Hopkins Architects to Transform Harvard’s Holyoke Center into New Campus Hub

Harvard’s Holyoke Center, designed by renowned Catalan architect and former Dean on the Harvard Graduate School of Design, Josep Lluís Sert, will soon be undergoing major renovations, university President Drew Faust announced last Thursday. London-based Hopkins Architects, the designers of Princeton’s Frick Chemistry Laboratory and Yale’s Kroon Hall, have signed on to transform the 50-year-old, […]

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Heydar Aliyev Center by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid Architects have designed the Heydar Aliyev Center in Baku, Azerbaijan.

Description

The Heydar Aliyev Center hosts a variety of cultural programs, its design is a departure from the rigid and often monumental architecture of the former Soviet Union that is so prevalent in Baku, aspiring instead to express the sensibilities and diversity of Azeri culture.

The Center’s design establishes a continuous, fluid relationship between its surrounding plaza and the building’s interior. The plaza, as the ground surface, accessible to all, rises to envelop an equally public interior and define a sequence of event spaces within. Undulations, folds, and inflections modify this surface to create an architectural landscape that performs a multitude of functions: welcoming, embracing, and directing visitors throughout the center; blurring the conventional differentiation between architecture and landscape, interior and exterior.

Fluidity in architecture is not new to the region. The continuous calligraphic scripts and patterning of historical Islamic architecture flow from carpets to walls, walls to ceilings, ceilings to domes; establishing seamless relationships and blurring distinctions between architectural elements and the ground they inhabit. The Center’s design relates to this historical understanding of architecture, not through the use of mimicry or a limiting adherence to the iconography of the past, but with a firmly contemporary interpretation.

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Architect: Zaha Hadid Architects
Photography: Helene Binet, Luke Hayes, Iwan Baan, Hufton and Crow

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The Art of Construction: Projects and Principles for Beginning Engineers & Architects (Ziggurat Book)

Students discover the basic principles necessary to build all types of structures used in everyday life including bridges, skyscrapers, and other architectural gems. Line art illustrations help to explain projects that demonstrate how these principles keep structures solid. Perfect for kids who wonder why, and love to figure things out! All projects are easily done with materials found around-the-house.

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Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects

Architects: Clive Wilkinson Architects
Location: , CA,
Architect In Charge: Clive Wilkinson, Sam Farhang, Sasha Shumyatsky, Matt Moran, Chester Nielsen, Andrea Schoening, Mitsuhiro Komatsu, Annie Ritz, Meredith McDaniel
Area: 82,000 sqm
Year: 2012
Photographs: Benny Chan

Mechanical And Plumbing Engineers: TK1SC
Electrical Engineers: OMB Electrical Engineers, Inc
Structural Engineers: Englekirk Structural Engineers
Landscape Architect: Melendrez
Civil Engineers: Ware Malcomb
General Contractor: Howard Building Corporation

From the architect. The leaders of the motocross apparel company, Fox Head, Inc. approached us in November 2011, with the goal of relocating their headquarters from Morgan Hill, in Northern California, to Irvine, California. They wanted a space that would inspire their staff and encouraged CWa to challenge preconceptions about how an office space can work and how this warehouse shell could become a cutting edge creative house.

The industrial warehouse on Armstrong Avenue in Irvine offered an opportunity of consolidating the company in one open, creative environment. The design solution for the 82,000 sq. ft. space evolved from the desire to create a functional yet playful environment that befits the Fox image. Equally significant was the company’s desire for an open, flexible and collaborative work environment for its employees.

Traditional urban planning concepts were utilized to provide the architectural frame to foster a community centered around place, interaction and innovation. A Main Street concept, individual task-oriented neighborhoods, park-like landscape elements and circulation-oriented ‘facades’ were each enlisted to create a community unique to the company’s culture. The various departments were organized on either side of the warehouse connected through a ‘Main Street’ bisecting the ground floor. The need to articulate the ‘Main Street’ led to the adoption of diverse interior building frontages emphasizing the varied functions. Fox’s operational needs were met through incorporation of open offices, workstation systems tailored to departmental needs and accompanying support spaces, such as sewing room, photo studio and tech-room.

On the exterior, a sculptural addition was proposed to accommodate Fox’s main entrance and provide an identifying landmark. From the main entrance, a wide street leads you through the single story reception area, defined by a red slatted ceiling, into the ‘Main Street.’ Here product showrooms define the boundary of the ‘Main Street’ terminating at the lounge/cafeteria zone with its 18-foot high glazed storefront opening to the outdoor recreation area. Here informal meeting areas are housed on the ‘roofs’ of the ‘Main Street’ structures and a raised boardroom offers an unprecedented view of the ‘Main Street’ and the creative warehouse area. Existing and new infrastructure are exposed and coordinated to enhance the architecture, while thewarm palette of reds, oranges and yellows reference the original brand colors of Moto-X Fox while differentiating the ‘monuments’ in the city from the muted background.

Fox’s brand represents a diverse set of apparel, equipment, and lifestyle products. In order to celebrate this diversity, the architecture was enlisted to emphasize the different teams of designers, engineers and marketing professionals behind the company image. Each area of the design boasts a uniquely identifiable character. The resulting ‘city’ is a reflection of the company’s character: an open and creative workplace that fosters interaction between varied groups of specialists.

The exterior grounds offered an extension to the workplace and gave Fox the opportunity to embrace the active culture which it represents. A scheme was developed with a raised garden area emanating from the warehouse, enclosed by hedges and shade trees. Outside the clubhouse, loose furniture under trees encourages people to meet, work and relax; while a bike track becomes a highly visible extension of the company.

To realize the project within a tight timeframe, the project team took a highly collaborative approach, enlisting early input from the contractor in order to streamline the design and construction process. The project was taken from conception to permitting within 4 months, and constructed on a fast-track schedule over 7 months. The resulting efficiency of delivery ensured the client significant costs-savings without sacrificing quality of the finished product.

Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects © Benny Chan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects Floor Plan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects Floor Plan
Fox Head / Clive Wilkinson Architects Detail

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NEXT Architects’ Möbius Strip Pedestrian Bridge Wins Meixi Lake District Competition

NEXT Architects just won first place in a design competition with plans for a sinuous pedestrian bridge in Changsha, China that is modeled after the Möbius strip and Chinese knots. The bridge is designed for a site in the city’s Meixi Lake District, and it provides multiple pathways across the Dragon King Harbor River. The bridge connects the river park with the rest of the site’s ecological programs, and it’s a critical project in the development of the district.

pedestrian friendly, pedestrian bridge, bridge, meixi lake district, meixi lake, next architects, changsha, china, mobius strip, mobius bridge, chinese knot, green design, green transportation, green building, green architecture, sustainable building, sustainable design, sustainable architecture, eco design
pedestrian friendly, pedestrian bridge, bridge, meixi lake district, meixi lake, next architects, changsha, china, mobius strip, mobius bridge, chinese knot, green design, green transportation, green building, green architecture, sustainable building, sustainable design, sustainable architecture, eco design
Meixi Lake Bridge, NEXT Architects, pedestrian bridge, mobius bridge, bridge, china, changsha
Meixi Lake Bridge, NEXT Architects, pedestrian bridge, mobius bridge, bridge, china, changsha

Read the rest of NEXT Architects’ Möbius Strip Pedestrian Bridge Wins Meixi Lake District Competition



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