Philadelphia – Pennsylvania – USA (by Peter Miller)

Philadelphia – Pennsylvania – USA (by Peter Miller)

💙 untitled on 500px by Sergey Polyushko, Kiev,…

💙 untitled on 500px by Sergey Polyushko, Kiev, Ukraine☀  … http://ift.tt/2b6xl6c

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House B&R / ECOING


© Marko Ercegović

© Marko Ercegović


© Marko Ercegović


© Marko Ercegović


© Marko Ercegović


© Vojo Bašić

  • Architects: ECOING
  • Location: Sevid, Croatia
  • Architect In Charge: Ivana Dabrović
  • Project Team: Maja Tutavac
  • Area: 500.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Marko Ercegović, Vojo Bašić
  • Structural Engineering: KAP4 d.o.o. ( Nikola Miletić )
  • Electrical Engineering: ETS Farago d.o.o. ( Alen Farago )
  • Plumbing And Drainage: Mrazek d.o.o. ( Štefica Mrazek, Stjepan Mrazek
  • Mechanical Installations: GREMIO d.o.o. ( Mladen Babić )
  • Pool System: MAKRO 5 Projekt d.o.o. ( Vladimir Zelić )
  • Landscape Design: Horting Sisak d.o.o. ( Lucas A. Werft, Davorka Pospišil )
  • Bill Of Quantities : Marija Babojelić
  • Project Manager & Construction Supervision: Tim Coulson ( First Property Croatia )
  • Contractors: M-P-Beton d.o.o., Servis Zaninović d.o.o., Horting Sisak d.o.o., Stolarija Branko Rudolf, VOTEX d.o.o.

© Marko Ercegović

© Marko Ercegović

From the architect. The residential villa B&R, located by the sea and designed for a Belgian family, has been developed in conjunction with the well laid-out surroundings, and follows the terrain of various heights, balanced by constructed retaining walls of 0.8 to 3 m high.


© Vojo Bašić

© Vojo Bašić

Some retaining walls are underground parts of the villa, some are parts of the garage beneath the garden area, or parts of walls of the open kitchen in the garden, thus creating an impression of architecture and environment integration.


© Marko Ercegović

© Marko Ercegović

The design and U-shape of the villa with a total surface area of 500 m2 has resulted from the fusion of the plot, its beautiful vistas and positioning on the one hand, which is why the end sections are of different lengths and angles, and slightly bend around the central terrace, designed to provide shade, and from its micro-location on the other hand, which resulted in such variations in the dimensions of the end sections, thus making the villa, thanks to its own size, fit nicely into the urban matrix.


Ground Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan

The villa has two storeys: ground floor and first floor, and split-level design.

A sundeck extends towards the sea, accommodating the swimming pool with the dimensions 4.6×11 m and an open kitchen, while the glass walls of the villa provide for the integration of outdoor and indoor stay. 


© Marko Ercegović

© Marko Ercegović

Other facades are of a more closed character to ensure the indoor intimacy of the villa. They protect it from the street and the driveway, opposite which residents go to the beach. With only one angle opening, and the light getting in through skylights, they also render the villa protected from any views on the rear side.


© Marko Ercegović

© Marko Ercegović

From the main entrance there is direct access to the kitchen with a pantry and to the toilet. The central, two-storey space opens right from the entrance, with galleries, stairs and the dining area that is adjoining the kitchen and the terrace with a pergola, thus opening the space for an all-day stay, as well as to the living room, which is recessed relative to the entrance and dining area.

Upstairs, in the most prominent part of the villa, overlooking the sea and the swimming pool, there is a master bedroom with a glass ensuite bathroom and a corner glass walk-in closet. There is also a guest bedroom, which overlooks the backyard, as well as two children’s bedrooms with bathrooms and a common terrace facing the sea and a workspace with access to the backyard.


Section

Section

The design concept is based on the premise that each room offers a unique experience, while at the same time the spaces create an integrated whole merging with the environment, ensuring a vacation stay in a natural seaside and Mediterranean ambience. The surrounding autochtonous vegetation further contribute to such an atmosphere.


© Marko Ercegović

© Marko Ercegović

The villa’s architecture is presented as a playful white block opened by large glass walls with magnificent vistas and contact with the environment.


First Floor Plan

First Floor Plan

Product Description. – In this project clients’ desire was to have contemporary Croatian furniture design so among other pieces in the house central place takes dining table, the TT table from ELEMENT, designed by Numen/For Use.  Table is made of solid oak. Slavonian oak, “Quercus robur slovanica”, a subspecies of pedunculate (common) oak named after Slovania, a geographical and historical region in eastern Croatia.  All the finishing is executed in high-quality natural oils, preserving and enhancing the characteristics of the wood. http://ift.tt/2itSjPG


© Marko Ercegović

© Marko Ercegović

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💙 Sunset at Coot Lake on 500px by Stephen K. Miller,…

💙 Sunset at Coot Lake on 500px by Stephen K. Miller, Longmont,… http://ift.tt/2b2z5mT

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Orange Business Services Office / T+T Architects


© Dmitriy Yagovkin

© Dmitriy Yagovkin


© Dmitriy Yagovkin


© Dmitriy Yagovkin


© Dmitriy Yagovkin


© Dmitriy Yagovkin

  • Architects: T+T Architects
  • Location: 1st Красногвардейский проезд 15, Mercury City Tower, Moscow, Russia
  • Architect In Charge: Sergey Truhanov, Voevodina Polina, Parfenova Yuliya, Denisova Galina, Trusova Olga.
  • Area: 5300.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Dmitriy Yagovkin

© Dmitriy Yagovkin

© Dmitriy Yagovkin

From the architect. The new Moscow office of telecommunications company Orange Business Services is located on two floors of “Mercury” tower of business center “Moscow city”. The total area of the interior is 5,300 sq. m.

The interior project was implemented by Pridex Group Company, which combined the functions of General designer and General contractor performing the architectural and engineering design, as well as the complex of engineering works. The interior design was developed by T+T Architects bureau. 


Axonometric

Axonometric

Two reference points: customer’s logo, the orange square, and accent elements in the form of circles became the basis for the architectural concept. 

The principle of an open workspace is popular all over the world. However, here the customer has built a distinct functional process in which the tasks go through a kind of “assembly line” of departments and specialists. The final placement of the departments follows this scheme.


© Dmitriy Yagovkin

© Dmitriy Yagovkin

The office space is divided into working areas and points of informal communication evenly spread over the entire space of the floors. At these points architects set the accents based on the form of circle in a particular embodiment. Workspaces are made contrastly – in the orthogonal forms and monochrome materials. Part of the informal communication points were integrated in the center of some departments showing the inextricable workflow and the process of discussion.

Materials with high acoustic comfort were used for the productive work of 500 employees. Solutions with mobile partitions in meeting rooms made the space for negotiations flexible and scalable.

“The new office for Orange Company has become for us a serious challenge. Complicated architecture of the building and a number of customer conditions demanded high professionalism of the team. Due to the selected solutions and coordinated work, we managed to implement such an ambitious project in the shortest possible time”, – says Sergey Kudryavtsev, managing partner of Pridex Group Company.


© Dmitriy Yagovkin

© Dmitriy Yagovkin

“Great attention was paid to the corporate standards. “Orange” provided us with the detailed brand book with a lot of restrictions and recommendations. During the implementation we managed to create a unique solution without breaking the basic corporate strategy”, – says Polina Voevodina, the main architect of the project, the T+T Architects Bureau.

“We thank the Pridex Company for the fast and high quality implementation of this complex project. Everything is done in accordance with the requirements of the Orange brand style. New office came out comfortable and functional, and most importantly – helped to raise the productivity of our employees interaction. It will definitely impact on improving the quality of service to our clients”, – commented Olga Nekrasova, Director of commercial real estate and facilities management at Orange Business Services.


© Dmitriy Yagovkin

© Dmitriy Yagovkin

Product Description: As far as the main point of the concept was minimalistic and neat interior, one of the principal materials was the white color itself. However, we paid high attention to the public spaces: circular reinforced concrete staircase, lounge area near it, coffee points and kitchen, informal meeting areas, reception.

Oppositely to the white and really simple open space areas, there are accent walls with micro-cement decorative coating (Baldini) or bright orange-color ceiling detail (Tikkurilla paintings). There are also some cozy suspended lamps (“Hood”, Atelje Lyktan) with red felt shades, which determine unique areas. Using different colors from Desso Airmaster carpet collection allowed us to distinguish different functional zones by determing the floor color. 


© Dmitriy Yagovkin

© Dmitriy Yagovkin

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East Village / J.M.Bonfils and Associates


© Kinan Mansour

© Kinan Mansour


© Kinan Mansour


© Kinan Mansour


© Kinan Mansour


© Wael Khoury Photography

  • Collaborators: Marwan Matta & Lea Ksayer
  • Structural Engineers: Rodolphe Mattar
  • M E P Engineers: Kamal Sioufi & Associates
  • Contractors: Kfoury Contracting & Engineering

© Wael Khoury Photography

© Wael Khoury Photography

From the architect. The concept consisted in lifting key contextual elements – traditional building material and Lebanese gardens –and revives them with contemporary interpretations. So conventional wood and dark stone found an unexpected contrast in vivid red metal, and space-efficient vertical gardens replaced their horizontal predecessors. These elements complement the diversity of the surrounding context. While it looks like a simple geometric shape from afar, the structure consists of three parallel elongated blocks each with a unique identity that’s revealed on approach, while a cantilevered section that extends out towards the street emphasizes the building’s partly public function, a contemporary art gallery that occupies the ground floor to introduce a cultural and commercial element to the project.


Section

Section

East Village includes 13 loft units, each of the double height characteristic of the region: 10 duplexes, two penthouses with pools on each of their terraces, and one simplex, its balcony framed by red metal. On the simplex’s terrace is a private bar that overlooks the pubs and lounges scattered across Gemayzeh and through Downtown, exposing a panoramic view of the city.


© Kinan Mansour

© Kinan Mansour

“East Village is a kind of suprematist composition playing with the paradoxical conditions of today and linking us to a kind of paradigm” – Jean Marc Bonfils


© Kinan Mansour

© Kinan Mansour

Product Description: Vertical Garden influenced by a public garden located in the adjacent 1960s Electricite du Liban headquarters, that is no longer accessible to the public. The aim is to reintroduce a more space-efficient vertical green space that the community could enjoy.


© Kinan Mansour

© Kinan Mansour

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Take Harvard’s Online Course in Digital Photography for Free





If you’ve always wanted to take better photos and you have 10-15 hours to dedicate to the endeavor, you’ll be pleased to know this: Harvard, one of the world’s most renowned universities and home to the mighty GSD (Graduate School of Design)—whose faculty has included Rem Koolhaas, Zaha Hadid, Walter Gropius and many others—is offering a free course in digital photography.

Available via ALISON, an online learning community, the course offers 13 modules that promise to teach the basics behind good photography.

ALISON’s free online photo course gives you the opportunity to gain extensive knowledge and understanding of digital photography including topics such as exposure settings, how to read and use the histogram, how light affects a photograph, how the camera sensor and lenses work, and how to process a photograph using computer software. You will also learn tips and techniques on what not to do when taking a photograph. 

Computer scientist and photographer Dan Armendariz guides you through the course, with lessons covering

  • Introduction to Digital Photography
  • Introduction to Software
  • Introduction to Light
  • Introduction to Exposure – Part 1
  • Introduction to Exposure – Part 2
  • Introduction to Optics
  • Introduction to Histograms
  • Introduction to Software Tools
  • Introduction to Digital Cameras
  • Introduction to Digital Cameras – Part 2
  • Introduction to Color
  • Introduction to Artifacts
  • Digital Photography Assessment

Ready to step up your architecture photography game? Join the over 400,000 interested students at ALISON or learn more by visiting the course’s website

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Dolbadarn Castle, Snowdonia, Walesphoto via alicia

Dolbadarn Castle, Snowdonia, Wales

photo via alicia