House in San Juan / Díaz Paunetto Arquitectos


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

  • Collaborators: Arq. Ariel Santiago, Danniely Staback Arq. Néstor Lebrón AIT ,Arq. Jorge González AIT ,Arq. Roberto Guadalupe, Jimmie Vélez
  • Consultants: Green Engineering Group – Structural; DRS Engineering – Electrical
  • Contractor: 504 Construction Managers; Daniel Isado PE
  • Addition Area: 1,200 sqft

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

From the architect. The remodeling and expansion of this existing residence was developed for a family of four members. The site of approximately 1,270 m2 is located on the highest point of the street of a well-known suburban housing development in San Juan. On clear days, part of the city is visible from the second floor on the east side of the house.


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

Section

Section

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

Our arrival to the project was given under atypical circumstances. The previous architect that was working on the design of the house had passed away and the contractor was fired from the project after the completion of the pool and pool house. We were asked to evaluate the work built so far and to proceed with the redesign of the terrace, reconsider the relationship between the master bedroom with the exterior, and redefine the front of the house in a more distinctive manner. Once the design was completed the client hired a new contractor with the required knowledge and capacity to finish the first phase of the project.


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

Some of the objectives in this project included taking advantage of the topography, responding to existing views, and maximizing natural ventilation and light. We proceeded to expand and open the public areas to the west facing the street, which allowed us created a new image for the house and a more continuous and ample space, as well as establishing a better connection between the interior and exterior spaces of the house. Having the main façade facing west, we decided to turn the problem of direct afternoon sun heat and light into an opportunity to create an element that gave a distinctive character and a new identity to the residence. In this sense, we proceeded to create what could be perceived as a sculptural relief made of a long-lasting material that could serve as a sunscreen and to give privacy. This sunscreen creates a play of light and shadows in the interior, which helps define the spaces through the constant light changes and projections. The cellular sunscreen, contextualized in reference to the client’s medical profession, created an organic array made of weathering (corten) steel which generates a tridimensional pattern. Although initially design by hand with an intuitive cellular pattern, we drew upon parametric programming technology that helped us develop the precision needed to be laser cut at a metal workshop and accuracy needed during the on-site assembly.


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

The concept for the remodeling and expansion of this residence focused in opening the interior and exterior public spaces by creating a floor plan that allowed for a more fluid movement through the space, better illumination and spatial amplitude. The design’s formal expression uses a contemporary vocabulary made up of simple lines and forms, in an effort to establish a better relationship between the original structure, what our colleague left us, and our new design, as well as to achieve a more cohesive reading of the structure. We continued the use of concrete as the main construction material and the white color present in the original structure, which along with glass and weathering (corten) steel dominate the architectural language.


© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

© Víctor Díaz Paunetto

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NAC Restaurant / EstudiHac


© Germán Cabo

© Germán Cabo


© Germán Cabo


© Germán Cabo


© Germán Cabo


© Germán Cabo

  • Architects: EstudiHac
  • Location: Av. de L’Almaig, 13, 46870 Ontinyent, Valencia, Spain
  • Area: 125.0 sqm
  • Photographs: Germán Cabo
  • Project Manager: Lourdes Soriano – EstudiHac
  • Lighting: Antares Iluminación.
  • Graphic Design: Ilustradora, Mª Isabel Ferri
  • Carpentry: Penades Carpintería
  • Masonry: Vertice
  • Metal Carpentry: Ento

© Germán Cabo

© Germán Cabo

From the architect. NAC was the last project that estudiHac has developed in Ontinyent (Valencia). The main concept for this new interior project has been promoting the image as Specializes in the world of Rice dishes and Mediterranean Tapeo Restaurant.


© Germán Cabo

© Germán Cabo

NAC is famous for its variety of specialized Rice letter. This would have worked a whole concept of textures and graphic elements inspired by the development of the Rice dishes, many of the unique details that make space such as copper discs micro perforated, the warmth of clay texture, marbled gray marble… create a special palette of materials, colors and textures detailing inside and give a sense of refreshing NAC traditional elegance.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© Germán Cabo

© Germán Cabo

The Restaurant opens into a large terrace with a special system that has created large casement windows, which allow the space to be transformed dramatically from day to night. A surprising staging that takes you to the famous New York restaurant, where interior and exterior merge.


© Germán Cabo

© Germán Cabo

It has collaborated with illustrator to create two large wall charts that reflect a selection of ingredients most used in the kitchen of Chef NAC.


Diagram

Diagram

© Germán Cabo

© Germán Cabo

Highlight the front wall of the restaurant, which has created an installation with more than 200 discs perforated copper float on the wall and that together resemble a large palette of work for the development of rice. A sculpture wall that gives essence and personality to the new restaurant.


© Germán Cabo

© Germán Cabo

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Provencher_Roy Unveil Plans for Montreal Port Terminal


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Montreal-based Provencher_Roy have released images of their designs for the restoration of Alexandra Pier and the Iberville International Passenger Terminal, currently under construction in Montreal’s Old Port. The new terminal will accommodate the operational needs of the modern cruise ship, offering tourists a new entrance into the historic heart of the city, and will provide residents with a new promenade and public space integrated smoothly into the existing urban fabric.


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

The 305 by 91 meter Alexandra Pier has existed for over one hundred years, and in 1967, the Iberville Terminal started serving exclusively as a port for receiving cruise passengers. The pier was never particularly pedestrian-friendly, however, and in recent years the site’s vital infrastructures began to show advanced signs of aging and difficulty meeting the demands of the city’s ever-growing tourism industry. It was at this point that the Montreal Port Authority called upon Provencher_Roy to redesign the pier to serve both tourists and Montreal citizens.

“This is a structuring project for the tourism industry, as well as for residents and visitors of Old Montréal, who will benefit from the revitalization of the Alexandra Pier facilities,” says Claude Provencher, architect and senior partner at Provencher_Roy.


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

The terminal design emphasizes pedestrian circulation and an injection of greenery to the site, replacing paved surfaces with a landscaped green space on the roof of the terminal building and tree plantings throughout. To improve traffic flow, continuous-loop vehicular lanes have been designed to simplify passenger drop-off and pick-up. Additionally, pedestrian and vehicular paths have been separated to allow people to walk around the site uninhibited, while benches and forum stairs give visitors a chance to relax and rest their feet.


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

“From the project’s outset, our aim was to extend the Old Port’s linear park onto the pier,” says Sonia Gagné, architect and partner at Provencher_Roy. “We wanted to create a space that emphasizes the historical richness of the site while also providing a park, a place to relax, and a space that people could make their own.”

In addition to the terminal redesign, the pier will feature a sleek observation tower that will serve as a new beacon to the Old Port, welcoming visitors into Montreal and becoming a new landmark for the area. The tower’s elevated viewing platforms will provide views to the water and the city, and its base will serve as a transitional element between the maritime terminal and the park located at the tip of the pier.


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

The 25,000 square meter project is slated to be completed in 2017, marking the 375th anniversary of the founding of Montreal.


Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

Courtesy of Provencher_Roy

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Politeama Theatre / Estudio Lorieto-Pintos-Santellán arquitectos


© Pablo Pintos

© Pablo Pintos


© Diego Villar


© Diego Villar


© Pablo Pintos


© Pablo Pintos

  • Structural Engineer: Ing. Carlos Scoseria
  • Air Conditioning And Fire Protection Engineers: Ing. Luis Lagomarsino
  • Sanitary Engineer: Pablo Richero
  • Mepf Engineer: Walter Riveiro
  • Acoustics: Arch. Gonzalo Fernandez

© Diego Villar

© Diego Villar

OBJECTIVES

As a result of the need to build a new front of house (cafeteria, administration, restrooms, staff areas, etc.) and to change the circulation layout to provide for universal accessibility, the spatial perception of constricted public areas was doubled. The new building associates with the existing one in a complex manner. First, it acknowledges the primary role of the theater building, and takes from it its design guidelines: material and color, its own height and the height of its formal components, how its façade aligns, and the leading role of solid over hollow. However, this relationship is strained by opposites: the weight of the older building contrasts with a light construction that disregards massiveness while choosing planes that join together following the logic of an origami. While the former’s genetic memory features stone, the latter’s one features paper. The plot of land for the new building had been surrounded by a wall that replicated the material and the esthetics of the theater. What ensued shows a contemporary sensitivity that – as expressed by Solá-Morales – waves from resemblance to analogy.


Courtesy of Estudio Lorieto-Pintos-Santellán

Courtesy of Estudio Lorieto-Pintos-Santellán

CONTEXT

Teatro Politeama is the main cultural center in the City of Canelones (Capital City of the homonymous Department, pop. 100 000). It was built in 1921 to become, for 60 years, the venue not only of arts and sports events, but also of circus performances. Teatro Politeama was closed in 2012, after years of progressive deterioration caused by normal wear-and-tear added to some ill-advised architectural interventions. The local government, owner of the building, then decided to call for tenders in order to recuperate and complement the theater for it to turn into a cultural complex. Therefore, not only was the building envelope restored, but several requalification operations were performed concerning stage, audience and services. The original project was supplemented with a multi-purpose area (for rehearsals and smaller-scale drama or musical performances), classrooms, administrative, direction and staff support offices, as well as a cafeteria. Furthermore, these actions included redesigning the circulation layout and the services location, in order to provide for universal accessibility in the whole complex. The Politeama Cultural Complex reopened on September 19, 2014. Construction took eight months.


© Diego Villar

© Diego Villar

Sketch

Sketch

Courtesy of Estudio Lorieto-Pintos-Santellán

Courtesy of Estudio Lorieto-Pintos-Santellán

PERFORMANCE

Since it was reopened, the Politeama Cultural Complex has shown great vitality. Programming has been very busy in all its different areas: music, dance, theater, academic and social activities, etc., most often filled to capacity. As to education, it hosts a branch of the National Dance School, a permanent theater troupe, and a music school. Along with reclaiming the theater building came the improvement of some public areas, e.g. the street became semi-pedestrian, as an extension of the neighboring square. Opposite the Complex stands another historical building in precarious conditions, which nonetheless hosts music classes, both instrumental and lyrical. Based on the success of Teatro Politeama, it has been announced that this building will be refurbished. Once this becomes a reality, Canelones will have a Cultural Center of a dimension consistent with regional scale.


© Diego Villar

© Diego Villar

Plan / Section

Plan / Section

Courtesy of Estudio Lorieto-Pintos-Santellán

Courtesy of Estudio Lorieto-Pintos-Santellán

http://ift.tt/28PmnlU

Video: Reiulf Ramstad Explains “The Nordic Way of Building”

“We believe that architecture makes sense when it’s anchored in the locales where it’s built, and the people who are going to use it. That’s why I’m not so occupied with the zeitgeist of architecture.”

In this interview from Louisiana Channel, Oslo-based architect Reiulf Ramstad discusses how the Scandinavian landscape is at the core of his design concepts. In a context of globalization, increased mobility, and communication medias, Ramstad believes “the depth of the locale becomes shallow.” His architecture contrasts this mainstream approach by offering designs specifically tailored to Norwegian cultural heritage and the landscape of its remote areas.


National Tourist Route Trollstigen / Reiulf Ramstad Architects + Oslo Norway . Image Courtesy of Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter

National Tourist Route Trollstigen / Reiulf Ramstad Architects + Oslo Norway . Image Courtesy of Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter

Ramstad first introduces his project for the National Tourist Route in Trollstigen, an opportunity to build in one of Norway’s most impressive landscapes. Norway is one of the rare places where untouched nature is familiar, so Ramstad wanted visitors to feel surrounded by the larger landscape space. He explains that his design strategy was to clarify what is natural from what is man-made. The project is “more a landscape than a singular building or a bridge,” as it takes almost 30 minutes to walk from one place to the other. In designing the project, Ramstad explored the “value of depth of time,” which he further identified during the construction process because of the difficulty of dealing with nature’s brutality: “We erected test elements and when we came back the following year, they were gone. I believe we’ll need that insight in the years to come because the climate will change, the weather will be more brutal, so that way of testing architecture through the Trollstigen project has given us a lot of experience.”


Split View Mountain Lodge / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image © Søren Harder Nielsen

Split View Mountain Lodge / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image © Søren Harder Nielsen

With his Split View Mountain Lodge project, Ramstad explored Norway’s well-established culture of cabins as second homes. As he says, “the holiday cabins that are made become a kind of suburbia and in a way the natural landscape turns into a slum because people want to bring the same lifestyle with them into nature.” In contrast, Ramstad thinks that a house built in a natural setting should be the opposite of the urban house. The Split View project is “anchored in the locale so that you almost get the feeling of being outside,” and “some of the windows are created in such a way that when you’re inside there’s just a climate membrane between you and nature. The glass is fixed so that you don’t see the frame to bring it closer.”


Square House Veierland / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image Courtesy of Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter

Square House Veierland / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image Courtesy of Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter

Community Church Knarvik / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image © Hundven-Clements Photography

Community Church Knarvik / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image © Hundven-Clements Photography

The video further outlines some of Ramstad’s projects – the Square House VeierlandCommunity Church Knarvik, Romsdal Folk Museum, and Selvika National Tourist Route – while the architect highlights how the climate has made him very pragmatic, and how, in contrast to today’s global context, “In the Nordic societies people will live ever closer” adding that he is “convinced that quality of life is not necessarily connected to the abundance of space or quantity.”


Romsdal Folk Museum / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image ©  Erik Hattrem, Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter

Romsdal Folk Museum / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image © Erik Hattrem, Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter

Selvika  / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image Courtesy of Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter

Selvika / Reiulf Ramstad Architects. Image Courtesy of Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter

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Mi Yuma Educational Park / Plan:B arquitectos


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango


© Alejandro Arango


© Alejandro Arango


© Alejandro Arango


© Alejandro Arango

  • Architects: Plan:B Arquitectos
  • Location: Puerto Triunfo, Puerto Triunfo, Antioquia, Colombia
  • Project Manager: Felipe Mesa, Federico Mesa
  • Work Team: Carlos Blanco, Clara Restrepo
  • Area: 1144.24 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Alejandro Arango
  • Construction: Consorcio obras sociales Antioquia
  • Client: Gobernación de Antioquia

© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

This Community Center is part of a new network of small format public buildings which have been planned by the Government of Antioquia, distributed in eighty municipalities. This new network is a wide educational project with a public character in organization with the municipal communities, its aim is to make high quality education reach various regions of the department. All the community centers have a similar program and a unique public space. This kind of project set out by the Government of Antioquia allowed to do collaborative work between a group of representatives of the municipality, of the Government and the architects: through simple meetings the community expressed their wishes and needs regarding the educational and architectural project with texts and drawings. 


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

Puerto Triunfo is a municipality located on the river bank of the river Cauca in the West of Antioquia, at 150 m above sea level and in a tropical humid forest ecosystem. Its population consists of farmers, cowboys, fishermen and traders. Its urban center consists of a regular and flat grid of low blocks, arranged along the river with a wide central park full of trees. The allocated plot for the community center is located in the corner of an outlying block but it is near the park and connected to the Cultural House. In some of the empty plots around the park you can observe how the tropical vegetation absorbs the abandoned constructions making them pleasant and diverse. The drawings and petitions of the community were concentrated in the wish of having a building with flexible classrooms, wide spaces, cool and with low maintenance, requests which were articulated with the urban characteristics of the plot and with the educational program established by the Government.


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

View

View

© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

This building aims to complete the block and participate in the existing urban grid, for which reason the building is regular and compact. Its concrete reinforced structure serves simultaneously as support, façade, bioclimatic control and space for the native plants to grow. Columns at an angle and beams are situated mainly in the perimeter, leaving in the interior as much flexibility as possible. The vertical façades are built in metal weaves and perforated walls that allow as much cross ventilation as possible. On the first floor there is a multifunction and flexible space, and on the second floor modular classrooms. Both levels are connected through a ramp parallel to the main façade in two stretches. This building is resistant to tropical climate and permeable. It is built in low-cost materials and local techniques. 


© Alejandro Arango

© Alejandro Arango

http://ift.tt/28KqTAe

Walk on Water at ‘Zero Meter Above Sea Level’ Art Installation Exhibit by Ryo Yamada


Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Japanese artist and architect Ryo Yamada has recently unveiled Zero Meter Above Sea Level, an artwork installation at the Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art in Sapporo, Japan.

Constructed at exactly the primeval sea level of its location, the installation helps to visualize the fact that about eight hundred thousand years to one million years ago, Sapporo City—in the area of the Ishikari Lowlands, where the museum currently is located—was covered by ocean water.


Courtesy of Ryo Yamada


Courtesy of Ryo Yamada


Courtesy of Ryo Yamada


Walk on Water at 'Zero Meter Above Sea Level' Art Installation Exhibit by Ryo Yamada

The piece sits 2.1 meters above the museum floor, held up by thin columns made out of scrap wood purposefully giving the exhibition a fragile look. However, at any one time, the 31-meter-long floor installation can hold up to ten people.


Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Through the installation, visitors should be able to envision the ocean while walking at the level it used to be a million years ago. The installation “shows that the history of mankind is just a moment compared to Mother Earth” says Yamada. 


Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Courtesy of Ryo Yamada

Zero Meter Above Sea Level is open from the 25th May until the 23rd June.
News via Ryo Yamada

http://ift.tt/28KAqZn

F&M House / La Errería


© David Frutos

© David Frutos


© David Frutos


© David Frutos


© David Frutos


© David Frutos

  • Architects: La Errería
  • Location: Plaça Poligono 46, 5, 03680, Alicante, Spain
  • Architect In Charge: Carlos Sánchez García, Luis Navarro Jover
  • Area: 342.43 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: David Frutos
  • Collaborator: Alejandro Sánchez Zaragoza, arquitecto
  • Promoter: Fernando López Becerra
  • Constructor: Proyectos y Edificaciones Vigran SLU
  • Technical Architect: Joaquín Mira Martínez

© David Frutos

© David Frutos

From the architect. The course we started 2 years ago with Fernando and Mireia had signs of being exciting. And it is done!


© David Frutos

© David Frutos

As a good course there have been surprises, unexpected difficulties. And as a good course has lasted enough to evaluate the experience as amazing.


© David Frutos

© David Frutos

Our experience and interest in architecture shows us these processes requires a special effort and dedication if we want to reach architectural quality results in a tight economic context.

So, we asked Fernando and Mireia confidence that, we promise, has been well matched.


© David Frutos

© David Frutos

The house has been articulated in three flexible and open floors, connecting all floors not only by verticual circulation elements but through the patio. The main patio appears as a backbone between all floors, creating the visual references that put on value the space we wanted.


Floor Plans

Floor Plans

Section

Section

But we have also wished a bit of luxury. A luxury resolved in some special worked materials, warm and comfortable flooring, some color, … a multi-ingredient recipe in which the building has given us the special touch.


© David Frutos

© David Frutos

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Ulterior Motives: OMA/AMO’s Reinier de Graaf on “Research,” Europe and the 2014 Venice Biennale


Installation in the Central Pavilion of the Giardini at the 2014 Venice Biennale, directed by OMA/AMO. Image Courtesy of OMA

Installation in the Central Pavilion of the Giardini at the 2014 Venice Biennale, directed by OMA/AMO. Image Courtesy of OMA

The following interview with Reinier De Graaf was first published by Volume Magazine in their 48th issue, The Research Turn. You can read the Editorial of this issue, Research Horizonshere.

Architectural practice requires a degree of intimacy and insight into complex sets of forces. While building is architecture’s bread and butter, it’s not always the best format to make a statement. It’s sometimes not even the most appropriate language to respond to a brief. Volume spoke with Reinier de Graaf of OMA/AMO about how research and media can become a vessel for political agendas.





Volume You’ve been overseeing the work of AMO since 2002. Can you describe the nature of AMO within OMA? How does it sit?

Reinier de Graaf To start, I find it interesting that this interview takes place in the context of research because I’m not sure whether we do research, whether what we do qualifies as research. I don’t think it actually is. As an architecture office that’s focused on building, any project that doesn’t get continued all the way to the end is regarded as an aborted effort or failure. Those efforts can be highly productive in generating a particular type of knowledge that you can only get by doing a project. Yet if you don’t autonomize that knowledge, you can never capitalize on it. So AMO started because we wanted to find a way to, first of all, autonomize that knowledge, and see whether that knowledge could see the light of day in a form other than a building.

To give the intellectual dimension of the office an economic dimension was a very important consideration. Way back, we had this Stichting Groszstadt in the Netherlands, which was a non-profit foundation that deliberately cultivated an intellectual dimension of architecture almost exclusively through public sector funding. These subsidies dried up throughout the 1990s and onto the 2000s in the context of the market economy. So we knew we would have to fend for ourselves, that we would have to properly market our knowledge as an economic entity in order to continuously fund that dimension of the office. Each project became a kind of continuous fundraising project for itself. Secondly, a lot of clients came to us, particularly at the turn of the millennium, with questions rather than briefs for a building. Even when they did come with a brief for a building, it was not necessarily the building that was an answer to their problems.

Like the Universal Studios project?

RdG Right. Like Universal Studios, like Prada, like Schiphol. Once you get to talk to them what you realize is that the building is largely a symptom treatment for the larger problems. Yet as an architect, you always have the ulterior motive to recommend a building, because recommending a building is good for your business. Most motives are banal. This means that all your advice is always clouded by an ulterior motive, and therefore never pure, never fully sincere. So the interesting thing is that, in a way, we’ve been successfully able to eliminate the ulterior motive as architects. That’s not to say that our research is free of ulterior motives though.

I think that’s where the difference of ‘research’ comes in. Where a proper scientist goes into research maybe with a hypothesis, sometimes without, and they go where the research leads them, our research is still in many ways a rhetorical tool to substantiate hunches. The first form of research we do is simply to practice architecture all over the world. This lets us function as thermometers of seismographs of a mood that leads to particular thoughts which we then deepen with the ‘research’. But the research often follows feelings, whereas I think if you were 100% pure about research, feelings would follow research. In that sense there is something deliberately unscientific about what we do.


Europe Iconography. Image Courtesy of Volume

Europe Iconography. Image Courtesy of Volume

Was there a point in the history of AMO where the ‘research’ projects undertaken were self-initiated?

RdG No, I don’t think so. What was the case in particular instances was that we gave a twist to particular commissions, whereby we changed the product. For example this European Flag and all the iconography stuff from the European project; they came to us thinking we would make a masterplan of Brussels. That was the official title of the exercise: “Brussels, Capital of Europe.” I’m sure they came and expected us to look at the European Quarter, that we would do things to it like propose some kind of big renovation or big change of the urban fabric. And of course we did something completely different. We said it’s inherently problematic if you do that, because most capitals are the capitals of countries. Brussels is the capital of a country, but in this capacity it’s the capital of a political system, which you first need to establish the exact nature of before you can ever express it in any symbolic way. So rather than symbols in a city in the form of statues, monuments, axes or whatever, we chose to look at symbols in much wider terms, harking back to Soviet propaganda and earlier instances where political systems had a visual presence – which democracy never has, by the way.

This project is an interesting case because it seems, at least from the outside, that the project’s agenda was advanced by AMO and OMA much further than the clients might have intended.

RdG Yes, it’s partially our own agenda. But the nice thing is that it was not an agenda we had before the project; it was an agenda that emerged through the project as a discovery. And in that sense what we do is still very close to design, where the building is never a reflection of a foregone conclusion or intention, but the product of something discovered while working on it. The fact that the output of the European Flag project is largely visual also allows you to cloud that agenda as much as you want, so you can keep a client on board. If that project would have been text, there would have been all sorts of people from the European side swarming over it, correcting its words into oblivion. So in a way we inhabit a space that is somewhere between design and an agenda – design being our own profession, and an agenda meaning the territory of the client – which allows us to take things further because we’re not hampered by either of the traditional limitations. These projects are very ambiguous. The Roadmap 2050 project on European energy, for example, was also a very aggressive political agenda that harked back to the earlier work we had done on Europe. Yet because it’s ultimately an illustration, we can under- or over-state that agenda almost at will depending on the situation in which we talk about it.


Europe Iconography. Image Courtesy of Volume

Europe Iconography. Image Courtesy of Volume

How has the fact that both of these projects use images to speak altered the course of the project as a whole?

RdG It’s interesting because both clients have embraced these images, yet at the same time rejected the embedded conclusions in them. It’s not like this image has been adopted as a single flag for Europe, but there were a lot of other ideas that were taken. The entire idea of energy regions that specialize is of course an idea that, if it’s been adopted in spirit, has not been adopted in practice, which is clearly very difficult. The image is an announcement of an almost utopian dream, which you can do precisely because it is an image. We’re well aware of that. If these projects would have been publicly funded, the rhetoric might have been a lot more direct; more would have been stated and less implied. I think the very economic nature of the beast also means that a lot of the agenda is there implicitly rather than explicitly. This is the only way to do it, though. I mean, had we operated differently and acted in a very nagging way and insisted on that agenda, none of these projects would have been done.

You have to occlude your intentions.

RdG You have to be able to deny them when questioned, or at least put them in perspective. That map, for instance, in the roadmap, if you take it at face value, redraws Europe’s borders into a number of energy regions and makes energy the single source of European integration. It’s the calling card of the project that deliberately applies a very old cartographic style of denoting national borders, which have been fought over for centuries, to something completely new, flippantly redrawing them. In the unfairness of doing that is its comical dimension.


Roadmop 2050 (original). Image Courtesy of Volume

Roadmop 2050 (original). Image Courtesy of Volume

You must have also been aware of the hopelessness of this proposition.

RdG I don’t think the proposition is hopeless, it’s just that its execution might take a lot longer than drawing the image. Even if you’re lucky, most of the time to go from start to finish in an average architectural project takes longer than any single political cycle. The timescale of a more ambitious large-scale urban effort or even an infrastructural effort will have around four or five governments in them. So if you don’t announce the ambition unrealistically, within the context of a single political cycle, you’ll never get there. The image can also function as a contract that binds people over a longer period of time than the standard political contract, which is only four or so years. In that sense these visionary images play a role in formulating ambitions which are by definition longer than political cycles, and are therefore by definition unrealistic, but necessarily so.

It’s interesting because we did that roadmap in 2009, 2010, and then the whole Ukraine dispute emerged with the threat from Russia to turn off the tap, and people started asking about the project again. One of its aspects was energy independence, not the main aspect but it was one of the things in the conclusion, and that became highly relevant. So all of a sudden a project that seemed to have been shelved gained relevance again.


Roadmap 2050 – EU Energy Network. Image Courtesy of Volume

Roadmap 2050 – EU Energy Network. Image Courtesy of Volume

Are there more examples of that?

RdG Currently in the whole discussion around immigration, we did this project that we called “Hollocore” or “Euro Core,” in which we identified a metropolis on European soil that exists but nobody sees it. We looked at the Randstad, which is officially a collection of forty-seven Dutch cities, Belgians have something similar with the Vlaamse Ruit, and Germany is looking in a similar way to the Ruhr valley. So there are three simultaneous initiatives where multiple cities are trying to be caught under a single nomer, which doesn’t exist administratively but exists as a planning concept. So we introduced a planning concept that didn’t stop at the borders. We identified and conceptualized a city of forty million people straddling parts of the Netherlands, Belgium and parts of Germany; the largest metropolis on European soil whose largest official city within, Brussels, didn’t even have one million people. So you have the most radically large metropolis with the most provincial governments. It has no center. It should never have a center. It’s a kind of porous urban substance, which we said at the time, might interestingly be a texture to absorb immigration. First of all there’s no center that can be threatened, and there is also no dominant identity that people are forced to adhere to. It’s a contested territory between countries, so it’s not under threat of being contested by more. We looked at the yellow pages of pizzerias in Germany, where not a single Italian name featured anymore. So being Italian, particularly in Germany, is a sort of Ersatz identity for Turkish and Moroccan people to become European. Rem is currently looking at the countryside with Harvard students, so this research into an urban area that is both countryside and city at the same time becomes relevant again.


Hollocore Ruhrgebiet. Image Courtesy of Volume

Hollocore Ruhrgebiet. Image Courtesy of Volume

Hollocore Ruhrgebiet. Image Courtesy of Volume

Hollocore Ruhrgebiet. Image Courtesy of Volume

For most architecture firms, research is a notion that relates to a creative process, that is feeding the design process. Does this description fit you?

RdG That is part of our work, for example the Seattle Public Library wouldn’t have been that library if there hadn’t been an investigation into what a library is in the age when everything is becoming digital. G-Star wouldn’t have been G-Star if we hadn’t have hung out with them for months. But that’s something we always did; back when we used to do more competitions, we did a lot more than the financial envelope of a competition warranted in terms of trying to familiarize ourselves with the nature of a project in an extreme way. But for me the most interesting aspect of AMO has simply been the efforts where things didn’t end up in buildings anymore, where it gave us an authority in a completely different domain.

What is it that has allowed AMO to survive then, if you compare it with other firms that haven’t been able to create such a playground?

RdG The fact that we’re big, as a firm, helps. We can absorb a lot of shocks. We do a lot of projects and we’re present in a lot of countries, which means it’s always going well somewhere. Robustness has partially to do with size, but the robustness is also, and I still maintain that, due to the early recognition of the fact that if you want to continue ‘research’, you need to define it as an economic activity. And in a way, the economy of that activity was the first subject of research; its viability beyond being a subsidized entity. That effort, although with varying degrees of success, has created an awareness of that necessity, which I think is what made it survive.

AMO is the part of our office composed of the people who share that same mental disposition, that sense of naughtiness.

I very much like what we did at the Biennale in 2014, but for me the most interesting project relating to it was fundraising. It was phenomenally interesting because initially we had a scenario where we would broker a deal between Venice and our Qatar client to get them a pavilion, which would make them so thankful and grateful that they would sponsor the whole effort. That fell through, and in its wake of we really had to grasp at straws. We had to go in all sorts of directions, talk to all kinds of people. From a networking point of view, seeing how this whole world of sponsorship works, how people expect something back, how in a way asking someone for money is the first step into declaring them a client at a later stage, a process of early acquisition… For me that was very interesting. And I had never done that, not in that way. Normally you go to clients and you ask to get paid for work you are doing or are about to do. But here you go to somebody and you are basically asking them to give money for a leap of faith, almost like a beggar, without a sense of entitlement like ‘we’re going to work very hard for you’. The whole logic was different. It takes a certain overcoming of shyness and sense of duty, but that’s how I’ve discovered the whole economy works, in a way. It’s about asking, it’s about promises, it’s about favors, and also having something very immaterial as compensation further down the line. The art world works a lot like that, how exposure, how being associated with certain cultural phenomenon, is a product. This type of economy exists to a much greater extent than I thought.

It’s the economy of debt relations. It’s an economy that requires an insane amount of energy and time.

RdG Yeah, and that’s why it’s a project. I didn’t work at all on the content of the Biennale. First of all it was a personal commission to Rem – the Biennale doesn’t commission offices, it commissions people. But make no mistake, the expenses are incurred by the office. We were aware of that and so it was partially my task to protect the office. Of course the office also benefits, because it’s still the office that is associated with the whole thing. It’s quid pro quo.

But it’s a risk.

RdG It’s a certain risk, but risks I think we should always take.

If you were to be a bit speculative, what do you see in the future of AMO? How do you see it progressing?

RdG I think we’ve broached a lot of subjects in the past. I see part of its future in the future of those past subjects.

Not necessarily invention.

RdG Yeah but invention is a very tricky word. I’ve done this for twenty years and I don’t think I’ve ever come across an invention. And if we did, we ourselves would be the ones least aware. Invention is more-or-less the byproduct of working on something, the casual insight that always appears along the way. It’s also important to note that the territories we work in still cross our path, like in the case of Europe and the case of energy. New domains are the products of reinterpreting existing issues. So in that sense our future is simply in the headlines, but with a different take because there is a different type of knowledge relating things underneath.

You can almost predict our trajectory. Precisely at the moments when everybody talks about more than half of the people live in city, the very office in whose name the urban is embedded, starts to look at the opposite. That’s our method. The counter-intuitive, the contrariness, is part of us, and also part of the fun. That’s something you can never openly state, but the fun of going against the grain is of course a very powerful motivation.

AMO is the part of our office composed of the people who share that same mental disposition, that sense of naughtiness.

This interview was conducted by Arjen Oosterman and Nick Axel.

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Theatre Maurice Novarina Renovation/ WIMM


Courtesy of WIMM

Courtesy of WIMM


Courtesy of WIMM


Courtesy of WIMM


Courtesy of WIMM


Courtesy of WIMM

  • Architects: WIMM
  • Location: Route d’Evian, 74200 Thonon-les-Bains, France
  • Architect In Charge: Arrighetti Patrick, William Tenet, Ana-Luisa Gouveia de Freitas Gonçalves
  • Design Team: KEOPS, Structure engineering, BRIERE, energy, fluids and thermic
  • Area: 3650.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Courtesy of WIMM
  • Associated Architects: C. Bonnot and Grisan (site)
  • Engineering: SINEQUANON, site coordination and planning, VIES-AGE, economist
  • Cost: 3 670 000 € VAT

Before

Before

From the architect. In the late 1960s, a French cultural policy was affirmed and the democratization of culture under the leadership of André Malraux (French Minister of Culture, philosopher and writer) who defined a « House of Culture » as: ” Primarily a home that should gather all the creative activities of a small town or a big city neighbourhood, in the field of culture ; the House of Culture, and as it uses most of the other arts, the leader of the artistic life of the city. ” and In 1961, the building is radical. It imposes modernity without compromising the city landscape.


Courtesy of WIMM

Courtesy of WIMM

At the end of 2012, there is evidence that the strong architectural design suffered many changes during its multiple transformations. Therefore, in parallel with the pure technical answer for the refurbishment and upgrading, WIMM & the team questioned the use and programming of current areas of this cultural tool through its proposal. The purpose was not to ” re-think ” the Theatre but to transform it into a new device closely related with contemporary cultural practices. As well as being a cultural object, the re-design was also concerned with the theatre’s relationship with the public : give the building its synthetic nature, unitary cultural place ; Simplify its connection to the city ; Restore a space of cultural mediation with the public.


Scheme

Scheme

Symbolic of these issues, the curtain wall “window” of the building has within it a tremendous and rare potential to amplify the theatrical interior spaces. These spaces will be places of encounter, communication and exchange around culture. Their perception both from the outside and the inside will be one of the key elements of the device.


Courtesy of WIMM

Courtesy of WIMM

“The Urban shelf of Jacques Tati is somehow resurrected. We worked in the reprogramming of these spaces and their reading. The ground floor comprises: a large reception compartment which distributes the various activities gathered today in the building, a ticket counter, a bar/restaurant and spaces for the presentation of cultural activity. The access to the ground floors was simplified; the exhibition gallery is thus completely integrated with the equipment. The promenade became a meeting/ press conference space and a projection space creating an internal screen of the city. ” Ana Luisa Gonçalves


Before

Before

Courtesy of WIMM

Courtesy of WIMM

The new curtain glass wall creates an urban shelf that generates new activities. It challenges the cultural program as it proposes new events. The façades are reinforced by a visual filter, which consists of vertical lines that control thermal energy and provide comfort inside of the volume.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Section

Section

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Inspired by Kinetic Art and Op Art experiences, the façades perception changes with movement.


Courtesy of WIMM

Courtesy of WIMM

” If positioned in front of the façade the vertical metal lines disappear and allow the viewer to perceive the activities, then when movements take place objects blur before becoming again visible when facing one of the sides of the hexagon. The actions change with movement as a cultural changing screen” William Tenet

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