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The Wave For Toyota by Deri | Geneva-2013

By: Joe Cohan | September - 5 - 2013

“The Wave” is the new stand-design and concept for Toyota by German design-agency Déri that had its debut at Geneva-2013. The architecture of the stand reminds one of a wave in motion: dynamic, energetic and pure. Inspired by traditional Japanese paper craft, the idea of The Wave was born by just rolling a sheet of paper. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Repetitive Assemblage In Salzburg / Temporary Art Pavilion By Soma Architecture

By: Marija Bojovic | September - 4 - 2013

Temporary Art Pavilion, temporary structure, contemporary art, Salzburg, Austria, Austrian State of Salzburg, Soma Architecture, mass-like structure, aluminum, conglomerate, aggregation

This temporary pavilion in Salzburg, designed by Soma Architecture, presents unique venue for contemporary art production in the city known for its classical music events. The main user of the structure was a contemporary music festival – the Salzburg Biennale and during next ten years the pavilion will move and will be used for various art events at different locations.

As the art as a process which involves many participants doesn’t reveal itself at first sight, but demands time and engagement and unfolds slowly, the pavilion’s appearance provokes curiosity and invites visitors to experience the unusual and unknown.

The main architectural concept of the pavilion is repetitive and inherited – rule and variation. The design process is based on repetition of one element and they are aggregated by a set of rules, according to the architectural effect the architects aimed for. Aluminum profiles of uniform length together produce irregular, mass-like conglomerate that changes in appearance during the day, depending on present light condition. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

The Kyiv Culture Space On Andriivski Descent, Ukraine

By: Joe Cohan | September - 4 - 2013

The competition for young architects on the Andriivskyi descent in Kyiv, Ukraine, aimed to create a concept for the former Yunist factory. The site redevelopment competition terms determined the cultural space as 10-15 per cent of the area linked to the Andriivskyi descent, and the rest of the one hectare was for commercial use. The competition provided the design of multifunctional cultural space with integrated chamber music hall. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Cloudscapes / An Experiment On A New Type of Architectural Space

By: Marija Bojovic | September - 3 - 2013

Tetsuo Kondo Architects, Tokyo, Transsolar, Matthias Schuler, Japan, Sunken Garden, Museum of Contemporary Art, cube, container, glass curtain, cloudscapes, controlled humidity, controlled environment, artificial weather

Tetsuo Kondo Architects created playful installation for the Sunken Garden of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo. In collaboration with Transsolar, they designed a small bank of clouds that are captured in the transparent, two-storey container and could be seen from the outdoor plaza, entrance hall, exhibition galleries and other parts of the museum.  This cloud installation is the second one created by this team – trey previously collaborated to produce an indoor cloud at the Venice Biennale in 2010.

When one climbs the stairs beyond the clouds to reach the top of the cube, the museum, the surrounding buildings, and the sky stretch out above the clouds. The clouds are in constant motion and their edges are both sharp and soft. Color, density and brightness are ever changing, depending on the weather and the time of the day. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

New Center For Performing Arts In Sejong, South Korea By Asymptote Architecture

By: Marija Bojovic | September - 3 - 2013

Asymptote Architecture, Sejong, South Korea, Korea, Center for the Performing Arts, glass façade, performing center, contextual architecture, landmark architecture, landmark

Places of culture always form very significant network in every urban center. The city of Sejong in South Korea will strongly benefit from a new Center for the Performing Arts, as the vital part of the city’s emergence and growth. Designed by Asymptote Architecture, the proposal calls for architecture rooted in the contemporary urban life of Sejong as well as it celebrates the contemporary culture as expressed through elegant and sophisticated design principles.

The aim of the designers of this performing center was to capture the spirit and flavors of local architectural traditions therefore the elegant, curved roofs of pavilions, temples and traditional, monumental buildings are transformed in the architecture of contemporary expression, allowing continuity of culture and city’s 21st century cultural aspirations. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

GMP Wins Competition For National Convention And Exhibition Centre in Tianjin, China

By: Joe Cohan | September - 3 - 2013

With their design, von Gerkan, Marg and Partners (GMP) won the 1st prize of the international design competition for the Tianjin Exhibition Centre. Joining Shanghai and Guangzhou, Tianjin will be the third city to have an exhibition centre of internatio­nal importance to be built. With a total square area of 1.2 million square metres and dedicated exhibition floor space of 400,000 square metres, one of the world’s largest exhibition centres will be created in the east of China over the next few years.

The site is located at Tianjin Avenue, the main traffic artery which links Tianjin’s historic centre with the Binhai Development Area at the coast of the Yellow Sea. To the north, the site borders the river Haihe which is instrumental in shaping the character of the city. The exhibition ground’s central access avenue runs between these two poles and generates a spatial connection between the traffic artery and the waterway. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Mondaine New Classic Watches Are The Perfect Holiday Gift For Design Connoisseurs

By: Paul Aldridge | September - 1 - 2013

Mondaine New Classic

The Mondaine New Classic is personified by its straightforward and unadorned case and crystal shape, its luxurious genuine black leather strap with red accent, and, of course, the famed red second hand modeled after the signal paddle used on the Swiss Railway. Available with the wearer’s choice of a brushed or polished stainless steel case, the Mondaine New Classic is also available with a Big Date function at the 3:00, or a Day Date function at the 3:00.

Our increasingly demanding schedules and busy lifestyles require us to keep a close eye on the time. Enter the unique Evo Alarm watch from renowned Swiss watchmakers Mondaine. Form meets function in this innovative design, which combines the iconic “analog” aesthetic of a classic Mondaine timepiece with the decidedly “digital” addition of an easy-to-use alarm. The Mondaine Evo Alarm features a quartz movement with a 40 mm case and a genuine leather strap. The face is available in either black with a stainless steel brushed case or white with a stainless steel polished case.

eVolo has teamed up with Mondaine to give away one Mondaine Evolo Alarm to a lucky reader. Please send your comments to magazine@evolo.us by November 30, 2013 to be entered into a raffle. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, design, featured, news

International Centre For Cave Art | Snøhetta, Duncan Lewis With Casson Mann

By: Joe Cohan | August - 31 - 2013
Deep in the heart of the Dordogne river valley, in the foothills of Montignac lies the Lascaux cave complex with its unique treasure trove of Paleolithic cave art. Discovered in 1940 by 3 boys chasing their runaway dog, the 2000 paintings within caused an international sensation that attracted visitors from every part of the world. In 1963 the paintings were so compromised by environmental exposure that the caves were permanently closed to the public.

Today, a new ambitious “Lascaux IV” is planned to re-establish this extraordinary world heritage site. After an international competition that attracted 88 entries, a team comprising of architects Snøhetta and Duncan Lewis and exhibition designers Casson Mann won the prestigious commission to create the new visitor center. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Commuter Settlement In Germany Near The Rhine | Studio BANG

By: Joe Cohan | August - 31 - 2013

Studio BÄNG‘s winning entry for the IBA Basel competition to design a settlement for commuters in Rheinweiler, Germany is located at the Oberreihnische Tiefebene, a lowland plain at the Rhine. The connection to Freiburg and Basel sets the possibility for a commuter settlement. This design is focuses on the last part of the commuters’ daily way back home; the stage from station to bedroom.

The new settlement is composed of 3 different row-housing units. 28 of them form a structure that is slightly denser than the surrounding single-family housing units. Thus, lower building costs and a closer community is established. Various public and semi-public places in combination with private zones provide different stages of intimacy within the settlement. Habitants are free to choose the level of intimacy. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Wrapped In Metal Ribbons, New Petersen Automotive Museum Has Been Finally Revealed

By: Marija Bojovic | August - 31 - 2013

Los Angeles, California, US, Petersen Automotive Museum, Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates, metal ribbons, metal cladding, organic structure, museum design, museum, the miracle mile

The design for the new Petersen Automotive Museum has been finally revealed. The announcement that the 20th anniversary of the company will be marked by complete exterior transformation and significant redesign of the interior followed the controversy. However, New York based office Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates is behind the cutting edge design for the new Petersen Museum. Undulating metal façade followed by stunning interior characterizes their proposal for the corner of Wilshire Boulevard at Fairfax in Los Angeles, showing California’s rich automotive heritage.

The new design for the Museum will transform the building into a landmark. Ribbons of stainless steel wrap the structure from three sides and over the top evoking the notion of speed and the organic form of the coach-built automobile. At night, the Museum is lit and transforms into an attraction for the neighborhood, known as The Miracle Mile. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news
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