Monday, 29 June 2015

Today's archidose #846

Here are some photos of Houses Sete Cidades (2015) in São Miguel, Portugal, by Eduardo Souto de Moura and Adriano Pimenta Arquitectos, photographed by José Carlos Melo Dias.

Açores, casas das Sete Cidades / Eduardo Souto de Moura + Adriano Pimenta

Açores, casas das Sete Cidades / Eduardo Souto de Moura + Adriano Pimenta

Açores, casas das Sete Cidades / Eduardo Souto de Moura + Adriano Pimenta

Açores, casas das Sete Cidades / Eduardo Souto de Moura + Adriano Pimenta

Açores, casas das Sete Cidades / Eduardo Souto de Moura + Adriano Pimenta

Açores, casas das Sete Cidades / Eduardo Souto de Moura + Adriano Pimenta

Açores, casas das Sete Cidades / Eduardo Souto de Moura + Adriano Pimenta

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Friday, 26 June 2015

Book Review: 30 Years of Emerging Voices

30 Years of Emerging Voices: Idea, Form, Resonance by Architectural League of New York
Princeton Architectural Press, 2015
Hardcover, 304 pages



There is a certain ebb and flow to architecture, by which I mean the culture at large – practice, publishing, awards, exhibitions, conferences, etc. In one of these areas – awards – each year sees, to name a few, the naming of a Pritzker Prize laureate in early spring, a bevy of AIA awards leading up the annual convention in late spring/early summer, the WAF awards in October, and a cluster of "best-ofs" near the end of the year. About a month before the world is inundated with Pritzker hype the Architectural League of New York announces the winners of its annual Emerging Voices awards, which are given to typically eight architects/firms from Canada, Mexico and the United States. Although Thom Mayne is, I think, the only winner who has gone on to win the Pritzker, the League's award could be considered one place to look for future laureates.

This book collects thirty years of winners, giving each of them one page packed with a handful of photos/projects and a narrow column with their education, teaching positions (when applicable), notable honors, website, and an update on their practice. The last is particularly valuable for the earlier winners, who have in most cases executed a number of buildings since winning, evidenced by the photos. The one-page format is straightforward and egalitarian, giving each architect the same exposure within the chronological timeline from 1982 to 2014. (Flipping through the book reminds me of PSA Publishers' newyork-architects book from 2002 that, although marketing rather than awards, has a similar one-page format and focus on quality architecture.)

Breaking up the over 200 pages of winners are six commentaries, which address five-year chunks of the awards: Suzanne Stephens takes the first five years, followed by Henry N. Cobb, Thomas de Monchaux, Paul Makovsky, Alexandra Lange and Alan G. Brake. Although the five-year periods are basically arbitrary (five six-year chunks would work just as well, really), they allow these critics and architect to make some sense of their half-decade and together they express the changes happening within the profession and the culture of architecture over the last thirty years. Lange's piece, for example, looks to a more recent event (Denise Scott Brown's call for a retroactive Pritzker) as a means of analyzing how winners in 2004-2008 were primarily collaborative rather than single-architect (in name) firms.

In addition to the six commentaries, the book has essays by Ashley Schafer, Reed Kroloff and Karen Stein, and an introduction and afterword by Rosalie Genevro, who has served as the League's executive director for over twenty years. But it's the one-page profiles of the winners that people will gravitate to. Though compact, they are a delight to look at, be it for reminiscing on certain years, for seeing what certain architects – some of them more forgotten than others – have done over the years, or just for admiring the great work produced by the winning architects and seeing how architecture has changed over the last thirty years.



Update: On Saturday, July 11, Open House New York and the Architectural League of New York are holding OpenStudios: Emerging Voices, "an unprecedented opportunity to visit the studios of more than forty of the most inventive and exciting design practices working in the city today," all of them previous Emerging Voices winners. Visit OHNY for more information and to register.

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

Today's archidose #845

Here are some of my photos of COSMO by Andres Jaque / Office for Political Innovation at MoMA PS1 in Long Island City, Queens. COSMO is on display until September 7, 2015.

COSMO

COSMO

COSMO

COSMO

COSMO

COSMO

COSMO

COSMO

COSMO

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Tuesday, 23 June 2015

Today's archidose #844: Potpourri

Here is a miscellaneous smattering of photos posted recently to the archidose Flickr pool. Click on photos for more information, including the photographer.

IMG_9341

UP Express in the Skywalk

09.08.14 | Meander.

MAXXI Roma

Cylindrical Walkway

IMG_0106

Academy of Fine Arts

Audiovisual Campus - Diagonal 197 / David Chipperfield

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Monday, 22 June 2015

Book Review (sort of): Solid Wood

Solid Wood: Case Studies in Mass Timber Architecture, Technology and Design by Joseph Mayo
Routledge, 2015
Paperback, 346 pages



Last week I spoke with Joseph Mayo about his new book, putting together a piece over at World-Architects that highlights a few buildings featured as case studies in Mayo's book. An excerpt:
While obviously geared toward architects, given the voluminous technical advice in its pages, Solid Wood is hardly an esoteric read. Following an introductory section where Mayo gives a short history of building in wood, speaks about the carbon-sequestering benefits of mass timber construction, details various solid wood materials and concepts, and addresses concerns of building with wood (structure, fire, etc.), he then presents the case studies in eight geographical chapters: England, Norway, Sweden, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, North America, and New Zealand and Australia. For each case study he clearly describes each project's details, aided by numerous illustrations: photographs of the completed buildings, construction photographs, floor plans, detail drawings, and diagrams. Too many books limit themselves to the first (glossy photos of finished buildings), so Solid Wood is a valuable book for architects interested in designing with wood.
Head over to World-Architects to read "Designing with Solid Wood."


Friday, 19 June 2015

Tim Shot Andy Warhol (and other gems at Timothy Hursley's new website)

For as long as I can recall, the website of Timothy Hursley – architectural photographer extraordinaire – was just a splash page with some photos of the "Broken Silo" near Greensboro, Alabama. But recently Hursley updated his website so it functions as a retrospective of his photography. I spent some time digging through the photos and took screenshots of a few of my favorites and put them into an animated GIF (pardon the GIFfy graininess – the versions on his website look much better):



Head to Timothy Hursley's website to see more of his Architecture Retrospective.

Wednesday, 17 June 2015