Quantcast
Channel: Architecture & Design
Viewing all 1184 articles
Browse latest View live

VIDEO: The Multi-Faceted Atlas of Le Corbusier

$
0
0
VIDEO: The Multi-Faceted Atlas of Le Corbusier
"Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes" at MoMA

Charles-Édouard Jeanneret (1887 - 1965), better known as Le Corbusier, was a visionary of his time. Not only was the Swiss-born French urbanist a pioneer in modern architecture, he was also an artist who expressed his imagined landscapes with various media such as watercolors, architectural models, and found objects from his global expeditions. The Museum of Modern Art presents its first major exhibition of his work, “Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes”, the largest exhibition of the multi-faceted architect in New York with more than 400 pieces. Guest curator Jean-Louis Cohen, Professor in the History of Architecture at New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts, took Blouin ARTINFO on a preview of the exhibit and shared his fascination with Le Corbusier’s creative process.


Look Ma, no Beams! City Form Lab's Floating Canopy

$
0
0
Look Ma, no Beams! City Form Lab's Floating Canopy
The SUTD Library Pavilion is made out of a timber shell covered in steel scales

SINGAPORE – When a design school needs a new facility, who better than the students to brainstorm, design and even help to build it? The Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) did just that last year, organizing a student workshop for first-year students to design an outdoor extension to its existing library.

The winning team came up with a self-supporting canopy that had no beams, vertical walls or columns, which formed the preliminary ideas for City Form Lab's Library Pavilion, lead designers Raul Kalvo and Andres Sevtsuk told BLOUIN ARTINFO via email.

City Form Lab is a design studio at SUTD, established in collaboration with United States university Massachusetts Institute of Technology's School of Architecture & Planning. The studio developed the proposal into a pavilion made out of lightweight timber shell covered in galvanized steel scales. The curved canopy crawls between three mature trees and turns its back towards the Ayer Rajah Expressway on the south of SUTD’s Dover Drive campus for noise protection. There are three arched openings that open the pavilion to the library, a small courtyard with an existing jackfruit tree, as well as an outdoor timber deck for open-air gatherings.

City Form Lab also oversaw the fabrication of the site, made of 3000 unique plywood panels hand-assembled into triangles by the designers, some students as well as SUTD staff, which were then aggregated into larger components and taken down to the site to be installed by contractors.

“The plywood beams and metal cladding pieces were designed such that there was only one correct way of fitting them together, so fortunately we didn't have to worry too much about grave mistakes in the assembly process,” say the designers.

The whole canopy assembly took about two and a half months, with two to three sessions held a week. “Between five to twenty five students and staff would come and assemble the elements for a few hours,” the designers add. “We would usually finish up by having a big pizza dinner together.

“Demystify the Market”: Design Miami Founder Launches Online Sales

$
0
0
“Demystify the Market”: Design Miami Founder Launches Online Sales
Ambra Medda

NEW YORK — Nearly a decade after she co-founded Design Miami/ at the age of 23, wunderkind curator Ambra Medda opens her new hybrid design fair/magazine L’ArcoBaleno today in her most daunting marketplace yet: the Internet.

“I’m relatively spastic online,” Medda admits to ARTINFO. “I’m not tech savvy at all.” Despite her fluency in five languages, terms like social media, SEO, and SEM were until recently part of a completely foreign lexicon. In turn, launching her online venture also required translating the concept for the older, more traditional gallerists of the design establishment: “They ask me, ‘Oh, so you’re selling furniture via email?’” Medda relays, affecting a heavy Italian accent, “and I say ‘Well, not really.’”

The act of translation summarizes the project as a whole, as literally as it does figuratively. “L’ArcoBaleno” is Italian for “The Rainbow,” an apt name for a site that plans to sell a broader spectrum of inventory than real-life sales conventions would allow. Buyers can scroll through the site and read an interview with Johanna Grawunder or a historical look at Atelier Fornasetti, as well as browse works that span Verner Panton to Nacho Carbonell, listed by dealers throughout the world. With a click the site computes shipping costs, and once the purchase is complete, that dealer sends the object — be it Swedish portable synthesizers or Hopi Native American doll — straight to the collector’s door.

A similarly wide spectrum informed Medda’s choice of collaborators: starting with L’ArcoBaleno CEO Oliver Weyergraf, a former executive officer at e-commerce sites eBay and erento; and extending to an advisory board that includes hip hop mogul Pharrell Williams, London-based and African-born architect David Adjaye, Greek shipping heir Stavros Niarchos, London designer Tom Dixon, and a slew of gallerists from various continents. “They represent different constituencies,” says Medda. “Because [the site] is supposed to speak to a global audience, it’s essential that we have different points of view.”

Medda’s other mission, on a broader reach of inclusivity, is to “demystify the market.” The reluctant older dealers who “rarely even have a landing page” initially found Medda’s insistence on displaying prices for each item quite perplexing (the spectrum there ranges from a $50 Max Lamb bowl to a $155,000 pair of 18th-century vases), but she was adamant: “The market is very tricky; there’s a lot of overlap in people selling secondary market pieces. I understand the game, but if someone who hasn’t been a longtime collector doesn’t know how it all works, and they want to buy, let these people buy. Let them know who made it, why this is so amazing, and yes, sell it. It’s commerce, people.”

Her own novice on the Web, a sharp contrast to her design expertise, resulted in a site of minimal design — sans serif black fonts and the most basic of layouts — that allows the objects and editorial to speak for themselves. “It needed to be really simple and intuitive,” Medda explains, adding, “It’s the stuff we’re interested in. It’s not much more complicated than that.”

To see images, click on the slideshow.

MoMA's New Corbusier Exhibition Reveals a Life Led By Landscapes

$
0
0
MoMA's New Corbusier Exhibition Reveals a Life Led By Landscapes
Installation view of "Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes"

Watch ARTINFO video on Le Corbusier show HERE.

Jean-Louis Cohen, guest curator of “Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes,” MoMA’s retrospective of the Franco-Swiss architect’s work, has taken on a restorative task: he wants to, as he puts it, “re-skew Le Corbusier from his bad reputation of having been indifferent to specific places, of having invented the generic buildings that have no relationship with any particular site.” Cohen counters Le Corbusier’s naysayers by highlighting what he calls “the beauty of [Le Corbusier’s] objects” in an exhibition that surveys the biographical development of the architect’s ideas about landscape and topography. By taking the visitor on a tour through the locales that influenced and inspired Corbusier as a young aspiring painter and the sites that the adult architect interpreted with his structures and plans, Cohen’s display of the dazzling breadth of the architect’s creative undertakings — from watercolors to Purist paintings to furniture and buildings — helps to provide a view of Corbusier apart from his more commonly known reputation as proponent of austere, uniform modernism. However, Cohen’s emphasis on beauty and landscape in Le Corbusier’s oeuvre is not accompanied by a thorough reflection on the practical concerns and dysfunctions — the sources of the architect’s “bad reputation” — that have developed in the wake of some of the grandest topographic interventions presented in the exhibition.

“An Atlas of Modern Landscapes” opens with watercolor paintings the architect completed from 1900 to 1915, as an adolescent and young adult living in the bucolic Swiss Jura Mountains and traveling through Germany, Turkey, and southeastern Europe. Corbusier developed a talent for observing nature in close detail, which despite much later criticism arguing the opposite, would pervade the rest of his life’s creative work. His early 1902 landscape “Au sommet” is a realistic depiction of pine trees, pastures, and expansive sky — while lacking the reductive geometries that would later become Le Corbusier’s hallmarks, the architect’s enduring fascination with the horizon, and its separation of land and sky into planar surfaces, is already evident.

 

This type of observation was similarly key for Le Corbusier as he began working with architecture and furniture design, organizing domestic interior landscapes of furniture and windows in a way designed to facilitate observation of the geography outside the home. On view at MoMA are four reconstructed interiors featuring the original pieces designed by Le Corbusier, including the living room of the Maison Blanche, the house Le Corbusier built for his parents in his hometown of La Chaux-de-Fonds in 1912. Here, a couch and chairs were positioned toward a wide window to frame and encourage outdoor viewing, while a desk designed for Corbusier’s mother faces the wall. Rather than using design to isolate the interior experience from the outdoor topography, it instead offers the landscape as something to be enjoyed through an aesthetic experience.

 

Models of buildings appear midway through the exhibition, following a series of paintings, drawings, and interiors that focus on the central role of observation in Corbusier’s understanding of landscape. Seven of the photographs by Richard Pare commissioned for this retrospective, displayed alongside models and architectural drawings, contextualize within the original landscape objects representing the Villa Le Lac in Neuilly-sur-Seine, the Villa Savoye in Poissy, the Capitol Complex in Chandigarh, the Unite d’Habitation in Marseilles, the chapel of Notre Dame du Haut in Ronchamp, the convent of Saint-Marie-de-la-Tourette in Eveux-sur-Arbresle, and Le Corbusier’s own cabanon in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin. These reveal how the curvilinear roof of the small chapel of Notre Dame du Haut imitates the rolling hills of the surrounding landscape and integrates with the topography, while the horizontality of the Unite d’Habitation in Marseilles, though contrasting sharply with the nearby rolling Calanques hills, offers a rooftop platform to enjoy the view.

 

Le Corbusier’s focus on landscape was at times a shortcoming, a fact that goes unmentioned in the exhibition’s fourth section, devoted to Corbusier’s plan for and buildings in Chandigarh, India. Three plaster architectural models and 11 ink and pencil perspective drawings work in concert with Pare’s photography to reveal that Corbusier was inspired by the expansive, flat plain of the city’s setting – a site he relished viewing from above via airplane – and not by the citizens who would inhabit the new Punjab capital. A detail model of the Palace of Assembly’s roof structure captures the contrast of the Assembly’s rectangular body and square windows against the upward curves and slanted linear plane of the roof structure, emulating the linear landscape of the plain against the curves and peaks of the Himalayan mountains in the distance; while drawings reveal Le Corbusier’s detailed observations on topography.

 

But what significantly remains unmentioned in the exhibition about the Chandigarh design was its impracticality. When the city was designed from scratch in the early 1950s, Punjab locals navigated back and forth between villages on foot. While in vision, Corbusier’s urban plan and buildings for Chandigarh do reflect the expansive plain and towering mountains that surround the city, Chandigarh was built for cars at a time when most nearby inhabitants did not yet own a bicycle. The models of Chandigarh are indeed beautiful — testament, like all the show’s beautiful objects, to Le Corbusier’s tireless observation and adoration of landscape — but “Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Landscapes” would do well to acknowledge that the beautiful objects presented in the exhibit do not always represent an equally beautiful reality.

 

To see images from the exhibition, click on the slideshow.

Watch ARTINFO video on Le Corbusier show HERE.

 

Issey Miyake's "In-ei" Lamp Exhibition in Tokyo and Osaka

$
0
0
Issey Miyake's "In-ei" Lamp Exhibition in Tokyo and Osaka
In-ei Issey Miyake

TOKYO — Issey Miyake’s “In-ei” lamps, which won the Gold Medal at the iF Product Design Award 2013 hosted by the International Forum Design Hannover, Germany, are currently being showcased at a special exhibition located in two of his stores until June 30 — Elttob Tep Issey Miyake in Tokyo’s Ginza district, and Semba in Osaka.

Conceptualized and refined by Miyake’s research and development team Reality Lab, the In-ei lamps, consisting of free-standing, table, and hanging lights, were then handed over to the renowned Italian lighting manufacturer Artemide, who produced the final versions using recycled paper and other materials.

The name “In-ei” was inspired by Junichiro Tanizaki’s classic work of literature, “In Praise of Shadows (In-ei Reisan),” which extols the beauty of the muted lighting and soft gloom often found in traditional Japanese interior spaces.

Using an innovative design process developed by Jun Mitani based on a mathematical program and 3D geometric principles, the In-ei lamps are an extension of the investigations into textile technologies that Issey Miyake first made to produce his celebrated “Pleats Please” line of clothing.

The illumination offered by these lamps strikes a delicate, alternating balance between light and shade. In addition, their structure allows them to retain their shape perfectly without the need for an internal frame, while also giving users the option of reshaping them as desired. They can also be collapsed and easily stored flat when not in use.

Hip New Workspace Unites Frieze, The Kitchen, Art-World "Solopreneurs"

$
0
0
Hip New Workspace Unites Frieze, The Kitchen, Art-World "Solopreneurs"
NeueHouse

Earlier this year, when the artist and playwright William Leavitt held casting calls in New York for his show “Habitat,” which opened at the Kitchen in May, he was nowhere near the Kitchen. He was across town in Gramercy meeting his prospective cast in a vast raw space that was in the midst of heavy construction. On the floor below, workers were operating drills and scissor-lifts. Though at the time there was not even a wall in sight at NeueHouse, a new members-only workspace for people in creative industries, it was already proving itself to be a boon.

“That’s something that we couldn’t have done,” Kitchen director Tim Griffin told ARTINFO. Since there wouldn't have been room at the Kitchen for Leavitt to conduct his search, Griffin had hooked Leavitt up with NeueHouse.“It worked out brilliantly.” 

Located on 25th Street off Park Avenue South, NeueHouse adds a new art-focused twist to the co-working spaces that exist in New York. Like the Brooklyn Writers Space, which offers freelancers a desk, a quiet environment, and atmosphere among other writers working on their novels, or General Assembly, a similar space geared toward tech entrepreneurs, NeueHouse offers a little more than just a well-designed space with desks, WiFi, and coffee. Entry into the NeueHouse community as a member will cost artists $600 per month to work in the open space in the gallery, while space on the upper floors, or the “Atelier,” range from a private desk to studio space, which costs roughly $1,400 per person.

What does it offer in return? On a recent tour of the 50,000-square-foot site — which formerly held auction house Tepper Galleries and has been given a re-design by David Rockwell — we saw sleek glass-walled conference rooms, and “open-plan” areas with cushy suede couches, egg-chairs, and potted plants. People can be seen working on laptops, padding around on the caramel-toned rugs or holding impromptu meetings.

The basement space, or “Cellar,” will soon house a screening room and a recording studio that will offer members the ability to create, edit, and broadcast podcasts. The main floor houses a gallery that will offer programming partners a space to host talks, performances, and exhibitions. And as a testament to its attempt to court the artful set, its walls will be the site of a rotating exhibition of artwork as well as some on permanent display. Artist Jill Magid has been commissioned to create a work that will be suspended over the gallery space.

While the members-only workspace has the exclusive feel of the city’s tony private clubs like Soho House and Core Club — its cultural programming director, Michelle Grey, was formerly the membership manager of Soho House — a social club this is not. “Soho House is a completely different animal,” Grey told ARTINFO, though she said honing the right “psychographic” was a priority. “This is a place you come to create.

Though it hasn’t even formally opened its doors — its official opening is July 1 — the space is already 80 percent committed. With many individual members (solopreneuers) in the creative field in need of a workspace away from home, NeueHouse is also positioning itself to be the city’s go-to site for fine-arts organizations in need of a little extra space. According to Tracey Ryans, one of its partners, Frieze Art Fair is a member, and used the space to accommodate staffers from its London team who had flown in to New York for several weeks to prepare for Frieze New York. Performa is slated to hold some of the programming for its Biennial there in November, and the site will also house Ballroom Marfa's New York office. Curator Alanna Heiss, art dealers Lisa Cooley and Andrew Kreps, and artists Sanford Biggers and Marianne Vitale are among the roughly 30 trustees on the team.

The range of support NeueHouse has already accrued reflects the diversity of its five partners — who include tech entrepreneurs Joshua Abram and Alan Murray, James O’Reilly (who comes from a commercial real estate background), and Steven Eckler (whose fine dining background includes stints as the general manager for Lever House and Wolfgang Puck restaurants). Its connections to the art world come mostly through Tracey Ryans, a marketing strategist who for years has been forging bonds between the luxury brand world — LVMH, Nike, and Tom Ford are clients — and the philanthropic world — he served on the board of the Kitchen for 12 years and was an advisor to the New Museum in addition to having worked with MoMA and the Brooklyn Museum.

While members get a space to house their staff, and a temporary workspace for visiting artists, the organization is also angling to leverage its connections to host some high-profile programming, including talks, presentations, and performances by some of its members and partners. They’ve already got talks lined up with Marcus Samuelson and Sanford Biggers (July 10), and David Rockwell and composer Nico Muhly (July 16). As for programming specifics, Ryans said that NeueHouse aims to adapt to the particular needs of its members and partners as those needs arise. 

While it offers some of its high-end partners use of the space in exchange for programming, its founders are adamant that the relationships are not just about “being cool or being a name,” according to Steven Eckler. “If we’re working with anybody and allowing them to use the space, it has to benefit our other members in some way.”

According to Griffin, in addition to providing artists temporary residencies or rehearsal space, NeueHouse offers other “great possibilities” including the advantage of giving the Kitchen a wider reach at a time when programming is not limited to the locally-sourced.  “We’re locally oriented,” said Griffin. “But the local and global exist in counterpoint.”

With all this potential, what exactly will the space be? “It’s not a gallery, an event space, or a theater,” said Ryans. “But it has the capability to be all of that.”

Farm Designs Jewel Cafe + Bar in Little India

$
0
0
Farm Designs Jewel Cafe + Bar in Little India
Jewel Cafe + Bar

SINGAPORE — In recent years, Singapore has witnessed a rise in design cafes offering good coffee, good food, and Instagrammable decor. The latest to hit the block is Jewel Cafe + Bar, the second branch of the grab-and-go artisanal coffee house Jewel Coffee in the CBD owned by former banker Adrian Khong.

Opened in Rangoon Road in the Little India area earlier this year, the eatery was designed by local design studio Farm. The two-storey converted shophouse bears the stripped, industrial-chic look that has become a design mainstay in the cool cafe arena.

Designer Peter Sim tells BLOUIN Artinfo that he was inspired by the quirky, salty nature of the Little India neighbourhood. He says, “We interpreted the brief as that of placing a shiny jewel among the rough-and-tumble that is Rangoon Road. We wanted it to be a design of contrasts.”

So, on the one hand, the converted shophouse kept the bare, rough bones of the space with plenty of raw concrete, giving the place an edgy urban vibe. On the other hand, “jewel-like” details and features made of more refined materials break up the monotony. Think crystal light bulbs, glass doors, elegant teakwood paneling, and a cool brass and copper ceiling feature.

“Overall, we wanted to to create a ‘chilled out’ space that is unpretentious,” Sim added. “We wanted it to be somewhere you could spend a lazy sunday afternoon with a group of friends.”

What’s on the menu? All-day comfort food such as unapologetically calorific and beefy burgers (with a name like “Praise the Lard!” you know what you’re in for,) and East-meets-West casual fusion in pasta dishes like the Umami prawn capellini, a rich concoction somewhere between Singapore’s hokkien mee, Japan’s ramen and regular pasta.

And needless to say, coffee connoisseurs will be satisfied here with its espresso-based quality specialties served in signature double-shot style.

Jewel Cafe + Bar, 129 Rangoon Road. Tel: +65 6298 9216

Zaha Hadid Buys Design Museum’s Shad Thames Home

$
0
0
Zaha Hadid Buys Design Museum’s Shad Thames Home
Design Museum

Architect Zaha Hadidhas purchased the former banana-ripening warehouse on the Thames that has been the home to London’s Design Museum for the past 24 years. The site was put on the market by its owners, the Conrad Foundation, ahead of the museum’s relocation to the former Commonwealth Institute in 2015. Although the exact amount paid by Hadid has not been revealed, the Guardian reported that it is estimated to be around £10 million. Proceeds from the sale will go towards funding the museum’s £80 million move to west London.

“Whilst we are sad to be leaving Shad Thames we are leaving the building in the best possible hands,” said Deyan Sudjic, the museum's director. “The sale is a significant moment in the museum's relocation plans and a substantial contribution towards our new home.”

It is understood that Hadid’s firm will use the building to store its archives, as well as using it for architecture exhibitions where “the research and innovation of global collaborations in art, architecture and design” could be displayed under one roof.

The warehouse was built in the 1940s and was originally used to ripen bananas. Designer Terence Conranbought and revamped it to an elegant modernist building with exhibition spaces spread over two floors, an outdoor area, and a restaurant with windows overlooking the riverfront. The Design Museum opened in 1989 and has become internationally recognized for its collection of contemporary designs in different disciplines including furniture, graphics, and architecture.

Hadid’s work has won her much accolade around the world. She has worked on over 900 projects in 44 countries. Hadid was the first woman and the first Muslim to receive the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize for her work on the Bridge Pavilion in Spain, and is a two-time recipient of the Stirling Prize in Britain. She was also recently named the winner of the 2013 Veuve Clicquot Business Woman Award in April this year for her work on the Olympic aquatic center in London.

 

Follow BLOUIN ARTINFO UK on Twitter @UK_ARTINFO


Ed Ng Adds The Gloucester to Hong Kong Skyline

$
0
0
Ed Ng Adds The Gloucester to Hong Kong Skyline
Ed Ng, AB Concept, interview, The gloucester, wan chai apartment

HONG KONG — Redefining the Hong Kong skyline is an ambition shared by architects and designers of the city. Only a handful have really achieved it, including César Pelli’s International Financial Centre and Pritzker Prize winner I. M. Pei’s Bank of China Tower. Add to that list Ed Ng’s The Gloucester in Wan Chai, an all-harbor-view residential block that will be ready by the end of July.

Ahead of the project's completion, we went into Ng’s office and sat down with the director of local firm AB Concept, responsible for The Glouchester, to ask about his design ethos.

It's easy to mistake the foyer of design firm AB Concept for a furniture museum. Peculiarly shaped chairs, an elongated couch, and lamps made of varied materials are scattered in the spacious “living room.” Ng, who is a co-founder of AB Concept, had a free rein designing the workspace.

When it comes to customers, however, it's a different story. Even with over a decade of experience in the field and countless notable international clients in AB Concepts’ portfolio, like Swire, Mandarin Oriental, Four Seasons, and Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts, there is never a shortage of problems and compromises in every project, says Ng. 

The constant design tug-of-war with developers is multiplied by interference from salesmen, who for The Gloucester, objected to the idea of constructing a communal swimming pool in favor of a duplex of residential units. Ng won the war here, and went ahead with constructing a one-of-a-kind 25-meter infinity pool, located on the 43rd floor of the building, which will come with transparent glass walls and a retractable roof.

At the end of the day, design is all about problem solving, says Ng.

“I always tell my team that a project without a brief or constraints from the developer is actually the most difficult project,” says Ng. “I mean the whole point about design is problem-solving and you always need a certain set of standards from the [client].”

One of the standards set for The Gloucester is that the building must capitalize on the great harbor view that only a few other locations in Wan Chai enjoy.

“Finding ways to maximize the stunning harbor view at every possible opportunity was the biggest problem,” admits Ng. “But we’ve designed the layout so that every single unit will face the harbour. Additionally, we also custom-designed a triangular dining table for [the show flat,] so that residents and guests can take in the view even while dining.”

“The building also redefines the Hong Kong skyline, and we’re extremely honored to be part of the making of a landmark in Hong Kong!”

Ng mentions AB Concept’s upcoming project Shangri-La Qufu Hotel and says the challenge lies in creating a luxury hotel with traditional Chinese aesthetics, stripping away the “bling” for the modest, to match the humble city in southwestern Shangdong province.

“First you really have to study the historical background of Qufu, which is a heritage site and is where Confucius was born,” says Ng. “Then you have to understand the Shangri-La culture.”

There are certain styles that the hotel group can’t do without, including the luxurious lobby area. Replacing the typical crystal chandeliers will be sculptural lanterns, named “Wisdom Lanterns,” that are equally grand. Throughout the hotel, Ng and his team have used simple geometrical patterns for a warm ambience.

When asked what would be the most difficult problem in a project, Ng replied in an almost natural reflex, “People.”

“You have to be very sure of your concept,” he continues. “Then you have to educate the people around you.” And he attributes his adept problem solving skills to the work experience in his early career.

A graduate from Polytechnic University, Ng had worked at an interior design firm, where he worked on large-scale projects. From there he moved on to an architecture firm, internalizing the workflow with design houses, and just before co-founding AB Concept with architect Terence Ngan in 2001, he also had a stint as a property developer, which gave him an insight into clients’ perspectives.

Follow BLOUIN ARTINFO Hong Kong on Twitter @ARTINFOHongKong

An Earthy Ode in Architect Jean Taek Park’s First Solo Show

$
0
0
An Earthy Ode in Architect Jean Taek Park’s First Solo Show
Jean Taek Park

South Korean architect Jean Taek Parkis opening his first solo exhibition July 13 at D Project Space, the alternative gallery of Daelim Museum.

“(e)Motion Space” uses installation and video to capture a sense of nature’s power through depictions of air, wind, rain, clouds, and waves — transforming the modern space into one of renewed, earthy creativity.

The experimental showcase demonstrates Park’s desire to momentarily overturn the falsified, manmade movement of urban centers that have overwhelmed that of nature, re-calibrating the balance of power. The density of air, the rhythm of wing, the vibrato of rain are all themes visited in the architect’s inaugural show.

Park is known for his design work that typically centers around the realization of natural movement, continuity, and sensitivity. His “‘Ereignis” work was shown at the Korea Pavilion of the 2012 Venice Biennale for architecture, which returned to Seoul earlier this year.

“(e)Motion Space” runs through Aug. 11 at D Space. Park will also hold a public talk at D Space on July 28 at 4pm.

Follow BLOUIN ARTINFO Korea on Twitter @ARTINFOKorea

Kengo Kuma's Villas Inspired by Jeju's Volcanic Landscape

$
0
0
Kengo Kuma's Villas Inspired by Jeju's Volcanic Landscape
Kengo Kuma's Jeju Ball villas reflect the volcanic landscape of Jeju island.

The volcanic landscape of Jeju Island has been translated into porous, pebble-like homes in the Art Villas of Lotte Jeju Resort.

Designed by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma, each unit of the resort's block D was envisioned as a miniature version of the island's “oreum, the zones of volcanic mounts that characterize the landscape of the island.

“What determines the landscape of Jeju is this blackness and porousness. So we sublimated its feel in the scale of a house,” says Kuma, who named the project “Jeju Ball.” “From a distance, the house appears like a single pebble and when you are close, you notice that many parts of the house are of the black stone.”

Inspired by the soft and round touch of the volcanic rubble, the architect naturally turned to it as a building material, scattering them on the villa rooftops to create gently curved mounts. Durable and easily attainable throughout the volcanic island, the rocks were also also chosen for their porousness, which make the roofs highly insulated and water absorbent — well-suited to the island's subtropical climate.

“The volcanic rock was [selected] to create a harmonized roof-scape but more importantly, to control the indoor environment naturally,” explains Satoshi Adachi, the lead architect on the project. The 210- and 245-square-meter houses are endowed with floor-to-ceiling glass windows, as well as wooden ceilings and tiles made from Jeju rock to heighten the connection with the landscape.

To emphasize the connection between the house and its environment, unique roof eave structures have also been designed to subtly let in natural light, Adachi told BLOUIN ARTINFO Korea.

“We challenged this solidity in a different way, introducing ‘lightness’ by assembling the rocks with a translucent, stainless steel mesh. This way, a light pouring of ‘rock eaves’ was achieved to create a relaxing indoor space.”

The Lotte Jeju Resort consists of five blocks in total, each designed by a different architect. Villas by Dominique Perrault, Yi Jongho, Seung H-Sang, and DA Group make up the rest of the development, each designed to make the most of Jeju’s unique natural environment.

MAD Architects Reveal Designs for “Floating” Pingtan Art Museum

$
0
0
MAD Architects Reveal Designs for “Floating” Pingtan Art Museum
Pingtan Art Museum

MAD Architectsled by Ma Yansong have designed the Pingtan Art Museum, which resembles a floating island. 

Situated in a body of water in the center of Pingtan, Fujian Province, the museum can only be accessed via a narrow bridge. With a construction area of more than 40,000 square meters, it will take RMB 800 million to build what is promised to be the largest private collection museum in China.

Construction has begun on the Pingtan Art Museum and MAD Architects shared images of the design on their website last week. The structure has a fluid form of undulating landscape with cave-like interiors and walls of concrete mixed with local sand and shell.

The museum is an integral part of a top-down push to transform Pingtan into a new urban area. Pingtan Island is the largest of Fujian’s islands and is of strategic importance as it is the nearest Chinese island to Taiwan. Currently, Pingtan is home to fisheries industry and a military base, but the launch of the Comprehensive Experimental Zone project in 2010 means the quiet island will soon become a bustling new city. 

At the center of it all is the Pingtan Art Museum, a planned landmark of soft power to facilitate cultural exchange between the mainland and Taiwan. Scheduled to open in 2016, its debut exhibition boasts more than a thousand pieces of “national treasures,” however the specific collections to be shown have yet to be confirmed.

Click on the slideshow to see the images.

Follow us on Twitter @ARTINFOHongKong 

Le Corbusier's Kaleidoscope: Looking at the Architect's Sense of Place

$
0
0
Le Corbusier's Kaleidoscope: Looking at the Architect's Sense of Place
Le Corbusier, Villa Savoye, Poissy. 1928–31. Patio.

How does something very ordinary and banal, say a rock, become something extraordinary? If that rock were a piece of gold, it would be easy to say that its material properties aid such an advancement. Take for example how gold doesn’t really tarnish; it keeps its luster with a minimum of effort. Yet, beyond its mesmerizing glow, gold has another special property: Not only can it hold its brilliance; it can also be tested with a touchstone for purity.

For these and other reasons, gold became a standard for trade since its grade could always be calculated as a unit measure to facilitate symmetrical exchanges. Thus, gold became the first true commodity. But was this embedded quality its only means for evaluation? Or is there something more to be said about the psychological effect of its glow?

The question of whether objects—artistic or otherwise—are valued for some intrinsic objective reason as opposed to their potential to elicit subjective phenomenological responses is an old one. Plato posed this very quandary in the Euthyphro by asking, “Is the pious loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved by the gods?” Plato ultimately sided with the idea that the pious was autotelic. As such, he could conclude that values exist outside the individual perceptions of mind as a way to justify the ideal of a universal authority—be it called truth, god, law, or what have you. But for this to be the case, a given object, let’s call it object X, would have to have the same reading in all and every context. It would always manifest as X. A gold filling in a tooth, however, is not the same thing as a golden cross. So while both may rely on various performances of gold as a soft metal that is easily shaped, the setting and placement of that form is paramount. Even the same object, say a cross, has a different life in a church versus in a museum. Placement is a device with which to imbue meaning; only through a contextual demarcation can the everyday be parsed with the extraordinary.

Architecture of course is the art par excellence of ordering materials as a way to invent spatial interrelations. Consider a holy space, a cathedral, wherein basic stones and metals are wrought so as to produce a sacred experience. Although the wealth of materials used in such spaces is by no means simple, it is their juxtaposition that truly provokes feedback from the visitor’s psyche. This test is easy enough to witness with the more concentrated example of a museum vitrine, where artifacts are seldom placed in completely neutral settings. Often they are enhanced through the use of theatrical devices, such as lighting, plinths, or other installation means, which actually signify the import of the object just as much as the object itself may. This pairing of installation and scene provides manifold complex associations in order to mediate their reception. Amplifying these valence lines, architecture—as well as installation art—strings together chains of such presentations so that time and memory come into full play. Normatively, these edits can be called architectural procession, as the designer places one view after the next in a kind of abstract narrative of shapes and forms. And like a good story, such displays are best advanced through foreshadowing, flashback, and the like.

The Swiss-born French architect Le Corbusier was a keen student of such scenarios. And as an apt pupil, the designer turned to history to investigate how to twin time and memory so as to charge space with a supersensory meaning—that is, how to transform raw materials into not only a space but also an emotive place of belonging. To this end, he famously went to Athens.

In his youth, Le Corbusier slowly walked through the Acropolis to watch how his changing views of the Parthenon began to create not a stone temple but a mental composite, which activated his imagination as much as it did his eyes. Key among these vistas was how the building was revealed or concealed with each step so that a kind of time travel could be felt. By taking in the view from various coordinates, noting how, for instance, the steps of the temple looked from below as opposed to how they looked up close, and superimposing such differing perceptions of the same object, he was able to project himself back to various points in time and sensation. In an essay on the architect’s work, the historian Colin Rowe proposed that such a layering of space, time, and memory could be called “phenomenological transparency.”

Unlike literal transparency—such as that of a glass window—a phenomenological perspective tasks a subject to see content relations not across immediately apparent lines but through diverse and discontinuous perceptions that are physically impossible to see. That is, these associations could exist only as a collage of memory and projection. This mechanism can be most easily observed in Le Corbusier’s noted early work, the Villa Savoye, outside of Paris.

At the villa, Le Corbusier found a trick that he would continue to employ throughout his oeuvre: What if you take a simple cube and from the center of it remove another smaller cube, so as to view the resultant four interior planes across this void as a network of actors between one another? A subject might encounter the bedroom by viewing it from the living room as a framed scene through strategically placed windows. Without the viewer’s physically being in the bedroom, a partial image of that space is nevertheless hinted at, but not disclosed in full, leaving the viewer to wonder what is outside this view, what are the atmospheric properties of being in that room itself, and so on. Inversely, when the guest moves from the living room to the bedroom, the image folds back on itself reciprocally as it now sets a new cast of the room she’s just left. More than just causing an aha moment, these slices bring together multiple impressions, as the image of the bedroom through the living room is wed to the experience of the view in the bedroom itself, not to mention the fact that a similar trans-position affects the idea of the living room itself.

This manipulation of image, time, and place could be called Le Corbusier’s kaleidoscope. More than just bringing about a change in the unfolding of the space, this recognition of the importance of position and demarcation within the space is what prompts variation. On the one hand, such calculated plays provide for a notion of order to comfort the guest by telegraphing a movement through an artificially constructed world aesthetically arranged for viewing texture and pleasure. And yet, any succession of images can, of course, provide the material for variation so that a guest need not blend the view of the living room with that of the bedroom, but with another view entirely: The “void” at the villa is in fact a terrace, which can also be occupied to afford a split middle view. It, however, does not act as an epicenter to render the final code with which to anchor all vantages. With such a displacement, no real hierarchy is imposed; instead of a kind of dialectical montage, these jumps and crosscuts elicit a craving in the observer to find new image relations voyeuristically. With such a perverse desire in the visitor to explore more and more perspectives, this simple box of glass and concrete becomes a kind of random scene generator teasing the subject to revel in the discovery of hidden spatial-temporal delights.

While the Villa Savoye is a rather abstract catalogue of perspectives, Le Corbusier’s later masterpiece, the monastery Sainte Marie de La Tourette, in the Rhône-Alpes, near Lyon, takes this idea of a superimposed narrative to its full conclusion by uniting procession with an actual iconographic rebus.

Like Villa Savoye, La Tourette is basically a square complex with a central court. Here, however, the square is fractured, as three sides are slightly set back from the fourth to essentially form two buildings in a pattern similar to a U capped by a straight line. Diagrammatically, this cleft separates the daily functions of the monastery: The U-shaped structure houses the monks’ cells and other domestic activities, while the other volume provides for the holy chapel. Beyond this division of purpose, each building is rendered with different forms and icons, which collapse into the grand conceit of the compound.

When viewing the chapel elevation from the entrance to the monastery, a pilgrim might notice that instead of being inside a tower, the church bell is housed in a concrete frame, essentially a plant box, cantilevered just off the side of the chapel structure. When the visitor scans this façade further, however, its few deviations from a flat plane resolve into a surreal canvas.

In the façade’s center, a large concrete quadrangle bulges forth, while a long rectilinear cut streaks across the upper portion of the building. Just to the side of it all, a smaller annex can be seen jutting off. The plan of this annex follows a deformed D shape, but the arc of the D is subdivided into a wave. Strikingly, this deformed letter looks remarkably like a cartoon ear, which itself becomes a clue with which to make sense of the rest of the various forms.

With the D considered as an ear, the chapel itself becomes a kind of head fashioned with a nose (the triangular bulge) and an eye (the bell tower). With a nod to cubism, the ear has to be rotated from a plane to a section so a viewer can see these details. No ordinary face, the ribbon strip across the top can be envisioned as a monk’s tonsure. Likewise, the larger U-structured building, set on the opposite side of the chapel from the annex, becomes the second ear—requiring a rotation as well. Tellingly, this disguised ear metaphor takes on another character, as Le Corbusier stated he wished “to give the monks what men today need most: silence and peace. … This Monastery does not show off; it is on the inside that it lives.”

Once inside, a monk must first course around the U-shaped building to get to the chapel, the now literal and figurative “head” of the clerics’ activities. It becomes clear, as a second order of revelation, that the noselike bulge on the outside of the chapel’s facade is the housing for the organ, while the tonsure cut affords a clear story, capping the interior of the chapel with a halo of light. This doubling of images can in turn be seen as a kind of fictive double entendre since the outside view presents a mortal monk’s head, while its interior presents the metaphysical realms of the speculative and spiritual mind. Even though this assembly area is set for Mass, participants usually remain in silence. The only time for utterance becomes the climax of this procession of spaces. Sliding through the chapel, a monk comes to the door of the annex ear. He enters, and upon looking up, three private chapels, complete with long drumlike skylights, provide altars from which to whisper privately and speak to the unknown. In the end, privacy and silence might be the truest measure with which to contemplate Le Corbusier’s environments or to gauge any installation that aims for supersensory meaning. When his designs are reconfigured not as mere spaces, but as islands unto themselves, the logics of these worlds foster a special accompaniment, the ability to exist only in the mind of the beholder through the prompts of objects and their orientation.

This article was published in the July 2013 issue of Modern Painters.

To see images, click on the slideshow.

Prison Design and Its Consequences: The Architect's Dilemma

$
0
0
Prison Design and Its Consequences: The Architect's Dilemma
solitary confinement

Throughout California’s prison system, 30,000 inmates participated in a July 9 hunger strike as a gesture of solidarity for those incarcerated at the KMD Architects-designed Pelican Bay State Prison, the 275-acre super-maximum security facility where living conditions fall under one of two extremes: stifled overcrowding, where the risk of contracting contagious diseases runs high, or solitary confinement, a psychologically debilitating practice that the UN Human Rights Council condemned as torture in 2011. Although there’s no telling the extent to which the architects at KMD could have foreseen this dehumanizing climate springing from their design, California-based architect and Architects/Designers/Planners for Social Responsibility (ADPSR) founder Raphael Sperry directs us to an ugly truth: they are inherently complicit in the outcome.


An aerial shot of Pelican Bay State Prison in California / Wikipedia

“Frankly, there are some buildings that never should have been built – buildings that constitute human rights violations by their very existence,” Sperry argues on the American Civil Liberties Union blog, and Pelican Bay’s design offers scant evidence to the contrary. Beyond the “significant life cycle cost savings” touted at its 1989 opening, the prison’s most prominent architectural feature is the X-shaped formation of white buildings on the desolate grounds that make up the Security Housing Unit, the focus of the prisoners’ protest. Its interior consists of 8x10-foot, soundproof, poured-concrete cells with remote controlled doors and no windows, where approximately 1,000 inmates with alleged gang affiliations spend up to 23 hours a day with the sole company of their walls. The effects on the individual are symptomatic of post-traumatic stress disorder: hallucinations, depression, anxiety, rage, and suicide. Despite UN torture rapporteur Juan E. Méndez’s heed that “solitary confinement in excess of 15 days should also be subject to an absolute prohibition,” isolation — sometimes for decades — continues as a perpetually failing attempt to solve the rampant gang violence in California’s prison system. “No one has the answer,” Lieutenant Dave Barneburg, lead gang investigator at Pelican Bay, conceded to the New York Times in 2012. “You do the best you can with the tools you have.”

Architecture has long been an indispensible tool in the search for answers, both in the spatial sense (for example, the elimination of blind spots where opportunities for violence can hide) and as a method of exerting psychological control. In the late 18th century, philosopher Jeremy Bentham proposed the Panopticon, a circular penitentiary that placed the unseen jailer at its all-seeing center. Theoretically, the pressures of constant, implied surveillance would instill self-control among the incarcerated, which Bentham deemed “a new mode of obtaining power of mind over mind.”


The Presidio Modelo in Cuba, inspired by Bentham's panopticon / Wikimedia Commons

In opposition to such Orwellian uses of architecture, Sperry launched a petition last fall urging the American Institute of Architects (AIA) to update its code of ethics to ban architects from designing spaces for killing and torture. “AIA’s code of ethics already includes the statement, ‘Members should uphold human rights in all their professional endeavors,’” Sperry noted, highlighting the contradictions that designing not only supermax prisons but execution chambers and solitary confinement spaces pose. “As people of conscience and as a profession dedicated to improving the built environment for all people,” he wrote, “we cannot participate in the design of spaces that violate human life and dignity.”

Should architects remove themselves from prison design entirely? No, quite the contrary. Elsewhere in the world, architects have helped develop prison models that actively work towards rehabilitation. In November 2010, Erik Møller Arkitekter reportedly won the commission for Norway’s Halden Prison for its integration of landscape into the design. There, convicted murderers and rapists currently have access to woodland jogging trails and climbing walls, and security fosters an environment of mutual respect. Skeptics would argue that these resort-like conditions go against the logic of the judicial system, but while the United States suffers from a 43 percent rate of recidivism, only 20 percent of Norwegian inmates return to jail. In light of these facts, Australia has also recently adopted this humane approach to incarceration to combat the disproportionate aboriginal population in its prisons; although indigenous people comprise 2.5 percent of the total population, they constitute 25 percent of prisoners. TAG and Iredale Pedersen Hook Architects designed the West Kimberley Regional Prison as a complex of group houses where aboriginal prisoners live with those who speak the same language and cook their own meals. The World Architecture Festival nominated the prison as a Best Building of 2012 in its civic architecture category.


Halden Prison in Halden, Norway / Erik Møller Arkitekter

It would be naïve to assume that the United States could put Norway’s system in place as a quick solution to our prison woes. Scandinavia has far fewer prisoners, far greater resources, and no comparable levels of gang culture. What the Norwegian system does do for us is prove that rather than conceding to violence and squalor as the inevitable conditions of our penal system, putting the $50,000 California spends a year per prisoner toward treating them as human beings is a notion very much worth exploring. 

 

 

Yasumichi Morita Redesigns Kyoto’s Arashiyama Station

$
0
0
Yasumichi Morita Redesigns Kyoto’s Arashiyama Station
Yasumichi Morita

Kyoto’s Arashiyama station, operated by Keifuku Electric Railroad, reopened on July 13 with a brand new interior design scheme conceived by designer Yasumichi Morita, who first started working on the station in 2002.

An established commercial and interior designer who was most recently involved in the refurbishment of Isetan’s Shinjuku flagship store in Tokyo, Morita sought to merge the inside of the station with its surrounding environment, activating idle zones and turning them into public spaces that resemble urban squares and plazas where people can mingle and relax.

For this latest phase in the transformation of Arashiyama station, Morita has designed a “hokkori” zone on the east side that features a stunning artificial forest of acrylic poles draped with traditional yuzen dyed kimono fabrics, illuminated from within by LEDs. This “kimono forest” presents commuters with a particularly spectacular view from within trains that are pulling into the station after sunset.

The existing “hannari” zone on the opposing west side of the station, completed in 2002, also features a selection of kiosks operated by established Kyoto stores, and a grove of some 3,000 bamboo trees.

Other attractive additions to the station include a foot bath in the concourse area that draws natural spring water from the nearby Arashiyama hot spring, an imposing painting of a dragon by artist Masataka Kurashina adorning a small pond, and a transplanted cherry tree from Fukushima that serves as a memorial to the March 11, 2011 Tohoku earthquake.

Compared with the slick, deconstructionist interior of the main Kyoto station designed by Hiroshi Hara in the mid-90s that was criticized for flying in the face of the traditional craft-centered aesthetics that Japan’s old imperial capital is known for, Morita’s new Arashiyama landmark sets a markedly different tone — one that emphatically rejects the glaring, fluorescent lighting that has become fairly ubiquitous in many Japanese public spaces.

Follow BLOUIN ARTINFO Japan on Twitter @ARTINFOJapan


London Design Festival “Destinations” Announced

$
0
0
London Design Festival “Destinations” Announced
“Endless” timber staircase by dRMM

The London Design Festival, the largest annual celebration of design in the British capital, has announced its participating venues for 2013.

Institutions showcasing events include the Design Centre at Chelsea Harbour and London’s Southbank Centre.

The Southbank Centre’s Queen Elizabeth Hall will host Designersblock, an annual showcase for young designers, along with the “Fifth Element,” an exhibition on experimental design. The institution is a newly designated “destination” for this year’s festival.

The festival’s new venue hubs or “design districts” for 2013 include “Chelsea Design Quarter” and its equivalent in Clerkenwell, joining groups of venues in Fulham, Fitzrovia and Shoreditch.

Events in Chelsea include a panel discussion on interiors and fashion at The Rug Company and a talk by French decorator Jean Louis Deniot on his new furniture collection for George Smith.

Other highlights from the festival include an “endless” timber staircase by architect dRMM, on show outside St Paul’s Cathedral this summer (pictured).

The London Design Festival takes place from September 14-22, 2013

Follow @UK_ARTINFO

Denise Scott Brown, Role Models, and the End of Pritzker Prestige

$
0
0
Denise Scott Brown, Role Models, and the End of Pritzker Prestige
Denise Scott Brown

The only architects Denise Scott Brown knew as a child were women: “I thought architecture was women’s work!” she recently told ARTINFO. In part because her mother studied the discipline twenty years prior to her own entry into architecture as a student at South Africa’s University of Witwatersrand in 1949, Scott Brown had long known that she could be an architect. In fact, she went on to become one of the most influential architects of the 20th century at a time when female practitioners were nearly unheard of in the highest echelons of the profession. After finishing her studies as “one of five women in studios of 60 men” at the Architectural Association School in London and the University of Pennsylvania, Scott Brown began a lifelong teaching career that complemented her work as an architect, planner, and theorist. “When I was a young professor,” she recalls, Scott Brown insisted on teaching her own studio, annoyed by the belittling remarks of a senior colleague she worked for. She succeeding in getting her own studio, but “one day…the dean’s secretary told me: No, we’re not giving you your classroom for the seminar, we’re taking your room away because we decided you talk too much.” Scott Brown, an expert on public space, was undeterred — she finished teaching her seminar in the bleachers of the sports arena.

That characteristic determination inspired two Harvard Graduate School of Design students, Arielle Assouline-Lichten and Caroline James, to launch a petition in March 2013 to retroactively add Scott Brown to creative collaborator and husband Robert Venturi’s 1991 Pritzker Prize; he won the highest honor in architecture for work they largely completed together. In the ensuing debate, Scott Brown has been the center of virulent discussion on the place of women, minorities, and creative collaboration in architecture — does Denise Scott Brown deserve a Pritzker inclusion ceremony? Should her name be honored in the annals of architectural history with the same prestige the Pritzker Prize accorded to her husband? What role models do women and other underrepresented minorities have in a profession that has long venerated the perceived genius of singular white men? These concerns pertain to all architects, especially those who fall outside the privileged male demographic typically lauded by the old boys’ club known as the Pritzker Prize jury.

Peter Palumbo, chairman of the 2013 jury, failed to answer these questions when he responded to the petition on June 14, writing: “A later jury cannot re-open, or second guess the work of an earlier jury, and none has ever done so.” His dismissive tone seemed to highlight a still-prevalent sexism in the profession, in response to which the two recent GSD alumnae pressed Palumbo again on July 11: “Addressing these biases now is a moral and decent act to ensure that these injustices won’t happen again.” Correcting Scott Brown’s legacy is essential both because she deserves equal honor and because “it really impacts the way future women see their own position in relation to women over time…and the way future opportunities exist,” Assouline-Lichten told ARTINFO. In a profession still dominated by privileged men, Scott Brown has become a role model not only for her revolutionary work in architecture, planning, and theory, but also for her perseverance and outspoken insistence on receiving credit where it is due.

In the introduction to the 1977 second edition of Scott Brown’s era-defining treatise, Learning From Las Vegas: The Forgotten Symbolism of Architectural Form, co-authored with Venturi, Steven Izenour, and a cadre of student researchers, she expressed “personal pique at the cavalier handling of my contribution and at attributions in general by architects and journalists,” analyzing the “social structure of the profession, its domination by upper-middle class males, and the emphasis its members place upon” the veneration of solitary creative genius. 

However, her outcry against misattribution and sexism was disregarded by those it targeted: Scott Brown tells ARTINFO about an instance when one of the “big honchos in New York architecture offices” abruptly stormed out of a presentation upon being told that it was not “Venturi’s project” because she was the principal in charge of the proposal at hand. In the 1980s she was forced to acquiesce partly to sexist attitudes, even though she and Venturi have collaborated completely at their firm, Venturi, Scott Brown, and Associates: “I had to move over in the 1980s because of the fact that I couldn’t make our office lose…money,” she says of the firm’s move away during that decade from the planning projects that she carried chief responsibility for. When Pritzker called to congratulate Venturi in 1991 and he “said it should be Denise too,’” — Pritzker disagreed — “I felt very broken, very heartbroken,” Scott Brown recalls. “It takes away from your ability to be creative because it’s breaking you down. It took me a lot of time, a lot of building myself up in different ways,” to feel better. 

Unfortunately, Scott Brown’s 1991 exclusion is not an isolated or outdated instance. When a similar snub occured in 2012 — Wang Shu alone was awarded the Pritzker for work completed in concert with his creative partner and wife, Lu Wenyu — the Pritzker Prize jury proved that it still does not properly understand the collaborative nature of design, nor is it truly interested in lauding practitioners who don’t mirror the class and gender of its own members. In an age when nearly half of architecture school graduates are women, but only 17 percent of female architects are managing partners or principals, this pattern of exclusion speaks volumes about the role of women in architecture. “You’ll still find the differences I saw,” remarks Scott Brown. “Women are discovering,” she explains — after years of insisting that they didn’t want to be known as ‘female architects’ and that gender equity has been achieved amongst architects — “that sexism is still prevalent.”


Caroline James and Arielle Assouline-Lichten / Courtesy Caroline James+Arielle Assouline-Lichten

Recognition of and reaction against the systemic gender and racial biases within architecture, Assouline-Lichten tells ARTINFO, are essential to “slowly creating change.” Thus far, the Harvard alumnae’s efforts appear to be working: whereas Venturi and Scott Brown were four times turned down for the AIA Gold Medal because they applied jointly, the American Institute of Architects voted last month to update the rules governing its highest honor, allowing two individuals who have worked together on a single body of architectural work to share the honor. Meanwhile, the Pritzker jury refuses to budge, which prompts another question: How can the Pritzker Prize remain a relevant and prestigious honor if it doesn’t respond to the changing values and demographics of the profession it represents? The 18,000 signatories — and counting — to the Scott Brown petition signal the beginning of the end for the hegemony of the old boys’ club.

Broad Group Breaks Ground on “World’s Tallest Building”

$
0
0
Broad Group Breaks Ground on “World’s Tallest Building”
A graphic rendering of Broad Group's Sky City

Work has begun on the Sky City tower, a skyscraper in Changsha, Hunan province, that developers claim will be the tallest in the world.

The company behind the project, Broad Group, held a ceremony on July 20 to celebrate breaking ground on the 838 meter tower, which is scheduled to be completed by April 2014 — a total build time of just eight months. The reigning tallest building, Dubai’s 829.8 meter Burj Khalifa, took over five years to erect.

Sky City looks like a blockier version of the Burj Khalifa, with a series of towers narrowing towards its peak.

In order to keep up with the unprecedented speed of construction, Broad plans to manufacture large prefabricated sections of the tower before assembling them at the site. Using this method they previous built a 30-story building in 15 days.

The 5.25 billion RMB building will be 202 stories tall with an additional six stories below ground. The total planned floor space is 1.05 million square meters. According to Zhang Xue, the chairman of Broad Group, the top half of the building will consist of apartments, hotels theaters and cinemas, with the bottom half reserved for schools, an elder care center, hospital, and offices.

Zhang says the building will be home to 30,000 people and help take 2,000 cars off the road. There’s also a plan for a vertical farm to help feed residents.

The New Century Global Center in Chengdu, Sichuan province.

The Sky City announcement arrives soon after construction was completed on the world’s freestanding largest building by volume. Situated in Chengdu, Sichuan province, the New Century Global Center is 500 meters long, 400 meters wide, and 100 meters high. Three times bigger than the Pentagon, its 1.7 million square meters of floor space include shopping centers, offices, hotels, a fake Mediterranean village, and an artificial sun.

While the scale of Chinese construction projects continue to set records, the ambition of several projects has far outstripped their usefulness. In anticipation of migration that never came, entire “ghost cities” were built and left vacant in the Kangbashi district of Ordos, Inner Mongolia, and Chenggong, in Kunming, Yunnan province.

With a population of 7 million, Changsha may be considered a mid-sized Chinese city.

HK Polytechnic Students Design Hotel of the Future

$
0
0
HK Polytechnic Students Design Hotel of the Future
Mandarin Oriental, Hotel Design, Polytechnic University, Hotel of the Future

Imagine stepping inside a completely interactive hotel, where a floor with LCD screens will guide you from the reception to the lift, and 3D projectors will transform the lobby according to the event that could be an auction or a concert. Such is the winning concept of “Hotel of the Future” competition organized by Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong, and the Hong Kong Polytechnic University’s School of Design.

The winning team, comprising second-year students Lee Kwok-kwong and Mak Chu-leung, imagined a multi-functional lobby that incorporates the idea of ink stone, a traditional tool used in Chinese painting to hold ink. The lobby area in their “Spreadism” design is centered around a main column – the ink stick – and will become a transformable ink stone, where movable furniture and 3D projectors, LCD screens, and colored lighting alter the setting. Once transformed, the space could be used for exhibitions, auctions and concerts, as well as serve as an interactive space.

The space around the lobby is paved with interactive screens, with imagery resembling ink in water. These imageries mimic the organic shapes of Chinese ink when dropped into water, and double up as a directory guide that leads guests.

“Hotel of the Future” was held to celebrate Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong’s 50th anniversary this year, challenging 39 local design students to reinvent the interiors of the famous five-star hotel.

Notable alumni from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University include fashion designer Vivienne Tam, founder of jewelry brand QeelinDennis Chan and Porsche chief designer Pinky Lai.

Designs of all the finalists’ are on display at the Clipper Lounge of Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong, from now until August 4.

Follow BLOUIN ARTINFO Hong Kong on Twitter @ARTINFOHongKong

VIDEO: China Opens World's Longest Cable-Stayed Bridge

$
0
0
VIDEO: China Opens World's Longest Cable-Stayed Bridge
Jiaxing-Shaoxing Bridge, China

The world's longest and widest multi-pylon cable-stayed bridge is now open to traffic in eastern China.

The Jiaxing-Shaoxing Sea-Crossing Bridge, which stretches 10 kilometers across the Hangzhou Bay in Zhejiang Province, took over four years to complete, designers said.

The main 6-mile stretch across the Qiantang river estuary has six masts and cost more than 1 billion U.S. dollars, designers said.

The bridge, which is the second to be built over the Hangzhou Bay, will halve the driving time from the city of Shaoxing to the eastern financial hub of Shanghai, the state-run Xinhua news agency said.

The head of construction for the main body of the bridge, Lin Daojin, could himself enjoy the drive across after his team successfully overcame significant challenges.

"The Jiaxing-Shaoxing Bridge is located in an area where the tide of the Qiantang River is stronger. The bridge is long and the tide is turbulent, so it presented a huge challenge for our designers. Sometimes we say that this is a no-go zone for building a bridge. When building this bridge, one problem was that we needed to make sure we protected the tide of Qiantang River from being effected by the bridge. But on the other hand, we also needed to control the risk that the tide poses to the bridge," he said.

Commuters were already feeling the benefits of the bridge, which is known as the 'Jia-shao Bridge' for short.

"It's pretty convenient now that the Jia-shao Bridge is open to traffic. I come to Haining and Jiangyin often for my work. After the opening of the Jia-shao Bridge, it takes me just over ten minutes to get to Jianshan from Shangyu. When I used to go through Hangzhou, it would take at least an hour. The distance is considerably shortened and my work is now much more convenient," said 32-year-old Sun Feng.

"I feel very surprised driving across the Jia-shao bridge for the first time. The construction on the Shaoxing side is magnificent. And it's much faster than before, and I can avoid the traffic jams in Hangzhou. I have always driven this route, and now I can save a lot of time," said 31-year-old Xia Feng.

Footage provided by Shaoxing TV showed the bridge's official inauguration on Thursday, when the first vehicle pushed through a ribbon held up by traditional Chinese lion dancers.

The bridge is just one in a number of huge infrastructure projects the world's second largest economy has completed in recent years.

In 2011, China completed the a 26 mile-long sea bridge in eastern Shandong province, which Guinness World records has recognized as the longest bridge over water on earth.

Infrastructure spending leapt in China since 2009, when the government rolled out a $585 billion U.S. dollar, two-year stimulus package to counter the global economic downturn.

Viewing all 1184 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images