Incidental Space: Inside the Swiss Pavilion at the 2016 Venice Biennale


«Incidental Space»  A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

«Incidental Space» A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

As part of ArchDaily’s coverage of the 2016 Venice Biennale, we are presenting a series of articles written by the curators of the exhibitions and installations on show.

All architecture is exhibitionist. Exhibitions are not simply sites for the display of architecture, they are sites for the incubations of new forms of architecture and new ways of thinking about architecture. [1] – Beatriz Colomina

An architecture biennale can be more than a place to simply represent and celebrate the status quo in architectural production. The Biennale’s state of exception and its spatial distance from where people normally work open up a space for examining and critically questioning the conditions of everyday work and production. Although, technologically speaking, more is possible today than ever before, in recent years architects’ creative latitude has been greatly reined in by an enormous—and growing—burden of rules and regulations. Against this background, the architectural exhibition is becoming an ever more relevant medium for a critical practice of architecture. Understood in these terms, an exhibition is no longer just a place for representing architecture ex post facto, as it is still often treated today. Instead, the fact of the exhibition space’s autonomy, and its distance from the “real” world of public and private architecture, has a potential that is increasingly being recognized and put to use. Exhibitions are becoming a place for researching and producing an experimental and critical architectural practice: a place not for the presentation of finished products, but for the production of content. The simultaneous limitations and license to experiment lent by the exhibition space focuses the object of research, allowing for the emergence of new insights, interpretations, and meanings. This calls into question the supposed boundary between architecture and the exhibition. Inquiry becomes a form of display.


«Incidental Space»  A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

«Incidental Space» A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

Thinking Incidental Space: The Exhibition as Inquiry

Even today, Biennale pavilions tend to stage more or less classical architectural exhibitions using models, drawings, and photographs—media, in other words, that refer to a reality outside the exhibition space. But architecture can also be represented using the medium of architecture itself. This is where Christian Kerez enters in: for him, the exhibition Incidental Space stands on equal footing with his other architectural projects. In any of his projects, Kerez’s central concern as an architect is the knowledge to be gained through architectural means.


«Incidental Space»  A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

«Incidental Space» A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

It is in pursuit of this knowledge that Kerez, for the exhibition in Bruno Giacometti’s Swiss Pavilion in the Giardini, has built a space as an architectonic project. This space is an event that takes place at a specific location and justifies itself there. This space is meant to stand only for itself, as a claim or a thesis; not to serve as an illustration of some other space beyond itself, or gesture toward some particular tendency in architecture. It is not a reproduction or portrayal; instead, it is a process and an ephemeral manifestation. This space is an experiment: a fundamental research project investigating how architectural spaces might be conceived and might be built, both in the imagination and in technical terms. In this experiment, space has primacy above all else: space as a concept, as an idea. But the physical manifestation of the space is also meant to be an event, one that gives every visitor a means of accessing the project. In this way, the Swiss Pavilion becomes a place of direct architectural-spatial observation and experience; in the Giardini, architectural space as such is put on display. In this beautiful and unique location, surrounded by old trees, Incidental Space engages in a dialogue with its contextual location, commenting on the architectural domain of follies, whose only purpose is to enhance and accentuate the uniqueness of the landscape. At the same time, it reflects on the location’s connotations as a historic exhibition space, a place where architecture surpasses the limits of everyday architecture, bound as it typically is to functionality, permanence, and communicability. 


«Incidental Space»  A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

«Incidental Space» A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

With this as a starting point, Kerez’s Incidental Space attempts to explore the outer limits of what can be achieved in architecture today—in terms of both technical feasibility and the limits of our own imagination. How can you use the medium of architecture to contemplate an architectural space that is entirely abstract and as complex as possible? How could this kind of imaginary space even be visualized, and how could it be produced? The goal of this project was not to create a built space using any specific construction method, design method, or spatial program. Instead, with the help of an abstract architectural objective, it aimed to produce an “atomized” space, a small space with maximum possible complexity and with infinite interior extension—a space whose visual character cannot be something easily decoded, that doesn’t depict or represent any other space, that defies univocality and withdraws from any unambiguous legibility. In short, Christian Kerez sought to create a space that in no way corresponds to what architecture has hitherto considered to be architectural space.


«Incidental Space»  A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

«Incidental Space» A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

An assignment formulated in this way demands a design process far removed from the intentionality of artistic sovereignty. For Kerez, the actual work of architectural design isn’t found in drawing, model-building, speaking, or writing. Instead, it is fundamentally about making decisions:

On architectural design: every construction is the outcome of a series of traceable decisions. But for many buildings, these decisions all just accumulate without any relation to each other. The finished building, to a certain degree, represents a catalogue of the measures that were taken. But a holistic spatial experience or a cogent architectural statement can only come about when all the decisions in the design process are reciprocally determined by one another. In that way, they take on their own imperative. In other words, a decision no longer becomes a question of personal taste, but one of architectural consistency. It is no longer a question of personal authority; the decision takes on a generally valid character, comprehensible to anyone. In this way, the search for criteria becomes the actual work of design; decisions result from this. These criteria of judgment can in turn only be derived from an overall architectural problem, an idea, which must be further reconsidered with every successive decision. Every new architectural problem demands its own specific means of investigation and specific means of reflection for valid criteria to be derived from it. And if, for us, the architectural problem includes the search for alterity, or for the enigmatic, that changes nothing in this definition of architectural design. On the contrary, it confirms this definition by different means.

Many buildings, particularly in contemporary architecture, achieve a holistic character via a shortcut in the design process: they borrow from architecture that has already been built, from something that has already been holistically worked out. This was precisely the shortcut that was precluded for us in our contribution to the Biennale in the Swiss Pavilion, since we didn’t want the built space to refer to some other space. We didn’t want it to atrophy into mere illustration. Instead, the space was meant to assert itself as an event at a particular location, for a particular time. For this reason, there was no option to depend on any existing work of architecture to attain some measure of certainty and efficiency in the design process. Instead, with our goal of generating new experiences, we were forced to understand architectural design as an intellectual adventure, full of risk. Nonetheless, Incidental Space is emphatically not a space that has been created at random, or worse, a space that has generated itself.

In contrast to an architecture of disconnected elements, a holistic approach to architecture can only come about through the simultaneity of all forms of representation and all modes of looking. This means that all decisions, even if they were reached sequentially, must nonetheless coincide in the moment of looking at the structure. This precludes a linear design process, in which decisions are made independently of each other in disconnected sequence. – Christian Kerez


«Incidental Space»  A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

«Incidental Space» A project by Christian Kerez / curated by Sandra Oehy. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

As an architectural project, Incidental Space attempts to overcome the contradiction in terms between the enigmatic and the technically precise; it seeks to tease out a wayward space using a method that insists, as one of its criteria, on the maximum possible complexity. The space results from a deliberate combination of disparate processes. The character of this premise is not aesthetic or creative. Yet at the same time, the space doesn’t emerge by itself, it is not discovered; instead, it is sought out and then developed. By linking digital with manual processes, with the help of a variety of technical tools of translation, a highly detailed architectural space is teased into existence. It is transformed into a space created and formed by the caprices of the incident, where incident is understood in the sense of an “occurrence of an action or situation that is a separate unit of experience,” or as “something dependent on or subordinate to something else of greater or principal importance.”  In other words, it becomes an Incidental Space. 

[1] Beatriz Colomina, quoted on the back cover of Exhibiting Architecture: Place and Displacement, eds. Thordis Arrnius, Mari Lending, Wallis Miller, Jeremie Michael McGowan (Zurich: Lars Müller Publishers, 2014). 

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House H / Abiboo


© Joao Morgado

© Joao Morgado


© Joao Morgado


© Joao Morgado


© Joao Morgado


© Joao Morgado

  • Architects: Abiboo
  • Location: Madrid, Spain
  • Architect In Charge: Alfredo Munoz-Herrero
  • Design Team: Ronan Bolaños, Felipe Samarán, Jesus Amezcua, Delia Rodriguez, Oscar Hernando, Luis Rocca, Daniel Jimenez, Carla Anton, Jordi Mas, Manel Rio, German Gil, Emiliano D’Incecco, Rodolfo Pomini, Jesus Reyes, Ivan Sanchez, Mariluz Jimeno, Cristina Domecq
  • Area: 1500.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Joao Morgado
  • Structures: ABIBOO Architecture & Jorge Torrico + Alvaro Ruiz
  • Mep: JG Ingenieros, Plenum Ingenieros
  • Construction Project Manager: Carlos Garcia
  • Contractor: Contratas y Obras
  • Plot Area: 3720 m² – 40000 sqf

© Joao Morgado

© Joao Morgado

 House H  is located in an exclusive area in Madrid. The house has a floor area of 16,145 sq. ft. (1.500 m2) and is the answer to the broad and diverse functional needs of the client, a well-known international sportsman.


Ground Floor plan

Ground Floor plan

In the residence, growth occurs in a non-hierarchical order, each space has different characteristics but similar importance. The villa is designed as a sponge, with multiple micro-spaces designed especially in relation with sensorial experiences and inter-related to each other.


© Joao Morgado

© Joao Morgado

The ground floor has the typical program associated with a villa along with many patios that make the house look bigger due to its integration with the site. The first floor includes spaces like office, guest rooms and play area. The basement includes spaces associated with oneself (meditation rooms, gym, spa) and with others (party areas and lounges).


© Joao Morgado

© Joao Morgado

The discontinuity expands from the inside to the materiality of the facades. The secondary areas are built with a façade in exposed concrete, while the day spaces in the center of the floor plan are in stucco and glass. Finally the night areas are shown to the outside in a metallic ventilated façade that reflects the light and create a strong contrast between all the different materials used.


© Joao Morgado

© Joao Morgado

The environmental commitment of the project is noticeable not only in the use of eco-friendly materials; the villa also pays special attention to passive strategies that respond to sun radiation, natural light and wind. The design leverages the local micro-climate through the existence of patios, water bodies, natural ventilation strategies and water management solutions while takes advantage of active environmental solutions such as the use of geothermal heat pumps That Reduce Considerably The CO2 Consumption.


© Joao Morgado

© Joao Morgado

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Sakura / Nerma Linsberger


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

  • Architects: Nerma Linsberger
  • Location: Vienna, Austria
  • Client: BWSG
  • Area: 12500.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger
  • Budget: 18,0 MM Euro

Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Urban Concept
The property is located on a very busy intersection.
By intervening in the provided work plan it was possible to create better light and sunlight conditions.
In order to defuse the “T”-point, a V-shaped courtyard is cut into the building.
The portico accesses and the ancillary room areas are concentrated throughout the courtyard.
A passage in the East creates a pedestrian connection between Brünnerstraße and a park in the West.


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Building Structure
The North- and Courtyard-wing are connected by a portico; the East-wing is connected by paired apartments.
The South-West part of the building has apartments located on the ground floor which are situated 60 cm above the adjoining terrain. The rest of the ground floor houses a 5-group kindergarten and ancillary rooms.


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Apartment Structure
A large variety of apartment ground plans are created through the particular body structure of the building. Openness and the dynamic of the space structure may add to the diversity of living units.
By putting together B-type apartments bigger flats are created, each with a correspondently large sanitary units. The possibility to interconnect the rooms between the B and C-type apartments is given, as well as the possibility to merge them together.
The apartments are designed in a very compact way and are economically optimized. The flats offer the same quality and category of living having less usable space.


Plan

Plan

Facade
The portico is shielded from the street by a “skin” made of a steel mesh. Big cuts in the façade allow different view variations and sequences into the surroundings. The steel mesh covers over the plastered façade on the East part of the housing complex. The façade in the courtyard is composed of loggias and windows of 2 different sizes


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Reduction of Cost Through Planning  
Creating compact apartments. Less usable space – same apartment category and equal quality of living. The portico is designed in a way to minimize the amount of elevators and staircases, which creates lower costs in the building process, as well as in the everyday life usage. The sanitation core is build with short pipe systems.


Section

Section

Social Sustainability
Flexibility and suitability for everyday use is one of the central components of the planning. This is possible through the ground plan design (flexible living-kitchen area, neutral living spaces, the ability to connect rooms, merging apartments) and the possibility of being able to be part of the designing process of the apartment by its future owners.
The complex is equipped with easily reachable bike and baby stroller storage spaces on the ground and on the upper floors. Accessibility in all the community areas is, of course, a must. The ground floor apartments have different combination possibilities which can be adapted for the special needs of handicap people and people in need of care.
Due to the compactness of the flats, a big variety of different community spaces is offered. The diversity of the community areas reaches from a recreational communal kitchen large number of guests, to a managed in- and outdoor areas for children to play.
Clear circulation areas, good lighting and a variety of visual relationships create fear free paths and spaces. Every apartment has its own loggia with a balcony which shows good use of proportions.


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Costs Reduction
In addition to the original measures in the leading idea to sink costs, the reduction of costs in the design of community areas will also play an important role. The idea is that areas which are designed together by its inhabitants are valued more and are better taken care of. Through this process the quality of living becomes better, the maintenance costs are reduced and therefore, the sustainable longevity of the designed inside and outside spaces is assured. The energy efficient building design and the use of low-maintenance and durable materials (e.g. wood-aluminum windows with triple isolation) help to reduce heating and operating costs.
In addition to the reduction in the costs through the Construction Law Model (Baurechtsmodell), the long-term security of the object for the Social Rented Apartments is secured through the 100 year Construction Law Agreement (Baurechtsvertrag).


Plan

Plan

Living in a Community
The project has a differentiated system of meeting and communication rooms with varying degrees of privacy; for example – community rooms and a communal kitchen.
Due to the system of circulation areas of the housing complex, small manageable social spaces are created. Through the large diversity of free spaces the identification of the inhabitants with their housing complex is strengthened. Additionally, the incorporation of the lower social groups in the managed living apartments on the ground floor should create further community building and should reduce prejudice.


Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Courtesy of Nerma Linsberger

Living for Changing Needs
Changes within the apartment are with relative ease possible and offer different possibilities with changing living needs in nearly all phases of life. The rooms will be used for resting, working, playing learning and other uses.

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HEM House / Sanuki Daisuke architects


© Hiroyuki Oki

© Hiroyuki Oki


© Hiroyuki Oki


© Hiroyuki Oki


© Hiroyuki Oki


© Hiroyuki Oki

  • Construction Company: Công ty TNHH Cơ khí và xây dựng & thương mại Tám sáu.
  • Structure Engineer: Công ty TNHH Cơ khí và xây dựng & thương mại Tám sáu.
  • Building Height: 13.6m, 4 Stories

© Hiroyuki Oki

© Hiroyuki Oki

From the architect. This is the individual house project at a small alley in the center of Ho Chi Minh City.

When having a look at Vietnamese towns, we can realize that the buildings’ blocks separated by main streets, and numerous narrow alleys inside of the blocks like blood capillary. The width of these alleys is quite narrow around 2m – 4m, occasionally less than 1m. When walking around these alleys, we can see very vivacious Vietnamese life., these narrow alleys are called “HEM” and these are quite attractive urban spaces in Vietnam.


© Hiroyuki Oki

© Hiroyuki Oki

Concept Sketch

Concept Sketch

© Hiroyuki Oki

© Hiroyuki Oki

Houses in the HEM are usually covered by fence or smoke glass for security, privacy and shading. As a result, the houses look like cages. . The spaces inside the house in those cases are dark and broody. People usually use electric lighting in daily activities, especially in the ground floor level. Therefore we made the design target of “How to design enjoyable house in the HEM”.


© Hiroyuki Oki

© Hiroyuki Oki

Floor Plans

Floor Plans

© Hiroyuki Oki

© Hiroyuki Oki

The site is located at the corner of HEMs and the widths of HEMs are just 2.1m and 1.7m. It is not easy to keep privacy and security. Thus we attempted to set the “Opening with Depth” at the envelope along to HEMs. Several openings have the depth of 50cm -80cm and are equipped with furniture and shelves. This helps indoor spaces brighter by getting natural lighting’s reflection. At the same time, it keeps the privacy by providing the eye stop from outside. The building has extremely simple shape with maximum area according to the regulation and many openings toward the outside. It usually seems closed from outdoor, but the inside environment is astonishingly bright with natural lighting by reflection at the openings. When the window opened, the natural wind come into the house. We designed the steel mesh with pattern covered each opening. The patterns are considered according to client’s usage and referred to Vietnamese local textile. The meshes provide security and eye-stop from outside.

We made different ceiling height in each floor and create the space of the house as spacious as possible. We also use Vietnamese traditional materials in this project. The outside wall is finished by exposed Terrazzo. The interior cement tile is also local and widely used material.


Section

Section

The locations of the openings were carefully decided by surrounding condition and future planning of neighborhood. We design the views of HEMs from openings to become a part of interior space in this house. The housing in the HEM is usually considered negatively. However we carefully observed and transform the condition of it. This could be the alternative house to enjoy the life in the HEM.


© Hiroyuki Oki

© Hiroyuki Oki

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Fukumasu Base and Kindergarten Annex / Yasutaka Yoshimura Architects


© Yasutaka Yoshimura

© Yasutaka Yoshimura


© Yasutaka Yoshimura


© Yasutaka Yoshimura


© Yasutaka Yoshimura


© Yasutaka Yoshimura

  • Structural Engineer: Eisuke Mitsuda Structural Consultants (wooden) / Hasegawa Sogo Sekkei (Steel)
  • Adviser For Kindergarten: HIBINOSEKKEI, Inc + yoji no shiro
  • General Contractor: Hirai Kensetsu / Sanwa-kigyo Corporation (Tent Warehouse)
  • Building Area: 512.42 sqm
  • Max Height: 8,470 mm

© Yasutaka Yoshimura

© Yasutaka Yoshimura

From the architect. An extension project for the kindergarten in Ichihara, Chiba. It is aimed to be a community center not only for children but also for their families and graduates.


Exploded Axonometric

Exploded Axonometric

We provided huge air volume to enables children to run around in the building by ready-made tent warehouse, which reminds of the existed warehouse stood in the same site.


© Yasutaka Yoshimura

© Yasutaka Yoshimura

1st Floor Plan

1st Floor Plan

© Yasutaka Yoshimura

© Yasutaka Yoshimura

 The tent warehouse also covers the freely folded wooden walls that forms place-like thing. We also tried to stimulate children’s imagination by leaving the things like front side and backside of the walls, and even the confliction of the brace structure.


© Yasutaka Yoshimura

© Yasutaka Yoshimura

2nd Floor Plan

2nd Floor Plan

© Yasutaka Yoshimura

© Yasutaka Yoshimura

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SOHO Bund / AIM Architecture


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen


© Dirk Weilblen


© Dirk Weilblen


© Dirk Weilblen


© Dirk Weilblen

  • Architects: AIM Architecture
  • Location: Shanghai, China
  • Design Team: Wendy Saunders, Vincent de Graaf, German Roig & Zhikun Zhang, Ivan Yu, Liat Goldman
  • Client: SOHO China
  • Area: 9400.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

From the architect. SOHO China, a leading prime real estate developer in China, has recently set up shop on the Bund. Widely acclaimed for both a visionary business model and several landmark buildings, it’s an exciting time for SOHO China – expressed through design, the future is bold and bright.


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

AIM was chosen to design four spaces within the interior of SOHO Bund: the public spaces, basement, show office, and club. This project was a balance between past and future – the government of Shanghai is concerned with the Bund’s facade, and rightly so – we all love the 1930’s style buildings that look out onto the glitzy, modern towers of Pudong. 


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

The idea was to simultaneously challenge and evoke the timeless character of the Bund on the exterior, and pair it with a contemporary interior design that was reflective of the SOHO China vision and brand image.


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

We used a simplified beige stone on both exterior and interior surfaces that recalls the material palette of historic Bund buildings and simple, strong white surfaces that bring us into the future. Small details like the 45-degree angles near the lift lobbies and the creamy stone colors offset the open floor plan and bright lighting, balancing the narrative of modern and jazz age Shanghai.


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

The mezzanine floor houses SOHO China’s Shanghai headquarters. The spectacular view informed many of the design choices – this space is used daily for sales and business, and needed a dynamic vibe to match.

We kept things simple and direct: shifting volumes, muted details and bright colors in the interior. 





The outdoor space wraps around the mezzanine floor and features both stunning views of the Bund and Pudong, as well as a calming bit of green.

A reminder that even in the heart of the city we can find a little peace and quiet.


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

Big windows looking out and the stairwell platform keep the tension between city and Bund at just the right frequency.


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

The staircase is also a nod to a similar stair in the Beijing headquarters – a design feature that connects the more uniform, corporate side with uniqueness of the Shanghai office. 





Lighting can make or break a space. This is where people spend a lot of time so we wanted it to be both comfortable and sophisticated. We created a membrane skin for the ceiling lights, so that the whole ceiling gives light. An innovative, sensitive way to connect the indoors with the outdoors.


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

Subtle details like the custom designed carpets and art are in the spirit of the location, and give the expansive space a feeling of intimacy and luxury.  


© Dirk Weilblen

© Dirk Weilblen

The SOHO Bund experience is orchestrated through the layering of old and new, glitz and minimalism, to create a lasting impression of energy, excitement, and change for the Bund and Shanghai. 

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Carver Global / D-Werker Architects


© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo


© Inwoo Yeo


© Inwoo Yeo


© Inwoo Yeo


© Inwoo Yeo

  • Architects: D-Werker Architects
  • Location: Daeheung-dong, Mapo-gu, Seoul, South Korea
  • Architect In Charge: Jieun Lee, Hwon Yoon
  • Area: 1743.27 ft2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Inwoo Yeo
  • Construction: Gaudikorea Co.
  • Client: Sang Rok Lee
  • Surface Area: 2,710.4 ft2

© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo

Mapo_ New development and a hybrid urban landscape

Mapo is a district undergoing considerable transformation in Seoul through a recent redevelopment craze. Large enterprises, hotels and apartment complexes unable to bear the cost of rent in existing urban centers are entering Mapo’s competitive market. Therefore, the image of Mapo is changing with the development of large apartments complexes behind a single layer of high-rise buildings positioned along the edge of the main streets. In contrast, a part of Mapo district remains undeveloped and intact as it was built from the 1960’s with small scale buildings.


© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo

Carver Global_ A strategy for a hybrid urban landscape

In terms of architecture, ‘Carver Global’ sought to achieve harmony with the urban structure of different scales, occupying an important position between apartment complexes and small scale buildings. The project’s intention was to suggest the possibility of ‘incremental development’ in this district which is a mixture of newly constructed apartment complexes and an historic urban structure.


© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo

Rather than vertically extending the existing building which was relatively large-scale compared its surroundings, a strategy of horizontally extending the mass by segmentation was selected. The new program was inserted over the parking space behind the existing building and connected to the existing building. Through this maneuver, ‘Carver Global’ acts as ‘a neutral medium’ connecting the dual urban landscape of the street-facing large scale buildings with the small scale architecture located behind the site.


© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo

Horizontal Extension_ Adaptation to a limited time schedule

The method of horizontal extension was not just an architectural strategy considering urban surroundings but a means for resolving the client’s requirement that the building would be ready for use in two months. By horizontally extending the building, the client could utilize the existing building before the completion of the whole project.


© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo

The project’s time constraint not only influenced the extension method, but also the remodeling method of the existing building. Within a short amount of time the sandwich panel construction of the existing building (formerly used by a package delivery company) needed to be transformed to correspond to the image of a cosmetic company. Metal fabric was selected as a suitable material which could be applied over the existing finishing without having to remove it, effectively improving the façade. This process of hiding and supplementing the existing look also acts like a metaphor for the transforming role of cosmetic products. The metal fabric exterior not only coincides with the image of a newly emerging cosmetic brand, but simultaneously transforms the urban landscape of the neighborhood. Furthermore, as a material which does not exert a negative influence on the neighboring residential environment it creates a positive effect in the building’s relationships with its neighbors.


Section

Section

Spatial Characteristics_ An office for a small to mid-sized company

From the standpoint of an office building of a recently established small to mid-sized company in a society, it was important to conceive a space which could instill pride in the employees in addition to creating a positive image for the company’s customers and investors. In particular, the planning required that the space for this professional cosmetic company should be differentiated from the office spaces of other types of businesses.


© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo

Height and Size

In comparison to the scale of the building, the size of entrance and lobby were over-emphasized. When the large, heavy, metal door which harmonizes with the building’s colorless exterior is opened, the visitor is greeted by a magnificent bright white space completely different than the exterior. In this large double height space sits a long information desk, while the lights of the ‘stretched ceiling system’ shine like sunlight as people gather together bringing life to this space. The building is connected to the extension wing by a terrace and rooftop garden which not only plays a circulation role by linking the two buildings, but was designed as a space where employees and visitors could encounter a diverse array of experiences in everyday life.


Section

Section

Horizontal Substitute of a Vertical Core_ Transformation into an architectural journey

Normally, spaces for executives are strategically placed on the upper levels in high-rise office buildings. This represents the organization’s hierarchy and an order which reflects the desire to amplify the company’s greatness. However, this “height strategy” could not be applied in this three-storey building project.


© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo

Instead, the president’s room was strategically placed on the farthest from the main entrance. In addition, each mass was separated using a ‘skip floor’ system with a small hall and skylight placed in between each mass, intentionally creating a long and interesting ‘journey’ to the president’s room. 


© Inwoo Yeo

© Inwoo Yeo

In this way, the core of a high-rise building was transformed into a horizontal form, creating a ‘spatial strategy’ traversed not through machinery but through an architectural device.

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KAAN Architecten Integrates Historic School into New Library & Performing Arts Center


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

The city council of the Flemish city of Aalst have awarded KAAN Architecten with the commission for a new library and home of the Academy of Performing Arts. The building will also integrate the existing “Pupillenschool” (formerly a military school for children) to anchor the new tenant into the Belgian town’s rich history. The complex will be located at the corner of Oude Graanmarkt and Espalnadestraat, becoming a new cornerstone project where the many communities of Aalst can gather, learn and engage in cultural activities.


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten


Courtesy of KAAN Architecten


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

The design of KAAN’s functional addition starts with the building’s load-bearing shell – thick walls that allow for large open spaces on the interior and complement the Pupillenschool’s historic brick facade. Small group spaces and private reading rooms cluster around the central atrium, which houses bookshelves and spacious reading areas. The building takes direction from recent trends in library design, serving as an open and accessible place for people to work in its primary function, while also being a home for books.


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

The addition’s relationship to the old school was inspired by the irregular street grid of the historic center of Aalst. At certain points in the downtown, streets converge erratically, creating small public squares that hold street cafés and meeting places. Likewise, the library intersects with the existing building to create two small plazas, one serving as the entrance area for the complex and the other as a terrace housing a reading café.


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

On the other side of the building, the Academy for Performing Arts will contain classrooms and a theater for music, dance, drama and singing. The building will be balanced between areas of movement and noise, and silence and reflection, which KAAN believes will create a greater sense of community to the complex.


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

Throughout the addition, windows and skylights have been designed to provide optimal light to reading areas and to radiate light out at night, corresponding to a greater illumination plan devised for the whole of the city center. Windows will also provide curated views of the city and to important historic prints affixed to the walls. The interior surfaces will be dominated by wood cladding, increasing the the warmth and intimacy of the open spaces and contrasting with the cool grey floors and ceiling panels.

The building is scheduled to be completed in 2018.


© EdiT, KAAN Architecten

© EdiT, KAAN Architecten
  • Architects: KAAN Architecten
  • Location: Graanmarkt 4, 9300 Aalst, Belgium
  • Design Team: Bas Barendse, Tjerk de Boer, Sebastiaan Buitenhuis, Sebastian van Damme, Raluca Firicel, Narine Gyulkhasyan, Joost Harteveld, Martina Margini, Giuseppe Mazzaglia, Kevin Park
  • Main Contractor: Groep Van Roey NV
  • Construction Consultant: UTIL Struktuurstudies
  • Installation Consultant: Studiebureau R. Boydens NV
  • Fire And Acoustical Consultant: ABT
  • Sustainability Consultant: Studiebureau R. Boydens NV
  • Area: 8500.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: EdiT, KAAN Architecten, Courtesy of KAAN Architecten

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Tamalpais Residence / Zack deVito Architecture + Construction


© Bruce Damonte

© Bruce Damonte


© Bruce Damonte


© Bruce Damonte


© Bruce Damonte


© Bruce Damonte


© Bruce Damonte

© Bruce Damonte

From the architect. The goals for this project were multi-faceted and ambitious- Design a new, modern, sustainable and energy efficient home that had the highest level of craft and attention to detail.    The floor plan is open and spacious, providing function and flexibility, three of the five bedrooms are designed with flexible use in mind- they can be master bedrooms, an in-law unit, home office or family room.  The house can be easily  adapted to the needs of the owner, and it can change in time as the family grows and matures and needs change.


© Bruce Damonte

© Bruce Damonte

Special attention was paid to energy efficiency starting with the 10Kw solar PV system, which provides the energy for the 300% efficient mini-split heat pump heating and air conditioning.  The house has an abundance of large windows, minimizing the need for lighting, which is 100% LED or high efficacy.  Where possible materials were sourced to be reclaimed or made form recycled content. Indoor life quality is enhanced by the natural light, access to the exterior form every room and attention to indoor air quality.


© Bruce Damonte

© Bruce Damonte

The house was designed to be virtually maintenance free with pre-finished or naturally weathering materials.


1st Floor Plan

1st Floor Plan

2nd Floor Plan

2nd Floor Plan

3rd Floor Plan

3rd Floor Plan

The architect/builder team were focused on providing the highest quality construction, with an obsessive attention to refining every detail, expressing the natural characteristics of materials and refining the sense of craft and quality in even the smallest details.


© Bruce Damonte

© Bruce Damonte

441 Tamalpais was designed and built as if we were going to live here. We considered the plan, details and materials we want in our house, and which we hope will adapt well to your house.


© Bruce Damonte

© Bruce Damonte

The location is five minutes from downtown, yet secluded, private and serene, close to hiking trails and the end of the road, so low traffic flow.


© Bruce Damonte

© Bruce Damonte

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White Arkitekter Blurs the Line Between Built and Natural in Housing Project Design


© White Arkitekter and Beauty and the Bit

© White Arkitekter and Beauty and the Bit

White Arkitekter’s Copenhagen studio has been selected as winners of a competition to design 115 individual homes as part of a social housing project in Denmark’s Allerød Municipality. Located north of the capital city of Copenhagen, the new neighborhood will be bordered by forest and a lake, inviting the nature in to complement and screen individual buildings. The project, titled “By the Woods,” will attempt to subvert typical preconceptions about social housing through the blurring of public and private space.


© White Arkitekter


© White Arkitekter and Beauty and the Bit


© White Arkitekter


© White Arkitekter


© White Arkitekter and Beauty and the Bit

© White Arkitekter and Beauty and the Bit

In traditional affordable housing developments, public and private spaces are separated abruptly and unnaturally. In “By the Woods,” White Arkitekter has softened those lines by utilizing existing natural elements on the site, creating semi-public spaces that encourage residents to socialize in common areas.

“There is an unfortunate stigma attached to social housing; they are grey, static, generic, colossal buildings surrounded by parking lots, empty lawns and concrete,” says Morten Vedelsbøl, Creative Director at White Arkitekter in Copenhagen. “For us, it was important to have none of that, so we decided to let nature lead the way. Nature is dynamic and resilient – just like we want our neighbourhood to be”


© White Arkitekter

© White Arkitekter

The project consists of 155 row houses of two, three or four rooms arranged to match the hilly terrain of the site. Sustainably-sourced wood is used to clad both exterior facades and interior walls, and additional natural elements line spaces between the buildings and on rooftops.


© White Arkitekter and Beauty and the Bit

© White Arkitekter and Beauty and the Bit

“We deliberately created the sensation that nature is taking over. We wanted residents to have a sensuous experience with the woods when outside or looking through the kitchen window from the inside”, says Mikkel Thams, Design Architect and Project Manager at White’s Copenhagen studio.

To further blur lines between public and private, each unit features an individual terrace enclosed on the sides to encourage residents to move their living rooms outside. The terraces can also be used for garden beds or as an outdoor gathering space. There are, however, no fences throughout the complex, giving the neighborhood an open and inclusive feel.


© White Arkitekter

© White Arkitekter

“Traditionally, the transitions between private houses and the outside were abrupt, discouraging people from personalising common areas and the exterior of their homes,” explains Vedelsbøl. “This sends a signal that the community comes before the individual, but it also alienates residents from using common areas, which turns them into dead zones.”

The project is slated for completion in 2018.


© White Arkitekter

© White Arkitekter

© White Arkitekter

© White Arkitekter
  • Architects: White Arkitekter
  • Location: Allerød Municipality, Denmark
  • Design Team: Morten Vedelsbøl (Creative Director) Mikkel Thams Olsen (Architect and Project Manager), Ann Christiansen (Architect), Scott Grbavac (Architect), Daria Cichön (Architectural intern), Marija Ambrasaite (Architectural intern), Ivanka Ivanova (Architectural intern)
  • Engineer: Oluf Jørgensen A/S
  • Area: 11000.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2018
  • Photographs: White Arkitekter and Beauty and the Bit, White Arkitekter

http://ift.tt/29o7c6m