Robert M. Gurney Designs a Colorful Apartment in Washington D.C.

Kindergarten Valdaora di Sotto / feld72


© Hertha Hurnaus

© Hertha Hurnaus


© Hertha Hurnaus


© Hertha Hurnaus


© Hertha Hurnaus


© Hertha Hurnaus

  • Architects: feld72
  • Location: 39030 Olang, Province of Bolzano – South Tyrol, Italy
  • Area: 950.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Hertha Hurnaus
  • Collaborators: Marino Fei, Carl Friedrich, David Kovařík, Therese Leick, Gerhard Mair, Edoardo Nobili
  • Engineering Consultancy: Ingenieurteam Bergmeister

© Hertha Hurnaus

© Hertha Hurnaus

From the architect. Nestling within the village structure of Valdaora di Sotto in South Tyrol, the kindergarten building communicates the interplay between tradition, contemporary life and nature. The third kindergarten made by feld72 aligns itself within its tranquil background without being subordinate to it. Self-evident and uncontrived. Embedded sensuously in its location, the building responds to the dominant aura of the parish church with the cemetery chapel and the elementary school in the centre of Valdaora di Sotto. The timber building sits as though in an encasement within the massive surrounding wall, lending security.


© Hertha Hurnaus

© Hertha Hurnaus

Boundaries and fences determine the village structure. The clear spatial margins divide the village into private and public spaces. Meanwhile, the architectural intervention of the kindergarten alludes to the theme of different boundary intensities and continues it further as a multi-layered circumferential wall. There is a successful contextual interweaving of elements that are typical of the location.


© Hertha Hurnaus

© Hertha Hurnaus

Section

Section

© Hertha Hurnaus

© Hertha Hurnaus

Because of the surrounding boundary wall, the kindergarten articulates clear spatial margins in the village ensemble. The unity of building and kindergarten yard is embedded in the traditional context and imparts to the kindergarten the architectural conditions for nest security, as well as for freedom. As a compact edifice this is located on the northern boundary of the property, endowing space for a sunny garden. The free space for children is optically and functionally separated from the road by the surrounding building structure.


© Hertha Hurnaus

© Hertha Hurnaus

The wall alternates between concepts of materiality and volume, thus it changes from garden fence to boundary wall for the building, just as much an interpretation of what already exists as it is a further elaboration of the existing stock. The wall on the kindergarten yard side is completely of wood and in a friendly gesture embraces the children’s garden. Roofed, weather-protected areas are set up as you pass over to the building. A playful way of handling the element of the wall unfolds. Architecture and playground fuse. The traditional element of fencing-in a property gains in complexity and in quality as somewhere to linger – it shelters, frames, hides, invites everyone to play and presents views not only towards the outside world but also inside. The building itself remains clearly modelled and yet has a multi-stratified effect.


Floor plan

Floor plan

Uniform materiality conveys simplicity. Rendered masonry and wood in the innards of the kindergarten create feelings of identity and belonging. A subtle and warm atmosphere is generated within the interiors thanks to the subtly complex treatment of local timber.


© Hertha Hurnaus

© Hertha Hurnaus

For the children, the group rooms represent the starting point of their daily explorations. The rooms are designed to be unpretentious and modest, providing scope for individual changes. Small areas for retreat are offered by the large window recesses and accessible partition furniture leading to the cloakroom. The assembly room and multi-function rooms can be adapted as connecting room structures or, if required, used singly. The suggested spatial concept thus enables attractive variations on both levels in realising the educational scenario.


© Hertha Hurnaus

© Hertha Hurnaus

A house for children and the village takes shape as intermediary between tradition and modernity. The familiar and the unusual simultaneously find a home in Valdaora di Sotto.

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Houses in Wygärtli / Beck + Oser Architekten


© Börje Müller

© Börje Müller


© Börje Müller


© Börje Müller


© Börje Müller


© Börje Müller

  • Architects: Beck + Oser Architekten
  • Location: 8354 Hofstetten, Switzerland
  • Architects In Charge: Martin Beck, Roger Oser, Niklaus Stöcklin
  • Area: 200.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2013
  • Photographs: Börje Müller

© Börje Müller

© Börje Müller

From the architect. The two houses “Im Wygärtli” are located in a villa garden on the southern hillside of Hofstetten. The buildings are situated across the slope and are accessed from the north on the upper floor level, which offers a beautiful view towards the first hills of the Jura Mountains. The curved shape of the roof creates its own topography, which connects the two floors and turns the location on a slope into a part of the design concept. On the inside, a single-flight staircase provides the spatial connection between the entrance hall on the upper living floor and the sleeping floor below. The dynamic and open staircase creates a strong reference between the two floors. It also allows daylight into the translucent bathroom cubes – which are built out of glass blocks and divide and structure the lower floor. 


© Börje Müller

© Börje Müller

Section

Section

© Börje Müller

© Börje Müller

The effect of the curved ceilings in the interior is enhanced by the reduced and honest choice of materials; concrete ceilings, dyed concrete floors and white plaster walls. Also on the outside, the facades were developed to support the volumetric concept. The curved ceilings are indicated with hard concrete bands – the light filling in between is composed of ceiling-high windows and curtain walls covered with translucent polycarbonate panels. An economical and considerate use of housing space contributes to sustainability, as well as the use of uncoated materials and efficient building services with heat pump, thermal solar panels and comfort ventilation.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

The project is an example of a modest densification of villa plots in rural living areas. The relation between the new buildings, the existing villa and the landscaped grounds were essential. The design of the two houses, inspired by the topographic particularities of the site, allows optimal integration into the existing estate and leaves enough presence, space and views for the villa.


© Börje Müller

© Börje Müller

Product Description. The lightwave polycarbonate boards are the filling between the ceiling foreheads of concrete. This supports the volumetric concept of waves and curved forms as a reaction to the slope of the plot.


© Börje Müller

© Börje Müller

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NIO Brand Creative Studio Shanghai / Linehouse


© Dirk Weiblen

© Dirk Weiblen


© Dirk Weiblen


© Dirk Weiblen


© Dirk Weiblen


© Dirk Weiblen

  • Architects: Linehouse
  • Location: Shanghai,China
  • Area: 250.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Dirk Weiblen

© Dirk Weiblen

© Dirk Weiblen

Linehouse was commissioned to create the Brand Creative Studio for electric car company NextEV in Xintiandi, Shanghai. NextEV sought a design to reflect its NIO brand in a space that enabled collaboration and creative development by a wide range of design disciplines.


© Dirk Weiblen

© Dirk Weiblen

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© Dirk Weiblen

© Dirk Weiblen

Linehouse inserted an inhabitable wall into the centre of the space. This oak wood structure fluidly shifts to create different pockets that can be occupied. The central enclosure forms the studio’s primary working area. The surrounding negative space can be inhabited as meeting rooms and for social engagement. This wood apparatus operates as desks, shelving, and a screening mechanism, offering privacy and transparency between the private and public areas of the studio.


© Dirk Weiblen

© Dirk Weiblen

A glass skin is layered on the timber shell, the location of the skin shifts from the interior to the exterior of the structure, allowing the occupiable side of the wall also to alternate. The glass is etched with a white vertical gradient from opaque to translucent, this creates a weightlessness that reflects the brands promise, Blue Sky Coming. The gradient also offers privacy for users, occupying the lower half at desk level, and clear sightlines at higher level. The glass screen provides an ephemeral quality to the office allowing light to filter through, and shifting perspectives throughout.


© Dirk Weiblen

© Dirk Weiblen

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Platform-L Contemporary Art Center / JOHO Architecture


© Sun Namgoong

© Sun Namgoong


© Sun Namgoong


© Sun Namgoong


© Sun Namgoong


© Sun Namgoong

  • Architects: JOHO Architecture
  • Location: Gangnam-gu, Seoul, South Korea
  • Architect In Charge: Jeonghoon Lee
  • Design Team: Gaehee Cho, Il-Sang Yoon, Bong-gwi Hong, Junhee Cho, Moonyoung Jeong
  • Area: 2173.6 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Sun Namgoong
  • Structure : PRIME ENC
  • Engineering : ACE Engineering
  • Lighting : ALTO
  • Landscape : Garden In Forest
  • Construction : JEHYO Construction & Engineering
  • Exterior Finish : Mohse, THE ONE PLANT
  • Client : TAEJIN International (Yongjun Jeon)

© Sun Namgoong

© Sun Namgoong

From the architect. Platform-L Contemporary Art Center is located in a residential area of the Gangnam district in Seoul, South Korea. The sites irregular geometry – an irregular trapezoid – and being surrounded on three sides by street presented was a unique design challenge. The Laws of Architecture on the proposed site limiting building ratio to be no more than 60% of the total site area was a key focus to the design of Platform-L. This restriction typically leads to most projects designating parking to be on grade with a large mass covering the rest of the site. Platform-L situating the parking to be underground allows for a voided space on grade. The design of two independent masses with a central courtyard opening to the west proved to be the most efficient use of space. The north end mass is comprised of the museums entrance, two exhibition spaces, VIP lounge, as well as featuring a roof terrace looking out towards the cityscape. On the south end of the site a cafe / restaurant and office spaces are located. The exterior façade design inspiration came from Louis Quatorze fashion design company. This company is the sponsor for Platform-L and ideology is based on Louis XIV. The use of basic geometries of Louis XIV was reinterpreted to become the design for the façade of Platform-L. This design stands as a new symbol for the company and its high regard for fashion and culture.


© Sun Namgoong

© Sun Namgoong

Platform-L Contemporary Art Center in Seoul is situated in a secluded area near the Segwan Seoul Customs intersection in the Nonhyeon-dong neighborhood of Gangnam District. Its uniquely shaped footprint—an irregular trapezoid—necessitated utilizing innovative design elements in response to the unique challenges presented by its unconventional dimensions. Although urban planning in Gangnam generally adheres to a grid system, Platform-L enjoys street access on three sides, a distinguishing feature of the site and one of its many assets. The site is also classified within a general residential zone rather than a commercial zone, subjecting it to increased restrictions concerning building coverage rate and floor area ratio. With these considerations in mind, a more compact plan for the building was prioritized. 


Diagram

Diagram

This geometry implies Louis XIV’s wishes to be recognized as an absolute royal entity rather than a mediator between god and man. The circle, square and octagon were utilized extensively in the geometric plan of the famed Gardens of Versailles executed during Louis XIV’s reign. These symbols served as physical embodiments of heaven, earth and the authority of the king, respectively. The exterior façade of Platform-L reinterprets the historical notion of absolute authority, particularly with regard to the site’s unconventional plan and its surrounding roads on three sides. The application of this concept is the transformation of the octagon into widened lattices which highlight the building’s horizontality and imply infinite expansion toward the horizon. The appropriation of this geometry within the context of local culture is realized through the use of tenon joints to bind materials, a practice typically seen in traditional Korean windows. In total, three separate louvers were fitted together to form Platform-L’s lattice of intersecting sight lines and create building’s striking exterior.


© Sun Namgoong

© Sun Namgoong

Section

Section

© Sun Namgoong

© Sun Namgoong

Courtyard 

One of the foremost aims of the project was that it retain a sense of outdoor space throughout; this concept guided the formulation of a design which addresses Korean construction regulations in an unexpected way. Platform-L achieves this by interpreting the outdoors as a mediating space and platform serving to extend and link the various functions of the building, including programs in the galleries and events in the Live Hall as well as visitor experiences in the art shop and cafe. A void space in the form of a courtyard set in the center of the building visually resembles a Western courtyard, though from a functional standpoint it operates more like a traditional Korean courtyard—namely, as a buffer zone and resting place. This space performs a key role in the overall design of Platform-L, connecting the building’s two separate wings and providing a shared free space.


© Sun Namgoong

© Sun Namgoong

Live Hall

The Live Hall is an underground multipurpose venue which can accommodate diverse programming for larger audiences. Utilizing basement levels in the design of Platform-L was essential in order to overcome floor area ratio limitations and make use of all available space as efficiently as possible. This spacious setting features eight-meter ceilings and is equipped with full A/V capabilities as well as reconfigurable seating which increases its versatility in facilitating various performances and events. Its interior is also finished as a white cube space in order to offer additional gallery space as needed to complement the building’s upstairs galleries. A moving wall system further enhances the space’s compatibility and allows it to be configured as a box theater, cinema or auditorium. Its removable seating and adjustable stage structure also provide additional opportunities for events such as fashion shows, weddings and other ceremonies.


© Sun Namgoong

© Sun Namgoong

Product Description. Its façade covered with anodized aluminum panels helps to create an unique atmosphere responded to urban context. Due to the materials feature, Platform-L’s façade reveals the mischievously dual nature of aluminum, with its uncanny mass-to-volume ratio.


© Sun Namgoong

© Sun Namgoong

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Mrs. Fan’s Plugin House / People’s Architecture Office


© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

Mrs. Fan is from a traditional Chinese family. Newlyweds like her are expected to purchase a car and move into a new house in the suburbs to start the next phase of their life. But for people in their early 30’s who wish to be financially independent, the astronomical price of real estate in Beijing makes buying a house on their own nearly impossible.


© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

Diagram

Diagram

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

Mrs. Fan was born and raised in the Changchun Jie Hutong neighborhood in the center of historic Beijing. By the time she was in high school her family had moved to the suburbs while her old neighborhood, with outdated infrastructure and overcrowding, continued to descend into slum-like conditions. But Fan never got accustomed to suburban residential towers, preferring the intimacy of the close knit community she came from.


© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

Section

Section

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

The affordability of the Plugin House, thirty times less than the cost of buying a typical apartment, made moving back to where Mrs. Fan grew up a practical reality. The living standard and energy efficiency of a Plugin equals or exceeds that of new apartment towers. And her daily commute to work is now reduced from four hours to one. The Plugin replaces part of the old house and adds new functions such as a kitchen and bathroom. The Changchun Jie neighborhood has no sewage system, so public toilets are usually the only option. But an off-the-grid composting toilet system integrated into the plugin makes Hutong life much more convenient.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

The Plugin House is custom designed for Mrs. Fan. The living room ceiling extends upwards to provide a double height space with skylights on either side. Sunlight is channeled in from above to flood the previously dark interior with light. To relieve Mrs. Fan of her claustrophobia the small bathroom also has a skylight but receives reflected sunlight from a blue privacy screen. Even on gloomy days the bathroom is covered in a blue tint. A roof deck gives her breathing room from the dense surroundings and private social space.


© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

PAO’s proprietary prefabricated Plugin Panels makes the Plugin House very affordable. Originally developed for the Courtyard House Plugin for “house in house” renovations, the new Plugin House System is waterproof and can be used outside of an existing structure. These prefabricated modules incorporate insulation, interior and exterior finish into one molded part. Plugin Panels attach to each other with an integrated lock making construction a task simple enough to be completed by a couple of unskilled people and one tool in one day. Wiring and plumbing are integrated into the molded composite panels.


© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

The architectural form of the Plugin is defined not by limitations imposed from regulations but instead the negotiated demands from surrounding neighbors. On all sides of the Plugin the structure cannot block sun light, air circulation, and views of the people next door. Even as the structure was built, new demands came about. The Plugin Panel material makes accommodating these changes practical, chopping off entire sections of the building can be done on site.


© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

© Gao Tianxia / People’s Architecture Office

As an expression of intersecting social forces the Plugin House is a new urban vernacular born from local conditions. For original residents like Mrs. Fan to move back to these historic parts of Beijing is rare. Through improving living standards for an affordable price within given social constraints the Plugin House attempts to breathe new life into old neighborhoods.

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NFB Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

  • Site Area : 3238 m2
  • Surface Area: 1193 m2

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

From the architect. Nara province where the site located has 8 world heritage architectures. So this city has a lot of history. On the other side, the site is located at the center of the industrial residence in Yamatokoriyama city. Surrounding is a special sight with simple and no color factories.  This project is to reform an old kindergarten at that site.


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

We were trying to make a positive kindergarten at such a negative environment.

And, by explain the “Factory” where can create stuffs and product things, we made the “Dream and creativity making factory” as our concept.


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

Plan 1

Plan 1

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

About the surface, by consider the urban landscape, we made the designed that had hard texture feeling like a factory.  At the same time, through the courtyard to set up a lot of greens, to create a soft atmosphere. In order to cultivate the kids’ curiosity.  And about the indoor, the places where usually be hidden were deliberately exposed, to create atmosphere like the factory. At the same time, through the ventilator of the piping made of transparent, and put the propeller inside, so that children can learn how the wind flow. By exposed the pipe of washbasin, let the kids know how the flow of water working inside the drain-pipe 


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

Through the design of trampling generating plant, let the children learn how electricity is flowing. Like these, many discover places has been designed. Kindergarten is a place for education and growth, not a place with noble color and toys, as a kindergarten, let the children through their own thinking to create like what we respect is one of the results of our design.


© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

© Ryuji Inoue / Studio Bauhaus

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Paul Revere Williams Wins 2017 AIA Gold Medal


LAX Theme Building, 1961. Image © Flickr user thomashawk. Licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0

LAX Theme Building, 1961. Image © Flickr user thomashawk. Licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has announced Paul Revere Williams, FAIA as the posthumous winner of the 2017 AIA Gold Medal. With a portfolio of nearly 3,000 buildings over five decades, Williams’ career was notable for breaking boundaries within the profession as the first black member of the AIA.


Paul Revere Williams. Image Courtesy of AIA

Paul Revere Williams. Image Courtesy of AIA

“This is a moment in our Institute’s history that is so important to recognize and acknowledge the work of a champion,” said Phil Freelon, FAIA, Managing and Design Director at Perkins + Will, who presented to the AIA Board of Directors on behalf of Williams. “It’s been many decades but Paul Williams is finally being recognized for the brilliant work he did over many years.”


La Concha Motel, Las Vegas, 1961 (now Neon Museum). Image Courtesy of AIA

La Concha Motel, Las Vegas, 1961 (now Neon Museum). Image Courtesy of AIA

A native of Los Angeles, Williams was known for his many schools, public buildings, and churches in a variety of styles, notably the Palm Springs Tennis Center (1946) and the space-age LAX Theme Building (1961). Eight of his buildings have been named to to the National Register of Historic Places.


Guardian Angel Cathedral, Las Vegas, 1961. Image Courtesy of AIA

Guardian Angel Cathedral, Las Vegas, 1961. Image Courtesy of AIA

“Our profession desperately needs more architects like Paul Williams,” wrote William J. Bates, FAIA, in his support of William’s nomination for the AIA Gold Medal. “His pioneering career has encouraged others to cross a chasm of historic biases. I can’t think of another architect whose work embodies the spirit of the Gold Medal better. His recognition demonstrates a significant shift in the equity for the profession and the institute.”


LAX Theme Building, 1961. Image Courtesy of AIA

LAX Theme Building, 1961. Image Courtesy of AIA

As the 73rd AIA Gold Medalist, Williams joins an esteemed list of winners including Frank Lloyd Wright (1949), Louis Sullivan (1944), Le Corbusier (1961), Louis I. Kahn (1971), I.M. Pei (1979), Thom Mayne (2013), Julia Morgan (2014), Moshe Safdie (2015). Last year, the prize was given to Denise Scott Brown & Robert Venturi, the first time the Gold Medal was given to a pair of architects.

Read more about Williams’ nomination here.

News via AIA.

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The University of Kansas DeBruce Center / Gould Evans


© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall


© Steve Hall


© Steve Hall


© Steve Hall


© Steve Hall

  • Architects: Gould Evans
  • Location: 1647 Naismith Dr, Lawrence, KS 66044, United States
  • Project Designers: Tony Rohr, Design Principal; Sean Zaudke, Architect; Jonathan Holley, Architect
  • Area: 48000.0 ft2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Steve Hall
  • Mechanical Engineer: Henderson Engineering, Lenexa, KS
  • Structural Engineer: Bob D. Campbell + Company, Inc., Structural Engineers, Kansas City, MO
  • Civil Engineer: Professional Engineering Consultants, P.A., Lawrence, KS
  • Geotechnical Engineer: GeoSource, LLC, Topeka, KS
  • Exhibit Consultant: Ralph Applebaum Associates, New York, NY
  • Food Service: Robert Rippe + Associates, Inc, Minneapolis, MN
  • Building Science Consultant: Building Science Corporation, Westford, MA
  • Structural Glazing Consultant: Novum Structures, LLC
  • Acoustic Consultant: Acoustical Design Kubicki, Shawnee, KS
  • Code Consultant: FP+C Consultants, Inc., Kansas City, MO
  • Construction Mangaer: Marlan Construction, Lawrence, KS

© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

From the architect. A unique hybrid of museum and student commons, the new DeBruce Center at the University of Kansas creates a permanent home for the historic two-page document on which, in 1891, James Naismith outlined The Original 13 “Rules of Basket Ball.”


© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

Diagram

Diagram

© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

Gifted to the University, The Rules document became a catalyst for a new $12 million, 32,000 sf facility. The DeBruce Center needed to be more than just a game day attraction, however, as the University desired a building that would provide more student commons space to serve its campus throughout the academic year. Gould Evans responded with a design that weaves together the two distinct programs – an interpretive center built around the concept of The Rules, and a student commons – allowing the story of basketball to unfold at multiple scales and to multiple audiences.


© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

Using The Rules document as a point of departure, the architecture focuses on the creation of an immersive experience to tell the story of the University’s role in the development of the game. Program is arranged along a linear pathway that winds through the open interior, connecting the story of The Rules and all building program – including a 200-seat dining commons for students and visitors, nutrition center for the men’s and women’s basketball teams, coffee shop, museum store and exhibits.


© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

The building consists of two main volumes: a three-story transparent prism within which exhibit and path are delicately suspended, and a single-story bridge connecting the building to the historic Allen Fieldhouse arena where James Naismith perfected the game. Within this bridge, the original 451-word document is enshrined by a perforated scrim containing the more than 45,000 words that make up the contemporary rules of the game, offering visitors a way to physically experience basketball’s evolution over 125 years.


© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

A refined material palette of structural glass and honed black concrete highlights pedestrian movement within a transparent and overlapping building program. This spectacle of social activity breathes life into what might otherwise be a very traditional museum experience. Aluminum provides a substrate for marrying architecture and museum content – a continuous aluminum ramp weaves together exhibit content while perforated aluminum scrim walls wrapping the space where The Rules document is housed pay homage to its author and other significant figures in the history of the sport.


© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

Open since May 2016, the building is making a significant impact on the University by bringing student traffic to a growing quadrant of campus, acting as a primary attraction for prospective students and athletic recruits, drawing visitors from across the country, and strengthening its pride and sense of identity as “the cradle of basketball.”


© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

Product Description. An aluminum-clad bridge enshrines the original Rules of Basketball document and connects to Allen Fieldhouse. Excerpts from the contemporary rules of basketball are engraved in the aluminum plate, wrapping the 451-word historical document in the more than 45,000 words that define the game today. This juxtaposition gives visitors a unique way to experience how the game has evolved over the past 125 years.


Bridge Vignette

Bridge Vignette

© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

Detail

Detail

Likewise, the area between the exterior scrim and the building is a new “pocket park” where students and basketball fans can gather. The wheat pattern on the scrim references the KU Basketball fan tradition of “the waving of the wheat” during games.


© Steve Hall

© Steve Hall

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InstruMMents Releases Portable Scanner to Digitally Capture the 3D Curves of Any Object

Digitally modeling objects from real life has just become easier.

Tech innovation company InstruMMents has unveiled a new functionality to their 01 portable dimension scanner that allows you to capture the 3D curves of any surface. Logging in to the Pro App, users can then track, share and export the curves into key 3D formats, allowing you to quickly recreate any desired object in 3D.


Courtesy of InstruMMents

Courtesy of InstruMMents

“Capturing not just dimensions, but character lines and sections of objects in 3D is essential to anyone working in 3D,” said founder and CEO Mladen Barbaric. “Yet today, it’s a really painful experience. We are going to change that.”

The 01 scanner launched in November with the Lite app, which allows you to capture the dimensions of any object. Now with the Pro app, users can create 3D curve files directly on their Android or iPhone.


Courtesy of InstruMMents

Courtesy of InstruMMents

The architectural applications of this new product are obvious – need to document an unusual wall contour or produce a 3D model of a unique furniture piece for a perspective drawing? The InstuMMents 01 with Pro App makes that possible.

The 01 is available now for $149 at Indiegogo, and can be integrated into a pen, pencil or stylus for increased practicality. The Lite app is available for free download on Google Play and Apple App Store starting on December 10th, while the Pro app is expected to become available in Spring of 2017 at a cost of $10/year.


Courtesy of InstruMMents

Courtesy of InstruMMents

Learn more about this product, here.

News via InstruMMents.

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