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UNStudio designs the new UIC building ‘V on Shenton’ in Singapore

UNStudio designs the new UIC building ‘V on Shenton’ in Singapore  - Image 16 of 4
© UNStudio

UNStudio has unveiled their design for the redevelopment of Singapore’s UIC Building (1973), located in the heart of the city’s Central Business District. The concept integrates lush sky gardens throughout a 53-story residential tower and a 23-story office tower, while distinguishing itself with a unique facade made up of five different textures that represent various programs. The climatically responsive structure is scheduled for completion in 2016.

Continue after the break for the architects’ description.

DETAIL: Building Simply Two

DETAIL: Building Simply Two - Image 1 of 4

As innovation and new developments in technology now follow each other faster and faster, making yesterday’s architectural fantasies today’s construction realities, there’s already a movement to return to the essential things in life: be it a quest for sustainability, which implies basic principles such as incorporating a region’s typologies and materials, or for reasons of expense, which often prompt a search for efficient designs or manufacturing technology, or even aesthetic requirements that allow people to step out of our increasingly noisy and heterogeneous environment.

Winners of Habitat for Humanity's Sustainable Home Design Competition

Winners of Habitat for Humanity's Sustainable Home Design Competition - Image 19 of 4
Northeast Region © 2012 Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture

This year’s winners for the Sustainable Home: Habitat for Humanity Student Design Competition have been announced. The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture chose five winners, one from each region and an additional prize for the best use of vinyl building materials. The competition asked young professionals to consider building strategies that would advance solutions to poverty with affordable housing that is simple, decent and healthy.

Follow us after the break to view the winning projects.

Kirchplatz Office + Residence / Oppenheim Architecture + Design

Kirchplatz Office + Residence / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Image 8 of 4
Residence © Borje Müller

Architects: Oppenheim Architecture + Design Location: Muttenz, Switzerland Project Year: 2012 Photographs: Borje Müller

Kirchplatz Office + Residence / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Image 7 of 4Kirchplatz Office + Residence / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Image 6 of 4Kirchplatz Office + Residence / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Image 30 of 4Kirchplatz Office + Residence / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Image 35 of 4Kirchplatz Office + Residence / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - More Images+ 31

Disruptive minds: James Ramsey, designer of the Low Line

Disruptive minds: James Ramsey, designer of the Low Line - Image 11 of 4
Renderings of the Low Line. Courtesy of James Ramsey and Dan Barasch

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The disruptive minds series is in partnership with smartwater. smartwater, simplicity is delicious. Click here to learn more.

Usually when one studies architecture, one does architecture. But that’s just not enough for some people. James Ramsey, most famous for the sci-fi-like renderings of the Low Line, an underground park which has captured the imagination of thousands, is one of those people. An architecture grad from Yale University, Ramsey went on to be a satellite engineer for NASA, before coming back to architecture and starting up his own design studio, Raad Studio. Oh yeah, and along the way he came up with a fiberoptic technology that would allow you to bring natural light (and thus grow plants) underground.

Read the full interview after the break

modeLab Patterning Lab: Parametric Patterns and Digital Fabrication Workshop

modeLab Patterning Lab: Parametric Patterns and Digital Fabrication Workshop - Featured Image
Courtesy of modeLab

modeLab is putting on a two-day workshop August 18-19 on the topic of Parametric Patterns with Grasshopper for Rhinoceros. In a fast-paced and hands-on learning environment, we will experiment with the materiality, craft, and effects of patterning through the distribution of simple and repeatable material events (the cut, the fold, and the perforation). Coupling Parametric Design and Digital Fabrication workflows, we will iteratively test our patterns while learning best practices for use of a large-format Laser Cutter. Prototypes will range in material palette (fabric, paper, plastic) based on participants’ interests and will be used to discuss issues of craft, detailing, and the assembly process. For more information, please visit here.

Asma Bahçeleri Houses Office / Metin Kılıç & Dürrin Süer

Asma Bahçeleri Houses Office / Metin Kılıç & Dürrin Süer - Image 10 of 4
© Erdal Gümüş

Architects: Metin Kılıç & Dürrin Süer Location: Narlıdere, Izmir, Turkey Architects: Metin Kılıç, Dürrin Süer Design Team: Damla Duru, Merih Feza Yıldırım, Serdar Uslubaş, Ali Can Helvacıoğlu, Burak Bakö Project Year: 2012 Project Area: 134 sqm Photographs: Erdal Gümüş

Asma Bahçeleri Houses Office / Metin Kılıç & Dürrin Süer - Image 11 of 4Asma Bahçeleri Houses Office / Metin Kılıç & Dürrin Süer - Image 2 of 4Asma Bahçeleri Houses Office / Metin Kılıç & Dürrin Süer - Image 4 of 4Asma Bahçeleri Houses Office / Metin Kılıç & Dürrin Süer - Image 3 of 4Asma Bahçeleri Houses Office / Metin Kılıç & Dürrin Süer - More Images+ 7

Summer Streets in NYC

Summer Streets in NYC - Featured Image

This past Saturday, we joined in the fifth annual Summer Streets opening weekend. About 7 miles of city streets were free of cars, allowing scores of bicyclists, runners and pedestrians to occupy the entirety of the pavement. And, at designated rest stops, participants enjoyed a variety of activities, such as zip lining above Foley Square, rock climbing at Spring Street while hearing how to fix a bike flat from REI volunteers, and Salsa lessons at 51st Street. Although the streets were full of life with bikes whizzing passed and the pavement buzzing with the sound of runners’ feet, we were struck by how quiet the streets were without the sounds of cars. In some spots, it was actually quite eerie to notice which cross street was just passed; for, even the busiest of intersections, typically filled with the all too familiar beeps and screeches, can transform into an entirely different environment with the elimination of cars. It makes one realize how much of our urban environment has come to be defined and dominated by the vehicle, and makes one wonder the possibilities of what major cities could be like without cars.

More about Summer Streets after the break.

Presenting the AD Architecture School Guide: University of Utah

Presenting the AD Architecture School Guide: University of Utah - Featured Image
University of Utah campus

It’s pretty easy to check out what the top architecture schools are, parsed by country. Just try Google and you’ll find a list of Top 10 Architecture schools in___. There is, most obviously, our own ArchDaily list of the Best Architecture Schools in the US. Another search yielded this site which ranked the Top 10 schools based on a vote and parsed by continent. In other words, it’s pretty easy to find school rankings.

What’s less easy is to actually 1) get accepted to one of these schools, and 2) figuring out a way to afford them. Besides which, it may not be appealing to attend one of those really famous schools because after all, they can be very large, intimidating, and even factory-like, depending upon how big the classes are. What many people are seeking is a balance between the quality of the faculty, class size, location of the school, and cost.

If this sounds like someone you know (or maybe it’s you), we’re here to help. In fact, if you’re attending a school that you think is great and deserves some acknowledgement, tweet me @xiaying.

In the meantime, there are a lot of schools that are running some very innovative architecture programs all over the world. And we will be looking at some of them to help people make what can be a pivotal life decision. In fact, what school you attend often shapes who you are to no small degree—at least at first.

(Read our first featured School after the break)

CASsAPANCA / ES-arch

CASsAPANCA / ES-arch - Image 12 of 4
Courtesy of ES-arch

With the aim of transforming the town of Ameno, Italy for two days in a centre where spaces, art and sociality could guide people through the territory, ES-arch, in partnership with Legnotech S.p.A., present CASsAPANCA . As the 5th edition of the “Paesaggi Mirati” exhibition invited architects and designers to work on the idea of “diffuse museum”, they created an experience of a journey dedicated to multi-sensible tourism, made by cultural, responsible, sustainable and artistic choices. More images and architects’ description after the break.

2014 World Cup Final Stage Stadium / Fernandes Arquitetos Associados

2014 World Cup Final Stage Stadium / Fernandes Arquitetos Associados - Image 12 of 4
Courtesy of Fernandes Arquitetos Associados

The design for the 2014 World Cup Final Stage Stadium by Fernandes Arquitetos Associados will provide a feeling of continuity as if the Maracanã, which is the original conception of the Journalist Mario Filho stadium, has scarcely changed. Once inside the main public areas, the old and the new will work together to create a modern yet familiar look and feel. The pinnacle of which occurs upon reaching the stands, revealing an entirely new stadium carved out of the original. The facade will be preserved, ensuring that, from the outside, the Maracanã appears almost untouched. The roof is one of the main new elements introduced, but will not bring any visual impact as it will not be visible from the outside. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Cunjunctive Points: Eric Owen Moss’s Hayden Tract in Culver City

Cunjunctive Points: Eric Owen Moss’s Hayden Tract in Culver City - Featured Image
Samitaur Tower / © Courtesy of Eric Owen Moss Architects & Tom Bonner Photography

Taking place Saturday, August 18 from 10am-2pm, the Society of Architectural Historians/Southern California Chapter will explore the transformative power of architecture, art and design at Culver City’s Hayden Tract, where award-winning architect Eric Owen Moss has been creating innovative structures for 25 years. In creating a vibrant community for creative workers in what was once a bleak industrial area, we begin to ask ourselves, ‘Can architecture be used as a catalyst for positive social change?’

Video: Sigur Rós - Varúð by Ryan McGingley

As part of the ‘Valtari’ Mystery film experiment of the Icelandic band Sigur Rós, the video for Varúð was released few days ago. Directed by Ryan McGingley, it shows New York in a magnificent way as we architects would like to move around.

AECOM to give LAX a facelift

AECOM to give LAX a facelift - Featured Image
TBIT Arrival Loop at Dusk - Courtesy of AECOM

The Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), one of the world’s busiest airports, is undergoing a facelift. As part of a multi-phase project, AECOM is working with Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA) to create a sensational experience for the 61 million passengers who travel in and out of LAX annually. The project aspires to unify the disparate components of the airport’s central terminal area (CTA) and insert grand gestures that provide architectural hierarchy — yielding LAX as exciting as the city in which it resides. Through an artful integration of lighting, graphics, and architecture, the design draws from key existing airport elements such as the 1960s architecture of the Theme Building and the 60-foot polychromatic light pylons that define the airport’s entry.

AD Recommends: Best of the Week

AD Recommends: Best of the Week - Image 1 of 4

The leaning Colosseum of Rome

The leaning Colosseum of Rome - Featured Image
© Paal Harald Mork-Knutsen

Officials have warned that the 2,000 year old Colosseum in Rome is leaning. About a year ago, they noticed the south side of the Colosseum was leaning about 40cm lower than the north. As reported on the guardian, Prof Giorgio Monti from La Sapienza’s construction technology department stated that this could be the result of a crack in the 13-meter-thick concrete slab below the amphitheater; however, it too early to judge.

Meixihu Culture & Arts Centre / Hans Hollein & Partner

Meixihu Culture & Arts Centre / Hans Hollein & Partner - Image 13 of 4
© Atelier Hollein

Unfolding around Meixi Lake, the Meixihu Culture & Arts Centre, designed by Hans Hollein & Partner, incorporates a carefully conceived mix of functions nerved generously with waterways, underground traffic roads, and boulevards. In a prime position, overlooking the waters and the ceremony island, the project will become the largest multifunctional world class culture and art centre of international standing in the Hunan province. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Publication: Zawia#00:Change

Zawia, a periodical publication and online forum on design, architecture, and urbanism, just released their first issue which features contributions from Saskia Sassen, Stefano Boeri, Joseph Grima, WAI architecture think tank, Carlo Ratto, Markus Miessen and many others. Their ‘Change’ volume will attempt to demonstrate if architects are ready to embrace the changing ideals and the new modes of operation, and if they are willing to help better people’s lives rather than focusing on glorifying design or architecture. It is targeted towards discussing the significantly changing realities imposed on all social, political and economic systems and their influence on design disciplines. For more information, please visit here.

Public Art Sculpture Mirage / Paul Raff Studio

Public Art Sculpture Mirage / Paul Raff Studio - Image 1 of 4
© Cassandra Hryniw

Internationally acclaimed artist and architect Paul Raff just unveiled a permanent sculpture at the opening of the Waterfront Toronto Underpass Park on August 2. Suspended overhead of pedestrians, large scale mirror-like surfaces create an illusory appearance, which bends light rays to produce a displaced image much like a mirage. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Video: Christchurch Central Recovery Plan

As a collaborative effort involving urban designers, architects, economists, and developers, the Christchurch Central Recovery Plan was assembled as a video to present to the public. Led by the Christchurch Central Development Unit (CCDU) in New Zealand, which is part of the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (CERA), the plans for the central city rebuild was released earlier this week as a response to the earthquake sequence in Canterbury which destroyed most of the building stock in the CBD. This distinctive, vibrant, and green 21st century city has been met with overall positive feedback, which demonstrates the importance of shared ideas on rebuilding after natural disasters. On a global scale, all cities ad towns are at risk for natural disasters, and as many of us know, preparation is key to recovery. Like the video above, the power of public opinion can really have a major impact on these types of plans and give us both a feasible and optimistic view of the future.

Artisan Barn 
Addition / Hutchison & Maul Architecture

Artisan Barn 
Addition / Hutchison & Maul Architecture - Image 6 of 4
Courtesy of Hutchison & Maul Architecture

Seattle-based Hutchison & Maul Architecture has designed an addition, dubbed the Artisan Barn, to a historic barn in Uniontown, Washington. The existing space currently houses studio, performance and gallery areas for artists, along with a gift shop. Materials will be salvaged from an onsite Loafing Shed to create a new classroom onto the existing barn structure. Additionally, Hutchison & Maul will assist in designing a master plan that will integrate landscape and outdoor performance spaces into the surrounding area.

Continue after the break for the architects’ description.

Video: Storage House / Ryuji Fujimura

This short clip via ja+u of the Storage House by Ryuji Fukimura Architects takes you on a quick journey through the relatively compact residence that occupies a thin plot of land in the Kanagawa Prefecture, part of the Greater Tokyo Area. Smartly designed to maximize the interior volumes, a unique aspect of the house is the dry moats that line the basement floor allowing for diffuse daylight to shower the interior that would have otherwise been artificially lighted. An added benefit of the moats is that it encourages air circulation from the bottom of the house to the top creating a stack effect.

Terra Nova House / Isay Weinfeld

Terra Nova House / Isay Weinfeld - Image 6 of 4
© Leonardo Finotti

Architects: Isay Weinfeld Location: São Paulo, Brazil Design Team: Juliana Scalizi, Flávia Oide, Leandro Garcia, Gustavo Benthien Project Manager: Monica Cappa Project Year: 2009 Photographs: Leonardo Finotti

Terra Nova House / Isay Weinfeld - Image 17 of 4Terra Nova House / Isay Weinfeld - Image 7 of 4Terra Nova House / Isay Weinfeld - Image 16 of 4Terra Nova House / Isay Weinfeld - Image 15 of 4Terra Nova House / Isay Weinfeld - More Images+ 14

National Museum of Afghanistan / TheeAe LTD

National Museum of Afghanistan / TheeAe LTD - Image 7 of 4
Courtesy of TheeAe LTD

The design concept for the National Museum of Afghanistan is centered around the Afghanistan flowered arch. TheeAe LTD finds this design opportunity as a way to bring the lost heritage back to the present. The major concern for the architecture was not only about the collections but also emotional realm of space that requires a place to give a rest and the joy of the nature in its heritage safe and secured. More images and architects’ description after the break.

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