How Migration Will Define the Future of Urbanism and Architecture


The entrance to the Forum Karlín during reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

The entrance to the Forum Karlín during reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

When we started talking about migration [as a conference theme], everybody said ‘don’t do it, it’s too controversial.’ We said that’s exactly why we’re going to do it.

This defiant attitude was how Martin Barry, Chairman of reSITE, opened their 2016 Conference in Prague three weeks ago. Entitled “Cities in Migration,” the conference took place against a background of an almost uncountable number of challenging political issues related to migration. In Europe, the unfolding Syrian refugee crisis has strained both political and race relations across the continent; in America, Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump has led a populist knee-jerk reaction against both Mexicans and Muslims; and in the United Kingdom—a country only on the periphery of most attendees’ consciousness at the time—the decision in favor of “Brexit” that took place a week after the conference was largely predicated upon limiting the immigration of not only Syrians, but also of European citizens from other, less wealthy EU countries.

In architecture, such issues have been highlighted this year by Alejandro Aravena’s Venice Biennale, with architects “Reporting from the Front” in battles against, among other things, these migration-related challenges. From refugee camps to slums to housing crises in rich global cities, the message is clear: migration is a topic that architects must understand and respond to. As a result, the lessons shared during reSITE’s intensive two-day event will undoubtedly be invaluable to the architectural profession.

A Global Challenge


Martin Barry opens reSITE 2016. Image © Tomas Princ

Martin Barry opens reSITE 2016. Image © Tomas Princ

In her opening keynote, sociologist Saskia Sassen outlined what was perhaps the defining theme of the conference: that migration is not a random event, but something which is caused by the actions of governments and citizens. “Migrations are made, they don’t just happen,” says Sassen. “There are conditions which cause them,” many of which arise as a result of the capitalism which enables our current lifestyles. As a result, it might be argued that we each have a responsibility to engage with the challenges involved in migration.


Saskia Sassen presenting at reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

Saskia Sassen presenting at reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

Building on this statement, Sassen identified different types of migrant: the first was the political refugee, those fleeing political turmoil in their homes; the second the economic migrant, who seeks a better life in a new country. But while these two types of migrant are widely discussed, Sassen argued that the third type of migrant has barely been acknowledged—this is what she called the “economic refugee,” a class of people who are fleeing the “massive loss of habitat” catalysed by economic activities such as corporate land-grabs and mining, or by encroaching environmental disasters.

In addition to Sassen’s three types of migrant the morning’s other keynote speaker, New York Times architecture critic Michael Kimmelman, adds a fourth type: “an often unrecognized but large class of middle-class, educated, mobile people who choose to see different parts of the world and live in different places because they can.”


Michael Kimmelman presenting at reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

Michael Kimmelman presenting at reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

While Kimmelman expects that we will continue to see high numbers of political refugees and economic migrants, he also believes that the 21st century will also see a dramatic rise in these middle-class migrants, and in those fleeing environmental disasters. Indeed he made the threat of climate-driven migration a key part of his message to the conference. Speaking to ArchDaily he summed up the issue rather pithily: “We may be building new towers in Miami, but if the seas rise they’re not going to be occupied in several decades, so we’ll be talking about the migration of people from Miami. We need to think about that much more seriously.”


"Play the City," a giant interactive board game, that asked conference attendees to roleplay as the stakeholders in an imaginary city dealing with an influx of migrants. Image © Dorota Velek

"Play the City," a giant interactive board game, that asked conference attendees to roleplay as the stakeholders in an imaginary city dealing with an influx of migrants. Image © Dorota Velek

For Sassen, taking these migrants seriously means recognizing their existence and instituting legal mechanisms, similar to those available to political refugees, to enable their protection. But it also means taking seriously the role that cities have historically taken in empowering migrants. “The city is a space where those without power get to make a history,” she says, but the current trajectory of our cities threatens to put this at risk. As many global cities continue to prioritize the concentration of capital, those with less capital to offer are threatened with marginalization. Highlighting the world’s top 100 cities, Sassen points out these places host 10% of the world’s population, but a full 30% of its GDP, saying simply: “that’s too much.”

With such a range of different causes of migration, one thing that was clear from the conference’s opening was that at the level of cities, the key question of migration is how diversity is acknowledged, respected and accommodated by the built environment.

Architectural Responses to the Challenge


Martin Barry (left) speaks to Carl Weisbrod (right). Image © Dorota Velek

Martin Barry (left) speaks to Carl Weisbrod (right). Image © Dorota Velek

One of the most striking examples of a city accepting migrants and embracing diversity is perhaps New York City, as evidenced by the closing presentation from Carl Weisbrod, director of NYC’s City Planning Commission, in which he discussed the city’s commitment to low-income housing under Mayor Bill de Blasio. One component of this policy, and perhaps the most interesting interaction between architecture and city policy presented at the conference, is New York’s experiment with micro-apartments in the form of nArchitects’ Carmel Place. Conceived as a way of providing cheap, single-occupancy apartments in the very center of a city that has an overabundance of homes designed for families or the super-rich, Carmel Place is largely about preserving and encouraging the diversity of Manhattan.


Mimi Hoang presents at reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

Mimi Hoang presents at reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

“It’s incredibly important to keep [the cores of the cities] as diverse as possible,” explains Mimi Hoang, principle of nArchitects. “I think the warning signs are here in Europe—the warning signs are in Paris, where they tend to put immigrants in this kind of immigrant belt, the peripherique, in the banlieues. This obviously create feelings of ostracization and marginalization for some in society. We have our own problems in the States of course, but the reality is that if the working class is in the peripheral of the city, that is creating a hotbed of resentment.”


Carmel Place in New York, designed by nArchitects. Image © Field Condition

Carmel Place in New York, designed by nArchitects. Image © Field Condition

And though micro-apartments are of course envisaged as just one part in enabling this diversity, that does not mean they have been without controversy. In a recent piece appearing on ArchDaily, Jesse Connuck argues that such apartments may risk legitimizing a “new normal” of tiny, substandard apartments. In responding to this argument, Hoang’s usually soft-spoken demeanor breaks into something considerably more animated. “We’re worried,” she says, “and we’ve certainly had our fair share of calls from interested developers, and if we think that they’re only calling us because they think that we can squeeze more apartment units onto their plots, we’re not interested. We’re interested if they’re interested in creating community, if they’re interested in creating a new kind of living experience.”


Interior of Carmel Place in New York, designed by nArchitects. Image © Pablo Enriquez

Interior of Carmel Place in New York, designed by nArchitects. Image © Pablo Enriquez

For Hoang, an important part of nArchitects’ decision to engage in micro-apartments was the underlying complexity of the issue. “What bothers me is that the issue is always discussed in isolation of a lot of other issues,” she adds. “But you have to think about all the other tangential, ripple effects of not doing it. Not doing it means people having to commute an hour in; not doing it means there’s increased cost to the taxpayer for road infrastructure and public transportation; not doing it means loss of talent in the city, because plenty of people, especially creatives, are leaving New York for cities like Philadelphia.”


Joana Dabaj and Riccardo Conti of Catalytic Action present at reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

Joana Dabaj and Riccardo Conti of Catalytic Action present at reSITE 2016. Image © Dorota Velek

Representing a very different side of migration to that explored by Mimi Hoang was Catalytic Action, a non-profit whose work in places such as Lebanon has focused on lean solutions to providing schools, playgrounds and other crucial spaces for refugee camps. Among their current projects is the Jarahieh School, a plan to create a school building in Lebanon by adapting Save the Children’s pavilion from the 2015 Milan Expo. Joana Dabaj, Catalytic Action’s principle coordinator, believes that this model could provide an example for future exhibitions, biennales and the like in Europe. “There’s huge opportunities when it comes to exhibition structures because usually they have been done in a temporary way,” she says. “When dealing with the crisis and urgent situations there’s also this requisite that you need temporary structures—because for example in Lebanon you cannot build permanent structures for refugees. So it also fits the same design guidelines of the building: temporary, it can be disassembled and assembled.”

The concept is, at its base, a simple act of recycling. “Recycling is not a new concept,” Catalytic Action’s Executive Director Riccardo Conti tells me. But he adds that “what we maybe should try to push a bit more is to recycle almost at a global scale.” The project also implies that Western countries could examine where they are producing waste and think more carefully about how they could design their products to have a useful afterlife.


A playground designed and constructed by Catalytic action in Bar Elias, Lebanon. Image Courtesy of Catalytic Action

A playground designed and constructed by Catalytic action in Bar Elias, Lebanon. Image Courtesy of Catalytic Action

Of course, one school, adapted from a single expo pavilion, will not change this situation alone. But Catalytic action is hoping their example will lead to greater change. “The reason we’re called Catalytic Action is because we believe in an intervention that would catalyse a bigger impact,” says Dabaj, and Conti adds an example of when this has happened in the past: “the first project on the playground, it raised awareness of the need for these spaces in Lebanon for refugee children. After that, of course we were able to do more projects, but there was also a very nice thing that happened in the same village: another organization built a school, and they included a playground in the school—without us pushing the idea, they knew about our work and they said that they understood the importance.”

At first, the provision of schools, playgrounds and social spaces to refugee camps might seem a world away, both literally and metaphorically, from the work being done by architects in the world’s global cities to accommodate the ever-increasing influx of people to the planet’s social and economic centers. But on closer inspection, refugee camps may have more in common with places like New York than we think. “There’s a deep urbanizing impulse which I think is a basic human desire,” Michael Kimmelman explains to me. “If we begin to think of those camps—where people on average spend sixteen years—not as temporary, stop lying to ourselves and instead think of them as new cities, pop-up cities, which should benefit the people who live there now and in the long-term benefit the host countries as well, that’s a whole class of cities which we can develop from scratch.”


A playground designed and constructed by Catalytic action in Bar Elias, Lebanon. Image Courtesy of Catalytic Action

A playground designed and constructed by Catalytic action in Bar Elias, Lebanon. Image Courtesy of Catalytic Action

Viewed in this way, the work of Catalytic Action and other organizations in the refugee camps of Lebanon might be seen as the first urbanizing actions in the birth of new cities—cities which are much more aware of how migration fits into both their past and future than many of today’s mature cities.

The collection of perspectives presented at reSITE’s 2016 conference was full of lessons for planners, politicians, and policy-makers. But perhaps the greatest lesson for architects was summed up by Michael Kimmelman: “I think the whole question of migration allows us to rethink what cities should look like. There’s never been a moment when there’s such a demand to think on such a large scale about how we build our cities and build the world. For architects and urban planners I would think this is one of the great moments to be in the profession.”

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Educational Center ‘Montecarlo Guillermo Gaviria Correa’ / EDU – Empresa de Desarrollo Urbano de Medellín


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango


© Alejandro Arango


© Alejandro Arango


© Alejandro Arango


© Alejandro Arango

  • Client: Municipality of Medellin – Secretary of Education and Culture
  • Work Team Company: General Manager Urban Development Enterprise; Eng. Cesar Augusto Hernandez Correa (current), Eng. Maria Margarita Ángel Bernal 2012-2015
  • Design Directors Architects: John Octavio Ortiz Lopera (current), Gustavo Restrepo, Juan Mejia
  • Architects: Lina Arrubla, Julian Esteban Gómez Carvajal, Maria Mercedes Arango, Julián Gutiérrez, Marcela Jaramillo, Verónica Franco, Kelton Camilo Holguín, Beatriz Oquendo, Jaime Marín, Ana Mercedes Suárez, Juliana Ochoa, Marcela Velasquez, Érica Ruiz
  • Bioclimatic Consultant: PVG architects
  • Environmental Consultant: Eng. Mauricio Jaramillo
  • Free And Recreation Area: 3,463 sqm
  • Public Space Area: 1,198 sqm
  • Investment: $ 11.376’000.000 COP – $ 3’703.697 USD

© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

Transformation of Medellin, education and culture have been the main platform for true social changes, where physical infrastructures are essential in the inclusion of quality policies in areas where state hasn’t been before and low levels of human development are common. These spaces are operated from Educational Ministry and Citizen Culture, seeking mainly to improve the education quality to reduce dropout and repetition rates in early grades in elementary school. This project it’s about how to contribute to citizen encounter, integrating these infrastructures to the city, to its inhabitants and the recovery of public space.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

MEDELLIN Transformation has given the public space and the public building, the most important value to build a place for the citizen encounter and the best scenario where it is possible to build a society that based on diversity, is recognized and accepted as the way to a better living.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

State coordination with its programs and projects in bounded strategic territories that allows integral transformations of high physical and social impact, where planning and urbanism is the vehicle.


Plan

Plan

The design conceived from the Urban Development Enterprise – EDU through its design workshop, realized that the impact on the transformation of neighborhood and their inhabitants was successful through the gathering of programs and projects compactly, linking it to the development of public space for community encounters. The challenge for EDU was to consolidate under the strategy, new educational centralities, the united work of different government entities, Buen Comienzo, Secretary of Education, Secretary of Culture and Secretary of Environment, to focus all joint actions in the same territory. A Urban design created in turn by the hand of community and its ideas, which guaranteed an identity and ownership by them.

Architecture and urbanism as platforms for meeting among the state with its programs and projects and communities with their dreams and ideas achieving social innovation.

We learned how to listen to our main customers, citizens.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

This project was placed precisely on the footprint of an old billiards factory located in an antique farm called Montecarlo, a vacant lot in the neighborhood Las Granjas at the comuna 3 (Manrique) in Medellin. One of the challenges was to concentrate a number of facilities that would lead a training process for the community, from the attention to pregnant mothers until training future musicians for the city. This allows us to conclude that not only projects are undertaken, but profound social changes are made.


Diagram

Diagram

Public architecture should celebrate the combination of ages, cultures, lifestyles and activities, along with animation provided by streets, squares and informal life that contains and act as a facilitator.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

This project articulates a program composed by a kindergarten, a quality high school and a music school, which were involved in the middle of a recovered forest that becomes environmental park for the community. In short an Educational Centrality that respect environmental pre-existences and incorporates them as a fundamental part of its urban plan. 


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

Respect for nature. Trees, shrubs and existing plants are the basis of design, architecture link up and involve them. Each on increases the value of the spaces generated.


Diagram

Diagram

This is a new version of facilities for Medellin were conceived from the “Containers knowledge” concept, the idea of ​​a school that must be opened for changing the paradigm of limit instead of space of transition between the public and the school, change the grille for public hall where the community and the scholars is welcome. For this centrality it is about to form a large cover that allows the basic act of educating and get together students and the community around knowledge.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

“Architecture without limits; public transformations erase barriers and reject “locked” spaces favoring open spaces. Buildings that get up on the first floors, generate thresholds, and ensure that buildings are the enclosure itself. “

These facilities are located strategically on the first floor of the architectural programs intensively used by the community, which are borrow by local people for training and leisure, the computers room, the recreational area (soccer field) and school restaurant among others.


Diagram

Diagram

Architectures who value the day to day affairs, and enhance the neighborhood life style. To stare from balcony, to descry, to play in the street, to talk on the terrace, to sip a coffee in a corner store, the neighborhood has taught us to value this cultural wealth and how to bring it to our projects.

Four architectural premises structure the idea of ​​these centralities:

1. To create assembly modules: The regularization of replicable building elements permit thanks to its disposal, to build between them some dynamic spaces for the encounter. It’s about to generate quiet architecture systems easily buildable.

2. Integrator Voids: courtyards, walkways, forests, niches, squares, entrances, lobbies, endowed with qualities that stimulate the experience of citizens, producing desire to get in and study.

3. Space + Lived Experience: The construction of educational spaces, recreational places that stimulates to learn at different scales. Color, shapes, textures, dimensions, spaces of interaction and encounter.

4. Sustainability and Clean Buildings: Sustainability is an obligation and duty to the public sector, good architecture itself must be sustainable from the technical, social, economic and environmental.


Diagram

Diagram

From a material point of view, the educational centrality gets to be an icon identified from various areas of the city thanks to the intense colors of its finishing. In the case of the High School and the School of Music, the micro drilled Aluzinc facades sheet become with their covers in an area that wrap the interior and the circulation aisles, just like a translucent shell supported by a structural system of steel columns grouped in corsages that evoke the forest trees. These equally are an integral part of the evacuation system of rainwater.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

Public architecture has the ability to become a symbol of the main policies of the city, the public gains values and becomes reference making evident territories for years forgotten.

This veiled container works as a system of extremely high bioclimatic comfort in thermal and acoustic matters and generate spaces. Quad height for the meeting of students, such as the entrance hall and the playground. Under this cover, the architectural program is constructed as simple porticated and serialized modules, with enclosures in masonry concrete block with ceramic aggregates and tile floors of ocher monolithic micrograin. The materials of these facilities are oriented to have a high resistance and few maintenance in time.


Section

Section

Section

Section

“There are no bad materials but misused. To build thinking for 100 years supporting minimum maintenance works that transcend generations. “

In the case of kindergarten, formal strategy is based on a “Toy Building”, which through modular classrooms coupled to the topography, provides a fun experience for infants a space entirely designed for measurements of children. Here the material changes to a walls system type expanded polystyrene reinforced, plastered and painted which allowed rapid implementation and acoustic and thermal insulation. This building is a bioclimatic lab itself by designing each of its facades ranges as lighting, ventilation and percentages of ergonomic exclusive for early childhood.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

The constant challenge is to make architecture that moves, each project is a great opportunity to create spaces of highest quality that that provides to the user and city positive feelings. Public buildings should be urban activators, first floors open architectures that protect and invite you to enter into a friendly content and redefine the places where are located.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

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Kiev / Arquitetura Nacional


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi


© Marcelo Donadussi


© Marcelo Donadussi


© Marcelo Donadussi


© Marcelo Donadussi

  • Architects: Arquitetura Nacional
  • Location: Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
  • Authors: Eduardo Maurmann, Elen Balvedi Maurmann, Paula Otto (partners), Lucas Pessatto and Arquitetura Nacional team
  • Developer: Anacional Incorporadora
  • Area: 1000.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2014
  • Photographs: Marcelo Donadussi
  • Structural Project: Carpeggiani Engenharia
  • Mep Project: Filippon Engenharia
  • Builder: Empreiteira Marodim

The Kiev building history started when the couple Eduardo and Elen – architects from Arquitetura National – decided to live near their families. They wanted to raise a child who could live surrounded by the grandparents, the same way they had grown up. 


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

The building is set in a traditional district of the city of Porto Alegre which is facing an intense urbanization phase. Since it is closely located to major equipment, it provides the residents with the best alternatives for entertainment, shopping and cultural life, not to mention the excellent quality of life that the surrounding parks add to the neighborhood. 


Section

Section

The project provides excellent privacy: each unit occupies an entire floor, in a total of five apartments – each with 136,70m². The common areas are very optimized, freeing up space for the privacy of each resident. 


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

With the strategic location of wet areas – on both ends of the plan – there’s a great flexibility in the intimate area of the apartment. In a more traditional situation there is enough space for two bedrooms and a large suite. In a slightly different version, it can have a large suite with a dressing room connected to an office, for example. 


Diagram

Diagram

The chosen slab for the project was the flat, freeing the apartments from any interference beams – present only in the core circulation of the building, where they are not visible. The ceiling height is 2.8m in the social area, hallways and suite with exposed bare concrete slab. Only a few points of light fixtures were left purposely so that the ceiling was kept as clean as possible, thus valuing the indirect illumination. 


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

One of the highlights of the building are the main frames, which occupy the entire length of the façade facing the street. Each glass sheet has 3,2×2,4m and when open, the living room window has a span of 6.4m. To further enhance the feeling of spaciousness, the frames were fixed on the front of the beam – in this way, when open, not even the window tracks hide the great view.


© Marcelo Donadussi

© Marcelo Donadussi

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Gabriel Dawe’s Installation Recreates the Light Spectrum Using Nothing But Yarn


© Ron Blunt

© Ron Blunt

Along with eight other contemporary artists, Mexican artist Gabriel Dawe is exhibiting his installation called ‘Plexus A1’ within the WONDER display at the Renwick Gallery until July 10. WONDER is an exhibition showing nine very different projects within Renwick Gallery, all of which use large-scale and/or unexpected materials. Dawe uses around 100 kilometers of cotton yarn to create a colorful installation that is similar to the light spectrum.


© Ron Blunt

© Ron Blunt

The installation is “basically the superposition of two architectural structures made from the main material in clothes,” says Gabriel Dawe on the Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM) Youtube channel. “I started working with textiles as a way to challenge the notions of gender identity. I grew up in Mexico City where there is a strong notion of the “macho” culture which forbade me to investigate textiles as a child. Now as an adult, I decided to challenge this continuous culture.” 


© Ron Blunt

© Ron Blunt

© Ron Blunt

© Ron Blunt

To mount the thread, Dawe placed four main supports (two on the floor and two on the ceiling) with several hooks each. He then designed a special tool made out of a large stick that acts like a giant needle, weaving the thread from the floor to the ceiling without a problem and as often as necessary. There are thousands of connections between the hooks on the floor and the ceiling, each thread measuring around 100 kilometres. Seen close together the threads appear to be “frozen rays of light.”


© Ron Blunt

© Ron Blunt

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Mecanoo Reveals Plans for Massive Green Train Station in Taiwan


Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Netherlands-based Mecanoo Architecten has unveiled its plans for the new Kaohsiung Station, the centerpiece of the massive Kaohsiung Metropolitan Area Underground Railway Project in Taiwan.

The project, which will occupy an 8.5-hectare site, will act as a green connector unifying different modes of transportation and represent Kaohsiung’s vision for its future as a sustainable city.

With its curvilinear landscaped canopy, the transportation hub will integrate train, metro, bus, taxi, bicycle services, and will create green public space for pedestrians and cyclists alike. The canopy will additionally connect a hotel, commercial buildings, shops, restaurants, and other facilities.


Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

The sprawling green canopy protects the open public plaza underneath from Kaohsiung’s tropical climate like large trees would do. Here people can meet, enjoy a refreshing breeze, or visit events that take place at the station, like a farmers’ market, second-hand market, traditional open-air opera or a mobile library. – Francine Houben, creative director of Mecanoo Architecten


Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Visitors arriving at the station via underground train and metro platforms will pass through the Station’s central hall, a sunken plaza that features a bright ceiling of oval-shaped tiles.


Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Work on the project began in 2014 and is expected to be completed in 2024.

Learn more about the project here.

  • Architects: Mecanoo
  • Location: Section 2, Jianguo Rd, Fengshan District, Kaohsiung City, Taiwan 830
  • Area: 182000.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2024
  • Photographs: Courtesy of Mecanoo

News via Mecanoo Architecten

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Balboa Bar & Gym / helsinkizurich


© Jochen Splett

© Jochen Splett


© Jochen Splett


© Jochen Splett


© Jochen Splett


© Jochen Splett

  • Architects: helsinkizurich
  • Location: Am Schanzengraben 19, 8002 Zürich, Switzerland
  • Architect In Charge: helsinkizurich
  • Design Team: Mirjam Niemeyer, Tommi Mäkynen
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Jochen Splett

© Jochen Splett

© Jochen Splett

From the architect. Balboa is an urban fitness start-up. We designed their first fixed location – Balboa Bar & Gym – in the banking district of Zurich. The design is based on functionality, authenticity, collectivity and openness. The goal was not only to create a new place-to-be, but further to challenge common perception of what “fitness” is about and to open up the Balboa community to grow beyond gym- goers. People and interaction are in the center of the concept.


© Jochen Splett

© Jochen Splett

Section

Section

© Jochen Splett

© Jochen Splett

The concept mixes two uses that normally would not be considered a “match”. The ground floor works as a regular, fully-fledged bar and the gym is located downstairs. This unorthodox mix is celebrated in the architecture. Generous roughly cut openings allow for visual connections between the two floors and their partly differing clientele – and also bring natural light in to the basement. The connecting effect is amplified by lighting. Further ample uncovered windows connect the bar to the outer world. Inside, the long copper bar, wide concrete drinking fountains, a big communal table and the „mixed-zone“ downstairs (housing shared toilets) are designed as places of encounter.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Balboa Bar & Gym is located in the ground floor and basement of an existing modernistic office building from the 60’s. For functionality the spatial organization was optimized, new connections between the floors were added to make the most out of the available space in all three dimensions. To stay true to urban spirit Balboa’s (and in order to deal with the tight budget) the look and feel was kept functional and authentic. Surfaces were, when possible, left as found or toned to an all- grey palette. The reduced backdrop was then contrasted with black steel, a few splashes of signal red, copper, light beech wood and cognac leather to add graphic accents and warmth.


© Jochen Splett

© Jochen Splett

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Video: Designing Through Time – Home Economics at the 2016 Venice Biennale

In this interview, presented in collaboration with PLANE—SITE, Jack Self—co-curator of the British Pavilion at the 2016 Venice Biennale—reveals how the frontline of architecture in Britain today is not just a housing crisis, but “a crisis of the home.” In provocatively presenting “the banal,” Self reveals why the British participation at the 2016 Venice Biennale proposes five new models for domestic life, each curated through time of domestic occupancy, alongside how it seeks to address the ways in which we might live in the future.

Through five distinct periods (hours, days, months, years and decades) [the exhibition] argues that by designing first with time (as opposed to space) we can overturn the functionalist perspective in western architecture and reinstate a rationalist understanding of dwelling. As far as we are aware, it is also the first exhibition on architecture to be curated through time in the home.

Each of these five models addresses a different facet of our “frontline” crisis of living, from how to prevent speculation and exploitation in real estate markets to how sharing can be a form of luxury and not a compromise. Each model has been developed in an intensely pragmatic and totalising way, by harnessing the expertise of diverse advisors and collaborators ranging from developers and financial institutions to engineers, architects, artists, fashion designers, photographers and filmmakers.


Central Room. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

Central Room. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

Jack Self is an architect and writer. He curated the British Pavilion with Finn Williams and Shumi Bose.Home Economics was commissioned by the British Council.

Home Economics: Inside the British Pavilion at the 2016 Venice Biennale
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LightPathAKL / Monk Mackenzie Architects


© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt


© Russ Flatt


© Russ Flatt


© Russ Flatt


© Russ Flatt

  • Landscape: LandLAB
  • Artist: Katz Maihi
  • Engineer: GHD
  • Contractor: Hawkins Construction

© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt

From the architect. LightPathAKL transforms six hundred meters of redundant highway infrastructure into a dynamic cycleway completing a vital link in Auckland’s inner city cycle network.


© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt

LightPathAKL was initiated when a study identified the potential of an unused former highway offramp to be repurposed to form the western route of an inner city cycleway and complete Auckland’s inner city cycle network.


Site Plan

Site Plan

Architecturally the project had to work simultaneously at two scales: the macro and the micro – the city and the individual.  The project was also primarily conceived equally as a piece of urban art as it was urban design.


© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt

At the city scale, the project was just one strand, albeit now unused, of a larger and multiple level confluence of highways that run through Auckland.


© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt

To create an impact at this wider city scale a simple yet bold strategy was employed.

The former asphalt highway was given a highly vivid and provocative pink resin and aggregate surfacing. This transformed the space from a disused highway into a highly contemporary urban space used by cyclists and pedestrians.


Section

Section

A dusk and evening dimension was created by placing over 300 LED custom light boxes along the eastern edge of the cycleway to create a light spine.

These were fully programmable and contained sensors to create a digital infrastructure to allow an artist to create an infinite array of experiences. This reinforced the macro realm of the project and created an interactive light sculpture that transformed the new urban space and gave the project its name.


© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt

Maori artist Katz Maihi formed a crucial part of the team to imbue the contemporary project with a sense of narrative, place and speak to the user and micro scale.

Aluminium plates, engraved with original Katz artworks were subtly integrated into the western edge of the cycleway barrier. In addition to this, the pink surfacing was concluded at its northern end in another 27 metre long original artwork that morphed the surfacing back to asphalt.


© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt

The project is a bold statement in Auckland’s urban realm, illustrating movement, speed and aspiration. The project hurtles through the active highway network – the immersive character and identity of the project varying from one vantage point to another, across the day and night, and around the adjacent precincts.


© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt

It takes on the often overused definition of urban connectivity and profoundly redefines it with a persuasive use of colour, materiality and technology. In the process, it contributes to a dispersal of ones perception of what it is to move about a city with an intoxicating cycling, pedestrian and transportation event.

More than 100,000 cycle journeys have been made on #LightPathAKL, cementing its place as a now critical piece of cycling infrastructure in the city.


© Russ Flatt

© Russ Flatt

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Two Courtyards House + Bridge 130 Cafe / Lee.haan.architects


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon


© Joonhwan Yoon


© Joonhwan Yoon


© Joonhwan Yoon


© Joonhwan Yoon

  • Architects: Lee.haan.architects
  • Location: Hwagae, Hadong, South Korea
  • Architects In Charge: Hoseok Lee, Boyoung Han
  • Area: 390.09 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Joonhwan Yoon
  • House: 183.5 sqm
  • Cafe: 206.59 sqm

© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

From the architect. To the west, the site is accessed by the famous road as known as the ‘Road to the Ssanggyesa Temple’ or the ‘Simni (10 ri) Cherry Blossom Avenue, Hadong.’ To the east, it is overlooking the Hwagaegol Valley and provides the view towards the distant tips of Jirisan Mountain, wild tea plantation, and the village.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

The site is open all the way round and so required a solution that maintains the home privacy in its entirety as well as providing the view of surrounding natural landscape at any place within the house.

We made the cafe adjacent to the Cherry Blossom Avenue frequented by passers-by, and located the house far from the road so as to embrace two courtyards.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

Two Courtyards House
The outer courtyard does not bother to visually block the inside, but enables free access. The entry hall, laundry, carpenter’s store, additional floored hall, and faucets are located around the courtyard, in order to embrace the meeting with neighbors and such an everyday life as to be quite laborious like Kimchi-making and laundry.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

Around the inner courtyard, the living room, the kitchen, and the main room are arranged in an L-shaped form, while a long floored hall was located towards the valley.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

The floored hall was completely open towards the valley, but guaranteed intimacy towards the village road with an additional door installed. While the distinction of inside or outside between the courtyard and the living room disappeared, the privacy was stabilized.


Plan

Plan

Going through the stepping stones on water, the gate, and the outer courtyard and entering the living room, one can see the valley under one’s feet and the distant landscape of wild tea plantation, which are invisible from outside.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

Going upstairs to the study, one can also see the powerful and far-reaching landscape of the Jirisan valley that meanders through the north-south axis.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

The exterior was clad with grey cement blocks and red cedar in their raw states so as to be well harmonized with the mountain, green tea plantation, cherry blossom trees, and unknown species of grass outside.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

Bridge 130 Cafe
Like an old scenic gazebo where the literati enjoyed a refined taste, the cafe is maximally open where one can enjoy the flavor of the Cherry Blossom Avenue and the scenery of the valley.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

The site, whose level is about two meters apart from that of the Avenue, was partly elevated to make the cherry blossom trees and the cafe meet with each other.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

The floor and the ceiling were clad with the same material for both the inside and the outside in order to extend the inner atmosphere towards the outside continuously. This is to extend the cafe towards the outdoor space shaded by the cherry blossom trees. At the outdoor space, one can see the whole look of the house aside as well as enjoying the landscape of the valley stretching to a distance.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

Designed to make easy access to the house, the bridge between the cafe and the house has a similar pattern with the handrail of the old Jeonggeumdari Bridge, so as to reflect the client’s past memories of the old charming bridge just beside the site.


© Joonhwan Yoon

© Joonhwan Yoon

We hope this house will be with composure and wisdom to enjoy together or alone the nature of Jirisan Mountain whose landscape is variegated with the four seasons.

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Bima Microlibrary / SHAU Bandung


© Sanrok Studio

© Sanrok Studio


© Sanrok Studio


© Sanrok Studio


© Sanrok Studio


© Sanrok Studio

  • Architects: SHAU Bandung
  • Location: Jl. Bima, Arjuna, Cicendo, Kota Bandung, Jawa Barat, Indonesia
  • Team: Florian Heinzelmann, Daliana Suryawinata, Yogi Ferdinand with Rizki Supratman, Roland Tejo Prayitno, Aditya Kusuma, Octavia Tunggal, Timmy Haryanto, Telesilla Bristogianni, Margaret Jo
  • Client: Dompet Dhuafa, City of Bandung
  • Area: 160.0 sqm
  • Photographs: Sanrok Studio
  • Contractor: Yogi Pribadi, Pramesti Sudjati
  • Signage Graphic Design: Nusae
  • Supported By: Dompet Dhuafa, Urbane Community , Indonesian Diaspora Foundation
  • Construction Costs: 35.000 Euro

© Sanrok Studio

© Sanrok Studio

The Microlibrary is located at Taman Bima, Bima Street in Bandung in a small square in a Kampung neighborhood near the airport. The neighborhood consists of middle class housing on one side and a Kampung (village) like structure on the other, where less affluent people live. The Taman Bima Microlibrary is the first realized prototype of a series of small libraries in different locations throughout Indonesia, which we intend to build.


Plan

Plan

With an Interest in books and reading declining in the past years, the illiteracy rate and school dropout rate in Indonesia remains high. Our mission is to rekindle interest in books by offering a dedicated place for reading and learning, availability of books, other media and courses. The Microlibrary adds identity and is a source of pride for all the people in the neighborhood. The activities and teaching are currently supported and organized by Dompet Dhuafa (Pocket for the Poor) and the Indonesian Diaspora Foundation. However, the ultimate goal is to enable the local people to organize the content and maintenance independently. 


© Sanrok Studio

© Sanrok Studio

The building is situated in a small square with a preexisting stage that  was already used by the local community for gatherings, events, hanging out and sports activities. Our intention was to add rather than take away, so we decided to enhance the open stage by shading it, making it rain protected and cover it in form of the floating library box.


Section

Section

The building is constructed via a simple steel structure made from I-beams and concrete slabs for floor and roof. The stage was reworked in concrete and a previously missing, wide stair was added. As the building is located in a tropical climate, we aimed to create a pleasant indoor climate without the use of air conditioning. Therefore, we looked  for available façade materials in the neighborhood that were cost efficient, could shade the interior, let daylight pass and enable enough cross ventilation. Initially, we found several small vendors selling used, white and translucent jerry cans. However, prior to construction the jerry cans were no longer available in the quantities we required. Instead, we found used plastic ice cream buckets that  were being sold in bulk.  This turned out for the better as they have a more positive image and are more stable when cutting the bottom open for cross ventilation.


© Sanrok Studio

© Sanrok Studio

While studying design options of how to arrange 2000 ice cream buckets, we realized that  they could be interpreted as zeros (opened) and ones (closed), thus giving us the possibility to embed a message in the façade in the form of a binary code. We asked the Mayor of Bandung, Ridwan Kamil, a supporter of the project whether he had  a message for the Microlibrary and neighborhood and his message is: “buku adalah jendela dunia”, meaning books are the windows to the world. The message can be read starting from the top left (facing the front) and spirals  down around the perimeter repeatedly. Not only does the facade give additional meaning to the building but the buckets also generate a pleasant indoor light ambiance since they scatter direct sunlight and act as natural light bulbs.


© Sanrok Studio

© Sanrok Studio

The buckets were then placed in between vertical steel ribs spanning from floor to roof and are inclined towards the outside to repel rainwater. For more harsh tropical rainstorms translucent sliding doors in the inside can be closed temporarily. Mounting 2000 buckets, making the fixture and punching out bottoms of more than half of them is time consuming. However, the local craftsmen made their own punch out/cutting tools to be faster while also maintaining  sharp and clean edges.


Elevation

Elevation

The building is very well received among the people in the neighborhood and we get regular feedback about ongoing events, e.g. school class excursions, etc.

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