Poly WeDo Education Institution / ARCHSTUDIO

© Xia Zhi

Architects: ARCHSTUDIO

Location: Chaoyang District, Beijing, China

Design Team: Han Wen-Qiang, Wang Ying, Li Yun-Tao

Area: 1300.0 sqm

Project Year: 2015

Photographs: Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi

From the architect. Poly WeDo is a new children’s education brand of Poly Culture Group, which aims at exploring and developing kids’ gift and potentiality in music, and improving their comprehensive art accomplishment. ARCHSTUDIO is invited to do the design for their teaching space within Yongli International Shopping Centre in Workers’ Stadium North Road, Beijing. The top issue to be solved while doing the design thinking is how to create an open, free and flexible modern teaching environment which breaks the limits of rigid structure and creates a feeling of closeness between children and the space.

Diagram

The project covers the area cross 7 pillars of the shopping center on the first floor. The basic structure of the space is framework + shear wall, it enjoys an area of about 1000 sqm and has a basement with an area of 300 sqm. ARCHSTUDIO removes the concrete block wall as much as possible to open up the closed space; a corridor is used to connect the classrooms to the public space. All the teaching spaces including music classroom, private classroom, reception hall, theatre and rehearsal room, etc. stretch out horizontally to the atrium of the shopping Centre. The slope shape roof extends to the wall and then the floor, which becomes the extension of classrooms and public space. The entire teaching space is like a translucent “indoor village”, which presents spaces of variety of scales and texture according to different needs. It presents the kids an intimate, natural and cozy music playing and learning environment.

© Xia Zhi

Section

© Xia Zhi

ARCHSTUDIO introduces green landscape to soften the restriction of structural walls and to keep teaching get in touch with nature all the time. Part of the floor slab of the atrium is removed; the bamboo courtyard extends to the dancing classroom, Yoga classroom and office in the basement. The bamboo courtyard is the highlight of landscape of the entrance hall, and the shift point of traffic of the two floors. Gaps between walls of classrooms are used to create landscape area, thus “outdoor” space are formed in the indoor space. And the combination of plants and book shelves make kids’ reading coexist easily and naturally with rest.

© Xia Zhi

Music classrooms need to satisfy acoustical requirements of sound insulation and sound absorption. For the purpose of soundproof, three layers hollow glasses are used for the walls of music classrooms, wood grain aluminum grille and aluminum plate are used for the ceiling. In additional to soundproof treatment, the shape of the slope roof and the wavy surface of grille have the effect of audio mixing. Because of the limitation of height of the small theatre, we keep the original ceiling, only use some sound-absorbing wood panels on part of the wall,  which heightens the space visually and achieves excellent acoustic effect as well.

© Xia Zhi

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The Mirrored Color Dual-Monitor Desktop

We don’t highlight dual display desktops nearly as often as I’d like, so when orbmeiser submitted this dual monitor setup, I took notice. He’s running Netrunner Linux on dual displays, and here’s what he used to set everything up.

Read more…

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Gould Evans adds vibrant orange skin to Brutalist library in Kansas

US firm Gould Evans has revamped a 1970s concrete library in Kansas, wrapping the building in a terracotta rainscreen and adding modern amenities such as a recording studio (+ slideshow). (more…)

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leśna ścieżka byHalina P. http://ift.tt/1Suq8xU

via Sig Nordal, Jr. http://ift.tt/1TjWvPX

Hangzhou China photo via abner

Hangzhou, China

photo via abner

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Renzo Piano and ELEMENTAL Among 8 Finalists in Qatar’s Art Mill International Design Competition

© Qatar Museums and Malcolm Reading Consultants

Qatar Museums has announced a shortlist of eight finalists that will move on to the third and final stage of the Art Mill International Design Competition in Doha. On a site extending into the Arabian Sea that was only recently occupied by Qatar Flour Mills, Art Mill will integrate gallery and exhibition space with facilities for education, events, conservation, art handling, and research. Joining the Museum of Islamic Art designed by I.M. Pei, and the still under-construction National Museum of Qatar, designed by Jean Nouvel, in the words of the competition brief, “Art Mill will and extend and intensify the cultural quarter being developed in Doha.”

Shortlist:

Adam Khan Architects (UK)

Atelier Bow-Wow (Japan)

EAA Emre Arolat Architecture (Turkey)

Elemental (Chile)

Junya Ishigami + Associates (Japan)

Mangado y Asociados (Spain)

Renzo Piano Building Workshop (Italy)

Rice+Lipka Architects (US)

The competition jury met for two days last month to select the eight finalists from a longlist of 26, which was already reduced from the original pool of 489 submissions from 56 countries.

Jury:

Her Excellency Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani

His Excellency Sheikh Jassim bin Abdulaziz Al-Thani

Dr. Hassan Rashid Al-Derham, President, Qatar University

Professor Harry Gugger, Principal, Harry Gugger Studio

Dr. Akel I. Kahera, Dean, Virginia Commonwealth University in Qatar

Sir John Leighton, Director-General, National Galleries of Scotland

Jasper Morrison, Designer

Hiroshi Sugimoto, Photographic artist, sculptor, architect, producer, and 

Professor Chris Wise FREng FICE RDI, Director, Expedition

The jury was advised by competition organizer and architect, Malcolm Reading of Malcolm Reading Consultants (MRC) and QM technical representative Maha Hamad Al Hajri.

Stage three of the competition will occur between April – August of this year, with a winner to be announced in the fall.

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Cedar House Pine House / S PLUS ONE architecture

© Naoki Kobayashi

Architects: S PLUS ONE architecture

Location: Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Area: 50.0 sqm

Project Year: 2016

Photographs: Naoki Kobayashi

© Naoki Kobayashi

From the architect. This project is a village house of the small village surrounding environment mountains.

© Naoki Kobayashi

So, there are so many Japanese cedar, pine and white cedar in this village. The form of the building is very simple.We use only materials of the area,  The façade and the interior decoration of of each building volume change.

Section

© Naoki Kobayashi

Plan

In this time, we chose cedar and pine, designed cedar house and pine house. We can be also design white cedar house,oak house and so on.

© Naoki Kobayashi

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