Architecture is Propaganda: How North Korea Turned the Built Environment into a Tool for Control


Workers' Party monument, a monument to the people showing the Hammer (builders), Sickle (farmers) and Paint Brush (scholars, an addition to the standard symbol of communism). Image © Alex Davidson

Workers' Party monument, a monument to the people showing the Hammer (builders), Sickle (farmers) and Paint Brush (scholars, an addition to the standard symbol of communism). Image © Alex Davidson

Architecture is propaganda. Throughout my two years of visiting and living in North Korea the country slowly revealed to me the details of this evolved and refined tool for totalitarian control of the country’s population. The West views the country with incredulity—surely this cannot be a functioning country where people lead “everyday lives?” Surely the country’s populace can’t possibly buy into this regime? But I assure you that they do. People have careers, they go to work on the bus, and those women crying over the death of their leader were doing so through their own initiative, if not out of genuine emotion. How is this possible? This is a carefully constructed regime which has, at its heart, an unprecedented understanding of how architecture and urbanism can influence and control people. Coming second only to the military on the list of party priorities, the design of the built environment has had an incalculable effect on reinforcing the ideologies of the North Korean regime and conveying these to the people.


A recent residential tower block, containing apartments for scientists and teachers. Image © Koryo Tours courtesy of Alex Davidson


Arch of Triumph. Image © Alex Davidson


Pyongyang's new science and technology center. Image © Koryo Tours courtesy of Alex Davidson


The view from Kim Il Sung Square, in front of the Grand People's Study House, looking towards the Juche Tower. Image © Alex Davidson


The view from Kim Il Sung Square, in front of the Grand People's Study House, looking towards the Juche Tower. Image © Alex Davidson

The view from Kim Il Sung Square, in front of the Grand People's Study House, looking towards the Juche Tower. Image © Alex Davidson

It is not that the architecture in Pyongyang has to be world standard, or even of a good standard at all; the people just need to believe that it is. In fact, due to the level of control, the buildings need only to do the bare minimum, capturing an architectural idea in order to convince the people of a notion of power, progress or wealth. The level of isolation is such that there is no way for citizens to compare the structures of their home country to the grandiose buildings of power around the world. Koreans I spoke to in the Grand People’s Study House seemed convinced, and in their minds rightly so, that this admittedly impressive building was the greatest in all of the world. Why shouldn’t they? The Arch of Triumph, a gigantic arch straddling one of the main highways through the city adorned with stories of Kim Il Sung, receives no comparison here with its counterpart in Paris or any other Roman arch around the world before that. It just has to be a symbol of power, wealth and, in the minds of the people, be an idea conceived by their leader. It does what it’s meant to do—people speak of the buildings with genuine pride in their eyes, and they see them as a gift from their leaders to whom they are ever grateful. This is, of course, after over 60 years of socialist rule. Few in the country would have been alive to see the city before the Kim dynasty; those that were must only remember it as a pile of rubble after years of war.


The Grand People's Study House. Image © Koryo Tours courtesy of Alex Davidson

The Grand People's Study House. Image © Koryo Tours courtesy of Alex Davidson

Arch of Triumph. Image © Alex Davidson

Arch of Triumph. Image © Alex Davidson

After the Korean War the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), led by Kim Il Sung and supported by the Soviets, was left with a scene of complete and utter destruction; with the exception of a handful of buildings Pyongyang had been completely flattened. For a young general with socialist ideals this was seen as a clean slate, on top of which a new country, both physically and ideologically, could be built. Today, even with knowledge of the outside world, it is hard not to admire the clear, axial urban plan of the city designed with the help of established communists, the Soviet Army. The designers of Pyongyang focused on portraying ideals to the individual on the ground. Standing at the foot of a monument celebrating the Worker’s Party, clear views open up across huge lawns adorned with fountains, and over the river Taedong to gigantic statues of both the late leaders. The monument symbolizes an appreciation of the people, idolizes their community spirit, and looks out to the men that supposedly gave them this city. Even to a visitor it’s a powerful motif and a spectacular view, and for a split second this tranquil viewing point might even make you believe that maybe people don’t have it so bad here. It’s not until the apartment blocks in your peripheral vision come back into focus with their missing windows and permanently sodden concrete that you remember just how poor the quality of life in this city is in comparison with the initial dream of a socialist utopia that was planned decades ago.


View from Workers' Party Monument, showing city's axis and poor building quality either side. Image © Alex Davidson

View from Workers' Party Monument, showing city's axis and poor building quality either side. Image © Alex Davidson

Apartments either side of the main city axis. Image © Alex Davidson

Apartments either side of the main city axis. Image © Alex Davidson

The Soviets, during their partnership with Kim Il Sung’s regime, left behind some monumental and genuinely impressive buildings, but almost overnight the Soviet Union collapsed and suddenly the North Korean regime was left without money or support. As the DPRK pushed to maintain an image of power and strength in the eyes of its people, genuine quality was replaced for buildings that merely gave the impression of wealth; construction quality plummeted and build speed increased. Even today buildings are in almost all cases constructed with weak and rudimentary concrete blocks that are hand shaped and comprised primarily of ballast. But to the layman on the street it looks like the city is in a constant state of rapid growth, and of course no one hears about it when an apartment block collapses. A recent development, named “Dubai” by expats living in the city, is an attempt at creating modern riverside apartment blocks. But don’t let the multi-colored neon lights fool you, the buildings themselves are but poorly made, barely insulated shells not suited for a standard of living even close to what you’d imagine. To your average North Korean however, they’re seen as the ultimate trophy home, one they might be awarded if they do their best for the Party; sadly, they don’t know any better.


The "concrete" blocks used to build Pyongyang consist of mostly ballast form the river. Image © Alex Davidson

The "concrete" blocks used to build Pyongyang consist of mostly ballast form the river. Image © Alex Davidson

"Dubai," central Pyongyang's "modern" apartment complexes. Image © Alex Davidson

"Dubai," central Pyongyang's "modern" apartment complexes. Image © Alex Davidson

The remaining buildings of actual quality in the city are the original governmental ministry buildings, which take prominent seats within the cityscape but could have easily been—and probably were—plucked out of a Soviet building catalogue. The grandiose steps used to lead up through a front of concrete pilasters adorned with symbols of prosperity and solidarity, into large, brutal yet beautiful entrance halls of marble with colossal chandeliers. Now though, the interiors are up for refurbishment, and the replacement? Chinese faux-marble on the floors and fake gems in the door handles. To the workers who use the building every day this appears to be an upgrade, and this enforces what they’re being told: that the country is getting stronger and richer.


Pyongyang trainstation, built by the Soviets. Image © Alex Davidson

Pyongyang trainstation, built by the Soviets. Image © Alex Davidson

Before the Soviet Union fell the DPRK had already been developing its own ideas and had begun imposing them upon their people. As the regime gained confidence in their ability to run a country and consolidated their power, they decided on a more nationalist approach to rule and created the current political stance of “Juche,” based on the principles of political, economic and military independence. In both their ideologies and architecture this meant showcasing what North Korea could produce, independent of outside influences, instilling a sense of national pride in its people. In conjunction with this idea, a new style of architecture began to appear across Pyongyang. Major cultural venues and public buildings with immense concrete casts of the traditional Korean Giwa styled roofs, sporting pastel green tiles, were suddenly built “for the people.” These buildings kept the same socialist content that had been donated by the Soviets but now had a national character which instilled a sense of nationalism and contributed to an independent North Korean socialist identity. The people love these buildings, as do tourists, for it’s in these buildings that they have fun. On special days out, or for the fortunate few with the luxury of freedom, these buildings signify the chance to read some foreign books, watch the circus or enjoy a concert. The mental connection is made between having a great time and being in a building that represents your country; ideology is enforced through a simple mechanism of positive association.


One of Pyongyang's theaters, which combines ideas of "modern design," traditional Giwa roofs, and socialist content. Image © Alex Davidson

One of Pyongyang's theaters, which combines ideas of "modern design," traditional Giwa roofs, and socialist content. Image © Alex Davidson

North Korean architecture today is a result of the country’s isolation and because of this has evolved in its own incestuous way. Now however, word of the outside world is trickling in and the regime are starting to realize that they’re going to have to try and catch up with their Asian neighbors, or risk losing credibility among their own people. As they can no longer shun the mass globalization and urbanization of the rest of the world, the government has announced an “Age of Construction” in which they intend to make North Korea an international contender for tourism, technology and commerce. With an increase in communications and trade with China, aided by a severe lack of enforcement of the sanctions imposed by the international community, the DPRK are having a good go at it. Just as cultural buildings were linked to nationalism, these “modern” designs have been employed for just about any building that symbolizes progress; whether it be new up-market restaurants, factories or technology centers. After all, how could the Koreans reject the idea that their technologies are becoming ever more advanced when their science institute is coated in metal and glass? At a time when the DPRK is boasting of strapping nuclear warheads to intercontinental missiles, it’s not enough to merely tell their people this—the government needs visual proof that there have indeed been some technological developments that could give this story some credibility.


Pyongyang's new science and technology center. Image © Koryo Tours courtesy of Alex Davidson

Pyongyang's new science and technology center. Image © Koryo Tours courtesy of Alex Davidson

A recent residential tower block, containing apartments for scientists and teachers. Image © Koryo Tours courtesy of Alex Davidson

A recent residential tower block, containing apartments for scientists and teachers. Image © Koryo Tours courtesy of Alex Davidson

With that being said, as with earlier architecture styles, certain adaptations are made to conform to the narrative set by the government, and these interpretations of contemporary design can therefore be described as no more than a retro-futuristic interpretation of what modern architecture should be. Ironically, the Koreans have copied the Chinese copy of American capitalist architecture; even big LED billboards on the front of the buildings have been copied, except in Korea they try to sell you Juche diatribe rather than a fancy new car. Unfortunately, the flashy new envelope hides the same deadly construction methods that give new North Korean buildings single-figure life spans.

During my stay in the country I was fortunate enough to be invited to the Pyongyang University of Architecture, the sole source of building design and engineering in the country, and have a sit down with the heads of the school to discuss how our countries, so very different to one another, approach architecture. Their enthusiasm to learn what I had to say came as rather a surprise, albeit a refreshing one, as I’d expected the individuals themselves to be as rigid as their design ethos, and their opinions of the outside world to be as hostile as those of their government. But instead they shared with me the ideas behind their designs with such pride, having finally been given the opportunity to explain their work to a foreign architect. Inspiration for their designs, in an approach that is rare among Western architects, comes from a very figurative way of looking at things; concert halls that mimic piano keys, or a table-tennis complex that symbolizes a table and net. As with everything else in the country, individuals are not left to make decisions by themselves. All designs have to stay in keeping with the underlying values of the Party and need to gain the approval of those in command—and in many cases from leader Kim Jong Un, whose say is final. The recently completed terminal for Pyongyang Airport, for example, had its design changed mid-construction after the “Supreme Leader” visited the site, disliked the entrance and had it demolished and reconstructed differently. It was reported in the foreign media that this decision came with grave consequences for the chief-architect, who was said to have been executed as a result of this fatal design choice.


The new ice skating rink, an example of one of North Korea's more "modern" designs. Image © Alex Davidson

The new ice skating rink, an example of one of North Korea's more "modern" designs. Image © Alex Davidson

Whether or not these claims have any truth to them—hopefully it’s no surprise to read that much of the “news” coming out of North Korea is a fantastic exaggeration at best—stories like this help highlight the genuine dangers that North Korean designers face on a daily basis. It is the architect’s natural instinct to want to apply their own design ideas to a project, something that most of us probably take for granted, but on a day-to-day basis this instinct has to be buried deep and replaced instead with the desire to do the bidding of their leader. As a result, North Korean architects are left with no choice but to produce the propaganda that feeds the machine and keeps their own people under the heavy hand of the North Korean government.


The Ryugyong Hotel. Started in 1987 and still only complete on the exterior, the hotel has been a empty shell looming over the city for years. Image © Alex Davidson

The Ryugyong Hotel. Started in 1987 and still only complete on the exterior, the hotel has been a empty shell looming over the city for years. Image © Alex Davidson

Architecture is propaganda, but the architects of the DPRK are just the humans caught up in the game, being used as a tool. From what I saw, they are just trying to make the best out of a difficult situation, yet they have in their hands the tools to completely control an entire nation. Without outside influences to help guide the country and its architecture to a better future for the people, the country risks falling into a stalemate, trapped in today’s status quo. But the architects that I met displayed a genuine thirst for knowledge, for inspiration, to share, to show off and to ultimately be the ones to shape their country for the better. They hold within them the best dreams of a socialist utopia, but are held back not only by the regime but also by the restrictions put on them by the outside world.

Yesterday’s Future, Today: What’s it Like to Work as an Architect in North Korea?//cdn.embedly.com/widgets/platform.js

Is it then within the power of international visitors to make life better for the average North Korean? We have already seen how a gradual exposure to modern designs can change the architectural direction of the regime. If their architecture now keeps people trapped in this state, can further input of ours at the very least alleviate some of the suffering and danger that these people have to go through?

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Indoor Swimming Pool for Sundbyberg / Urban Design


© Per Kristiansen

© Per Kristiansen


© Per Kristiansen


© Per Kristiansen


© Per Kristiansen


© Per Kristiansen

  • Architects: Urban Design
  • Location: Sundbyberg, Sweden
  • Architect In Charge: Erik Jarlöv
  • Area: 3500.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Per Kristiansen
  • Team: Christina Eriksson, Anna Undén
  • Construction: NCC Construction Sverige, Strängbetong, Sundbybergs plattsättningsentrepenad

© Per Kristiansen

© Per Kristiansen

From the architect. The indoor swimming pool located in Sundbyberg, originally designed by Åke Östin in 1978 has now been expanded to accommodate the municipality’s growing population. The new addition includes a new 25-meter pool with a height adjustable bottom, a children´s swimming pool, a new side entrance, locker rooms, offices, conference rooms and a large sun deck. The project also included a new wellness center run by an independent operator.


© Per Kristiansen

© Per Kristiansen

The new building forms a separate volume that directs itself toward the sports field to the west. The new pool space is cradled by two parallel wood-paneled walls that seem to spring from a natural granite outcropping and a new concrete foundation – its characteristic, rough-hewn wood formwork still exposed. The large sun deck opens up to the south, embracing the older building volume and connecting the older to the new. On warm summer days, when the large glass sliding-doors are open, the sun deck becomes a natural extension of the new swimming pool space.


© Per Kristiansen

© Per Kristiansen

Sundbyberg’s swimming hall is in many ways a typical example of the many swimming halls that were built in Sweden in the 1970’s – a simple brick building devoid of unnecessary embellishment, meant to provide citizens with the opportunity to learn to swim. Despite its humble and utilitarian ambitions, it demonstrates a clarity of design and a number of carefully chosen elements and details that enhance the architecture beyond the ordinary.


© Per Kristiansen

© Per Kristiansen

The swimming pool is located along the central street of Fredsgatan, raised above the surrounding landscape upon a rocky knoll and slightly skewed in plan compared to the surrounding buildings, as was typical for the time period. The roof’s profile is accentuated by the corrugated metal roofing which stretches down onto the façade above a strip of windows that provide the pool space with natural light. The exterior brick reappears on the inside – partially as airbrick, to improve the acoustics.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Since the building is a concrete structure with high demands for humidity control, we designed the wooden facade as a series of panels that “float” outside of the building envelope, easy to demount for future maintenance. This wooden facade refers to the original building’s horizontal character, while the large cantilevered glazed gable façade of the new swimming hall is clearly vertical. The robust glulam beams of the gable façade align with the lanes of the pool itself and help to shade the pool from the sun.


© Per Kristiansen

© Per Kristiansen

Inside, wood recurs in the form of acoustic panels in the large swimming hall, a material which can also be found in the original interior. Again, airbricks are used to improve acoustics, but this time they are glazed in a cheerful turquoise color. The lofty height of the room gives the space an added quality, in contrast to the more modest height of the older hall.


© Per Kristiansen

© Per Kristiansen

Sundbyberg’s swimming pool was inaugurated on January 1, 2015 and was immediately seen as a great success by both new and old visitors, reflected in the dramatic increase in visitor numbers. The swimming pool is open to all and is the first LGBTQ-certified Swedish indoor swimming pool with a designated gender-neutral locker room where it is possible to change in private. The new pool is a multi-pool, which means that the bottom is adjustable in height, thus it can adapt to the varied needs for training, children and adult swimming classes. The pool is also equipped with lift-platforms and is handicap-accessible. The swimming pool makes a noted effort to make all residents of the community welcome, as can be seen in events such as the annual Christmas Bath, that is particularly aimed at the homeless and economically disadvantaged.


© Per Kristiansen

© Per Kristiansen

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The Stencil App That Gives You Custom Stencil Tools for Digital Drawing

Today, Morpholio has unveiled a new addition to their flagship Trace app. The new addition, called simply “Stencil,” offers a quick way to add figures and annotations to your Trace sketches using a tool that has been familiar to architects for years. The update to the app features a number of pre-loaded stencil designs, but thanks to its new digital twist, the act of stenciling is also augmented through the ability to take any image you can find or photograph and turn it into a stencil in seconds.


Courtesy of Morpholio


Courtesy of Morpholio


Courtesy of Morpholio


Courtesy of Morpholio

While architects have long had the opportunity to add images to their drawings through Photoshop or other similar software, Morpholio felt that that approach wasn’t really in the spirit of their own app. Their resulting solution is something which offers speed and convenience for architects, without losing the “hand-made” quality of the architect’s sketch. “Creating stencils sits perfectly between the architect’s sketch and the quick photo,” explains Mark Collins, Co-creator of Morpholio.

Here’s how Morpholio describes the process of making and using its new Stencil feature:

  • Make a Stencil: Sample the world around you and build an indispensable library of go-to drawings, compositions, elements and annotations.  Stencil turns your device into a scanner and digital laser cutter. Like a facade? Street sign? Dashing figure? Simply find or take a photo, set the contrast or invert, and transform it into a stencil that is forever at your disposal.
  • Transform your Drawings and Images: Morpholio’s pre-made figures, furniture, fixtures, entourage, landscape and graphic symbols bring any sketch, floor plan, section drawing, or background image to life. Use them together with your custom stencils to annotate drawings with ease, or create your own super graphics, patterns, and art at any scale.  Simply set the stencil and sketch over it with any brush or color.

  • Brushes, Textures and Vibrant Color: The Stencil tool works with the Trace App’s variety of color palettes created by the award wining graphic design firm MTWTF.  Trace offers eight unique pen types, including pencil, charcoal, marker and brush.  Building rich, multilayered drawings has never been easier or faster.
  • Export and Share: Stencils make your mobile device work for you in a new way. They take the images you’ve captured and turn them into productive, powerful tools to tell a new story – whether talking to a client or the world.  Export effortlessly to scale as PDF or directly to your favorite social media or cloud service.

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CA NA MARIA / Laura Torres Roa + Alfonso Miguel Caballero


© José Hevia

© José Hevia


© José Hevia


© José Hevia


© José Hevia


© José Hevia

  • Quantity Surveyor: Jaime Mauri Hernández, Josep Mauri Fernández
  • Contractor: Construcciones y Obras Porxet
  • Site Manager: Toni Tur Guasch

© José Hevia

© José Hevia

This single-family house is located on the highest and most horizontal area of a rustic land.

This plot, which presents a significant slope and it is divided into terraces by existing dry stone walls, once formed part of a larger agricultural land and today is covered with native vegetation, mainly pine forest.


© José Hevia

© José Hevia

Plan

Plan

© José Hevia

© José Hevia

The project seeks to make the most out of the house location in its geographical and natural environment in order to exploit its interaction with it. That way, it takes advantage of all possible relationships between interior spaces and, specially, between indoor and outdoor spaces, offering family members the Balearic climate’s so desired “outdoor life”.


© José Hevia

© José Hevia

The construction is configured as a single prismatic volume of about 29x8x3.5m oriented southeast to maximise views of its own land. The main floor is divided into four functional units successively arranged: entrance-kitchen / terrace-living room / library-bedrooms / guest bedroom or home office. The volume presents two points of interruption. One gives place to the double orientation living room, which becomes the house’s central area and whose boundaries extend beyond the enclosure by integrating the entrance courtyard and the rear terrace. It becomes an interior or exterior space depending on the time of year, bringing all the surrounding nature closer to the house occupants during warm seasons. The second gap separates the family sleeping area from the guests area-home office through a glazed space and a sunken courtyard that illuminates the social area located in the basement, where the installation facilities and auxiliary spaces for the orchard are also located.


© José Hevia

© José Hevia

Section

Section

© José Hevia

© José Hevia

The house is provided with a wide variety of linked spaces capable of hosting all the different activities and relationships so they can occur in a fluid way. Transversely, the inward prolongation of the outside terraces, configures the living room which extends longitudinally on one end to the kitchen (where the two-sided fireplace is the link) and on the opposite to the library (a space where daily activities can be conducted in the company of other members of the family) 


© José Hevia

© José Hevia

Without succumbing to local folk but in full compliance with local regulations, a link with the traditional architectural language has been established with typical materials found on the cottages of the island: white load bearing walls, ceramic and stone floors, and wood window and door frames. The openings in the facade, all of different proportions and sizes, appear laid out on a “disordered” pattern when observed from the exterior but they are actually looking for the “internal adjustment”, also taking aligned positions in opposite facades to facilitate adequate ventilation and allowing exterior-exterior cross views. Besides, they are protected from sunlight by concrete frames painted in blue, similar to the colour on the windows of the original building of the farm, framing the views and enhancing the plasticity of the facade. The front yard and the pool also refer to the vernacular architecture. The latter, placed on the prolongation of one of the aforementioned stone walls, takes the colour of the ponds found everywhere in the island and is separated from the house by a space that will be colonized again by native vegetation which will be changing with the seasons.


© José Hevia

© José Hevia

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5 Emblematic Buildings by Giuseppe Terragni


© José Tomás Franco

© José Tomás Franco

With a short career of only thirteen years, Italian architect Giuseppe Terragni (1904-1943) left an important legacy of built works that are now used as classic references of modern and rationalist architecture.

We traveled to Como and Milan to visit Terragni’s emblematic works that clearly reflect his style. These projects are based on the organized configuration of architectural elements that individually appear clean, pure, and expressive, but together also form a harmonious whole. 

These are: Novocomum, Casa Rustici, Asilo Sant’Elia, Casa Giuliani Frigerio and Casa Lavezzari. 


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco

Novocomun / Como, Italy (1927-1929)


© José Tomás Franco

© José Tomás Franco

History tells us that back in the 20s Terragni was commissioned to design a housing project with a classical facade, to fit in with how most residential projects were designed at the time. Terragni followed the rules and presented to the municipality a traditional building which was quickly approved. However, he had another idea in mind. During the construction period, his drawings took the form of an avant-garde building, the one that today is an icon of rationalist architecture in Italy.

Initially, Terragni’s work was considered for demolition however, Novocomun became one of the most popular buildings in the city. This was thanks to the unprecedented design comprising a clean, orthogonal volume of reinforced concrete broken at the corners by cylindrical shapes and curves. Over these large openings is suspended the mass of the top floor.


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco

Casa Rustici / Milan, Italy (1933-1935)


© José Tomás Franco

© José Tomás Franco

Designed by Terragni in collaboration with Pietro Lingeri and located on the main avenue Corso Sempione in Milan, this apartment building was conceived at first as two separate volumes, arranged perpendicular to the street.

Using a never before seen style for those years, the architect decided to unify the two units through a third architectural element: the balcony. Thanks to long-terraces oriented to the parks in the avenue, he managed to generate a facade without much effort, which better integrated the neighboring buildings. This ‘permeable’ facade marks the entrance and creates an inner courtyard for circulation and common areas. Highlighted through the use of white marble is the grid of pillars and walls of the structure.


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco

Asilo Sant’Elia / Como, Italy (1936-1937)


© José Tomás Franco

© José Tomás Franco

Two volumes and a unifying element. Terragni reuses this conceptual plan diagram to develop this kindergarten project. One of the volumes contains four classrooms, while the other contains the dining room and the bathrooms. In this case, the central element is the access, sharing a unique space with a main hall and reception protruding from the facade and rising above the ground. All this is part of an imaginary square about 40 meters on each side, forming a ‘U’ hugging an interior playground. 

Its arrangement seems ‘turned’ in relation to the way it responds to solar orientation, but it is actually a play on the relationship of the building to the other houses in the neighborhood. Again, the grids of pillars are explicit in the design and the geometric process of the proposal.


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco

Casa Giuliani Frigerio / Como, Italy (1939-1940)


© José Tomás Franco

© José Tomás Franco

This is the last building designed by Terragni before leaving for the war, forcing him to complete the design through letters with his friend and collaborator Luigi Zuccoli. The interesting thing about this building is the dismantling of its different levels in section, which is expressed in different facades exposed to the street on its three sides. 

They appear as staggered rooms in between floors and apartments with different spatial configurations, plus flexible enclosures connected by movable panels. The facades reflect this through a set of sliding windows, balconies, and expressive linear metallic elements.


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco

Casa Lavezzari / Milan, Italy (1934)


© José Tomás Franco

© José Tomás Franco

Clearly, this last project is not one of Terragni’s emblematic works, but it is a building that summarizes several of the styles he developed throughout his career. Located in a trapezoid shaped corner lot, Terragni solves this complexity through the same diagram used before; two volumes that rotate and fused at the narrowest point of the site, conjuring access and circulations.

Here, Terragni takes advantage of the difficult triangular space by placing the stairs in the same style he used years before in his Novocomun project. Again, balconies appear as pure and independent facade elements, in this case, framed by two large blind walls ranging from the first to the last level.


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco


© José Tomás Franco

*Photographs taken by the author in May 2013.

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Comic Break: Architects In Restaurants


Courtesy of Architexts

Courtesy of Architexts

Architects–if ever there was a profession that paid attention to details, this is it. Every building we walk in, we’re going to notice things. Every little thing. Floor to ceiling, wall to wall… we’ll find the good, the bad, the ugly, and the criminal. It can’t be helped. No matter how hard we might try, no matter how much we imbibe, we can’t just turn off being an architect. It’s a part of who we are. Sometimes, it’s a blessing to be able to travel around and really appreciate the built environment, other times it most definitely a curse. When we go out with friends and family, it’s not uncommon to remark about things like the lack of accessibility, the bizarre choice of light fixtures, the exposed ductwork, and the location of the pull stations. You’ll correct them for using the wrong words for things we know as frieze, clerestory, and muntins.

Maybe that’s why people think we’re all like Ted Mosby.

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House JP / Bevk Perović Arhitekti


© Miran Kambic

© Miran Kambic


© Miran Kambic


© Miran Kambic


© Miran Kambic


© Miran Kambic

  • Architects: Bevk Perović Arhitekti
  • Location: Ljubljana, Slovenia
  • Design Team: Matija Bevk, Vasa J. Perovic, Tina Marn

  • Area: 275.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2012
  • Photographs: Miran Kambic
  • Structural Engineering: Mitja Strlekar

  • Mechanical Engineering: Biro Petkovski 

  • Electrical Engineering: Profi
  • Drainage Consultant: IB-program 

  • Building Physics / Detailing: Polytechnic 

  • Construction Supervision: Projekt GT

© Miran Kambic

© Miran Kambic

The project called for a small, one family house as a part of an existing semi-detached house, located in Ljubljana’s 1960s suburbia, in an area covered with a  ‘blanket’ of small houses on minuscule plots of land.


© Miran Kambic

© Miran Kambic

Plan 0

Plan 0

© Miran Kambic

© Miran Kambic

The project became an exercise in organisational simplicity of the interior plan: on the ground floor, an insertion of a staircase slightly off-centre into the plan of the small living space effectively divides it into 4 distinct zones: access, kitchen, living/dining area and a workspace. The rooms exist and evolve around the column-like staircase in a simple sequence of different widths that defines them, simultaneously independent and fluidly connected.


Section

Section

Furthermore, a slight submersion of the ground floor surface by 30cm lower from the level of the garden, stresses the idea of ‘separation’ of the living space from the surroundings, creating a sense of intimacy with limited means at hand – this allows for both perpendicular walls of the ground floor to be opened along the entire length of the volume, while preserving the sense of ‘room’ for the interior. 


© Miran Kambic

© Miran Kambic

Plan 1

Plan 1

© Miran Kambic

© Miran Kambic

On the upper floor, the staircase divides the attic space into 2 separate tent-like volumes – the parents and the kids room, which both overlook the neighbourhood through elongated, slit windows, lowered to the level of the beds.


© Miran Kambic

© Miran Kambic

The exterior of the house, in contrast to its older neighbour, is clad in black extruded aluminium profiling, reminding one of the black wood-clad buildings of the past. By turning the profiling inside out, a sense of precision of the project is achieved – the thinness of the profiling giving the whole building a sharp, monumental appearance.


© Miran Kambic

© Miran Kambic

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Villers Abbey Visitor Center / Binario Architectes


© François Lichtle

© François Lichtle


© François Lichtle


© François Lichtle


© François Lichtle


© François Lichtle

  • Structure: JZH et partners

  • Fluids: SECA benelux

  • Lightning: Henriette Michaux
  • Landscape: Du Paysage (Virginie Pigeon et Sébastien Ochej)
  • Scenography: L'Escaut


© François Lichtle

© François Lichtle

© François Lichtle

© François Lichtle

The Villers abbey site is crossed and split by the N275 national road so it loses logic and unity. Architecture, through a common intervention in landscape and scenography fields, tries to reunite the full cistercian composition plan. The project leads to a truly sequence from the parking to the ruins and prepares the visitors. The new path goes by the mill (reception hall, scenographic spaces, models room), reaches the hill across the new footbridge, continues through the garden, crosses the second bridge over the national road and finally goes down into the ruins. The project highlights a common thread by means of sober  materials (corten, wood, concrete) set up in various ways.


© François Lichtle

© François Lichtle

View

View

© François Lichtle

© François Lichtle

View

View

© François Lichtle

© François Lichtle

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Mermerler Plaza / Ergün Architecture


© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden


© Cemal Emden


© Cemal Emden


© Cemal Emden


© Cemal Emden

  • Architects: Ergün Architecture
  • Location: İçerenköy, Kozyatağı, Topçu İbrahim Sk., 34752 Ataşehir/İstanbul, Turkey
  • Area: 32000.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

It is no secret. Concrete structures sprawl Istanbul’s urban metropolis. For the past decade Istanbul has been an ever expanding construction site. The rise of this so called “concrete jungle” depicts a time of rapid change. Yet during these times, our core studio philosophy has remained the same. Ergün Architecture has long posited a balance between art and utility at the very centre of its’ practice.  Mermerler Plaza is a testament to such an objective.


© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

This parent-child building duo is located in the Kozyatağı district of Istanbul. The tall wavy glass walls provide a playful contrast to its shorter aluminium enveloped counterpart. In order to preserve the southward looking façade from the sun, the design incorporates randomised tan colored sun blockers made from perforated aluminium sheets.


© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

The back façade is made of light grey pre-cast stone which provides a contrasting but balanced look against its neighbouring façades.


© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

Detail

Detail

© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

The individual floor balconies were designed as a green space that could showcase a variety of plants and flowers, but more importantly provide a pleasant, open-air socialising space for employees.


© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

The LEED Gold certified buildings sit between a major highway (called E-5) and several important roads that connect Istanbulites from all stretches of the city. Mermerler Plaza not only stands to provide office buildings, but its’ function extends to the public at large.


Section

Section

The spacious, two-building structure provides a convenient public passage for pedestrians. Pedestrians in transit can now connect from the highway to a number of main roads by foot. This public access point was essential to creating an interconnected transit system in Kozyatağı. Accordingly, the dual functioning plaza mandated a well contrived night-time lighting scheme that ensures public safety.  


© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

Mermerler Plaza is beautiful at night. The night-time lighting gives a day-time feeling. Blue waves are emphasised by cool hidden lights that pool in triangled shapes. Perforated mesh walls are illuminated with wall washer lighting producing a captivating soft warm glow that wraps around both buildings façades.


© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

The interior architecture boasts modern geometrical designs, often mimicking the same motifs from the building’s exterior. The interior finishes as such consist primarily of triangle shaped waves that are emphasised by hidden lights and aluminium perforated sheets used to drape the entrance ceiling. Contrast between the marble flooring and the glass walls enable the building to breathe without becoming a bore. An angularity ricochets down hallways, into restrooms, lighting fixtures, meeting rooms, and right back out the front foyer reminding us that the buildings interior run just as fluid at it’s wave encrusted exterior.


© Cemal Emden

© Cemal Emden

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The Treehouse / Wee Studio


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

  • Architects: Wee Studio
  • Location: Garden Village, Xin Chengzi Town, Miyun District, Beijing, China
  • Architect In Charge: Zhao Sheng
  • Design Team: Dai Haifei, Zhang Yanping, Zhao Sheng
  • Area: 8.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio

From the architect. The Treehouse is located in a little woods of poplar and hawthorn trees, where is at the foot of Mount Wuling in Miyun, Beijing. The cliff on the north with a stream meandering under it, and a mountain spring running in all seasons together create a quiet and peaceful environment for the Treehouse. There are two parts of the building, a deck and two separated polyhedrons the function of which are tearoom and bathroom. The inside of the tearoom is floored with Tatami, and the space is designed to serve as tea drinking in the daylight and sleeping as well as at night. 


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio

The building of Treehouse is a practice of Wee Studio about the subtle relationship between nature and inhabitation, as well as an exploration about how to achieve the architecture in the era of internet now. At the end of 2015, we initiated a crowdfunding on the Internet which had a great response in a short time. More than just about building a Treehouse on our own, the practice is more about inviting more people with same interests into the process of design and construction and having fun with it. 


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio

Going down through the steps from the door of a backyard, you would see the Treehouse floating in trees at the side of a stream. And then you have to climb onto a rock growing from the ground to achieve the deck. 


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio

The full size glass to the floor brings the view of trees and cliff in the tearoom, where you can read, rest, drink and even encounter with squirrels sometimes. 

You can enjoy the shadow of trees and leafs as well as the sky if lying down. 


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio

The Treehouse is equipped with thermal insulating layer and heating system to ensure normal operation in winter, in which you can enjoy another different view of the beautiful mountain area. 


Plan

Plan

While the north floor window brings the view in, a small window on the west side leads people to the small woods outside far away. The skylight at the end of the sloping ceiling introduces the light into the room, so that you can lying on Tatami and look to the nature with sky and trees outside which makes the small room felt bigger and higher. Through the study of window layout and human body size, we avoid the feeling of cramp in such a small interior space and make a conversation with the nature in a subtle way. 


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio

The Treehouse is interlocking with five poplar trees and two hawthorn trees. 

The Treehouse is a space where you can communicate with mountain, trees, the sky and stream. 


© Sun Haiting - RoadsideAlien Studio

© Sun Haiting – RoadsideAlien Studio

The main structure of the Treehouse is steel frame. We prefabricated all the structures in factory and transported them to be assemble on site to ensure the precision of the irregular form. The facade is installed with recycled wood panels in 60mm width, on which the trace of time makes the building blending into the environment. 


Section

Section

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