Construction Begins on World’s Tallest Religious Building


Courtesy of Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir, InGenious Studio

Courtesy of Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir, InGenious Studio

Construction is underway on a 700 foot (213 meter) tall Hindu temple in Uttar Pradesh, India that, upon completion, will be the world’s tallest religious building. Designed by Indian firm InGenious Studio, the structure (named “Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir”) will surpass the Ulm Minster in Germany, the current tallest church at 530 feet (162 meters).

The earthquake-resistant structure will rise 70 tiered stories and cover an area larger than St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City, and will house a variety of religious and cultural facilities – as well as a theme park filled with attractions.

“Attractions planned in the theme park would be like park rides, animatronics, light, sound and special effects as well as the Vraja Mandal parikrama shows and laser shows,” project director Narasimha Das told The Spaces.


Courtesy of Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir, InGenious Studio

Courtesy of Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir, InGenious Studio

Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir will be dedicated to Hindu deity Lord Sri Krishna, who scripture states grew up in Vrindavan. The temple will be surrounded by additional social and residential facilities, set into a 30 acre forested area planted to recreate the 12 forests of Braj.


Courtesy of Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir, InGenious Studio

Courtesy of Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir, InGenious Studio

Current work is concentrated on the building’s 180 foot (55 meter) deep foundation, which will contain 511 columns.

News via The Spaces.

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Larson Bergquist / Salmela Architect


© Paul Crosby

© Paul Crosby


© Paul Crosby


© Paul Crosby


© Paul Crosby


© Paul Crosby

  • Architects: Salmela Architect
  • Location: Schroeder, MN, United States
  • Architect In Charge: David D. Salmela FAIA
  • Area: 1400.0 ft2
  • Project Year: 2014
  • Photographs: Paul Crosby
  • Intern Architect: David Getty
  • General Contractor: Rod and Sons Carpentry
  • Structural Engineer: MBJ Engineers

© Paul Crosby

© Paul Crosby

© Paul Crosby

© Paul Crosby

The retreat is sited near Taconite Harbor where the boreal forest meets the exposed bedrock of Lake Superior shoreline. The utmost character of the project reveals the predominance of place. There is a sense of old and new, an ageing beauty in the materials that reflect both permanence and impermanence. It is an encounter of something unexpected, of things that are in opposition. 


© Paul Crosby

© Paul Crosby

1st Floor Plan

1st Floor Plan

© Paul Crosby

© Paul Crosby

Arriving at the site a garage and elongated storage shed to house kayaks form the stone entrance path. Clad with black paper-resin composite, repetitive cedar battens provide each otherwise stealth structure a sense of scale, warmth and resemble adjacent birch tree-trunks. Once on the path, the main building, courtyard and sauna come into view. Native grasses encroach on the path from the sides and through the gaps in random sized stone pavers. Descending and passing through a gap in a low stone wall you enter the court. To the right is a traditional white-washed masonry sauna with outdoor baking oven. The purity of white upon closer examination reveals the texture of the masonry and heightens the slight imperfections embodied in the construction. Ahead stands a L-shaped unchimney which defines the corner of the outdoor gathering area. The residual soot patterns mark the visual, auditory, olfactory stimulation from the presence of fires previous. Permanent outdoor furniture suggests uses related to the outdoor oven, unchimney and sauna.


© Paul Crosby

© Paul Crosby

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Nötkärnan / Wingårdh Arkitektkontor


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

  • Architects: Wingårdh Arkitektkontor
  • Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
  • Architects In Charge: Gert Wingårdh, Anders Olausson
  • Design Team: Peter Ejvegård, Liselott Jademyr, Tobias Fasth, Sebastian Olsson Susanne Flinck, Peter Öhman, Madeleine Stoops, Ulrika Davidsson, Malin Mattsson, Viktoria Wallin and Jens Vilhelmson
  • Area: 1580.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor
  • Pattern Graphics Team: Felix Holgers and Pål Ericksson (Wingårdhs)
  • Structural Engineer: Cowi
  • Services Consulant: BDAB, Rejlers
  • Main Contractor: Bergman & Höök
  • Facade Contractor: KG Constructions
  • Greenhouse Specialist: Drakenius Gardens
  • Client: Nötkärnan Bergsjön Vc & Bvc AB

Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

“Paradise is the term for a place of timeless harmony”

In Somalia, a simple flue often means death. Especially if you are young or newborn. The death-rate among children is the highest in the world.


Site Plan

Site Plan

Sweden has a high influx of Somalian refugees.

The Somalian community is concentrated at Bergsjön, a suburb of Gothenburgh. A private health clinic has been highly successful by giving rapid treatment to anxious mothers. It needed to expand.


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

The parking in front of the existing clinic provided a new plot for a new clinic, a new construction above the cars.

The drab surroundings of precast concrete, it is basically “a project” of 60s social housing, needed some colour and flair. The new building was conceived as a gift, carefully wrapped in elaborate glass. It should stand out and empower the community!


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Somalia is a very arid country where the idea of paradise is lush gardens, literally paradise or the garden of Eden.


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

We decided to surround the waiting area with four walls of dense, damp and excessive(in time) vegetation, a rain forest.


Diagram

Diagram

Plan

Plan

Diagram

Diagram

The exterior walls are clad with unique pieces of screened glass. There is a different pattern on the inner pane. The two patterns are juxtaposed. This creates the illusion of movement.

A flag of colors slightly shifting in the wind. A celebration of color.


Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Courtesy of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Product DescriptionIt was the strong desire of the client to make a colorful and optimistic statement. Therefore, we used standard insulated glass units to print unique rasterized multicolor print patterns on both glass panes. The distance between the overlaid patterns means that the combination of pattern looks different depending on the visual angle they are seen from, and it keeps shifting as you move your vantage point. The result is an illusion of movement, shimmer, shadow and depth, that offer an extra vibrancy of the expression.

http://ift.tt/2gM44no

The Planners’ Guide to Trees in the Urban Landscape


via www.tdag.org.uk

via http://www.tdag.org.uk

Tree and Design Action Group is a group that “shares the collective vision that the location of trees, and all the benefits they bring, can be secured for future generations through better collaboration in the planning, design, construction and management of our urban infrastructure and spaces.”

“Trees make places look and feel better, as well as playing a role in climate proofing our neighborhoods and supporting human health and environmental well-being, trees can also help to create conditions for economic success.” The Trees in the Townscape guide presents a modern approach to urban forestry, providing officials and professionals with the principles and references needed to realize the potential of vegetation in urban areas.

This is an approach that keeps pace with and responds to the challenges of our times. “Trees in the Townscape offers a comprehensive set of 12 action-oriented principles which can be adapted to the unique context of [any] own town or city.” 

Who should use the 12 principles?

“The 12 principles in Trees in the Townscape are for everyone involved in making or influencing decisions that shape the spaces and places in which we live. It will be particularly relevant to local elected members, policy makers and community groups. It will also be useful to those professionals who bring their technical expertise to facilitate delivery, such as engineers, architects, landscape architects or urban designers.” 

How were the 12 principles developed?

“This guide was developed by the Trees and Design Action Group (TDAG) based on over 40 interviews and wide consultation with key knowledge holders in the built environment sector including civil engineers, insurers, developers, designers, planners, tree officers, sustainability specialists, arboriculturist, tree nursery managers, ecologists, academics, and not-for-profit organisations specialising in community engagement and trees.”


via www.tdag.org.uk

via http://www.tdag.org.uk

Here is a brief description of each of the 12 principles:

PLAN

1- Know Your Tree Resource

Create and maintain easy-to-use records of the existing canopy cover and the nature and condition of the tree population.

2- Have a Comprehensive Tree Strategy

Produce, adopt and implement a collaborative strategy for protecting, developing and managing a thriving, benefit-generating urban forest which is in tune with local needs and aspirations.

3 – Embed Trees Into Policy and Other Plans

Adopt clear standards for the protection, care, and planting of trees in local plans.

DESIGN

4 – Make Tree-Friendly Places

Create places where tree species can thrive and deliver their full range of benefits without causing harmful nuisance. 

5 – Pick the Right Trees

Select and use trees appropriate to the context.

6 – Seek Multiple Benefits

Harvest the full range of benefits trees can deliver as part of a local green infrastructure system, focusing on key local aspirations.

PLANT / PROTECT

7 – Procure a Healthy Tree

Plant healthy, vigorous trees that have been adequately conditioned to thrive in the environment in which they are destined to live. 

8 – Provide Soil, Air and Water

Ensure trees have access to the nutrients, oxygen and water they need to fulfil their genetic potential for growth and longevity.

9 – Create Stakeholders

Work with local political, professional and community stakeholders to champion the value of trees in the townscape. 

MANAGE / MONITOR

10 – Take an Asset Management Approach

Inform all planning, management and investment decisions with a robust understanding of both the costs and the value trees deliver. 

11 – Be Risk Aware (Rather than Risk Averse)

Take a balanced and proportionate approach to tree safety management.

12 – Adjust Management to Needs

Conduct proactive and tailored tree maintenance to ensure optimum benefits in response to local needs.

To see the complete guide, click here.

This is an adapted version of the original guide released by TGAD with a focus on trees in urban areas.

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Faith & Form’s 2016 Religious Architecture Awards Recognize 28 Projects from Around the Globe





Each year, Faith & Form magazine and the Interfaith Forum on Religion, Art and Architecture (IFRAA) reward the best religious architecture, design and art for religious spaces. In their 2016 awards, the jury recognized 28 projects across 10 categories, with almost half of the winners designed for sites outside of North America. Aside from this diversity of location, another trend in the awards was a tendency toward material honesty and simplicity. “Several jurors were impressed with how designers used an economy of means with simple, elegant materials to meet the needs of congregations,” said Michael J Crosbie, editor-in-chief of Faith & Form, adding that “a reverence for natural materials was seen in many submissions, and in winning projects.” Read on to see all 28 winners.


© Nathan Kirkman


© Peter Moloney


© Lucas Boyd and Chad Greenlee


© Sadao Hotta

Jumaa Mosque / John McAslan + Partners (Doha, Qatar; New Facilies)


© Hufton+Crow

© Hufton+Crow

Chapel of St. Ignatius / John Ronan Architects (Chicago, Illinois; New Facilities)


© Nathan Kirkman

© Nathan Kirkman

Chapel of the Good Shepherd, Alojzij Šuštar Primary School / Robert Dolinar (Ljubljana, Slovenia; New Facilities)


© Luca Markez

© Luca Markez

Totihue Chapel / Gonzalo Mardones Arquitectos (Totihue, Chile; New Facilities)


© Nico Saieh

© Nico Saieh

Al Warqa’a Mosque / ibda design (Dubai, United Arab Emirates; New Facilities)


© Sadao Hotta

© Sadao Hotta

Chinmaya Mission Austin / Miró Rivera Architects (Austin, Texas; New Facilities)


© Paul Finkel / Piston Design

© Paul Finkel / Piston Design

The Joyful Church / The Beck Group (Pohang, South Korea; New Facilities)


© Seunghoon Yum

© Seunghoon Yum

St. Francis Chapel / Stocker Hoesterey Montenegro Architects (Breckenridge, Texas; New Facilities)


© Nicholas McWhirter

© Nicholas McWhirter

Temple Israel of Hollywood / Koning Eizenberg Architecture (Los Angeles, California; Adaptive Reuse/Repurpose)


© Eric Staudenmaier

© Eric Staudenmaier

St. Patrick’s Cathedral / Murphy Burnham & Buttrick Architects (New York, New York; Restoration)


© Whitney Cox

© Whitney Cox

Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun Synagogue / FXFOWLE (New York, New York; Restoration)


© Chris Cooper

© Chris Cooper

St. Cecilia Church / Donham & Sweeney Architects (Boston, Massachusetts; Renovation)


© Bruce T. Martin Photography

© Bruce T. Martin Photography

Palm Beach Synagogue / Arthur Chabon Architect (Palm Beach, Florida; Liturgical/Interior Design)


© Kim Sargent

© Kim Sargent

Knock Basilica Interior Design / Wejchert Architects (Knock, County Mayo, Ireland; Liturgical/Interior Design)


© Peter Moloney

© Peter Moloney

Temple Adath Israel / Atkin Olshin Schade Architects (Merion Station, Pennsylvania; Liturgical/Interior Design)


© Tom Crane

© Tom Crane

Sacred Heart Cathedral of Kericho / John McAslan + Partners (Kericho, Kenya; Liturgical/Interior Design)


© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

8-Shaped Passage / Shoji Oshio + UA architects (Ueno, Tokyo, Japan; Sacred Landscape)


© Masaru Niimi

© Masaru Niimi

Baptismal Font; St. Thomas More Catholic Church / Dekker / Perich / Sabatini (Oceanside, California; Liturgical Furnishings)


© RMA Photography

© RMA Photography

Pipe Organ; St. Dunstan’s Episcopal Church / Dobson Pipe Organ Builders, Ltd. (Carmel Valley, California; Liturgical Furnishings)


© Sherman Chu

© Sherman Chu

Torah Ark, Bema, and Screen; Gideon Hausner Jewish Day School / Studio Bondy Architecture (Palo Alto, California; Liturgical Furnishings)


© Ken Gutmaker

© Ken Gutmaker

Basilica de N.Senora de la Merced Façade Rehab / Eleftherios Piskitzis, Architect (Madrid, Spain; Unbuilt Work)


© Eleftherios Piskitzis

© Eleftherios Piskitzis

“Mary As Prophet”; Virginia Theological Seminary / Margaret Adams Parker (Alexandria, Virginia; Visual Arts)


© B. Cayce Ramey

© B. Cayce Ramey

“Mysteries of the Rosary”; Our Lady of Loreto / Scott Parsons (Foxfield, Colorado; Visual Arts)


© Steve Maylone

© Steve Maylone

Cathedral of St. Thomas / Ranjit John Korah (Cochin, Kerala, India; Student Work)


© Ranjit John Korah

© Ranjit John Korah

“City of Spirits” / Rafaela Paes (Recife, Brazil; Student Work)


© Rafaela Paes

© Rafaela Paes

“Pop-Up Places of Worship” / Lucas Boyd and Chad Greenlee (Various Locations; Student Work)


© Lucas Boyd and Chad Greenlee

© Lucas Boyd and Chad Greenlee

“The Chapel of St. Adalbert” / Filip Strzelecki (Fiszewo, Poland; Student Work)


© Filip Strzelecki

© Filip Strzelecki

“The Procession of the Souls” / Travis Price Architects with The Catholic University of America (Swinford, County Mayo, Ireland; Student Work)


© Travis Price

© Travis Price

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New Mixed-Use Complex Expresses Past, Present, and Future of Chinese Culture


© Aedas

© Aedas

Novotown is China’s latest cultural and creative incubator, designed by Aedas as an iconic destination on Hengqin Island in Zhuhai, China. Located just five minutes from Macau, the 120,000-square meter cultural and entertainment complex aims to straddle the roles of tourist destination and local icon. 


© Aedas


© Aedas


© Aedas


© Aedas


© Aedas

© Aedas

The complex, commissioned by Lai Sun Group, features a retail ring, an expansive courtyard, a shopping mall, a wedding pavilion, a healthcare center, and two indoor themed attractions: Lionsgate Entertainment World and National Geographic Ultimate Explorer. Three upper-level towers house the Hengqin Hyatt Regency Hotel, a 52,000-square meter office tower, and a cultural workshop tower.


© Aedas

© Aedas

Novotown’s core architectural gesture is an abstraction of an open palm, symbolizing both the embrace and proliferation of China’s culture. Construction is scheduled for completion in 2019.

For more information, visit www.novotown.com.cn/

News via: Aedas

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Villa CG / Powerhouse Company


© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode


© Ossip van Duivenbode


© Ossip van Duivenbode


© Ossip van Duivenbode


© Ossip van Duivenbode


© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode

From the architect. Villa CG is a family home in the eastern Dutch city of Enschede, close to the German border. The villa is located at the Museumlaan, a new, particularly special avenue reserved for designs by architects of national and international standing including Erick van Egeraat. The clients, a couple with two children, commissioned Powerhouse Company in 2013 to design ‘the most beautiful house on the street’ within a strict budget.


© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode

Villa CG is a two-storey home characterized by horizontality. Our design takes its cues from the surrounding low hedge to create a house that is about balance and equilibrium, symmetry and grace.


© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode

From the street, the house presents itself as a simple cube, clad in an unusually long, thin brick and divided vertically by a wide cantilevered first floor slab. The front elevation is designed to be private and closed, with only a single opening for the entrance. The slab shallows the height of the building, its severity and roots it into the flatness of the context. 


© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode

Sketches

Sketches

© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode

At ground level, the underside of the slab is glazed at either end of the core to form two window bays containing the kitchen/dining room and study/guestroom. The glazing wraps around the back to give views over every aspect of the garden from the house. Inside, the exterior darkness of the bricks combine beautifully with American walnut veneer fittings. The first floor, however, is the reverse – closed on three sides for an efficient use of openings. 


© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode

The materials used in Villa CG are timeless and of a very high quality. The long, slim bricks give the cube a delicate and elegant level of detail. The color of the brick was selected very carefully in combination with the wood veneer of the interior. This, in combination with the translucent door that separates the entrance hall from the living room, the sand colored Earthcote wall cladding, light grey polyurethane floor and a variety of woods make the house appear dynamic yet harmonious.


© Ossip van Duivenbode

© Ossip van Duivenbode

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Walmer Yard / Peter Salter


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet


© Hélène Binet


© Hélène Binet


© Hélène Binet


© Hélène Binet

  • Architects: Peter Salter
  • Location: Holland Park, London W11, United Kingdom
  • Area: 450.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Hélène Binet
  • Client: Crispin Kelly & Seb Kelly
  • Structural Engineers: Tony Holdbrook, Chetan Palmer @ Parmerbrook
  • Approved Building Inspector: Chris Tang, MLM approved inspectors
  • M&E: Shaw Building Group
  • Main Contractor: Daren Bye & David Tofts – Shaw Building Group

© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

Walmer Yard is the first residential scheme in Britain by Peter Salter, the internationally acclaimed teacher and architectural designer. Seven years in the making, four finely crafted houses built around a shared courtyard in Notting Hill are now being shown to the architectural press.


Detail

Detail

The houses reflect Salter’s unique approach to the design of spaces for living. The structure, volumes and materials are employed to create a series of rooms and circulation spaces that are precisely tuned to domestic use, private peace and sensory experience. 


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

The scheme offers an alternative ambition for contemporary domestic architecture: it uses a combination of new, old and non-standard materials selected for fitness for purpose rather than ease of construction, convenience or cost. The design and construction has as a result involved painstaking experimentation in materials and techniques, exacting craftsmanship and successful compliance with regulations for non-standard approaches. 


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

Cast from in situ poured concrete, structured around rectangular and elliptical stairwells, each house fits within an interlocking plan around an acoustically adjusted timber-lined courtyard removed from the street. The floors are a single unrestricted span supported by the stairwells, creating flexibility and extending space and circulation as well as allowing the play of light deep into the rooms across smoothly moulded concrete ceilings.   


Sketch

Sketch

Each of the interior rooms and the connections between them are designed to be experienced from within; the complex interplay of structural form and material textures, light and shadow, colour and sound are the result of decades of teaching by Salter and his team at the Architectural Association and other leading architectural institutions in Britain. 


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

The houses were commissioned by developer Crispin Kelly to demonstrate the potential of Salter’s drawing, design and engineering skills. Having worked with Alison and Peter Smithson in the 1970s, Salter built his reputation as a teacher at the Architectural Association and since 2006, as Professor of Architectural Design at the Welsh School of Architecture, Cardiff University. He has taught many of the leading architects practising in the world today. 


Sketch

Sketch

It is the crafted appearance of in-situ concrete, a reflection of its handmade form and manipulation that prompted its use at Walmer Yard. It carries the imprint of a bespoke craftsmanship; its scale of construction in tune with the other material elements that form the interior of the houses. In-situ concrete offers a sense of permanence to the architecture of the room; its density and massiveness of fabric providing quietness and a stillness for sleep.  


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

Concrete belies its 20 year indemnity on workmanship and material. Its degree of permanence, through age, offsets the embodied energy used in its making. Ground and granulated blast furnace slag, a byproduct of the iron and steel industry commonly known as GGBS, is used as the finest of fine to replace 38% of the cement content of the concrete matrix, to further offset embodied energy. 


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

The concrete structure, a mixture of frame and spandrel panels, forms a table-like construction over the underground garage. The tabletop slabs are highly reinforced, to transfer loadings across the floors to the elliptical staircase drums on the periphery of the site.


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

Close living between dwellings requires quietness and privacy. The concrete walls surrounding the periphery of the courtyard provide a buffer against the airborne  sound of the room and contribute to the acoustic renders, rigid insulation and timber louvres  that dispel sound from the  external central space. This tuned fabric between room and courtyard is a technical space – it presents surfaces and enclosure to the rooms, whether those rooms are inside or out. The concrete spandrel of the bedroom is cast to receive a low level window, from which to view from the bed  the early sunshine or morning light. Sitting on the bed, the procrastinating early riser is offered another window. The spandrel wall is divided by construction joints, grooves that separate head height, concrete cast in a phenolic-  faced formwork, with that of the lower wall casting using birch-faced formwork. The differences between formwork surface are startling, with the smoothness of the phenolic construction reflecting light to the extent that it appears almost white, set against the birch faced-forms in which the imprinted grain collects shadow – a soft darkness. The phenolic cast wall overhead connects to the soffit of the slab above, making a visual reconnection with its smoothness and reflectivity. By lining the soffit formwork with a wide roll of linoleum, the soffit is cast with minimal joints and is smooth, in some places even shiny.  This soffit connects to a ceiling-high window that enables light to illuminate and pan across the ceiling, penetrating the room to a depth of 2.00 m. The concrete spandrels contribute to a patchwork of material finishes to the rooms that work together as textures, complementing chopped straw clay renders and the exposed welding of the carbonized steel bathrooms. The use of phenolic and birch-faced plywood becomes a vocabulary that is used throughout the project.  It anticipates the graduated light quality that occurs as occupants move from shadow to light. Walls at ground level are constructed as double skin concrete, using different forms for internal and external surfaces.


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

Just as the interiors are governed by a rule system of concrete finish, so too other concrete surfaces carry a hierarchy of finishes to enable architectural decision-making, judgment and reading. The concrete retaining walls of the basement level media rooms and car park follow the striation of day joints with triangular fillets  of protruding concrete, which later got struck back to form a series of stepped datums revealing an exposed pebble matrix, almost like the remnants of a shoreline. The recognition of this surface plots the edge of the site and the party wall. 


Floor Plan Upper Ground

Floor Plan Upper Ground

Perhaps the most complex surfaces of all are the board-marked concrete walls that describe important elevations. This arrangement of board marking can be seen on the front elevation to Walmer Road and its return as a solid balustrade up the stepped ramp to the courtyard beyond. Because of the difficulty in connecting the sections of boardwork of random strip design, each length of formwork was built complete and shipped to site ready for placement. One timber form approx. 9m. in length weighed 7 tonnes and was lifted by crane into place. Following trial castings, the formwork was faced with strips of wire-brushed redwood. The redwood varied in section between 40mm and 70mm high and was chosen for its graining. A design of inset and protruding redwood strip was decided upon, whereby each protruded run of concrete was set 5mm beyond a hypothetical face; similarly, inset runs of concrete were set back 15mm from the face. The finished concrete board marking produced particular light striations and variations across it surface. The protruding concrete produced shelves of white daylight and the recessed elements deep shadow – an amazing ensemble of striation, almost a fixed geology or a sea washed eroded cliff. 

In-situ concrete wall panels were cast at each front door to signify entrance. These fluted elements were regarded as door cases similar to the fluted and reeded timber door cases of Georgian houses. Each concrete flute perfectly describes the finger.


© Hélène Binet

© Hélène Binet

The floor slabs were screeded with a  small brown Thames river gravel and large black Scottish river pebbles. These were ground back to form a terrazzo finish and a threshold to the timber floors beyond. In other places, concrete floor surfaces were struck with a ‘three stone’ floor design similar to that of a lime-bedded Japanese floor.

As with all in-situ concrete work, aggregate bridging and other anomalies become “par for the course”.  Such imperfections required a strategy, a judgement: to leave or to treat. What was clear was not to cover it up!  The majority of aggregate bridging was left as an indentification of process. Others were framed and scabbled back .  Scabbling became the preferred option, as it offered an alternative and unpredicted surface.  

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Villa Dodia / NUDES


© Sameer Chawda

© Sameer Chawda


© Sameer Chawda


© Sameer Chawda


© Sameer Chawda


© Sameer Chawda

  • Architects: NUDES
  • Location: Lonavala, Maharashtra, India
  • Area: 4230.0 ft2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Sameer Chawda
  • Lead Architects: Nuru Karim – Founder & Principal Nudes
  • Client: Mr Kabir Dodia
  • Structural Consultant: Mr J Shah & Associates
  • Contractor: D’souza Pvt Ltd
  • Design Team: Nuru Karim, Vishwanadh Kella, Shreya Pate, Yashavi Mehta, Devansh Mehta

© Sameer Chawda

© Sameer Chawda

The project is sited in Lonavala, a picturesque hill station approximately a 1.5 hour drive from Mumbai, in the state of Maharashtra, India.


© Sameer Chawda

© Sameer Chawda

Diagrams

Diagrams

© Sameer Chawda

© Sameer Chawda

The Site is flanked by a picturesque hill side terrain on the northern face and also a large natural water catchment area which is used for hydro power generation by a service provider. 


Axonometric

Axonometric

The design strategy was to increase the indoor/outdoor interface “design elements” and reduce the indoor “eclosed” experience to a “minimal”, thereby urging the residents to enjoy and experience the fresh air, scenery and vistas. A column free interior space facing the picturesque hill side was designed so as to soak in the picturesque hill side terrain even during the monsoons.


© Sameer Chawda

© Sameer Chawda

The program houses a Living, Dining, Kitchen, Sleep facilities with ancillary services primarily for a weekend getaway. The open to sky spaces such as “decks”, “terraces” and “balconies” are used for passive recreation and form the primary architectural program of the project. The architectural main frame is “pinched” at zero point facing north and zooms outward towards the southern hemisphere. The “Deck” emerges from the “zer-point” condition to nest into the body of the programmatic components. 

The “Deck” in a way transports the users and “sails” through stunning landscapes. 


© Sameer Chawda

© Sameer Chawda

http://ift.tt/2g3PgS9

iHouse Dormitory / Studio SUMO


© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office


© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office


© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office


© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office


© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

  • Client: Josai International University
  • All Engineering Service And General Contractor: Obayashi Corporation

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

From the architect. As Japan copes with a declining population, universities are trying to attract an increasingly international student body for both long and short term stays. This dormitory and International Center for approximately 140 international students efficiently houses, educates, and integrates a population that is both culturally and economically diverse through a collection of shared public spaces and rooms that range from singles and doubles with private baths, to rooms sleeping four with shared bathing facilities.


© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

These shared rooms allow JIU to offer accommodations for as little as $80/month and are particularly geared towards students of modest means from emerging Asian and Eastern European countries. The building is sited along the main access road to the university on the edge of an expanse of rice fields. It is comprised of a 9-meter wide dormitory bar that hovers over the International Center that projects out to engage the landscape.


© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

Floor Plans

Floor Plans

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

The International Center is comprised of a gallery, archive room, and event space in memory of the late Prince Takamado who helped broker the Japan/Korea partnership that hosted the 2002 World Cup. JIU maintains a close relationship with the Takamado family. One enters the building off the campus road through a void in the bar that separates the two programs on the ground level. A louvered surface interspersed with projecting balconies masks exterior walkways that serve the dormitory rooms facing out over the rice fields beyond. Multiple sliding glass doors open onto the walkways, recalling the ‘engawa’ space of traditional Japanese houses. The provision of shared spaces, the walkway, and balcony system expand the compressed living space into the outdoors.


© Kudoh Photography Ltd.

© Kudoh Photography Ltd.

Diagram

Diagram

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

Product Description. The most conspicuous material is the aluminum louver the makes up the south façade. We used horizontal louvers with three different dimensions. They are attached each with the maximum cantilever from the vertical support to create a woven pattern to comprise a unified façade to the public, and shaded walkways with a dynamic play of light for the inhabitants.


© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

© Kawasami Kobayashi Photograph Office

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