Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Chiisai

AMA House
Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates




One of my lecturer said he's bored of Japanese architecture because it's all the same plain squares, but this kind of minimalistic look always seems so "kawaii" to me (hahah).

Look at those tiny openings~ and the size of the building itself... also I like Japan's sliding doors XD

From the architect:

"Small House"
As the site is surrounded by rice fields, we planned “a small house” that the idyllic atmosphere and landscape. The entire volume of the house was first divided into individual rooms, their each concept were finally linked together taking account of factors such as connection of garden and room, entrance of light, ventilation, flow line of daily activities, etc. Also, to meet with the demand for a guest parking lot and family garden, we laid out the rooms across the site to secure two exterior spaces.
Multiple Viewpoint
Each room has different volume, finish, and openings. These differences were made to enhance deeper experience with elements by presenting more than one viewpoint on each element; for example, when the light enters from wide opening, it gives you different impression from the thin ray of light in a dark place. These elements can be trees in the garden, wind, internal openness, nuance of shadows, and communications between family members.
Connected Air
When opening the door, these rooms become “One single room with connections”. Although, unlike a general single room, it can not get a view of whole room, one room is visually connected with some and also connected with others beyond by air. Communication is prompted among the viewable rooms by the strong connection of visual element, and with the rooms out of sight by the senses other than visual sense. Subsequently, the light and wind streaming into a room, as well as the act and the sign of the family there are transmitted to the adjacent rooms, and are extended beyond.
Supplementary Architecture
The rooms expanded in the site functions as a house without being isolated functionally and spatially.  The important thing is that the rooms are connected.  The “connection” is formed by the persons and nature, and is not limited within the structure and the diagram of architecture. I think that the architecture is something that acts as a supplement of the “connected air “.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Spanish curves

Spanish Pavilion @ Shanghai Expo 2010
Benedetta Tagliabue, Miralles Tagliabue EMBT

“With the volumetric, material, and structural inspirations of a wicker basket array, the void of the stands will mold a pavilion in which tubular metallic supports will sustain a wicker grid that will filter the light and function as a climatic membrane that wraps the pavilion.”
Text by Anatxu Zabalbeascoa, 
El Pais Babelia 03.11.07



Sunday, May 29, 2011

The truth

...is out there in a Dilbert comic strip.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Pyramid of Peace!

Posting the second item today to celebrate tonight's Champion finale between Manchester United versus Barcelona (aka MU-Barca) !! God I'm so exciteeeeed~!!! (>w<)


Palace of Peace and Reconciliation | Astana
Foster + Partners







In addition to representing the world’s religious faiths, the Palace houses a 1,500-seat opera house, educational facilities, and a national centre for Kazakhstan’s various ethnic and geographical groups. This programmatic diversity is unified within the pure form of a pyramid, 62 metres high with a 62 x 62-metre base.


Co-architects: Tabanlioglu Architecture & Consulting (Istanbul)

Hanukkah?



A synagoge | Amsterdam
seARCH

It reminds me of Ross's holiday armadillo when he tried to explain Hanukkah to Ben~
...then Chandler came in a Santa's suit. LOL.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Then there was light.

Gate Building
Flowing Gardens - International Horticultural Expo 2011
Plasma Studio

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Mirror mirror on the wall

Who's the fairest of us all?



Felix Nussbaum Museum
Daniel Libeskind

...okay I was joking about the mirror mirror thing, but the resemblance in uncanny I couldn't resist.

From Archdaily:

The Felix Nussbaum Museum is an extension to the Cultural History Museum in Osnabrück and is dedicated to the work of Felix Nussbaum, the Jewish artist born in Osnabrück in 1904. The Museum displays Nussbaum’s graphics and paintings done prior to his extermination in Auschwitz, and houses a temporary exhibition space focusing on the themes of racism and intolerance. The building was completed in the summer of 1998, in collaboration with Reinders & Partner Lange, and has already attracted more than 4 million visitors.

The building consists of three main components: the tall and narrow central Nussbaum corridor, the long main section, and the bridge, which acts as a connection to the old museum. In its pathways with their sudden breaks, unpredictable intersections and dead ends, the building structure reflects the life of Felix Nussbaum.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

When i say "books"

I mean the "BOOKS".


I know Taschen publishing from my "Yes Is More!!" copy by BIG.


They have other tons of nice readings and more, but this kind of books literally NAGS on my financial conscience.


Check out these limited signed copies of complete works coming with outrageous boxes.


$2000
Limited to 300 numbered copies, presented in a matt-finish custom oakwood-box designed by the architect. In addition, each copy of this Art Edition comes with an individual sketch hand-drawn and signed by Tadao Ando.


$1500
Limited to 200 numbered copies, delivered in a  clamshell box and each signed by the architect, this Art Edition features a special cover custom-made by Zaha Hadid, a cast and high gloss polished black acrylic plate inspired by the design of the new MAXXI in Rome.


$1500
Limited to 200 numbered copies, delivered in a clamshell box and each signed by the architect, this Art Edition features a special cover custom made by Shigeru Ban, with a hand-crafted mesh of polished African Samba wood (Triplochiton scleroxylon), inspired by the roof design of the new Centre Pompidou-Metz. 


$1000
Limited to 1,000 signed and numbered copies packaged in a translucent plexiglass slipcase especially designed by Jean Nouvel for this edition.


$1000
Limited to 200 numbered copies, delivered in a luxurious clamshell box and each signed by the artist, the Art Edition features a special cover custom made by Olafur Eliasson: a high gloss polished and cold formed steel plate imitating the prismatic effect of raindrops falling into water.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Monday, May 23, 2011

Football fan?

Then you must've seen this before!

Allianz Arena
Herzog & de Meuron

The facade of the arena is made of 2,874 inflated ETFE foil air panels (same material used for the Eden Project and the Water Cube). Each of which can be lit in 3 colours: red, blue, white.

The arena is lit up red whener FC Bayern Munchen in playing in the stadium, in blue for TSV 1860 Munchen, and in white for the German national Team.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Van Gogh and *.gif images


This is probably what Vincent Van Gogh saw while painting "Starry Night".

...if only gif images existed back then.

From gregmelander.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Harajuku Church

Harajuku Church | Tokyo
Ciel Rouge





From Ciel Rouge (gotta love the name!! It's so Harajuku-ish for me XD):


The architecture for this Protestant Church is centered by a wide nave arranged with six arches and a bell tower that symbolically lay importance on the seven elements, the seven days of creation, the seven churches of the Orient… We create the impression of a biblical open sky image from which the light amid the Holy Spirit descends upon the followers and worshippers.


The softly curved arches specifically designed for fine acoustics also remind of a hand overwhelming the crowd. For the use as an authentic concert hall facility the temple displays the comfort of lodges discreetly positioned right from within the arches.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Bookworms' Haven

Musashino Art University Library | Tokyo
Sou Fujimoto Architects



The building's interior walls are bookshelves. I'm gonna make a house like this someday!

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

If your site faces west

...be creative.

I live in Indonesia, which is very VERY high in temperature in the past years (what's with the excruciating 42oC?).

The fact that sunset glare sucks big time - also the painful excessive heat gain - concludes the basic rule of a tropical building:

"DO NOT BUILD ANYTHING FACING WEST"

So when you get a site that faces west, put on your thinking cap and be creative.
...like my studio classmate!

This happened in our 2nd semester in studio class:

Lecturer: How are you doing?
Student A: I'm a bit confused, Miss.
Lecturer: What's the problem?
Student A: My site's facing west.
Lecturer: Think of an activity that requires you to face west.
Student A: ............scripture pilgrimage?


For those who still hasn't got it, go read the legendary "Journey to the West".

Monday, May 16, 2011

Sunday, May 15, 2011

The Souk

This was my case study for my hybrid + high rise project in studio 4.
Loving the grids and the sliding roofs!

Aldar Central Market
Foster + Partners

Aldar Central Market
Foster + Partners

Details from Foster + Partners:

Abu Dhabi’s historic Central Market is to be transformed into a dynamic new quarter with markets, shops, offices, apartments and hotels. One of the oldest sites in the city, Central Market will be a reinterpretation of the traditional market place and a new civic heart for Abu Dhabi. The project comprises a combination of lower-rise, ecologically sensitive levels of retail, roof gardens – forming a new public park – and three towers, with generous underground parking. Pushed to the corners of the site to maximise the ground plane, the cluster of towers creates a striking new urban landmark.

Like a modern version of the souk, the new Central Market will be a city in microcosm. It will unite high end retail and luxury goods shops with individual courtyards and alleys, together with food markets and craft-based trades specific to the region. Avoiding the generic feel of the universal shopping mall, the scheme will fuse the local vernacular with global aspirations.

While the towers relate to distance and skyline, the souk and the lower levels are scaled to the pedestrian. An intimate sequence of streets, alleys, courtyards, balconies and colonnades dissolve barriers between inside and outside, with flexible sliding roofs and walls to enable control of internal environments, and to maximise potential for natural ventilation. Like a patchwork quilt of gridded modules of varying height, the scheme is a highly articulated composition that bridges and unifies two city blocks.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Architects 'are sexiest'


Oookay let's face it - architects are problem-solving, creative, cool, and confident.

Architects also have egos as solid as Mario Botta's works.

...or else we won't survive architecture studies just by hanging on to the hope that we'll be filthy rich and famous someday.

One question remains - what's left of us female architects?
(PR executives, guys? Seriously?)

Friday, May 13, 2011

Come to the dark side

We have monochrome awesomeness.

Suprematism | Galerie Gmurzynska
Zaha Hadid

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Rain, rain, come again

Check this out: street ads that shows only on rainy days!


Rain Campaign is a form of Clean Advertising, and according to the company "an environmentally friendly way of advertising on the street. With a template and a high pressure water sprayer the advertising message is cleaned out of the dirt on the street or on a wall. The result is a contrast between the dirty street and the clean message."

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

A design #2

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion | Paris
Zaha Hadid for CHANEL
Commissioned by Karl Lagerfeld




I'm loving these designer-for-designer works!
(check out "A design" for Roberto Cavalli's house)

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Column vs Pole

The mighty God of online urban explanation (it's called Wikipedia) stated:
column or pillar in architecture and structural engineering is a vertical structural element that transmits, through compression, the weight of the structure above to other structural elements below. For the purpose of wind or earthquake engineering, columns may be designed to resist lateral forces. 

On the other hand, it also stated:
A pole is a solid cylindrical object or column with its length greater than its diameter. 

After a little bit of the enlightening lines above, we can conclude that a pole CAN be a column.

So here comes the conversation I had with my studio lecturer and classmates some time ago. The topic was originally podium structures for retails.

Student A: "Sir, is it possible to place a column in the middle of a retail?" (@_@)
Lecturer:  "Maybe if it has a specific use, like..." (^_^)
Student B: "......a stripper pole!" (^▽^)
Lecturer: (O_o) 

Monday, May 9, 2011

Play

I'm having a Peter Pan Syndrome moment.

Ecological Children Activity and Education Centre Stairs | Thailand
24H-architecture.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Millefeuille

Can I have a bite of this?

Sugamo Shinkin Bank, Tokyo
Emmanuelle Moureaux

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Friday, May 6, 2011

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Megacity: Jakarta

Location: studio class
Original topic: urban planning

Lecturer: "Jakarta has been made a case study by many experts from around the world."
Student A: "How come?"
Lecturer: "The city arrangements can't be figured out rationally."
Me: "So basically Indonesians are irrational."
Lecturer: "......" 

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

CAD monkey

Found this from mirage.studio7 XD


The 'waiting until the last minute' part is kinda true in studio classes.

Changing the design too much due to lecturer's daily comments is seriously painful, especially when your final reviewer asked,
 "I like your original idea, but why did you stray so far from it?"
And there's this split second when all you wanna say is "Ask him/her."

THEN you wonder since when you turned into a CAD monkey (aka someone who CAD whatever others tell him to).

By God, my finals are right under my nose and I'm posting THIS?

Monday, May 2, 2011

Where?

"GOD is in the details." 
- Ludwig Mies van der Rohe 

Sunday, May 1, 2011