The Paradise of Color / Atelier Alter


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

  • Architects: Atelier Alter
  • Location: Fengtai, Beijing, China
  • Chief Designers: Xiaojun Bu, Yingfan Zhang
  • Design Team: Xiaojun Bu, Yingfan Zhang, Dehu Du, Zhenwei Li
  • Area: 4200.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Courtesy of Atelier Alter
  • Client: Beijing No.12 Kindergarten

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

No.12 Middle School is one of the best schools in Beijing. There is a strong need from the neighborhood to have the School incorporate kindergarten education in their curriculum. The kindergarten of the school strives for building the best school of the neighborhood, and the architecture of it reflects its ambition. On top of that, the architecture aims for shaping a unique character for the school while enlivening the area of the city. 


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

This is a rehabilitation project. The structure sites at the expending area of the city. Surrounded by residential blocks, the site is in need for human scale culture facilities. The architecture design tries to create a pure and simple paradise with memorable spaces for children. The kindergarten is composed by clean lines and shapes of primary colors. By looking through the lens of a child, the purity of childhood is well preserved in the architecture. 


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

Our project begins with converting the scale from a grown-up to a child. We use building blocks as the inspiration, by incorporating the openings of the original building, we create large color blocks that pop-up from the facade as gigantic building blocks for the neighborhood. The simple color block stands out from the vernacular housing construction, and creates a dialogue with the children of the neighborhood.  


Facade Isometric Diagram

Facade Isometric Diagram

Facade Analysis

Facade Analysis

Our use of primary color starts with the understanding of perception in a child. As the vision of a child starts to mature gradually after six, children’s understanding of color is not as completed as the grownups. So we use a variety of colors in the elevation as well as the interior and exterior environment to stimulate the senses of children and encourage them to explore in the spaces and shapes. Thus their role play in the space would be more memorable. We use blue for nursery, green for toddler and orange for preschool kids, with different emphasis on keeping them calm or making them more activated. 


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

Level 1 Plan

Level 1 Plan

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

By combining the brilliant colors, we also try to bring some vividness to the city of Beijing—the city de-saturated by winter smog. In perspective, the architecture creates a surreal image of 2-D cookie cutter in the concrete forest of modern city. The two sides of the pop-up volumes are lighting panels. The lighting design makes the pure color block looks richer at night. It turns the architecture into a gigantic modern art of light and color. 


© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

© Courtesy of Atelier Alter

http://ift.tt/2i01nfj

Little Big House / Robert Maschke Architects


© Brad Feinknopf

© Brad Feinknopf


© Brad Feinknopf


© Brad Feinknopf


© Brad Feinknopf


© Brad Feinknopf

  • Design Team: Robert Maschke, FAIA; Marc Manack, AIA; Matt Lindsay, Associate AIA
  • Structural Engineer: I.A. Lewin, P.E. and Associates

© Brad Feinknopf

© Brad Feinknopf

The little_BIG house is located in Cleveland, Ohio’s historic Little Italy neighborhood, known for its rich culture and artisanal background. The husband and wife client, both industrial designers, commissioned the project to create a studio for their work and a home to raise a growing family. The residence is located on a dense and constrained urban street away from the idyllic neighborhood center.  The site is narrow and bound by three “shot gun” homes to the North, a retaining wall to the East, and a multi story condominium to the South.  A former open framed steel warehouse, now used as a covered surface parking structure, is to the west, obstructing views from the site. The imposition of these structures help to inform the design approach.


© Brad Feinknopf

© Brad Feinknopf

Diagram

Diagram

© Brad Feinknopf

© Brad Feinknopf

The architecture emerges from the reconciliation of inherent contradictions embedded within the site and program. The client desired an urban presence, while also creating private exterior space secluded from the surrounding context. The couple asked for flexibility to “split” the property into independent homes in the future. In response to these constraints, the massing of the house became parsed into two distinct volumes, pushed to the extreme boundaries of the site, connected by a covered bridge. This organization creates a communal courtyard from the residual space between the volumes. A monumental stair connects the various programmatic elements. The stairwell folds upon itself overlapping and separating, creating a visual connection between levels. The movement of the stair is evident on the metal surface of the exterior envelope, a folded logic that unites the parts into a cohesive wholeThe material palette is simple and elegant. The exterior facade is black stucco concrete in concert with a color matched metal folding wall and roof. Patterned corten panels provide privacy from the street and the adjacent properties through their use as entry gate and perimeter fencing. The interior is composed of hard troweled concrete floors with white walls, floor to ceiling book matched and sequenced statutory marble slabs in the bathrooms, and richly colored bamboo for the architectural millwork and stairs. Additionally, the monumental stairwell is veiled in white perforated steel panels. This textured strategy is implemented on select glazing units through etching. The perforation pattern was developed through a series of photo manipulations of light passing through a bamboo forest. A transposition inspired by the materiality of the millwork and stair.


© Brad Feinknopf

© Brad Feinknopf

© Brad Feinknopf

© Brad Feinknopf

Product Description. The concrete stucco allows the form to be sculpted and the complementary metal panels wrap and defines the space within and around the building. 


© Brad Feinknopf

© Brad Feinknopf

http://ift.tt/2jcYZCT

Burg-Hohenzollern Castle, Germanyphoto via fardus

Burg-Hohenzollern Castle, Germany

photo via fardus

These Intricate Illustrations Portray the Details of Fantastical Cities


© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

In the first installment of her series, “Cities and Memory – the Architecture and the City,” architect Marta Vilarinho de Freitas created a set of intricately rendered architectural fantasy worlds that straddled the line between realism and abstraction.

Now Vilarinho de Freitas has returned with an additional 7 illustrations, this time experimenting with planimetrics and new cityscape scenes.


© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas


© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas


© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas


© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

In her drawings, she explores the relationship between detail and perception of the city, where negative space becomes as important to an architectural element’s presence and what is drawn.


© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

© Marta Vilarinho de Freitas

Check out Vilarinho de Freitas’ first set of illustrations, here, and visit her facebook page to see more of her work.

Architecture is the Protagonist in These Intricate Illustrations
//cdn.embedly.com/widgets/platform.js

http://ift.tt/2hYKtCj

Brooklyn Bridge – New York City – New York – USA (by Ayolt de…

Brooklyn Bridge – New York City – New York – USA (by Ayolt de Roos)

Casa de Ladrillo / Paulo Ambrosoni


© Paulo Ambrosoni

© Paulo Ambrosoni


© Paulo Ambrosoni


© Paulo Ambrosoni


© Paulo Ambrosoni


© Paulo Ambrosoni

  • Construction Management: Lucía Preve
  • Structure: José Burren
  • Structural Advice: Enrique Peirano
  • Construction: López, Freitas, Araujo Construcciones

© Paulo Ambrosoni

© Paulo Ambrosoni

From the architect. The project is an urban housing for a family with three girls in Salto, a city located on the eastern bank of the Uruguay River.

The construction of 255 square meters on two levels is located on the obligatory frontal limit of 3 meters from the street, leaving free the largest patio area for the North sun.

The land where the housing is implanted has a public pedestrian passage to the west, on this side the land narrows with a curve in the middle of its depth. This singularity is solved by the garage and a storage room, thus regularizing the patio.


© Paulo Ambrosoni

© Paulo Ambrosoni

The Constructive System

The project is defined from the choice of the construction system.

The city of Salto has an interesting history of works of architecture in brick seen of great quality. Since the 1970s, Eladio Dieste’s buildings, among others, have masterfully used the structural and formal qualities of brick.


Scheme Structure

Scheme Structure

The provision of specialized workmanship and first quality raw material allowed using the constructive system of load bearing wall of exposed brick and concrete slabs in an effective way.


© Paulo Ambrosoni

© Paulo Ambrosoni

Formal Structure

The brick walls in English rig are arranged orthogonally and without voids. In the open spaces are located the openings from floor to ceiling.

The four bedrooms with dressing rooms upstairs are used to modulate the structure. In ground floor the living room, dining room and kitchen are articulated in a free light of 5.70 meters.


Lower Floor

Lower Floor

Upper Floor

Upper Floor

The shape responds to the constructive system with continuous walls. The textures of the external partitions are achieved with protruding bricks and open joints to ventilate the chambers of ventilated facades.


© Paulo Ambrosoni

© Paulo Ambrosoni

Bioclimatic Considerations

The climate in the city of Salto is very humid all year round, with very high temperatures in summer and low in winter.

The mass of the brick walls provides insulation and thermal inertia to regulate the great variations of temperature during the year.


© Paulo Ambrosoni

© Paulo Ambrosoni

The house is closed to the south and to the street, opens to the north and the patio where eaves are used to protect against the strong summer sun and allow the entrance of solar radiation in winter.


Longitudinal Section

Longitudinal Section

It also regulates humidity and heat through cross ventilation in all spaces, using banners on the doors and making in summer the fresh air of the south façade in shade runs through the house.


© Paulo Ambrosoni

© Paulo Ambrosoni

http://ift.tt/2i1h0q2

New York Plans $10 Billion Renovation of JFK Airport


Courtesy of State of New York

Courtesy of State of New York

New York City’s busiest airport is about to receive a major overhaul.

Proposed by New York governor Andrew Cuomo, the plan calls for a $10 million renovation to New York City’s busiest airport, transforming the facility into a “a unified, interconnected, world-class’ complex.”


Courtesy of State of New York


Courtesy of State of New York


Courtesy of State of New York


Courtesy of State of New York


Courtesy of State of New York

Courtesy of State of New York

The proposals would improve circulation throughout the airport by creating a unified terminal that would connect existing newer wings with newly relocated branches. Roadways leading to the complex would also be widened and redesigned into a continuous ring road for better vehicular access, and expanded taxiways would allow for quicker passenger turnover. Additionally, parking areas would be reorganized into clearly demarcated short-term and long-term lots.


Courtesy of State of New York

Courtesy of State of New York

“Our vision plan calls for the creation of a unified, interconnected airport that changes the passenger experience and makes the airport much easier to access and navigate,” said Cuomo in a statement.

“We are New York, and we remember the bravado that built this State in the first place, and that is the attitude that will take JFK and turn it into the 21st century airport that we deserve.”


Courtesy of State of New York

Courtesy of State of New York

Within the terminal, new fine dining venues, duty-free and retail shopping areas, and conference room facilities would improve traveller’s comfortability and experience.

Improvements would also be made to security technologies, including video monitoring and facial recognition software, which are designed to speed up the process for passengers.


Courtesy of State of New York

Courtesy of State of New York

If implemented, these changes would help to accommodate for a continually growing passenger base, expected to reach 75 million people per year by 2030 and 100 million by 2050. At its current growth rate, the existing airport will reach full capacity in the next 10 to 15 years.

Initial estimates for the project measure in at approximately $10 billion, $7 Billion of which would come in the form of Private Sector Investment. Initial renderings were produced coinciding with the announcement, but an architect has not yet been chosen for the project.

For more information on the proposal, click here.

News via State of New York.

Photographer Max Touhey Gives a Rare Glimpse Inside Eero Saarinen’s TWA Flight Center
//cdn.embedly.com/widgets/platform.js

New York’s LaGuardia Airport to Get 21st Century Makeover
//cdn.embedly.com/widgets/platform.js

http://ift.tt/2jkh1ad

Quotes and Images on How to Overcome Your Struggles and Challenges – Go Through Every Struggle and Challenge with Courage and faith

Son Ganxo House / Sio2 Arch


© José Hevia

© José Hevia


© José Hevia


© José Hevia


© José Hevia


© José Hevia

  • Architects: Sio2 Arch
  • Location: 07710 Sant Lluís, Illes Balears, España
  • Architects In Charge: Lluís Ortega, Xavier Osarte, Esther Segura
  • Area: 193.2 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: José Hevia
  • Architects Associates: F451; Santi Ibarra, Toni Montes
  • Quantity Surveyor: Francesc Crespí
  • Structure: GMK ASS
  • Construction: Conrado y Asociados

© José Hevia

© José Hevia

This house belongs to a set of projects developed by Sio2 that reformulates the type of the single-family house through the integration with the landscape. In these works, we experimented with roofs as organizing systems avoiding the traditional role of facades as compositional mechanisms


© José Hevia

© José Hevia

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© José Hevia

© José Hevia

In this iteration, the house is articulated as a landscape extension of an existing topography. The volume is placed in such a way that the roof becomes an artificial terrain. The form of this surface responds to the negotiation between topographic relations, construction technology constraints, raining water collection, and different spatial needs of parts of the interior. The architecture projects polygonal geometry to the exterior, tensing the landscape, and smooths the interior, naturalizing the domestic. 


© José Hevia

© José Hevia

http://ift.tt/2jcg1B4