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Adaptive Urban Ecology – Skyscrapers for Manhattan

By: admin | August - 29 - 2010

Adaptive ecologies explores the emergent logics of adaptation and evolution that are constitutive of ecosystems in nature. Chimera’s vision is to define an urban ecosystem which supports housing and cultural programs and has the ability to adapt, transform, mutate, and adjust according to the specific urban and social character of the site and of Manhattan. This urban ecological system is taking as a model an organism in nature, specifically the mangrove plant. The mangrove plant and its collective the mangal, provide examples of social associative principles as well as structural capacities and hybrid responses to environmental and contextual conditions.

The project’s elevated gymnastics are dealing both with the complex topography of the site and its connectivity to the larger city. The new ground has been defined by creating an elevated plateau  generated by the potential directionality of human fluxes on the newly proposed site. This oriented space is being partitioned following a logic of cellular aggregation, embedding neighbouring relationships at different scales, and is also the ground reference of the urban housing massing negotiation. Models from nature such as phyllotaxis and branching have been the driving paradigms to define a parametric machine which is able to create a responsive urban ecology. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Yas Yacht Club / Omiros One Architecture

By: admin | August - 29 - 2010

Designed by Omiros One Architecture (O1A) for Aldar Properties, the Yas Island Yacht Club forms a key part of the Yas Marina precinct, which recently staged its inaugural Formula 1 motor racing event. The recently completed project is the architect’s first significant work in the Middle East. O1A principal and founder Mr Omiros Emmanouilides describes the design as “a composition of dynamic and fluid forms that link the buildings to the nautical theme, the heritage of the location and the new F1 character of Yas Island.” “The Yacht Club is designed to excite, inspire and strengthen the concept that is Yas.”

Incorporating various 5-star club uses including restaurants, bars, lounges, function rooms, outdoor decks and 45-metre observation tower, the Yacht Club (Building 1) is the more expressive and prominent of the two. Building 2, the retail and administration component, features a waist-shaped glass internal courtyard and maintains a quieter profile. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

TU Delft School of Architecture / Sid Wichienkuer

By: admin | August - 29 - 2010


The TU Delft School of Architecture was burned down during a fire in 2008. The University official held an architectural competition in 2009 to build a new school and architect Sid Wichienkuer was selected among the finalists.

The use of section and topographies become the driving force behind this project. By reconstituting and reconsidering each of the precedents, the resultant project intends to not reinvent but understand how section can foster productive architectural relationships. The gathering/communal spaces are stacked through the core of the building – operating as a central gathering space for offices, studios, and the greater community as a central, unifying element that serves the same purpose for a variety of programs. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Faceted Surface Changes Color with Light / Orproject

By: admin | August - 29 - 2010

OR² by Orproject is the further development of OR, a single surface roof structure which reacts to sunlight. The polygonal segments of the surface react to ultra-violet light, mapping the position and intensity of solar rays. When in the shade, the segments of OR² are translucent white. However when hit by sunlight they become coloured, flooding the space below with different hues of light. During the day OR² becomes a shading device passively controlling the space below it. At night OR² transforms into an enormous chandelier, disseminating light which has been collected by integrated photovoltaic cells during the day into the surrounding areas.

Special software components have been developed in order to create the shapes and to generate the cutting schedules. The individual elements were then automatically numbered and water jet cut. OR structures are the first ones to employ photo-reactive technology at an architectural scale, exploring its applicability to the fields of construction and design. The beauty of OR² is its constant interaction with the elements, at each moment of the day OR’s appearance is unique. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, art, design, featured, news

Bubbles Urbanism for Berlin

By: admin | August - 27 - 2010

The starting point of this project designed by Patrick Bedarf evolved during the research of the ongoing conflict between different social groups and their interest in one of the most attractive pieces of  land in the heart of Berlin: the Spree Riversides located between Friedrichshain and Kreuzberg.

Through iteratively distributing programmatic layers  from the surrounding city fabric into the site and systematically mixing volumes of different social characteristics, the geometry of the project adopted the shape of foam clusters. The quality of formal variety as a consequence of the heterogeneity of the overall system is implied by the design methodology of functional aesthetics. The project focuses on a spatial partitioning strategy of voronoi regions featuring a gradient-driven diversity with highly functional orthogonal structures as well as distorted and geometrically complex volumes. Pointclouds, generated from early studies of programmatic foam structures, are therefore manipulated locally depending on programmatic attributes. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Timber Pavilion at the Hakone Museum / Tezuka Architects

By: admin | August - 27 - 2010

The new pavilion for the Hakone Open-Air Museum designed by Tezuka Architects is comprised of a structure entirely assembled with timber logs without any metal parts. Cutting-edge structural analysis has been employed to overcome the loads resistance variability that characterizes timber. The structure used traditional wood joints even though Tezuka Architects conceived a futuristic form.

In the interior of the pavilion a series of nets create an artificial topography for children. Nets are configured at different levels to create platforms, resting and playground areas.

The pavilion was designed to be permanent and dismountable with 100% recyclable materials. Since its completion at the end of 2009, the pavilion has gained the recognition among critics for its unconventional use of traditional materials and responsibility towards the natural environment. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Museum of Polish History / Paul Preissner Architects

By: admin | August - 26 - 2010

Paul Preissner Architects conceived the new Museum of Polish History as a sculptural volume designed along conceptual terms of fluidity, velocity, and lightness in order to produce a seductive and progressive artifact within the historic context of Warsaw. The building appears like a mystical object floating above the extensive artificial landscape, spanning the Trasa Lazienkowska at the edge of the embankment. This museum defies gravity by exposing dramatic undercuts towards surrounding entrance plazas, it does not sit as a barrier to the site, but as another viewing point to the historic and modern city.

Paul Preissner Architects designed the park site specifically to maximize the excitement, energy and functionality of all forms of urban transit, including automobile, bus, truck, bicycle, and pedestrian pathways.  New commercial, retail, residential, and cultural facilities can be accessed and serviced through park decks that connect the entire site with a network of pedestrian paths. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Green Urbanism and Synthetic Hyper-Structures

By: admin | August - 26 - 2010

Graham Thompson, a recent graduate from The Bartlett School of Architecture in the United Kingdom proposed a new type of green urbanism based on synthetic hyper-structures. The aim of the project was the exploration of the integration of architecture and technology for creating a new kind of urbanism that rethinks urban density, personal spaces, and communal areas.

The proposal consists of urban farming zones, undulated surface towers, solar recharging zones, and recreational areas. The farming zones are designed as planes in multiple levels with its own watering and nutrient monitoring systems.

The towers stretch themselves vertically under the premise of a bionic tower to relocate a new urban biotope for the local flora and fauna and recreating a food production which is automatically managed by the inhabitants.  The distribution of flow is made around a spreading spine in the loop of numerous elevators. The use of truncated and elongated curvatures throughout the buildings calls for a better circulatory fluidity and accessibility by being able to mediate the environmental flows. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

UNStudio’s Art Collector Loft in New York City

By: admin | August - 26 - 2010

UNStudio’s recently completed design for an existing loft located in Greenwich Village in Manhattan explores the interaction between a gallery and living space. The main walls in the loft flow through the space, and together with articulated ceilings create hybrid conditions in which exhibition areas merge into living areas.

The existing loft space was characterized by challenging proportions: the space is long and wide, but also rather low. Gently flowing curved walls were introduced to virtually divide the main space into proportionally balanced spaces. This created zones of comfortable proportions for domestic use, while simultaneously generating a large amount of wall space for the display of art.

Ben van Berkel: “The loft really is a hybrid space; as much a private museum as a living space. Because of that, flexibility is all; few rooms are actually fixed and most are interchangeable, so that in the end the areas devoted to living and to art are completely merged.”

While the walls form a calm and controlled backdrop for the works of art, the ceiling is more articulated in its expression of this transition. By interchanging luminous and opaque, the ceiling creates a field of ambient and local lighting conditions, forming an organizational element in the exhibition and the living areas. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Mixed-use Community for the Middle East / Klingmann Architects

By: admin | August - 25 - 2010

Klingmann Architects and Brand Consultant’s recent work in the Middle East illustrates solutions for New York City’s densely-packed urban landscape. The award winning mixed-use master plan was designed as a concept for prominent Middle East cities. It’s intended to be an eco-friendly cohesively “branded” destination. “It will be a destination for all to enjoy year round as a holistic, sustain able environment,” says, Anna Klingmann, Principal.

There are six functions within the master plan. The “exchange district” incorporates office buildings and public transportation. “This project is an innovative concept for inner city living and working, transit-oriented but principally people oriented,” says Klingmann. There’s a “leisure district” that includes a plaza, themed gardens, restaurants and retail, and water feature. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news
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