Resident Tsao by KC Design Studio

This apartment by Taiwan firm KC Design Studio features rotating walls, allowing four rooms to be converted instantly into one (+ slideshow).

Resident Tsao by KC Design

One of the moving screens pivots to either combine or divide the living room and kitchen, while a second is positioned between the bedroom and study.

Resident Tsao by KC Design

Both partitions have bevelled edges so that from at certain angles they appear razor-thin.

Resident Tsao by KC Design

Televisions and bookcases are housed within the recesses.

Resident Tsao by KC Design

Earlier this year we also featured a house with a stone wall that slides across a window – see it here.

Resident Tsao by KC Design

See more apartments on Dezeen »

Resident Tsao by KC Design

Here’s some more explanation from KC Design Studio:


The main concept of this project is that using two rotatable partitions to divided four area in a one open-plan space. The rotatable TV-Partition can be turned in different angle.

Resident Tsao by KC Design

Client can decide to having bigger dining area or living area. Another partition is actually a big bookshelf, it divides study room and bedroom. Using slide door to save privacy needs.

Resident Tsao by KC Design

A part of bookshelf can be moved to study room. The idea of this function is to make these two rooms become in a one big master room.

The post Resident Tsao by
KC Design Studio
appeared first on Dezeen.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

Above: photograph is by Wei-Ming Yuan

New York architect Stan Allen constructed this pavilion of bamboo scaffolding at a former airport in Taichung, Taiwan.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

Above: photograph is by Wei-Ming Yuan

The temporary Infobox structure displays masterplan proposals by the architect to redevelop the 240-hectare site.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

Above: photograph is by Wei-Ming Yuan

Drawings, models and projected animations are displayed on the ground floor of the pavilion, while a first-floor balcony offers a view of the progressing construction.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

The gridded scaffolding is composed entirely of bamboo sticks, which are tied together with metal wire.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

The bamboo structure will be completely recycled when the pavilion is eventually dismantled.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

Another former airport recently hosted an international design fair – you can watch a movie about that event here.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

Other bamboo structures featured on Dezeen include a nest-like den and a woven lattice restaurant ceiling, both in China.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

Photography is by Iwan Baan, apart where otherwise stated.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

Above: photograph is by Wei-Ming Yuan

Here’s some further explanation from Stan Allen Architects:


Taichung Infobox

In 2009, Stan Allen Architect completed the master-plan for Taichung Gateway Park, a 240 hectare mixed use quarter to be built on the site of the former Municipal Airport in Taichung, Taiwan.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

The urban design proposal includes a long-term strategy to “grow” the site over time, with civic buildings, infrastructure and residential neighborhoods to be built around a large central park space.

Taichung Infobox by Stan Allen

In order to raise awareness of the Taichung Gateway project, and to bring the public onto this spectacular site, SAA proposed the immediate construction of the InfoBox, a temporary exhibition pavilion to display the site and the project. Throughout the life of the structure, drawings, models and computer animations will be displayed within, while an elevated overlook terrace gives the public a ringside seat to observe the process of construction.

Infobox pavilion by Stan Allen Architect's

Click above for larger image 

Responding to the need for fast implementation and making the most of a limited budget, the InfoBox re-purposes the ubiquitous bamboo scaffolding technology seen all over Asia. The bamboo structure is not only quick and inexpensive, it is a locally available green technology: all materials will be recycled at the end of the pavilion’s lifespan.

Infobox pavilion by Stan Allen Architect's

Click above for larger image 

The dense weave of the bamboo creates optical effects which will contribute to the iconic presence of the InfoBox. The systems are flexible and adaptive, both during construction and over the life of the project.

Infobox pavilion by Stan Allen Architect's

Click above for larger image 

Client: City of Taichung
Design architect: Stan Allen
Executive architect: W.B. Huang Architects & Planners
Project coordinator: Feng-Chia Design Center

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

Jars of tea and second-hand books are separated in stacked wooden cubes at a Taipei teahouse.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

Designed by Swiss-Danish designer Carsten Jörgensen for Taiwanese tea brand smith&hsu, the two-storey teahouse has product displays and wooden furniture on the ground floor, while a dining room occupies the floor above.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

The wooden display boxes downstairs are arranged into grids along one wall, with some suspended from the ceiling.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

Upstairs, the cubes line every wall and are diagonally staggered with gaps in between.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

See some more interesting teahouses on Dezeen, including one made of cardboard by Shigeru Ban, by following this link.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

The following text is from smith&hsu:


smith&hsu Tea House, Where Tea and Design Meet.

smith&hsu is a contemporary tea brand based in Taiwan. Its premium loose teas, collected from around the world, are a testament to its deep passion for both Chinese and British tea culture. Beside its carefully assorted tea collection, smith&hsu offers a wide range of beautifully designed tea tools and homemade gourmet food.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

smith&hsu’s teahouse on Nan Jing East Road in Taipei is the 5th and latest addition to the brand. Envisioned by Swiss / Danish designer Carsten Jörgensen, the new teahouse has two floors seating 48 guests in the upper dining area and 10 guests in the spacious lower tea shop. It carries minimalistic tea tools exclusively created for smith&hsu and its outstanding teas.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

The wood and concrete interior feels authentic. The materials chosen for the store reflect the subtlety of a great tea and trigger the guests’ aesthetic sensibility. In keeping with modernistic principles of visual clarity and simplicity, Carsten Jörgensen has created a wonderful framework for experiencing quality teas. The teahouse’s ascetic yet warm charm has a calming effect even after one of those long and stressful days.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

As an extension of the design for the previous smith&hsu teahouses, the key elements of the new store are “soil” and “wood”. The store’s concrete surfaces display a subtle spectrum of grayish, bluish, yellowish and brownish colors.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

Concrete walls and floors add an earthy feel, whereas the wood gives the store a sense of organic warmth. All the materials smith&hsu has used for the teahouse feel refreshingly raw and uncluttered.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

The cubic wooden tables, counters and shelves are simple and unpretentious. On the first floor, Y Chairs by Hans J. Wegner and on the second floor, Eames Plastic Side Chairs by Charles & Ray Eames complement each other and the cubic furniture well. Both are epitomes of the “designer chair” and both are exceptionally beautiful.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

The sensuousness expressed in the Eames chair, its elegance and comfort, seems to have made it a perfect match for smith&hsu. Moreover, the inclusion of these two iconic chairs is a sure sign of the brand’s desire to bring only the best to its customers.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

Bookshelves made of piles of wooden cubes run around the walls of the entire second floor, creating an open library for smith&hsu’s guests. The books come from the customers themselves and from a few generous donors. The tea and the books, the concrete and the wood somehow all make sense together in this great looking new teahouse.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

smith&hsu has managed to combine asceticism with homeliness and the result is best described as something akin to wisdom.

smith&hsu Teahouse by Carsten Jörgensen

Designer: Carsten Jörgensen
Area: 172 sqm
Completed Time: May, 2011


See also:

.

WUHAO @
The Teahouse
Book and Coffeeshop
in Madrid by MYCC
Konjaku-an
by Inly Design

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

Japanese designers Nendo will draw black and white floorboards that appear to flow around plinths for their solo show at the National Taiwan Craft Research and Development Institute later this month.

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

Designed to showcase their Thin Black Lines and Dancing Squares projects, the exhibition will be divided into two rooms – one with black drawings on white and the other with white on black.

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

The walls of the second room will be curved as though visitors are walking through the image in a fish-eye lens.

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

See all our stories about Nendo here.

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

Photographs are by Daici Ano.

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

The information below is from Nendo:


Nendo’s solo exhibition in Taiwan will be held by the end of August.

“Nendo’s solo exhibition” design concept

A solo show at the Taiwanese government-sponsored National Taiwan Craft Research and Development Institute featuring two collections.

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

‘Thin black lines’ is a collection of furniture formed from ‘still black’, so we wanted to use ‘active black on white’ for the exhibition space. The drawings on the floor flow like river water around the exhibition stands.

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

‘Dancing squares’ is a collection based on the concept of ‘active white’, so we wanted a space that expressed the idea of ‘still black on white’.

Solo Exhibition by Nendo

Our room-sized sketch, affixed to walls and floor, uses a fish-eye lens-like effect as though viewers are seeing it through a tiny water drop.


See also:

.

Anna by
ZMIK
Leo Burnett Office by
Ministry of Design
Paperboard Architecture
by D’art for VDP

Sexy House Series

Découverte de cette série et des clichés très surprenants par le photographe taïwanais Wang Chien Yang. Un accent particulier sur la mise en scène de jeunes femmes dans des pièces de la maison, le tout dans un univers très pop et coloré. A découvrir dans la suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz

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Sun Moon Lake visitor centre by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Tokyo architects Norihiko Dan and Associates have completed this visitor centre on the shore of Sun Moon Lake in Taiwan.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Housing the tourist board’s offices and an information centre for visitors, the building has a green roof and rises out of the surrounding land towards the lake.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Curved concrete channels lead round the structure towards the lake.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

A basin of water between the building and the lake reflects a rippling image of the surrounding trees.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

The building will open to the public on 25 February.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

The information below is from Norihiko Dan and Associates:


Sun Moon Lake Administration office of Tourism Bureau —A landform for dialog between the human being and nature

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

This is one of the projects from an international competition held in Taiwan in 2003 for four representative sightseeing locations in Taiwan called the Landform Series. It is a project for an environment management bureau that houses a visitor center in the Sun Moon Lake Hsiangshan area.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

The site just touches the narrow inlet extending almost south-north at its northern tip, has a narrow opening facing the lake-view direction, and extends relatively deep inland along a road. Looking towards the lake, the lake surface looks like it is cutout in a V shape as mountain slopes close in from both sides.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

That is, although the site is for the Sun Moon Lake Scenery management bureau, it doesn’t have a 180° view of Sun Moon Lake as can be enjoyed from the windows and terraces of the hotels standing on a typically popular site.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

In most cases with sites like this, the building is positioned on the lake side to secure the greatest view possible, and thus the inland side tends to become a kind of dead space.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

As the basic policy for the design, my first aim was to propose a new model for a relationship between the building and its natural environment while preserving the surrounding scenery and keeping the inland area from becoming dead space.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

My second priority was to address the disadvantages of the site whose view of the Sun Moon Lake is not necessarily perfect, and to draw out and amplify the potential advantages.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

One way to solve the first problem was to pursue a new relationship between the building and its surrounding landform.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Since long ago, buildings have generally been built “on” landforms, but there have been cases in which they have been built within landforms, such as the early Catholic monasteries of Cappadocia and the Yao Tong settlements along the Yellow River, and there have also been such classics as Nolli’s map that considered the building as the ground which can be curved or transformed, similarly to the landform, in a conceptual sense.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Due to the fact early modernism negated in totality the methods of self-transformation—including the poche method that belonged to pre-19th century neoclassicism in particular—and demonstrated an inability to adapt to the complex and diverse topography in such areas as east Asia, I believe that 20th century architecture actually gave rise to the phenomenon of land development projects that “flattened” mountains, an approach that is almost synonymous with the destruction of nature.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

In fact, the very key to linking buildings with landforms lies in these issues that have been ignored by modernism.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

In this project, in order to emphasize a sense of horizontality to the architecture, I added more soil taken from construction for the foundation to the volume of the building conventionally required, and designed a composition in which the building on the lake side and a sloping mound on the inland side are in gradual and continuous transition.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

By adopting this composition I planned the design so that continuity is regained between the building and the landform to form an integrated garden rather than having the building sever the landform.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

For the second theme, I designed an extensive axial layout by rerouting the approach flow-line from the road to that it extends far inland and then curving it back as far as possible via two large arches spanning 35 meters each, to create a sense of dynamism that leads to the lake surface.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Moreover, I set up a near-view water basin in contrast with the distant-view lake surface to enhance the water surface effect by mirroring the distant view upon it.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

The fact it is only possible to view the lake surface distantly from a relatively narrow angle means that the site—fortunately free of nearby buildings—is surrounded 360° by a lush sea of trees.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

I saw this as the second undulating surface and opened up the upper part of the building by greening it to create continuity with the natural surroundings.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

These two surfaces—the union of the lake and water basin surfaces, and the resonance of the building’s greenery on the upper part with the surrounding undulating sea of trees—are connected via the tunnel-shaped diagonal path that cuts and penetrates through the interior of the building, and through the slopes carved into the building like mountain paths, to create a multitiered landform.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

This half-architectural and half-landform project is conceptualized as a stage setting to bring out and amplify a hidden dimension of the scenery and environment of Sun Moon Lake, and at the same time create a new dialogue between the human being and nature that provides another new dimension to this area.

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

Translator: Izumi Tanabe
Architect(s): Norihiko Dan and Associates

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

Project team: Norihiko Dan, Tadashi Yoshimura, Eiji Sawano, Minghsien Wang, Masato Shiihashi
Project management: Norihiko Dan and Associates
Collaborator(s): Su Mao-Pin architects

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

Structural engineer: Structure Design Group(Japan), Horn Gyun Engineering Consultants Ltd.(Taiwan)
Electrical engineer: Uichi Inoue Engineering Laboratory(Japan), Huan-Chiou Electrical Engineering Co.(Taiwan)

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

Landscape architect: Norihiko Dan and Associates(Japan), Su Mao-Pin architects(Taiwan)
Lighting engineer: WORKTECHT CORPORATION(Japan), Cheng Yi Lighting Co., Ltd.(Taiwan)

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

(General) Contractor: HUACHUN Construction Co., Ltd.(Phase 1), YIDE Construction Co., Ltd.(Phase 2)
Client: Sun Moon Lake National Scenic Area Administration

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

Location: No.599, Zhongshan Rd., Yuchi Township, Nantou County 555, Taiwan (R.O.C.)
Use: National Scenic Area Administration, Visitors’ Center

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

Site area: 33,340 m2
Bldg. area: 6,639.59 m2
Gross floor area: 6,781.21 m2

Sun Moon Lake Administration Office by Norihiko Dan and Associates

Click for larger image

Bldg. coverage ratio: 19.9 %
Gross floor ratio: 20.3 %
Bldg. scale: zero story below ground, two stories above ground


See also:

.

Visitors centre for Copenhagen
by EFFEKT
Visitors centre for Tibet by
Standardarchitecture-Zhaoyang
Visitors centre for South Korea
by G.Lab*

TEK by BIG

TEK by BIG

Danish firm Bjarke Ingels Group have designed a technology centre for Taipei, Taiwan, comprising a cube-shaped structure with round voids cut from its volume. 

TEK by BIG

Called TEK (Technology, Entertainment & Knowledge Centre), holes in the structure will create a spiral within the volume, forming access routes from street level into the building and up to its roof.

TEK by BIG

The building will be made up of concrete lamellas, an arrangement of stacked thin plates, that will recede in the centre and function as a staircase where the holes have been cut into the structure.

TEK by BIG

These stepped areas can also provide informal seating areas for visitors.

TEK by BIG

The centre will comprise exhibition spaces, showrooms, an auditorium, restaurants and galleries, which will be organised around the central spiral.

TEK by BIG

Retail spaces, a hotel and offices will also be incorporated.

TEK by BIG

All our stories on Bjarke Ingels Group »

TEK by BIG

More cultural buildings on Dezeen »

TEK by BIG

More architecture on Dezeen »

TEK by BIG

Here’s some more information from the architects:


TEK – Technology, Entertainment & Knowledge Center Taipei
The Technology Entertainment & Knowledge Center – aka TEK Taipei – is a dense urban block of all kinds of activities related to contemporary technology and media.

TEK by BIG

The cube = TEK3
The spiraling street of media programs is consolidated in to a 57x57x57 m3 cube of program permeated by a public trajectory of people life.

TEK by BIG

The cube is finished in concrete lamellas serving as solar shading as well as public access.

TEK by BIG

The lamellas recede inwards forming a generous public staircase allowing the public to walk into the façade and all the way to the roof.

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

TEK Taipei will consolidate exhibition spaces, showrooms, retail space, a market place and hotel, offices and conference rooms all related to media in a single superfunctional entity.

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

At the heart of the institution, a big public auditorium will host product presentations, program launches, movie previews and gaming tournaments as well as the biannual TEK Taipei as the reoccurring anchor event for the whole complex.

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

TEK3 contains an almost urban mix of programs with no obvious hierarchy.

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

We propose to organize the shops and showrooms, offices and hotel rooms, conference rooms and exhibition spaces, restaurants and galleries along an internal extension of the pedestrian street to the south.

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

ProJect TEK – Technology, Entertainment & Knowledge Center Taipei

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

client Taiwan Land Development Corporation

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

consultants Realities United, Arup

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

size 53.000m2

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

location Taipei, Taiwan

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

m = distance I m2 = area I m3 = space

TEK by BIG

Technology + Entertainment + Knowledge = TEK

TEK by BIG

TEK3 = Space for Technology, Entertainment & Knowledge

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

Partner in Charge: Bjarke Ingels, Jakob Lange

TEK by BIG

Project Leader: Cat Huang

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image

Team: Allyson Hiller, Xi Chen, Esben Vik, Johan Cool, Xu Li, Gaeton Brunet

TEK by BIG

Click for larger image


See also:

.

Taichung Convention Center by MADThe World Village of Women Sports by BIGUrban Forest by
MAD

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Here’s a proposal by Asymptote Architecture for a port terminal in the city of Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

The New York architects designed the scheme for the Kaohsiung Port Terminal competition, which was won by by Reiser + Umemoto (see our earlier story).

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Asymptote’s design features two towers with a terminal hall suspended between them.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

This hall provides shade and shelter for a public plaza below.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

All our stories on Asymptote »

Here are some more details from the architects:


Asymptote Architecture – Kaohsiung Port Terminal

The new Kaohsiung Marine Gateway Terminal designed by Asymptote is a new state of the art transportation interchange, an urban destination with both terminal and public facilities including exhibition and event spaces for the people of Kaohsiung as well as for national and international visitors. The project transforms the site from its industrial roots into a dynamic urban hub and a global gateway that bring a powerful and electric experience to the city 24 hours a day.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

The port terminal as envisioned by Asymptote is designed to invigorate and activate Kaohsiung’s city edge at the water. The port terminal extends the urban realm from the center of Kaohsiung to the city’s waterfront and connects this new urban space with the vitality of the future Pop Music Center and other public recreational and commercial activities that are to be located along the planned park at water’s edge.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

Key components of Asymptote’s design are two elegant towers, a sculptural terminal hall that is framed and hovers in an elevated position between them, and a plinth below that connects the towers and accommodates a new public urban space. This open plaza is an articulated yet continuous public space that is located at the very intersection of circulation paths that seamlessly draw the urban space of Kaohsiung into the heart of the project through to the water’s edge and back towards the city.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

These provide access to a number of important public spaces and programs as well as contribute to the dramatic entry sequence to the port facilities. This intertwining of public and private access as well as programming creates an activated public realm, providing a unique experience to ship passengers and city dwellers alike.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

The curved form of the terminal hall sits delicately yet majestically above the large open plaza activated by the flow of people moving back and forth between the harbor and the city. From the city, the terminal forms an urban scaled aperture that frames the harbor and water beyond. The sculpted underside of the floating building provides shelter to the urban space from the strong sun and seasonal rains while at night it provides dramatic illumination for the ongoing public activities, events and celebrations.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

The interior of the terminal building provides a spectacular culmination; a soaring vertical space naturally lit from above leads up to the large clear span of the terminal hall with sweeping panoramas of the City and the Kaohsiung skyline on one side and of the Sea, the sky and the horizon on the other.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

These are experienced within a dramatic space defined by the sophisticated geometry of the curved shell roof and the lightweight sculptural panels suspended below where the geometric pattern of the assembly creates ever-changing spatial and light effects, celebrating the events of both arrival and departure.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

Architects: Asymptote Architecture and Artech Architects
Location: Kaohsiung , Taiwan
Project Team: Asymptote Architecture – Hani Rashid & Lise Anne Couture, Artech Architects – Kris Yao
Structural Engineering: Knippers Helbig
Environmental Engineering: Transsolar

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image


Cruise Consultant: Parsons Brinckerhoff
Fire, Electrical & Plumbing: Heng Kai
Traffic Engineering: Everest
Project Area: 40,000 sqm
Client: Kaohsiung Harbor Bureau
Competition: Kaohsiung Port Terminal 2010
Photographs and Drawings: Courtesy of Asymptote Architecture


See also:

.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser + UmemotoThe Yas Hotel by
Asymptote
Strata Tower by
Asymptote

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser + Umemoto

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser Umemoto

New York practice Reiser + Umemoto have won the first prize in a competition to design a new port terminal for the city of  Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser Umemoto

The Kaohsiung Port Terminal will feature a series of undulating horizontal structures, each with glazed facades at the ends, merging together towards the centre and shooting up to form a tower at the opposite end.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser Umemoto

The building’s facade will feature an array of slim glazed slits, following the curves of the structure.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser Umemoto

An elevated boardwalk at street level will provide pedestrian access in and around the building.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser Umemoto

This will be separated from the  arrival and departure areas for the ships and ferries, which will be located below.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser Umemoto

Construction is due to start in 2012.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser Umemoto

Click for larger image

The following information is from the architects:


Reiser + Umemoto Awarded First Prize in the Kaohsiung Port Terminal Competition

NEW YORK, NY — Reiser + Umemoto (RUR) has been awarded First Prize in the international competition for a new Port and Cruise Service Center in the city of Kaohsiung in southern Taiwan, ROC.

For this project, RUR will partner with local architects Fei and Cheng and Associates (Taipei), with whom they are also working on their first-place winning Taipei Pop Music Center project. Also on the project team is Structural Engineer Ysrael A. Seinuk, PC (New York); Reiser + Umemoto and Ysrael A. Seinuk also collaborated on their O-14 office tower, which is currently nearing completion in Dubai, UAE. Rounding out the team in other engineering disciplines is ARUP Hong Kong.

The project is scheduled for construction in 2012 and expected to be in operation by 2014, with a construction budget of approximately $85,000,000 USD. The competition was sponsored by the Kaohsiung Harbor Bureau, Ministry of Transportation and Communications, Taiwan, ROC.

About the Project

For the Kaohsiung Port Terminal, RUR proposes a dynamic 3-dimensional urbanism that takes advantage of the site’s unique lateral positioning with respect to the city grid. Existing public pedestrian flows along the proposed elevated boardwalk can be amplified, rather than interrupted by creating a continuous elevated public esplanade along the waterfront. Cruise and ferry functions, meanwhile, are located just below the public level and are kept distinct to maintain secure areas for departing/arriving passengers.

The Main Hall splits up into three different partitions, each related to a different itinerary for travelling by ship, while the concourses are oriented parallel to the waterfront to maximize the interface between water and land. By vertically separating the functions of the general public, port business, and travelers along this waterfront edge we are able to keep the various operational uses highly efficient while at the same time allowing for the synergy of mixed functions for the general public.

Vertical circulation is organized around thickened zones in the building’s skin which also house structure, utilities, and ventilation. The structure is a system of nested, long-span shells, which are composed of an underlying steel pipe space frame which is sandwiched by cladding panels to create a useable cavity space. Overall an experience of directed yet functionally separated flows will lend an aura of energy to the point terminal space.

An essential component to the vitality of the Port Terminal Project is the connection to a proposed elevated public space along the waters’ edge. The importance of this waterfront space which is distinct yet connected to the city of Kaohsiung is inestimable. The boardwalk links the new Pop Music Center, the arts and shopping districts within a green necklace along the waterfront. The boardwalk will be a 24 hour space that fosters shopping, dining, and recreation. Moreover, connection to this vital public conduit will ensure the continuous economic viability of the port terminal, sustaining and amplifying the periodic maritime uses of the cruise terminal and ferries.


See also:

.

Ferry Terminal by
C. F. Møller
Airport by Massimiliano
& Doriana Fuksas
More architecture
on Dezeen

Inca Pan

incapan

Amazing work by Taiwanese illustrator, Inca Pan.

Check out more of his work on his flickr stream– he’s got some beautiful photography as well.