AD Round-Up: 10 Sacred Spaces


Courtesy of Flickr user Flemming Ibsen under CC BY-NC 2.0

Courtesy of Flickr user Flemming Ibsen under CC BY-NC 2.0

Religion, in one form or another, has formed the core of human society for much of our history. It therefore stands to reason that religious architecture has found equal prominence in towns and cities across the globe. Faith carries different meanings for different peoples and cultures, resulting in a wide variety of approaches to the structures in which worship takes place: some favor sanctuaries, others places of education and community, while others place the greatest emphasis on nature itself. Indeed, many carry secondary importance as symbols of national power or cultural expression.

AD Classics are ArchDaily’s continually updated collection of longer-form building studies of the world’s most significant architectural projects. The collection of sacred spaces collated here invariably reveal one desire that remains constant across all faiths and cultures: shifting one’s gaze from the mundane and everyday and fixing it on the spiritual, the otherworldly, and the eternal.


Courtesy of Flickr user Arian Zweger under CC BY 2.0


Courtesy of Flickr user Futo-Tussauds under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0


© Expiatory Temple of the Sagrada Familia


Courtesy of Flickr user Naoya Fujii under CC BY-NC 2.0

Grundtvig’s Church / Peder Wilhelm Jensen-Klint (1940)

AD Classics: Grundtvig’s Church / Peder Wilhelm Jensen-Klint
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Named for a 19th Century Danish pastor, politician, and philosopher, it is perhaps unsurprising that Grundtvig’s Church embodies the same nationalist romanticism as its namesake. The monument, utilizing design elements of traditional Danish country churches on the scale of a cathedral, is one of the world’s greatest examples of Expressionist architecture. The surrounding community, having been designed by the same architect as the church at its core, utilizes similar aesthetic styles in a flexible medieval layout.

Parish of the Holy Sacrifice / Leandro Locsin (1955)

AD Classics: Parish of the Holy Sacrifice / Leandro V. Locsin
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The fusion of indigenous and colonial cultures finds Modernist expression in the form of the Parish of the Holy Sacrifice. Dubbed the “Flying Saucer,” the Parish echoes qualities of the traditional Filipino bahay kubo (“cube house”) in a thin concrete shell dome. As Grundtvig’s Church is for Denmark, the Parish of the Holy Sacrifice stands as a monument to the cultural history of the Philippines – a potent statement in a republic that had only been independent for nine years at the time of the chapel’s opening.

North Christian Church / Eero Saarinen (1964)

AD Classics: North Christian Church / Eero Saarinen
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With its dramatic spire standing at 192 feet tall, the North Christian Church was the last building ever designed by Finnish architect Eero Saarinen. Leery of the manner in which secondary program buildings tended to draw focus away from worship spaces in contemporary churches, Saarinen strove to ensure that the sanctuary—and, by association, the act of praising God—would be the unmistakable centerpiece of his creation. Accordingly, all accessory spaces in North Christian Church are submerged beneath the cavernous sanctuary, the hexagonal form of which radiates out from the altar at its center. Visitors must climb stairs from the ground level to enter this space, further emphasizing the elevated importance of worship itself.

Thorncrown Chapel / E. Fay Jones (1980)

AD Classics: Thorncrown Chapel / E. Fay Jones
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The slender pine trusses of the Thorncrown Chapel seem to form a forest within a forest. Conceived as a non-denominational chapel where visitors could quietly “think [their] best thoughts,” Thorncrown was built by young architects and craftsmen out of local timber with the intent of minimal site impact in mind. The chapel draws over 2000 visitors every day, and has been named one of the American Institute of Architect’s top ten buildings of the 20th Century.

La Sagrada Familia / Antoni Gaudí (1882)

AD Classics: La Sagrada Familia / Antoni Gaudi
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The Sagrada Familia, one of the best examples of Catalan Modernism, has been under construction since 1882. Although it follows a cruciform plan typical of a Gothic cathedral, the temple’s hyperboloid vaults and angled columns are a radical departure from Gothic stylings. Three of the building’s façades represent the Glory, Nativity, and Passion of Christ; the fourth will feature a tower representing the Virgin Mary. Generations of collaborative design and construction work are expected to finally be complete in 2026 – 144 years after the project was begun.

Lotus Temple / Fariborz Sahba (1986)

AD Classics: Lotus Temple / Fariborz Sahba
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With its 27 marble-sheathed “leaves” shining white above verdant landscaping, the Lotus Temple is one of the most prominent and celebrated examples of architectural biomimicry on Earth. Inside the temple, visitors can admire the exposed concrete structure of the leaves, as well as the dramatic steel and glass skylight between their tips at the apex of the worship space. Primarily a Bahá’í temple, the temple is open to practitioners of all faiths, and has seen over 70 million worshipers since its opening in 1986.

Church of the Light / Tadao Ando (1999)

AD Classics: Church of the Light / Tadao Ando
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Thanks to Tadao Ando’s minimalist design aesthetic, the Church of the Light is almost entirely devoid of the ornamentation typically found in church buildings; the purpose of the almost featureless concrete structure is only betrayed by the cross cutting a void in the mass of the eastern wall. The Church is an exercise in spatial duality: the solids and voids of the building call to mind the gap between the secular and the spiritual. Great care was taken both by Ando and the master carpenters working on the project to ensure the smoothness of the concrete surface and joints, providing no distraction from the symbolic qualities of form, light, and space.

Cathedral of Brasilia / Oscar Niemeyer (1960)

AD Classics: Cathedral of Brasilia / Oscar Niemeyer
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The iconic columns of the Cathedral of Brasilia, bridged by enormous stained glass windows, earned architect Oscar Niemeyer the Pritzker Prize in 1988. The 16 parabolic steel columns, branching up from a diameter of 70 meters, are intended to represent a pair of hands in worship. With bells donated by Spain and an altar donated by Pope Paul VI, the Cathedral of Brasilia stands as the representation of the church’s power and influence in the capital of Brazil.

First Unitarian Church of Rochester / Louis Kahn (1969)

AD Classics: First Unitarian Church of Rochester / Louis Kahn
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Louis Kahn’s approach to the First Unitarian Church of Rochester revolved around a question mark: the sanctuary, in which the questions that gave birth to Unitarianism arose. Wrapped around the central sanctuary are the classrooms, in which these questions were raised for discussion. This symbolic layout, in combination with the heavy brick and concrete construction, made it challenging to bring light into the sanctuary; Kahn’s solution was to place four light towers at the space’s corners, filling the space with constantly changing natural illumination.

USAFA Cadet Chapel / Walter Netsch of Skidmore, Owings, & Merrill (1962)

AD Classics: USAFA Cadet Chapel / Walter Netsch of Skidmore, Owings, & Merrill
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Built for the United States Air Force Academy, the Cadet Chapel required three chapels to represent the three dominant faiths in American society: Protestant Christianity, Catholicism, and Judaism. The seventeen rows of spires, comprising over 100 identical tetrahedrons, are framed with tubular steel and clad in aluminum sheeting. The stained glass windows between each triangular unit become progressively brighter as they approach the altar, drawing the eye along the 92-foot tall nave to its end. The USAFA Cadet Chapel is an icon of Modernist sacred architecture, and was named a United States National Historic Landmark in 2004.

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Villas Jonc / Christian von Düring


© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher


© Thomas Jantscher


© Thomas Jantscher


© Thomas Jantscher


© Thomas Jantscher

  • Engineers: EDMS SA
  • Contractor: ATBA SA

© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher

This project of 3 attached houses follows the principals of sustainable development in an effort to minimize the impact on the environment during the entire life cycle of the building, ensure individual comforts while encouraging social relationships between neighbors, secure a long-term return on investment and keep maintenance and running costs low.


© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher

One of the objectives of the project is to foster the advantages of shared living while maintaining the individuality of each dwelling.  By the position of the garages and the portal definition of the entrances, each house is discovered by means of a passage through a private courtyard.  On the opposite side, the terraces give onto a common garden and the expression of the individual houses is erased to give the feeling of one big house.


© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher

Section

Section

© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher

By the structural layout and choice of materials, the project is conceived for maximum flexibility.  Each house can vary its layout and express its own individuality. And at the level of the entire structure, the possibility exists for future evolution, even to an eventual transformation into a small apartment buildingby adding two stories, thereby maintaining its sustainability and potential integration into a future town planning.


© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher

In this project, the use of natural materials was preferred (rammed earth, terracotta masonry & wood), choosing materials according to their level of gray energy and their durability. The construction is composed of a series of masonry walls on the ground floor, which support a wooden volume above.  As inspired by local rural construction, the masonry protects the wood from the ravages of ground humidity and at the same time compensates for the wood’s lack of inertia.  Furthermore, a rammed-earth monolith, made from the earth excavated for the basement, penetrates each dwelling from top to bottom.  It adds a passive regulation of temperature and humidity.  In addition to the windows on the facade, a central skylight ensures that every room benefits from natural lighting and ventilation. Finally, by the manual opening of a trap window, cool temperate air from the lower level is drawn through the house and out the skylight to act as a natural cooling system.


© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher

 Plan 1

Plan 1

© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher

These examples illustrate how the project minimizes complex automated regulation systems and gives preference to passive solutions, thereby optimizing energy consumption during all four seasons.


© Thomas Jantscher

© Thomas Jantscher

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M Woods Entrance Revitalization / Vector Architects


© Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi


© Xia Zhi


© Xia Zhi


© Xia Zhi


© Xia Zhi

  • Architects: Vector Architects
  • Location: Beijing, China
  • Architect In Charge: Gong Dong
  • Design Team: Dongping Sun, Yinxi Lu
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Xia Zhi
  • Structural Consultant: Lixin Ji
  • Site Architect: Dongping Sun

© Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi

From the architect. M Woods Entrance Revitalization is an urban renewal project in Beijing 798 Art Zone. The site was an abandoned industrial warehouse originally and it was used as an art museum since two years ago. The museum operators expect to have a façade and entrance renovation in order to refine visiting experience, and to improve the recognition of the museum’s public image.


Before

Before

© Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi

In the past two decades, Chinese cities have experienced a rapid development: a substantial amount of old buildings, streets, historical blocks, and even topography were wiped out and replaced by newly “designed” urban appearances. Our living environment becomes more generic but unfamiliar progressively, and this separates our emotion from the settlement we live on. Therefore the key issue of the design is to rethink the urban renewal. Although our existing structure is not a historical heritage, such old architecture is still precious, since it reflects the trace of time.


© Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi

Sketch

Sketch

© Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi

Our primary strategy is not to reform the exiting facade, but to add a layer of translucency on it. Hence people are able to sense the old when they experience the new, and read the historical information of the city. Another challenge is time and budget. The project has to be implemented within 40 days from design to construction. Due to this critical condition,we choose the “galvanized iron wire mesh” as main material. By taking advantage of its light weight and self-support quality, a big number of stud works were eliminated. In addition, translucency and reflectivity of the metal mesh turns the entrance façade into a more lively condition, since the mesh can bring sunlight to where it is in shadow.


© Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi

Plan-New

Plan-New

© Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi

We revitalized not only the M Woods entrance but also a “negative” green belt which is enclosed by a fence across the street. We opened it up, and embedded a small plaza there. This plaza is under a metal mesh canopy with same material as the entrance, unifying surrounded space with the museum. It becomes a public resting area and children’s play ground in 798 Zone. Meanwhile, some public art activities will take place occasionally here, besides a regular Sunday Farmer’s Market. After revitalization, this area becomes a vivid city node which enlivens the block with culture and arts, and brings out a more energetic urban lifestyle.


© Xia Zhi

© Xia Zhi

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Museum of Socialism-Jayaprakash Narayan Interpretation Center / Archohm


© Andre J. Fanthome

© Andre J. Fanthome


© Andre J. Fanthome


© Andre J. Fanthome


© Andre J. Fanthome


© Andre J. Fanthome

  • Architects: Archohm
  • Location: Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh 226002, India
  • Architect In Charge: Sourabh Gupta
  • Area: 3269.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Andre J. Fanthome
  • Client: Lucknow Development Authority
  • Design Team: Sanjay Rawat, Amit Sharma, Bhoomika Singhal, Ram Sagar, Shahzad Ahmad, Neha Aggarwal, Vineet Rao
  • Experience Design: Design Factory India
  • Structural: ROARK Consulting Engineers
  • Mechanical: Sunil Nayyar Consultants Pvt. Ltd.
  • Electrical: ARCHOHM Consults
  • Civil : Shalimar Corp. Ltd.
  • Landscape: Shaheer Associates S.J.A. Consultants
  • Hvac : Sunil Nayyar Consultants Pvt. Ltd.
  • Plumbing: Sunil Nayyar Consultants Pvt. Ltd.
  • Site Area: 18.6 acre (75464 sqm)
  • Project Cost: 9.87cr

© Andre J. Fanthome

© Andre J. Fanthome

From the architect. The JPN Museum is a gateway framing the centre placed as a wedged-shaped monument with a massive arch carved out of the mass; its nine-metre height and twenty-metre ambitious span are clearly attempts to push the limits of structural design and construction. Its stepped roof terminates in a pavilion that gifts a panoramic view of the R.M. Lohia Park and the Convention Centre.


© Andre J. Fanthome

© Andre J. Fanthome

The museum within is an experience in space design with the depiction of Jayaprakash Narayan as a chronological narrative of a linear journey. It is divided into two zones; the zone of absorption and the zone of reflection. As the names suggest, these spaces enable absorption of information triggering curiosity and contemplation which then is expected to lead to reflection and assimilation.


© Andre J. Fanthome

© Andre J. Fanthome

Thus the museum is not just a container that preserves frozen albeit inspiring moments of a past but breeds them and ensures that they percolate into current reality, and lay the foundation for the future.Thus while the various exhibits and narratives remain centre stage, the building offers surfaces, volumes and elements as   tactile backdrops.


Section

Section

The convention centre and the museum inserted as anchor points defining a principal node of the city along with their bold but sculptural forms seem destined to remind people of the immense power they possess; the power to bring about change. 


© Andre J. Fanthome

© Andre J. Fanthome

Archohm Consults, a multidisciplinary architecture studio, in line with Shri Akhilesh Yadav’s (Chief Minister- Uttar Pradesh) vision, has been responsible for the design of this museum.


© Andre J. Fanthome

© Andre J. Fanthome

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Veranda in Shanghai / ppas + tf Architecture Office


© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO


© SHEN-PHOTO


© SHEN-PHOTO


© SHEN-PHOTO


© SHEN-PHOTO

  • Architects: ppas, tf Architecture Office
  • Location: Langxia Town, Jinshan District, Shanghai, China
  • Architect In Charge: ZHANG Ning
  • Design Team: LI Zhenguo, LIU Jinpeng, LI Yi, WU Dan, TANG Ying
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: SHEN-PHOTO
  • Client: Government of Langxia Town, Jinshan District, Shanghai, China
  • Landscape Designer: WANG Hong, WANG Pengcheng, DONG Xiaohui
  • Structural Engineer: LIU Mingyuan
  • Construction Manager: YU Xunzhou

© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

From the architect. According to an ambitious plan, the Jinshan Modern Agricultural Park, located on the southwestern outskirts of Shanghai, is being transformed into a suburban park with composite functions. Enhancement of the public space in the core area of the park is the pilot project for initiating this transformation. In the conception of design, the veranda, an essential element in traditional Chinese gardening, has been selected as the theme of the design. In the park, a veranda extending in the east–west direction links up several isolated agricultural tourism projects on the north side of the freeway.


© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

This veranda will be expanded farther westward and will pass through the eastern landscape mound to be integrated with other tourism projects towards the south via a pedestrian bridge. The landscape mound on the south side of the veranda will isolate the park from the noise and sight of the freeway, and the freeway-facing side of the park, together with the veranda, will form an extended earthscape, thereby ensuring high identifiability along the freeway line.


© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

Axometric

Axometric

© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

Replacing the expensive and complex wooden structure of a traditional veranda, a simple, white concrete structure will not only harmonise the agricultural environment and the surrounding modern facilities but will also effectively ensure that the project costs less than 80 euros/square metre, in accordance with the financial restrictions of the project. The overall folded planar structrue provides sufficient activity space in various eastern and western areas of the project.


© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

Elevations / Sections

Elevations / Sections

© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

In particular, the courtyard enclosed by the central veranda and the sightseeing pavilions has become a rest stop for the visitors and a centre for tourist activity in the core area. Combined with the landscapes in various areas, the alternative guiding openings on the walls at each side of the veranda allow the scenery to change with each step. Similar to the traditional high-platform architecture, the bottom platform endows the veranda and surroundings with subtle height changes and powerful styling characteristics.


© SHEN-PHOTO

© SHEN-PHOTO

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Rumah Miring / Andyrahman Architect


© Mansyur Hasan

© Mansyur Hasan


© Mansyur Hasan


© Mansyur Hasan


© Mansyur Hasan


© Mansyur Hasan

  • Architects: Andyrahman Architect
  • Location: Jl. Medokan Asri Tim. IX, Rungkut, Kota SBY, Jawa Timur, Indonesia
  • Architect In Charge: Andy Rahman, Abdi Manaf
  • Civil Contractor: Griya Karya Mandiri
  • Area: 238.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Mansyur Hasan
  • Surface Area: 350 sqm

© Mansyur Hasan

© Mansyur Hasan

From the architect. If we see how far the architecture development nowadays, most of them have ‘forgotten’ the basic principles of architecture, people are increasingly distant from the spiritual dimension, disharmony with the nature, and far from urban awareness. Because of that, Andy Rahman decided to design this house with Back to Basics principles. Basics in this context cover the basics of spirituality, materials, and urbanity.


© Mansyur Hasan

© Mansyur Hasan

Back to basics on spirituality, the house plan is started with the design of the praying room (mushola) as a place for the owners and the people in the neighborhood to pray. In Islam, muslims have to pray facing the Qibla. And the Qibla is slightly on the northwest of Surabaya. This is the reason why the praying room layout is somewhat angled from its site line.


© Mansyur Hasan

© Mansyur Hasan

This unique angled layout is becoming a design idea. So that is why it has a basic shape of a cube that have been cut diagonally. This diagonal shape is elaborated hostically to the outer areas, such as the porch, carport, and the fences.


Section

Section

Section

Section

Back to basics on materials, the building is designed with unfinished touch, such as unpainted plaster, cement paints and rolls (with original cement color) to make it easier for the owner to maintain the building. Thus, these finishes make this house doesn’t need high cost maintenance, with its principle: low budget low maintenance.


© Mansyur Hasan

© Mansyur Hasan

In addition, it also returns to basic principles of recycling which has currently started to be applied by architects, by adopting recycled materials such as used wooden crates. They are remade as furnishings in many areas, from the living room which is public area to bedrooms that are more private.


© Mansyur Hasan

© Mansyur Hasan

With urbanity, its started from the phenomenon that most houses in the big cities (including Surabaya) are commonly used all the land on its site for buildings. Instead, this house wants to give the earth a room to breathe, its only using 40% of the land for the building and the remaining 60% is dedicated as one of the city open spaces in the neighborhood.


Plan

Plan

Eventhough the house has monolith form, it still adopts tropical elements such as wide openings on the sides of the building. So, even with the usage of concretes which are very dominant, it remains aware of the environment and climate, and it is livable because of good lightings and better air circulation.


© Mansyur Hasan

© Mansyur Hasan

It is also to actualize the grand idea of green city, so that our cities are more humane to be inhabitated without losing its spirituality, materiality and urbanity elements. These three basic principles become a strong conceptual starting point in the design of this house.


© Mansyur Hasan

© Mansyur Hasan

Today most of modern people are forgetting these basic principles, and preferring to pursue his personal interests and ambitions without regard to the nature and others. From this house, we can learn how architecture can make peace with God, natures and its city, and it becomes a meaningful architecture.

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Double House / ON Architecture


© Joonhwan-Yoon

© Joonhwan-Yoon
  • Architects: ON Architecture
  • Location: Ulsan, South Korea
  • Architect In Charge: Woongsik-Jung, Namsu-Kim
  • Design Team: Hyukki-Kim, Minsung-Kim, Suji-Jung
  • Area: 395.73 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Joonhwan-Yoon
  • Client: Pansuk-Yoon
  • Site Area: 253.5 sqm

© Joonhwan-Yoon

© Joonhwan-Yoon

From the architect. The house is located on a sloped corner site in the Innovation City, and it’s looking at a distant mountain in the northeast. The site is sitting at an intersection of a mixed-use housing block and a general dispatched housing block. To use the existing slope, the floor of the retail area on the 1st floor is divided from its corner into two in a diagonal direction, and the level of those two floors are set differently in order to maximize spatial flexibility. For the house on the 3rd floor, its access, entrance and living room are designed to offer a view to the mountain in the northeast. The living room is placed on a space where the mass is segmented in two directions so that it can be linked with a deck outside and also take advantage of natural ventilation all the time.


© Joonhwan-Yoon

© Joonhwan-Yoon

We are living in the era of single households. Yet in Ulsan, decent housings for them are very scarce. For the people who are living in a rented house under the circumstances, the architect wanted to create a quality space. And as single-room or two-room housings don°Øt provide any independent or private space at all, he wanted to give a separate access and a sense of privacy to the residents while proposing a communal space by using a central circulation established on the corner. For the residence of the owner on the 3rd floor, he attempted to place a kitchen, the owner’s most valued element, in a most decent area, and also to introduce an outdoor space which can be accessed from the living room, kitchen and bedroom. 


Diagram

Diagram

The essence of this project is the experimental and unconventional circulation system. The straight stairs which draws a diagonal line across this corner site is an unacceptable concept for general owners of mixed-use housing because they think it will affect the lease income of the 1st and 2nd floors. However, considering the nature of the site connected with a dispatched housing (2-storey) block, the architect thought it would be better to split the retail area on the 1st floor into two independent leasing spaces. And as the site is touching the streets on both sides, there would be no problem to use the entire retail area as one space. On entering the 3rd floor via this stairs, one always comes to face a scenery of distant mountains and the close one behind the dispatched housing block. The outdoor stairs provide an access to each unit, and in the end, turn out to be an outdoor terrace for them. During this process, space comes to experience contraction and expansion alternatively and ends up stimulating an architectural excitement. 


© Joonhwan-Yoon

© Joonhwan-Yoon

The tight budget was the biggest challenge of this project. The owner couldn’t allow going over the budget, and the architect had to use it very meticulously. As all owners do, it was natural for the owner to desire better and more things within a given budget. So it was very difficult to lead the owner who is possessed by such an idea and set priorities through choice and concentration in accordance with the budget. But during that process, the owner agreed with the architect suggesting to give a top priority to essential elements in order to create a good space, and also he gave full support to ideas proposed by the architect. 


© Joonhwan-Yoon

© Joonhwan-Yoon

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Aedas’ Pebble-Inspired Lè Architecture in Taipei Nears Completion


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Aedas has released new renderings and photos of Lè Architecture as the 18-story building approaches completion. Inspired by the form and striations of river pebbles, the office building will provide a unique work environment along the Jilong River and will mark an important milestone in the revitalization of the Nangang District of Taipei.


Courtesy of Aedas


Courtesy of Aedas


Courtesy of Aedas


Courtesy of Aedas


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Imitating a moss-covered pebble found in a river, the building employs multiple strategies for adding greenery to the facade. On the west face, a series of vertical green belts provide sunshading for the interior office spaces, while the north and south ends feature a series of vegetated outdoor terraces to create “diverse façade layers with unparalleled views.”


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

“Efficient, interactive and healthy” office spaces have been carefully arranged to provide “an urban living room” centered around communal areas with kitchens, coffee shops, libraries and “brainstorming spaces.”


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

The design has been conceived with environmental sustainability in mind to aim for a LEED gold certification. The glass facade of the building has been optimized for construction feasibility, while vertical aluminum fins and the green planters on the west facade lower the interior temperature in the summer through sunshading, reducing the need for mechanical cooling.


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

Project: Lè Architecture
Location: Taipei, Taiwan
Architect: Aedas
Client: Earnest Development & Construction Corporation
Gross floor area: 14,169 square metres
Completion year: 2017
Director: Andy Wen

News via Aedas.


Courtesy of Aedas

Courtesy of Aedas

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Malleco Governorship / Francisco Javier Correa, Cristóbal Fernández, Pedro Hoffmann, Andrés Mas, Sebastián Mundi, Soledad Pérez Martinez


© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla


© Felipe Fontecilla


© Felipe Fontecilla


© Felipe Fontecilla


© Felipe Fontecilla

  • Client: Gobernación de Malleco
  • Structural Calculations: Ernesto Domínguez
  • Construction: Larraín Prieto Risopatrón S.A.
  • Sanitary Instalation: Jaime Vivanco
  • Electrical Installation: Luis Farías
  • Lighting: Mónica Pérez
  • Landscape: María Eugenia Muñoz
  • Energy Efficiency Advisory: José Antonio Espinoza
  • Air Conditioning: Francisco Avendaño R.
  • Acoustic Consultancy: Mauricio Canales
  • Paving: Mario Quiñones
  • Building Inspection: MOP Araucanía
  • Models: Patricio Herrera
  • Budget: 44 UF/m2
  • Land Surface: 2000m2

© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla

Text by ARQ. In October 2011, the Ministry of Public Works opened a competition to rebuild the Malleco Province Hall Building in the city of Angol through a public bid, bringing together eleven public services that were scattered throughout the city.


© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla

Our proposal was a building with a simple design and durable materials that would permit the flexible use of its spaces to respond to the variety of the services and activities that would be offered in the coming decades.


© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla

Both the building and the esplanade that precedes it are designed to support everyday life and events, using the state investment to create a condenser of citizen activities in Angol.


© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla

The strategy consisted in using the length of the terrain, 110 m, to build a continuous façade, a backdrop for the plaza of the Seven Foundations, Angol’s Civic Center. 


Plan

Plan

The volume is set back from the building line to leave a public space along the block. 


© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla

The setback also generated a narrower building width that optimized natural light and allowed for cross ventilation.


© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla

Two existing araucarias defined an access patio that divided the building in two wings, one containing and auditorium and the civil registry and the other with ten public services.


Section

Section

Plan

Plan

Section

Section

To strengthen the civic character of the building and specify its relationship with the plaza, we connected its pavement and created an esplanade where the pedestrian is the primary user.


© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla

The covered walkway along the facade functions as a protected access area as well as a meeting space in a rainy region of the country. 


© Felipe Fontecilla

© Felipe Fontecilla

This covered sidewalk also plays the role of connecting the esplanade, the building and the surrounding streets to integrate the new Government of Malleco with the city fabric.

http://ift.tt/2bPEkpA

Gallery: Calatrava’s WTC Transportation Hub Photographed by Hufton+Crow


© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

Hufton+Crow have shared with us their latest set of photographs: Santiago Calatrava’s World Trade Center Transportation Hub in New York City. Hardly requiring an introduction, the spiky structure has opened in stages since last year to mixed critical response, with new retail spaces lining the central “Oculus” space debuting to the public earlier this month.

Continue on for the British duo’s photographic impressions of the ribbed structure.


© Hufton+Crow


© Hufton+Crow


© Hufton+Crow


© Hufton+Crow


© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

Find more images in the gallery below.

http://ift.tt/2bPV0vw