Saturday, June 30, 2007

Redevelopment of Victoria Station, London: winner announced

The masterplan competition for the redevelopment of Manchester Victoria Station and the surrounding areas was won by Hamiltons Architects.
"..With developer AMEC, Network Rail and the City of Manchester, Hamiltons will now work up detailed proposals for the area with a view to submitting for outline planning permisson for the masterplan in a year's time. The first phase will include the redevelopment of the station itself and the first of the commercial buildings. This will be a fantastic project for Hamiltons combining public buildings, a mix of commercial uses and infrastructure works..." Source: World Architecture News

Espace Mobile - Austria

- Via Inhabitat

" Salzburg-based Espace Mobile has recently debuted their very eye-catching, very affordable prefabricated line of customizable homes, ranging from €55,000 to €95,000. The concept behind Espace is the individual “at home” in a natural environment, designed for modular customization with the best materials for long lifetimes and flexibility...."

"..The Espace home is as customizable as your next automobile purchase, allowing you to pick and choose from a variety of features- everything from size and configuration to roofing, balcony, and interior material options. The structure is also optimized for energy conservation and heat retention (and comes with a 3-year warranty!). Sizes are a standard 4 meters wide, ranging from 7 to 15 meters long. Now if only we owned an acre or two in the uber-green Austrian countryside! "
Espace Mobile
Check more photos on Inhabitat

Friday, June 29, 2007

Zaha Hadid - Architecture and Design exhibition at the Design Museum,London

Check these photos from Zaha Hadid Exibition at the Design Museum - london..




Source: Zaha Hadid Blog

The International Architecture Triennale of Lisbon 2007


The International Architecture Triennale of Lisbon 2007, happening between May 31 st and July 31 st, aims to become a ‘Festival’ of architecture, participated by the local community and able to attract an international audience (find more in trienaldelisboa.sapo.pt). You can also browse the photos on Flickr.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

International Award for OMA

"Casa da Musica, situated in the historical centre of Porto has won the European Award from the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). This prestigious prize is awarded yearly for outstanding contributions to architectural design in Europe. The Jurors described Casa da Musica as "intriguing, disquieting and dynamic". The building contains two shoe box shaped auditoriums, the voids created by these two concert spaces is used as a public space with 8 rehearsal rooms, IT and educational facilities, a music shop and rooms with recording facilities. The uniqueness of this building is also expressed through its concrete and glass faceted exterior, complete with an intimate roof terrace that offers views over the city of Porto. Casa da Musica is now in the running for the coveted RIBA Stirling Prize."
Photos by: Nicolas Firket (AMO) Courtesy of Office for Metropolitan Architecture
Source: World Architecture

Thorncrown Chapel - A Sustainable Icon

"...While walking through the woods near Eureka Springs, Ark, one might be forgiven to mistake Thorncrown Chapel for a grove of trees in the middle of the forest. The transparent glazed facade, combined with the timber trusses create the appearance of a being within grove of trees rather than a carefully constructed chapel. It is only when one is inside the chapel that one starts appreciating the small details that set it apart as a paragon of architectureal achievement: the steel joints on the trusses, the lanterns, the reflection of the glass, and finally the steel roof..." Inhabitat

xxxx House - Japan


"XXXX house, Yaizu, Shizuoka - Japón / MOUNT FUJI ARCHITECTS STUDIO
Automobile is our rival to beat.
Came one day a client who offered us a business. He wished to have an atelier which can be used also as a gallery to present his work of ceramic art, which he made for pleasure.
With mere 1.5 million yen (=11,000 euro) which he saved to originally purchase a business-purpose Toyota Collora sedan to spare as total budget, we started our project.
1.5 million yen. Ridiculously small sum of money for building any kind of architecture. Yet, it's good sum if you're going to pay away in everyday life. At least it affords you a "mobile room" with fancy air conditioner, car navigation system and power window. Question arisen. Are we sure we properly translate the money into the quality of architecture? Can ever be born objects that embody beauty and rationality in such architectural world, which is highly specialized and socially defined? These kinds of skepticism were something that bothered us over years. That's why we felt great appeal for the small budget he offered.
To beat an automobile in value by holding a thorough investigation into closed payment structure of architectural industry; to quest an object which is most rational and reasonable by treating an architectural structure as a plain object...
Motto of this project was like this: "Make great use of 1.5 million yen, and architecture get ahead of automobile"...."

More Photos

166 Perry Street by Asymptote



"...166 Perry Street is the first major building by cult figure theorist/virtual architect Hani Rashi and his wife LiseAnne Couture of Asymptote (designers of the curvy white Carlos Meile boutique on W. 14, the new Alessi shop on Greene Street, the virtual Guggenheim, NYSE's 3-D trading floor, etc.).
Developers are the team who created the two original Richard Meier-designed 173-176 Perry Street towers next door. Interesting that they are trying a different strategy this time -- young turk experimental architect versus white-haired eminence -- for the third building in the trio..."
Source: Curbed
More Pictures at Dezeen

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Vertical Gardens with Schiavello

- Via Inhabitat


"..For all of us urban dwellers who crave indoor greenery but find ourselves a bit short on space, here’s a great solution that requires almost no square footage: Joost Bakker’s Schiavello Vertical Gardens. The steel-frame interior plant system was designed on a grid that allows numerous plants to be stacked vertically in columns or walls- providing the perfect backdrop for any office or apartment that needs and extra bit of greening but can’t afford the space required for them (when you can’t build out, build up!)..." read more

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

A City Without Billboards

- via Designverb

From Sao Paolo - Brazil

BusinessWeek article
Sao Paulo: The city that said No to AdvertisingThe “Clean City” law passed last year by the populist mayor, Gilberto Kassab, stripped the Brazilian city of all advertising. So how’s it looking now?
by Patrick Burgoyne

A city stripped of advertising. No Posters. No flyers. No ads on buses. No ads on trains. No Adshels, no 48-sheets, no nothing.
It sounds like an Adbusters editorial: an activist’s dream. But in São Paulo, Brazil, the dream has become a reality.
In September last year, the city’s populist right-wing mayor, Gilberto Kassab, passed the so-called Clean City laws. Fed up with the “visual pollution” caused by the city’s 8,000 billboard sites, many of them erected illegally, Kassab proposed a law banning all outdoor advertising. The skyscraper-sized hoardings that lined the city’s streets would be wiped away at a stroke. And it was not just billboards that attracted his wrath: all forms of outdoor advertising were to be prohibited, including ads on taxis, on buses—even shopfronts were to be restricted, their signs limited to 1.5 metres for every 10 metres of frontage. “It is hard in a city of 11 million people to find enough equipment and personnel to determine what is and isn’t legal,” reasoned Kassab, “so we have decided to go all the way.”
The law was hailed by writer Roberto Pompeu de Toledo as “a rare victory of the public interest over private, of order over disorder, aesthetics over ugliness, of cleanliness over trash… For once, all that is accustomed to coming out on top in Brazil has lost.”
Border, the Brazilian Association of Advertisers, was up in arms over the move. In a statement released on 2 October, the date on which law PL 379/06 was formally approved by the city council, Border called the new laws “unreal, ineffective and fascist”. It pointed to the tens of thousands of small businesses that would have to bear the burden of altering their shopfronts under regulations “unknown in their virulence in any other city in the world”. A prediction of US$133 million in lost advertising revenue for the city surfaced in the press, while the São Paulo outdoor media owners’ association, Sepex, warned that 20,000 people would lose their jobs.
Others predicted that the city would look even worse with the ads removed, a bland concrete jungle replacing the chaos of the present. North Korea and communist Eastern Europe were cited as indicative of what was to come. “I think this city will become a sadder, duller place,” Dalton Silvano, the only city councillor to vote against the laws and (not entirely coincidentally) an ad executive, was quoted as saying in the International Herald Tribune. “Advertising is both an art form and, when you’re in your car, or alone on foot, a form of entertainment that helps relieve solitude and boredom,” he claimed.
There was also much questioning of whether there weren’t, in fact, far greater eyesores in the city—such as the thousands of homeless people, the poor condition of the roads and the notorious favelas: wouldn’t Kassab’s time be better spent removing these problems than persecuting taxi drivers and shop owners? Legal challenges followed while, in an almost comical scenario, advertising executives followed marches by the city’s students and its bin men by driving their cars up and down in front of city hall in protest...read more"


Hopefully Beirut is Next...

Monday, June 25, 2007

New Silk Road - competition results

- via Jean Beaudoin

Silk Road - China

" ...World renowned as the city of the Terra Cotta Warriors, Xi’an is one of the six Great Ancient capital of China, having hosted 13 dynasties in China’s history. Formerly named Chang’an, the current Shaanxi Province capital was the origin of the ancient Silk Road. As a historical capital, Xi’an has united China as well as initiated the intertwinning of cultures of the world.
The Silk Road came into being in the Han dynasty, and prospered during Tang dynasty.Crossing through the Middle-East and anchoring Europe to Asia, it played an important role in redefining political relations, economic trades, as well as cultural exchanges between the East and the West. The New Silk road Cultural Park is located in Qu jiang new district, near the Great Goose Pagoda in the South East of part of Xi’an. Established around the Nanhu (South Lake), it covers over 100 hectares and its construction has started with the infrastructural work of the lake. .."
read more

"...Seven projects have been selected in seven areas and established as the winning entries. The panels of the winning entries are compiled in this booklet . They are :
Mediterranean Europe destination : Massimiliano Fuksas architects, Italy.
Scandinavian destination : Snohetta architects, Norway.
Western Europe destination: Nox and Okra, Netherlands.
Eastern Europe destination: 3LHD, Croatia.
Western Turkish Cultural area: Work AC, USA/Lebanon/Turkey.
Arabic Cultural area :Antoine Predock, USA/U.E.A.
Jewish Cultural area Atelier Big City, Canada/Israel
Persian area : No projects rewarded.
Western Turkish Cultural area : No projects rewarded.
The jury also awarded an honorable mention for the project presented by
T.H.I.N.K. for showing outstanding research in the Jewish cultural area. In two areas, no winning teams have been retained from the competition process..."

Archiprix 2007: winners list

- Via Archiprix

"..Each year the institutions that teach design in the Netherlands select the best graduation projects of their students for submission to Archiprix.

The twenty-six plans submitted to Archiprix 2007 present in all their diversity a picture of the state of affairs in Dutch design education during the school year 2005-2006. You may take a tour through all the entries or read the Jury Report.

The plans are all published in the book Archiprix 2007 (edited by Henk van der Veen, design: Linda Swaap Accu-ontwerpers, € 24.50, ISBN 978 90 6450 617 8,
010 Publishers, Rotterdam)..."

Winners are:

1- First Prize:
The Work of the Tekton, A garden house in Heeswijk - Jochem Heijmans
Maja Turg: a market for Tallinn - Max Rink

2- Second Prize:
Osdorp Rings - Francisco Adão da Fonseca
SmART, Sarajevo Museum Of Art - Sasha Radenovic

3- Special Mentions:
Boerengoed! - Ivonne de Nood
Terrain vague, entropy poetry and nothingness - Francesco Marullo
Terschelling Theatre Route: three implanted structures for landscape display - Marjolijn Guldemond

Posting Clarification

Dear all,
kindly note that the text that describes the news posted on this site is usually part of the source and not part of architecture lab.
the text copied from other sources will be from now on posted between "..." so it can be more clear to readers.

cheers.

aline chahine
architect/designer

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Coin, by United


United Architects - Competition-entry ECB, Frankfurt (Copyright United Architects)

The competition for the new office building of the European Central Bank, the ECB, was won by the Austrian architects of Coop Himmelb(l)au with a quite modest design.
The most interesting design – and probably one of the most unlikely to win – in my view came from the team of
United Architects, a collective of architects instigated by Kevin Kennon to – successfully – participate in the WTC competition in New York, with prominent members such as UN Studio, Foreign Office, and Greg Lynn. In New York the team was at the end beaten by Daniel Libeskind, but the design-team proved a success.
Although they all are credited for the design, Greg Lynn admitted in his lecture at Harvard that the main idea for the ECB design came of Ben van Berkel of UN Studio, who came up with the iconography of the coin. Their website doesn’t mention anything like this, but the design tells the story.

Read More...

quon modular by andrew maynard

- via materialicio

Quon Modular by Andrew Maynard Architects in Australia...
"...Prefab may not take long to build once on site, but it takes a lot of time, money and perseverance to get a concept into the market and then into production. We first looked at Andrew Maynard's prefabs a while back, and now learn that his prefab company, Quon Modular, is in production and manufacturing. His site says "We are about to begin manufacturing our first housing modules for the Borogrove house and we have numerous other exciting projects underway." (source: Treehugger)

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Waves of Change - cities at crossroads

International Urban Design Conference, being held on the Gold Coast, Australia 6,7 & 8 September, 2007.

The Conference theme “Waves of Change – Cities at Crossroads” will challenge us all to examine our towns and cities.

Population growth and economic prosperity have consequences on the environment and on the longer term social well-being of our communities.
The wave of environmental challenges will affect communities through global warming and likely sea level rises. The ability of urban centres world-wide to cope with the impacts of high level fuel costs will also be examined. The physical separation of home from work and recreation may need to be re-addressed in city design.

>> Day one celebrates the official conference launch followed by challenging keynote addresses about the issues confronting our cities and what we might do about it.
>> Day two is a whirlpool of presentations taking the macro view down to micro insights into local and international research, design tools and models that can lead the way towards sustainable urban habitats.
>> Day three erupts with a hot debate moderated by Jennie Brockie, followed by even more keynote addresses exploring the ways and means of building capacity within our communities, our future designers, and policy makers to implement the necessary adaptations to our cities.

read more ...

Branches House, Campo Lindo, Melipilla – Santiago de Chile / Gregorio Vásquez Ayuso

- Via noticias arquitectura


Branches house is about one hour and a half of Santiago, specifically in the surroundings of Melipilla. The fast access from the capital turns it an excellent place for a second house. This zone is call “Campo Lindo”, and is characterized by the predominance of traditional Spanish houses style.
The project was thought and requested for a young couple, with a just born daughter, which favors the weekends outside Santiago with relatives. That is why the spaces of recreation are strongly valued.
The project is located on an area that forms a strong curve of trees towards west, generating a natural filter of light, this way the architect took this curve with the intention of incorporate this exterior space towards the interior, which is express in the architectural language, throw a broken floor in three facets, with opened spaces towards the mentioned grove, generating movement and fluency in the space organization.



It is the backdrop the one that inspired the elevated diagonals- like branches wanting to reach the ceiling with a double height - that values the common spaces and a habitable roof to cross the arboreal curve, which expresses in strong horizontal lines, supported by subtle diagonals.
Internally the house throw west cleans up, in a way that not over saturates the reading gave by the trees and protect it bioclimaticly in a natural way.
More Pictures: 1 - 2 - 3

Friday, June 22, 2007

Design Studio Pedagogy: Horizons for the Future (2007), Ashraf Salama and Nicholas Wilkinson (editors)

- Via Architecture - Urbanism

Excerpts from the Introduction by Ashraf M. Salama and Nicholas WilkinsonTitled: Legacies for the Future of Design Studio Pedagogy

……Contemporary societies are in a continuous process of transformations and learning systems should respond to the changes associated with these transformations. Design and built environment professions are no exception and thus corresponding changes in education are crucially needed. There are continuous attempts to massage and modify design studio teaching practices, to re-configure the structure of studio content, and the way in which knowledge is delivered and experienced. However, consensus is lacking on the issue of what changes and developments in studio pedagogy will best meet the needs of design professions while supporting the aspirations of contemporary societies. In response, Design Studio Pedagogy: Horizons for the Future presents thoughts, ideas, and experiments of educators of different generations, different academic backgrounds, who are teaching and conducting research in different cultural contexts. It simply probes future universal visions within which the needs of future shapers of the built environment can be conceptualized and the design pedagogy that satisfies those needs can be debated....

read more....

Global Cities

- via Pentagram


Angus Hyland and William Russell have designed Global Cities, a major free exhibition that is taking place in the spectacular Turbine Hall at Tate Modern in London from June 20 to August 27.




The exhibition has been developed from a show that formed the centrepiece of the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2006 by the Tate curatorial team, Professor Richard Burdett and his team at the London School of Economics (LSE), with Pentagram providing art direction throughout.
read more...

Intelligent Coast Tourism

- Via Intelligent Coast

Intelligent Coast* is a center of research on coast and tourism. It aims to develop new qualified coast systems with the help of thinkers and experts coming from different fields.


INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUMINTELLIGENT COAST TOURISM XXL. THE EUROPEAN MEGALOPOLIS at CCCB - Center of Contemporary Culture of Barcelona 19 - 20 - 21 of July 2007

The International Symposium Intelligent Coast [IC] invites thinkers, businessmen and politicians to debate about new models of development for coastal territories, as a privileged land of tourist economy and new society.
The debate focuses on an emergent European phenomenon, the Spanish Mediterranean coast is going to be next future the first European megalopolis, comparing with Tokyo, Mexico City and Shanghai.The Symposium is organized over 3 days, when it will be possible to attend lectures, dialogs and round tables between experts, politicians and directors of private companies directly involved in the tourist market and coast development.


Download the Program

Thursday, June 21, 2007

post modernism in the cathedral of modernism.

- Via Perfect City

On the 9th of June, the university of Anhalt organized a conference called digitalcities. Jürgen Mayer (J. Mayer H Architects, Berlin), Alain Chiaradia (Space Syntax, London), Neri Oxman (MIT Computation Group, Boston), Kas Oosterhuis (ONL Architects, Rotterdam) and some more interesting speakers presented their work on how new digital tools are being used to analyze and design architecture and cities.
Most of the speeches were focused on sophisitcated forms which were created with software tools like generative components by bentley, of which few are even being realised like Metropol Parasol in Sevilla (Spain) by J. Mayer architects. It was obvious that with software tools and scripting possibilities of how to design our future cities are grown which we were never able to think about. According to my opinion the aspect of digital generative urban planing, mentioned in the speech of Yusuke Obuchi (DRL Architectural Association, London) who introduced some work of his students, was nowhere near enough.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

New happenings: Ashkal Alwan

- via Ashkal Alwan

Metro Club Presents: Radical Closure
A Jalal Toufic Program @ Metropolis Art Cinema, Hamra Street, Beirut

Three film screenings:

Monday June 25 @7:00pm: The Exterminating Angel by Luis Bunuel (1967) 93 minutes
Spanish with English subtitles

Wednesday June 27 @ 7:00pm: Lost Highway by David Lynch (1997)137 minute, English

Friday June 29 @ 7:00pm: The Shining by Stanley Kubrick (1980)144 minutes, English

Each film is followed by a short lecture (in English) by Jalal Toufic and a discussion (in any language) with the public.
Metro Club is a collaboration between Ashkal Alwan and Metropolis Art CinemaFor more information, call 01-360251

THE LIGHTHOUSE: The UK’s first zero-emission home

- via Inhabitat

With the new housing regulations coming into effect in England, which will mandate that all homes in the country be emission free by 2016, the race was on for designers and builders to come up with the first prototype of what such a house will look like. Currently being exhibited in the Big Build Innovation Park area of the BRE’s OFFSITE2007 exhibition, The Lighthouse designed by Sheppard Robson, in conjunction with Arup and Kingspan Off-Site is the first house to meet these strict requirements.

The Lighthouse is a two bedroom, two and a half storey house, with a floor area of about 100m2. It does some things just a bit differently from the standard housing model such as locating all the sleeping areas at ground level. This allows the living areas to be located at the top, where they can make use of most of the natural light coming in through the windows and skylights. The curved roof sweeps down providing the living areas with a double height ceiling, making the occupant feel as though they are in a generous open-plan house, and concealing the rather tight and compact geometry of the house. read more..

Opportunity Urbanism: re-invigorating the urban middle class

- via Claiming Public Space

In the first decade of the 21st century, several critical analyses have emerged about the future of American cities. This paper attempts to lay out a new notion: that of “Opportunity Urbanism.” This concept stresses a region’s ability to create jobs,offer affordable housing, and present entrepreneurial openings to a growing and highly diverse population as the surest signs of urban vibrancy. It embraces the fundamental principle that one of the primary historic roles of cities has been to nurture and grow a middle class—to be an engine of upward social mobility.

download this report

New Vision for New York/New Jersey Gateway Unveiled – Winners of International Design Competition Offer New Ideas To Improve Troubled National Park

- via NPCA

Winners include designers from Brooklyn, Canada and professors from Virginia Tech
Van Alen Institute Executive Director Adi Shamir, National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) Regional Director Alexander Brash and Vice-Chairman of the Board of Trustees Tom Secunda, and President of The Tiffany & Co. Foundation Fernanda Kellogg, along with representatives from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP), announced today that a design team from Brooklyn received first prize, a landscape architecture firm in Canada won second prize and an interdisciplinary team from Virginia Tech won third prize in "
Envisioning Gateway: A Public Design Competition for Gateway National Park." The competition, launched in January, was an open call for ideas to transform Gateway and begin a real dialogue about its future as an iconic national park. Stretching from Queens, across parts of Brooklyn and Staten Island, to the northern tip of New Jersey, Gateway is one of the largest urban national parks in the United States.

Winners included:
1- First Prize ($15,000) – "Mapping the Ecotone" by Ashley Scott Kelly and Rikako Wakabayashi, Brooklyn, NY
2- Second Prize ($10,000) - "Reassembling Ecologies" by North Design Office, Toronto, Canada
3- Third Prize ($5,000) - "Untitled" by Laurel McSherry, Terry Surjan, & Rob Holmes of Virginia Tech, Alexandria, VA

Honorable Mentions ($500) - [Un]natural Selection by Archipelago Architecture and Landscape Architecture, NY, NY, "Urban Barometer" by Christopher Marcinkoski and Andrew Moddrell of loop8, Larchmont, NY, and "H2grOw" by Frank Gesualdi and Hayley Eber, NY, NY. read more...

Note: i will be posting next the winners's projects with brief description

New bridge for Docklands

- via Archiseek

The Dublin Docklands Development Authority has unveiled a dramatic design for the new Luas Bridge across the Royal Canal at Docklands North Lotts. This bridge is an important element in the extension of the Luas connecting the IFSC to The Point. The bridge structure combines functionality with design and will be a centrepiece of the planned Royal Canal Linear Park.
read more ....

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

urban militarization: The Automated Border

- Via Subtopia

"...a completely futuristic border barrier where human personnel are entirely substituted by unmanned aerial vehicles, intelligent robots, networks of surveillance cameras and satellite-connected border posts, self-adjusting light systems, ground sensors – essentially, technology which potentially could eliminate the physical constructs of an actual fence altogether; invisible walls, hidden checkpoints, secret surveillance landscapes, border security that – for all visible intents and purposes – has been designed to not exist, or, rather to disappear. ..." read more

image source: The Mini-Samson RCWS

Monday, June 18, 2007

Hermitage State Museum masterplan by AMO

- via dezeen


AMO, the think-tank arm of Office for Metropolitan Architecture, has announced a collaboration with the Hermitage State Museum (above) in St Petersburg, Russia, to develop a new museum typology for the 21st Century.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Ras Al-Khaimah - Snøhetta

- via Snøhetta


Sheik Saud and Rakeen of Ras Al-Khaimah has appointed Snøhetta the prestigious task of creating an iconic gateway building for the new capital city of Ras Al-Khaimah in the United Arab Emirates. The approx. 300,000 m2 complex will contain a Congress Center, Exhibition Halls, Shopping Center, 5+ Star Hotel, 5 Star Hotel, and a 4 Star Hotel.
more photos 1 - 2

Taiwan National Performing Arts Centre by Mecanoo

-via Worldarchitecturenews


Mecanoo architecten win competition to design Taiwan’s largest performing arts centre
At 100,000 m2 the National Performing Arts Centre is to become the largest theatre complex in Taiwan. An important source of inspiration for Mecanoo’s building design were the existing one of the world’s largest trees, the banyan trees on location. The partially grass and plant covered roof creates natural and efficient building cooling in the subtropical climate. The large roof also provides an informal public space where the city residents can stroll, practice Tai Chi, mediate or just relax. The design also consists of a concert hall of 2,300 seats, an opera house with 2,000 seats, a theatre hall with 1000 seats, an experimental Black Box with 500 seats, an open-air theatre and park design. Work on the 200m Euros is set to begin in early 2009 and to be completed by 2012.

more photes 1 - 2

Bus, mobile public space - beirut, Lebanon

The lack of common space can be seen in the public domain. This goes not only because of the lack of space itself, but also because of the connotation existing public spaces have.
During the civil war in 1975, Lebanon was architecturally divided into sectarian regions, in which each religious community exercised its own urban rules and formed its own public space that reflected its perception and ultimately was only used by this specific community. The urban development during this period (outside Beirut) was chaotic since the government had no power to exercise restraint or to implement any laws.
Adding to that the snipers and bombs who deprived the Lebanese, and for a long time, from the culture of walking the streets or hanging in parks.
A daring project is intended to address this issue and to create public spaces that initially will be as generic as possible and where different people from diverse backgrounds can meet.

read more on Archis/Unbuilt

Comme des Garçons Guerrilla Store +4161

- Via dezeen


Comme des Garçons Guerrilla Store +4161, temporarily set up in an old industrial building in Basel, Switzerland. The Guerrilla Store concept allows people to set up temporary retail outlets to sell Comme des Garçons clothing, providing the venue and organisers meet the approval of the fashion chain.
more pictures on dezeen.com

Books you need to read... v.1

hello,

i tried to summarize a short list of essential books that every architect needs to have on his bookshelf, i am starting now with books related to city planning and urbanism.

  1. The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs
  2. Geography of Nowhere: The Rise and Decline of America's Man-Made Landscape by James Howard Kunstler
  3. Suburban Nation : The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream by Andres Duany , Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk , Jeff Speck
  4. All That is Solid Melts Into Air: The Experience of Modernity by Marshall Berman
  5. The Regional City: Planning for the End of Sprawl by Peter Calthorpe, and William Fulton. "articulately advocates for a sustainable region through New Urbanist design and social equity"
  6. Urban utopias in the twentieth century: Ebenezer Howard, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Le Corbusier by Robert Fishman. "an eloquent intellectual history of three leading urban visionaries of the 20th Century"
  7. Cities of tomorrow: an intellectual history of urban planning and design in the twentieth century by Peter Hall
  8. The city in history: its origins, its transformations, and its prospect by Lewis Mumford. "a classic from a giant among 20th Century urbanists: an intellectual bridge between Ebenezer Howard and Patrick Geddes from the past and the modern regionalists."

Ecological Tower, Siberia - By Foster + Partners



Rising above the skyline of Khanty Mansiysk in Siberia, this mixed use tower will be a new landmark, providing crucial amenities for the city, sheltered from the harsh local climate. Set high on a hill in a densely wooded area, the tower rises above two podium buildings each facetted like a cut diamond, reflecting and refracting natural light to illuminate the interior. At the summit, a viewing platform and restaurant offer panoramic views over the city. The development will take advantage of a number of sustainable energy strategies and key to the energy performance of the building are its atria, designed to facilitate solar gain and to encourage daylight to permeate the complex.

EUROSCRAPER by José Muñoz Villers

- Via Inhabitat

Rem Koolhaas has been quoted saying that skyscrapers create “vertical organization and new territories.” And now, one young Mexican architect, José Muñoz Villers, has designed a building that embodies these sentiments. Muñoz Villers incorporates the latest technologies, materials, engineering, and a holistic view of urban space into his design. The building, named the Euroscraper, is such a forward-thinking design that it has garnered 3rd place in the eVolo Architecture Skyscraper competition.

Muñoz Villers says that “skyscrapers are the types of structures that can, in an exciting manner, consolidate and condense the great advances in technology and respond to the new social and spatial necessities that the city contains.” One of these needs is a heightened awareness of environmental sustainability. The building’s looping form reduces its resistance to wind, increases natural light and ventilation, and contributes to the green lung of the city by incorporating gardens into the scheme of the project.

The Euroscraper was conceived to be located in the Parisian office district of Porte Maillot and would complement the Arc du Triumph and La Défense. The concept and look of the building are inspired by Isamu Noguchi’s quest “to capture the void.” To do this, the Euroscraper is designed as a loop, generating a “growth upward of earth-generated forces.” The building would have public spaces and infrastructure at its base and offices, a sky lobby, residential space leading upwards to more public spaces and urban attractors at its crown. The intention of the structure is to “‘join seamlessly the center and intermediate zone” of Paris and “to be plugged into the tissue while redirecting all the kinetic conditions upwards uninterruptedly.”



SUMMERSCHOOL BEIRUT / PEARLS IN LEBANON - 17/8 till 1/9, 2007

A case study on the concept of public space in Lebanon
Initiated by Studio Beirut, Archis, Partizan Publik, Pearl and the University of Amsterdam - Center for Conflict Studies. An international multidisciplinary team of international and local students and professionals from the fields of architecture, urban development, design, sociology and political science, shall identify, analyze formally and socially, and propose interventions and new programs for the nearly infinite number of derelict or marginal spaces in Beirut. These terrains vagues, at many scales, from kilometers to centimeters, present a potential for territorial reassessment and cultural redefinition that will constitute a body of both research and action.
On the 1st of September on the Pearls in Lebanon event, results will be presented and debated. During Pearls in Lebanon a mixed audience will be brought together for discussion. The platform also gives the opportunity for project presentations of Studio Beirut and its projects to possible Lebanese cooperating partners and investors.
MORE INFO, AND APPLICATION FORM >>>
STUDIOBEIRUT.ORG

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Modular Transitional Growth

- Via Inhabitat

Philippe Barriere Design Collective’s Modular Transitional Growth Housing (MTGH) system proves once again that prefab is not only earth-friendly, but a highly-adaptable, scalable, and efficient form of building. The project, conceptualized for a post-Katrina New Orleans housing competition, and runner-up in last year’s Metropolis Next Generation competition, delivers a system to provide everything from minimum emergency shelter units to large-scale town house residences. Designed for mass production, affordability, and easy transport, these compact housing units also boast a self-recycling process that reuses existing parts for future applications and BioClimactic design for natural light and passive cooling.


From Philippe Barriere Design Collective’s website:
“MTGH allows for expansions through its occupants housing needs, and recycles itself through the process of housing evolution. The unique self-recycling feature entails reusing existing parts, a process of organic shading, as MTG evolves towards a more mature expression and a more complete appropriation and identification of of housing which is tailored to the individual’s life need and span, in tandem with their socioeconomic resources. Beyond the use of recycled materials, the BioClimactic Design (high ceilings and naturally induced cooling ventilation) addresses priorities in vernacular architecture making MTG housing with a character of nobility and environmental assimilation.”



Helpless Hands: From Arts and Crafts to Blobitechture

- via Architecture and Morality

Organic Baby Farm's Wacky Hermit follows up on a discussion by Glenn Reynolds about the lack of basic hand-skills among younger adults. Hermit blames the rise of foreign trade, which have made cheap goods so widely available that many skills that substituted the need to buy new replacement have lost their value in saving money. Hermit provides a good example of this change:
Myself, I have the ability to make over a dress, taking it apart down to its component parts and re-making it into a different dress. Back when dresses were not cheap, this was a valuable skill. Not so much anymore, when you can go down to the dollar store and buy spangly knit things off the rack. Who would pay me a couple hundred dollars to make over a dress, when for half that they could have a new one? read more ...