2011年1月31日星期一

Floating Cloud House Interior Filled with White Platforms by Shintaro Fujiwara

from here, thank you


Like modern clouds, a series of cantilevered (and white-painted) few-feet-wide levels makes this home on a narrow site feel wide open despite the solid and windowless party walls along its length.

The lot itself is only 10 feet wide, but manages to feel spacious between various intelligent color choices, design strategies and ample glazing in front, back and via skylights. For all its dynamism and creativity, the restrictions on this structure actually provided much of the basis for the evolution of its design.

Using a split-level strategy, open-tread stairs with wire-frame metal (if any) railings take residents from one half-floor to the next.

White is used strategically to reflect light and make the spaces feel bright – except along one side, where the use of black reinforces the feeling that the central platforms are indeed half-floating rather than suspended between two structural sides.

While the black-and-white scheme, rectilinear components and contemporary fixtures make this whole home feel extremely modern, the wall-to-wall and floor-to-ceiling windows along the facade still frame a connection to the more traditional homes in the neighborhood.

Due to building code regulations and lack of space, Japanese architects like Shintaro Fujiwara are increasingly becoming the masters of small-space design on skinny sites.

Now, if only some of these thin-lot specialists would come to the United States they would likely be quite successful in places like Manhattan at least.

2011年1月30日星期日

liksanchan


Lik San Chan
Masters of Architecture in Architecture
BSc (Hons), Dipl.Arch, MArch
Lik San graduated with a Distinction from the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL London, and was on the Dean's List in recognition of outstanding academic achievements in 2010. He was born in Malaysia and came to England at an early age for an education at Winchester College. He then trained at the Bartlett for both Undergraduate and Masters of Architecture, under the tutorship of Mark Smout/Laura Allen/Rhys Cannon and Cj Lim/Bernd Felsinger respectively. He currently lives in London.



http://www.liksanchan.com

2011年1月23日星期日

sony Bravia paint ad

roger hiorns: seizure



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In his latest installation, “Seizure”, British artist Roger Hiorns has turned the idea of sculpture inside out. Rather than present a sculpture inside an architectural space, he’s turned every surface of the architectural space into sculpture. Mixing installation art and chemistry, he’s taken an entire abandoned apartment near London’s Elephant & Castle and transformed it into a gemstone. Covering the inside with blue copper sulphate crystals, he’s created an other-worldly, mineralized, glinting mirror of an everyday apartment. Jewels literally glowing from the ceiling and lining the floors…
The scale and production of “Seizure” is ambitious. After reinforcing the walls and ceiling and covering them in plastic sheeting, 80,000 litres of a copper sulphate solution was poured in from a hole in the ceiling. After a few weeks the temperature of the solution fell and the crystals began to grow. The remaining liquid was pumped back out and sent for special chemical recycling.
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Describing his experience, Guardian art critic Adrian Searle said:
“Silvery shards of cold light spangle and wink and beckon. Every surface is furred and infested; big blue crystals dangle like cubist bats from the light fittings. Little wonder the flat has been abandoned: you’d move out, too, if the crystals moved in.”
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If you’re in London, “Seizure” is open to the public until November 3, at Artangel at Harper Road. Check out some pictures from people lucky enough to be able to see “Seizure” up close, plus some very cool pics of the creation process, at Iconeye.

Utopia Revisited


Utopia Revisited from Dan Tassell on Vimeo.

2011年1月17日星期一

Presentation




Presentation:


The subject:

To what extent is architects/ design responsible for the decline of council housing

The argument:

  1. Architects are responsible for not doing a good job to achieve “defensible space”
  2. In the case of system built housing, is architects still responsible for the failure of design?
  3. To what extent can layout of deign encourage sense of neighborhood?

The case study:

The Aylesbury Estate