General Hospital of Niger / CADI


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen


© Liu Chen


© Liu Chen


© Liu Chen


© Liu Chen

  • Architects: CADI
  • Location: Niamey, Niger
  • Lead Architects: Liu Chen, Xing Bing
  • Architecture Team: Liu Chen, Xing Bing, Zhu Hailong, Huang Weiwei, Ai Yuewei
  • Area: 34000.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Liu Chen
  • Project Maneger: Li Xi
  • Structural Engineer: Nie Qiling, Xiao Wei, Shi Jiliang
  • Equipment Engineer: Hu Mingdi ,Xie Daopeng ,Liu Bing ,Li Yunzuo ,Yang Zhi ,Liu Rong
  • Medical Technology: Li Jin
  • Clients: The Ministry of Commerce of China, Ministry of Public Health of the Republic of Niger

© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Project Background

The Republic of Niger (Niger) is a landlocked country in Western Africa with over 80 percent of its land area covered by the Sahara Desert. Niger’s subtropical climate is extremely hot and dry with annual average temperature up to 35 centigrade. The rainy season is from July through September. The rest of the seasons are dry seasons and its annual precipitation is low. Niamey is the capital of Niger and the center of politics, economy and culture. the population of Niamey is about 1 million and Islam is the dominant religion.

The project is committed by the Chinese and Niger governments, aiming to build a large scale general public hospital together in order to improve and upgrade the local medical facilities.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Location

The site is located in a wide flat sandy tract around 7km at the northern side of the centre of Niamey city. This is the a developing dwell area with weak infrastructure. Local people expect a new hospital could upgrade their living conditions.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Outpatient Building, Emergency Building and Public Hall

The public hall is an important connecting and distributing space for the public. A well-designed hall shall be open to the public and provide the easy access, function of sheltering , good ventilation without using air conditioners and energy saving.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Muslim Worship Hall

Islam is the dominant religion in Niger, therefore we have considered Muslim worship halls scattered in the hospital in the design. Meanwhile, these worship halls can be transformed to temporary camping sites for patients and their families.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Inpatient Building and Ramps

The inpatient Building is designed into a two-story courtyard space, connecting by continuous ramps and cloisters. In addition, it can meet the hospital accessibility requirements without lifts and elevators.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Medical Technology Building

Medical Technology Building consists of four floors, including all important medical equipments and operating rooms in the hospital. The external wall adopts the single small-opening windows and the external sunshade in order to reduce the heat exchange.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Insulated Roofing

Insulation is the simple and effective way to reduce the indoor temperature. All the roofs are designed with thermal insulating layers, which are prefabricated concrete panels, to reduce the heat transmission.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Building Sun-shade

In the hot and dry environment, building shading has significant influence on the indoor temperature. In order to avoid direct sunlight, a number of external sun-shade components are designed. The gaps between the shading panels and the walls form air microcirculation around the windows, which is conducive to carry off the surrounding heat. The architectural technology of this sunshade system has high durability with in-situ concreting. 


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Natural Ventilation

Buildings are mostly designed with the opened veranda of two sides’ entrances, forming good natural convection and improving the physical experience of people inside.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Roof Drainage

Precipitation is quite low throughout the year. However, the heavy rainfall is intense with strong winds, the leaves and dust blown by strong wind could plug the drain normally. Open-designed drainage is easy to clean and meanwhile presents an important facade element. The local loose sandy soil is conducive to the natural infiltration of rain as well.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Corridor

Corridors connect various blocks of the hospital. The pillars of the corridor are widened to provide a larger sunshade area.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Adoption and Construction of Traditional “Tyrol” Exterior Wall 

Since Niger is located in the west Africa inland, bulk import of common exterior wall material is highly expensive. Under perennial high temperature and illumination intensity, erosion of the building exterior wall would be serious. Local traditional process “Tyrol” style exterior wall is adopted in the exterior wall design. The typical construction method is to manually spray the mixture, which is composed of the local river sand and white cement/water under a specific ratio, on the exterior wall surface. This kind of material not only achieves low construction cost, but also has high durability under hot & dry weather with easy maintenance.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Link to the Environment

The relationship between architecture and the environment not only consider the natural environment where the building is, but also the local economy and social impact. Therefore, a local traditional construction methods ensure the building is built with low cost, good quality and high durability. In such way, the building is not only adaptable to the local climates and environment, but also integrate into the local culture.


© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen

Master Layout Plan

Master Layout Plan

© Liu Chen

© Liu Chen


Ground Floor Plan of the Outpatient Building

Ground Floor Plan of the Outpatient Building

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Magnitude 6.6 Earthquake Strikes Central Italy; Borromini’s “La Sapienza” Among Structures Damaged in Rome


Inspections underway in Rome. Image via La Repubblica (Roma)

Inspections underway in Rome. Image via La Repubblica (Roma)

Following an earthquake measuring 6.6 on the Richter Scale that struck central Italy this morning at 7:40 a.m. local time—the fourth to hit this part of the country in three months—a number of structures have collapsed entirely or been severely damaged. While no deaths have been reported at this time, the BBC suggests that twenty people have been injured.

This latest tragedy follows an earthquake measuring 6.2 on Richter Scale which hit a nearby region in August, killing 300 and causing widespread devastation to towns and villages. It is being suggested that the evacuation of buildings that were deemed vulnerable to the ongoing seismic activity in the region last week may have saved a great deal of lives.

Structural Damage Near the Epicenter

Reports verify that the Basilica of St. Benedict in Norcia has been almost entirely razed to the ground.

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Structural Damage in Rome

Tremors were felt as far north as Venice, and in nearby Rome – around a 171km road distance from the epicenter of the earthquake. There the Metro system has been shut down as a precautionary measure and a number of iconic, architecturally significant structures—primarily religious—have been damaged.


Inspections underway in Rome. Image via La Repubblica (Roma)

Inspections underway in Rome. Image via La Repubblica (Roma)

According to La Repubblica (Roma) a number of cracks have appeared (while existing fissures have expanded) in the fabric of the Basilica of San Paolo Outside the Walls, and cornices have fallen. The Basilica of San Lorenzo was also temporarily closed following fragments of “rubble” falling into the aisles (reports suggest that no one was hurt). The Church of Sant’Ivo alla Sapienza (La Sapienza), completed in 1660 to designs by Francesco Borromini, has suffered structural damage to its iconic dome. 


Damage to the Basilica of San Paulo Outside the Walls. Image via La Repubblica (Roma)

Damage to the Basilica of San Paulo Outside the Walls. Image via La Repubblica (Roma)

Damage to the Basilica of San Paulo Outside the Walls. Image via La Repubblica (Roma)

Damage to the Basilica of San Paulo Outside the Walls. Image via La Repubblica (Roma)

Domenico Barrière(?): Dome of St. Ivo alla Sapienza, ca.1655. Berlin, Kunstbibliothek Hz. 1025. ImagePublic Domain

Domenico Barrière(?): Dome of St. Ivo alla Sapienza, ca.1655. Berlin, Kunstbibliothek Hz. 1025. ImagePublic Domain

Inspections are being carried out at these buildings alongside many more of similar age and significance. The Colosseum and the archeological site of the Roman Forum—both popular tourist sites due to their historical and architectural value—were fully inspected and were reopened as normal to the public.

News via Repubblica (Roma), BBC

Experts Fear Massive Losses of Historic Italian Architecture Following Magnitude 6.2 Earthquake
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Sustainable Plan for Carlsberg City Evokes Historical Significance of Copenhagen


Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Courtesy of White Arkitekter

The new development plan for Copenhagen’s Carlsberg City aims to embrace the closeness of old Copenhagen and institute an urban center evocative of the historical style of Scandinavia and Europe at large. White Arkitekter has been tasked with achieving these goals with their design for Humlehaven, a residential and commercial plan that emphasizes sustainable design and integration with the existing site.


Courtesy of White Arkitekter


Courtesy of White Arkitekter


Courtesy of White Arkitekter


Courtesy of White Arkitekter


Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Courtesy of White Arkitekter

The plan needed to meet the challenge of reconciling the increased density of modern Carlsberg with its historical legacy, as the Carlsberg brewery is a well-established institution that has promoted the development of Copenhagen over time. To this end, the architects chose clay bricks that are not only reminiscent of the local materiality but are in fact recycled from demolished nearby buildings. This practice has limited the total environmental footprint of the project.


Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Courtesy of White Arkitekter

The bricks are arranged in large planes that contrast with existing facades and oriented to allow natural light into the apartments. Based on the assembly from the original brewery grounds, the windows provide views to the city.


Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Humlehaven includes a green inner courtyard that connects each of the residential buildings. The hard surfaces reflect ambient light around the space, while vegetation filters excess solar radiation and foot traffic. Inside the apartments, the warm wooden material palette contrasts with the robust concrete semi-private circulation space. The living spaces thus allow residents to simultaneously retreat to the private warmth of their homes and interface with the urban environment.

News via: White Arkitekter

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CASA O’ / Despacho Arquitectos HV


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom


© Paul Czitrom


© Paul Czitrom


© Paul Czitrom


© Paul Czitrom

  • Collaborators : Enrique Guinchard, Benjamín Rocha, Jorge Gil, Merle Castañeda Andrés Rodriguez Castro
  • Structure : EA Ingeniería
  • Installations : MEPU&WATER, Carlos Beltrán, Vicente Peña.
  • Carpentry: Víctor Ramírez
  • Ironwork: José Lira
  • Gardening: Entorno Taller de Paisaje
  • Heating System: ECOVENT
  • Solar Panels : EVA
  • Sound: VFX Digital

© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

The fusion of exterior and interior areas, the integration of the surrounding and the landscape are main subjects of “Casa O'” which is located in one of the most exclusive areas of Mexico City.


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

 The aim for the specific design with our clients is to unfold an intimate landscape, in which different places and sceneries coexist, seeking to achieve functionality within an harmonious architectural with spaces surrounded by lush vegetation.


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

Once you go through the hermetic facade of the street, it establishes a route that connects the habitable interior areas with the exterior. The generous and accessible interior facade allows interior spaces to extend to visual limits of the house, managing to dilute the garden and integrate it with these areas.


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

First Floor Plan

First Floor Plan

© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

Una vez traspasada la hermética fachada de la calle, se establece un recorrido conectando las áreas habitables interiores con el exterior. La fachada interior generosa y accesible permite que los espacios internos se extiendan hasta los límites visuales del terreno, logrando que el jardín se diluya y se integre a estas áreas.


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

Los materiales utilizados en la construcción, en su mayoría naturales complementan la imagen del proyecto haciendo que la arquitectura genere múltiples sensaciones entre las texturas de los acabados, las tonalidades que se funden con la vegetación y el uso mesurado de la iluminación, teniendo como resultado un proyecto sobrio y moderno.

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3 Winners of the 2016 Young Talent Architecture Award Announced


Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

The Fundació Mies van der Rohe has announced the three winners of the inaugural Young Talent Architecture Award (YTAA) 2016. Established this year to “support the talent of recently graduated Architects, Urban Planners and Landscape Architects who will be responsible for transforming our environment in the future,”  9 finalists were selected from a shortlist of 30 projects, which was then narrowed down to 3 winners.

Winners

A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

The project proposes a simple and sustainable way to react to the dynamics of the demand of accommodation for tourists. The Jury appreciated the ‘glocal’ thinking which supports the local community in obtaining the tools to face the urban, economic and social changes that the city is undergoing.


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

S’lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Housing is a key topic in Europe today and the project understands the impermanence of our habitat. The Jury considered the importance of understanding architecture as an open process in an ever-changing environment and the potential to create a real time experimental FabLab connected to an innovative housing experience.


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

The project addresses the topic of cohabitation and how borders (both political and geographical) can be transformed in order to make this cohabitation possible. This proposal approaches the role of design as a political tool, as a spatial practice within a new emergent socio-political space. The Jury was positively impressed by the amount of overlapping layers of complexity created and by the skillful designs and modeling to explain a newly imagined world.


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Finalists

Death and Life of a Small French city, Alix Sportich du Réau de la Gaignonnière / Alice Villatte from School of architecture of Marne-la-Vallée, France


Death and Life of a Small French city, Alix Sportich du Réau de la Gaignonnière / Alice Villatte from School of architecture of Marne-la-Vallée, France. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Death and Life of a Small French city, Alix Sportich du Réau de la Gaignonnière / Alice Villatte from School of architecture of Marne-la-Vallée, France. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Brewing Democracy: The Assembly of Le Balai Citoyen in Ouagadougou / Lorenzo Perri from AA, London, UK


Brewing Democracy: The Assembly of Le Balai Citoyen in Ouagadougou / Lorenzo Perri from AA, London, UK. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Brewing Democracy: The Assembly of Le Balai Citoyen in Ouagadougou / Lorenzo Perri from AA, London, UK. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Genesis of a place towards the project / David Gonçalves Monteiro from FAUP, Porto, PT


Genesis of a place towards the project / David Gonçalves Monteiro from FAUP, Porto, PT. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Genesis of a place towards the project / David Gonçalves Monteiro from FAUP, Porto, PT. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Living in a cultural environment / Clàudia Carreras Oliver from ETSALS, Barcelona, ES


Living in a cultural environment / Clàudia Carreras Oliver from ETSALS, Barcelona, ES. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Living in a cultural environment / Clàudia Carreras Oliver from ETSALS, Barcelona, ES. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Living in offices. The alive triangle of Bordelongue in Toulouse / Jaufret Barrot, Cinthia Isabel Carrasco Fuentes from ENSA, Toulouse, FR


Living in offices. The alive triangle of Bordelongue in Toulouse / Jaufret Barrot, Cinthia Isabel Carrasco Fuentes from ENSA, Toulouse, FR. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Living in offices. The alive triangle of Bordelongue in Toulouse / Jaufret Barrot, Cinthia Isabel Carrasco Fuentes from ENSA, Toulouse, FR. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Subversions Minhocao / Laura Abbruzzese from DA, Ferrara, IT


Subversions Minhocao / Laura Abbruzzese from DA, Ferrara, IT. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Subversions Minhocao / Laura Abbruzzese from DA, Ferrara, IT. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

The YTAA 2016 Jury consisted of: 

  • Jose Luis Vallejo, Architect, Principal at Ecosistema Urbano, Madrid (President)
  • Inge Beckel, Architect, Editor at Swiss-Architects.com, Zurich
  • Michał Duda, Architecture Historian, Curator at the Museum of Architecture, Wroclaw
  • Juulia Kauste, Sociologist, Director at the Museum of Finnish Architecture, Helsinki
  • Triin Ojari, Architect, Director at the Museum of Estonian Architecture, Tallinn 

For more information on the award, check out the website, here.

News via Fundació Mies van der Rohe.

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Hockey Club Oranje-Rood Clubhouse / Diederendirrix Architecture & Urban Development


© Arthur Bagen

© Arthur Bagen


© Pieter de Ruijter


© Pieter de Ruijter


© Arthur Bagen


© Arthur Bagen


© Arthur Bagen

© Arthur Bagen

Eye-catching, Functional and Sustainable

Diederendirrix architecture & urban development designed a striking pavilion for hockey club Oranje-Rood. The large canopy built from laminated wooden joists in a triangular grid, supported by a few pillars, is extraordinary. The structure extends from the outside into the inside and creates a special interior with an unobstructed view of the fields. This year, Oranje-Rood originated from a merger between the successful topclass sports club Oranje-Zwart (first division champions for the last three years) and recreational sports club EMHC. This new start called for a new, modern clubhouse. The pavilion was festively opened in September 2016.


© Arthur Bagen

© Arthur Bagen

Splendid View Over All Hockey Fields

The triangular building with rounded corners is fitted in on a wedge-shaped area between the hockey fields. The pavilion is located on a plinth consisting of an overgrown slope on one side and a stand with 1600 seats on the other side. Underneath, comfortable changing rooms and a physiotherapy room were built, which meet the requirements of a top-class sport accommodation.

On the raised level the luxurious canteen is located, from where you can view the club’s eight hockey fields. The very large canopy will always keep you dry while watching the matches outside. There is room for a business club on the pavilion’s level.


© Pieter de Ruijter

© Pieter de Ruijter

Smart and Sustainable Building

The smart façades consist of light grey, preserved pine slats. The vertical slats accentuate the rounded corners. The inside is also dominated by concrete and wood, including in the long bar. As commissioner, the city of Eindhoven set high sustainability goals. The EPC (Energy Performance Coefficient) is 0.3 due to the building´s triangular shape, the solar panels on the roof and the high insulation levels.


© Pieter de Ruijter

© Pieter de Ruijter

Frans van Duivenboden, president of Oranje-Rood: “Not the largest clubhouse of the Netherlands, but definitely the coolest.”


Ground Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan

Product Description. We gave the clubhouse a distinctive triangle shape to fit it carefully in the context, in this way you have a beautiful view on all the surrounding hockey fields from the building. We rounded the corners and gave the facade a certain softness, because we didn’t want to make the building to hard and detached.


© Pieter de Ruijter

© Pieter de Ruijter

Therefore we chose to give the facade a wooden covering. However, not only a uniform flat finish with shelves, but we’ve added vertical ribs at a distance of 132mm from each other, that form a consistent vertical grid over the facade. Because the view of the building is almost always from an angle, the facades and the receding canopy have a tactility that makes the pavilion much kinder and gentler.


Section

Section

A very light gray color enhances the lightness and friendliness of the building. There is however consciously decided not to use a grey aging natural wood. This would after some time give a splotchy image, especially at the transitions between the canopy and facade. Hence the choice not to use hardwood, but modified pine wood treated with a light gray stain as to remain its beauty in the future.


© Arthur Bagen

© Arthur Bagen

The facade builder hanged the boards and slats in prefabricated panels to the rear structure, whereby the fixation was on the backside of the panels, therewith leaving the rhythm of the ribs undisturbed by visible fasteners.

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This Maple Leaf Shaped Tunnel Commemorates Hungarian Refugees in Canada


© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

In memorial of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, which resulted in the emigration of over 37,000 Hungarians to Canada, architectural studio Hello Wood has created Tunnel Through Time, a contemporary interpretation of the historic event that remembers the heroes of the revolution and especially honoring the Canadian people who welcomed Hungarian refugees. 

Composed of 37,565 pieces—one for each Hungarian refugee accepted into Canada—the tunnel begins with a Hungarian flag with a hole in the middle, representing how protesters cut the communist coat of arms out of the Hungarian flag during the revolution. The tunnel then morphs—as a representation of the journey of the refugees—until it reaches an exit, which is shaped like the national symbol of Canada, the maple leaf.


© Gergely Szinnay


© Gergely Szinnay


© Gergely Szinnay


© Gergely Szinnay


© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

© Soraya Hegyesi

© Soraya Hegyesi

© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

The welcoming of Hungarian refugees was a huge turning point in the history of Canadian immigration policy that shaped the country’s open-minded attitude towards immigrants in general. Hungarian immigrants added value to the economy of Canada, like those 200 young engineers arriving from the Faculty of Wood Sciences of the University of Sopron who helped to shape the world famous Canadian wood industry. Canada welcomed 37 565 Hungarians after the Uprising, molding the image of Canadian society so much, that in 2010 it was designated a Canadian national historic event and part of Canadian heritage – explained the architect in a press release. 


© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

The installation was commissioned by the Consulate General of Hungary in Toronto, who, in addition to local Canadian Hungarians from around the country, assisted with construction.


© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

We wanted to create a memorial that could be interesting to a Canadian youngster, who does not necessarily have Hungarian roots, said Péter Pozsár, co-founder of Hello Wood. The Tunnel Through Time is a visually exciting object, and if someone steps closer, they will get a piece of history by meeting the story of the events of 1956. Canadians of Hungarian origin can be proud of the old country and to Canada, which gave them a new home, and the culturally diverse local community can experience a piece of world history.


© Gergely Szinnay


© Soraya Hegyesi


© Gergely Szinnay


© Gergely Szinnay


© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

Tunnel Through Time is currently on display in Budapest Park in Toronto, and will be moved to Niagara Falls, where it will be in custody of a Canadian-Hungarian scout group.


© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

© Gergely Szinnay

Learn more about the project, here.

News via The 1956 Hungarian Revolution and Freedom Fight 60th Anniversary Memorial Board.

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Peter Zumthor’s Therme Vals Through the Lens of Fernando Guerra

In this stunning photo shoot Fernando Guerra, of Últimas Reportagens, captures the Therme Vals, one of the most iconic works of the 2009 Pritzker Prize-winner Peter Zumthor.


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

Built between 1993 and 1996, the building is part of the hotel complex in Vals. Constructed over a thermal spring, it serves the hotel guests, the local community and other visitors in search of the healing and relaxing properties of hot water.


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

The design of the project arose from a restriction which prevented the construction of a building height that would damage the guests’ views of the valley. This led to one of the main design features of the building, with a facade and half of the building buried in the hill blending with the topography of the valley, and a flat green roof that combines with the sloping hill to create a continuous lawn.


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

The space within the spa is organized around two large pools, one outdoor and one indoor, surrounded by high stone walls. The building’s main access is via a tunnel from the hotel, serving as a transition that prepares the visitor to experience the architecture imagined by Zumthor. Internally, you can move through the various spaces freely, without a preordained path, with views to the landscape highlighted and blocked masterfully through the building’s external openings.


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

The facade, with a striking alternation between solid and void, clearly shows the construction technique. The volume of the building consists of 15 subsidiary volumes, all distinct from each other. These fragments are assembled as a large three-dimensional puzzle, thus the roof coverage is not continuous but broken at each of the connections between these blocks. These subtle gaps of just 8 centimeters allow the entry of a sliver of natural light. Despite its appearance as a massive, monolithic volume, the building is a composition of slightly spaced apart structures that make up the whole. The project addresses these contrasts masterfully; between the straight lines of the architecture and the movement of water, or between the gray of the rocks and the play of light and colors.


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

In each block the architect explores different sense, utilizing colors, the scale of the space or even the water itself, and its temperature, state, smell, and so on. Overnight, the experience is drastically altered, as most of the light in the building emerges from the water itself.


© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

© Fernando Guerra | FG+SG

The Therme Vals / Peter Zumthor//cdn.embedly.com/widgets/platform.js

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Sunwheel / Moradavaga


Courtesy of Moradavaga

Courtesy of Moradavaga


Courtesy of Moradavaga


Courtesy of Moradavaga


Courtesy of Moradavaga


Courtesy of Moradavaga

  • Architects: Moradavaga
  • Localization : Porto, Portugal
  • Area: 54.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Cortesia de Moradavaga
  • Collaborators : Rossana Ribeiro, Myrto Lantza

  • Production: Euphoric Generation Unipessoal, Lda

  • Structure : Radical e Positivo Unipessoal, Lda

  • Logistic: Catari Portugal, Lda

  • Partners : Cavaco & Coquet, Lda

Courtesy of Moradavaga

Courtesy of Moradavaga

Following an invitation by Porto Lazer to rethink São João’s popular cascades, Moradavaga took inspiration from one of its icons, the wheel of the traditional water mills, and linked it to the old pagan cults to the Sun related to the summer solstice, from which the traditional festivities in honor of the city’s christian patron are derived, developing a site-specific interactive artistic piece implanted inside the fountain of Porto’s main avenue. 


Courtesy of Moradavaga

Courtesy of Moradavaga

Courtesy of Moradavaga

Courtesy of Moradavaga

The rotation of the 8 meters diameter “sun-wheel”, made of hundreds of little golden moving plates, produces changing effects throughout day and night, according to wind and light variations and the speed given by users, also creating varying reflections and movements on the existent water mirror.

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Clever Park / VOX Architects


© Sergey Ananiev

© Sergey Ananiev


© Sergey Ananiev


© Sergey Ananiev


© Sergey Ananiev


© Sergey Ananiev

  • Client, General Constructor: Alfa Story
  • General Designer Of Existing Building: R1
  • Navigation Consultant: Smart Heart
  • Architecture Concept Of Building Of Parking And Masterplan: Twelve Architects & Masterplanners

© Sergey Ananiev

© Sergey Ananiev

From the architect. A Large-scale project development of Clever Park business center is the result of successful collaboration between Alfa-Story construction company and Boris Voskoboynikov architectural studio since they were working together on Koltsovo (Yekaterinburg airport).


© Sergey Ananiev

© Sergey Ananiev

The client uses VOX architects projects with great attention and almost everything is realized unchanged. The bureau designed all important elements forming the face and image of the business quarter: entrances, the management company office, navigation, restaurants and cafes.


© Sergey Ananiev

© Sergey Ananiev

Projects are skillfully integrated into the existing architectural environment with a clear understanding of the territory development direction. The business center is planned to be a growth point of the residential area. «When we were asked to design a riverside building with a restaurant and offices, we drew client attention to the fact that the territory should not only be developed in the context of offices, but also with the thought that soon there will be houses, – says project designer Maria Akhremenkova, – so we offered to give the quarter some urban value. As a result our studio set up waterfront development concept which is ideal for relaxing and walking, and has great views of the Iset River».


Site Plan

Site Plan

While developing a number of projects for the business district, studio VOX architects conceptually revealed massive task of creating links between the various architectural and interior elements. They created an image of a modern business center using public spaces and efficient navigation system.


© Sergey Ananiev

© Sergey Ananiev

© Sergey Ananiev

© Sergey Ananiev

Further plans include the organization and development of the Iset River embankment: landscaping, construction of buildings and small architectural forms, installation and application of the information signs. After the completion of the Clever Park project a large-scale 16th hectares park will be made. Green area is an important part of the quarter image and panoramic windows will bring the garden atmosphere to the lower floors of the buildings. There is a two-storey office building with a restaurant and a sales office pavilion also provided in terms of development and improvement of the whole complex. On completion of all project the quarter will be a socially significant object, fully harmonized with the architectural surroundings and meeting the needs of all employees of the business center and residents of the surrounding city. The park and Iset River green areas located on the campus, will improve whole Yekaterinburg architectural scene. An important feature of this project are technologies aimed at sustainable development of the Ural region, and the use of building supplies produced from local raw materials by a company-builder. There are also solutions aimed at energy savings. Yekaterinburg has its first time-ever electric vehicles chargers on a parking lot.


© Sergey Ananiev

© Sergey Ananiev

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