AD Classics: Jyväskylä University Building / Alvar Aalto


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

Jyväskylä, a city whose status as the center of Finnish culture and academia during the nineteenth century earned it the nickname “the Athens of Finland,” awarded Alvar Aalto the contract to design a university campus worthy of the city’s cultural heritage in 1951. Built around the pre-existing facilities of Finland’s Athenaeum, the new university would be designed with great care to respect both its natural and institutional surroundings.

The city of Jyväskylä was by no means unfamiliar to Aalto; he had moved there as a young boy with his family in 1903 and returned to form his practice in the city after qualifying as an architect in Helsinki in 1923. He was well acquainted with Jyväskylä’s Teacher Seminary, which had been a bastion of the study of the Finnish language since 1863. Such an institution was eminently important in a country that had spent most of its history as part of either Sweden or Russia. As such, the teaching of Finnish was considered an integral part of the awakening of the fledgling country’s national identity.[1]


© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

Announced in December of 1950, the design competition for the university called for an entire campus plan that would outline uses for the existing buildings and introduce a new heating plant, refectory and dormitory building, main building, teacher training facility, housing for university staff, saunas, as well as a sports field and playground. All entries were delivered in May of 1951 and, by June 6th, the jury had unanimously selected Aalto’s horseshoe-shaped proposal.[2]

Aalto’s entry, entitled ‘URBS,’ laid out the campus buildings in a large U-shape, the center of which contains the sports field and a number of tree-lined circulation paths. This inner sanctum of the university was closed off to vehicular  traffic, reserving the space for pedestrians. Each new building was equipped with two entrances, serving as conduits from the city to the more discreet court.[3]


Courtesy of Wittenborn & Company

Courtesy of Wittenborn & Company

Courtesy of Alvar Aalto Museum

Courtesy of Alvar Aalto Museum

Although Aalto chose to shelter the inner campus, he took care to ensure that the university would still interact with Jyväskylä in a meaningful way. The university is accessed via a diagonal road that leads to the city’s primary commercial thoroughfare, linking directly to the school’s main entryway.[4] The inclusion of a meeting and concert hall also allowed for the provision of public utility beyond education, integrating the university into the urban fabric not only as an academic facility, but as a public and intellectual center.[5]


Courtesy of Alvar Aalto Museum

Courtesy of Alvar Aalto Museum

This public gathering space, known as the ‘festival hall,’ forms one of three distinct sections of the main building, which Aalto considered to be the most important design task of the entire project. Along with the festival hall, the building also contained an administrative wing and a central thoroughfare that links each section and provides access from the entrance square to the court of the inner campus.


Courtesy of Alvar Aalto Museum

Courtesy of Alvar Aalto Museum

The entrance to the Festival Hall sits at the center of the building, its fanned floor plan echoing the shape of the lecture halls into which it leads. The front end of the room is almost entirely glazed with floor-to-ceiling windows, looking out onto the forest surrounding the foyer. The light that streams in through these windows is reflected and diffused by the gleaming marble floor and white wooden slats of the ceiling, creating a light and airy atmosphere throughout the space.

Three staircases lead up from the foyer to the lecture halls. A rhythmic series of vertical mahogany bars line the sides of each stairway, echoing the trees visible just outside the entrance hall’s vast windows. The main stairwell, opposite the front doors, leads directly to the center of the Festival Hall[6]; the others, flanking either side of the foyer at the same oblique angles as the walls themselves, arrive at the halls after a series of three mezzanine landings. This stair configuration reflects the interest Aalto had in mimicking aspects of Mediterranean hill towns at the time; the lecture hall stairwells allude to the stairs between the walls of surrounding buildings in such towns. He used a similar treatment in the ceremonial main stairwell of his Säynätsalo Town Hall, which was nearing completion while Aalto was designing the University.[7]


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

From the beginning, Aalto wanted to create the Festival Hall out of a combination of multiple lecture halls – an approach not shared by any of his rivals during the competition. It was a poetic gesture to use spaces that were, according to his project proposal, the “focus of everyday academic work” to create something less mundane when the time arose. The hall is lit by clerestory windows at its rear end and the light diffuses along the white clamshell ceiling, which is composed of bent plywood panels and linear concrete beams. The walls, meanwhile, are built of Aalto’s trademark red brick, providing a visual contrast to the lighter touch above.[8]

The Festival Hall ‘portion’ of the main building, with its series of fan shapes, stands in direct contrast to the administrative wing of the building, which takes a rectilinear form. Visual emphasis is therefore placed largely on the festival hall; with its more imaginative layout and roof line, it takes definite visual precedence over the comparatively banal administrative wing.[9] This method of defining a specific portion of the building through non-rectangular form is not an uncommon in Aalto’s work, who would use the same system for his House of Culture in Helsinki four years later.


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

The campus as a whole is seemingly created to give the impression of a community built incrementally over time. The same interest in Italian hill towns that informed the festival hall staircases influenced the overall aesthetic of the university’s new buildings: shed roofs and brick walls rose across the entire campus, with each one recessing to form partially open courtyards. Aalto was not only influenced by Italian towns, but by Ancient Greece, as well. The ideal Greek city was to embody several fine harmonies: mind and body, knowledge and athleticism, logic and nature, amongst others. Placing a sporting venue at the center of the instruction spaces implied a balance between the two, echoing traditional urban Greek ideals.[10]

The University of Jyväskylä continues to be a prominent academic institution in Finland. With over 15,000 students from almost 100 countries enrolled, Aalto’s campus is home to a large and cosmopolitan audience to this day.[11] Like the city from which its nickname is derived, the “Athens of Finland” would seem to have achieved its goal of constructing an academy worthy of its illustrious academic history.


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

References

[1] Lukkarinen, Päivi. “Acropolis in the Pine Forest.” In Alvar Aalto, Architect, edited by Mia Hipeli. Helsinki: Alvar Aalto Museum, 2003. p7-9.
[2] Lukkarinen, p11-13.
[3] Fleig, Karl. Alvar Aalto. New York: Wittenborn & Company, 1963. p194.
[4] Trencher, Michael. The Alvar Aalto Guide. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1996. p129.
[5] Fleig, p194.
[6] Lukkarinen, p19.
[7] Quantrill, Malcolm. Alvar Aalto: A Critical Study. New York: New Amsterdam Books, 1983. p188-190.
[8] Lukkarinen, p19.
[9] Trencher, p130.
[10] Trencher, p130.
[11] University of Jyväskylä. “Study with us.” jyu.fi. http://ift.tt/1HjJB24 (accessed March 01, 2016).

  • Architects: Alvar Aalto
  • Location: Seminaarinkatu 15, 40014
  • Architect In Charge: Alvar Aalto
  • Project Year: 1951
  • Photographs: Nico Saieh, Courtesy of Alvar Aalto Museum

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Arndt Schlaudraff’s Lego Creations Re-Imagine Renowned Architecture


via Instagram

via Instagram

At last year’s inaugural Chicago Architecture Biennial, one of the celebrated exhibits was Architecture is Everywhere by Sou Fujimoto Architects, in which the firm used everyday items like staples, boxes, potato chips, rocks, and ping pong balls, coupled with scaled human figures to posit new architectural forms. Operating with the philosophy that “architecture is first found and then made,” the project expresses the firm’s belief that we need not look to typical sources for bold thinking on the formal possibilities of architecture.

Building on this philosophy and using only the white-brick Legos from the company’s Studio Architecture kit, Berlin-based artist Arndt Schlaudraff has created a series of constructions that emulate real-world precedents, but lack their materiality and color. The results are sterilized, scaleless forms restricted by the orthogonality of the interlocking brick forms. These stripped Brutalist and Modernist buildings morph into white-washed facsimiles which allow us to see many recognizable projects with a set of fresh eyes. Posting the completed projects on Instagram, Schlaudraff has reimagined icons like the Tate Modern, Alejandro Aravena’s Innovation Center UC, and the Barcelona Pavilion of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, interspersing them with his own creations and adding another layer of reality distortion to that which is already enabled by the Legos.

#lego #legoarchitecturestudio #architecture #brutalism #legoarchitecture #memorial

A photo posted by Arndt Schlaudraff (@lego_tonic) on Nov 15, 2015 at 3:11am PST

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#legoarchitecture #legoarchitecturestudio #stairs #architecture #lego #brutalism

A photo posted by Arndt Schlaudraff (@lego_tonic) on Dec 19, 2015 at 1:28pm PST

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#design #legoarchitecture #architecture #legoarchitecturestudio #alphaandomegatowers

A photo posted by Arndt Schlaudraff (@lego_tonic) on Dec 29, 2015 at 2:34pm PST

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Vitoria-Gasteiz Town Hall Offices / IDOM


© Aitor Ortiz

© Aitor Ortiz
  • Architect: IDOM
  • Location: 48013 Bilbao, Biscay, España
  • Lead Architect: César Azcárate Gómez Jesús Armendáriz
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photography: Aitor Ortiz


© Aitor Ortiz


© Aitor Ortiz


© Aitor Ortiz


© Aitor Ortiz


© Aitor Ortiz

© Aitor Ortiz

From the architect. One of the matters that most damages the perception that the citizens have of the local administration is the penitential itinerary, which forces them to go from one office to another in order for them to fulfil their obligations with the different municipal departments. This is exactly what the Vitoria-Gasteiz Council wanted to do away with by concentrating all the services that deal with citizens’ affair in one single building. 


© Aitor Ortiz

© Aitor Ortiz

The starting point being the unique character of such a facility, with an important significance for the citizenship, we thought it necessary to set ourselves apart from the residential urban mesh alignment and in doing so, establishing the formal strategy of the project. We pursued a certain urban link with the foundational mesh in the old quarters, the mediaeval core. On the north face, the building has a pronounced curve that generates a continuous and smooth volume, which confronts the orthogonal layout of the city, separating itself from it and claiming its institutional character. Towards the south, continuity is interrupted by more complex volumes which generate the main entrance for the public at the same time that it seeks a connection with the new San Martin Square. 


© Aitor Ortiz

© Aitor Ortiz

The exclusive purpose of the building is for the carrying out of technical municipal activity, sheltering a workforce of 540, distributed into different departments located up until now, in different buildings. One of the functional aspirations is to promote the citizen-administration relationship. Therefore, the customer care department is located in a great central area, illuminated by zenithal skylights, which as if it was a grand living room, takes in, informs and guides the visitor.


Plan 1

Plan 1

Each floor is generated by a longitudinal space which is vertically communicated with the rest of the building by means of three equidistant cores. This space is adapted according to the planning to the different department layouts, conceived mainly as a landscape office, with all its workstations associated to the façade-long window. Between the vertical cores as if they were a backbone, the service areas are located: toilets, archives and technical rooms. A single floor add-on has also been generated, towards the south. It houses training rooms and an assembly hall, and it can be accessed from the outside. This extension configures a better defined outdoor space to access the building at the same time that it makes approaching the building a more agreeable experience thanks to its short height. 


© Aitor Ortiz

© Aitor Ortiz

Section 2

Section 2

© Aitor Ortiz

© Aitor Ortiz

The search for visual and lighting comfort has been a key project principle. Thorough design work has been carried out in order to alleviate direct sunlight in working areas, therefore also avoiding thermal loads that would affect energy consumption. This solar protection is carried out by two systems: on the one hand, horizontal projections and on the other, perforated metal vertical panels. This solar protection is at the same time what generates its final image, offering a rich light and dark composition that identifies and singles out the building from its surroundings. 


© Aitor Ortiz

© Aitor Ortiz

The building also includes a good number of passive and active sustainability and energy saving measures, such as geotechnics, solar energy, projections and slates, which have earned the building a class A energy label, in keeping with the “Green Capital” title which the city of Vitoria-Gasteiz recently held.

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One Resident’s Argument to Save London’s Central Hill Housing Estate

London’s Central Hill housing estate, located in Brockwell Park (South London) and designed by Edward (‘Ted’) Hollamby is, like many 1960s schemes of its ilk, under threat of demolition. In this short film by British filmmaker Joe Gilbert, the estate is viewed through the narration of a long-term resident, Clifford Grant, who discusses its history and argues for its future security.

Tucked away in South East London is Central Hill housing estate, designed by Edward Hollamby. Like the majority of council housing in London, the estate is under threat by private developers set on demolition and promising ‘regeneration.’ Clifford Grant, a long term resident, delves into the history of the estate and argues why Central Hill needs to be saved.

Learn more about Edward Hollamby, here.

A Six Minute Snapshot of Alison and Peter Smithson’s Robin Hood Gardens
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VERTIGO / Atelier JQTS


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela


© Diana Quintela


© Diana Quintela


© Diana Quintela


© Diana Quintela

  • Structure: Daniel Maio, Urban 360
  • Cordinator: Pedro Alves
  • Construction: António Augusto, Jaime, José Figueiredo, Pedro Alves, Tiago Martins, Nuno Batista, Marta Jerónimo, João Quintela, Tim Simon
  • Volunteers During Construction: Pedro Quinteiro, Sarah Monte Alto, Hélio Morais, Leonor Oliveira, Jerônimo Sôro, Vera Marmelo, Hugo Castro Silva, Martim Vidigal, Duarte Medeiros

© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

From the architect. Located in Lisbon, VERTIGO was born in particularly complex context due to the physical reality where it belongs,the different functional needs, but specially due to the Portuguese economical situation. This is an area that intends to host a small cafe but also a reception to a sports center as well as a small shop to sell equipment and an informal lounge area. Perhaps a possible answer to such different specific needs is to not consider them in a strict and literal sense. When form follows the structure, the action can simply appear and the real use becomes unpredictable.


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

We could understand Architecture as a key force of mediation. And it’s also under this definition that it can exist as material and immaterial reality at the same time. As a physical structure, static, as well as an happening, volatile.


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

The project is located within a large industrial warehouse just on the riverfront of Lisbon and will receive an indoor climbing center. Because of this, the pavilion that hosts the café must be assumed as a transitional filter between the outer reality of the city and the inner world of the sports, keeping a direct relation with both. VERTIGOanswers to this but it appears also as as position towards the abandoned industrial structures located in this area of the city and that once admitted the replacement of the man by the machine.


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

The structure is built by a basement of precast handmade concrete pieces, and a wooden structure made out of handmade cut pieces, yet through a repetitive process, in series, industrial. Can the contradiction exist in Architecture without it becoming formally evident?


Exploded Perspective

Exploded Perspective

The construction process follows the same logic and is done manually, accepting the imperfections and the specific circumstances of an open work that enriches the gap between project and construction. The red color that is softly applied to the wooden structure corresponds to a symbolic nature which could be read in overlapping meanings, evident in a particular way in their relationship with the cranes and containers located by the river, as well as the oldest river bridge of Lisbon or even the other industrial structures that have a strong presence in this area.


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

The ambiguity of the real color explores this and other different relations and its given by the variation of the sunlight during the day by changing definitely the perception of the space and his environment. The using of the black metal elements inside belongs also to this symbolic but fragmented memory of the industrial period in Lisbon during the nineteenth century.


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

The whole project is generated from the small scale by overlapping wooden pieces which allows a direct relationship of the whole to the parts, and the parts among themselves and to the whole. The use of national pinewood and its repetitive and elemental construction allows the active participation of several hands, which exponentially reduces the total cost of the building and at the same time explores a mutual identity and a deeper relationship between the  built space and people.


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

VERTIGO Pavilion has a rectangular floor plan of 12 by 5 meters and is developed on two levels creating covered areas, upper spaces and open places where you can feel the  height of the existing warehouse. It is intended that the physical experience of the building can emphasize the pre-existing architectural features using elemental architectonical tools: the entry is made by a large and low door trough a tensioned space, while the way out is made through a high and narrow opening which monumentalizes the climbing area and simultaneously becomes an privileged window from the upper spaces.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

The internal structure of the pavilion is confronted by the soft outside adaptations that reveals the unstable relationship of the original warehouse as well as the climbing walls themselves. We could say that there is a reciprocal relationship in the search for the equilibrium.


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

The scale of the project appears to be somehow uncertain due to the use of massive pieces of wood, overlapped perpendicularly in order to allow the visual relationships. Thus there is an austere character that contrasts with a transparent image creating a slight contradiction between the visible image and the physical experience.


Section 3

Section 3

These wooden pieces are strictly aligned in the inner surfaces, in order to give a certain calmness inside, while they are misaligned in the whole of the outer surfaces which repeats in a not imposing neither evident manner some of the main patterns of the climbing areas. Therefore the space is just creating the possibility of an action assuming that all Architecture has an implicit performative character. The act becomes definitely unpredictable with the construction of this possibility and it lives independently if that happens or not.


© Diana Quintela

© Diana Quintela

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Nursery in Buhl / Dominique Coulon & associés


© Eugeni Pons

© Eugeni Pons
  • Architects: Dominique Coulon & associés
  • Location: 14 Rue de la Fabrique, 68530 Buhl, France
  • Author Architectes: Dominique Coulon, David Romero-Uzeda, Olivier Nicollas
  • Architectes Assistants : Javier Gigosos Ruipérez, Diego Bastos-Romero, Gautier Duthoit
  • Area: 763.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Eugeni Pons , David Romero-Uzeda


© Eugeni Pons


© Eugeni Pons


© Eugeni Pons


© David Romero-Uzeda

  • Construction Site Supervision : David Romero-Uzeda
  • Structural Engineer : Batiserf
  • Electrical Engineer : BET G.Jost
  • Mechanical Plumbing Engineer : Solares Bauen
  • Cost Estimator : E3 économie
  • Acoustics : Euro sound project
  • Kitchen Expert : Ecotral
  • Landscaping : Philippe Obliger
  • Budget: 1 700 000 €

© Eugeni Pons

© Eugeni Pons

From the architect. The building marks the entrance to a small village nestling in a valley in Alsace. A 14th-century castle dominates the site from the nearby hillside. The day nursery echoes the orthonormal geometry of the fortified castle. A perimeter wall with openings like on a castle wall protects the children’s playgrounds. This spatial arrangement offers views of the rounded outlines of the Vosges mountains.


© Eugeni Pons

© Eugeni Pons

The principle of the strictly rectangular plan is an arrangement of successive crowns containing the elements of the project. These layers give depth to the project overall. The heart of the building is formed by a central space which emerges at double the height and plays with natural light like a kaleidoscope. This almost cubic volume condenses a host of faces ranging in colour from pink to red. The matte and shiny colours resonate, shaping the space to make it richer and more subtle.


© David Romero-Uzeda

© David Romero-Uzeda

Plan 1

Plan 1

© Eugeni Pons

© Eugeni Pons

The multiple transparencies installed between the different layers give an indication of the depth of the building. There is abundant natural light throughout, captured by skylights emerging from the overall volume.


© David Romero-Uzeda

© David Romero-Uzeda

The building appears in the landscape like a fragmented monolith where the play of solids and hollows is reminiscent of something like a Lego model of a castle. The building is surrounded by sixty-eight apple trees which hark back to the local agricultural landscape.  


Diagram

Diagram

© Eugeni Pons

© Eugeni Pons

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Yushu Administrative Centre / THAD


© YAO Li

© YAO Li


© YAO Li


© YAO Li


© YAO Li


Courtesy of THAD


© YAO Li

© YAO Li

From the architect. Yushu in Qinghai is situated in the hinterland of Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, withthe average elevation of over 4,200 meters. Ga Duo Jue Wu, the famous holymountain there, is reputed as the Dzong (fortress) among four well-known mountains in the Tibetan-inhabited Area. Yushu, which has been long known as the “Source of Three Rivers”, is the birthplace of the Yangtze River, the Yellow River and the Lancang River. In Yushu, 97% of population is Tibetan, with rich ethnical features.


© YAO Li

© YAO Li

Sketch

Sketch

© YAO Li

© YAO Li

Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture Administrative Center, located in QinghaiProvince of China, is one of the key reconstruction projects after Yushu earthquake on April 14th, 2010. The total construction area is 72,000 m2. The main building of the project is the largest and highest individual building in Yushu. Yushu Earthquake was measured at 7.1 magnitude, and the focal depth was about 14km. The design conditions were complicated. Due to the extreme cold-weather conditions and high altitude, the delivery of building materials and the construction work were difficult. The project team coped with these challenges through using relative common techniques and materials which met the local situation. The new construction was accomplished in high quality and explored solutions on a number of technical problems involving high-rise, long-span building requirement, and complicated topographic condition. The process of design and construction devoted to both aesthetics and techniques as follows.


Plan

Plan

The design of Yushu Prefecture Administrative Center boasts two traits. The one is the Dzong of the Tibetan cultural traditions, standing as a demonstration of power. The other one is to express the connotation of a civilian-oriented contemporary administrative building via Tibetan-style courtyard. The two themes, “Symbol of Power” and “Connotation-based Civilizations”, are contradictory in the expression of form. Hence, our design emphasis is to solve this contradiction, which is also the starting point of our architectural concept.


© YAO Li

© YAO Li

Creative Design in Ethnic Areas

The schematic design was inspired by the Tibetan architectural features “Dzong”. The project team searched for the prototype from local circumstance and traditional customs. Dzong was built at the top of mountains. It was surrounded by a host of auxiliary buildings, which was named “Snow”. These buildings formed rich urban texture in horizontal. In our project, the main building was located in the middle, just like the imagination of Dzong. The courtyards were interwoven in an appropriate scale. Dzong and Snow complemented each other and added radiance to the architectural complex.


© YAO Li

© YAO Li

Respect for Cultural and Natural Environment

In terms of natural environment, the project team arranged several water courtyards around the buildings. Surrounding environment and local Tibetan buildings were reflected in the water. Due to the cold and dry weather, trees in Yushu grew quite slowly. There were a few tall and big arbors on the site, including 141 poplars, 45 pines and 33 willows. The project team cherish each of trees, verified the position and crown diameter of them, and preserved them carefully in the design. All the constructions keep away from these trees to respect the natural environment.


Diagram

Diagram

Use of Sustainable Materials in the Tibetan Plateau Region

The materials of the exterior wall are 300mm split-face concrete decorative blocks,which are environment-friendly blocks made of industrial solid residues. The combination of the blocks created unusual concave-convex effect and gave expression to traditional figures. It was the first time that split-face concrete decorative blocks were applied in Tibetan Regions. With the help of China Construction Units Association,architects, technicians, and construction teams explored on the construction techniques in different situations, like earthquake resistance system, drainage system and sloping walls. The sample wall was built on site and tested before the construction work to guarantee the safety and quality of final projects.


© YAO Li

© YAO Li

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UFC Crateús / Rede Arquitetos


© Joana França

© Joana França
  • Architect: Rede Arquitetos
  • Location: BR-226 – Venancio, Crateús – CE, 63700-000, Brazil
  • Rede Arquitetos: Bruno Braga, Bruno Perdigão, Igor Ribeiro
  • Area: 1658.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photography: Joana França


© Joana França


© Joana França


© Joana França


© Joana França

  • Croquis Proyeto: Custódio Santos, Renan Cid
  • Collaborator: Luiz Cattony (Arquitecto), Carlos Augusto (Diseño estructural), UTP Engenharia (Instalaciones prediales)
  • Construction: Construtora e Imobiliária JMV

© Joana França

© Joana França

From the architect. The administrative building of the Federal University of Ceará´s campus in Crateús municipality is the first of a series of blocks planned at the master plan of this academic unit. The building has a dual function: to host the administrative part of the program and to serve as a gateway to the campus. This determined the shape of the building, which is split by a shift in its floorplan that separates a solid and closed part from a more open and fluid one.


© Joana França

© Joana França

© Joana França

© Joana França

The access is located at this open space, that, more than just a building, it is a big shade of double height, creating an area for meeting and socializing. This space was designed intentionally without a defined use, changing throughout the day, both through a garden that receives light designed by a group of pergolas, and also because of the landscape and sunset reflected in the glass facade which gives access to the more closed part of the building.


© Joana França

© Joana França

The part that houses the administration is an airtight volume where is almost impossible to see what happens inside, both because of the mirrored facade of the entrance, because of the rear perforated wall (north) that protects from direct sunlight, and also because of the front facade (south), opaque and with zenith lighting. These devices contribute to better isolation of its interior and also to the possibility of the building to receive future changes without interfering in its external character. Internally a double height reception distributes the flows in the two floors. On the ground floor are located the boardrooms, office, service areas and a set of toilets and changing rooms. Upstairs are the coordination rooms, a battery of toilets and pantry. A corridor connects these areas, functioning not only as circulation but also as a meeting space.


© Joana França

© Joana França

Plan

Plan

© Joana França

© Joana França

The building materials mitigate the austerity of its double height. More than different materials, the building works with possibilities of different lights and shadows, taking advantage of the strong insolation that Crateús has, emphasized by the contrast of white and dark textures.


© Joana França

© Joana França

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Rock Print: The Remarkable Deinstallation of a Standout Exhibit at the Chicago Architecture Biennial

It’s a shame that the inaugural Chicago Architecture Biennial has already come and gone, and that the Windy City will have to wait until next fall for another dose of architectural euphoria. But it’s worth revisiting one of the event’s standout exhibits, an installation equally exemplary for its display as for its expiry. “Rock Print,” created by Gramazio Kohler Research of ETH Zurich and Skylar Tibbits of MIT’s Self-Assembly Lab, was a four-legged, neo-primitive tower of stones and string that was erected without mortar or other reinforcement, meaning its disassembly would be the exact inverse action of its construction. The string, laid down by an algorithm, was the binder for stones laid by hand in thin stacks – the team called them “slices” – in what amounted to a type of analog version of 3D printing. The material process has been given the name “reversible concrete” and could be a paradigm shift in construction for its portability and versatility.

In the above video, the deconstruction of “Rock Print” is shown in abridged stages, where the structure’s string is dislodged and returned to a motorized spool on the gallery floor. The small stone fragments spew from the top of the structure like debris from the top of a volcano in the midst of eruption, and all that remains at the end is a small mound of concrete pebbles occupying a large circumference. A structure like “Rock Print” emphasizes that detritus can be avoided by adapting the process of building to vanguard materials that seek to match the brevity of contemporary construction with materials that curtail the waste.

Gramazio Kohler and Skylar Tibbits’ “Rock Print” Is a Gravity-Defying Pile of Stones
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Showroom Delineare / Cristián Irarrázaval + Leonardo Eyzaguirre


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

The project consists in the recuperation of an old commercial warehouse emplaced in Villa el Dorado in Vitacura, as a Strategic renewal of the comercial infrastructure of the neighborhood.

The new presented programme is a showroom for furniture sales and exhibition.


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

The warehouse, built in 1962, was in a major state of deterioration, due to poor maintenance, a fire and countless interventions which were also in poor shape.

The recuperation strategy starts by cleaning the site, removing everything that was not originally part of the construction, in order to bring the original structure to value.


Diagram

Diagram

The original structure is divided in two main areas, north and south. The southern portion of the building is a low height construction built on reinforced concrete pillars and beams, on which prefabricated concrete beams are mounted as a part of the deck structuring, construction features of the time, that are brought to value as a part of the recuperation project. AS to the northern area, with higher ceilings, an existing skylight was recovered as a natural lighting element.


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

Afterwards, programmatically, four independent elements were added as a way to occupy the inner space:

  • The main access – offices volume
  • Exit to deck volume
  • Meeting room volume
  • Attention to public volume

© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

These are organized within the original warehouse, with different orientations, so as to create new sub-spaces around them, in order to create different settings for the furniture to be displayed in.


Section

Section

Finally, the exterior is projected, on one hand with a steel plate façade, which contemplates the recuperation of the original roof wing and the improvement of the public space in front of the site, and on the other hand, generating patios that allow the exhibition and sale of goods.


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

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