Friday, October 30, 2009

LAN's Tower so gorge...

It's been a while since I was impressed by a skyscraper. The world has been obsessing over iconic and monstrous towers in Dubai that lack cultural context and proportion, it is time to bring elegance back to skyscraper architecture.

Paris practice LAN Architecture have designed a 142m high “mirror tower” for Beirut, Lebanon.The tower is part of 486 Mina El Hosn, a development also consisting of a shopping centre and five blocks of housing.Located in the port area of the city, the tower will be clad in glass and steel mesh, reflecting views of the surrounding city... (excerpts from Dezeen) We hope that the building comes out as beautiful as its rendering.
The interiors are to die for. The windows make you want to jump and fly out. It won't be long from now that we can park our flying cars right inside our apartment unit.
You have a nice building with a construction site as your view.Nice cranes.
I love the common areas. I imagine Ultraviolet and Aeon flux when they were still nice and virgin.Perforations are so in these days. Some misuse it that the building resemble a chicken cage. Not this one. Where the mesh are intended to be used for experiential wow factor shit kaboom. Above photo shows a space as if bombarded by bullet holes from the guns of Robocop and Dominatrix.






Here’s some more information from LAN:

486 Mina El Hosn
Beirut

The city that wouldn’t disappear

As we well know, every city is singular. Yet clearly some are more so than others. Beirut is a unique urban phenomenon, literally inhabited by its history, and with each successive war or occupation finding the strength to combat its disappearance.

The 486 MINA EL HOSN, the ‘mirror-tower’ designed by LAN, is to be built in the port area, opposite the Murr Tower, the shell-riddled building that has come to symbolise the civil war. The tower is absolutely novel in concept: the building’s skin will reflect the city surrounding it. One will be able to see it from everywhere, and everywhere one’s view will bounce off its mobile surface into the surrounding city, showing Beirut in all its myriad facets.

And of course behind this innovative technology lies a guiding idea: the impressive outline of 486 MINA EL HOSN, soaring above the skyline, will enable a kind of moving and poetic visual reconstitution of the city – a way of making Beirut itself, its light, diversity, districts and cultures, the tower’s very substance.

The risk lay in constructing a new monument, a new prisoner of the city’s oppressive memory. True, the tower recreates the diverse histories and cultures that have made and are still making the city, but the building is a living, animated, changing entity. Its envelope will be an integral part of the city’s physical reality, giving it back a body, reflecting its myriad facts. In doing so, it will open up an invisible inner space, strike chords within us, almost effacing itself to become an active agent in Beirut’s reconciliation with itself.

Analysis
Identification of a city

What is a city? Talking about Beirut, one has to consider not a single context but a multiplicity of contexts.

At the outset, there are evidently the multiplicity, plurality and divisions that are part of the city’s very substance. With the passing years, Beirut has metabolised the communities that have forged Lebanon’s exceptional and tumultuous life into its urban structure, providing a geography and territory for all, each with their own lifestyle, culture and architecture. One only has to cross the city from north to south or east-west to savour the many perfumes of this unique assemblage. At a distance of hardly a kilometre, one sometimes has the impression of being at the other end of the world.

The concept
From private to public, from vertical to horizontal

The 486 MINA EL HOSN is set in an area near the port close to the Marina and the Solidere district, on a plot flanked by Fakhreddine Street and Omar Daouk Street.

In a district already occupied by high-rise buildings, there was never question of merely building another tower, but rather of fashioning a new urban space, combining private habitat and public circulation, verticality and horizontality.

The 486 MINA EL HOSN project is composed of three elements:

  • The Tower proper is the project’s central and most visible element. The novel design of its mirror-envelope reflects views of the city back towards the city, enabling a visual reconstruction of its manifold identity.
  • The Base of the tower provides its residents with a public space playing with horizontality to create circulation and meeting places on a human scale, including a shopping mall, a public roof garden and pedestrian alleys.
  • The five Blocks are intermediary residential spaces, imagined on the model of the oriental house. Acting as an interface between the project’s two other elements, they play on the dichotomy between exterior and interior.
The TOWER

The other side of the mirror / Visually reinventing the city. The project’s central element, the tower, enables a visual reinvention of the city.

The tower is the central element of 486 MINA EL HOSN. Its insertion in a district already populated with towers and steeped in history and symbols, prompted an in-depth reflexion on the project’s meaning. It was particularly necessary to create a dialogue with the Murr Tower, a monumental vestige of the civil war and one of the city’s iconic symbols.

But one had to go further than this, to remove the tower from its immediate physical surroundings and integrate it into a broader environment encompassing the entire city, yet do this without resorting to gigantism. Hence the fundamental idea of ‘meta-territory’ which led to the concept of the tower’s envelope as a means of visually reinventing the city, visually reconnecting urban elements beyond the tower’s immediate physical and material surroundings.

The result is an immaterial, constantly changing object, an architecture of lightness, glass and finely hatched steel whose game consists in effacing the building’s tangible limits by rendering the perception of a solid object superfluous within the poetics of the blurred and evanescent.
The city of Beirut, historically marked by division, can also see the tower as an animated mirror reflecting its living and tormented history and geography.

Interior, exterior: effacing limits

The building, 142 metres high, its structured around a cruciform volume sheathed by a solar protection based on a 25×25m square unit. The facades of the volume at the heart of the tower are in black concrete, and the design of the openings follows the functional logic of the living units. The exterior skin consists of sliding perforated sheet metal panels with a mirror finish, acting as reflectors and protection against heat but also allowing light to enter.

Our vision of the tower is reflected away to other parts of the city but can also penetrate within. The tower’s cross-shaped ground plan frees its corners and imbues it with lightness and evanescence. Its limits are effaced and only the building’s core has substance. Depending on the play of natural light and viewpoints, the tower can physically reinvent itself in the changing light and points of view.

The Bankmed Foundation will occupy the tower’s first six levels, with an access from the street. The entrance hall to the apartments, imbricated at double height, enables access from the base’s inner street. There is a service level between the foundation and apartment levels.
The surface areas of the 20 apartments (duplex and triplex) range from 750 to 1200 m². A lift provides direct access to each apartment, which are entered via a ‘lobby’ acting as a filter between public and private spaces.

The apartment layout consists of a main living room of around 85 m² occupying one quadrant of the cross, with a smaller living room functioning as a reading room, contiguous to a more intimate ‘family room’. The dining room is located on the opposite side to the living room, next to the servants’ spaces.

Each apartment has two terraces, extensions of the dining room and living room. To make this possible, the corners of the tower were emptied to give the ensemble more lightness. These triple-height terraces provide optimum views of the city, sea and sky.
Each level is characterised by maximum flexibility and circulation around the core. A system of movable partitions and sliding doors enables the opening up of all the interior spaces and increased views of the apartment as a whole.

The Tower’s technology

The tower has four façades, 140 metres high and 25 metres wide. The aim was to precisely orientate over 30,000 facets of identical size so that the tower can reflect some of Beirut’s monuments and remarkable districts, and that these reflections should be visible from precise areas of the city. The remaining facets are orientated to produce smooth transitions between these panoramic viewpoints.

When light encounters a reflective surface, it is reflected according to its angle of incidence on that surface. The principle of the reflective facade consisted in globally defining the orientation of each facet of the cylinder’s surface to create the desired reflection.

Working with specialists in this field, we produced an automated 3D tool enabling us to visualise different instances of the facade by changing viewpoints at will, both the reflective area and the position of the reflected images on the tower.

The BASE

Recreating a public space
Commercial units, a roof garden, and pedestrian alleys: the tower’s base opens up a circulation area for the inhabitants of Beirut.

One of the project’s stakes was to materialise the renaissance of public and shared spaces in Beirut, after years of inter-community conflict for the control of city territory. Today, the development of new places of exchange (business centres, large hotels, etc.) is accompanying the modernisation of Lebanese society and its insertion into the global economy.

The base’s three levels form a 10,000 m² ensemble of commercial units ranging from 300 to 1,200 m², a public roof garden and pedestrian alleys, inspired by Beirut’s traditional urban morphology. Located on one of the city’s few green belts, the project has taken this specificity into account by ensuring that it respects the terrain’s natural slopes and differences in level.

An elegy of vegetation

The base was conceived as a green environment recalling the plot’s original state. The base has green belts linking the terrain’s various differences in level, with three levels corresponding to levels 0.4 and 8 in relation to the streets bordering the plot. These altimetric differences are linked north-south via a carefully designed and planted roof walk, and east-west via streets connecting to the surrounding network of streets.

Evocation of the Medina
Between the base’s green belts, a network of streets enables pedestrian circulation, bordered by shops and a variety of public spaces (squares, arcades, a gallery, terraces). The aim was for the architecture of the shops to recreate the bustling streets of traditional oriental markets and their reduced visual perspectives. This deliberately confined public pedestrian area is conducive to meetings and favours visual sensations and speech.

Sensorial experience
The multiplicity of itineraries, views, different depths of field and framings, exacerbated by the interplay of levels, helps produce unexpected sensorial events, which accompany the walker or access to shops and living units.

The BLOCKS

Imagining tradition
The five 35,000 m² residential buildings were imagined as a series of houses arranged vertically

Reinventing an oriental habitat…
Residential living concerns lay at the heart of LAN’s project, which for the blocks drew inspiration from various modalities of Mediterranean habitat.

It was a question both of providing a truly appropriable architecture, in harmony with contemporary lifestyles, and of revisiting historic filiations, in essence, of reinventing tradition.

Oriental patio houses, in the extraordinary relationship between exterior and interior that they manage to create, provide a generous living space rich in possibilities.

…with the changing seasons

Each apartment is based on a domestic sequence of successive and overlapping interior and exterior spaces, structured around a central lobby acting as a natural ventilation of these spaces and providing access to the rooms.

The patio gives a framed view of the city and becomes entirely modular. Using pivoting partitions, the apartment can be opened up during the cold months and protected from the summer heat, without confining its occupants within.

The facades are clad with a lightweight structural skin in Ductal, providing generous interiors and a subtle interplay between light and shade.

Including the climate

The environmental question was not addressed as a constraint (compliance with standards) but as an opportunity, a possibility for creation. The local climate was studied in detail to take advantage of its main features, of the sun as a source of light and heat and the wind as a means of cooling and ventilation.

Taking the climate into account enabled a broadening of the field of reflection to include the relationships between spaces and their uses, the sole means of integrating the environment, man and architecture.

To achieve this, we based our solutions on a series of studies: the access of exterior spaces to light, the reflective potential of the blocks on the tower and shadows cast by the ensemble on itself and its surroundings, access to light in terms of use (types of space, room depth, occupation, etc.), the ‘facets’ of the tower’s envelope, the possibility of creating variable solar protection adapted to orientation, the effects of wind on living units and exterior spaces, etc.


I really love the prism effect. Like blush on, it hides your imperfections.

A reaction to a post in Dezeen

Giant Horses attend YMCA

I won't say much because this is pretty obvious. I know that the Trojan horse appear mighty and masculine... These stallions are def not from Troy, but they totally turned into horsie fairies.

Presenting Polish Design Season: Beata Konarska and Pawel Konarski of Warsaw design studio Konarska-Konarski have created a group of winged horses with screens in their flanks. (excerpts from Dezeen)
They were used as medium for video installation in the Polish National Library. After which, they were modified to be installable anywhere. Right now they are an installation in a park at Warsaw.
It's like... The Horsie fairies inside the YMCA

Now they go gallop outside, spreading wing to fly... butterfly?
It is not a unicorn either because there is no horn....but the tail is hard
... Anyone know the significance of a winged horse?... They should put a tiara to complete the look.

A reaction to a post in Dezeen



Thursday, October 29, 2009

Trahan's Accordion Building

This is a building that compresses downwards and decompresses upwards. When it does that, the people inside get squished....

That is so morbid. But the design suggests where imaginations run wild. However, this is still in its conceptual stage but without loony tendencies, it looks stunning. This is Baton Rouge Library proposal by Trahan Architects, located in Louisiana, Missouri.
Evening look
The floor splits.































The diagram clearly shows the program of the building. It indicates that the circulation surrounds the book storage. The book storage is then buffered by reading areas. Then that would mean the reading areas are exposed to circulation. Circulation is a busy area, so how can one read when you hear people chatting in the hallways? Plus the movement in your peripheral vision can be totally distracting. As in super. That is totally anti-concentration to my reading moments which can raise the level of my stress hormones. uuggh..I need a massage.

Trahan Architects recently launched a conceptual design for the renovation and expansion of the River Center Branch Library. The project stands at the intersection between civic buildings and the city’s arts and entertainment district, overlooking a new town square.... (excerpts from Fopple)

A reaction to posts in Fopple and ArchDaily





Tuesday, October 27, 2009

KARO'S Booze for Books Pav

Somewhere in Leipzig stands a library that doesn't forget its past, booooze!


German designers KARO have designed an outdoor library in Leipzig, Germany.Developed from an installation in 2005 made of beer crates, the new building comprises sheltered seating areas and niches to store books. The new building is clad in wood and materials from a former warehouse. It took some some years to organise the money to build this so called “bookmark” for real. It opened in June this year.Last year, in its project-phase, it has been shown at the Venice Biennale in the German pavillon (updating Germany). An installation of it has also been shown in 2006 in the exhibition.... (excerpts from Dezeen).

It is interesting that the beer crates was the skin on one side and on the other side, the innards show up.
My question is, is it just an installation with benches and niches? From these photos, we see people interact with it. I couldn't find pictures of interiors. What if the books get stolen?

What does the L stand for? Lo_er? :-)

The form in its scale doesn't yell "permanence." Maybe the size times two, will make it really look like a "building." Right now, dwarfed by the old structure at the back, it is an installation that looks like a miniaturized version of a modernist box edifice with an interesting surface.

The choice of green for the interior walls... Any connection to booze?

What is cool with this installation is that it makes designers realize that using beer crates can provide an interesting skin for buildings......Like this...Columbarium Niches 3000. Neat

Photographs are by Anja Schlamann.

A reaction to a post in Dezeen

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