Baomaru House / Rieuldorang Atelier


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan


© Yoon, Joonhwan


© Yoon, Joonhwan


© Yoon, Joonhwan


© Yoon, Joonhwan

  • Architects: Rieuldorang Atelier
  • Location: Cheongdo-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do, South Korea
  • Architect In Charge: Kim Seongryul
  • Design Team: Choi changgyu, Park yeonju
  • Area: 188.26 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Yoon, Joonhwan
  • Constructor : Manbull construction

© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

The clients who had a great deal of fatigue in working and in the urban environment asked to us design a house surrounded by nature. They had a desire for a unique space that was different from the apartment where they lived.


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

The site is a steep slope with mountains in the back. We did not want to design on the land properly arranged by cutting the ground or build up the soil . The point was to actively use the surrounding natural environment and land while comply with slope of the land and overturns the concept of the building form what people think.


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

The house in the ground, the nature in the house. A house-shaped white shell is the space embrace the nature. The residential space lower than the ground level enables a variety of spatial experiences through the skip floor planning. By reversing the shape of the land and the house, we wanted to think about the relationship between house and nature and notion of form.


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

Product Description. Dirt runs off with the water that falls on the facade. The Lotusan exterior coating possesses a highly water-repellent surface similar to that of the lotus leaf. Its microstructure has been modeled on the lotus plant to minimize the contact area for water and dirt. 


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

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U38 House / OfficeAT


© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat


© Rungkit Charoenwat


© Rungkit Charoenwat


© Rungkit Charoenwat


© Rungkit Charoenwat

  • Structural Engineer : Sarawut Yuanteng
  • System Engineer : Petch Panyangam
  • Contractor : S.P. Civil System Co., Ltd.

© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat

From the architect. SITE: The U38 house is located in Bangkok, Thailand. The 400 sqm house was designed for a couple and a child in the site next to the husband existing family house surrounded by typical suburban houses.


© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat

STRUCTURE:  Since the owner and also a builder himself need to complete a house within 4 months, architect decided to use very simple steel structure on 6 by 5 meter grid to build it as fast as possible.


Diagram

Diagram

PROGRAM: The program is a 2 story house. Architect place the building on one side to keep some space for green area & swimming pool with carport at the front. On the ground floor including open plan of living room and dining room  which are facing onto swimming pool and outdoor terrace. The second floor is composed of master bedroom, son bedroom and family room.


© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat

Floor Plan 01

Floor Plan 01

© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat

SCREEN: In order to protect Heat from the Tropical climate of South East Asia and creates privacy for the 2nd floor. Architect design a long terrace on the side to keep the room from the heat outside  and moveable recycles wood skin panels  over glass layer for more privacy and heat protection.


© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat

MATERIALS: Architect chose nature material for this house by use steel structure, painted plastered wall and brick wall and wood lattice.


© Rungkit Charoenwat

© Rungkit Charoenwat

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The Garden of Forking Paths / officePROJECT


© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting


© Sun Haiting


© Sun Haiting


© Sun Haiting


© Sun Haiting

  • Architects: officePROJECT
  • Location: Tianjin, China

  • Architect In Charge: Chang Ke, Li Wenhan
  • Design Team: Zhang Hao, Zhao Jianwei, Chen Shimeng, Lan Kaifei, Cui Lan
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Sun Haiting
  • Installations And Structural Design Coordination: Rogrea Design Group
  • Client: ZBJ.com

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

From the architect. 40 days from design to construction completed-How to transfer a half-way building into a co-working factory 


Before

Before

Implantation and Demolition Diagram

Implantation and Demolition Diagram

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

Longyue Hotel is a unfinished building for 10 years in Tianjin. OfficePROJECT was invited to transfer this abandoned 5000spm hotel space into a co-working model.   


© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

The first step is to catch the identity of the existing space. The space is high and empty. The rough feeling of an unfinished atmosphere is attractive and fascinating. We want to keep this identity as implanting several different space installation. Some different routes and experiences were set to encourage the communication and interaction between people and the primitive space. Through these paths, people start to encounter and observer. A new observation network formed. The desire of space exploration becomes the motivity of the creative productivity.    


Spatial  Installation Diagram

Spatial Installation Diagram

“wander”,”watch”,”enclosure”,”fold”, “look”,”traverse”,”loop”. These installations explain some basic ways of spacial experiences. We interacted these experiences as an complicated “The Garden of Forking Paths”. In this Borges’ novel, time sometimes endless, sometimes become a loop. The major character chose all possibilities. Different ending generated. This is the idea of today’s internet. An echo here presented between online and offline.


© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

These installations have two materials- OSB boards and stressed steel panels. These two materials forms contrasts in different way with the primitive concrete space. These contrasts lead the breaking of the familiarity.


© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

© Sun Haiting

15 days form schematic design to construct drawings, 30 days of construction, this is an informal design process. This process represented a normal condition in China’s renovation projects nowadays. 


1F Plan

1F Plan

2F Plan

2F Plan

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Bramasole / Herbst Architects


© Patrick Reynolds

© Patrick Reynolds


© Patrick Reynolds


© Patrick Reynolds


© Lance Herbst


© Lance Herbst

  • Contractor: Paul & Trevor Buchan

© Lance Herbst

© Lance Herbst

The site’s previous existence was a market garden with shelterbelts forming large outdoor rooms. Our client then planted part of the site with vineyards and fenced off paddocks for horses. He built a barn and a dressage arena. 


© Lance Herbst

© Lance Herbst

The house presented an opportunity to bring order to the large site.
Some division was needed between the private home and the public dressage arena.
Bi-axial landscaping elements of Gabion baskets were employed to divide the site into quadrants. 


© Lance Herbst

© Lance Herbst

The gabion basket walls start low demarcating entry points and rise up to form the anchor wall of the house. 


© Patrick Reynolds

© Patrick Reynolds

The house has 3 positive elements with negative spaces between. These positive elements house the Lania, the garage and the bedrooms. They are articulated as simple box forms with weathered timber planked skins referencing agrarian crates. The giant crates form the edges to the negative spaces and frame views of the site. 


© Lance Herbst

© Lance Herbst

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© Lance Herbst

© Lance Herbst

The primary negative space is the living room pavilion situated between the Lania and bedroom box. A oating roof caps the living room tipping up toward the south light and allowing a view of the tree top foliage. It is intended that the expansive roof gives the building a scale appropriate to the scale of the land. 


© Patrick Reynolds

© Patrick Reynolds

The living pavilion extends west to form a terrace and east to trap a sheltered courtyard with tree and water feature. To the north a large sun terrace. 


© Patrick Reynolds

© Patrick Reynolds

The house is elevated on a blockwork plinth to lift it out of the potentially soggy homogenous land. This height allows the boxes to oat, gives the occupants a view over the vineyards and brings them closer to the eye height of the horseman. The plinth, intersected and edged by the gabions serves to blind the positive and negative spaces. 


© Patrick Reynolds

© Patrick Reynolds

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Aedas Wins Competition for Dragon/Phoenix-Inspired Transportation Hub in Sanya, China


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Aedas has been selected as the winner of a competition for a new mixed-use tourist and transportation hub in Sanya, China. To be located in front of the existing Sanya High-Speed Railway Station, the Sanya Integrated Commercial and Transportation Hub will feature a variety of public program elements serving visitors to the city.


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

The design of the complex has been inspired by forms of the Chinese dragon and phoenix. On the ground level, a retail podium will be accessed through an interior shopping street/village. Other elements will include a hotel, serviced apartments, a wedding and event hall, a cinema, a children’s playground and a sky garden, all linked together via a continuous canopy system.


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

The complex will be linked to the nearby rail and train stations, as well as the bus terminal, making it easily accessible to the public, and will be integrated into the masterplan for the area, envisioned by Aedas in 2012.


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

The project is expected to be completed in 2019.

News via Aedas.


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas
  • Architects: Aedas
  • Location: Sanya, Hainan, China
  • Director: Kevin Wang
  • Client: Bestway Investment Asia Pte Ltd
  • Gross Floor Area: 121,388 sqm (above ground); 153,854 sqm (below ground)
  • Project Year: 2019
  • Photographs: Courtesy of Aedas

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Casa Villaggio / Sacha Zanin


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi


© Marcelo Donadussi


© Marcelo Donadussi


© Marcelo Donadussi


© Marcelo Donadussi

  • Architects: Sacha Zanin
  • Localization: Erechim – RS, Brazil
  • Area: 302.11 m2
  • Year Project: 2014
  • Photography : Marcelo Donadussi
  • Engineering: Paulo Roberto Xavier (Concrete Structure), Francisco Luis Volpato (Steel Structure), Fernando Luis Tartari Peres (Electric).
  • Contractor: Sacha Zanin Incorporação

© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

Home in a residential neighborhood in the city of Erechim, located in the northern region of RS state, 390 km from the capital Porto Alegre.


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

Created to functionally accommodate the lifestyle of a couple, the design of the Villaggio House was conceived with well-defined conditions: to preserve the topography and the woods, to be used as an area of leisure, contemplation, privacy, and integration with nature, and to be easily accessible, keeping it to one level without any stairs.


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

Thus, the main house was located on an area of elevated terrain, out of the woods and distant from contact with the street, in a position of topographic declivity. The reception room was placed opposite the house with the woods in between. The woods, besides an area for leisure and contemplation, sets an element of privacy and coolness.


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

Sections

Sections

© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

The solution found was the use of a metal structure. The house is a large platform above the land slope, like a tree house, with sustaining metal arms, overhanging a garden. This choice of structure opened the way for plasticity and lightness. Along with providing generous spans, the metal structure contrasts with other elements like concrete, wood and glass.


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

When the house is open, the feeling is that the indoor and outdoor environments interconnect, rendering the size of the rooms even larger, since the integration with nature is constant.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

The roofs are actual hanging gardens, shaped by beds of foliage, flowers and grass, that turn into an extension of the patio. The benefits of the roof garden are not restricted to the landscape aesthetic aspect, they influence the thermic and acoustic quality of the environment, and provide more delay time in the absorption of pluvial water on the land.


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

Noteworthy in this project is that the respect to the topography of the land and to the existing nature was integrated to technology for the comfort of the dwellers. The few walls in the design are made with light elements, composed by cement plates, OSB wood panels and drywall panels filled in with rockwool sheets. The house also received an automation system, which enables control of different electronic circuits even at a distance with a mobile phone application that activates lights, security cameras or the alarm system, as well as opens shades and canopies or operates the garden watering system, all integrated within one system.


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

More than the project of a house, the aspiration was to design a place to live fully.


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

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Who Should Win the 2017 Pritzker Prize?





The end of 2016 is nearly upon us, and with the start of 2017 comes speculation about who will be the next Pritzker Prize winner. Will the jury honor an influential member of the “old guard,” as they did in 2015 when they bestowed the award upon the late Frei Otto? Or will they recognize a young architect who is redefining the profession, as they did when they selected Alejandro Aravena earlier this year? Will they reward virtuoso spatial design, or will they once again acknowledge the role of social impact, as they did in recognizing Aravena and Shigeru Ban in 2014? Will the award go to an individual or to two or more architects working together, as it did in 2010 when SANAA scooped the prize?

We want to hear from our readers – not just about who probably will win the prize, but about who should win the prize, and why. Read on to cast your vote in our poll, and let us know in the comments whose name you’d like to hear announced in 2017.

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Owensboro-Davies County Convention Center / Trahan Architects


© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley


© Timothy Hursley


© Timothy Hursley


© Timothy Hursley


© Timothy Hursley

  • Architects: Trahan Architects
  • Location: Owensboro, KY, United States
  • Architect In Charge: Victor F. “Trey” Trahan III, Brad McWhirter, Leigh Breslau
  • Area: 169000.0 ft2
  • Project Year: 2014
  • Photographs: Timothy Hursley
  • General Contractor: Denark Construction Inc., Knoxville, Tenn.
  • Installer : F.L. Crane and Sons Inc., Fulton, Miss.
  • Anodizer : Lorin Industries, Muskegon, Mich.
  • Curtainwall: Novum Structures LLC, Menomonee Falls, Wis.
  • Metal Ceiling System: Hunter Douglas Architectural, Poway, Calif.
  • Metal Wall/Soffit Panels:  MetalTech-USA, Peachtree City, Ga.
  • Steel Partitions: Hufcor Inc., Janesville, Wis

© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

Owensboro is the county seat of Daviess County in north-central Kentucky. Originally part of Shawnee territory, white settlers first arrived there in the 1700s. Over time the city played a role in the Civil War era, serving as an important river port, which continues to this day. The city’s environs gave birth to the Bluegrass sound in American music, starting in the 1930s and 40s, continuing on through today. 


© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

The site of the new convention center on the Ohio River bank was previously occupied by the Executive Inn which accommodated performances by many of the most popular singers at the time. To serve this wide range of activities, programs and events, as well as to provide an important economic development tool, the city undertook the development of a new convention center which includes over 40,000 sf of exhibition space, nearly 30,000 sf of meeting space and extensive public lobbies, as well as service and support facilities.


© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

Organized on two levels with the halls at grade and the meeting and banquet facilities above, the complex acts as a beacon on the River, signaling the extraordinary ambitions of this community. The exhibition halls and meeting facilities are distinguished by views out to the River while the lobbies overlook the historic downtown.


© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

Set in a newly developed riverside park, the facility will join a recently completed performing arts center and an expanded Bluegrass Museum honoring the city’s remarkable history of public amenities unusual in communities of this scale.


Floor Plan Level 01

Floor Plan Level 01

Product Description. The vertically brushed finishes on anodized aluminum panels on the exterior refer to woodgrain on the tobacco barns. “It was a move we chose from a finish standpoint to keep the exterior tight, taught and smooth,” says Brad McWirther, Design Director at Trahan Architects. “We tried to create this smooth, vertical finish that would allow the building to feel like these vertical panels are very similar to the vertical woodgraining of the barns. When the sun hits them, there’s this vertical reflection, very similar to some of those woodgrains that you see on the tobacco barns.”


© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

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Robert A.M. Stern Awarded the AIA’s 2017 Topaz Medallion


Tour Carpe Diem / Robert A.M. Stern Architects. Image © Peter Aaron / OTTO

Tour Carpe Diem / Robert A.M. Stern Architects. Image © Peter Aaron / OTTO

Following the announcements of the 2017 AIA Gold Medal and Architecture Firm of the Year winners, The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has announced the winners of three other national awards: the Edward C. Kemper Award,the Topaz Medallion, and the Whitney M. Young Jr. Award.


Robert A.M. Stern. Image © Flickr user pneedham. Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Robert A.M. Stern. Image © Flickr user pneedham. Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

The 2017 Topaz Medallion, given each year by the AIA and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) to “an individual who has been intensely involved in architecture education for more than a decade and whose teaching has influenced a broad range of students,” has been awarded to Robert A.M. Stern, FAIA.

Stern is well known for his dual careers as founding partner of Robert A.M. Stern Architects and former Dean of Yale University’s School of Architecture, a position in which he served for over 20 years. In bestowing the award, the AIA noted Stern’s remarkable ability to demonstrate “that architecture can be powerful and inspiring by bringing time-honored forms and proportions to bear on a modern world.”


Recovery Park Urban Farming / Detroit Collaborative Design Center. Image Courtesy of Detroit Collaborative Design Center

Recovery Park Urban Farming / Detroit Collaborative Design Center. Image Courtesy of Detroit Collaborative Design Center

The 2017 Whitney M. Young Jr. Award, honoring architects and organizations that champion a range of social issues, including affordable housing, minority inclusion and access for persons with disabilities, was awarded to Detroit Collaborative Design Center (DCDC) for their work in amplifying “the diminished voices of all citizens through a wide variety of design projects in its hometown and across the country.”

DCDC is housed within the School of Architecture at the University of Detroit Mercy, and has been modeled after a teaching hospital, pairing 1-4 student interns within 7 design professionals to envision innovation architectural solutions that empower communities. Projects have ranged from playgrounds, to community how-to guides, to urban gardens to social media campaigns.


Tour Carpe Diem / Robert A.M. Stern Architects. Image © Peter Aaron / OTTO

Tour Carpe Diem / Robert A.M. Stern Architects. Image © Peter Aaron / OTTO

The third award, the 2017 Edward C. Kemper Award for professional service, has been given to Ronald Skaggs, for his “uncanny ability to recruit, mentor, and involve others in projects and causes.”

Among other accomplishments, Skaggs served as the 76th President of AIA National in 2000, establishing the AIA’s first finance committee and strengthening ties with professional architects’ associations around the globe.

You can read more about this year’s recipients via the following links:

News via AIA.

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Omicron Campus / Dietrich | Untertrifaller Architekten


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar

  • Structural Engineer: gbd, Dornbirn
  • Wood Engineer: mkp, Dornbirn
  • Building Services: e-plus, Egg; teamgmi, Schaan
  • Acoustics: Müller BBM, Planegg
  • Lighting: Bartenbach, Aldrans; Hecht, Rankweil

© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

From the architect. OMICRON, a globally active company, is currently expanding its development center in Vorarlberg, Austria. This involves the erection of a new building that provides space for approximately 200 office workplaces and additional facilities. The concepts realized in the already existing OMICRON building are continued: adaptable office units are situated around three open courtyards. These so called ‘hotspots′ function as hubs that connect the different sections of the building. Their design aims at stimulating communication and creative thinking. Planning and realization of the hotspots took place in close collaboration with Martin Rauch and Anna Heringer (clay), Border Architects (light ceilings) and Eichinger Offices (wood). The green roof compensates for the loss of green space as a consequence of the construction of the new building.


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

OMICRON′s workplace culture emphasizes flat hierarchies as well as open and transparent communication. This is reflected in the architecture. The courtyards feature an open layout and are easily accessible for employees and visitors. Meeting rooms, storage spaces and other facilities are situated on the ground floor. The upper floors host office units. Their size can be easily adapted in order to accommodate the needs of the different teams. The contrast between structured tasks that demand high concentration, and creative thinking tasks that require an environment without artificial limits, is reflected in the architecture. 


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

The high quality working places are equipped with cooling ceilings and most office units have direct access to the exterior. The lighting arrangements are designed to help foster the well-being of the employees. Special glass panes, which facilitate the flow of the natural light, are used. The artificial lighting emulates the daylight and changes over the course of the day. 


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

The building is energetically optimized. Future extensions are possible by connecting the already existing building with the newly constructed one. This next step would create another 150 working places.


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

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