L’Etagere-en-Bois: IMM Cologne’s D3 Contest picks ECAL grad Lucien Gumy’s innovative bookshelves

L'Etagere-en-Bois

Seeing Lausanne University of Art and Design (ECAL) students top international design competitions is nothing new. Most recently, the prestigious D3 Contest, part of the international furniture fair IMM Cologne, has awarded its first prize distinction to 2012 product design graduate Lucien Gumy. Gumy was chosen among more than…

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Body Language: An exhibition in Paris exploring the relationship between photography and the human form

Body Language

The Centre Culturel Suisse in Paris has gathered a selection of photos focused on the concept of the body from the Fotomuseum Winterthur’s collection, as part of the city’s “Mois de la photo” (Month of Photography) event. Throughout its history as a medium, photography has entertained an exclusive and…

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Wine Museum in Lavaux by Mauro Turin Architectes

Swiss studio Mauro Turin Architectes wants to celebrate the history of the Lavaux wine-making region in Switzerland by cantilevering a museum from the side of a mountain (+ slideshow).

Wine Museum in Lavaux by Mauro Turin Architectes

Architect Mauro Turin initially came up with the designs as an imaginary project for a page in Swiss design magazine Hochparterre. “The space is given to architects for a dream of something that could be interesting, or could reveal some parts of an area or idea,” said Turin’s collaborator Martine Laprise.

Wine Museum in Lavaux by Mauro Turin Architectes

Turin chose to design a wine museum dedicated to the historic vineyard terraces, which date back to the eleventh century and step down the side of the landscape to meet Lake Geneva on the western border of the country.

Wine Museum in Lavaux by Mauro Turin Architectes

The architect explains how he wanted to create something that would not only tell the story of the World Heritage Site, but also create a landmark that would attract tourists from all around the world. A museum that “offers a walk in the air, allowing an unforgettable experience of Lavaux, Lake Geneva and the Alps could be the answer,” he says.

Wine Museum in Lavaux by Mauro Turin Architectes

After capturing the attention of the local press and politicians, the architects are now in discussions to develop the building for construction.

Wine Museum in Lavaux by Mauro Turin Architectes

Other extreme cantilevers on Dezeen include a glass viewing platform over a glacial valley in Canada and a ski jump in Norway.

Wine Museum in Lavaux by Mauro Turin Architectes

Above: site plan – click above for larger image

See all our stories about cantilevers »

See all our stories about museums »

Wine Museum in Lavaux by Mauro Turin Architectes

Above: section – click above for larger image

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Low-Tech Factory: ECAL students explore self-sustaining manufacturing process for Designers’ Saturdays in Langenthal

Low-Tech Factory

For its 14th edition earlier this month, Designers’ Saturdays in Langenthal, Switzerland invited ECAL undergraduate and Masters students in industrial and product design to let their imagination run free while developing a series of machines exploring the manufacturing process of a selected product. The project was overseen by industrial…

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ECAL Yearbook

Ecole Cantonale d’Art de Lausanne showcases its talented grads

ECAL Yearbook

During last week’s Swiss Design Days, Ecole Cantonale d’Art de Lausanne—more commonly ECAL—debuted “ECAL Diplomes 2012,” a conceptual yearbook showcasing student thesis work from the past academic year. With sections devoted to everything from photography to industrial design, the book offers a comprehensive look at the school’s top-notch talent….

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Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Swiss architect Gus Wüstemann used raw concrete, oak and travertine to create the smooth walls and floors of this home and poolhouse overlooking Lake Zurich (+ slideshow).

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

“The use of raw materials is essential for our work,” Wüstemann told Dezeen. “It’s that kind of atmosphere we’re looking for – authentic surfaces with character.”

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Describing the concrete structure of the house, he said: “It’s about mass and feeling the power. Concrete is a further step in the culture of stony architecture, but it’s still a stone and you can feel all the work of the construction behind it.”

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The two buildings are positioned at different levels of a sloping site, with the swimming pool and pavilion at the lowest level, while the house sits above on the other side of a small garden.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Concrete dominates the walls of the house, but the facade is clad with timber to match the pavilion opposite, which is solely clad with wooden panels.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Frameless walls of glass slide open across the facade of the house, connecting living rooms on the ground and first floors with a terrace and balcony that overlook the lake.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Bedrooms are located on the ground floor, while a movie room, gym and wine cellar are housed in the basement.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

We’ve featured a few projects by Gus Wüstemann, most of which also feature raw materials – see them all here.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Other Swiss houses we’ve featured include a holiday home in the Alps and a concrete house with folded seams.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

See more projects in Switzerland »

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Photography is by Bruno Helbling.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Here’s a project description from the architects:


2 Verandas

This is a house for a young South African family in Erlenbach, just outside Zurich along the lake.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The plot is in a suburban context and therefor pretty dense with family homes, typical for the area. The site is on a slope, where on top there are beautiful views to the lake with evening sun and at the lower part there is a group of smaller family houses.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The clients asked us for a solution for a house that made the most of the big plot, wanting a view, but not end up with a house on top of the hill and a rest of a garden down below.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Periphery

Our solution for this plot was to occupy the periphery of the site, with the main house on top of the hill and the pool house at the bottom, both houses connected through a solid stony promenade: 2 verandas.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

By occupying the periphery: there is one veranda at the top, the promenade is going alongside the eastern boarder of the plot leading to the south end, there is a park in the middle of the site.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The park can be consumed as nature from all three sides and therefor there is no ‘left over’ land. The stony promenade connects the two verandas, is a site of its own, where you walk or sit and enjoy the view to the lake or the park. With the promenade, the garden moves up to the level of the living room and it connects all levels of the house with the garden.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

2 verandas

The main house is a stony, concrete, hammer shaped volume over two levels, that contains the living rooms. In the upper part is the‚ public ‘living room for invitations and dining with a beautiful view over the lake of Zurich. On the ground level is the family lounge with an exterior patio that can be joined as one room with the living room. All the windows disappear and the inside and outside patio become one. That patio connects all bedrooms and is a lounge to sit together privately and watch a movie.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The circulations in and out of that space are controlled by concrete volumes at the ceiling that condense the space through mass and light and slow the circulation.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The two rooms are crossed above each other, at the ground floor level we pull a wooden curtain around the concrete volume to create the private sleeping quarters.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The upper living room has a shark fin like shape, so the space is very high at the back of the space with northern sky lights, and is lower at the front to frame the view.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Mass with no windows

The inside and the outside are joined, as we let all the windows disappear, so there is only the concrete mass left. The inside becomes a covered outside space: Mediterranean feeling in the northern hemisphere.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The absence of the window is the essential instrument to actually unite in and outside space; it is the glass itself that reminds us of the border of in and outside. In many projects nowadays this fact is neglected or simply ignored and therefore glass is used in an extensive way.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Mass and light

We chose natural and raw materials like concrete, travertine or wood. The concrete is formed and communicates with the space through light gaps that give that extra feeling of finesse to the shear mass of the concrete. Throughout the whole house indirect lights are giving directions, and attract the periphery of the spaces rather than the centre. The indirect light is creating the atmosphere.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

On the underground floor there is a gym, a movie room and wine cellar all arranged around the light up masses of the concrete that give the house a whole different playful area. There is raw concrete and raw wood and therefore a lot of texture.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Basement plan – click above for larger image

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

First floor plan – click above for larger image

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Section – click above for larger image

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Comet Substance

Musical identity mash-ups in collaged band posters by a Swiss illustrator

Comet Substance

With his wide range of projects and mediums, it is no wonder why the technical sketcher turned screen printer Comet Substance uses collage in his works. Armed with a broad background, Comet Substance, also known as Ronny Hunger clips images out of their original context to create new spaces…

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Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Steel trees with sprawling branches support the glass roof of this greenhouse in Switzerland by Buehrer Wuest Architekten (+ slideshow).

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Located in a botanical garden outside the village of Grüningen, the greenhouse is used for growing subtropical plants such as banana and papaya.

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

The architects borrowed structural patterns found in nature, like the membranes of a leaf, to create the geometric structure of the roof.

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Glass screens subdivide the space to create different planting areas.

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Other greenhouses we’ve featured include one made from Lego and another with a temporary restaurant inside.

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Photography is by Markus Bertschi.

Here are a few words from the architects:


The new pavilion at the botanical garden at Grueningen relates strongly to its context. The design was inspired by the surrounding forest, not the built environment.

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Both the formal vocabulary and the structural concept derive from nature. The pavilion is conceived to harmonize with and expand the forest.

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Site plan – click above for larger image

The form was developed using Voronoi tessellation, also known as natural neighbor interpolation. Analogous to cell division in nature, the geometry of the roof as surrounding membrane was determined by the position of the old and new trunks.

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Column plan detail – click above for larger image

The forest was augmented by four steel trees that form the primary structural system of the pavilion.

Greenhouse at Grüningen Botanical Garden by Buehrer Wuest Architekten

Column detail – click above for larger image

At about five meters, the trunks branch toward the treetop, which forms the natural roof. A secondary glass construction, suspended from the steel branches, encloses the inner space of the greenhouse.

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Wohnhaus Ginkgo by on3 architekten

This concrete house in Switzerland by Basel studio on3 architekten has gabled end walls that appear folded along central vertical seams (+slideshow).

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

An exposed concrete staircase connects the three storeys of Wohnhaus Ginkgo and is suspended behind a balustrade of taught wires between the two upper floors.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

A large dormer window increases the amount of inhabitable space on the top floor, which overlooks the corridor on the floor below.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Other Swiss houses on Dezeen include a holiday home in the Alps and a renovated farm building.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

See more houses in Switzerland »

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Photography is by Börje Müller.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

The text below is from on3 architekten:


House Ginkgo

The house is located in the center of Oberwil, in the north-west of Switzerland.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

The neighbourhood is designed by older one family houses and small stores. Due to its geometry, the house offers an unconventional floor plan with comfort, flexibility and space to move.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

As the rooms are linked and correspond to each other, they are ideal for family life with space for individual creativity.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

The open kitchen and the living room, which are on the same level as the terrace in the garden, form one area.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

A large glass facade is the only separation between the interior and the external space. The two upper floors offer private rooms, seperated by sliding doors.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Site plan- click above for larger image

The gallery in the attic gives a wonderful view over the roofs of Oberwil and completes the concept of the flexible and open floor plans. The centre of the house is a stair made of exposed concrete.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Ground floor plan- click above for larger image

It connects the house in the vertical.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

First floor plan- click above for larger image

The robust and massive concrete sets a contrast to the fine, light white oak parquet floor.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Second floor plan- click above for larger image

A special feature of the house is the frameless, partly room-high glazing.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Longitudinal section- click above for larger image

Thematically, they are used in every room and open the house to the external space. Thus, the rooms receive a generous, light and friendly atmosphere.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Cross section- click above for larger image

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Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

This holiday home by Swiss architects Hurst Song Architekten is partly embedded in the steep slopes of the Swiss Alps (+ slideshow).

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Located in Lumbrein in the Swiss canton of Graubünden, the house is vertically clad in black-stained timber.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The roof is made from copper and will eventually discolour to blend in with the dark timber.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The gabled roof has been positioned perpendicular to the hill, as is customary for local buildings.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

A concrete frame has been inserted around the entrance at the lower corner of the house.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The underground parking area also provides a separate internal entrance to the house.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The interiors make use of concrete and spruce, with darker materials on the lower levels and lighter materials throughout the upper floors.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The kitchen and living room have spruce walls and concrete floors, and are divided by a central concrete wall.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The bedrooms are finished in spruce and some have beds that fold out from the walls.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The project was commended in the AR House 2012 prize this year.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Another house in the Swiss Alps we’ve featured on Dezeen is a concrete extension to a stone house and barn.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

See all our stories about Switzerland »

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Here’s some more text from the architects:


The building is located at the periphery of the village and ascribed to the landscape of a sloping field. The new road curves below the parcel which necessitates a steep berm where a small incision is made to allow access to the garage and provide entry to the house through the basement.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The gabled roof is oriented perpendicular to the slope following local custom.The building volume is rotated to face the street and to optimize the stunning views.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The resulting crystalline geometry emphasizes a dynamic relationship to the landscape. This reading is enhanced by the absence of roof eaves.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The sheathing, composed of verticle wooden planks, is treated with a weatherproof dark stain which relates to the materialtiy of the aged barns in the region.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The standing-seam copper roof will age in a short time to the same hue as the facade.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The interiors are primarily composed out of concrete and spruce. The surfaces interlock and graduate in proportion from the cellar to the attic from heavy to light.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

In the living room a rugged concrete floor matches the concrete walls and in the bedrooms the wood floors are made from the same material as the timber walls and ceilings.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Holzkristal
Single Family House
Lumbrein, GR 2009-2010
Switzerland
Minergie-P (Passive House Standard)

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Architektur: Hurst Song Architekten, Zürich
Ingenieur: Clemens Arpagaus, Vella

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Haustechnik: BSP-Energie, Zürich
Bauphysik: Raumanzug, Zürich

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Holzkonstruktion: Alig & Co, Vrin
Fenster und Türen: Alig & Co, Vrin

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Schreinerarbeiten: Alig & Co, Vrin
Küche: Alig & Co, Vrin

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Sanitärapparate: Catalano
Küchenapparate: V-Zug
Beschläge: D-Line

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

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Hurst Song Architekten
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