EID Wins Competition for Stacked Block Mixed-Use Development in Chongqing


Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

China-based firm EID Architecture has been selected as the winner of a design competition for a mixed-use development, entitled Longfor Phase IV, in Chongqing, China. Designed as an exploration of vertical urbanism on a high-density scope, the project is composed of a “single tower and associated podium integrated as an assembled massing of stacked box-like volumes.”


Courtesy of EID Architecture


Courtesy of EID Architecture


Courtesy of EID Architecture


Courtesy of EID Architecture


Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

At 150 meters tall, the building will offer office space in its upper levels, and retail on its lower levels.

An “urban void” is created in the center of the project, where on lower levels, an open space acts as a “gravitational core,” around which the rest of the building organizes itself, “stimulating movement and activity through the vertical space that energizes and defines the associated programmatical components and offers a visual and spatial connection to the multi-level exterior terrain at ground level.”


Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

On a design level, the project draws inspiration from the nearby countryside—with its natural karst formations— as well as from the surrounding city, where vernacular dwellings cascade down steep inclines in the city’s fabric.


Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

“The outcome is a design that is both contextual and iconic, contextually integrated whilst unique in appearance that allows for a visual and spatial porosity and connectivity across all levels with a naturally balanced composition of stacked box-like volumes interlocked with a tower component, creating a design of understated monumentality and a harmonious contextually responsive composition,” said the architects in a press release.


Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

In order to connect the East and West sides, the project will feature a terraced grand stair, which will additionally create ground level entrances at multiple levels.

Furthermore, the building will include garden terraces and a green wall within its lobby, in an effort to connect the space with the natural environment around it.


Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

Longfor Phase IV is currently heading into the schematic design phase, and is expected to be completed in 2019.

The project was recently awarded an AIA HK merit award for unbuilt project.

News via EID Architecture.


Courtesy of EID Architecture

Courtesy of EID Architecture

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Moshe Safdie: Architects “Have a Deep Social Responsibility”

http://ift.tt/2fCcJK3

In the latest edition of Section DMonocle 24’s weekly review of design, architecture and craft, the team speak to Moshe Safdie – the Israeli-Canadian architect whose “signature geometric style of lavish curves and green space has made the self-styled Modernist an influential voice” in the profession. The conversation, broadcast from Safdie’s Marina Bay Sands complex in Singapore, reflects on his life and work – including Montréal’s Habitat 67.






Habitat 67 / Moshe Safdie

Habitat 67 / Moshe Safdie

Habitat 67 / Moshe Safdie

Habitat 67 / Moshe Safdie

Find out more about Monocle 24’s Section D here.

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Loft in a Historic Tenement / CUNS


© Hanna Długosz

© Hanna Długosz


© Hanna Długosz


© Hanna Długosz


© Hanna Długosz


© Hanna Długosz

  • Architects: CUNS
  • Location: Słowackiego, Poznań, Poland
  • Architects In Charge: Michalina Majcherkiewicz Chmielowska, Jędrzej Sobkiewicz
  • Area: 130.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2013
  • Photographs: Hanna Długosz

© Hanna Długosz

© Hanna Długosz

From the architect. We would like to present you the reconstruction project of the loft’s space into the private accommodation in an apartment building. The building was built in the late nineteenth century.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Both district and the building itself are located in the preservation maintenance zone. The tenement is located in the compact residential of the street, it has 4 floors, a cellar and an attic.


© Hanna Długosz

© Hanna Długosz

Such space requires an individual approach as well as the application of unusual solutions, we did not change the cubature, gross covered area, its height, length, width and the number of the stores, however we have created a new history of the place!


Section

Section

Section

Section

We tried to keep the effect of the maximally open space and the exposure of the important elements for us. Among them you can find the roof construction and the original height of the rooms.


© Hanna Długosz

© Hanna Długosz

Very clearly exposed wooden roof construction gives the interior the flavor and in our opinion  – it highlights its uniqueness. By creating a new function of the loft, we felt as if it was our operating pattern; the look of the interior is dedicated by the roof construction.


© Hanna Długosz

© Hanna Długosz

Multiple number of windows in the whole loft allows the sun a better exposure of all the rooms. Moreover, the big white planes of the walls and ceilings do brighten the space. Lighted by the skylight, the  open kitchen interior is a link between the private sphere of the owners and the living and the guest room. The large kitchen with a huge cooking island is an excellent place for cooking and spending relaxing time in the hammock.

As well as the tenements, we also love the natural materials. Here, except for the pine wood, the brick  played the major role. We used it on the knee walls, and on the whole length of the tenement’s wall, By doing it – we have emphasized the length of the apartment.  


© Hanna Długosz

© Hanna Długosz

The living room is a separate big part of the whole open daily space. This is  place with the TV and comfortable, variable seats, located around. It is a perfect space to relax with friends

The bathroom, dedicated mainly to the guests, but used as a toilet on a daily basis, has a basin, lavatory and the shower. Another bathroom was designed in the bedroom. The idea of  an open bathtub next to the bed is the removal of all the barriers between these spaces. The bathtub is located in the bay window, with an easy access to the wardrobe located in this room. Next to it, we have additionally designed a separate box with the toilet and the shower.


© Hanna Długosz

© Hanna Długosz

The attic’s floor is a mix of the pine wood and the very dark gres tiles with an interesting and irregular surface. We kept the interiors in the earthy tones, that together with the timeless whiteness present themselves the prettiest.

Product Description. We wanted to keep  the original character of the tenement that’s why one of the most important materials we used are definitely the original sliced bricks and also wooden floors (pine).

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House D / Dietrich | Untertrifaller Architekten


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

Located on a mountain overlooking Bregenz, Haus D′s open floorplans and generous glazing allow for magnificent views over the surrounding countryside and Lake Constance. The home is stratified into 3 stories, with the Entrée and utilities located on the first floor, guest and children′s rooms on the second, and Master bedroom and an open layout kitchen+dining+living room on the third. In order to strengthen the connection to the natural environment, the third floor also boasts a patio which wraps around the entirety of the building. 


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

Floor Plan 01

Floor Plan 01

© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

The geometric form of the home, combined with the architect′s decision to construct with concrete and wood, create a powerful building that seems to blend into the surrounding landscape. Furthermore, the attention to detail highlights the craftsmanship for which this region of Austria has become famous. 


© Bruno Klomfar

© Bruno Klomfar

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Maslak No.1 Office Tower / Emre Arolat Architects


© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            


© Thomas Mayer            


© Thomas Mayer            


© Thomas Mayer            


© Thomas Mayer            

  • Client: Alsar Maslak Real Estate
  • Structural Projects: Altıneller Engineering
  • Mechanical Projects: Tanrıover Engineering
  • Electrical Projects: Aykar Engineering
  • Fire Safety Consultant: Abdurrahman Kılıc
  • Facade Engineering Consultant: CWG (Salih Sekban)
  • Security Consultant: ICTS
  • Sustainability Consultant (Fort He Leed Certificate): Altensis

© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

The project for the office building to be situated on the Mecidiyekoy-Maslak axis, where Turkey’s foreign capital takes its most visible form, was conditioned by the tension between density of its environ and the tightness of the project site. It was the client’s wish that the building would be a prestigious building, just like all the other surrounding buildings which only meant to be prominent, having been developed with no certain rule, plan or order.


© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

Apart from the other projects along the Buyukdere Avenue, which is the main business district of Istanbul, Maslak No.1 Office Tower was designed to enrich the quality of the typical office space by vertical gardens. In order to accomplish that, a rational office block which was planned over a 8.25 x 8.25 m grid, enveloped with a free formed glazing system was designed. The envelope, acting as a secondary facade in south and west direction is detached from the building up to 17 meters, let vertical gardens in 20 meters high. The space in-between two facades was considered as a buffer zone both for the acoustical and the climatic sense. The simple reinforced concrete office building with a basic, operable aluminum framing and glazing system helped in ease of construction and decrease in budget compared to similar investments, being free of direct wind load and sun rays. The envelope in steel structure, while creating the climatic control, provides the building with the prestige, identity and peculiarity  through the crowd of alike structures that is a part of the client’s brief.


© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

Ground Plan

Ground Plan

© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

The curvilinear plan of the facade formed by the 150 x 200 cm rectangular modules was designed regarding the perception from the highway. These glass panels are arranged in the texture of fish-scale letting air flow through and they have a translucent film layer over it. The opacity of the film layer diverse, up to the orientation of the curvilinear facade; on southern facade a less transparent pattern was chosen; however in north, almost a transparent film was used which are designed according to environmental control issues. 


© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

The office buildings at this district are planned and are being managed as private gated communities, independently secured and controlled. No free access or passage is allowed even at the communal ground levels, that prevents any possible interaction with the street and neighboring alike complexes. As a matter of creating porosity on the urban level, a considerable part of the ground floor, together with the buffer zone and the outside terrace at Maslak No:1 Tower is kept except the secured, private areas of the building, that welcomes public freely with a hope that future developments or refurbishments at the region may carry on this attitude to empower the urban life throughout the district. 

Concept Project presented at the beginning of 2009 was developed with all parties and local authorities until 2012. As opposed to many other projects in Turkey, the construction started then with all documents ready and completed in 2014 through a well-organized and controlled process. 


© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

Sustainability Statement

Maslak No.1 is certified with LEED Gold and is considered among the high-qualified and highly-demanded office buildings of the district, in spite of notably simple choice of materials compared to the counterparts in the market, inhabiting national and international significant companies such as Deloitte as the main tenant.


Section

Section

Main volumetric composition of the project depends on a simple reinforced concrete office block and a porous envelope that controls  the general climate of the building. While letting air flow through the glass panels arranged as fish-scale, the envelope filters direct effects of the climate. The in-between buffer zone, provided the design of the office framing dependent on most simplest parameters technically; low wind loads and least amount of uv control. The envelope also provided acoustic comfort, made natural ventilation possible at suitable seasons by operable windows which also decreases the sense of working in a plaza effect on employees. The existence and density of the dots on the film coating on these glass panels are designed parametrically according to the movement of the sun in order to decrease solar gain and to provide shade control while at the same time letting panoramas at eye level. 


© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

General office planning strategy takes into account the issues of flexibility and adaptability, designed in the scope of shell and core design. The carpark levels, lobby space and circulation core together with minimum amount of common restrooms were completed with simple finishes of optimum budgets. Large amount of exposed concrete and use of partial suspended ceiling elements, together with a simple local stone on the floor are the main materials used. The rest of the office floors were finished as a simple naked grid structure, to be equipped with raised floor and dry wall structures. Concrete surfaces were finished in a quality that once again encourages the tenant to keep it as exposed or with partial ceiling elements.  


© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

The building has maximum energy efficient design based on the latest technology in building materials, illumination and mechanical  systems. The 3D Variable Refrigerant Volume (VRV) system and heat recoverable HVAC Units help it to reach high efficiency level, aiming to reach an energy saving level of 40% compared to buildings with similar features. The building is equipped with maximum cooling / heating and story based control with three tube VRV system and reinforced fresh air with recycling fresh air units. Regenerative elevators produce their own electricity, water efficient appliances and fixtures are installed, energy saving is provided by the use of LED and T5 lighting fixtures, 


© Thomas Mayer            

© Thomas Mayer            

The location of the site had benefits of highway access for material supply during construction as well as its close proximity to public transport; bus and metro that are a few minutes walk away. Finally, the project tries to create an urban porosity on the ground level, as described in the project description text, as opposed to the rest of the district that would behave as seeds for a future consideration of urban access and communal use throughout the neighborhood. 

http://ift.tt/2gHtDUP

ANGLE / Hiroyuki Arima + Urban Fourth


© Kenichi Suzuki

© Kenichi Suzuki


© Kenichi Suzuki


© Kenichi Suzuki


© Kenichi Suzuki


© Kenichi Suzuki


© Kenichi Suzuki

© Kenichi Suzuki

These days, we are losing focus of our main theme. Perhaps we need to include the surrounding margins when we address the meanings of virtualized space.


© Kenichi Suzuki

© Kenichi Suzuki

“…If our experience of reality is to maintain its consistency, the positive field of reality has to be “sutured” with a supplement which the subject (mis)perceives as a positive entity but is effectively a “negative magnitude.”
– Slavoj Zizek


© Kenichi Suzuki

© Kenichi Suzuki

The sire is only a few minutes walk from the Ohori Park, where the outer moat of the Fukuoka Castle used to stand during the 1600s. Today, the area has become community park with a perimeter of about 2km, enjoyed by locals as a place for talking, running, and cycling. The park is also a cultural region containing an art museum, Noh theater, gallery, and restaurant.


Diagram

Diagram

Following this context, the first floor and courtyard were designed as a gallery the embraces the concept of “beautiful cars as a lifestyle.” The house centers around the courtyard that features a selection o attractive trees such as oak, maple, katsura, and ash, and is designed so that it is disconnected from the outside world. The floor and wall surfaces that face the courtyard, however, have different angles in various places to transform and spread light. Various spaces surround the courtyard in a U-shape throughout the three levels, each offering a view of the inside that can be seen from the different zones.

The surrounding environment is monotonous with clustering mid-rise structures, and the project has no distant views. The design emphatically focuses n defining the house as a distinctive couple cut off from the ordinary foreground, and to explicitly yet reasonably screen its environment.

While functional, both interior ad exterior spaces of ANGLE contain fluctuation and variations in many places. Volumes eoxand, contract, and continue, and the project becomes unified, through the use of material and texture . The couple, the children, and the grandmother. Each member of the family enjoys life ; according to their own taste and style.


© Kenichi Suzuki

© Kenichi Suzuki

http://ift.tt/2fAQYdE

BomBom Boutique Hotel / Architecture Studio YEIN


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan


© Yoon, Joonhwan


© Yoon, Joonhwan


© Yoon, Joonhwan


© Yoon, Joonhwan

  • Architects: Architecture Studio YEIN
  • Location: 1839-3 Gyo 1(il)-dong, Gangneung, Gangwon-do, South Korea
  • Architect In Charge: Yesun Choi
  • Design Team: Myungsun Lee, Hanhee Park, Jeongmee Kim
  • Area: 966.17 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

“Spring! It’s spring!”

This was what we hoped at the beginning of this project the first visitors of the boutique hotel BomBom would call it. (‘Bom’ is the English transliteration of a Korean word which means the season of ‘spring.’)


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

Architecture as a means of communication

People use various codes as a means of intercommunication or to embed information. The architect believes architecture can be a means of communication and the container of information.


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

Section

Section

© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

For travelers, the hotel is not only an accommodation but also an architectural place where they can share information. In this sense, we inserted the codes of ‘봄 (bom)’ and ‘spring’ into the facade image of the hotel. The code on the facade is not just to assume the function of architecture with simple fenestration, but also to serve as a design element that controls the neighboring detrimental scenes, thereby making the lively image of Hotel BomBom flow in and out of windows with light penetrating through them.


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

BomBom as a shelter for travelers

A tourist city where the ice sports game of the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics will be held, Gangneung is a place that expects a new and transformative trend to be seen. The site is a part of the commercial area in Sol-ol Residential District, where accommodations and entertainment facilities are mixed up. The original site was a fallow land which seemed to wait for the buildings with similar characters to come up. This building seems to have a significance in its same functioning as accommodation but with a completely different image. We wanted to impart a sense that spring has come to everyone who sees BomBom.


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

Plan (level 6)

Plan (level 6)

© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

BomBom provides low stone fences and benches under roadside trees and the cafe on the 2nd floor where the hotel guests can have breakfast in the morning and communicating and sharing travel information in the evening. The standard rooms are on the 3rd and 4th floors, while the duplex suite rooms are on the 5th and 6th floors each of which has an exclusive terrace open to the outside in the urban center, serving as an open but also private space for rest.


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

Materiality and architecture

The old bricks giving off the sense of warmth seemed to be the most appropriate for the image of BomBom. Amongst many kinds of bricks, I intended to choose the ones which express a bright sense of spring, thus using the antique bricks that can embrace the reminiscence of travelers. The brickwork was built in three ways: the stairways and the corner window at the ground-floor front were made with cavity wall masonry, so as to flow the light from inside BomBom toward the urban nightscape; the exposed antique brickwork outside the east and south balconies on the 2nd floor becomes both exterior and interior materials, serving to transfer the external image into the inside; the upper vertical mass was made with protruding brickwork in order to emphasize the sense of massing and the unique texture of bricks.


© Yoon, Joonhwan

© Yoon, Joonhwan

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Wu Ji Academy / Wutopia Lab


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

  • Design Period: 2011

  • Construction Period: 2011-2012
  • Site Area: 550 m2
  • Building Area Before Renovation: 450 m2

  • Building Area After Renovation: 940 m2
  • Height: 12m

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

In 2006, house No. 1, house No. 2 and courtyard No. 3 were completed at the same time in Jiu Jian Tang, Shanghai, which were all designed by famous international architect Arata Isozaki.


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

In 2011, the owners of these estates, unbeknownst to the others, invited local architect Yu Ting to transform them one by one. 


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

After a long time of disuse, house No.2 would become an academy special for ancient Chinese classics, expanding from 400 to 900 sqm, as the owner’s wish. 


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

After bound up the old building with bamboo curtain wall, the architect covered it with a translucent rice paper glass box to weaken the sense of volume. The side atrium, a public space lacking in old building appeared naturally in the gap between these two boxes. The 6-meter-high gate, looks like a dramatic cave made the side atrium more like a courtyard blurring the inside and outside space.


1F plan

1F plan

The new-built classroom is a pure glass box. It suggests functional differences of interior by comparing to old building in symmetry to reach an accurate balance on the façade. For example, rounded and right angle; translucent and transparent, vertical and horizontal grid.


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

The façade of Wu Ji is a space not a boundary. Tier upon tier, Architect used Capitalism architecture vocabulary to create Chinese mood as a result in this space. The Isozaki’s work can’t be elucidated in the Wu Ji at last. It is only a distant memory. Wu Ji is a totally new one.


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Those 3 buildings were looked on as whole but humdrum by Isozaki. As a result of different functions, they rebuilt in different methods, finally reached a balance of harmony, which we called Mutation.


Section 2-2

Section 2-2

You can find more information on the other two buildings, one is ‘Kaisersaal of Longevity,Kun opera playhouse’,another is ‘painter’s Atelier’.


Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

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Eric Parry Architects’ 72-Story Skyscraper Receives Approval from City of London


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

Eric Parry Architects’ 1 Undershaft has been granted planning permission from the City of London Corporation’s Planning Committee, which will allow the 73-story tower to become the tallest building in the London Financial District and the second tallest building in the UK, behind only The Shard.


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

The 295 meter (967 foot) tall structure will house over 130,000 square meters (1,400,000 square feet) of Grade A office space and 1,800 square meters (19,3875 square feet) of retail and restaurant space accessible from an open public square beneath the building.


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

At the top of the building, a free public viewing gallery, the tallest free observation deck in the UK, will provide views of the city and an education center with two classrooms. A bank of dedicated elevators will transport visitors to the deck, 7 days a week.


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

The project (already being dubbed “The Trellis”) will join the group of iconic towers that make up the City of London’s distinctive skyline, including the Leadenhall Building by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners (The Cheesegrater), Foster + Partners’ 30 St Mary Axe (The Gherkin), and PLP Architecture’s upcoming 22 Bishopsgate.


© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

© DBOX for Eric Parry Architects

Learn more about the project, here.

News via Eric Parry Architects.

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Clifton Hill Clinic / Cloud Architectiure Studio


© Jeremy Wright

© Jeremy Wright


© Jeremy Wright


© Jeremy Wright


© Jeremy Wright


© Jeremy Wright

  • Builders: Ascot Group

© Jeremy Wright

© Jeremy Wright

From the architect. The Clifton Hill Clinic challenges the design norm prevalent in local medical practices. The 1901 former residential building has been transformed into a 9 room contemporary facility that will become an important social hub for the local community. 


© Jeremy Wright

© Jeremy Wright

Inspired by a visit to the Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne the client, a local GP challenged us to deliver a cutting edge conversion on a very tight budget. We cut an internal corridor through the center of the site and fed of that space. This allowed us to create colour and light that is typified by the stair light well and courtyard spaces. 


Section

Section

Section

Section

The building has created considerable local interest since its completion, its light and airy feel very different to the medical practices the locals visit.


© Jeremy Wright

© Jeremy Wright

Product Description. The client for the project required a tough and seemingly impenetrable exterior cladding to the rearof the property, worried about potential break-ins We selected VM Zinc to provide this exterior but also for its beautiful aesthetic properties. 


© Jeremy Wright

© Jeremy Wright

http://ift.tt/2fO8r0A