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Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Monday, June 4, 2012
Fogo Island by Saunders Architecture
Orientated towards the sea, the studios offer their residents the perfect view of elemental extremes and seasonal changes. Each one has its own unique design and is connected to one of the island’s communities
While several studios stretch out over the water, some of them reach upwards, such as the tall, origami-esque Tower Studio, pictured here
Orientated towards the sea, the studios offer their residents the perfect view of elemental extremes and seasonal changes. Each one has its own unique design and is connected to one of the island’s communities
While several studios stretch out over the water, some of them reach upwards, such as the tall, origami-esque Tower Studio, pictured here
Orientated towards the sea, the studios offer their residents the perfect view of elemental extremes and seasonal changes. Each one has its own unique design and is connected to one of the island’s communities
Fogo Island artists' studios by Saunders Architecture
Fogo Island artists' studios by Saunders Architecture
Architecture update: Letter from Japan
Priorities have changed radically since we last took an in depth look at the Japanese architectural landscape. The country is now anxious to pull its economy out of a recession stemming from March's devastating TÅhoku Earthquake and tsunami, as well as the problems related to the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant. The natural disaster plunged the Asian nation, the world's third-richest economy, into its worst crisis since World War II, but widespread reconstruction works are now underway, with architects taking a key role in the most damaged areas, constructing temporary relief facilities as well as new sustainable master plans. The design community has also come to the fore, expressing its support with art, graphics and products in the hope of raising money.
Current power shortages have forced the Japanese to limit their energy consumption, a phenomenon that architects have picked up on as a new starting point of design. Fresh ideas on living 'the old way' (a traditional Japanese house was built to resists its souring hot summers without the use of air-conditioning) are characterising new designs and the architects are making a virtue of necessity. Here, we take a look at several of the small building projects that are currently sprouting up in the country, all of which have been designed with freshly environmentally conscious minds.
Current power shortages have forced the Japanese to limit their energy consumption, a phenomenon that architects have picked up on as a new starting point of design. Fresh ideas on living 'the old way' (a traditional Japanese house was built to resists its souring hot summers without the use of air-conditioning) are characterising new designs and the architects are making a virtue of necessity. Here, we take a look at several of the small building projects that are currently sprouting up in the country, all of which have been designed with freshly environmentally conscious minds.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
'Het Huis' by Robbrecht and Daem for Middelheim Museum, Antwerp
Architecture practice Robbrecht and Daem have designed a new semi-open
pavilion in the Hortiflora flower gardens of Antwerp's Middelheim
Museum. Photography: Joris Casaer
'It's absolutely not a white cube,' says Belgian architect Paul Robbrecht about the new pavilion his Ghent-based practice Robbrecht and Daem(also responsible for the renovation and extension of London's whitechapel Gallery has designed for the Middelheim
open-air sculpture museum in Antwerp. Pointing out the exposed columns
and 'knots' where the beams have been welded into the green steel
structure, he adds: 'What we really wanted to do was make a building
that shows how it is built, that shows the tectonics of construction.'
The brief for the semi-open structure was straightforward. 'It was for a
pavilion that would have real contact with nature, with the landscape
around it, a place where smaller or fragile works of art could be shown,
or works that needed a more framed setting,' says Robbrecht. The
colourful but unsettling glossy ceramic heads and urns of German artist Thomas Schutte
displayed here were created especially for the pavilion's inauguration
and contrast ingeniously with the smooth concrete floors, geometric
lines and angles of the roof and the special 'topography' of the
ceiling, which 'looks as if it's moving'.
The pavilion represents nature in architecture, says Robbrecht. Two
trees have been planted at opposite ends of the space and steel
lattice-patterned screens (which can be pulled across the four openings
to close the pavilion at night) create extraordinary dappled effects as
if light is coming through the branches of a tree. 'You could almost
think it's a roof of leaves above you,' Robbrect says excitedly.
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