Thursday, 19 February 2015

Shooting Construction

If you like tunnels, tall buildings and other large-scale constructions, head over to ENR to see the winners in their 2014 Annual Readers' Photo Contest (runners up can be found here). Here are a few standouts.


[Harry Tracy Water Treatment Plant, photographed by Robin Scheswohl]


[L: East Side Access Project, photographed by Rehema Trimiew; R: Legacy Way Tunnel Project, photographed by Steve Ryan]

Tschumi in PA

Next week Bernard Tschumi is giving a lecture in Pittsburgh, rescheduled from earlier this year when Snowmageddon was predicted but failed to materialize. Details are below.


[Acropolis Museum, Athens, 2001-2009]
SoArch Spring 2015 Lecture Series
BERNARD TSCHUMI
Bernard Tschumi Architects, New York, Paris
Professor, Columbia University
Concept and Notation
Friday 27 February at 5:30pm, Carnegie Lecture Hall
Alan H Rider Distinguished Lecture
Cosponsored by the Heinz Architectural Center at Carnegie Museum of Art

Bernard Tschumi is an architect based in New York and Paris. First known as a theorist, he exhibited and published The Manhattan Transcripts and wrote Architecture and Disjunction, a series of theoretical essays. Major built works include the Parc de la Villette, the New Acropolis Museum, Le Fresnoy Center for the Contemporary Arts, MuséoParc Alésia, and the Paris Zoo.  He was the Dean of the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation at Columbia University in New York from 1988 to 2003. His most recent book is Architecture Concepts: Red is Not a Color, a comprehensive collection of his conceptual and built projects.  His drawings and models are in the collections of several major museums, including MoMA in New York and the Centre Pompidou in Paris; in the spring of 2014, a major retrospective of his work was on view at the Pompidou, with an important bilingual catalogue entitled Bernard Tschumi, Concept and Notation.

Monday, 16 February 2015

Today's archidose #814

Here are a few wintry scenes for your Monday, President's Day here in the United States.

Centre of Excellence - York University, Glendon Campus by Daoust Lestage Architects, photographed by Riley Snelling:
CEG-32

Housing Complex Zollikerstrasse by Gigon/Guyer, photographed by Andras Kiss:
ANNETTE GIGON / MIKE GUYER ARCHITEKTEN: Wohnhäuser Zollikerstrasse, Zürich

Modern Wing of the Art Institute of Chicago by Renzo Piano Building Workshop, photographed by John Zacherle:
Snow Day at the Art Institute of Chicago #snow #modernwing #artinstituteofchicago #winter #VSCOcam

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:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool
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:: Tag your photos #archidose

Sunday, 15 February 2015

Book Review: BIG. HOT TO COLD

BIG. HOT TO COLD. An Odyssey of Architectural Adaptation by Bjarke Ingels
Taschen, 2015
Paperback, 712 pages


[Wraparound cover – All images courtesy of Taschen]

If Bjarke Ingels' Yes Is More from 2009 didn't reinvent the monograph, it at least injected some new life into it. The BIG helmsman used a comic book format to explain the Danish firm's projects, particularly how those mountainous and curling forms came about. Much has happened in the six years since – BIG has expanded to New York and other offices; Ingels has become a common name and face, given appearances on CNN, TED and other venues with a wide audience; and the firm has produced lots of works, some of it built, some under construction, and some to never be. So 2015 is a fitting time for BIG to put out another monograph, one that accompanies their first U.S. exhibition, also called HOT TO COLD, now at the National Building Museum in Washington, DC.


[W57 "courtscraper" in Manhattan]

Those expecting Yes Is More v2 will be a bit disappointed, since Ingels ditches the "archicomic" format in favor of something more straightforward. But he does not abandon the idea behind the previous book entirely, as the spread from the W57 "courtscraper" project below illustrates. Although Ingels does not pop up on the page accompanied by a speech bubble, the white-on-black captions that overlap the images clearly explain what we are looking at. This quasi-comic approach (quasi in that the captions appear over the images rather than underneath or to the side) makes two things particularly important: the ordering of the images and the words in each caption. In the case of the former, the images – be they renderings, diagrams or floor plans – function much like the step-by-step diagrams that BIG is known for, moving from general to specific, diagrammatic to detailed. And in the case of the captions, they read like a story, a story that Ingels is telling the reader directly. The text is primarily free of archi-jargon, favoring metaphor to explain forms and honesty when explaining how a project came about, or in some cases how it fizzled.


[Spread from W57 project]

[Global hot-to-cold map of the ~60 projects in the book and exhibition]

As the HOT TO COLD name of the book and exhibition indicate, the projects are ordered in terms of climate, moving from the Middle East to the firm's native Copenhagen. At the National Building Museum, this movement happens on the second-story arcade that rings the huge atrium, but in the book it happens, appropriately, from cover to cover, with hot at the beginning and cold at the end. The strong colored border on each spread translates to a rainbow on the edges of the pages, making for a considered design from any angle. One difference between the exhibition and the book is the way the built projects are integrated into the hot-to-cold spectrum in the book, while they are (re)moved to a side gallery in the exhibition.


[Book sans dustjacket, which doubles as a map to the exhibition on the reverse side]

[The first "hot" project in the book]

If Yes Is More clarified Ingels' ambitions, adopting and reworking an expression ("less is more") attributed to one of the greatest architects of the 20th century (Mies van der Rohe) for the 21st century, then HOT TO COLD documents his attempts at turning that ambition into a global reality. Through a combination of striking form-making justified through diagrams, an omnipresence in various media, and a design approach that finds a unique twist in the given circumstances (climate, built context, economics, etc.), BIG's brand of architecture has taken off to just about every bit of land on the globe. Not that many firms could fit 60 projects into a global spectrum the way BIG has done; this is a testament to their appeal and their savvy, yet also their willingness to let the characteristics of a place take part in making attention-getting contemporary architecture.


[The last "cold" project in the book]

Saturday, 14 February 2015

Thursday, 12 February 2015

Wednesday, 11 February 2015

Today's archidose #813

Here are a few photos of the addition to the Regional State Archives (addition 2012, original 1921) in Bergen, Norway, by NAV Architects with VY Arkitektur, photographed by Sindre Ellingsen.

Statsarkivet i Bergen

Statsarkivet i Bergen

Statsarkivet i Bergen

Statsarkivet i Bergen

Statsarkivet i Bergen

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool
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:: Tag your photos #archidose