Jazz Campus / Buol & Zünd


© Georg Aerni

© Georg Aerni
  • Architects: Buol & Zünd
  • Location: Utengasse 15, 4058 Basel, Switzerland
  • Design Team: Robert Müller, Vincenzo Maddalena, Rémy Schuster, Jules Hausherr, Johannes Schäfer, Franziska Moog, Yannick Schnetz, Bruno Radelfinger, Reem Al- Wakeel, Martin Schröder, Judith Sagl
  • Project Year: 2013
  • Photographs: Georg Aerni


© Georg Aerni


© Georg Aerni


© Georg Aerni


© Georg Aerni

  • Structural Engineering: WGG Schnetzer Puksas, Basel
  • Acoustics: Applied acoustics, Gelterkinden
  • Ventilation Planners: Ruedi Wirz, Basel
  • Construction Management: Sulzer + Buzzi, Pratteln
  • Steel Lightweight Construction: Arbeitsgem. Rodoni AG und G. Canonica AG Basel
  • Owner, Construction Supervision: Stiftung Habitat, Stiftung Levedo, Hochschule für Musik, Basel

© Georg Aerni

© Georg Aerni

From the architect. The idea was to plan a building which is dedicated to jazz. It was a challenge to bring the two disciplines together as jazz music works with improvisation and serendipity while architecture seaks to avoid random and tries to plan and fix things to make them persist. The second question was how to integrate a new building into the grown city structure of the old town in Basel. During our research we realized that the plan of the buildings on the site hasn’t changed much during centuries although the buildings themselves were exchanged several times. So we decided to believe in the “architecture-trouvée” and create the building’s volume on the base of the old citymap. The result is a diverse volume with a courtyard in the center.


© Georg Aerni

© Georg Aerni

We organized the building’s interior circulation around the courtyard.

This leads to various paths and manifold random meetings rather than short, effective ways in a complex building. Our intention was to create a course inside the building which starts from the rehearsal rooms where you practice almost privately, continues in the hallways where you meet other people and culminates in the courtyard where many people interact.


© Georg Aerni

© Georg Aerni

As the space programme of the building wasn’t fix at the start we had to find out the specific needs of the school and the musicians. During our survey we realized that there is no such thing as the perfect rehearsal room. Some people prefer to play in churches, others like to practice in a garage and some people play in their living rooms. The only common ground was the need for daylight and an atmosphere of private cosiness. Instead of flexible rooms we provided various rooms with different dimensions and acoustic qualities to leave it to the musicians to choose.


Floor Plan / Elevation

Floor Plan / Elevation

The space palette with over 50 different rehearsal rooms is completed by 3 characteristic recording- and performance rooms such as a wooden sound body with a flying acoustic sky, an introverted performance room combined with a professional recording studio and a jazz club which opens up to the city and serves as an interface to the public.


© Georg Aerni

© Georg Aerni

The materialization of the interiour spaces is superior and rich due to the acoustic requirements. Acoustic needs shape the building a lot as it was necessary to built almost a second house inside the house and metres thick walls.


© Georg Aerni

© Georg Aerni

Although none of the spaces exist a second time its the coherent union of the interior design which holds together the volumetric diversity of the outside and creates the identity of the building.


© Georg Aerni

© Georg Aerni

The interpretation of the courtyard as an urban interior gives the project a strong quality. The word campus in it’s original meaning as a field is implemented here, both socially and spacewise. Interior and exterior space are mingled which links the house and the city as well as the school and the public.


© Georg Aerni

© Georg Aerni

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57 Drawers / Alexey Rozenberg


© Konstantin Dubovec

© Konstantin Dubovec


© Konstantin Dubovec


© Konstantin Dubovec


© Konstantin Dubovec


© Konstantin Dubovec


© Konstantin Dubovec

© Konstantin Dubovec

From the architect. This apartment is designed for a family with two small children. It is divided into two unequal parts, where the first part is at the front of the apartment near the entrance. This part consists of a kitchen, a living room, a dining room and a master bedroom. The second part is a smaller area in the back of the apartment, which is dedicated for children. There are two children’s rooms and a play area here. A lengthy corridor connects these two parts with utility rooms along the way: a dressing room/closet, a pantry, a laundry room and two bathrooms.

The front part of the apartment is designed as a free-flowing space, where each area maintains visual connection with the others. The master bedroom is also one of the zones of this space and is connected by wide gates/doors and window-like openings. The bed is raised on a podium and is hidden behind a brick wall, which makes it not visible from the living room from any angle. Thus, the living area receives a visual extension, but the sleeping area retains its intimacy. Protruding volume in the living room enhances the spatial relationship between the bedroom and the living room. It does not reach the ceiling and is trimmed with the sheets of black metal to emphasize the subtlety of this structure.


© Konstantin Dubovec

© Konstantin Dubovec

“Soft” (aka TV) living area is raised on a podium and pushed back from the front windows. So moderate lighting, special comfort and magnificent view from the windows lowered into the floor is created. Living area is separated from the corridor by bookshelves. These bookshelves are organized in the mutual composition with a high-lounger for reading. One can climb up to it using the removable ladder. There is a storage space under the lounger.


© Konstantin Dubovec

© Konstantin Dubovec

The front of the kitchen is set along the whole living and dining space. This allows to fit lots of kitchen gadgets. Custom bar counter on wheels can be easily moved along the kitchen and can serve as an additional work or serving table. Dining table (also designed by the architect) has unusual proportions: its countertop is narrow and long. Such table visually lengthens the dining area and serves as a connecting link between the kitchen and the living room.


Plan

Plan

The apartment space devoted to the children area originally was very elongated. As a solution, the playroom is placed in the furthest from the windows area. Its walls are partially made of glass so not to lose the natural light. The two children’s rooms have similar design and each consists of three parts: a bed raised on a wooden podium, a soft zone with a sofa, and a work area with a desk and most light. This design justifies the elongated nature of both children’s rooms. Glass walls separate the soft and work areas of the children’s rooms – it visually expands the space and adds light. However, each child can pull down screens-curtains and create privacy.


© Konstantin Dubovec

© Konstantin Dubovec

There are several different textures combined in the decor: dark brick, light oak planks, sheets of black metal, ceramic tile and rough plaster. Glass partitions are widely used in the interior. The playroom is decorated with tinted cork. All the materials are subject to specific hierarchy, and as such they create a harmonious ensemble.


© Konstantin Dubovec

© Konstantin Dubovec

The author designed z-shaped partitions to organize the flowing space within the guest area. Their shape is easily visible from the side. Partitions clearly divide the zones and visually expand each of them. This solution is especially important for the sitting area. A person experiences two opposite emotions when being in this room. On one hand the sense of security and comfort – because of its intimacy. On the other hand – the feeling of extra space – because the area expands in all directions above the z-shaped partitions.


Model

Model

There are a lot of podiums in the interior, and together they create an intense “landscape”. However, their main function is utilitarian, because all the space underneath is arranged for storage. Overall there are 57 drawers under the podiums, plus two closets and pantries. The owners didn’t have to buy any storage furniture thanks to this solution.


© Konstantin Dubovec

© Konstantin Dubovec

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Mosha House / New Wave Architecture


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff
  • Architects: New Wave Architecture
  • Location: Mosha, Tehran, Iran
  • Associate Architects: Maryam Amanpour
  • Design Team: Lida Almasian, Shahin Heidari
  • Area: 2800.0 ft2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Parham Taghioff


© Parham Taghioff


© Parham Taghioff


© Parham Taghioff


© Parham Taghioff

  • Team Members: Sheida Ghotbi, Soheila Zahedi, Ilnaz Ashayeri, Elnaz Shokravi, Fatemeh Honarbakhsh
  • Structural Designer: Yaghoub Abedpour
  • Client: Private

© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

From the architect. It is inevitable that the innate trend of human being is tangled to natural landscape, The location of project is Mosha site in the vicinity of north side of Tehran in domains of Alborz mountains.


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

Intensive topography and location between mountains with sightseeing to flat plain of Mosha, inspired us to create sense of suspension and   wide view for all spaces.


Plan 1

Plan 1

Our goal of merging nature with human life led us to have vertical distribution of functions with less land occupation for building and hence allocates more portion of land to design landscape.


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

The adopted shape for this project is a transverse volume with direction from domain to Mosha plain, so the form of three cantilevered boxes, with specific rotation to each other, comes out. Consequently additional spaces are generated, whereas a ceiling of each story is the terrace of another. Apparently high slope of site provides perfect sense of suspension for each box. Functions are distributed from upper to lower level respectively.


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

For having endless view, the sides of the boxes facing the plain have floor-to-ceiling windows with numerous panoramic views. Here windows acting a role more than just an opening or constructional element, They are like a transparent curtain between in and out that overflow interiors with natural vision.


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

An inclined cylindrical shaft is located in the intersection point of boxes which covers the stairs and has shaped a void that due to its position supplies an oblique view among all three levels and improves family interactions.


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

Sense of nature is flowing inside spaces moreover to all aspects with using wood as one of basic natural elements in building that can be seen in floor and wall of sport rooms and in stairs which is moving upward from lower levels to the upper ones. For saving Purity of the form building is covered with one single white shield which is made building’s volume distinctive and bright in domain of mountain.

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CORO Project – Phase 1 / Integrated Field


© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan
  • Architects: Integrated Field
  • Location: Suan Phueng, Suan Phueng District, Ratchaburi 70180, Thailand
  • Owner: Coro Brother Co,.Ltd.
  • Area: 1345.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Ketsiree Wongwan


© Ketsiree Wongwan


© Ketsiree Wongwan


© Ketsiree Wongwan


© Ketsiree Wongwan

  • Interior Architecture: IF (Integrated Field Co.,Ltd.)
  • Landscape Architect: IF (Integrated Field Co.,Ltd.)
  • Lighting Designer: Kullakaln Gururatana
  • Corporate Identity: Symbolist Co.,Ltd.
  • Engineering: Kor-IT Structural Design and Construction Co.,Ltd.
  • Main Contractor: Rattanaphon development Co.,Ltd.
  • Modular Furniture Contractor: The Brick Design and Construction Co.,Ltd.
  • Softscape Contractor: New TL Nature Co.,Ltd.
  • Signage Contractor: Beetwart CNC Co.,Ltd.
  • Landscape Area: 8,548 sqm

© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

” Layers of adaptation “

Originate from the fascination of agriculture, the owner who owns an agriculture field on a vast land in Suan Phueng (a Thailand scenery town) intends to bring the farming products and farming lifestyle from the farm to the urbanites. Therefore, the first phase of “Coro project” was located on the front area of the same plot with the farm to be the prototype of farming lifestyle and the Coro products display.


© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

Due to the long-term strategy, the project extension is soon to be continued to strengthen the Coro ambition with more activities, products and experiments.    


© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

Plan

Plan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

This first development of the Coro project is a place for both plant and human with the design for the capability of supporting different activities responding to different circumstances.


Diagram

Diagram

Diagram

Diagram

The certain dimension of 1.50m, the proper distance of farming, defines a grid system, which connects each building layers from the open space to the enclosed. Structure, skin, services, space plan, and stuff are supporting each other to define different spaces. 


© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

Moveable surfaces define different enclosure. Modular furniture system defines different planning. Electrical outlets on the grid structure supply different activities and different adjustments.


© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

Diagram

Diagram

© Ketsiree Wongwan

© Ketsiree Wongwan

Consequently, the relationship of these layers generates the space’s resilience in order to encourage the creativity and diversity.

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H House / VACO Design


© Quang Dam

© Quang Dam
  • Architects: VACO Design
  • Location: Thảo Điền, Quận 2, Hồ Chí Minh, Vietnam
  • Architect In Charge: Do Quoc Hiep (project leader), Vo Duy Kim
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Quang Dam


© Quang Dam


© Quang Dam


© Quang Dam


© Quang Dam

  • Structural Engineer: Nguyen Huu Tuan
  • Construction Supervisor: Nguyen Thanh Sang, Do Trung Chau

© Quang Dam

© Quang Dam

From the architect. Saigon architecture is an inspiring memory for architects who was born and raised in Saigon. House design is an intricate topic in architecture as a house is a very common architectural typology with so many demands and possibilities. 


Diagram

Diagram

The house requires many different functions, arranged within a limited footprint of 12.5m x 14.5m. Basic living areas including living, sleeping rooms were put to the back of the site whereas other utilities such as kitchen, garage, swimming pool, study were placed to the front and connected through open spaces. With this arrangement, the utility spaces receive maximum lighting and ventilation, while the living areas archive higher level of silence and privacy with enough view, light and air.


© Quang Dam

© Quang Dam

Plan 4

Plan 4

© Quang Dam

© Quang Dam

The house interior was inspired by traditional Vietnamese architecture through the use of courtyard, fish pond, veranda, shutter windows and greenery. Natural materials such as wood, stone combined with concrete created a tropical and relaxing atmosphere.


© Quang Dam

© Quang Dam

By elevating the swimming pool, the ground floor was opened for more flexible functions. Moreover, the pool also helps to cool down open courtyard. The 12.5m spanning façade structure, holding a great number of handcrafted ventilation blocks, delicately “wraps” the spaces within. This screen wall helps blocking the harsh tropical sun light and prying eyes from outside, while allowing air flow through in a simple, subtle fashion.    


© Quang Dam

© Quang Dam

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The Active Living Centre / Cibinel Architects + Batteriid Architects


© Jerry Grajewski

© Jerry Grajewski


© Jerry Grajewski


© Jerry Grajewski


© Jerry Grajewski


© Jerry Grajewski


© Jerry Grajewski

© Jerry Grajewski

From the architect. The Active Living Centre at the University of Manitoba was recently named a 2016 NIRSA Outstanding Sports Facility Award recipient. The awards, open internationally, recognize the innovative design of new, renovated, or expanded collegiate recreational facilities. This marks the first time since 1988 that a Canadian building has won the award.


© Jerry Grajewski

© Jerry Grajewski

Designed by Cibinel Architects Ltd + Batteriid Architects, the Active Living Centre was noted by the National Intramural-Recreational Sports Association (NIRSA) as a facility that exemplifies excellence in a number of critical areas, including architectural design, functionality, and how well the facility meets its intended purpose.





As the keystone of the university’s Fort Garry Campus, the 100,000 square foot, LEED Silver targeted facility boasts features and attractions such as a 12-metre climbing wall, an elevated 200-metre running track, and over 1000 pieces of free weights and accessories. A research centre, strength and conditioning facilities, and three group workout studios complete this state-of-the art facility.


© Jerry Grajewski

© Jerry Grajewski

“The Active Living Centre is indeed a pride point for our faculty, university, and community,” says Dr. Douglas Brown, Dean, Faculty of Kinesiology and Recreation Management, University of Manitoba. “We believe it serves as a catalyst of health and well-being for our students, faculty, staff, and community as a whole.”


© Jerry Grajewski

© Jerry Grajewski

George Cibinel, the project’s Design Director, describes the facility’s importance to the campus and its relationship to the community, “the project is located at the corner of University Crescent and Dafoe Road, across from the campus Welcome Centre, which is an important pedestrian entrance to the campus for people arriving by car or by bus. The mandate of the University was to take this opportunity to create a dynamic and vibrant facility that would introduce students, faculty and staff to recreation as a healthy lifestyle and to create a place where they would love to stay”.


© Jerry Grajewski

© Jerry Grajewski

The award is the sixth received by Cibinel for projects they have completed on the University of Manitoba’s two campuses.
via v2com.

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New York’s 1851 Landmark, the Serbian Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sava, Burns in Fire

A photo posted by SWEENEY ART NYC (@sssweeney) on May 2, 2016 at 11:32am PDT

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The Serbian Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sava, a New York landmark built in 1851 by Richard Upjohn, burned Sunday night in a fire after more than 700 parishioners celebrated Easter, reports NBC New York. Originally known as Trinity Chapel, the cathedral was created as satellite location for Trinity Church at Wall Street and Broadway in Lower Manhattan, also designed by Upjohn, after parishioners began to settle farther from the original location. The church was later joined by a Clergy House and the Trinity Chapel School in an ecclesiastical complex, but in 1943 the chapel and neighbors were sold to the Serbian Orthodox Church. The cathedral, stretching between 25th and 26th Street, was nearly 180 feet long, and had one of the largest hammerbeam roofs in the city. The New York Landmarks Conservancy partnered with the church for a 2002-03 restoration of the building’s facade and roof. The four-alarm fire that was contained by Monday morning is under investigation as suspicious.

A video posted by Cody Joel (@thekentuckykid) on May 1, 2016 at 4:17pm PDT

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A photo posted by Briana Nolan (@bn_______) on May 1, 2016 at 5:21pm PDT

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A video posted by Gothamist (@gothamist) on May 2, 2016 at 6:20am PDT

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A photo posted by BEKI VUJOVIC (@beautybybeks) on May 2, 2016 at 11:46am PDT

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AD Interviews: Alan Ricks / MASS Design Group

In this video, ArchDaily interviews MASS Design Group co-founder Alan Ricks, who describes the firm’s working process and how the practice, with offices in Boston and Kigali, Rwanda, is intent on improving people’s lives through architecture. The firm has established a fundamental process for creating structures, that according to Ricks “Have an obligation to catalyze and amplify the outcomes that are the core services delivered in our buildings.” Whether serving the fields of health, education, or housing, the firm’s modus operandi is public benefit. “[It’s] how we leverage the building process to expand the impact,” says Ricks. “We’ve taken to the calling that lo-fab, or locally fabricated, it doesn’t mean lo-tech and it doesn’t mean not pre-fab. It just means we’ve uncovered the available resources where we work and are leveraging them to deliver value.” With clinics in Haiti, primary schools in Rwanda, and proposals for library and hospital projects in the United States, MASS Design has proven its ability to act in the realm of public good. The firm has previously been lauded by New York Times critic Michael Kimmelman, was named one of the Architectural League of New York’s Emerging Voices in 2013, and was the winner of both the Zumtobel Group Award and Curry Stone Design Prize in 2012. Watch the video for more about this entrepreneurial design practice that is redefining what it means to be local, sustainable, and most importantly, for the community.

TED Talk: How MASS Design Group Gave the Word “Architecture” a Meaning in Rwanda
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How to Balance Local Traditions and New Solutions in Public-Interest Design
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Three Projects That Transform Low-Tech Materials Into Innovative Design
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Françoise Sagan Multimedia Library / Bigoni Mortemard


© Bigoni Mortemard

© Bigoni Mortemard
  • Architects: Bigoni Mortemard
  • Location: Paris, France
  • Architect In Charge: Stéphane Bigoni, Antoine Mortemard
  • Area: 3500.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Bigoni Mortemard


© Bigoni Mortemard


© Bigoni Mortemard


© Bigoni Mortemard


© Bigoni Mortemard

  • Construction Follow Up : Alexandre Nossovski
  • Contractors : EIFFAGE / PRADEAU MORIN

From the architect. Officially opened on 16 and 17 May in the 10th arrondissement of Paris, the Françoise Sagan Multimedia library covers 3.500 m2 of usable surface area over one site, the Clos Saint-Lazare, which alternately housed a leprosarium, a priory and a prison before becoming a hospital which was closed in 1998. The site is hidden from view, despite being steeped in history, and is little-known, even by Parisians.


© Bigoni Mortemard

© Bigoni Mortemard

Section

Section

© Bigoni Mortemard

© Bigoni Mortemard

The architects, Stéphane Bigoni and Antoine Mortemard, have successfully renovated the site without being hindered by its heavy past. They preferred to draw their inspiration from the Mediterranean-style covered cloisters for the creation of one of the best-equipped multimedia libraries of the capital, which boasts more than 100.000 documents. Only the façades and two stairways from the old structure were kept and renovated. For the rest, they emptied everything and added a metal structure “with the load-bearing capacity required for such a project, i.e. between 600 and 1.200 kg/m2, whereas he former structure could only support 150 kg/m2”, according to the architects.


© Bigoni Mortemard

© Bigoni Mortemard

Ground Floor

Ground Floor

© Bigoni Mortemard

© Bigoni Mortemard

Rounded off by an auditorium and exhibition hall, the immaculate reading rooms are sheltered behind a glazed curtain wall removed from the exposed interior of the arched openings that make up the stone façade. Here, nothing is in excess and the slightest detail is impeccably addressed. The only decorum is the curtains interspersed in the thickness of the loggias and the design of a garden planted with palm trees and featuring twisting paths. One way of highlighting the Mediterranean and even tropical feel of the site, a surprising haven of peace a stone’s throw from the Gare de l’Est train station. The downside ? The plans to create a roof terrace of 700 m2 on the building offering magnificent views of Paris where ultimately shelved, despite the designer’s insistence. A property potential which is once again topical, according to the architects.

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Architecture Ranked as 10th Best Entry-Level Job out of 109 Professions


© wavebreakmedia via Shutterstock

© wavebreakmedia via Shutterstock

Architects are famously cynical about the long hours and over-education required for what can be a thankless career. But in a recent study conducted by WalletHub, “2016’s Best & Worst Entry-Level Jobs”, recent grads and seasoned professionals alike may be surprised to find that “architect” is ranked 10th out of 109 evaluated professions. Read on to find out how they calculated their result.

The study’s assessment hinged on 11 key metrics outlined below:

Immediate Opportunity

  • Median Starting Salary
  • Number of Job Openings
  • Unemployment Rate

Growth Potential

  • Projected Job Growth by 2024
  • Income Growth Potential
  • Typical On-the-Job Training
  • Median Annual Salary
  • Median Tenure with Employer
  • Occupation Viability Score (the probability of a certain occupation being replaced with a computer)

Job Hazards

  • Number of Fatal Occupational Injuries per 100,000 Employees in Past Three Years
  • Typicality of Working More than 40 Hours per Week

Establishing that most job-market newcomers are seeking a career that combines a high starting salary with long term growth potential and increasing responsibility, architects scored 60.39 in WalletHub’s data set, trailing top-ranked engineers (score of 69.67) by less than 10 points. That being said, the study doesn’t appear to consider the debt that many architects graduate with, and it also doesn’t specify where this study was conducted. Also, though many of the top professions could be based in cities, architecture firms seem to hold affinities to urban environments above other careers, adding cost-of-living as a potential gouge to earnings. Nonetheless, the information should be reassuring to those deciding if they would like to pursue a career in architecture and also to the long term viability for the profession.

Sources for the Study: Data used to create these rankings were collected from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Oxford Martin School at the University of Oxford, Indeed.com and Salary.com.

Main image via Shutterstock.com

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