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Archive for the ‘Architecture 2009’ Category

Wellness Center as Garden of Eden

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

 

Wellness Center as Garden of Eden

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Ikon.5 architects complete wellness center at New York college

Wellness centers are cropping up on college campuses everywhere. For its new center, the College of New Rochelle asked Princeton architect Ikon.5 to give them a facility that spoke to wellness as a holistic experience of the human body, mind and spirit. In designing the new center, Design Partner Joseph Tattoni looked to the metaphor of a paradisiacal garden for inspiration in creating this award winning, Silver LEED certified building that merges building and landscape into a singular statement that speaks to wellness through its siting, program and materials.

The 55,000 sq ft building houses spaces for physical education, sport competition and contemplation including a 2000-seat gymnasium and convocation center; a competition level natatorium; a fitness/aerobics center; a holistic mediation room, classrooms; and an outdoor contemplation garden and chapel. Metaphoriaclly, each program element represents a landform: the natatorium, with its vaulted sandblasted concrete ceilings and wall, is the grotto; the gymnasium, with its exterior granite walls, is a rock outcropping and the lobby concourse is a stone crevasse deeply cut into the gently sloping site.

In deference to the scale of the existing campus and neighboring residences, Tattoni suppressed 40% of the building’s program below grade and used the space above to locate a contemplation garden and skylights to bring natural light into the building below.

The building, which opened in May 2008, is constructed of locally quarried granite, glass and concrete.

 

 

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California Academy of Sciences by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

California Academy of Sciences by
Renzo Piano Building Workshop
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
California Academy of Sciences by architects Renzo Piano Building Workshop opened last week in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco.
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
The museum, which contains an aquarium, a planetarium, a natural history museum and research and educational facilities, features a “green” roof and numerous sustainable features.
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
The following information is from California Academy of Sciences:

NEW CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES RECONCEIVES TRADITIONAL SCIENCE MUSEUM; OPENS SEPTEMBER 27 IN GOLDEN GATE PARK
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
Record-setting “green” building designed by Renzo Piano houses an aquarium, planetarium, natural history museum, and world-class research facility—all under one living roof
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
SAN FRANCISCO (September 18, 2008) — One of the world’s most innovative museum building programs—a record-setting, sustainable new home for the California Academy of Sciences—has reached completion in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park.
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
After nearly a decade of planning and the largest cultural fundraising effort in San Francisco history, the new Academy will open to the public on September 27. Designed by Pritzker Prize winner Renzo Piano, the new building stands as an embodiment of the Academy’s mission to explore, explain and protect the natural world. Expected to earn a LEED Platinum certification from the U.S. Green Building Council, the new Academy is topped with a 2.5-acre living roof and employs a wide range of energy-saving materials and technologies.
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
The California Academy of Sciences is one of the world’s preeminent natural history museums and is an international leader in scientific research about the natural world. Founded in 1853 as the first scientific institution in the West, it is the only institution in the world to house an aquarium, planetarium, natural history museum, and world-class research and education programs under one roof. This major new initiative builds on the Academy’s distinguished history and deepens its commitment to advancing scientific literacy, engaging the public, and documenting and conserving Earth’s natural resources.
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
“Science is more influential and relevant to our daily lives than ever before, and natural history museums can and must deal head-on with the issues of the 21st century,” said Academy Executive Director Dr. Gregory Farrington. “Our goal was to create a new facility that would not only hold powerful exhibits but serve as one itself, inspiring visitors to conserve natural resources and help sustain the diversity of life on Earth.”
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
Design Driven by Nature
The Renzo Piano Building Workshop, in collaboration with local firm Stantec Architecture (formerly Chong Partners), worked with the Academy to create a design that grows out of the institution’s mission, history, and setting. The new design unifies the Academy’s original array of twelve buildings, which were built over eight decades, into a single modern landmark that places a visual and intellectual emphasis on the natural world.
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
“With the new Academy, we are creating a museum that is visually and functionally linked to its natural surroundings, metaphorically lifting up a piece of the park and putting a building underneath,” says architect Renzo Piano. “We are excited to collaborate with the Academy on a project in which design and mission are so seamlessly integrated. Through sustainable architecture and innovative design we are adding a vital new element to Golden Gate Park and expressing the Academy’s dedication to environmental responsibility.”
California Academy of Sciences www.max4object.com
Piano’s goal was to create a sense of transparency and connectedness between the building and the park through both a careful selection of materials and a thoughtful arrangement of space. Glass is used extensively in the exterior walls, allowing visitors to look through the museum to the surrounding green space of the park along both the east-west axis and the north-south axis of the building.

The glass, which is manufactured in Germany, is famous for its especially clear composition. To enhance the open, airy feeling created by the glass, Piano designed the central support columns to be extremely slender. A series of carefully configured cables prevent these slim columns from bending. The concrete for the walls and floors will remain untreated, continuing the emphasis on natural materials.

“Museums are not usually transparent,” says Piano. “They are opaque, they are closed. They are like a kingdom of darkness, and you are trapped inside. You don’t see where you are. But here we are building a natural history museum in the middle of a park, and those are two things that should belong to each other. They should be as connected as possible.”
The building is topped by a colorful living roof—a 2.5 acre expanse of native California plants and wildflowers that creates a new link in the ecological corridor for wildlife. Steep undulations in the roofline roll over the Academy’s domed planetarium, rainforest, and aquarium exhibits, echoing the topography of the building’s setting and evoking the interdependence of biological and earth systems.
The new Academy site is located directly across from the new de Young museum, which opened in October 2005 and was designed by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron. The architectural dialogue between the two buildings and their unique responses to the environment of Golden Gate Park furthers San Francisco’s growing role in supporting groundbreaking architecture and design.
Setting a New Standard for Sustainable Architecture
The new Academy is one of ten pilot “green building” projects of the San Francisco Department of the Environment, part of a vanguard initiative to develop models for workable, sustainable public architecture. Designed to be the greenest museum in the world, the new Academy optimizes the use of resources, minimizes environmental impacts, and serves as an educational model by demonstrating how humans can live and work in environmentally- responsible ways. The new facility integrates architecture and landscape, and helps to set a new standard for energy efficiency and environmentally responsible engineering systems in a public, architecturally distinguished building.
In Piano’s design, the environmentally sensitive components of the building are featured, rather than hidden. The living roof, which reduces storm water runoff by up to 3.6 million gallons of water per year, includes an observation deck, allowing visitors to admire the rooftop wildlife haven and learn about the benefits of this sustainable feature. The roof is bordered by a glass canopy containing nearly 60,000 photo voltaic cells, which will produce up to 10 percent of the Academy’s annual energy needs.
These photo voltaic cells are clearly visible in the glass canopy, providing both shade and visual interest for the visitors below. Additional green features throughout the building are highlighted with informational signage. There are varying shades of green as measured by the U.S. Green Building Council through its LEED™ (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) rating system.
The LEED rating system is a voluntary, consensus-based national standard for evaluating high-performance, sustainable buildings. Through all aspects of design and construction, the Academy will strive to achieve the highest possible rating: LEED platinum. The Academy’s rating is expected to be awarded by the end of 2008.
In recognition of this commitment to sustainable “green” design, the Academy project was selected as the North American winner of the silver Holcim Award for Sustainable Construction in September 2005. The competition, organized by the Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction in collaboration with five of the world’s leading technical universities, promotes sustainable approaches to the built environment.
The Academy was also awarded the EPA’s regional 2006 Environmental Award in recognition of the new building’s sustainable design. The EPA received more than 160 nominations in 2006; the Academy of Sciences was one of 39 recipients to be selected in this very elite group of environmental champions.

 

Hopkins Architects

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

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Hopkins Architects have been selected to design a 55,000-seater stadium in Pune, India for the Maharashtra Cricket Association
Hopkins Architects have been selected to design a 55,000-seater stadium in Pune, India for the Maharashtra Cricket Association. It is intended that the MCA Pune International Cricket Centre (MPIC) will be able to host matches for the ICC Cricket World Cup to be held in India and Sri Lanka in 2011. The practice already has landmark work at London’s Lord’s and Hampshire County Cricket grounds in its portfolio and has recently strengthened its sports offering with the National Tennis Centre at Roehampton (completed February 2007) and its recent Olympic Velodrome win. The MPIC project will include: A main 15 wicket match ground with adjacent practice ground for nets and smaller matches; spectator seating for 55,000 grouped into 4 stands including a Members’ Pavilion and a Media Stand; additional facilities for 5,000 members including squash, badminton, swimming, spa, restaurants and bars; 80 corporate hospitality boxes; a “state of the art” Indoor Cricket Academy with residential accommodation for youth training schemes; parking for almost 4,000 cars and 10,000 two-wheelers. The site is conveniently located close to the Pune-Mumbai Expressway, just outside the city of Pune, with dramatic 360-degree views of mountain ranges. Hopkins Architects will create an amphitheatre style ground to offer spectators maximum visibility both of the game and of the local scenery. Taking into account the local climate, the practice will use innovative solutions for the roofs to the stands both to maximize shading and provide a memorable and identifiable signature for the complex
 

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Construction For The Rotating Tower In Dubai To Begin This Month

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

Construction For The Rotating Tower In Dubai To Begin This Month
Modern Architecture & Design News www.max4object.com/wp
I don’t think that I have to say more about Dubai. Everybody knows that there you can find the most impressive structure in the modern world – world’s most luxurious hotel, Burj Al Arab and world’s tallest building , Burj Dubai. Now, they have prepared a new impressive structure: it’s the Rotating Tower designed by David Fisher’s Dynamic Architecture.

Modern Architecture & Design News www.max4object.com/wp
The Rotating Tower will be the first ever in motion as the floors will be able to twirl continuously. The construction of Fisher’s design will begin this month and when it’s finished it will change shape in order to give to the inhabitants the possibility of choosing a new view by pressing only one button.

Modern Architecture & Design News www.max4object.com/wp
This dynamic tower will be self-sufficient meaning that it will be powered by the sun and by the wind energy. Based on a state-of-the- art technology, Fisher designed the twirling tower to withstand heavy earthquakes even if each floor will rotate independently.
Modern Architecture & Design News www.max4object.com/wp

A weird fact about the Rotating Tower is that each of its floor will be produced in a factory which is a first for a building this size. The floors consist of 12 units and on each floor there will be individual plumbing, electric connections and air conditioning among others.

Modern Architecture & Design News www.max4object.com/wp
Dubai’s new masterpiece will feature 59 stories and as aforementioned, it will produce ten times the energy that it needs and this makes it a positive energy building. As the construction is scheduled to begin this month, there are some reports that a tower like this one will be built in Moscow

A new look for Dubai

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

A new look for Dubai

O-14 Tower introduces innovative design to Dubai’s Business Bay

The latest addition to Dubai’s expanding Business Bay area – the O-14 Tower – has recently been drawing international interest, due to its unique design in the context of its surrounding area. The tower, designed by architects Reiser and Umemotos comprises 300,000 sq ft of space over twenty-two stories and is located along the extension of Dubai Creek, occupying a prominent location on the waterfront esplanade. The project originally broke ground in February 2007, and as of September 2008 the first nine floors and exterior shell have been cast, revealing the beginnings of the perforated concrete shell exoskeleton.

 

The design of O-14 fundamentally shifts away from the current architectural norm in Dubai building design, by not employing the now ubiquitous curtain wall solutions and above-ground parking which have typified new developments in the area. Instead the architects have favoured a shade-producing, concrete load-bearing shell and an open public space at the tower base, achieved through employing a below ground parking solution. The design element that provides the O-14 with its individual look is a forty centimetre-thick concrete shell, interspersed with over a thousand openings that create a lace-like effect on the buildings façade. Chief architect for the project, Jesse Reiser states that they wanted something original, which would “turn the normative idea of a tower literally inside out…we discarded the idea of a typical Dubai structure early on.”

 

In order to achieve this, the designers cast super-liquid concrete around the original steel meshwork of the building before removing the thousand or so fill-ins, thus giving the tower its distinctive perforated shell. These perforations help serve as a solar screen to the occupants of the tower, and a one-metre gap between the O-14’s concrete shell and its main enclosure will create a ‘chimney effect,’ causing hot air to rise and creating an efficient passive cooling system.

 

With the O-14 due to open in Spring 2009, Jesse Reiser feels that the finished building will reflect the main objective of creating a unique take on traditional Dubai architecture, “we looked at traditional Islamic architecture but wanted to use that as inspiration, rather than copy it, and to try and intertwine the decorative and the practical.”

 

 

 

SHL win with harbour design

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

SHL win with harbour design

Modern Architecture & Design News max 4 object
Harbour masterplan and leisure complex to revitalise Holbaek Harbour
Schmidt Hammer Lassen has won the design competition for the masterplan of Holbaek Harbour in Denmark and for a new sports and leisure complex at the site.
The masterplan design acts as a modern “interpretation of an old town with narrow alleyways, which opens up to create a meeting point – a place for passing time,” said Kasper Frandsen, associate partner of the architects firm.
Covering half of the 40,000 sq m area the sports and leisure complex will take pride of place on the banks of the Holbaek fjord reaching into the water on reclaimed land. Taking inspiration from nature, the design is surrounded by leaf shaped green spaces which complement the angles and slits in the building’s roof when seen from above. This strikingly sculptural roof profile intentionally refers to the heritage and the scale of Holbæk’s old harbour – the site of the shipyard, fishing boats and the scent of wood chips, tar and seaweed.
A water culture centre, a flexible multi-purpose hall and smaller activity rooms, a health centre, fitness centre, hotel, café and restaurant as well as a four-screen cinema and sports kindergarten are all included in the design. In addition to proximity to the inlet and the harbour basins, two new channels will also be added to the area to create a new hub for Holbaek’s social, commercial and transportation port.
Modern Architecture & Design News max 4 object

Modern Architecture & Design News max 4 object

Modern Architecture & Design News max 4 object

Modern Architecture & Design News max 4 object

 

Superstar: A Mobile Chinatown by MAD

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

Superstar: A Mobile Chinatown by MAD
Modern Architecture & Design News

Beijing-based architects MAD have designed a conceptual, star-shaped, mobile Chinatown.
Modern Architecture & Design News
The architects describe the project as “MAD’s response to the redundant and increasingly out-of-date nature of the contemporary Chinatown”.
Modern Architecture & Design News
Moving around the world, the mobile town would produce all it’s own energy and recycle all its own waste, requiring no resources from its host city.
Modern Architecture & Design News
The town would be home to 15,000 people and include health resorts, sports facilities, drinking-water lakes and a digital cemetery.
Modern Architecture & Design News
The project will be presented at the Venice Architecture Biennale as part of the exhibition ‘Uneternal City’ curated by Aaron Betsky, which opens this week.
Modern Architecture & Design News
Watch a movie about the project here.
Here’s some more information from MAD:

MAD’S SUPERSTAR TO FEATURE AT 11th VENICE BIENNALE
A new project by MAD, ‘Superstar: A Mobile China Town’, will be featured in the exhibition ‘Uneternal City’ at the 11th Venice Biennale, curated by Aaron Betsky. The exhibition invites 12 young global architects to suggest interventions into an anonymous suburban area of Rome, which will exploit and represent new spaces and urban fabrics of a Rome of the future. It will be shown in the Arsenale, from 14th September to 23rd November 2008.
Modern Architecture & Design News
MAD’s proposal, ‘The Superstar’, takes the form of a New China Town.
Along with shopping malls, petrol stations and branches of McDonalds, the old China Town renders all of our cities boring and alike. It is nothing more than restaurant streets and fake traditional buildings representing a kitsch image of contemporary China, with no real life inside. It is a historical theme park that poisons the urban space. There must be a shock therapy to remedy this situation.
Modern Architecture & Design News
Superstar: A Mobile China Town is MAD’s response to the redundant and increasingly out-of-date nature of the contemporary Chinatown. Rather than a sloppy patchwork of poor construction and nostalgia, the Superstar is a fully integrated, coherent, and above all modern upgrade of the 20th century Chinatown model. It’s a place to enjoy, to consume Chinese food, quality goods and cultural events; it’s a place to create and to produce, where citizens can use workshops to study, design and realize their ideas.
Modern Architecture & Design News
Equally important to what this neo-community contains is how it operates. Superstar: A Mobile China Town is a benevolent virus that releases unknown energy in between unprincipled changes and principled steadiness. It can land at every corner of the world, exchanging the new Chinese energy with the environment where it stays. It’s self-sustaining: it grows its own food, requires no resources from the host city, and recycles all of its waste. And it’s a living place, with authentic Chinese nature, health resorts, sports facilities and drinking water lakes. There’s even a digital cemetery, to remember the dead. The Superstar is a dream that’s home to 15,000 people: there is no hierarchy, no hyponymy, but a fusion of technology and nature, future and humanity.
Modern Architecture & Design News
The Superstar’s first destination will be the periphery of Rome. The Superstar will provide an unexpected, ever-changing future imbedded in the Eternal past.
Welcome to the Superstar, the China Town of today.
Modern Architecture & Design News
ABOUT MAD
MAD is a young and innovative architectural design office practicing contemporary architecture, urbanism and cultural analysis. Based in Beijing, we examine and develop our concept of futurism beyond the boundaries of architecture by exploring into sociology, technology and politics in today’s China.
MAD’s ongoing projects include: the Absolute Tower in Toronto, Canada, it is the international competition MAD won in 2006; the Tianjin Sinosteel International Plaza, a 358M high-rise building in Tianjin, China; the Mongolian Museum in Inner Mongolia, China and some large-scale public complex and residential housing in Denmark, Hong Kong, Dubai, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan and Costa Rica.
MAD’s work has been published worldwide. In 2006, MAD was awarded the Architectural League Young Architects Forum Award. The office has also presented its designs in a series of exhibitions, including the “MAD in China” exhibition at the Venice Architecture Biennial, and the “MAD Under Construction” exhibition at the Beijing Tokyo Art Projects Gallery in Beijing. In 2007, “MAD in China,” a floating city of MAD’s work, was shown at the Danish Architecture Centre (DAC), in Copenhagen, Denmark. In 2008, MAD published its first book MAD DINNER with ACTAR.
PARTNERS:
Ma Yansong, Yosuke Hayano, Dang Qun

Opera without the drama

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Opera without the drama

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Wexford’s new Opera House may be small but it is perfectly formed
It’s not every day that an architect gets to design an opera house, so there was much excitement in the small town of Wexford, Ireland when the Office of Public Works Architects with London based Keith Williams Architects presided over the preview of the town’s shiny new opera building this week. At only €33m, Wexford comes in at just 10% of the cost of Henning Larsens Tegnestue’s Copenhagen Opera House completed in 2004. Wexford is opera, but not as we know it. It is however full of surprises, the first is the entrance. Even when looking for it, many people walk right past the door. No pretentious columns or wide marble stairways, just a few letters over a humble doorway in a row of terraces. This is taking “understated” to new, previously unimaginable heights.
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Once inside, the building unfolds like a Tardis. It must be pointed out at this juncture, that the opera house, other than from the other side of the river, is barely visible from within the town. Keith Williams explains, “Close up, the new building has retained the extraordinary element of surprise and secrecy so characteristic of the old Theatre Royal, by re-integrating itself into the historic fabric of Wexford’s medieval centre, behind reinstated terraced buildings.
Opera without the drama www.max4object.com/wp
The scale of the building and its contribution to Wexford’s silhouette only becomes truly apparent when the project is viewed from the banks of the River Slaney. From there the new flytower appears in the skyline alongside the spires of Wexford’s two Pugin churches and the Italianate tower of the Franciscan Friary, announcing the presence of an exceptional new cultural building in the historic townscape.
Opera without the drama www.max4object.com/wp
Internally the main auditorium, inspired both by the form of a cello and the curves of a traditional horseshoe-form operatic space, has been lined in black American walnut, whilst the seating has been finished in pale purple leather giving a rich sense of material quality to its contemporary design.”
Opera without the drama www.max4object.com/wp
The new, larger opera house’s two performing spaces have capacities of 780/175 and totally replaces a previous Theatre Royal structure.
Opera without the drama www.max4object.com/wp
Key facilities in the new 7,500sqm theatre include:
• A 780 seat state-of-the- art auditorium – The O’Reilly Theatre – specifically designed for opera
• A 175 seat second space – The Jerome Hynes Theatre – for drama, music, and rehearsal
• Main stage, orchestra pit, flytower and back stage
• Foyers/box office/cloaks/ bars and café /wcs
• Hospitality Areas
• Backstage facilities for directors, conductors, designers and singers
• Dressing rooms
• Chorus Rehearsal Rooms
• Prop Making

The Wexford Festival Opera is internationally acclaimed and draws some 40% of its audience from overseas. Williams won the Wexford project shortly after the successful completion of his Unicorn Childrens’ theatre in Southwark, south London.

Designed by: Office of Public Works Architects and Keith Williams Architects

 

The Skyscraper Of The Future – Symbiotic Interlock

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

The Skyscraper Of The Future - Symbiotic Interlock

The Skyscraper Of The Future – Symbiotic Interlock
Across the world there many architectural design competitions meant to brings new ideas for the skyscrapers of the future. One of these events is the eVolo Skyscraper Competition and the structure that caught our attention is a design made by Daekwon Park called Symbiotic Interlock.

The Symbiotic Interlock skyscraper is destined to “to reunite the isolated city blocks and insert a multi-layer network of public space, green space and nodes for the city”. If you want to enter the competition you have to come up with your own sustainable skyscraper that needs to be technologically possible and environmental friendly.

The Skyscraper Of The Future - Symbiotic Interlock

The Skyscraper Of The Future - Symbiotic Interlock
 

New York’s Gouverneur healthcare system expands with RMJM Hillier

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

New York’s Gouverneur healthcare system expands with RMJM Hillier
Ground was broken today on the $180 million renovation and expansion of Gouverneur Healthcare Services in New York City’s Lower East Side. The project, designed by RMJM Hillier calls for a 316,000 sq ft renovation and a 108,000 sq ft addition that will create a state-of-the art community health care facility. A new atrium will be built on Madison Avenue for the five-storey Ambulatory Care Center, which will be called The Center for Community Health and Wellness. The Residence at Gouverneur Court, which houses long term care, will undergo a dramatic redesign and expansion that includes private rooms and suites, several recreational areas and amenities, and increased natural light.

The project is scheduled for completion in 2012.

 

 


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