George Lucas replaces Modernist masterpiece with Cape Cod on a California Beach

George Lucas is making architectural waves again. And it has nothing to do with a museum. In 2012 AN reported that Lucas had torn down 3389 Padaro Lane, a 1981 Modernist masterpiece on the beach by sculptor and architect Sherrill Broudy in Carpenteria, just east of Santa Barbara. Now he’s finished the replacement—designed by Appleton & Associates. And […]

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blog wunderlust: 14th July 2014

There’s a lineage of carpentry and masonry, building with high skill and great efficiency that’s specific to India, and I am transferring that ideology to projects around the world.
Bijoy Jain


Why the Millennial Architect Won’t Be Your CAD Monkey | How Chinese Urbanism Is Transforming African Cities | Inside the Iconic World Cup Finals Stadium | Why the modern bathroom is a wasteful, unhealthy design | Is maverick master builder Bjarke Ingels the world’s smartest architect – or just the craziest? | Slovak architect turns billboards into homes for the homeless | Knud Lonberg-Holm: ‘The Invisible Architect

last word: Villanueva 114 years

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Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi

Architects: Nicolas Loi
Location: Lo Curro, Vitacura, Metropolitan Region, Chile
Area: 250 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Marcos Mendizabal

From the architect. The house is located in Lo Curro, a residential area of Santiago, Chile. The area has some hills and forest, with a great view of the city of Santiago. The design strategy is based on a 7 x 25 meter rectangle, located over an existing parking space.

The ground level of the house is a continuous space than contains the family area, living room, dining room, kitchen and an interior courtyard. The bedrooms are located in the first floor, and there is a rooftop terrace on the top of the house.

The design tries to be the most simple possible in its shape – a rectangle-, and aims to put the design stress in the construction and materials. Several materials are used: concrete, wood, metal cladding, etc., in order to give intent and expression to the design.

The design aims to achieve an equilibrium between the abstract and the natural; to use the most simple and abstract geometry but to build it with gentle materials that make a connection with its users.

There is also an intent to emphasize the basic geometry of the house represented by 3 axis: Vertical, horizontal and the depth, as the natural position of the human being in the nature, (the vertical position of the human body, the horizontal horizon, and the depth of walking), with the nature, represented by the use of rustic materials, in order to achieve the balance between abstract construction and natural environment.

Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi © Marcos Mendizabal
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi Ground Floor Plan
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi Second Floor Plan
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi Ground Floor Plan
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi Floor Plan
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi North Elevation
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi South Elevation
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi Elevation & Section
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi Section
Lo Curro House / Nicolas Loi Diagram

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Local Group Tries to Block Affordable Housing at Brooklyn Bridge Park

As AN covered earlier this month, Mayor de Blasio’s plan to bring affordable housing to Brooklyn Bridge Park has received steep opposition from local groups in neighboring Brooklyn Heights. They contend new housing development will eat up public space and that under-market housing would not provide necessary funding for park maintenance. Under a Bloomberg-era plan, revenue from private, market-rate […]

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SHoP Architects Designing Brooklyn’s Newest, Tallest Tower

SHoP Architects has racked up another major project in Brooklyn. The firm behind the Barclays Center and the Domino Sugar Factory redevelopment, is designing Brooklyn’s newest, tallest tower. NY YIMBY spotted building permits for 340 Flatbush Avenue Extension in Downtown Brooklyn, where the firm’s 775-foot-tall, 495-unit building will rise. SHoP’s high-rise will top Brooklyn’s current tallest […]

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Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams

Architects: Stanton Williams
Location: London, UK
Year: 2014
Area: 5,602 sqm
Photographs: Hufton+Crow, Courtesy of Stanton Williams

Multidisciplinary Engineering: Arup
Quantity Surveyor: CLM / Mace Town
Planning Consultant: DP9
Catering: King Design
Overlay Consultant: Alpinex
Breeam: Southfacing
Cdm Coordinator: Arup
Landscape Architect: LDA Hargreaves
Landscape Civil Engineering: Atkins
Landscape Lighting: Sutton Vane
Site Area: 146,590 sqm

From the architect. Designed by Stanton Williams, Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre is an inspirational London 2012 legacy venue. Acting as the northern gateway to the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, it marks the final stage of transformation of the Eton Manor site, from its use as the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Aquatic Training and Paralympic Wheelchair Tennis venue – the only purpose-built Paralympic venue in the history of the Games – into a world-class sports facility.

Alongside Lee Valley VeloPark and Lee Valley White Water Centre, the Centre is one of three legacy venues which are now operated by Lee Valley Regional Park Authority.

A thoughtful strategy of a ‘Build it Once’ concept took legacy as the starting point of design, enabling substantial transformation of sporting facilities without the loss of its distinct architectural identity at each phase. Games facilities were conceived as a temporary overlay, purposeful in appearance and with its own precise functional requirements, yet easily removed to reveal the legacy venue.

In this final mode, it will become the major events venue of England Hockey and a key development centre for the Lawn Tennis Association. The Centre comprises four indoor and six outdoor tennis courts as well as a 3,000 seat international hockey stadium, a second international standard hockey pitch, a mountain bike trail, and associated changing and support functions.

A dark grey steel canopy, newly added above the terrace and tiered seating, ties into the dark-coloured, metal cladding selected for the upper body of the building, whilst the red cladding, selected for the points of access in the elevation, adds to the overall sense of depth, texture and tactility, evident elsewhere on the site, for example, in the rhythm of gaps created on the timber façade of the tennis hall.

Drawing inspiration from its sporting heritage, a particular emphasis was given to re-connect Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre with its East London locality. During the course of the twentieth century, Eton Manor, originally set up in the 1920s by philanthropic Etonians for the young East End residents, had become somewhat cut off from its surroundings, bounded to the south and east by major roads and a railway, and hidden to the north from Ruckholt Road by a brick wall.

Stanton Williams’ overall design therefore aims to open the park up to visitors and reassert the building as an integral, legible part of the surrounding landscape. The site’s topography has been significantly re-shaped to aid legibility and accessibility, creating better visual and physical links with the streets to the north and also the bridges, which connect to the Park and Hackney Marshes. A newly installed mountain bike trail around the site weaves through the new planting, screening the site from the busy dual carriageway to its south, and intricately linking this part of the park to the neighbouring Lee Valley VeloPark.

The result is a layered landscape. Pedestrian and vehicle routes have been overlaid onto this manipulated landscape, as the building has been. Since the main hockey pitch has been conceived as a bowl carved into the ground, the surrounding park begins to function almost as additional viewing platforms, drawing people in to be closer to the events taking place at the venue.

A series of intersecting blocks define the building, allowing various component units to be easily identified, whilst also emphasizing their interconnectedness to one other and to the place. The mass of the tennis hall, for example, sails above the horizontal roofline of the multifunctional room, whilst the new canopy assists in creating a sense of unity between the pitch, seating and building. The use of timber rainscreen for the tennis hall, moreover, connects its greater bulk with the landscaping beyond.

The tennis hall is a timber cassette construction, which incorporates the longest single span glulam beams in Europe. It is naturally ventilated and largely daylit. The viewing gallery terminates with a square of solid glazing, perfectly framing the nearby Lee Valley VeloPark.

The rest of the venue is primarily concrete with a variation of boardmarked and grit blasted finish, adding a layer of detail and texture, as well as complimenting the appearance of the timber as it ages. At the heart of the Centre are the lounge and social areas, cementing its position as a valuable asset.

A high quality, long life design was driven by the need to provide an exceptional legacy venue for both the local community and as part of the overall investment in regenerating East London.

In its final legacy mode, the Centre can once again promote itself as a ‘beacon’ to inspire, encourage and develop aspiring young players in East London, therefore carrying on the legacy of its sporting past. It also acts as a world-class sporting venue today, playing host to international tournaments, such as the European Hockey Championships in 2015 and the Women’s World Cup in 2018.

Vivien Blacker, Corporate Director of Lee Valley Regional Park Authority, said:

“It was a pleasure for the Authority to work with the architects from Stanton Williams during the development of Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis centre. Their challenging yet ultimately sympathetic approach to the demands of providing first class sports facilities has led to the delivery of an outstanding legacy venue.”

Paul Williams, Director at Stanton Williams, said:

“This has been a wonderful project to work on, and it is a true legacy project. Legacy drove our vision from the beginning to the end and it is wonderful to now see it unfolding. The centre will continue to evolve and become richer, as it starts to serve the local community, as well as national and international sports teams. We believe that it is the crossover of all these different groups of people that is going to make this a very special venue.”

Sally Munday, England Hockey Chief Executive said:

“Having a facility like this is a fantastic tool for us to engage the public with our sport and really stimulate some National pride in supporting England’s hockey teams. It’s also a huge benefit to the local clubs and schools in the area who’ll use the pitches, which is of utmost importance.”

Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams © Hufton+Crow
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams © Hufton+Crow
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams © Hufton+Crow
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams © Hufton+Crow
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Courtesy of Stanton Williams
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Courtesy of Stanton Williams
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams © Hufton+Crow
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Master Plan
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Floor Plan
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Floor Plan
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Diagram
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Elevation
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Elevation
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Elevation
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Elevation
Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre / Stanton Williams Detail

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blog wunderlust: 9th June 2014

It is in hard times especially, that good architecture is made.

Christopher Whyms-Stone [Cornerstone.Design Ltd]

Are Ivy League Schools Really Offering the Best Architectural Education? | 25 Architects You Should Follow on Twitter | A new blueprint for architectural excellence | Berlin Plans ‘House Of One,’ A Place Where Jews, Muslims, And Christians Will Pray Under The Same Roof | Life in the suburbs: the good, the bad and the ugly | How to make a tool set | Miami’s new vice – an addiction to star architects |

last word: “LEEDing” The Pack: acla:works Deepens Commitment to Green Building, Design and Construction

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ASLA New York to Honor Rebuild by Design Champion, Leader of Governors Island

The New York chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year at the 2014 President’s Dinner Gala. For this occasion, the ASLA has selected the Rockefeller Foundation’s Judith Rodin, the Trust for Governors Island’s Leslie Koch, and the NY1 News Organization as their honored guests.   All Renderings Courtesy […]

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ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design

Architects: Prism Design
Location: Huangpu, ,
Architects In Charge: Tomohiro Katsuki, Masanori Kobayashi, Reiji Kobayashi
Area: 160 sqm
Year: 2014
Photographs: Studio W – Wataru Ishida

Construction: Shanghai Zhangfa Construction Installation Engineering Co,.Ltd
Lighting Supplier: Koizumi Lighting Technology(Shanghai Co. Ltd.)

From the architect. ABC Cooking Studio is a place where people come to cook an array of foods, including baking breads and cakes.

Unlike other cooking schools, ABC Cooking Studio promotes a more casual and friendly environment where people can enjoy while learning how to cook delicious and sophisticated food.

1.There are 124 studios currently operating in Japan, and as a member, you will be allowed to take classes at any studio of your choice

2.The classes are done in a small group, ensuring you maximum support from the teachers

3.Lessons are held multiple times a day, and you can easily reserve the classes through your computer or cell phone

4.You can register for classes based on the teacher and/or menu of your liking ABC’s original recipe sheets are very easy to understand, and can be used for extra support

5.You can review the recipes that you used online, allowing you to recreate your favorite dishes

ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida
ABC Cooking Studio / Prism Design © Studio W – Wataru Ishida

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