Archive | October, 2008

LIterary Dose #35

31 Oct

blockquote”Supposedly the emperor [Hadrian] sent the plans for [the Temple of Venus and Roma] to the professional architect a href=”http://www.archiplanet.org/architects/Apollodorus_of_Damascus.html”Apollodorus/a. Apollodorus, one of the great architects of Imperial Rome, had previously served Trajan, and known Hadrian for perhaps twenty years; the modern historian William MacDonald describes the architect as “a man of considerable consequence, a writer and a cosmopolitan citizen.” When Hadrian sent him the plans for this new work, Apollodorus criticized the technical construction and the proportions of both the building and its statues. Hadrian reacted, according to later gossip, by having Appolodorus killed.br //blockquote – Richard Sennett from a href=”http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0393313913?ie=UTF8amp;tag=aweeklydoseof-20amp;linkCode=xm2amp;camp=1789amp;creativeASIN=0393313913″span style=”font-style: italic;”Flesh and Stone: The Body and the City in Western Civilization/span/a (W.W. Norton amp; Co., 1994, p. 97)

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Tod Billie Musing #3 (aka Today’s archidose #260)

31 Oct

style type=”text/css”.flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; }/stylediv class=”flickr-frame” a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/scottnorsworthy/2984806555/” title=”photo sharing”img src=”http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3210/2984806555_120ff8343c.jpg” class=”flickr-photo” alt=”" //abr /span class=”flickr-caption”a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/scottnorsworthy/2984806555/”American Museum of Folk Art – Tod Williams Billie Tsien amp; Associates/a, originally uploaded by a href=”http://www.flickr.com/people/scottnorsworthy/”Scott Norsworthy/a./span/div p class=”flickr-yourcomment” The a href=”http://www.folkartmuseum.org/”American Folk Art Museum/a in New York City by a href=”http://www.twbta.com/”Tod Williams Bille Tsien Architects/a, 2001. The project was featured on my weekly page in a href=”http://www.archidose.org/Dec01/121701.html”2001/a and a href=”http://www.archidose.org/Jan02/010702.html”2002/a.br //pp class=”flickr-yourcomment”Previously:br /a href=”http://archidose.blogspot.com/2008/10/tod-billie-musing-1.html”Tod amp; Billie Musing #1/abr /a href=”http://archidose.blogspot.com/2008/10/tod-billie-musing-2.html”Tod amp; Billie Musing #2/a/ppTo contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:/pblockquote:: Join and add photos to the a href=”http://www.flickr.com/groups/archi-dose/”archidose pool/a, and/orbr /:: Tag your photos span style=”font-style: italic;”a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/archidose/”archidose/a/span/blockquotep/p

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Sarugaku / Akihisa Hirata

31 Oct

Architects: Akihisa Hirata
Location: Tokyo, Japan
Program: Shopping
Design Year: 2006-2007
Construction Year: 2007
Site Area: 538 sqm
Constructed Area: 851.5 sqm
Photographer: Akihisa Hirata

sketch

This is a set of commercial tenant building in Daikanyama, Tokyo.
From legal condition it was demanded to build several small volumes in narrow site, and we decided to make several volumes that seemed to be mountains.
Thereby valley-shaped space between mountains is formed, where people and displayed things will overflow. Each shop can enlarge itself on the mountain-shaped volumes.


Lengthwise windows extend over floors, and they seems all together straight from a certain direction.
It is also planned that windows penetrate volumes. Thereby each mountain-shaped volume is connected and people can experience mysterious time as if they walk in forest of illusion.
We aim at making vigorous buildings which acquires strength by overflowing with things and people.








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Couran Point house / Arkhefield

31 Oct

Architects: Arkhefield
Location: South Stradbroke Island, Queensland, Australia
Project Team: Andrew Gutteridge, Simon Wynn, Justin Boland, Julie Tomaszewski
Project Year: 2006
Photographer: Scott Burrows, Aperture Architectural Photography

Conceptual Framework

The core drivers behind the build were maximising space and privacy, sheltering from the predominant south-easterly wind/weather front and creating a simple, low maintenance, sustainable living volume which could be enjoyed all year round. The isolation of the site and the harsh climatic conditions on the island are evident in the simplicity of the structure, the choice of basic, low maintenance materials and in the ability which the house is able to isolate, reorientate and shut down against the elements.

Public Benefits

The house offers a stark contrast to the predominantly lowset shacks by the way that it expresses and celebrates volume, simplicity of form and its ability to manage/manipulate the external environment. The house appears to be inspirational amongst the community with many new houses currently under construction on the island being designed and sited in a similar manner.

Relationship of Built form to Context

The house is a simple extruded profile with its form being solely dictated by town planning constraints. Height, setback and roof pitch essentially created the volumetric section which was extruded to the road and waterfront boundary setback to maximise the enclosed space. The house breaks out onto the terraced waterfront on the east, to an enclosed ‘winter courtyard’ on the west and closes down to the north and south to retain privacy from the adjacent blocks.

Program Resolution

The house is split in half down the centre of its length with a large double volume ‘communal’ living space on the north and a two level ‘private’ core comprising of bedrooms and service zones on the south. The volumetric interplay between the two halves of the house creates a sense of inclusion and encourages interaction between family and guests whilst still enabling privacy and seclusion.

Integration of Allied Disciplines

The build required very little input from consultants.

Cost / Value

The isolation of the site put a premium on the construction cost as all materials and skilled labour had to be barged out to the island.

Sustainability

ESD principles of orientation and sitting along with use of solar, gas, rainwater harvesting, bamboo cladding/screening and a thermally efficient monolithic floor slab were all core ideas behind the build.

Response to Client and User Needs

Our clients desire to recreate a ‘Bahaman’ styled beach cottage with shingled pitched roofs and quaint shuttered windows made for a challenging brief. They wanted the house to take them back to the memorable vacations they had spent in exotic locations. Through exploration and development, it became evident that decoration and themed architecture may enable brief relapses into the bygone but that intelligent design and the creation of flexible spaces stimulated communal interaction which was what really recreated that relaxed holiday atmosphere they were seeking. They are extremely happy and are enjoying their ‘Contemporary Bahaman’ cottage which they have aptly named ‘the shed’ out on Stradbroke Island.
















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Hill House / Johnston Marklee Associates

31 Oct

Architects: Johnston Marklee & Associates
Location: Pacific Palisades, California, USA
Project year: 2004
Project Architects: Mark Lee, Sharon Johnston AIA, Jeff Adams, Mark Rea Baker
Project team: Diego Arraigada, Brennan Buck, Michelle Cintron, Daveed Kapoor, Anne Rosenberg, Anton Schneider
Developer: Lucas Ma (President, Markee LLC)
Client: Chan Luu
Contractor: Hinerfeld-Ward, Inc.
Structural Engineer: William Koh & Associates
Lighting Consultant: Dan Weinreber
Landscape: DLush Life LA
Photographs: Eric Staudenmaier

Completed in October 2004, the Hill House was designed under challenging conditions generated by modern problems of building on a hillside. Located in Pacific Palisades, California, while the site for the house offers panoramic views from Rustic and Sullivan Canyons to Santa Monica Bay, the irregularly shaped lot is situated on an uneven, downhill slope. With the canonical Eames House nearby, the 3300 square foot Hill House provocatively continues the Case Study House tradition of experimentation and reinvention of Los Angeles lifestyles.

HILLSIDE ZONING

Increasingly in Los Angeles, local hillside ordinances, building codes, coastal regulations, and design review boards have imposed restrictions on hillside construction, with the goal of preserving the profile of the natural hillside terrain by limiting building heights, location and massing. The Hill House sets a new precedent for hillside building by liberating itself from these restraints – not through evasion – but by strategically transforming these stringent criteria into a sculptural and efficient design solution, that seamlessly engages with the surrounding site.

The massing of the Hill House subsequently results from two economically driven development criteria: To maximize the volume allowed by the zoning requirements; and to minimize contact with the natural terrain. Recalling Hugh Ferriss’s vision of a Manhattan skyline literally interpreting the zoning laws as building form, the Hill House adopts the maximum zoning envelope as its form. The initial envelope is shaped from a combination of property setbacks in plan and hillside height restrictions in section, and is further refined three-dimensionally according to structural criteria.

PLANNING

Within the building enclosure, individual programmatic components are assembled to fit into the fixed envelope, much like a contortionist, artfully compressing the mass of their body into unique configurations. By eroding all non-structural walls and partitions, the program flows effortlessly between three levels stacked within the exterior skin. An upper semi-private loft space and a more secluded lower bedroom suite sandwich the central public living and dining area. An open, sculptural, steel and glass stair vertically stitches the three levels together. The smooth polished interior skin is shaped and curved selectively to accentuate the geometry of the house and to accommodate storage and mechanical services.

APERTURES

The aperture strategy results from a desire to both minimize the quantity for privacy and efficiency in terms of environmental performance, and to maximize size for views, ventilation and light. With the relationship of the site and building to the street, the conventional rear of the house in essence becomes its front with spectacular views of the canyon and ocean to the north, east, and south. Large sliding glass doors in the living area retract into concealed pockets, erasing boundaries between interior and exterior. Where windows and doors are recessed into the building volume, the exterior material membrane folds into the house to form deep sills and thresholds respectively. The recessed windows of the private rooms frame specific views to the exterior while limiting views into the house. The placement of skylights in both the flat and sloped roofs further blurs the conventional differentiation between roof and wall. Indirect light sources and unanticipated views from these openings further enhance the three-dimensional quality of the space and form.

MATERIALS

To express the continuity of the building skin and minimize the conventional distinctions between roof and wall planes, an elastomeric, cementitious exterior coating material was used requiring no control joints. The embedded lavender color of the coating was sampled from the pigment of eucalyptus bark, prevalent at the site, re-enforcing the house’s connection to the site from which its form is derived. The material’s iridescent quality results in dramatic color variations with changing light conditions throughout the day. Similar to the monolithic exterior coating, the interior materials are detailed to suggest spatial continuity. Materials in varying shades of white, including polished Carrara marble, smooth Corian countertops, lacquered wood, and enameled steel seamlessly meet throughout occasionally accented by darkly stained walnut flooring and cabinets. A meadow of various native California grasses forms a blanket covering the slope surrounding the house. Highly detailed succulent plants such as aloe and agaves accent the soft grasses and reflect the crisp lines of the house.

STRUCTURE

The structural assembly is composed of concrete, steel, and timber. The foundation, based upon nine 35-foot deep reinforced concrete piles, is anchored into bedrock and tied together by a network of grade beams. Rising up from this foundation, inclined concrete walls project orthogonally to the grade – instead of vertically – taking on the figure of prevented fall. A braced steel frame with timber infill framing emerges out of the concrete base to form the circulation core and cantilevered overhang at the entry.


































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World Trade Center Iguala / b720

31 Oct

b720 architects won the competition for the World Trade Center at Igualada, Spain. The complex will articulate the existing industrial city with the residential zone, completing a new zone of infrastructure for this developing city.

The complex consist of 4 buildings with a total area of 53.000 sqm, including 530 underground parking spaces. This project will hold offices, retail spaces.

Retail space is located on the lower and first level of the first 3 buildings, as a base to the office space above it as you can see on the rendering. The upper levels are wider than this retail base, creating a covered space for pedestrians. Between the volumes, several spaces will allow for future occupation. Galleries on the upper floors will allow an exterior-interior continuity, integrating the mid-rise volumes with the exterior that starts to become more as a neighborhood than with this new relations, thus answering to the city council requirement to turn this project in not just office space, but a new urban centrality.

There’s only a few more images available (after the break), but we will keep in touch with b720 to bring you more on this project as it develops.

 

Client and developer: World Trade Center Igualada, S.A. 

Location: Igualada, Barcelona, Spain

Architects: Fermín Vásquez (b720)

b720 Team: Fermín Vázquez, Cristina Algás, Pablo Garrido, Ángel Gaspar, Eike Grossman, Sebastián Khourian, Jaime Luaces, Carles Martínez-Almoyna, Leonardo Novelo, Gemma Ojea, Magdalena Ostornol, Oriol Roig, Dani Valdés, Ana Vicente-Arche. 

Structure: BOMA S.A.

Services: JG

Budgets and measuring: G3

 

 

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Monte Silo / Gigaplex Architects

31 Oct

Architects: Gigaplex Architects
Location: Woodland, Utah, USA
Client: Jonathan “Earl” Stein
Project year: 2006
Constructed area: 147 sqm
Photographs: Gigaplex

Program:

Our charge was to design a house for a newly single man with two grown daughters from whom he expects multiple grandchildren. Earl, the client, is foremost a sound engineer, but also a screenwriter (of course), director and producer in the film business, with many big Hollywood pictures to his credit, and hence he has to be on the road for lengthy periods of time. He requested a home both cozy in scale and yet comfortable for weekend guests up to fish the bountiful Provo River, which runs just alongside, to the south, and onto which he has access for a three-mile stretch. The goal was to provide both a visual and an aural connection to the blue ribbon waters coursing just a grandchild’s stone throw away. Earl had seen and witnessed several of the firm’s previous projects, and hence, from the very get go he asked that a cylinder be incorporated. It wanted to be smart. Shockingly, he also asked that the whole project be completed very inexpensively.

Solution:

Not one but two corrugated metal grain silos, with a short, complementary link, were incorporated in order to help modulate the space and increase the square footage enough to comfortably house grandchildren, who will certainly be born with bamboo flyrods in their hands, and other guests, and to provide the required nooks, niches and other interstitial spaces enough to reek of coziness and holing up in the mountains until another job might raise its ugly but otherwise very real and seemingly necessary head.














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Mercedes Benz Showroom / Kristin Jarmund Architects

31 Oct

Architects: Kristin Jarmund Architects
Location: Oslo, Norway
Project year: 2005-2008
Project Team: Kristin Jarmund, Leif D. Houck, Børge N. Anfinsen, Gunn Andresen, Nora Müller, Arild Eriksen, Aud Randi Astad
Client: Bertel O.Steen
Constructed Area: 23,500 sqm
Photographs: Leif D. Houck

Functionally the building is a combined office building, car salesroom and workshop. Formally we worked with two ideas, in which the first one was to work with dynamic curves, with each office floor offset in and out independently with its own curvature – inspired by the speed and dynamic which characterizes moving traffic.

The building contains an exclusive showroom for Mercedes Benz Norway – which further legitimizes the dynamic architecture.

Secondly, we introduced further themes in the endless façade by developing the story of what happened when a mighty force “bent” the building into place: Cracks would occur, and therefore we built stylized “cracks” to visualize the bending. The building is terraced to accommodate the falling terrain and hight of the neighbouring builidings.

The building is the first building in Norway of it’s size to be built with Bubble-Deck, a deck system in which each concrete deck is filled with plastic balls. This makes the decks lighter and gave us great freedom with regards to cantilevering and a allowed for a greater distance between each column – 12,5 m.

The projects sun protection strategy is based upon using sun reducing glass and black glass insulated from the inside. The pattern of glass closes towards south and opens towards east and west, emphasizing the curvature at the same time.





















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Folded Bamboo + Paper House / Ming Tang

31 Oct

Our friends at Inhabitat tipped us on this amazing project, the Folded Bamboo Houses + Paper House by Ming Tang. This structures were conceived as a response to the 7.9 earthquake that strucked China last May. 

In order to relocate the people that lost their houses, the Chinese goverment decided to build 1.5 million temporary homes. For this, Ming Tang proposed a shelter that was easily produced, cheap and environmentally friendly, using bamboo. The concept utilizes a system of bamboo poles that are pre-assembled into rigid geometric shapes. The geometry of these forms provides each structure’s integrity, allowing a range of lightweight modular structures to be quickly assembled in factories and transported to their destination. Once constructed, the shelters are then covered by using post and pre-consumer recycled paper.

For this modular system, Tang also proposed a  paper fibers, water, and cement envelope that allows for larger configurations.

This project was presented on the RE:Construct competition, a call for a ideas on temporary housing. This project was selected as a notable entry, but i think it should have been awarded since it address a on going problem with a local solution in an innovative way.

This are the kind of projects that I wish were being built right now! What do you think? Do you have more examples on innovative temporary housing?

More pictures after the break. 





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Higueritas Sport Center / GBGV Arquitectos

31 Oct

Architects: GBGV ArquitectosFederico García Barba y Cristina González Vázquez de Parga
Program: Edificio Deportivo cubierto con canchas, gimnasio y piscinas
Location: La Higuerita, La Laguna, Tenerife, España
Project: 2003
Completion: Junio de 2008
Client: Excmo. Ayuntamiento de La Laguna, Programa Urban de La Cuesta y Taco
Contractor: Dragados S.A.
Collaborators: Jorge Mosquera Paniagua (Arquitecto), Javier Ramos Díaz (Arquitecto), Patricia González Fernández (Arquitecto), Tomás Sánchez Peraza (Ingeniero Industrial), Fernando García Ortega (Estructuras), María José Díaz Fernández (Arq. Técnico), Ruperto Hernández González (Arq. Técnico).
Photography: José Ramón Oller

Located on a dense metropolitan area between the Santa Cruz and La Laguna districts, this building incorporates sports facilities to fill the lack of equipment.

The required program is quite complex, in order to organize services to practice several sports, mostly the usual sports for covered courts such as basketball, volleyball, handball, tennis and a space for gymnasium and fitness. Also, training and therapeutic pools were required.

The proposed building allocates the required spaces on several levels, making use of the height differences on the site. The pools and locker room are located on the semi basement level. The gymnasiums and workout areas are placed on an intermediate level. Finally, the upper level holds the multiuse courts and seats for 300 people.

The goal was to make a compact building, in order to lower costs and achieve high energy efficiency, while allowing for good ventilation and lighting. Special care was put to fit this new infrastructure on the site, after studying the heights, so you could access every space from street level. This strategy involved an interior elevator that connects the 4 levels.

The formal language pretends to simplify the global form while defining a new urban landmark for the neighborhood, as should be for a quality urban equipment. Simple and easy to install materials were used to achieve rich spaces with good illumination.

Blue tinted translucent polycarbonate panels were used to enclose the pool area in order to achieve a nice atmosphere.

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