The award winners from day two at the World Architecture Festival include a stone church in Germany, MVRDV’s glass-brick shop and a shiny silver building by Zaha Hadid Architects. Read more
The award winners from day two at the World Architecture Festival include a stone church in Germany, MVRDV’s glass-brick shop and a shiny silver building by Zaha Hadid Architects. Read more
The refurbishment of a historic English theatre and a boutique hotel in Mallorca are among the second batch of category award winners at Inside 2016. Read more
John Pawson and OMA have completed the Design Museum‘s new £83-million London home, which is set to open next week at the former Commonwealth Institute building in Kensington. Read more
A recyclable, collapsible helmet that could be sold at bike-share stations has been named this year’s winner of the James Dyson Award. Read more
As the second chapter in his series, Iconic Norway, Alejandro Villanueva has released a time-lapse of the Trollstigen Visitor Center, a project by Reiulf Ramstad Architects for the Norwegian Public Roads Administration in Oslo, Norway.
Designed to “enhance the experience of the Trollstigen Plateau’s location and nature,” the Center utilizes water as a dynamic element and rock as a static element, in order to “create a series of prepositional relations that describe and magnify the unique spatiality of the site.”
Experience the beauty and nature of the Visitor Center by watching the video, above.
News via Alejandro Villanueva and Reiulf Ramstad Architects.
From the architect. On the pretext of designing a pre-primary and primary school for children, the solution to an urban problem was sought: the quarter available for construction was characterised by a great void stuck between discordant scales and languages, open to integration into the urban fabric.
The brief for the school comprised three main strands: classrooms, a library, and a common space for a gymnasium and a canteen, each with different areas and volumes. This difference in size and brief enabled its division into different bodies, siting them at different points on the land so as to punctuate a triangular plot with an envelope of varying scales.
The classroom block occupies the largest, lowest and markedly horizontal side of the land lengthwise, relating in landscape terms to the existing void to the north and having the main classroom wing facing south.
The canteen block is a larger volume which relates to the collective housing buildings in this urban area.
At the tapering end of the plot stands a triangular prism, accommodating the reading space and finishing off the quarter to the west to create a proximity with the most informal area of the urban fabric.
These three buildings are connected by a peripheral wall in exposed brick masonry which forms a continuous boundary for the entire complex, connecting the school’s open spaces (playgrounds and courtyards) and built spaces. This brick wall is a strong feature of the urban intervention, somehow maintaining its original calling as a large space available to the city.
It confers an organic expression on it, connecting the construction to the ground and effecting a permanent continuity between the interior and exterior areas.
This month London’s Design Museum will officially open it’s new home on Kensington High Street. The project, which has been redeveloped and designed in collaboration with Rotterdam-based practice OMA and London-based studio Allies & Morrison, has seen a Grade II* Listed Modernist monument sensitively restored into contemporary galleries. For John Pawson—who has been commissioned to create “a series of calm, atmospheric spaces” ordered around a large, oak-lined atrium—this scheme marks his first major public work.
According to the Design Museum’s own narrative of the spaces, “visitors [will] find themselves in a central atrium with striking views up to [an] iconic hyperbolic paraboloid roof.” Here galleries, learning spaces, a café, an events space and a shop are arranged like an “opencast mine” beneath the building’s iconic concrete roof.
Two temporary gallery spaces will display up to seven temporary exhibitions per year. According to the museum, a “double-height basement also features a dedicated museum collection store with a glass window, allowing visitors a behind-the-scenes glimpse of pieces not on display.” In addition, a 200-seat Bakala Auditorium will “allow the museum to expand its public programme and evening talks.”
“Italian terrazzo flooring is used throughout the basement and ground floors, transitioning to warm-toned Dinesen oak flooring and wall panels on the upper floors. A key element of the Pawson vocabulary, a wooden bench with concealed lighting spans one side of the Weston Mezzanine. The bench sits in front of a series of marble panels conserved from the original building, which before that had previously been installed in the Imperial Institute in 1857.”
There are ‘moments’ in the building that I relish every time I walk around, but I think it is really the way everything comes together – the new and the old – that gives me the greatest pleasure. I hope the Design Museum shows people that you don’t have to tear down and start from scratch to make exciting new cultural spaces.
Properly Breathing House is a residential project designed by H&P Architects in 2015. It is located in Dong Anh Town, Dong Anh District, Hanoi, Vietnam. Properly Breathing House by H&P Architects: A “suffocating” situation Just 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) far from the center of Hanoi, the suburban district Dong Anh has witnessed pervasive urbanization – one of the major causes for a trend towards a maximum use of volume and..
From the architect. Boxpark Croydon, which is part of the mixed-use Ruskin Square development next to East Croydon station, creates a unique dining experience that focuses on small independent traders.
BDP’s design creates a semi-enclosed market hall – like Covent Garden or La Boqueria in Barcelona – so there is a central focus to the scheme with units arranged around it, as well as outdoor terrace spaces. The change of level between the station entrance and Dingwall Road means people enter from multiple entrances and levels adding spatial interest and animation.
Shipping containers are an intrinsic component of the Boxpark brand. There’s something quite magical about taking this mundane and ubiquitous object and turning it into something desirable and transformational. We used 96 containers in total, four of which are unaltered. The whole assembly is like a giant 3D jigsaw puzzle but the finished result looks deceptively simple.
The pared down raw aesthetic of the design integrates into the core Boxpark design language and, with graphic designers Filthy Media and retail designers Brinkworth, a very strong graphic and visual identity is applied rigorously throughout the scheme.
Boxpark will transform the quality of the retail and leisure offer in Croydon and is expected to draw in customers and new businesses from across the region.
BDP was architect, civil and structural engineer, environmental engineer, acoustic consultant, lighting designer and landscape architect for the £3 million scheme.
Product Description. The use of shipping containers is an intrinsic component of the Boxpark brand. We used 96 containers in total and only 4 of them are unaltered. Additionally, we introduced new materials such as the polycarbonate roof supported by a steel roof structure and integrated them into the core Boxpark design language.
House for Mother is a residential project designed by Forstberg Ling in 2016. It is located in Linköping, Sweden. House for Mother by Forstberg Ling: “House for mother” is the first house completed by Förstberg Ling, a project started in 2013 as a part of the housing exhibition in Linköping, Vallastaden 2017. The house is conceived as a dwelling and studio for Björn’s mother Maria, librarian and an enthusiastic weaver…