Monthly Archives: November 2009

Circa Gallery / studioMAS

© Tristan McLaren Architects: studioMAS architects + urban design Location: Rosebank, Johannesburg, South Africa Structural Engineers: Vela VKE Consulting Main Contractor: Murray-Dickson Project year: 2009 Photographs: Tristan McLaren © Tristan McLaren Imagine a place in Johannesburg where you can enjoy music, film, talks, natural history exhibits, and art…. From early on, it was evident to the architect, Pierre Swanepoel of studioMAS, that CIRCA was to be ‘the’ venue to go to, a place to enjoy the best contemporary art on offer in Johannesburg; it would therefore need to function as a cultural gathering place. Forming an art precinct in the north western corner of Rosebank, its design focuses on a comprehensive way of looking at art and in so doing, creates a flexible, multi-purpose building, that gives the visitor complete exposure to all types of art within the ambit of supporting amenities. Circa, when viewed together with the existing Everard Read gallery is conceived as more than just a gallery and is therefore equally considerate about the public realm around it. It integrates itself with the city and offers more user variety, like a coffee shop and bookshop which are within the open ground floor and spill onto the sidewalk. It contains exhibition spaces for crafts and mixed media and large meeting places for public events or smaller private functions. The purpose is to create a building responsive to the art on show, offering something physical and real; something that alters perspectives of everyday life. The space between the galleries creates an opportunity to enjoy and exhibit large scale sculptures much like a sculpture garden or park or square, thereby making more of our shared public space; not just road surfaces for cars and hiding places for criminals. floor plans An underlying purpose of the design is to encourage the gallery goer to rethink what is defined as “art” and an “art gallery”. No longer is it simply about a picture hung on a wall in a forgotten so called “white box” hall, in an out of sight building. The vision is for Circa to become a cherished city landmark in an impressive art precinct on the prominent intersection of Jellicoe and Jan Smuts. Located on the corner of this highly visible intersection, it marks a prominent public intervention within the existing urban fabric, offering 360° views. Art has evolved, and this gallery sets out to include these advances using various media, such as music, film, large scale sculpture and the architecture itself. The architecture is therefore a sculptural artwork, moulding itself around the art it contains. Johannesburg beats to the pulse of many themes. To drive along its streets is to be continuously exposed to inventive craft. This tradition is born of natural media, under the care of a well trained hand. Artists engage with their patrons through informal side walk “galleries”, where despite difficulty, sidewalks fight to sustain their function as public connectors. Moving forward on the vision to reclaim public space, the gallery establishes very open and fluid areas outside the building, which connect it prominently to the existing Everard Read Gallery. A ‘square’, big enough to house various large artworks, is created and provides an outdoor space to gather in. © Tristan McLaren One can say that Circa is a small building, with a big attitude. It is not just another commercial building, nor is it by any means, just another gallery. It is inspired by the new world economy where commercial gain and philanthropy are tempered by a concern for urban and natural environments. While its main aim is to conduct business, it uses its prominence to create an interest in art. It does so by forming a community landmark and reference point that emphazises the importance of art, in an unexpected urban environment. Therefore, it is integrated with functions in its surroundings such as the existing Everard Read Gallery, while still functioning autonomously. Consider the Pine trees growing on the slopes of Table Mountain in Cape Town. Their bent trunks are not characteristic of their structure, but are reflective of the harsh, windy context in which they have adapted their form to survive. These Pine trees, appear very different from their relatives growing in Mpumalanga, principally, because they have had to adapt to a very different context. This metaphor illustrates the importance of context in denoting form to a building. The Circa site can be described as harsh and challenging to design in. It is located on a noisy and busy intersection, next to a filling station and within an undefined urban environment. The site is narrow and difficult to accommodate a standard building. It therefore creates a unique opportunity for some ingenuity and adaptive design. The architectural form can be appreciated for adapting to a narrow site, while creating a sculptural landmark form. The fins and scrims create visual linkages into and out of the building into the surroundings, while the main gallery remains private and removed from the hustle and bustle. Circa would not look the same were it to be built somewhere else. Partly in response to rational limits, a large part of the design of Circa stems from intuition, complimented by common sense. As its name suggests, it is not specific or defined, it is Circa. ellipse diagram The design is based on an elliptical plan. An ellipse, unlike an oval, does not represent an unsurprising constancy, but rather something of more natural origins; something organic. It speaks of that which comes from nature, through handmade and not machine made methods. In essence, this is the creative process from which art is crafted: “… once the size of an ellipse has been fixed then its exact shape is mathematically determined. In other words, the line forming the perimeter can be drawn in only one way. This is distinct from an oval where the perimeter has only to be a concave curve, and there are many possibilities. Simply, an ellipse is an oval, but an oval may or may not be an ellipse.” (Dr. Sarah, The Math Forum) The Circa design philosophy reflects the abstract nature of art: it does not replicate realistically what is out there, but rather stimulates a thought from which it is to be understood. While the fins represent the randomness and variation of colour in nature, they do not reflect the internal functioning of the building. Thought and exploration are required in order for an appreciation of this is to be achieved. For studioMAS, the architecture of Circa is one in which enclosure and spatial experience are paramount, where the lines of architecture become blurred. This has been achieved by using a number of long aluminium elements attached to the facade. These elements, or fins, are a means of partitioning the inside and outside space, while when read together, their repetitive placement along the facade create a monumental sculptural form. The fins, as singular elements, become apparent with the play of light and shadow along the edges of the building. Click here to view the embedded video. Evolving, with the time of day and seasons, the experience of the filtered space in the northern edges of Circa accentuates the experience of space in a completely different way; more than just a sculptural object, Circa’s architecture is about creating atmosphere. The sensory experience of space in Circa is demonstrated in the play of shadows, the reflection of sunlight off the fins and their glittering in the water of the sculpture pond. The harmony created by these elements evokes a sense of vibrant playful architecture, where movement and the process of experiencing space creates architecture that is fluid and evolutionary. Poetry is interpreted in the façade of the gallery by creating a system of narrow vertical anodized aluminium fins that are equal neither in length, nor in colour. Nature and natural processes inspired the facade design. Consider the implied order and chaos typical of the protective fences of Zulu Kraals and the vertical elegance of reeds and grasses. These elements create both ‘enclosure’ as well as maintain views through them. © Tristan McLaren These concepts have served to inspire the facade of fins that serve as a screen, through which activity can be observed within the building from the street or where gallery visitors can experience glimpses of the city from within the gallery edges. This visual interface between user and context, changes along the perimeter by virtue of the elliptical façade. No two views from the building toward its surroundings are the same. The carefully developed process of colour selection for these panels was as follows: Images of natural scenes and colourscapes were sourced to act as the base images for the fins in order to simulate the randomness and variation of colour in nature. A single pixel strip of colour through the images was extracted with a focus on colour variation and contrast. The strip of colour was then colourised in Photoshop to simulate the range of colours able to be created and in line with the desires of the client. The single pixel strip of colour is then extruded to simulate the elevation of the fins as they would be seen once installed. In order to achieve the correct scale and grain of colour variation throughout the fins a degree of interpolation between the colour bands was required. Once the correct scale and variation was achieved the colours needed to be reduced to a minimum number for ease of manufacture yet retain the visual effect which had been developed. The final number of colours settled on was 7 and the colour sequence was applied onto the entire elevation of the façade and the colours mapped to each individual fin for construction. Sections BB + CC The use of scrims in the facade as well as the external fire escape forms a major component of the architecture. The planted box within which the fire escape is located, creates an opportunity on which creepers can grow. It emphazises the importance of encouraging conditions for nature to develop in harmony with manmade things. Greening of this urban building in other parts of the design is also evident, albeit in a very subtle manner. The dialog between handmade product (the facade) and natural growth (the green scrim) aims to evoke an appreciation of the poetic and functional importance of scrims in our cities, a design feature that studioMAS actively promote. Circa consist of three floors. The ground floor is named Speke and consists of about 106m2 of exhibition space for crafts curiosities. On crossing the public threshold, users are drawn in via a perimeter ramp that connects ground and first floor exhibition spaces and promotes access to the mobility impaired. Its double volume first floor, consist of 177.76 sq. multi-purpose exhibition space, with 7 movable display screens which can be dropped through the floor into the ground level below, realizing the full extent of the multi-purpose floor. The top floor consists of the Darwin Room, an 85 sqm private lounge that can be rented out for functions and that spills out onto a 20sqm deck, overlooking the impressive North Western Johannesburg views . The gallery has two small kitchens for catering as well as AV technology for projection and public address. © Tristan McLaren Security is tackled by a bold site intervention. Circa promotes the seemingly forgotten concept of designing an inviting building with “good manners”; one that does not resort to perimeter fencing or a 3m high wall. By that we mean that the building utilizes level differences, overlooking features and robust materials, to create secure internal environments; breaking down barriers between the public and art. Boundaries create psychological barriers between people more than they create physical protection. Circa intends to break these barriers, bringing art to the public in everyday life. If it is true that buildings are poetic yet rooted in logic and crafted though the creative process, then Circa not only responds to the poetic composition of a building within a vibrant urban context, but also to the logic of the needs of the art it houses and of its public. Circa is a building that is built upon a desire to be part of this city, its art and its people; it is a fluid point in time, that will morph and evolve as South Africa, and its art does.

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Eden Falls / Visiondivision

Visiondivision shared their Eden Falls entry for a vertical zoo competition organized by  Arquitectum with us.  The design features a thunderous water curtain facade that offers a dramatic entry condition as visitors pass over a moat of crocodiles and into a free setting where monkeys and birds freely roam about the building, and a  pool with fresh water dolphins rests on the roof. More images and more about the zoo after the break. The water curtain is formed as a result of the building taking water from the river, cleaning it and then pumping it through a system of huge pipes (which form the building’s structural system).  The constant overflow on the roof causes the water to flow off the sides, enveloping the entire structure in a dynamic waterfall.  The rush of water conceals the pipe structure and as the falling water hits the surface, it is turned into energy via turbines and a generator.  The structure is completely self-sufficient and can provide for water and energy for other future structures in the reserve or existing ones in Puerto Madero.  It also becomes a unique and striking symbol for the Costanera Sur and the river. A core of circulation rests in the middle of the building and several cantilevered footbridges breach the waterfall so one can enjoy the views of the Costanera Sur, the city and the river. The floors for the animals are divided into flats for each species, with a balcony that pierces the waterfall and a typology of plants and vegetation that is suitable for that animal.

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AD Interviews: Hrvoje Njiric / njiric+ arhitekti

During my visit to Croatia for CIP Talks, everyone kept recommending me to meet Hrvoje Njiric. Partner of njiric+ arhitekti , his recent works are very good examples on residential and educational architecture. He won -among other awards- the 2006 Zagreb Salon Grand Prix, which resulted on the Zagreb 09 Pavilion we featured last week. In parallel to his remarkable architectural production, Hrvoje is also very related to architectural education, being a visiting critic at the HAB Weimar, the ETSAB Barcelona, the TU Wien, the AA School of Architecture London, the ETH Zuerich, the Strathclyde University of Glasgow, Politecnico di Milano and the Southeast University of Nanjing, ETSAM Madrid and the William Lyon Somerville Visiting Lectureship at the University of Calgary. He has alsodirected international workshops in Zagreb, Merano, Maribor, Gorizia, Barcelona, Brescia, Unije, Santiago de Chile, La Coruna, Aarhus, Trieste, Kriva Palanka, Rijeka and Calgary. I had the chance to briefly meet him on a sunny day in Zagreb, and we talked under his pavilion about the usual things we ask. But I feel that the interview doesn´t reflect his passion for architecture, and also for teaching, something you could feel just by talking with him. On the next days we are bringing more projects and built works by him, so stay tuned. Interview available in High Definition at Vimeo .

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Twin extentions of 2 elementay schools in Courbevoie / BP Architectures

@ Kozlowski Architects: BP Architectures (member of PLAN01 ) Location: Courbevoie, France Contracting Authority: City of Courbevoie Contracting Companies: CERP, Roger Renard, Lebrun, ALMA Project Area: 2,200 sqm Budget: €3.1 Million Project year: 2009 Photographs: Frédéric Delangle & Kozlowski A twofold accomplishment! « Once upon a time, in Courbevoie, in a residential district without any real urban markers, two elementary schools shared the same block and the same playground, though not the same school principal. One school was named “Logie” and the other “Anatole France.” As the need for public space grew, the City of Courbevoie decided it wanted an extension, which it thought would be common to both schools. But the BP Agency, which had been allowed to bid on the project, did not see things quite the same way; instead of the ground plan sketched out by the municipal services, BP proposed not one but two extensions. Two buildings with the same construction, twin structures arranged perpendicular to each other so that the observer has the strange sensation of seeing the same object from two different angles. An odd feeling. ground floor plan On either side, a deliberately sturdy mineral base to enclose the schoolyard and house the technical premises, servicing areas and bathroom facilities. Above the base, a vibrating, golden metal box housing a floor dedicated to classrooms with a pediment and a library looking out onto the city, turning knowledge and study into figureheads of the school. And in both cases, slanted walls serving as the pupils’ entrance. As a result, the playground area was enlarged and even included a vegetable garden: a solution that made everyone happy! Our two extensions shimmered. The façades of the metal boxes were covered with anodized aluminium clapboard in three 3 colours: champagne, bronze and gold, giving the buildings an attractive, sparkling look. The structure as a whole produced an impression of abstract vitality. @ Kozlowski This is therefore the story of a twofold accomplishment – architectural as well as symbolic. These two structures, with their highly contemporary style, recompose the city block, making it more compact and lively. Architecturally: a bland district is turned into a landmark neighborhood. Symbolically: with these twin extensions, BP could have signed an egalitarian manifesto for the France’s elementary schools, which would not surprise anyone familiar with the Agency’s vision. But the real moral of the story is that one can be outside the competition and still be the winner » 2 buildings instead of one @ Kozlowski The City of Courbevoie wanted to extend two distinct elementary schools located on the same block in a residential district of Courbevoie. As the geographical proximity of the two schools seemed unusual to us, we suggested freeing our- selves from the ground plan projected by the City and making each extension a continuation of the existing structures. Thus, we designed two buildings instead of one, which allowed each one to achieve its own optimum functioning as well as town planning to recompose the city block. Simple volumes with an identifiable architectural meaning @ Kozlowski The project is part of a heterogeneous fabric without any dominant architectural style, which is typical of the outskirts of Paris. We therefore chose to create two 2 extensions instead of one, and to build on 2 streets of a single block, which offered us the chance to create a strong, structuring identifying element by repeating the motif. Our project helps give an “order”, an identifying, recognizable signature, to the district. Radical architectural language and project economy The volumes are constituted by a mineral base (tinted self-placing concrete) forming the ground floor and the wall enclosing the playground. The regular vertical piercing and the vertical layout of the concrete punctuate and animate these façades. @ Kozlowski The bases support the metallic volumes forming the floor above including the façades giving onto the street which are broadly lighted by a succession of bay windows of varying heights and covered with a 3-tonne grid made of anodized aluminium wall rails (gold, bronze and champagne) that dematerialize the volume as the light changes. The wall rails have a twofold purpose: arranged vertically in an irregular, random pattern, they serve as a canopy while contributing to the aesthetic signature of the project. These volumes stand out slightly from the bases at a slant to form shelters for the pupils’ entrance to the Logie School and the top of the planted square at the corner of rue Armand Silvestre and rue Cayla for the Anatole France School. The gables of these volumes, which are entirely glassed in, open widely onto the public space. They enhance the flagship element of the whole school: the library, which is naturally located here in each of the extensions.

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Twin extentions of 2 elementay schools in Courbevoie / BP Architectures

@ Kozlowski Architects: BP Architectures (member of PLAN01 ) Location: Courbevoie, France Contracting Authority: City of Courbevoie Contracting Companies: CERP, Roger Renard, Lebrun, ALMA Project Area: 2,200 sqm Budget: €3.1 Million Project year: 2009 Photographs: Frédéric Delangle & Kozlowski A twofold accomplishment! « Once upon a time, in Courbevoie, in a residential district without any real urban markers, two elementary schools shared the same block and the same playground, though not the same school principal. One school was named “Logie” and the other “Anatole France.” As the need for public space grew, the City of Courbevoie decided it wanted an extension, which it thought would be common to both schools. But the BP Agency, which had been allowed to bid on the project, did not see things quite the same way; instead of the ground plan sketched out by the municipal services, BP proposed not one but two extensions. Two buildings with the same construction, twin structures arranged perpendicular to each other so that the observer has the strange sensation of seeing the same object from two different angles. An odd feeling. ground floor plan On either side, a deliberately sturdy mineral base to enclose the schoolyard and house the technical premises, servicing areas and bathroom facilities. Above the base, a vibrating, golden metal box housing a floor dedicated to classrooms with a pediment and a library looking out onto the city, turning knowledge and study into figureheads of the school. And in both cases, slanted walls serving as the pupils’ entrance. As a result, the playground area was enlarged and even included a vegetable garden: a solution that made everyone happy! Our two extensions shimmered. The façades of the metal boxes were covered with anodized aluminium clapboard in three 3 colours: champagne, bronze and gold, giving the buildings an attractive, sparkling look. The structure as a whole produced an impression of abstract vitality. @ Kozlowski This is therefore the story of a twofold accomplishment – architectural as well as symbolic. These two structures, with their highly contemporary style, recompose the city block, making it more compact and lively. Architecturally: a bland district is turned into a landmark neighborhood. Symbolically: with these twin extensions, BP could have signed an egalitarian manifesto for the France’s elementary schools, which would not surprise anyone familiar with the Agency’s vision. But the real moral of the story is that one can be outside the competition and still be the winner » 2 buildings instead of one @ Kozlowski The City of Courbevoie wanted to extend two distinct elementary schools located on the same block in a residential district of Courbevoie. As the geographical proximity of the two schools seemed unusual to us, we suggested freeing our- selves from the ground plan projected by the City and making each extension a continuation of the existing structures. Thus, we designed two buildings instead of one, which allowed each one to achieve its own optimum functioning as well as town planning to recompose the city block. Simple volumes with an identifiable architectural meaning @ Kozlowski The project is part of a heterogeneous fabric without any dominant architectural style, which is typical of the outskirts of Paris. We therefore chose to create two 2 extensions instead of one, and to build on 2 streets of a single block, which offered us the chance to create a strong, structuring identifying element by repeating the motif. Our project helps give an “order”, an identifying, recognizable signature, to the district. Radical architectural language and project economy The volumes are constituted by a mineral base (tinted self-placing concrete) forming the ground floor and the wall enclosing the playground. The regular vertical piercing and the vertical layout of the concrete punctuate and animate these façades. @ Kozlowski The bases support the metallic volumes forming the floor above including the façades giving onto the street which are broadly lighted by a succession of bay windows of varying heights and covered with a 3-tonne grid made of anodized aluminium wall rails (gold, bronze and champagne) that dematerialize the volume as the light changes. The wall rails have a twofold purpose: arranged vertically in an irregular, random pattern, they serve as a canopy while contributing to the aesthetic signature of the project. These volumes stand out slightly from the bases at a slant to form shelters for the pupils’ entrance to the Logie School and the top of the planted square at the corner of rue Armand Silvestre and rue Cayla for the Anatole France School. The gables of these volumes, which are entirely glassed in, open widely onto the public space. They enhance the flagship element of the whole school: the library, which is naturally located here in each of the extensions.

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Romania Pavillion for Shanghai World Expo 2010

The concept design competition for the Romania Pavilion, “Exchange of Ideas”, was won by SC M&C Strategy Development who designed Greenopolis, “The green mega polis”. Name of the pavilion is term with universal meaning, metamorphosed in a fruit, the apple, which means health, knowledge, freshness, temptation, eternity. The surrounding Greenopolis landscape recreates principal elements of the nature (the lawn from the hills, rivers, grass). The apple is divided in two parts: the main body from which is detached a slice, the secondary body. The inside architectural design has generous and multifunctional spaces, disposed on 5 floors and the access in Greenopolis follows a natural line which allows visiting all the modules without passing over any zone. Seen at Big Creative Industries. More images after the break.

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Romania Pavillion for Shanghai World Expo 2010

The concept design competition for the Romania Pavilion, “Exchange of Ideas”, was won by SC M&C Strategy Development who designed Greenopolis, “The green mega polis”. Name of the pavilion is term with universal meaning, metamorphosed in a fruit, the apple, which means health, knowledge, freshness, temptation, eternity. The surrounding Greenopolis landscape recreates principal elements of the nature (the lawn from the hills, rivers, grass). The apple is divided in two parts: the main body from which is detached a slice, the secondary body. The inside architectural design has generous and multifunctional spaces, disposed on 5 floors and the access in Greenopolis follows a natural line which allows visiting all the modules without passing over any zone. Seen at Big Creative Industries. More images after the break.

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Lot 18 House by Arkitek Axis: Modern Living in Malaysia

Lot 18 House by Arkitek Axis showcases some fine modern Southeast Asian architecture. The building is a 3-level U-shaped contemporary home in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The living, dining and kitchen areas interlock around a pool with a roof top garden, which is surrounded by glass walls. There is a lot of glass in the house with windows on all sides for good natural lighting throughout the day. On the first ground level there is a family hall with three bathrooms; the whole space opens up to a balcony that is just above the pool. This is a post from Home Design Find Lot 18 House by Arkitek Axis: Modern Living in Malaysia

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Lot 18 House by Arkitek Axis: Modern Living in Malaysia

Lot 18 House by Arkitek Axis showcases some fine modern Southeast Asian architecture. The building is a 3-level U-shaped contemporary home in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The living, dining and kitchen areas interlock around a pool with a roof top garden, which is surrounded by glass walls. There is a lot of glass in the house with windows on all sides for good natural lighting throughout the day. On the first ground level there is a family hall with three bathrooms; the whole space opens up to a balcony that is just above the pool. This is a post from Home Design Find Lot 18 House by Arkitek Axis: Modern Living in Malaysia

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Green Sebastian Mariscal Solar Home Uses Charcoaled Wood

After discovering the traditional Japanese wood finishing technique of charcoaling wood I wrote about here, I went looking to see it used in modern building. I wasn’t disappointed. Here is how the author of Pursuing Wabi himself put it to work in creating his new solar powered yet very traditional Japanese green home in San Diego, designed by Sebastian Mariscal . The house is informed by the Japanese sensibility of simplicity. Part of this living room in the 2,100 sq ft house can be partitioned off for a guest bedroom. Counting that as a room, when they sell, it could count as a 2 br/2 bth (and a solar topped office upstairs). Guests sleep on futons that can be brought out when they’re needed…no need for a bed wasting space. Disappearing sliding doors make it part of the living area when there are no overnight guests. Another traditional element was the avoidance of “motonai!” a Japanese term that connotes the “squandering of natural resources” like when something useful is wasted. It conveys “reduce consumption, reuse, recycle, and repair” all in a single word. That word is simply un-american. “Instead of demolishing our house we decided to deconstruct it. With deconstruction, 85% of the house gets reused. It costs twice as much as a normal demolition, but it’s green”. Everything from the old house was salvaged for the ReUse People ; from roof tiles to outlet boxes. He also wanted to retain what he considers (and I’m inclined to agree) one of the best aspects of Japanese design: the Engawa. Common in traditional Japanese homes but now rare in Japan – the Engawa is a narrow space that serves as a transition space between the indoors and outdoors.  It’s a place where you can sit, drink coffee, and vegetate while viewing the outdoors. The master bedroom, overlooking the green roof, has solar panels to provide electricity to the whole house, yet the panels are hidden to cars passing by, with a small parapet. He didn’t worry about the future, but had this very green home designed for his own tastes. “The comment I typically get is “you won’t be able to sell that house”. Even in Southern California, a house with anything less than 3 bedrooms is immediately considered unsellable. I should worry about that but I’m not that smart.” He needn’t worry. So many custom homes look and feel like no more individual than a tract home. Not this one. Source: Pursuing Wabi This is a post from Home Design Find Green Sebastian Mariscal Solar Home Uses Charcoaled Wood

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Fiscavaig / Rural Design

Architects: Rural Design Location: Isle of Skye, Scotland Client: Nick and Kate Middleton Structural Engineering: AF Cruden Associates, Inverness Main Contrator: James MacQueen Builidng Contractors Ltd, Borneskitaig, Isle of Skye Project Area: 70 sqm Budget: £123,000 Project Year: 2009 Photographs: Rural Design This small holiday house, located in the township of Fiscavaig on the western side of the Isle of Skye, deliberately eschews convention due to its unusual site. Indeed on first visiting the site it was difficult to see how any proposal could succeed if it disrupted a landscape that did not lend itself to intervention. original site location plan The decision to lift the building off the ground on small piloti released the design from convention and allowed it to relate to the wider context – the views to the north and the sun from the south. The form of the house deliberately narrows to the north, reducing its surface area, and leans into the weather. The entrance bridge lifts one off the landscape and immediately upon entering one is connected with the view through the fully-glazed elevation to the north. The other windows are secondary and draw light into the two storey volume. Simple timber construction reinforces the character of the house as a visitor in the ancient landscape.

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Glass Half Full…Always

Did you ever contemplate whether your glass was half empty or half full? Thank heavens designer Alissia Melka-Teichroew did some thinking, and came up with these really classy InsideOut series. Martini Glasses and Champagne Flutes made out of hand-blown borosilicate glass. It has the advantage of double-walled glass, which provides insulation, thus keeping your drink colder for longer. Designer: byAMT [ Buy it Here - Martini Glasses set of 2 for $55; Champagne Flute set of 2 for $59 available at YD Store ] Martini Glasses set of 2 for $55 available at YD Store Champagne Flute set of 2 for $59 available at YD Store

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Radio Ga Ga

Flexio is this really awesome radio that’s solar powered and portable. I’m willing to overlook the “only one fixed FM channel” stand for the cute little paper packaging it comes in. I’m sure the dynamics of manufacturing this are going to be reasonable, because one can even use it for promotions and gifts…like ask someone to advertise on its package. The innovative factor comes from the flexible speaker & flexible solar cell. It’s designed to be used within the station-waves range, but could be modified to receive internet radio via WiFi or WiMax. Designers: Wu Kun-chia, Wang Shih-ju, Chen Ming-daw & Liou Chang-ho

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Make My Own Juice

We all know that energy is neither created nor destroyed; it only changes its forms. When we do our daily chores or simply exist, we do expend some amount of it that could be trapped and used to power gadgets and devices. This is the very premise of the “Human Energy Recycle System.” Wearable contraptions (on hands, fingers and wrists) called “Solution Units” come fitted with a battery that stores the harnessed juice. These batteries can be then removed and used to charge basics like cellphones and MP3 players. At home, the battery units can be inserted into an “Application Built-in Type” and stored. The “Application” units perform the roles of storing and supplying power. There is the option of using a “Application Portable Type” unit, this helps in harnessing energy while doing heavy-duty stuff like exercise machines and cycling. Here is an idea that can really revolutionize the way we perceive power and energy sources for the future. Essentially making it a portable thing. Designers: Choi Hyung-Suk & Yun Jung-Sik

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Phone Fashion

The trend in concept phones these days is turning retro, which is why we have the “Dial” reminisce the era of the round-dials on phones. The difference however lies in the present concept being touted as a fashion accessory that can be crafted in the metal of choice; giving you the luxury of being, chic, sporty, or uber-rich. A projected light beam in the inner circle impersonates the rotary dial, but to dial a number you need to simply touch it. Quite interesting. Designer: Jung Dae Hoon

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