Nature Centre by EFFEKT
Posted in: UncategorizedThis visitor centre by Danish architects EFFEKT will have a series of ramped green roofs and sit at the heart of the Hareskoven forest in Copenhagen.
The Nature Centre will cover a thousand square-metres and house research facilities, exhibition spaces, rentable rooms and a café.
The star-shaped plan is inspired by a series of hunting pathways created by a former king that disperse from two points in the forest.
The building consists of five regularly shaped wings that each have separate functions and panoramic views.
The building will be triple-glazed and off the grid with water provided from a local well.
Here are more details from the architect:
Nature Centre:
The visitors centre is situated in the pristine forest of Hareskoven in the vicinity of Copenhagen. It is a portal to the almost 1 million visitors that uses the forest annually.
It hosts a 1000 square meter large visitor centre with café, exhibition space, rental, learning and research facilities and a caretaker’s residence.
The building is shaped like a star resembling the pathways in the forest that surrounds it. The pathways used to be a part of the old kings hunting grounds. They could provide a panoramic overview over the position of the prey in the forest. Now they serve as a historical memory and are a beautiful and unique feature of Hareskoven.
Landscape and building:
The building is designed in a simple gesture. The star shaped roof is a lifted landscape creating a series of panoramic rooms looking on into the forest.
In two of the five wings the roof slopes down to the ground making it accessible and part of the forest. Visitors can then either choose to walk through or over the building when entering the forest.
The floor is carved out of the hill proving varied parapet along the facades. The typology is carefully positioned so that in two places the floor and surroundings are in level providing a level free access to the central lobby and exhibition space and access into the forest.
Inner life:
The central lobby is the collective and organic shaped space of the building. It hosts the exhibition and multipurpose space.
Each wing then contains a separate function and can function independent with a local entrance when necessary. The regular shape of the independent wings allows maximum functionality of each room.
The envelope is a three layer glass facade for maximum energy performance and transparency at the same time.
All inner walls are covered with wood resembling the surrounding trees to give the feeling of still being inside the forest.
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A sustainability concept that draws on the natural aspects of the forest:
The unique position inside the forest has directly inspired the solutions for sustainability in the project. The building itself becomes a practical example on how solutions for sustainability works in buildings and users can experience and learn about the subject when visiting the centre. In the entrance an ‘energy barometer’ will update the energy consumption and inform users on the buildings activity.
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The building uses the natural green climate regulation that is provided by the surrounding deciduous forest. During summer time the density of the leaves will protect against overheating and during winter time the bare trees allows for the sun to heat up the building.
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The buildings position in the hill allows it to ‘hibernate’, using free earth cooling during summer and heating during winter.
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A building ‘Off the grid’:
The building is designed to be off the grid. Clean water is accessed through a local well in the forest and the wastewater is purified in a local root zone bed. The building utilizes earth energy providing a sustainable and off grid solution for heating the building.
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An energy producing building:
The building is powered by a local array of solar panels positioned at the edge of the forest. These are the only part of the building linked up to the surrounding cities supply grids.
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During peak hours this facility produces more energy than needed and delivers energy back to the grid. This enables the building to become an energy producing building in total.
Awards:
The Nature centre is shortlisted for WAF2010 in the category Future Projects: Education. The Nature centre was recently voted winner in the 7th cycle in the world architecture community.
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Team:
Sinus Lynge, Tue Hesselberg Foged, Jakob Nørbjeg Madsen, Marcin Kropidlo, Josephine Giller, Søren Martinussen, Tina Lund Højgaard
See also:
.
Floating gardens by Anne Holtrop | Cottages at Fallingwater by Patkau Architects | East Mountain by Johan Berglund |
iPad Sleeve Merino
Posted in: UncategorizedDan Hill on the World Design Congress in Beijing
Posted in: Uncategorizedpimg alt=”icograda_wdc.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/icograda_wdc.jpg” width=”468″ height=”351″ class=”mt-image-center” style=”text-align: center; display: block; margin: 0 auto 20px;” //p
pIn a seven part series, designer and urbanist Dan Hill, research leader at ARUP and author of the acclaimed blog a href=”http://www.cityofsound.com/”City of Sound/a, reports at length on last year’s a href=”http://www.beijing2009.org/index-eng.htm”World Design Congress/a in Beijing./p
pa href=”http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2010/07/world-design-congress-beijing-day-one.html”1/a a href=”http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2010/07/national-centre-for-performing-arts.html”2/a a href=”http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2010/08/world-design-congress-beijing-opening-ceremony.html”3/a a href=”http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2010/08/world-design-congress-2009-beijing-day-two.html”4/a a href=”http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2010/08/world-design-congress-2009-beijing-zhu-dake.html”5/a a href=”http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2010/08/world-design-congress-2009-beijing-victor-margolin.html”6/a a href=”http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2010/08/world-design-congress-2009-beijing-day-three.html”7/a/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/events/dan_hill_on_the_world_design_congress_in_beijing_17207.asp”(more…)/a
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Rejuvenate cities
Posted in: Uncategorizedpimg alt=”rejuvenative_cities.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/rejuvenative_cities.jpg” width=”390″ height=”250″ class=”mt-image-center” style=”text-align: center; display: block; margin: 0 auto 20px;” /In a long paper, Reon Brand of Philips Design presents a holistic approach to systemically transform cities into places that positively contribute to human personal development, social harmony and diversity./p
blockquote”Urban living is the future of the majority. But although urbanization has brought great progress to human civilization, it is also a key factor in compromising the natural balance of the planet; it has become one of the key threats to loss of biodiversity. There are a number of associated macro level issues such as pollution, decline in natural resource, and numerous current and escalating social issues that will increasingly detract from the benefits brought by urban living if we continue to develop cities in their current format. Many approaches to improve urban development are still driven on an issue-based level rather a systemic approach.
pThis paper examines the systemic issues and drivers of change associated with urban development. It explores possibilities for a holistic approach to systemically transform cities into places that positively contribute to human personal development, social harmony and diversity, and the environment and health of the planet at large. The paper concludes that we have to think differently about the role and the function of cities, which will inspire us to develop future cities and urban living in a different way.”/blockquote/p
p a href=”http://www.design.philips.com/philips/shared/assets/design_assets/pdf/nvbD/august2010/rejuvenative_cities.pdf”Download paper/a (pdf)/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/business/rejuvenate_cities_17206.asp”(more…)/a
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Cool Hunting Video Presents: Brimfield Dealers
Posted in: Uncategorized A Cool Hunting Video on the people selling Americana of all sorts at the U.S.’s biggest flea market
This video checks in with the sellers who come to the Brimfield Antique Show, which three times a year inflates the population of Brimfield, Massachusetts from 3,000 to a quarter million. From a dealer who specializes in Masonic ephemera to a sculptor who uses scrap metal as his material, we took a look at the community who gives shoppers reason to travel far and wide to the small town. (For a look at the collectors, check out our companion video.)
Cool Hunting Video Presents: Brimfield Collectors
Posted in: UncategorizedOur video on the hunters of vintage goods at the Brimfield Antique Fair
Taking a look at the thrice-annual phenomenon of the Brimfield Antique Show in Western Massachusetts, this video focuses on the people who travel there from all over the world to collect everything from milk bottle caps to taxidermy peacocks. We talked to jewelry designer Phillip Crangi, prop master
Kenyan Lewis, and others who were all in some way or another—like the married couple who bought a Viagra clock—looking for “conversation pieces.” To see the other side of the story, the dealers who also travel from all over to sell at the show, watch our other video on Brimfield.
LimoLand
Posted in: Uncategorized Jean Pigozzi’s line for creative grandpas launches in the U.S. with an NYC flagship
Jean “Johnny” Pigozzi, the larger-than-life personality behind LimoLand, says the line of clothing and accessories is for “rich old men.” Combining a candy-hued palette with classic styles and quality materials, if Pigozzi is talking about grandpas, then they’re the ones who summer in the Hamptons on hallucinogens. Those who fit the bill or just dig the style will soon be able to indulge in the look when the brand’s first flagship store hits NYC next week in the Meatpacking District.
A French mogul, philanthropist and avid art collector—including the world’s largest collection of contemporary African art— Pigozzi’s label expresses his colorfully casual aesthetic and ultra-quirky personality through and through. The brand’s logo, Mr. Limo—a little creature based on work of late Tanzanian artist George Lilanga—makes the perfect mascot.
Selling at concept shops like Colette, 10 Corso Como and Land of Tomorrow, the LimoLand collection includes a stylish assortment of everyday fashions as well as collaborations with Yoshida Porter, Wild Things and Penfield.
We recently got a chance to preview the shop and the new collection, which are both packed with carefully considered details and plenty of joie de vivre.
See some of our favorites from the collection in the gallery below.
Lina Scheynius
Posted in: UncategorizedShe’s a really wonderful photographer from Sweden with a distinctively warm and personable style.
Lina’s also worked on a few of what she calls ‘Polaroid Projects’. Those are a bit softer, as you would expect, but still illustrate her knack for snapping engaging and realistic shots. You can find them, and plenty more of her work, on her site.