To Live Is To Be Slowly Born: Kashef Chowdhury/URBANA’s Contribution to the 2016 Venice Biennale


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

As part of ArchDaily’s coverage of the 2016 Venice Biennale, we are presenting a series of articles written by the curators of the exhibitions and installations on show.

The title relates to the processes of architecture, which can be slow to come to fruition and therefore one also refers to architecture and patience, and to the meaningful sustained existence of buildings in their fragile environments.

The installation is a glass labyrinth, which one crosses to reach an internal landscape. The glass is clear – therefore it is an alternate take on the architectural manifestation of the ‘labyrinth’: an age-old space of intrigue and discovery. It refers to the idea that although one is sure of one’s intentions – has a clear vision – the path to achieving that may not be straightforward but rather quite ‘labyrinthine’, in the economies and climatic zones that the architect operates in. That is, one can see clearly but cannot progress easily.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu


© Laurian Ghinitoiu


© Laurian Ghinitoiu


© Laurian Ghinitoiu


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

As one passes through the labyrinth one encounters terracotta tiles with etchings of historic sites and buildings – a call from deep recesses of memory.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

In the internalized space are four groups of ‘plants’ – referring again to the patience and perseverance that is required of the architect and the slow raising of buildings much like plants growing from a seed. Three of the four projects on display are directly related to natural disasters and climate change. 


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

1. Raised Settlements – to protect an entire settlement rather than individual houses from catastrophic nature of floods in remote northern Bangladesh.

2. Cyclone Shelter – In the south, close to the Bay of Bengal. To provide shelter and protection to people in cyclone prone areas where, during cyclones, tidal surges can reach heights of 20 feet or more and wind speeds in excess of 230 km/h.

3. Friendship Centre – a meeting and training Centre constructed in a flood zone with an inexpensive but lost solution to protect from flood: a mini-embankment around the project built on low land. This facility is used for health, education, social justice and other programs for some of the poorest of the poor living in remote inaccessible areas in the Jamuna-Brahmaputra river network. With restricted budget, the architect could only give them the luxury of light and shadows.

4. Satkhira Hospital – a low cost 80-bed full function hospital in the remote south, maximizing natural ventilation and rainwater harvest.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

All these projects are with one client: the non-government development organization ‘Friendship’. Projects span over the past 10 years, two without fee, all out of tight budgets, using local materials and workmen. Without innovating (Raised Settlements), re-imagining (Friendship Centre, Hospital) and re-casting (Cyclone Shelter) through architectural solutions, these buildings and projects would not serve their function nor ever see the light of day considering their difficult birth.


© Laurian Ghinitoiu

© Laurian Ghinitoiu

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Abandoned by Anna Mizi SOOC (Straight Out of the…

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Brexit live: Boris Johnson says lack of government leave plan led to ‘hysteria’

8.41am BST

Good morning. I’m Andrew Sparrow, taking over from Claire.

John McDonnell, the shadow chancellor, is on the Today programme now.

8.31am BST

While in the UK legal moves and opinion columns ponder the possibility of not triggering article 50, EU officials are wondering the same thing.

Politico reports:

What if the UK never withdraws?

The EU cannot force to the UK to notify its withdrawal, but it could try to invoke sanctions under Article 7 using the rationale that the political and economic uncertainty created by the delay is undermining the union. But that’s unlikely. Tusk’s top aide [Piotr] Serafin urged national diplomats at their meeting last week to remember that the UK is going through a crisis and they should avoid escalating it by threatening sanctions.

8.25am BST

This afternoon, Jeremy Corbyn will appear in front of the home affairs select committee to answer questions from MPs about Labour’s antisemitism review, published last week.

Keith Vaz, the committee’s chairman, said:

We have seen a deeply troubling upsurge in anti-Semitic incidents and speech across Britain and Europe in recent times, including within our political discourse …

We are grateful to Jeremy Corbyn for coming to give evidence on his and the Labour party’s position following the publication of the independent report on anti-Semitism in the party on Thursday.

8.11am BST

Boris Johnson has found unlikely agreement on his claim that the vote to leave the EU has been met with hysteria – from shadow chancellor John McDonnell.

McDonnell has told ITV’s Good Morning Britain:

Now is the time to sort of calm down, everyone calm down.

Since the referendum there’s sort of been mass hysteria in virtually all our political parties and I can’t completely understand it.

That has never been discussed. Last week I was accused of a coup against Jeremy myself. This week I was accused of forcing him to stay in. It gets ridiculous.

8.03am BST

Hammond said voters had made it clear that they wanted restrictions on freedom of movement, but that this came at a cost:

We need to be realistic – we need to accept that the terms of trade must change.

Simply doing our ‘stubborn best’ by demanding access to the market while offering nothing in return may sound brave, but would be foolhardy.

8.00am BST

Foreign secretary Philip Hammond – who has declared his backing for Theresa May today – has been speaking on the Today programme.

He was questioned about May’s reluctance to guarantee that EU nationals already living in the UK will be allowed to stay post-Brexit.

7.50am BST

Alain Juppé, former prime minister of France and a candidate for the centre-right presidential nomination, says in the Financial Times today that the remaining EU states shouldn’t give the UK a hard time:

[Brexit] does not mean we are going to punish the UK. We need to find ways to co-operate, to find a solution to have the UK in the European market, one way or another – whether that is part of the European Economic Area or something else.

They can’t say yes, no, maybe. Now they must draw the conclusions of the vote. When you get divorced, you don’t stay in the same house. It’s not a question of days, but it has to be fast.

7.40am BST

The decision to leave the EU has cast the future of the so-called Osborne Doctrine – by which Britain positioned itself as China’s best friend in the west – into doubt.

Many observers believe that as a result of Brexit, the “golden” relationship between London and Beijing, whose main architects were David Cameron and George Osborne, is now on life support.

We’ve got to get on a plane and sell Britain to the world. And for me that means putting more effort still into our relationship with China.

I am going to buy a Louis Vuitton handbag as soon as possible in case the exchange rate changes again.

7.28am BST

Today’s secretary of state for closing the stable door after the horse has bolted is John Whittingdale:

“I don’t want it to descend into a dispute over personality.” @JWhittingdale on newspaper h/lines abt Gove.@NickyAACampbell @bbc5live

When I was a government whip and Michael was the chief whip, the office leaked like a sieve. Important policy and personnel details made their way to the papers. Michael seems to have an emotional need to gossip, particularly when drink is taken, as it all too often seemed to be …

UK citizens deserve to know that when they go to sleep at night their secrets and their nation’s secrets aren’t shared in the newspaper column of the prime minister’s wife the next day, or traded away with newspaper proprietors over fine wine.

7.18am BST

Tory MPs vote tomorrow in the first round of leadership culling that will see the five candidates reduced to four.

John Redwood – previously a Boris Johnson backer – announces today that he’s opting instead for Andrea Leadsom:

She has a fresh and determined mind, with the qualities necessary to get us out of the EU quickly and with the minimum of disruption.

I know that Theresa has the qualities and the character to take our country forward and, with her quietly determined, down-to-earth style, to reunite us after the referendum.

Related: The Conservative leadership contest: who’s backing who

7.09am BST

Mishcon de Reya, the law firm taking action on behalf of an anonymous group of clients against the triggering of article 50, has published this explainer on the move:

The referendum held on 23 June was an exercise to obtain the views of UK citizens, the majority of whom expressed a desire to leave the EU. But the decision to trigger article 50 of the Treaty of European Union, the legal process for withdrawal from the EU, rests with the representatives of the people under the UK constitution.

The government, however, has suggested that it has sufficient legal authority. Mishcon de Reya has been in correspondence with the government lawyers since 27 June 2016 on behalf of its clients to seek assurances that the government will uphold the UK constitution and protect the sovereignty of parliament in invoking article 50.

Related: UK government faces pre-emptive legal action over Brexit decision

6.46am BST

Welcome back to a fresh week of Brexit live blogs, a week in which we will find out the first two Tory leader wannabes to be kicked off the list; we might find out if a Labour MP (or two) is going to launch a challenge to Jeremy Corbyn; and we certainly won’t find out what’s going on with the whole leaving-the-EU thing.

Here’s the morning briefing to set you up for the day ahead, then stay glued to the live blog with me and (later) Andrew Sparrow through the day. Do come and chat in the comments below or find me on Twitter @Claire_Phipps.

It was wrong of the government to offer the public a binary choice on the EU without being willing – in the event that people voted leave – to explain how this can be made to work in the interests of the UK and Europe. We cannot wait until mid-September, and a new PM.

The future is very bright indeed.

There is, among a section of the population, a kind of hysteria, a contagious mourning of the kind that I remember in 1997 after the death of the Princess of Wales.

There is no doubt that elements of Ukip are intending to try to steal a Conservative leadership election.

One option could be a collective leadership with a ‘kitchen cabinet’ representing different wings of the party … Under such a plan being discussed by some left-leaning MPs, Corbyn could become chairman rather than ‘supreme leader’.

Another alternative is for him to assume a more presidential role, with a consensual leader of the PLP being appointed who would satisfy MPs.

The notion that it should be left to Conservative members to handpick a new prime minister for what in effect will be a new government pursuing new priorities is absurd. This election would also give all parties the opportunity to set out their stalls on what our new relationship with Europe should be.

We just need to get on with it.

I would allow EU citizens already in UK to continue their lives here, and expect same for Brits in EU. People are not bargaining chips

On Friday I heard a new dawn chorus outside my house. There was a rustling and twittering, as though of starlings assembling on a branch. Then I heard a collective clearing of the throat, and they started yodelling my name – followed by various expletives. ‘Oi Boris – c—!’ they shouted. Or ‘Boris – w—–!’ I looked out to see some otherwise charming-looking young people, the sort who might fast to raise money for a Third World leprosy project.

He knows from experience that pushing change through the system can be like trudging through a swimming pool filled with sand – so he hits the task with uncompromising velocity. He gets things done …

To set this aside in light of last week would be a profound shame. If Gove is Machiavelli then Ant and Dec are the Kray twins. His concern for the national interest simply trumped etiquette. That is the long and short of it.

Anticipating the possibility of victory for the leave camp, the National Front had posters on hand proclaiming, ‘And now, France?’ In the current tense domestic and global situation, with a presidential election only 10 months away, Ms Le Pen’s party, which got 28% of the vote in the regional poll held last December, couldn’t have dreamed of such a godsend.

But France doesn’t seem to be ready for Ms Le Pen’s Frexit dream. A TNS Sofres poll taken in the immediate aftermath of the British vote … showed that less than half of the electorate, 45%, would favour holding such a referendum. If it were held, 45% of French voters would have chosen remain and 33% would have voted leave. Three days later, after giving it cooler thought, 55% of French voters rejected the idea of a referendum … and the remain camp had grown to 61%.

Lot of tweets saying we should do a Brexit Thick Of It – a) too bleak, b) TTOI found comedy in chaos behind the facade. No facade any more.

I’m at a garden party. Hope I’m not sitting next to Voldemort or Fromage. I might be sick http://pic.twitter.com/ILsuu6kDPM

-exit is the new -gate http://pic.twitter.com/Yt6HTtbWwr

Things are going great, and they’re only getting better.

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World Building of the Year 2016 shortlist announced



World Architecture Festival 2016: a Brazilian rainforest house, a spiralling university building in Tenerife and a bulbous blue drawing studio are among the 343 projects shortlisted for awards at the World Architecture Festival in Berlin this November (+ slideshow). (more…)

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Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Centre / Renzo Piano Building Workshop


© Michel Denancé

© Michel Denancé


Courtesy of SNFCC.


Courtesy of RPBW


© Michel Denancé


© Michel Denancé

  • Design Team: G.Bianchi, V.Laffineur (partner and associate in charge), S.Doerflinger, H.Houplain, A.Gallissian with A.Bercier, A.Boldrini, K.Doerr, S.Drouin, G.Dubreux, S.Giorgio-Marrano, C.Grispello, M.A.Maillard, E.Ntourlias, S.Pauletto, L.Piazza, M.Pimmel, L.Puech and B.Brady, C.Cavo, A. Kellyie, C.Menas Porras, C.Owens, R.Richardson; S.Moreau; O.Aubert, C.Colson and Y.Kyrkos (models)

Courtesy of SNFCC.

Courtesy of SNFCC.

From the architect. The Stavros Niarchos Cultural Centre is located in Kallithea, 4 km south of central Athens. An important cultural and educational project, the site will comprise the National Library of Greece and the Greek National Opera in a 170,000 sq m landscaped park. Currently a parking lot left over from the 2004 Olympic Games, once the site of a racetrack, the project restore the site’s lost connections with the city and the sea.


© Michel Denancé

© Michel Denancé

Sketch

Sketch

© Ruby On Thursdays

© Ruby On Thursdays

As one of Athens’ earliest seaports on Faliro Bay, Kallithea has always had a strong relationship with the water. At present, however, despite its proximity, there is no view of the sea from the site. To restore this, an artificial hill is being created at the south (seaward) end of the site. The sloping park culminate in the cultural center building, giving it spectacular views towards the sea. 


Courtesy of SNFCC.

Courtesy of SNFCC.

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Courtesy of SNFCC.

Courtesy of SNFCC.

Both opera and library are combined in one building, with a public space, known as the Agora, providing access and connections between the two main facilities. The opera wing is composed of two auditoria, one (450 seats) dedicated to traditional operas and ballets, the other (1.400 seats) for more experimental performances. The library is intended as not only a place for learning and preserving culture, but also as a public resource, a space where culture is truly accessible to share and enjoy.


Courtesy of RPBW

Courtesy of RPBW

Section

Section

© Michel Denancé

© Michel Denancé

The entirely glass-walled library reading room sits on top of the building just underneath the canopy roof. A square horizontal transparent box, it enjoys 360-degree views of Athens and the sea. The site’s visual and physical connection with water continues in the park with a new canal that runs along a north–south, main pedestrian axis, the Esplanade. The canopy roof provides essential shade and has been topped with 10.000 sq m of photovoltaic cells, enough to generate 1.5 megawatt of power for the library and opera house. This field of cells should allow the building to be self-sufficient in energy terms during normal opening hours. Wherever possible, natural ventilation has been used.


© Michel Denancé

© Michel Denancé

The visual connection with the water continues to the park, where it focus on a channel to the side of the Esplanade, the main pedestrian axis of the site, in the north-south direction.


© Michel Denancé

© Michel Denancé

The complex is aiming for a LEED platinum rating.


© Michel Denancé

© Michel Denancé

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Meier Architekten Design a Luminous Contemporary Home in Uitikon, Switzerland

Objekt 254 by Meier Architekten (2)

Objekt 254 is a private residence designed by Meier Architekten. The home is located in Uitikon, Switzerland. Objekt 254 by Meier Architekten: “My architecture should provide quality, comfort, and design enabling the highest quality of life”. These words spoken by the architect Egon Meier perfectly apply to the object number 254. This is a family residence newly built in the Zürich area of Switzerland. According to the office of Meier..

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My http://ift.tt/1XZ918K Lighthouse on the undersea rock near Vladivostok Russia

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My http://ift.tt/1XZ918K New York City

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