Studio Gang, SANAA Among Winners of 2017 AIA Institute Honor Awards





 The American Institute of Architects (AIA) have named 18 architectural and interior projects as recipients of the 2017 Institute Honor Awards, the profession’s highest recognition for excellence in design.

According to the AIA, “the 2017 Architecture program celebrates the best contemporary architecture regardless of budget, size, style, or type. These stunning projects show the world the range of outstanding work architects create and highlight the many ways buildings and spaces can improve our lives.”

The awarded projects were selected from nearly 700 submissions. The winners will be honored at the 2017 AIA National Convention in Orlando.

2017 Institute Honor Awards for Architecture

Aspen Art Museum / Shigeru Ban Architects
Associate Firm: CCY Architects


Aspen Art Museum / Shigeru Ban Architects. Image © Michael Moran

Aspen Art Museum / Shigeru Ban Architects. Image © Michael Moran

Founded in the late 1970s as a non-collecting institution, the Aspen Art Museum worked in tandem with the design team to determine programmatic needs and to ensure its new home completely supported the art it hangs. Adhering to a strict 18-month construction schedule, the new museum opened in 2014 and has seen a 400 percent increase in visitorship and a 1,140 percent increase in the number of students served by the museum’s educational outreach initiatives. Three floors—two above ground, one below—are dedicated to gallery space, while the top floor includes an ample multiuse space, café, and public terrace with sweeping views of the Rockies.

Carmel Place / nARCHITECTS


Carmel Place / nARCHITECTS. Image © Pablo Enriquez

Carmel Place / nARCHITECTS. Image © Pablo Enriquez

Winner of the 2012 adAPT NYC competition for New York City’s first micro-unit apartment building, Carmel Place represents a new housing paradigm for the city’s growing small household population. The design of the 9 story building’s 55 units aims for spaciousness and luminosity through the implementation of 9’-8” ceilings, 8’ tall sliding windows and Juliet balconies. With a goal of conveying the residents’ nested scales of community, afforded by varied interior and exterior shared spaces, the building’s brick exterior massing resembles four slender “mini-towers” – a microcosm of the city’s skyline.

Carnegie Hall Studio Towers Renovation Project / Iu + Bibliowicz Architects LLP


Carnegie Hall Studio Towers Renovation Project / Iu + Bibliowicz Architects LLP. Image © Jeff Goldberg

Carnegie Hall Studio Towers Renovation Project / Iu + Bibliowicz Architects LLP. Image © Jeff Goldberg

The Carnegie Hall Studio Towers Renovation Project centered on: renovation, reorganization, and repurposing of 167,000 square feet of non-performance venues at the National Historic site. The 7-year project encompassed the creation of a Music Education Wing, new roof terrace, consolidation of administrative offices, expanded backstage space and functionality, and façade lighting to showcase the landmark. Substantial interior structural modifications and infrastructure upgrades aided in the success of the renovation. The project was awarded LEED Silver Certification, one of the oldest and most notable buildings in the country with such distinction.

The Cotton Gin at the CO-OP District / Antenora Architects LLP


The Cotton Gin at the CO-OP District / Antenora Architects LLP. Image © Brian Mihaelsick

The Cotton Gin at the CO-OP District / Antenora Architects LLP. Image © Brian Mihaelsick

The reuse of the two existing cotton gin structures is the first piece of a 2012 master plan to revitalize the site, which was purchased by the City of Hutto. Both structures were selectively deconstructed and reused to create a single open-air 6,500-square-foot public events space. The new building is wrapped in perforated stainless steel that reflects the hot Texas sun during the day and provides intriguing transparency at night. The design team succeeded in creating a flexible space for public and private events that complements everything from programmatic functions of the local library and farmer’s markets to artisan fairs and wedding receptions.

Grace Farms / SANAA
Associate Firm: Handel Architects


Grace Farms / SANAA. Image © Iwan Baan

Grace Farms / SANAA. Image © Iwan Baan

Grace Farms was established with the idea that “space communicates” and can inspire people to collaborate for good. To realize this vision, Grace Farms Foundation appointed SANAA to create a porous, multipurpose building nestled within an 80-acre landscape that would encourage people to engage with nature, the arts, justice, community, and faith. The River building emerged as a new kind of public space that embodies these aspirations. Its sinuous structure is comprised of 203 individually curved glass panels containing five volumes: a sanctuary; library; commons; pavilion; and partially submerged Court.

Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts / Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects
Associate Firm: Holabird & Root


Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts / Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects. Image © Tom Rossiter

Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts / Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects. Image © Tom Rossiter

Sitting on the southern edge of Chicago’s Midway, the Center houses the University of Chicago’s visual arts, film, music, and theater programs, finally uniting the programs under one roof.  The building comprises a 10-story tower and an adjacent two-story “podium.” Both are clad in Missouri limestone cut into four-foot lengths and laid as bricks. The material echoes the limestone found on the University’s neo-Gothic structures as well as Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House, also located on campus.  Bathed in natural light, the smaller building is lit by north-facing skylights throughout its many creative spaces.

St. Ann’s Warehouse / Marvel Architects


St. Ann's Warehouse / Marvel Architects. Image © David Sundberg/ESTO

St. Ann's Warehouse / Marvel Architects. Image © David Sundberg/ESTO

Beneath the Brooklyn Bridge, Marvel Architects has brought the brick and mortar ruins of the historic Tobacco Warehouse back to life, creating a new theater space for renowned presenter St. Ann’s Warehouse. Leading a team of Silman, Buro Happold and Charcoalblue, Marvel created a controlled acoustical environment using natural state materials – concrete, blackened steel, Douglas fir plywood. With a respectful sleight of hand, a new roof floats atop a ribbon of solid glass brick. Adjacent to the theater is a trapezoidal garden designed with Michael Van Valkenberg Landscape.

The Six Affordable Veteran Housing / Brooks + Scarpa


The Six Affordable Veteran Housing / Brooks + Scarpa. Image © Tara Wujcik

The Six Affordable Veteran Housing / Brooks + Scarpa. Image © Tara Wujcik

The SIX is a 52-unit LEED Platinum affordable housing and support services building for disabled veterans. Located in the MacArthur Park area of Los Angeles which has one of the highest densities in the USA with a total population of 120,000 people in 2.72 square miles.  The SIX breaks the prescriptive mold of the traditional shelter by creating public and private “zones” in which private space is deemphasized, in favor of large public areas. The organization is intended to transform the way people live-away from a reclusive, isolating layout towards a community-oriented, interactive space.

Stanford University Central Energy Facility / ZGF Architects LLP


Stanford University Central Energy Facility / ZGF Architects. Image © Matthew Anderson

Stanford University Central Energy Facility / ZGF Architects. Image © Matthew Anderson

The Central Energy Facility is the heart of Stanford University’s transformational campus-wide energy system, projected to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 68%. The centerpiece of this composition of large, industrial components is a central courtyard pivoting around a 2.5-million-gallon hot water thermal storage tank, showcasing the energy plant’s mission. The architecture takes its cues from Stanford’s rich heritage: the Stanford arcade is reimagined as PV trellis; integrally colored cast-in-place concrete nods to the prevalent limestone; and weathered CorTen steel accents suggest terra-cotta tile roofs that give the campus much of its character.

THREAD: Artists’ Residency and Cultural Center / Toshiko Mori Architect


THREAD: Artists' Residency and Cultural Center / Toshiko Mori Architect. Image © Iwan Baan

THREAD: Artists' Residency and Cultural Center / Toshiko Mori Architect. Image © Iwan Baan

Located in the remote village of Sinthian, Senegal, this project offers multiple programs for the community, including a gathering space, performance center, and residency for visiting artists. In the design, a parametric transformation of the traditional pitched roof inscribes a series of courtyards within the plan of the building while also creating shaded, multi-purpose areas around the perimeter of the courtyard. The inversion of the roof creates an effective strategy for the collection and storage of rainwater, capable of fulfilling substantial domestic and agricultural water needs for the community. Relying exclusively on local materials and construction techniques, the building’s traditional structure is formed primarily of bamboo and spaced-brick walls that absorb heat and promote airflow through the building interior.

Yale Center for British Art Building Conservation Project / Knight Architecture


Yale Center for British Art Building Conservation Project / Knight Architecture. Image © Richard Caspole

Yale Center for British Art Building Conservation Project / Knight Architecture. Image © Richard Caspole

Following nearly forty years of continuous operation, the Yale Center for British Art, designed by Louis I. Kahn and recipient of AIA’s Twenty-five Year Award, faced mounting programmatic, infrastructural, and operational pressures which threatened to degrade its extraordinary architectural character. The multi-year conservation project renewed interior finishes that had grown tired and worn; restored and expanded teaching spaces that were oversubscribed and underequipped; fortified spaces for exhibition, storage, and study of the growing collection; and replaced vital building systems which had reached the end of their practical life.

2017 Institute Honor Awards for Interior Architecture

30 Rockefeller Plaza: 65th Floor, Rainbow Room, SixtyFive / Gabellini Sheppard Associates
Associate Firm: Montroy Andersen DeMarco


30 Rockefeller Plaza: 65th Floor, Rainbow Room, SixtyFive / Gabellini Sheppard Associates. Image © Paul Warchol

30 Rockefeller Plaza: 65th Floor, Rainbow Room, SixtyFive / Gabellini Sheppard Associates. Image © Paul Warchol

Gabellini Sheppard Associates opened a new chapter for the 13,160-square-foot Rainbow Room and 65th floor, blending contemporary needs with design that rekindled the room’s original Art Deco-inspired spirit and radiant notoriety of 1934. In the Rainbow Room, the revitalization of the rotating dance floor, addition of mesmerizing crystal window veils, and restoration of the chandelier and central dome, reinforce the modern-day grandeur. In Bar SixtyFive, a faceted ceiling composed of glass-reinforced gypsum panels anchor the space, reinterpreting the open-air height the room once had as a sun parlor.

General Motors Design Auditorium / SmithGroupJJR


General Motors Design Auditorium / SmithGroupJJR. Image © James Haefner Photography

General Motors Design Auditorium / SmithGroupJJR. Image © James Haefner Photography

In 1956, the General Motors styling team moved from Detroit to a new design space. The complex, originally designed by Eero Saarinen, has become a legendary corporate master piece of planning and design. For SmithGroupJJR, the overall design intent was to modernize the facility but to do so in a manner consistent with the original Saarinen detailing. Technologies of materials, lighting and audio/visual have progressed dramatically and the revised Design Dome is now poised for General Motors to re-establish the relevance of this significant space for the design community.

George Washington University, Milken Institute School of Public Health / Payette
Associate Firm: Ayers Saint Gross 


Milken Institute School of Public Health / Payette. Image © Robert Benson

Milken Institute School of Public Health / Payette. Image © Robert Benson

Located on iconic Washington Circle Park in the heart of the nation’s capital, this School of Public Health is a rigorous, innovative response to site and program. With its most sustainable solutions so deeply embedded as to be nearly indistinguishable, it keenly demonstrates the symbiotic relationship between sustainability and public health. The building’s unusual skylit atrium, in which classrooms and study areas overlook the city through an open latticework of floor openings, invites exploration and discovery. The building supports a highly effective learning and interaction environment that is equally memorable for its intimacy and transparency.

In Situ / Aidlin Darling Design


In Situ / Aidlin Darling Design. Image © Matthew Millman

In Situ / Aidlin Darling Design. Image © Matthew Millman

Located in the recently reopened San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMoMA), In Situ represents a unique intersection of art, design, food and community. The restaurant features a curated collection of culinary innovators from around the world to make their contributions accessible for greater public engagement. Its design operates at many scales from urban to the intimate, and is intended to engage all of the senses with an emphasis on tactility and acoustics. The exposed interior shell of the building provides a backdrop for discreetly placed “artifacts” which include commissioned art, custom designed lighting, custom furniture and a sculptural wood ceiling.

Pinterest HQ / IwamotoScott Architecture with Brereton Architects


interest HQ / IwamotoScott Architecture with Brereton Architects. Image © Bruce Damonte

interest HQ / IwamotoScott Architecture with Brereton Architects. Image © Bruce Damonte

The new Pinterest headquarters is inspired by the redesign of the company’s web platform — clean, simple, intuitive. It occupies a concrete structure in the SOMA district that previously housed a John Deer factory. A key aspect of the design extends the existing atrium through to the ground floor, spatially connecting all four floors. The Knitting Stair occupies this newly-activated heart of the building. The workspace program is organized as porous, concentric layers around the atrium and Knitting Stair, opening up to the city at the ground floor’s lobby, café, all-hands space and maker lab.

University of Massachusetts (UMass) Dartmouth, Claire T. Carney Library / designLAB architects
Associate Firm: Austin Architects


University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Claire T. Carney Library / designLAB Architects. Image © Jonathan Hillyer

University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Claire T. Carney Library / designLAB Architects. Image © Jonathan Hillyer

Conceived in 1963 as a utopian community by architect Paul Rudolph, the UMass Dartmouth campus remains a tour de force of late 20th-century architectural exuberance and optimism. The Claire T. Carney Library is the 160,000-square-foot centerpiece of the concentric campus plan. designLAB’s transformation celebrates the historic architecture, while creating a state-of-the-art learning environment, improved group study spaces, a cafe, a lecture space, and a new campus living room. Inspired by Rudolph’s original design intentions, the renovation included the re-introduction of a vibrant color palette, bold supergraphics, and dynamic social spaces.

Writers Theatre / Studio Gang


Writers Theatre / Studio Gang. Image © Hedrich Blessing

Writers Theatre / Studio Gang. Image © Hedrich Blessing

While functional requirements of performance venues often dictate opaque volumes, the 36,000-square-foot Writers Theatre is instead a transparent cultural anchor that embraces its community. A double-height lobby provides a flexible space for outreach, gatherings, and performances, with glass doors that open to the adjacent park. Clad in wood hewn from the site, box office and concessions are treated as furniture, integrated into flexible lobby tribune seating. A canopy walk hung from timber trusses provides an open-air gathering place before, after, and between shows. The two stages are configured to enhance the intimacy for which Writers is known while creating new opportunities for innovative performance.

More information on the awards can be found here.

New and project descriptions via AIA.

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Dandurand Residences / NatureHumaine


© Adrien Williams

© Adrien Williams


© Adrien Williams


© Adrien Williams


© Adrien Williams


© Adrien Williams


© Adrien Williams

© Adrien Williams

Diagram

Diagram

© Adrien Williams

© Adrien Williams

From the architect. Carried out in a residential area of the Rosemont–La-Petite-Patrie borough, the project consisted in renovating and expanding a duplex built in the 1920s that housed three dwelling units. The added storey harmonized the building with the size of the surrounding constructions.  


© Adrien Williams

© Adrien Williams

Plan

Plan

© Adrien Williams

© Adrien Williams

Plan

Plan

© Adrien Williams

© Adrien Williams

The intervention was minimal on Dandurand Street, rather extending along the perpendicular street. In the existing section, the brick was replaced, but the original openings were mostly retained, while large angled windows were built on the addition, multiplying the views on the urban landscape. The glass and white steel volume that was added on top of the first two levels stands out through both its angular shape and its materials. On each level, spacious decks equipped with glass railings lighten volume perception. A shared deck was inserted into a breach made in the volume, which also captures light. 


© Adrien Williams

© Adrien Williams

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Saving Money Basics: How to Build a Solid Savings Fund

Saving money is hard for most people. First of all, there are so many tempting things to spend it on! Also, in this current climate of ongoing economic uncertainty, job transitions have adversely affected many people’s savings and emergency funds. And if you have kids or pets, you already know what they can do to the best-laid financial plans.

But there are still ways to save – practical, achievable methods you can use to sock away something for the future. In this post, learn how to build a solid savings fund by following these saving money basics.

Tip 1: Pull your credit report annually

Your credit report will tell you if there are any outstanding issues or merchant disputes that are negatively affecting your credit score. This is important since your credit score directly impacts your interest rate for major purchases such as a home or car. Your credit score also impacts which credit cards you can apply for and what you will pay for basic necessities such as insurance.

By keeping your credit report squeaky clean and working with the best credit repair companies to resolve disputes, you will have more money available to save.

Tip 2: Use savings apps to make saving effortless

savings apps

Thanks to the internet explosion, you now have a new menu of savings apps to choose from. These apps can help you save without even thinking about it. Even if the app you choose only saves pennies per day on your behalf, that still adds up to dollars by the weekend and tens of dollars by month-end.

Before you know it, you will have a tidy little nest egg going!

Tip 3: Set up automatic bank drafts from your checking to savings account

One of the keys to a successful savings plan is to automate your savings so that you save money before you get your hands on it. One of the handiest tools to do this is also one of the simplest – the automatic bank draft. If you have your checking and savings account linked and you have elected to have your paycheck deposited via auto-draft, savings will be a breeze for you.

Just set up an automatic transfer to your savings account that occurs on the same day your paycheck gets deposited. Experts suggest saving 15 percent of your paycheck monthly if you can swing it, but any amount is better than nothing.

Tip 4: Participate to the fullest extent possible in your company’s retirement plan

Where this will help you to save the most is when your employer has a contribution matching program (where your employer will match your contributions up to a certain percentage annually). But even if this isn’t available, you can sock away some saved funds on a tax-free basis by participating in your employer’s retirement savings plan.

Saving this way also helps you keep from accessing the funds on a whim, since there is a penalty for withdrawal before you reach age 59.5.

See Also: Seven Top Tips for Retirement Planning 

Tip 5: Diversify your investment portfolio

investment portfolio

If you need a percentage of your saved cash to remain accessible, you might want to put it in a savings account where it won’t earn much interest but it will always be there if you need it. As for the rest, put whatever you can spare into your investment portfolio so it can start multiplying.

See Also: 5 Financial Emergencies Everyone Must Be Prepared For

As you do this, be sure to choose a blend of risk-levels so you never risk losing all your savings to an investment gone bad.

By following these basic tips faithfully, you will start to notice your little pool of saved funds growing and growing and then growing some more. All you need to do is get the ball rolling and then you can enjoy the peace of mind that comes with having savings in the bank!

 

The post Saving Money Basics: How to Build a Solid Savings Fund appeared first on Dumb Little Man.

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Hardenvoort Campus for Youth & Children / BURO II & ARCHI+I


© Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus


© Danica O. Kus


© Danica O. Kus


© Danica O. Kus


© Danica O. Kus

  • Architects: BURO II & ARCHI+I
  • Location: Antwerp, Belgium
  • Architect In Charge: Rita Agneessens, Thomas Dierickx
  • Area: 8395.58 m2
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus

This project consists of a new child and teenager campus, comprising a kindergarten, a primary school and a secondary school. The building location for this new project lies in Antwerpen-North, along the Hardenvoort street, on the edge of the Park Spoor Noord.


© Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus

The building has two faces: a city side with higher building volumes and the tower, and a ‘softer’ park side with several levels, making the building a transition zone between the park and the Hardenvoort street side, and linking it to the education facility building. The plan is to create a central lobby to connect the street and the park sides and provide double access to the complex. There is a student entrance on the park side and an entrance for visitors, neighbours and students who are late on the street side.


© Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus

Flor Plan 00

Flor Plan 00

© Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus

The site has a twofold relationship with the park: on the west side, a part of the park is focussed on teenagers (skating bowl, graf ti, part-time art education), while the south side is connected to the facilities for younger children (playground, recreational water features,…). Therefore, the basic concept is to situate the secondary school and the general rooms on the west side, and the kindergarten and primary school on the south-east side. This will create a logical connection to the park. The general rooms, such as the gym, will be located in the head of the building, the hinge between park and city. The neighbours can use this gym after hours.


Section AA

Section AA

Section CC

Section CC

The separate departments can be clearly seen within the building, just like the cascade of accompanying outside areas.


© Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus

The kindergarten is oriented towards the inner area that offers more cover, while the departments for the older children are more open to the park and street sides of the project. The ground  oor will include a separate play ground for the toddlers, which will be closed to the other students. Large stairs will lead to another, communal playground, on the level of the cafeteria and the entrance to the primary school. As the child becomes older, the approach will become more open. Once the child becomes a teenager, they will have a wide view over the city and its surroundings. Because the plot is relatively small for the number of students that has to be housed here (680 students), most of the roofs will be used as playgrounds.


© Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus

The building can be considered a passive school because of its thick insulation, the meticulous attention to soundproo ng, sun screens, a ventilation system with heat recuperation, and exterior carpentry with triple glazing.


© Danica O. Kus

© Danica O. Kus

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Comprised of 4 million acres in southwest Alaska, Lake Clark…

Comprised of 4 million acres in southwest Alaska, Lake Clark National Park and Preserve is one of the nation’s most remote national parks. Winter conditions add more challenges to those wanting to explore this gorgeous and diverse landscape, but as you can see, the backcountry scenes are worth the cold. Photo of Tanalian Falls by James Walton, National Park Service.

Be a Rebel: 7 Tips for Radical Achievement from Albert Einstein

People love a good rebellion story. From Alexander Hamilton to Luke Skywalker, rebel heroes inspire us.

The idea that we can rise up, against all odds, has captured the imagination of generations.

But day-to-day social pressures are a powerful force. It’s extremely difficult to escape the status quo and go against the grain of our culture. Too often this results in a feeling of being stuck or trapped. Have you ever had this feeling?

Fear not! You can make your escape by learning from smart-guy poster child Albert Einstein.

That’s right, Einstein was a rebel. In fact, his disregard for established thinking was a huge contributor to his revolutionary scientific accomplishments.

scientist quotes

“Other scientists had come close to his insight, but they were too confined by the dogmas of the day.” ~ Walter Isaacson, The World Needs More Rebels Like Einstein

So, consider the tips from Einstein below and spark your own rebellion!

Try New Things

quotes einstein

“Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.” ~ Albert Einstein

Einstein made plenty of mistakes but his successes are what we remember. To make real progress, you have to step outside of your comfort zone. Try new things. Make mistakes. All in the name of progress.

Question Authority

quotes by albert einstein

“Blind belief in authority is the greatest enemy of truth.” ~ Albert Einstein

Don’t take things at face-value. Develop your own understanding and be open to the fact that authority figures can be wrong too.

Seek Truth, Not Popularity

quotes of albert einstein

“What is right is not always popular and what is popular is not always right.” ~ Albert Einstein

Sometimes, being right will make you unpopular. Be right anyway. Popularity is cheap and temporary. Strive for quality and truth despite the opinions of critics.

Run Towards Problems

albert einstein famous quotes

“In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity” ~ Albert Einstein

People who create the most valuable solutions are often those who chase the most difficult problems. Don’t be intimidated by big challenges because they represent the greatest potential.

Be Persistent

quotes by einstein

“You never fail until you stop trying.” ~ Albert Einstein

Be patient. Keep going. Things of great value often take years to build. But in the end, it will be worth it.

Recognize When You’re Wrong

einstein quotes

“The measure of intelligence is the ability to change.” ~ Albert Einstein

When the facts change or you’re proven wrong, don’t be stubborn. Don’t let a mistake waste any more time, or create additional mistakes. Own your failure and move on.

Be Optimistic

quotes albert einstein

“I’d rather be an optimist and a fool than a pessimist and right.” ~ Albert Einstein

At the end of the day, we will experience successes and failures. But, the attitude we take will determine how we experience the world.

So strive, fail, succeed and smile at the possibilities of the future.

See Also: Amazing Life Lessons You Can Learn From Albert Einstein: Part Deux

 

The post Be a Rebel: 7 Tips for Radical Achievement from Albert Einstein appeared first on Dumb Little Man.

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Despacho Arquitectos HV Design a Spacious Contemporary Home in Ciudad de Mexico

Casa O' by Despacho Arquitectos HV (6)

When you’re looking for home inspiration in preparation for building a house, it’s easy to scroll through all different homes, styles, and decors in search of aspects and features you like best. Sometimes, however, it’s nice to find a grand and impressive “super home” where the designers have gone all out and incorporate just about everything you could possibly wish for in one place, just to see how people have..

More…

Camp Graham / Weinstein Friedlein Architects


© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC


© Mark Herboth Photography LLC


© Mark Herboth Photography LLC


© Mark Herboth Photography LLC


© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

  • Owner: Girls Scouts North Carolina Coastal Pines
  • Engineer: Neville Engineering, Chapel Hill, NC
  • Contractor: CT Wilson, Durham, NC

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

At a lakeside camp, where tented and cabin campsites are proven attractions, the Girl Scouts set out to add a different sort of shelter. They wanted treehouses, something to evoke the sense of adventure, fantasy, delight found in the lofty constructs of backyards and forest getaways. The new 36-person site at Camp Graham consists of a series of pole structures along the wood’s edge, linked by an elevated path that winds among the trunks of the native trees. The challenge in treehouse making is to build without doing harm to the trees, and to extend access to all campers.


Site Plan

Site Plan

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

Section

Section

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

The Camp Graham structures are supported on tall wood poles that lightly touch the ground. They lean toward one another amid the surrounding, irregular tree trunks, becoming part of the forest. These frames are draped in canopies that combine both solid and translucent materials, which playfully catch or transmit the dappled sunlight that makes its way through the natural tree canopy. Each of the all-weather shelters accommodates six campers in bunks and cots, and each one includes a daylit central core, a place for playful mingling. The stick-framed forms soar overhead, reaching up to the branches of the trees that surround. The edges of end panels and floor boards stop short, allowing screened slots to naturally ventilate the space.


© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

The connecting path begins at grade, rises gently and meanders a near-level course through the trees. Galvanized wire farm fencing minimizes the feeling of enclosure and promotes a sense of height, of being above the ground, in the trees. The elevated walk connects all six sleeping shelters and leads to the common troop house, located where the falling terrain allows a lower level for showers and storage. Stairs and a chair lift provide direct access between the troop level and the forest floor, which also provides location for the central firepit that is a feature of all the encampments at the lake.


© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

© Mark Herboth Photography LLC

Product Description. The lean-to frame is built with the same simple utility poles used most commonly as infrastructure. These poles fit comfortably among the trees with which they stand. As a product, the poles were economical and readily available up to the 45’ length required. To join the poles to the foundation, workmen on site saw kerfs for the steel plates which pin the structure together.


Diagram

Diagram

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Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara Named Artistic Directors of 2018 Venice Architecture Biennale


Courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia

Courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia

BREAKING: This is a developing story and will be updated as soon as more information is available. 

In a meeting yesterday, The Board of La Biennale di Venezia appointed Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara as curators of the 16th International Architecture Exhibition in 2018.

In a statement issued by President Paolo Baratta, he explained

“The Exhibition curated by Alejandro Aravena offered visitors a critical overview of the worldwide evolution of architecture and underlined how important it is that a qualified demand on the part of individuals and communities be met by an equally effective response, thereby confirming that architecture is one of civil society’s instruments for organizing the space in which it lives and works.

Along these lines, Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara will continue to address the same theme but from the point of view of the quality of the public and private space, of urban space, of the territory and of the landscape as the main ends of architecture. The curators, who are well-known for the refinement of their work, are also known for their intense didactic activity and their ability to involve and fascinate new generations.”

The 16th International Architecture Exhibition will take place from Saturday, May 26 to Sunday, November 25, 2018.

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10 Architecture Offices with Inspiring Workspaces

The spaces in which great architecture firms produce their work are a source of endless curiosity for architects. By understanding these workspaces, architects hope to understand the environment in which their favorite ideas and drawings are shaped, and gain a more intimate understanding of their favorite practices. For this reason, we have searched our archives for the architectural offices that have previously been published on our website. Among our selection are international names such as MVRDV and Selgas Cano alongside other offices which, though not so well known, also demonstrate how your workspace can be a source of inspiration for design.

See the offices after the break. 

MVRDV House / MVRDV


© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode

Casa MVRDV / MVRDV

Casa MVRDV / MVRDV

Apos2 / Apostrophy’s


© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

Apos2 / Apostrophy’s

Apos2 / Apostrophy’s

Selgas Cano Architecture Office by Iwan Baan / Selgas Cano


© Iwan Baan

© Iwan Baan




Assemble Studio / Assemble


© Tanja Milbourne

© Tanja Milbourne

Assemble Studio / Assemble

Assemble Studio / Assemble

Lyttelton Studio Retreat / Bull O’Sullivan Architecture


© Patrick Reynolds

© Patrick Reynolds

Estúdio em Lyttelton / Bull O’Sullivan Architecture

Estúdio em Lyttelton / Bull O’Sullivan Architecture

Architects Office / Skylab Arquitetos


Cortesia de Skylab Arquitetos

Cortesia de Skylab Arquitetos

Escritório dos Arquitetos / Skylab Arquitetos

Escritório dos Arquitetos / Skylab Arquitetos

Blurlogroño Studio / Blur Arquitectura


© Berta Buzunariz

© Berta Buzunariz

Estúdio Blurlogroño / Blur Arquitectura

Estúdio Blurlogroño / Blur Arquitectura

AUÁ Arquitetos Office / AUÁ arquitetos


© Luiz Carlos Bulla Jr.

© Luiz Carlos Bulla Jr.

Escritório AUÁ arquitetos / AUÁ arquitetos

Escritório AUÁ arquitetos / AUÁ arquitetos

Terra Studio / Arquitetos Associados


© Eduardo Eckenfels

© Eduardo Eckenfels

Estudios Terra / Arquitetos Associados

Estudios Terra / Arquitetos Associados

ARUP Downtown Los Angeles / ZAGO Architecture


© Joshua White

© Joshua White

ARUP Downtown Los Angeles / ZAGO Architecture

ARUP Downtown Los Angeles / ZAGO Architecture

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