Browsing:

Jean Nouvel

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2010 / Jean Nouvel

By — Filed under: Architecture News , , , ,

© Ateliers . Photograph by Philippe Ruault

This just in from the Serpentine GalleryJean Nouvel’s pavilion is complete!  In honor of the Serpentine’s 40th Anniversary, Nouvel’s pavilion is a bold and strong expression comprised of lightweight materials with dramatic cantilevers.  Designing the pavilion allows international architects to experiment with different architectural ideas, and over the years, the commissions’ varied aesthetics have added to the thrill of the exposition.  Nouvel’s bright red pavilion  is drastically different from SANAA’S subdued silvery curvillinear form of 2009, and its vivid color contrasts the park’s greenery, immediately drawing the eye.

More images and more about the new pavilion after the break. read more »

National Museum of Qatar / Jean Nouvel

By — Filed under: Architecture News ,Museums and Libraries , ,

, Artefactory, © Ateliers

Jean Nouvel‘s new National Museum of Qatar utilizes technology to create a thoroughly new institution.  Entire walls become cinematic displays and hand-held mobile devices guide visitors through the thematic displays of the collections.  Located on a 1.5 million-square-foot site at the south end of Doha’s Corniche, it will be the first monument travelers arriving from the airport will set their eyes upon.  Conceived as growing out of the ground, the building uses rings of low-lying, interlocking pavilions, to encircle a large courtyard area and encompass 430,000 square feet of indoor space.  Tilting, interpenetrating disks define the pavilions’ floors, walls and roofs,  and the exterior in a sand-colored concrete.  Nouvel likens it to a “bladelike petal of the desert rose, a mineral formation of crystallized sand found in the briny layer just beneath the desert’s surface.”

More images after the break. read more »

100 11th Avenue / Jean Nouvel, video preview

By — Filed under: Residential ,Videos , , ,

Jean Nouvel‘s 100 11th Ave in NY is almost complete. Vernissage TV brings us a video preview of the building, featuring the mosaic like facade and the interiors:

In this video, we have a look at the building’s exterior by day (March 6, 2010), and its interior by night (March 4, 2010). For the VIP party / preview on March 4, 2010, created a collaborative installation with the French artist Jean-Charles Blais. The installation involved taking over an apartment and doing a temporary “intervention” in it.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2010: Jean Nouvel

By — Filed under: Architecture News , ,

© Ateliers

French architect Jean Nouvel has been selected to design this years Serpentine Gallery Pavilion.

Since 2010, the Serpentine Gallery has commissioned world’s most renowned architects to design a temporary structure to host summer events. The list includes Zaha Hadid, Frank Ghery, Rem Koolhaas, Toyo Ito, Daniel Libeskind, Oscar Niemeyer, Alvaro Siza + Souto de Moura, SANAA (previously featured at AD), danish artist Olafur Eliasson, and several collaborations with Cecil Balmond and ARUP.

Nouvel proposes a vivid red metal structure, which trough the reflection of its materials (steel, glass, fabric, polycarbonate) remind of classic british icons, such as the phone box or the buses, while contrasting with the green of the park. A free standing 12m tall wall marks the presence of the pavilion.

More images after the break.
read more »

Jean Nouvele’s 100 11th Ave in NY

By — Filed under: Residential , , ,

Photographer Paul Clemence shared with us some photos of 100 11th Ave, a residential tower in Chelsea by Jean Nouvel.

This building is almost complete, and it has a strong presence from across the river, or when seen from the High Line. I remember that a month ago, I was looking at it from the High Line and a lady next to me said “how old is that building?”. Despite the fact of its high tech curtain wall, using 1647 different window panels, the building looks ancient, almost like a left over from the old waterfront.

The variation of the windows is not only on their size, but also the inclination and the glass tint, giving this building a unique facade.

More photos after the break:

read more »

City Shortens Nouvel’s 53rd Street Tower

By — Filed under: Architecture News , , ,

A few weeks ago, we shared Jean Nouvel’s design for 53 West 53rd Street, a 1,250 foot project that would dominate the site.  Reactions to the project were different across the board as some felt the tower would push New York forward in the architectural world, whereas others did not agree with the scale or aesthetic of the project.  As we previously mentioned, Nouvel’s project had a long way to go before construction, and this week, as Nicolai Ouroussoff reported for the New York Times,  it seems that the City Planning Department has decided to shorten the proposed tower by 200 feet.

More about the City Planning Department’s decision after the break.

read more »

Alternative for 53 West 53rd Street / Axis Mundi

By — Filed under: Architecture News ,Residential ,Skyscrapers , , ,
Jean Nouvel

Ateliers Jean Nouvel

With the countless number of ridiculously tall skyscrapers planned for around the world, it is remarkable the controversy an 82-story skyscraper for Midtown Manhattan can create.  Three years ago, MoMa completed an $858 million expansion, yet the museum is still in need of additional room to house its growing collections.  The Modern sold their Midtown lot to Hines, an international real estate developer, for$125 million.  Hines, in turn, asked Pritzker Prize Laureate French architect Jean Nouvel to design two possible solutions for the site.   “A decade ago anyone who was about to invest hundreds of millions on a building would inevitably have chosen the more conservative of the two. But times have changed. Architecture is a form of marketing now, and Hines made the bolder choice,” reported Nicolai Ouroussoff for The New York Times.

“Bolder” is certainly fitting to describe Nouvel’s Torre de Verre which is planned for 53 West 53rd Street. The 1,250 foot tower will offer approximately 40,000 sq feet of new gallery space for the MoMa, in addition to 150 residential apartments and 100 hotels rooms.  The tower’s unique silhouette will dominate the Midtown block, rising  higher than the iconic Chrysler Building.  Its irregular structural pattern has been called “out of scale” on numerous occasions by opponents of the project.   Some complain that the tower will “violate the area’s integrity” noting that its height will obscure views and light.   Shadow studies show that the building may plunge apartments in the area and the ice-skating rink at Central Park into darkness.

The aesthetic is definitely foreign to Midtown and, yet, while most are quick to reject change, the tower will sit in an area surrounded by  highly revolutionary buildings. Its new neighbors include Philip Johnson’s “Lipstick Building” at Third Avenue; Hugh Stubbins’ Citicorp Building at Lexington Avenue, Mies van der Rohe’s Seagram Building and SOM’s Lever House at Park Avenue.  At some point in time, each of those buildings exemplified a change in style, and yet now, they are staples in the area’s heritage.

© Axis Mundi 2009

© 2009

With controversy still surrounding Nouvel’s design as it moves through the city’s review process (ULURP),  John Beckmann and his firm, Axis Mundi decided to do something about it.  A few short days ago, Axis Mundi unveiled a conceptual alternative design for .    The alternative features a 600 foot, 50 story mixed use building that ”rethinks the tall buildings that have become synonymous with New York City’s identity.”  Beckmann explained,  ”Historically, the skyscraper was a unitary, homogeneous form that reflected the generic, flexible office space it contained…The Vertical Neighborhood is more organic and more flexible–an assemblage of disparate architectural languages. It reflects an emerging reality for tall buildings as collections of domestic elements: dwellings, neighborhoods, streets.”

More images and more about Axis Mundi’s alternative after the break.

read more »

Winner announced for the Tour La Signal at La Defense, Paris: Ateliers Jean Nouvel

By — Filed under: Awarded Competitions ,Skyscrapers , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
YouTube Preview Image

The La Defense is a 160 ha business district in the west of Paris, currently under a renewal plan to strengthen its place among the great international business districts. The plan is managed by the EPAD (The Public Establishment for Installation of La Défense), an organization formed by local authorities, government and neighbors focused on developing the La Defense for the best interests of its 20.000 residents and 150.000 inhabitants in floating population.

The renewal includes several high rise sustainable towers. One of this towers, the Tour Signal, entered an international closed competition for teams of architects/investors/developers, on which EPAD didn’t impose a site. The candidates were thus able to choose their sites either from among the entrances to the business district (South Gate and West Gate), either from sites subject to demolition operations. The Tour Signal will thus endow the business district with a new landmark in 2013.

The finalists for this project were Architectures, Foster + Partners Ltd, Studio Libeskind Architect, Ateliers and Wilmotte et Associes SA.

And a few days ago, the winner was announced: Ateliers Jean Nouvel, project shown on the video above.

More pictures of the Jean Nouvel proposal, and the rest of the candidates/finalists after the jump.

read more »

Page 2 of 212

Latest Comments »

cos when you’ve dumped years of your youth into it, how do you just let...[+]
Didn’t like this building when the proposals were...[+]
Definitely inspired by FLW’s water lily columns in the Johnson Wax building....[+]
This office produces the most awful buildings imaginable....[+]
The things you find only here on Live/Work Design Contest
Hey There. I discovered your blog using msn. That is an extremely...[+]

Upcoming Architecture Events »

got events? invite us! click here

Architecture Books & Magazines »

Apple / CLOG

Apple / CLOG

If you are an Apple fanatic and architecture lover you should pick up this book. CLOG publication is filling a niche that has been created by the hyperspeed of digital media. “In the deluge, excellent projects receive the same fleeting…

 

Imperfect Health / Giovanna Borasi & Mirko Zardini

Imperfect Health / Giovanna Borasi & Mirko Zardini

Get Fit. Lose Weight. Be a Better YOU.
Slogans like these constantly inundate us across media sources, and the premise is always the same: a healthy body is sexy, desirable, better. …The opposite is similarly true: if you’re fat or obese,

 

Sustainable Design: A Critical Guide / David Bergman

Sustainable Design: A Critical Guide / David Bergman

Written for students and practitioners in the fields of architecture and interior design, our new Architecture Brief Sustainable Design… provides a concise overview of all the techniques available for reducing the energy footprint of structures and spaces. With clear, simple

 

Our partners »

AD on iPad via Pulse

Browse by date »

Browse by category »

Friends »