another of the six artists’ studios that Norwegian firm Saunders Architecture designed for an island off the coast of Canada, this time a white angular cabin.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Located on the eastern coast of Fogo Island, Squish Studio has painted wooden walls that extend beyond the limits of the interior to create sheltered triangular terraces at both ends.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

These provide both a south-facing entrance foyer and a north-facing deck with a view out across the ocean.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

The ground beneath the studio is so rocky and uneven that the southern end of the building is raised up by just over six metres to maintain a level floor surface inside.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Like the other completed studios, Squish Studio provides all its own heating and power, plus facilities to treat its own waste.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

This is the third of the studios that we’ve featured on Dezeen. See the first two here.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Photography is by Bent René Synnevåg.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Here’s some more details about the project:


Squish Studio

Tilting, Fogo Island, Newfoundland

The Squish Studio is located just outside the small town of Tilting on the eastern end of Fogo Island. First settled in the mid-18th century, Tilting is known for its strong Irish culture and its recent designation by Parks Canada as a National Cultural Landscape District of Canada.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

The Squish Studio’s white angular form, sited on a rocky strip of coastline, that could rival Italy’s western coast, offers sharp contrast to the traditional vernacular architecture of the nearby picturesque community of Tilting. As its architect, Todd Saunders, has commented on the studio’s siting, “…it is out of sight, but close.”

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

The approach to the front entry of the studio is dramatic, as the most southern end of the studio rises twenty feet above the ground, in sharp contrast to its most northern tip that measures only half that dimension. The compact, trapezium-shaped plan of the studio is augmented by the extension of the east and west exterior walls to create a sheltered, triangulated south entry deck and a north terrace that overlooks the ocean. From a distant view, the streamlined form of the Squish Studio becomes apparent with its high back and low (squished) front designed, in part, to deflect the winds from the stormy North Atlantic.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

As we approach the entry of the studio we are greeted by Silke Otto-Knapp, a London-based artist and the first occupant of the Squish Studio. As Silke brings us through the studio, the spatial compression of the tall and narrow entry area gives way to the horizontal expanse of the main room. The downward angled roof leads the eye to the full height oblong glass window focused on a splendid view of Round Head.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

The vertical white planks that line the interior walls are interrupted by a playful series of narrow windows integrated with an expanse of built-in cabinetry. Silke’s quick figurative studies on paper are posted on the walls, as well as, several large scale canvasses. She is delighted to work in such an architecturally inspired space, especially when it is stormy and she can experience the immediacy of the sea and, on some days, observe the dramatic shift of the island’s weather.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

The Squish Studio, like most of its other counterparts, is equipped with a compost toilet, a small kitchenette and wood-burning stove. Power is supplied by stand-alone solar panels, mounted on an adjacent hilltop. Both the interior and exterior of the studio, including the roof, is clad with spruce planks that are painted white.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

At night, the studio, illuminated by the soft glow of its solar-powered lighting, appears as a lantern or a lighthouse placed strategically on a rocky cliff to over- look the North Atlantic. In its isolation, one can also imagine a sole occupant, vulnerable but protected from the elements – inspired to work late into the night, occasionally distracted by the crash of the waves, or perhaps, fully immersed in the work at hand, the first glimpse of the sunrise through the Squish Studio’s slot windows that face the north-eastern horizon.

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Client: Shorefast Foundation and the Fogo Island Arts Corporation
Architect: Saunders Architecture – Bergen, Norway
Team architects: Attila Béres, Ryan Jørgensen, Ken Beheim-Schwarzbach, Nick Herder, Rubén Sáez López, Soizic Bernard, Colin Hertberger, Christina Mayer, Olivier Bourgeois, Pål Storsveen, Zdenek Dohnalek
Associate Architect: Sheppard Case Architects Inc. (Long Studio)
Structural Engineer: DBA Associates (Long Studio)
Services Engineer: Core Engineering (Long Studio)

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Builder: Shorefast Foundation
Construction Supervisor: Dave Torraville
Builders: Arthur Payne, Rodney Osmond, Edward Waterman, Germain Adams, John Penton, Jack Lynch, Roy Jacobs, Clarke Reddick
Construction photos: Nick Herder
Text: Michael Carroll

Squish Studio by Saunders Architecture

Size: 130 m2
Location: Fogo Island, Newfoundland, Canada
Status: Finished 2011


Here are the other two Fogo Island studios we’ve featured:

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

Long Studio by Saunders Architecture

Long Studio by Saunders Architecture

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

Slideshow: this small twisted tower is one of the six artists’ studios that Saunders Architecture of Norway are constructing on Fogo Island off the coast of Canada.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

The three-storey Tower Studio is the fourth and most recent folly to be completed and like the others it has a painted wooden exterior and a whitewashed interior.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

The floors of the building incrementally rotate, so that a terrace on the roof is turned away from the ground floor by 180 degrees.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

These twists also create a faceted recess at the entrance, which unlike the other exterior walls is lined with white-painted spruce.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

A large triangular skylight allows light to flood into the studio on the middle floor, while a mezzanine overlooks it from above.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

On the ground floor is a small kitchen powered by photovoltaics panels, a wood-burning fireplace and a composting toilet.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

A narrow boardwalk leads out from the building’s entrance to the main road, creating access for nothing larger than a wheelbarrow or bicycle.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

We published the first of the studios when it was completed this time last year. See images of it here.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

Photography is by Bent René Synnevåg.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

Here’s a longer description from Saunders Architecture:


Tower Studio

Shoal Bay, Fogo Island, Newfoundland

The Tower Studio is dramatically situated on a stretch of rocky coastline in Shoal Bay, Fogo Island, Newfoundland. The studio’s sculptural silhouette leans both forward and backward as it twists upward. For the average visitor to the island, this windowless black tower, more often than not, provokes a quizzical response and the enviable question, “What’s that?”

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

For the locals, they know that this structure is a project of the Fogo Island Arts Corporation – an art studio opened in June 2011. The Tower Studio’s official opening was one of the most festive and included: a roaring bonfire, flares dramatically shot from its rooftop terrace and the recorded sounds of local whales as a background score.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

Perched on a rocky stretch of shoreline, there are no roads to the Tower Studio, it can only be reached by hiking along the shore from the adjacent community or walking on a narrow wooden boardwalk consisting of weathered planks that hover just slightly above a bog that features an abundance of cloudberries, known locally as bakeapples.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

From a distance the wooden boardwalk reads like a tether strap, linking the stranded Tower Studio to the lifeline of a busy stretch of road. The boardwalk, a mere twelve inches wide, is a vital component to the story of the Tower Studio, it provided an even track for wheel barrows to bring building supplies to the construction site without disturbing the delicate ecosystem of the Newfoundland bog and the lichens that grow on outcroppings of rock.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

The boardwalk is a testimony to the holistic thinking that is part of the Shorefast Foundation mindset that connects the dots of economic, cultural and ecological sustainability at both the macro and the micro level. Now that its purpose has past, the boardwalk will soon disappear in order to minimize the impact on the surrounding landscape of the Tower Studio’s construction.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

As one approaches the studio, its south-facing entry area is angled back thirty degrees. Overhead a triangulated section of wall leans forward to shelter the double glass doors below. Both the soffit and the angled entryway, clad in horizontal boards of spruce are stained white in sharp contrast to remainder of the building’s windowless exterior of vertical plank siding painted slate black.

The Tower Studio is comprised of three levels with an overall height of thirty-two feet. Its entry area is equipped with a kitchenette, a compost toilet and wood- burning fireplace. Its second level is a studio, day lit by a generous skylight that faces northward. A mezzanine overhead, juts into the double height volume of the studio. Aside from the geometric complexity of the space, the second feature that adds to a sense of disorientation is the elimination of architectural detail and the fact that all vertical, horizontal and inclined surfaces, clad in smooth plywood, are painted a brilliant white.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

The only relief from the stark interior is a sliver of the exterior visible through the studio’s sole skylight. A slightly angled wall opposite and parallel to the skylight provides the perfect viewing surface upon which a body can recline and enjoy the view. One can imagine the magical effect of resting against this surface during a moonlit evening with the audible roar of the North Atlantic and force of the wind against the exposed surface of the tower. From the studio level, a narrow ladder (also painted white) leads past the mezzanine level to the underside of a roof hatch. As one passes through the horizontal opening and stands on the rooftop deck, the view of the ocean and the rocky windswept terrain is spectacular. From the roster of studios recently completed, it is generally agreed that the building of the Tower Studio by the local crew of carpenters was one of the most challenging. Although the basic premise of the Tower’s geometry is a simple one – the plan rotates one hundred and eighty de- grees to the roof plan – the construction of the facetted form proved to be a little more complex. In order to figure out the framing diagram, a series of wooden models were constructed. Ultimately a large-scale model was fabricated to mini- mize any on-site confusion.

The story of the Tower Studio is not complete without referencing two structures that support it. The first one is a ‘standalone’ array of solar panels situated about fifty feet to the west of the studio’s main entrance. Because all the studios are located on isolated sites without access to the utilities of electricity, water and sewer, they are equipped with photovoltaic panels, compost toilets and water cisterns.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

The other structure necessary for the Tower Studio’s success is its ‘fraternal twin’ – a restored traditional house in the nearby village where the artist lives while he/she is not working in the studio. All the Fogo Island studios follow the same model in which the studio is paired with a Saltbox – a traditional Newfound- land house, where the artist abides when not fixated on his/her most recent art project. The restoration of the traditional Saltbox house and the new construction of the architecturally provocative studios has created an interesting dynamic that brings the local vernacular architecture face-to-face with the multi-faceted expressions of contemporary culture.

As the architect, Todd Saunders, has explained, the fact that the renovated houses were part of a vernacular way of building increased the level of architectural experimentation allotted to the studios. In contrast to the renovated houses, located in the middle of the villages, the studios are situated about a fifteen-min- ute walk on the villages’ periphery. The artists experience both the warm hospitality of their neighbours, as well as, the cool refuge of their studios. Because the studios are outside the local villages, their architectural character is both seemingly familiar and uncannily ‘strange’. In some sense the studios ‘fit in’, but more importantly they stand out.

Tower Studio by Saunders Architecture

At times, the stark abstract forms of the studios painted black and/or white seem to disappear into the foggy weather, typical on Fogo Island. Disappearance may be an interesting addition to the lexicon of Saunders’s architectural production that focuses on playful geometries that generate dynamic forms that are strangely familiar. This series of architectural projects on Fogo Island does encompass the vernacular within the production of the new. More importantly, it forms a contemporary sensibility that is vital to reframe, re-situate and rejuvenate any traditional culture, in order for it to meet the opportunities and challenges of the twenty-first century – head on.

Sauna Huginn&Muginn by AtelierFORTE

Sauna Huginn&Muginn by AtelierFORTE

Milan studio AtelierFORTE have built a sauna in the northern Italian countryside that has wings like a bird.

Sauna Huginn&Muginn by AtelierFORTE

Inspired by the Norse myth of raven messengers Huginn and Muninn, the structure is also raised above the ground on wooden legs.

Sauna Huginn&Muginn by AtelierFORTE

A ladder leads up to two people at a time inside the sauna, while portholes frame views out across the surrounding landscape.

Sauna Huginn&Muginn by AtelierFORTE

Other saunas we’ve featured include one that can be towed like a sledge and one surrounded by a herb gardenSee them both here.

Sauna Huginn&Muginn by AtelierFORTE

Here’s some more information from AtelierFORTE:


AtelierFORTE is glad to present the sauna Huginn&Muninn, inspired by the two ravens of Odin. The sauna, built in fir wood, accommodates two people. As the Scandinavian tradition it is powered by a wood stove.

The portholes on the walls, in this case, give an impressive view of hills around Piacenza, Italy.

From the project by Duilio Forte, Huginn&Muninn is built entirely by hand. AtelierFORTE manufactures outdoor saunas since 1994, and every sauna is unique, designed and created ad hoc.

Hugin and Muninn mean “thought” and “memory”. Those are the names of the two ravens of Odin. Every day he sends them flying over all the earth, and they come back and tell him everything they have seen and heard.

Designed in Hackney: The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Designed in Hackney: London borough of Hackney architects Liddicoat & Goldhill have completed a garden cabin with a zigzagging facade that angles south towards the sun.

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Located in the garden of a north London townhouse, the wooden pavilion has brick walls surrounding three of its sides.

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The saw-toothed front elevation creates one large south-facing window, which maximises natural daylight and passive solar heating to the interior.

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

As well as the garden room, which the client uses as a space for both work and entertaining, the cabin accommodates a shower room and a storage shed.

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

David Liddicoat and Sophie Goldhill founded their studio on Ramsgate Street, Dalston, in 2009. We first featured them on Dezeen shortly after, as they completed a glazed addition to a 17th Century house, then again when they designed and built their own home.


Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

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Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Photography is by Tom Gildon.