Showing posts with label building methods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label building methods. Show all posts

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Conceptual seed of future buildings, by Brittany Bell

Britany Bell, an architecture student in University of Victoria, New Zeland, has made her basic concepts of design. In this design concept she create seed concept may appear in her next design.



Basically, the idea is the concept of plants that grow in the city. Brittany Bell write in the text;

Each year, more and more types of plants that become extinct or endangered. The New Zealand government has proposed the idea to create the archives to seed the Pacific home to the original plant and preserve them for future generations.
 

Brittany describe that architecture of the future is unpredictable, and therefore there is a need to design buildings that can move and grow like plants in the changing environment and ecosystem. Basically she take the form of bone from the plant's 'cytoskeleton'. From this basic concept it can be further developed in response to building environment and grow with, such as adapting the rainfall, making forms of protection as a wing. These structures can even move to accommodate such protection.

+ via Dezeen
+ via Britt Bell

Friday, November 28, 2008

New emerging architecture design of Student Housing Complex by Ofis in Paris

The objective of this building is the green aspect of 'energy efficient building', which will be built at the end of 2010. This Student Housing Complex is somehow a de ja vu with metabolism architecture from Japanese modern architects with its tilted box units. Ofis Architekti, a Slovenia based architect win Student Housing Competition in Paris.





The complex will be build before the tram line pass the nearby neighbourhood in 2012. One thing obvious in this design is that it uses horizontal lines as shading device. It also uses simple, well insulation and ventilation plan, but it is still questioned whether the insulation will be in contrary with ventilation.



+ via ecofriend
+ via contemporist
+ via ofis

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Dynamic Tower in Dubai, ever changing form- architecture


UK based architect, David Fisher with his firm Dynamic Architecture, has been honored as the worldwide Architect of the year 2008 by The Developer & Builders Alliance (DBA). Other finalists were Zaha Hadid, Jean Nouvel, Foster & partners, Santiago Calatrava, and Pelli Clarke.







David Fisher design this tower in a very dinamic shape, with changes in every floor according to the need of every floor, meteorogical factors, that makes it has rotating and ever changing form in every direction. The construction is started with the top floor (80th), which is prefabricated units assembled around the core. It is a 'moving' building that has prefab floor each made in Italy to rotate freely creating a always changing, dynamic shape tower.


Fisher was graduated from the University of Florence, Italy, and he developed methods of 'dynamic architecture' that he believes will be a new concept and dimension of architecture and way of living. Even though there are many skepticism about this tower, because he has never build a skyscraper before. But he said he was working with experienced and reputable firm in UK and India.

Stated as the first 'Dynamic Tower' as Building in Motion, this building is believed to be a new symbol and era for architecture and Dubai.



Created by revolutionary architect Dr. David Fisher, the mixed use Dynamic Tower offers infinite design possibilities, as each floor rotates independently at different speeds, resulting in a unique and ever evolving structure that introduces a fourth dimension to architecture, Time.
The Dynamic Tower in Dubai will have 80 floors, and will be 420 meters (1,380 feet) tall, Apartments will range in size from 124 square meters (1,330 square feet), to Villas of 1,200 square meters (12,900 square feet) complete with a parking space inside the apartment. the first 20 floors will be an offices, floors 21 to 35 will be a luxury hotel, floor 36 through 70 will be residential apartments, and the top 10 floors will be luxury villas located in a prime location in Dubai, it is destined to become the most prestigious building in the city.
The Dynamic Tower in Dubai will be the first skyscraper to be entirely constructed in a factory from prefabricated parts, it will require only 600 people in the assembly facility and 80 technicians on the construction site instead of 2,000 workers on a similar size traditional construction site, Construction is scheduled to be completed by 2010.
His Highness Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum ruler of Dubai and Vice President of the United Arab Emirates, is considered by many to be a true visionary of the future, Dr. Fisher's dreams for the Dynamic Tower in Dubai were inspired by His Highness who said “Do not wait for the future to come to you…face the future.” (in dynamicarchitecture.net) 


via
+ todaysfacilitymanager
+ cnn.com
+ dynamicarchitecture
+ gizmodo

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Container houses by Lot-Ek

Via Inhabitat:
Lot-Ek in their presentation talks about the reuse of container for homes. The house will be from container that is cut in their sides of corrogated metal for windows and doors. The interior will be covered with wall boards and ceiling boards.

Sustainable prefab houses

The modern house, by Method Homes is a prefab factory-built green homes with a commitment to innovative design and sustainability. They say by building in a factory they will reduce construction waste to less than 10 percent of materials used, compared to 30 percent common in site-built construction. Their factory built process in conjunction with enhanced insulation, solar options, and energy star appliances ensure Method Homes are energy efficient and will save the owner money.

Method Homes will provide fresh indoor air to inhabitants by offering radiant heat, increased ventilation, and eliminating VOC finishes and other harmful chemicals. The Method Cabin is targeting LEED for homes 2.0 Gold certification.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Interview with Ken Yeang - his vision of future architecture

In 2003, Yeang's work was included in the exhibition "Big & Green: Towards Sustainable Architecture in the 21st Century" curated by David Gissen at the National Building Museum

Yeang's 1992 Menara Mesiniaga building in Subang Jaya Selangor, Malaysia is a catalogue of his bioclimatic techniques, including daring "vertical landscaping", external louvers to reduce solar heat gain, extensive natural ventilation and lighting, and an "active Intelligent Building" system for automated energy savings.

Like William McDonough, Yeang's concentration on energy conservation and environmental impact is a radical departure from mainstream architecture's view of the profession as an art form. Yeang has written, "In practice, architectural design is a craft, and a variable one at that. Post modernism has successfully shown up the volatile nature of this craft by its unrestrained use of architectural symbolisms, its frivolous multiplication of the surface area of the built envelope, its prodigious use of unnecessary building materials, its indifference to engineering economy, its extravagant use of land, and its irrational subservience to whim and history instead of the allocation and restriction of excessive consumption of energy resources." Yeang is very innovative, and who might know that his original idea can save the world? (Wikipedia with little changes).

INTERVIEW WITH KEN YEANG.



An interview with architect Ken Yeang, on CNN's 'Just Imagine' programme.
Ken describes his vision for the future of buildings - and how we might live in and organise our cities in 2020, to make them greener.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Meet Tadao Ando

INTERVIEW WITH TADAO ANDO
from
http://www.designboom.com/eng/interview/ando.html



what is the best moment of the day?

no particular moment.
morning maybe good because of the feeling of beginning.

what kind of music do you listen to at the moment?
mostly classic.

what books do you have on your bedside table?
I am interested in things happening around me, and I need to understand
what's going on in other artistic sectors like music and literature.
I read a lot, but nothing comes to mind at the moment.

do you read architecture and design magazines?
I don't read them. just look at it.

I assume you notice how women dress.
do you have any preferences?
I don't look so closely at women's fashion, but from the 20th century on,
people have had the freedom to express themselves and their individualities,
and fashion is one of the most fundamental ways in which they do this,
men and women are equally able to express themselves.

what kind of clothes do you avoid wearing?
nothing in particular.

do you have any pets?
a dog named 'le corbusier'.

where do you work on your designs and projects?
once I traveled a lot, to see the nature, the countryside and the cities,
with a sketchbook... a practice I continue today.
but plans actually I draw in my office.

who would you like to design something for?
I believe that the way people live can be directed a little by architecture.
I would like my architecture to inspire people to use their own resources,
to move into the future.
although now we are more and more governed by the american way
of thinking, money, the economy...
I hope that now people will shift to a more european way (of thinking),
culture, individuality, and that people move towards new goals.
so for me to be able to contribute to this would be great.

do you discuss or exchange ideas with other architects?
not much.

describe your style, like a good friend of yours would describe it.
walls are the most basic elements of architecture,
and in all my works, light is an important factor.
the primary reason is to create a place for the individual,
a zone for oneself within society.
its very difficult to explain or describe my style, I hope the answer will
come out of the interview.

what project has given you the most satisfaction?
as an architect you have to do your best work for any project,
but for me the most satisfying thing is when architecture can
do something to make people's lives better, to inspire them.

do you try to find meeting points between asian and european cultures?
I don't see them as opposites, the west and the east,
but for example western society seems to be centered on
american culture.
but I think it is important to understand that apart from that
main culture, there are so many other cultures,
and it is necessary to respect them all and their differences.

is there any architect from the past you admire?
of course I learned from history, from the renaissance,
from mies van der rohe, le corbusier, terragni... many architects.

what current architects do you appreciate?
like with the work of the past, as an architect you have to look around
and see what your contemporaries are creating,
for my contemporaries I have respect and interest.

did you always want to be an architect?
right from the beginning yes, but in my life I have done many things,
at one time I was a boxer...
I was never a good student.
I always preferred learning things on my own.



FROM WIKIPEDIA:
Tadao Ando's body of work is known for the creative use of natural light and for architectures that follow the natural forms of the landscape (rather than disturbing the landscape by making it conform to the constructed space of a building). The architect's buildings are often characterized by complex three-dimensional circulation paths. These paths interweave between interior and exterior spaces formed both inside large-scale geometric shapes and in the spaces between them.

His "Row House in Sumiyoshi" (Azuma House), a small two-story, cast-in-place concrete house completed in 1976, is an early work that begins to show elements of his characteristic style. It consists of three equally sized rectangular volumes: two enclosed volumes of interior spaces separated by an open courtyard. By nature of the courtyard's position between the two interior volumes, it becomes an integral part of the house's circulation system.

Ando's housing complex at Rokko, just outside Kobe, is a complex warren of terraces and balconies and atriums and shafts. The designs for Rokko Housing One (1983) and for Rokko Housing Two (1993) illustrate a range of issues in the traditional architectural vocabulary -- the interplay of solid and void, the alternatives of open and closed, the contrasts of light and darkness. More significantly, Ando's noteworthy achievement in these clustered buildings is site specific -- the structures survived undamaged after the Great Hanshin Earthquake of 1995. New York Times architectural critic Paul Goldberger argues convincingly that "Ando is right in the Japanese tradition: spareness has always been a part of Japanese architecture, at least since the 16th century; [and] it is not for nothing that Frank Lloyd Wright more freely admitted to the influences of Japanese architecture than of anything American." Like Ando, Wright's site specific decision-making anticipated seismic activity; and like Ando's several Hyōgo-Awaji buildings, Wright's Imperial Hotel in Tokyo did survive the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Wooden house in Vancouver, Canada

Modern West Coast House
First I saw this house in a book of houses compilation. Quite amazing design of wooden house.
The poster in Flickr said it:

A new modern west coast post and beam style house under construction in the Eagle Harbour neighbourhood of West Vancouver, BC, Canada.

More to see from this house:

Modern West Coast House

This house is a very good example of wood construction.

SHIGERU BAN New York City Shutter Houses

Via Inhabitat.

Scaling his literal Curtain House into a larger and more dense development, Shigeru Ban’s Shutter Houses are one part architecture, one part art, and one part pure poetry from one of our favorite thoughtful architects. The 9-unit condo located in West Chelsea blurs the line between indoor and outdoor with a perforated metal shutter system that lets residence open and close their spaces on a whim.

Units range from 1,950 to 3,180-square-feet. The rolling shutters are inspired by Korean delis and Chelsea galleries that use industrial rolling grates to open and close their storefronts. Shigeru makes industrial chic, and allows urban dwellers to let the sunshine in and live among nature even in the bustling Big Apple. Metal Shutter Houses at 524 West 19th Street are scheduled for completion in Fall 2008.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Fresh sustainable design

BoabDesign offers a variety of fresh look contemporary building designs, said to be supporting sustainable design. Their website contains their work, full of those orange and lime juice of tasty look.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Millions ideas open up for prefab houses

Prefab houses is considered an alternative way to own a house when custom designed houses are too expensive for many people. Prefab houses also express modern aesthetics because of the materials they use.


There are sure to be millions of chance to develop ideas for architects in this prefab houses issue. This is what fabprefab explains.


A perfect example from Chilearq

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