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Weave Housing in Denver / Meridian 105 Architecture

By: admin | February - 5 - 2011

Designed by Meridian 105 Architecture, ‘Weave Housing’ is a design proposal for an urban mixed use complex in Denver CO, with 160 apartment units, retail and parking. Inspired by a children’s potholder loom, the facade texture supports multiple interior apartment arrangements with units occupying one or two bays in width, and one or two levels in height, allowing for flexibility and plan variety. By weaving occupiable volumes across the facade, private balconies and overhangs are created, establishing zones of natural shading and meeting the desired passive energy strategy. The long dimension of each apartment unit is stretched parallel to the corridors, taking advantage of natural light and views while minimizing the depth light is asked to penetrate the space. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Maritime Culture & Pop Music Center – Kaohsiung, Taiwan

By: admin | February - 5 - 2011

Kubota & Bachmann Architects won a honorable mention for the Maritime Culture & Pop Music Center in Kaohsiung,Taiwan.

Color is joy, color is love and color is Pop! Joy is the pleasure of living in front of the sea, strolling along the beach, walking on the port and visiting the Port Market, the ships that come and go, looking into the distance. Love is the meeting of two programs on a single site. It is the encounter of Kaohsiung Maritime Cultural and Popular Music Center. Pop is the new symbol of Kaohsiung’s port. A place accessible to all audiences. A place where people sing and dance. A new meeting place in the city of Kaohsiung. The Kaohsiung Maritime Cultural & Popular Music center is a composition of different programs and components. The arrangement forms a harmony of colors. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Housing of Tomorrow – Building Performance and Social Interaction

By: admin | February - 5 - 2011

The 2011 d3: Housing Tomorrow competition called for the design of “transformative solutions that advance sustainable thought, building performance, and social interaction”. David Zhai and Alexis Burson’s winning selection for the New York category was an innovative project that speculated on the future of the network society through the hybridization of data and living.

The design strategy called for a series of server farms established within a network of high and low-density housing. The servers interface with surrounding domestic spaces allowing informational feedback to occur between the inhabitants and a kinetic architectural system that responds to the various spatial needs of its community.

Revenue generated from the data servers help to subsidize the cost of living while the substantial heat created from the processing of data is used in a heat-exchange process to support domestic heating and hot water. Heat from the servers also support a network of vertical farming which provides sustenance for the community. An integrated biometric monitoring system allows residents to better improve on their health and lifestyle while increasing the effectiveness of health and emergency response services.

By re-conceptualizing new modes of informational collection and distribution on an urban scale, with consideration for health, privacy, economy, and the environment, this project tests but also begins to define the emergence of the post-computing society and the creation of a new urbanism and a new model of community. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Rolling City uses existing railroads in Andalsnes, Norway / Jagnefalt Milton

By: Dennis Lynch | February - 4 - 2011

Faced with the task of revitalizing the “sober” town of Andalsnes, Norway, Swedish firm Jagnefalt Milton jumped light years outside the box and drew up plans for a district set completely on existing railways. Their bold idea won 3rd place in a master plan competition for the small Norwegian town. The Switching City is admittedly novel at first glance, but is in fact a surprisingly practical approach for cultivating seasonal tourism in Andalsnes.

The plan takes advantage of proposed and existing railroads running through Andalsnes and requires very little permanent development. Instead of drastically changing the Andalsnes landscape, The Switching City is a series of individual railcar modules collected and placed as needed for a particular event or function. Jagnefalt Milton specifically pointed out the flexible capacity of the project with their proposals for a rolling hotel, rolling public bath, and a rolling concert hall. The design, like the overall concept is tastefully simple and courts to the local geography and Andalsnes’ austere setting. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Herzog and de Meuron – Actelion Business Center

By: Dennis Lynch | February - 4 - 2011

December 2010 saw the finishing of the Actelion Business Center in Allschwil, Switzerland. The Center’s designers, Herzog & de Meuron melded functionality and aesthetics with a multi-cantilever design that provides space for green roofs and unique angles to allow in maximum natural lighting for each office section.

The Center provides 350 offices for Actelion employees and encourages a transparent workspace both inside and out. Ducts and piping and installations are all set in the floors and ceilings to open up the interior for glass walls and entryways while large open window facades open the Center to the surrounding environment.

Like many of their designs, Herzog & de Meuron listed sustainability as their main objective. They put reactive louvers on all of the triple glazed windows to adjust with the sun’s position. They angled windows so those on the lower floors incline upwards and those on the upper floors downward to better capture and utilize solar heat and incorporated photovoltaic cells for electricity.

The cantilever design evokes a vision of a structural Picasso and the basic aesthetics, construction, and visible structural supports give the building a 20th century modernist feel. Where the design is most forward the geometric offices of the Business Center seem to explode outward from its core form towards the surrounding environment, furthering the synthesis of form and environment. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

The Energy Report: 100% Renewable Energy by 2050 / WWF, AMO, Ecofys

By: admin | February - 3 - 2011

The Energy Report: a comprehensive study developed by the WWF, AMO and Ecofys claiming that the world can be 100% reliant on renewable energy by 2050, launches globally today.

The report proposes to address the urgent problems caused by looming climate change and dwindling fossil fuel supply through its assertion that by 2050, the world’s energy needs could be met entirely by renewable sources. It outlines an ambitious energy saving scenario as the first step toward an energy system in which fossil fuels are gradually replaced by wind, solar, geothermal, hydropower and sustainable forms of bio-energy.

The aim of the report is to inspire governments and businesses to understand the challenges associated with this shift and, at the same time, to encourage them to move boldly to bring the renewable economy into reality. By demonstrating the advantages of global cooperation and the deeper integration of global energy infrastructure, The Energy Report shows that the benefits of a transition to renewable energy far outweigh the challenges.

AMO’s contribution to the report, led by Partner Reinier de Graaf and Associate Laura Baird, both conceptualizes and visualizes the geographic, political, and cultural implications of a 100 percent renewable energy world. AMO draws a vision of a world without borders in which all continents have equal access to sustainable energy. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Dancing Water Pavilion in Seoul, Korea

By: admin | February - 3 - 2011

The Dancing Water Pavilion is a design by SUS&HI office – Calcagno Littardi A.A.+ Y.Park + A. Tomaiuolo that won the bronze prize at the Seoul Design Olympiad for its innovative geometry and interaction with Seoul and the Han-river.

The cityscape of Seoul is mainly made of nature with surrounding mountains and  the beautiful waterway. The Han-river is one of main nature elements in Seoul. In the past the Han-river gave life to Seoul, nowadays many cultures within the city are together around the river. Routine urban life is refreshed by Han-river’s energy. Han-river is the cradle of Seoul with unlimited energy that can be transform in many different ways. Rippling of water tells it to us. It is continuously rippling by wind or kind of vibrations, it is showing the energy flowing that is not visible. They are interacting between each other and make irregular forms.

The form of the proposal is created by the transformation of water dynamic energy. The rippling of water is a dance with wind and generates forms. Hence, the form is generated by the flow of energy. It is ready to be transformed into others interacting with people. The geometry is composed with organic forms. The concept is ‘fossilization of nature’. The geometry fossilizes the form that water ripple makes. It is makes natural textures one the form and becomes the structure at the same time. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

Topologies Video Installation / Quayola

By: Andrew Michler | February - 3 - 2011

The double video installation Topologies by artist Quayola is an experimental abstract of the Baroque period art works Las Meninas by Velazquez and L’ Immacolata Concezione by Tiepolo. The figurative paintings are systematically reduced to color planes and set in motion as a fluid kinetic skin. The fluttering undulations become almost entirely independent of their origins, responding to an underlying, ever changing formulation of three dimensional space. The abstractions have architectural geometric underpinnings of fixed points connected by simple geometric plains which create the three dimensional space. The organic movement of the topography is underscored by accompanying sounds corresponding to the intensity and scale of the movement. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, art, design, featured, news

Axis Mundi – Polyhedra cliff house overlooking New York City

By: Dennis Lynch | February - 3 - 2011

New York interior/architecture firm Axis Mundi presents their vision of a polyhedral based residence nested on the cliffsides of the Palisades in New Jersey. Axis Mundi designed the Polyhedra to showcase both their architectural style and interior design work.

The exterior structure is a simple angular and geometric design that contrasts the natural chaos of the Palisades with striking . The entire structure cantilevers slightly over a top edge on the cliffs. A glass façade opens the interior to the breathtaking views overlooking New York City. The glass is treated with a solar reducing panel to prevent the Polyhedra from quickly becoming a glorified greenhouse.

Axis Mundi maintained the clean and angular design in the interior of the Polyhedra by making visible the almost bone-like support structures that criss cross the walls. The bones of the structure are complemented by a backbone-like staircase that floats through the center of the Polyhedra. The entirety is white, opening itself completely to the natural lighting coming in from the glass façade. At the lowest floor is the kitchen and living area, up one floor is the bedrooms and one further is a sort of observation space. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news

A new landmark in the heart of Hong Kong’s vibrant Causeway Bay

By: admin | February - 1 - 2011

The recently completed Cubus building designed by Woods Bagot boasts exclusive open decks of differing sizes throughout various locations in the building, creating a strong identity that differentiates itself from surrounding structures.

“The development of ‘Podium Tower’ buildings continue to prevail in Hong Kong due to local site coverage regulation, however, the design team transformed this potential constraint into an opportunity by creating exclusive open decks through the reduction of the lower-level floor, floorplate sizes,” said Stephen Jones, Principal, Woods Bagot.

Visitors experiencing exciting retail and restaurants on offer, or travelling inside the glass elevators will be able to enjoy striking views towards the city. The design of this vertical retail building with original façade features, and lighting effects is inspired by ice cubes.

“The value proposition for this project was to create a landmark building exhibiting a strong identity that differentiates itself in the market. The project team has fulfilled the client’s vision, with the building set to become a landmark in this busy area of Hong Kong Island,” continued Stephen Jones, Principal, Woods Bagot. Read the rest of this entry »

architecture, featured, news
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