1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture News

Architecture News

Construction Halted on Heatherwick's Pier 55 in New York

Construction on Heatherwick Studio’s undulating Pier 55 in New York has come to a screeching halt, following a ruling by a United States District Court judge last week that will require the project to undergo an intense wildlife impact review.

Last April, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers gave the project, located on the Hudson River in West Chelsea, the go-ahead, allowing initial construction to begin. But the district judge found that the Army Corps of Engineers had failed to properly consider the wide effects of the projects on the river wildlife.

Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District

With their design approach treating the site as a work of art, GroupGSA’s proposal for a new hotel in Shanghai’s Fengxian District has been awarded 2nd prize in a recent competition. Located in the predominantly undeveloped Nangiao New City and part of the Yangtze River delta in south Shanghai, the Wanda Jinhai Lake Hotel aims to garner new interest in the region through the creation of a new social, cultural, and economic landmark.

At the center of the Jinhai Lake, the new hotel integrates into the site and provides scenic vistas of the surrounding waterscape. “Inspiration stemmed from the concept of Chinese Calligraphy, the stroke of a brush with its ink dripping in the water,” say the architects. “Our site is merely a piece of art and we plan to leave our mark via our architecture which is painted on the site following the lines and the movement of the surrounding context.”

Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - Image 1 of 4Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - Image 2 of 4Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - Image 3 of 4Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - Image 4 of 4Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - More Images+ 17

Morris Adjmi to Transform High Line-Adjacent Warehouse Into Office Building in New York

Elijah Equities, LLC has unveiled plans for the redevelopment of The Warehouse in New York City, a property currently occupied by car parking and art galleries, which will be transformed into 100,000 square feet of rentable office and retail space designed by Morris Adjmi.

Situated next to the High Line, the building currently at the site is a four-story, 65,000-square-foot former apparel-manufacturing warehouse. The redevelopment will add a three-story, steel-framed, cantilevered addition, resulting in a seven-story building with over 18,000 square feet of rooftop and outdoor amenity space.

Morris Adjmi to Transform High Line-Adjacent Warehouse Into Office Building in New York - Image 2 of 4Morris Adjmi to Transform High Line-Adjacent Warehouse Into Office Building in New York - Image 3 of 4Morris Adjmi to Transform High Line-Adjacent Warehouse Into Office Building in New York - Image 4 of 4Morris Adjmi to Transform High Line-Adjacent Warehouse Into Office Building in New York - Image 5 of 4Morris Adjmi to Transform High Line-Adjacent Warehouse Into Office Building in New York - More Images+ 4

Bee Breeders Announces Winners of the Blue Clay Country Spa Competition

Bee Breeders has released the results of their Blue Clay Country Spa competition, which asked participants to design a non-urban ecotourism facility in Latvia. The competition invited students and professionals to “interrogate the inherent tensions between subject and object, [and] building and site,” as well as to “engage the agency of typological form—including, for instance, the courtyard, shed, garden, and pavilion.”

The winners of the Blue Clay Country Spa competition are:

Bee Breeders Announces Winners of the Blue Clay Country Spa Competition - Image 3 of 4Bee Breeders Announces Winners of the Blue Clay Country Spa Competition - Image 9 of 4Bee Breeders Announces Winners of the Blue Clay Country Spa Competition - Image 30 of 4Bee Breeders Announces Winners of the Blue Clay Country Spa Competition - Image 75 of 4Bee Breeders Announces Winners of the Blue Clay Country Spa Competition - More Images+ 72

This 6-Axis Robot Arm Can 3D Print Fiberglass Composites

A team of architects and engineers at the Politecnico di Milano in Italy have unveiled Atropos, a six-axis robotic arm capable of printing continuous fiber composites. The one of a kind robot was developed by +Lab, the 3D printing laboratory at the Politecnico, who have taken inspiration from fibres found in the natural world. Through a technology known as Continuous Fiber Composites Smart Manufacturing, Atropos has the potential to create large, complex structures to aid the design and construction process.

This 6-Axis Robot Arm Can 3D Print Fiberglass Composites - Image 1 of 4This 6-Axis Robot Arm Can 3D Print Fiberglass Composites - Image 2 of 4This 6-Axis Robot Arm Can 3D Print Fiberglass Composites - Image 3 of 4This 6-Axis Robot Arm Can 3D Print Fiberglass Composites - Image 4 of 4This 6-Axis Robot Arm Can 3D Print Fiberglass Composites - More Images+ 11

Post-Fossil City Contest's 10 Finalists Share Visions of A Sustainable Future

Utrecht University’s Urban Futures Studio have announced the 10 finalists for their Post-Fossil City Contest, judged by a jury which included MVRDV co-founder Winy Maas. Each of the successful submissions responded to the contest’s call for the design of a sustainable city no longer reliant on non-renewable energy sources. Designers and makers were invited to envision this new future, which “will reshape our cities and everyday lives so radically that it is hard to imagine what it might feel, taste, smell, and look like.”

Out of the 250 total entries, below are the 10 selected finalists along with a snippet of their proposed futures as described by the competition website.

Toronto’s Urban Farming Residence Will Bridge the Gap Between Housing and Agriculture

With the ever-expanding global population, cities around the world today are caught in the midst of mass urbanization; the resultant problems are the topic of much of the current architectural discourse. From these trends stems the challenges of providing adequate amounts of both housing and urban green space, and by extension, providing adequate food production. In order to address this divide, Toronto will soon be home to The Plant – a mixed-use community revolving around sustainable residential urban farming and social responsibility in the Queen Street West neighborhood.

“It might seem extreme, but we orientated this entire project around our connection to food,” says Curated Properties partner Gary Eisen, one of the developers involved in the project. “It’s our guiding principle and the result is a building that lives and breathes and offers a better quality of life to the people who will live and work here. The Plant is a community that fits with the foodie culture that has come to define Queen West.”

Toronto’s Urban Farming Residence Will Bridge the Gap Between Housing and Agriculture - Image 1 of 4Toronto’s Urban Farming Residence Will Bridge the Gap Between Housing and Agriculture - Image 2 of 4Toronto’s Urban Farming Residence Will Bridge the Gap Between Housing and Agriculture - Image 3 of 4Toronto’s Urban Farming Residence Will Bridge the Gap Between Housing and Agriculture - Image 4 of 4Toronto’s Urban Farming Residence Will Bridge the Gap Between Housing and Agriculture - More Images

These Statuettes of Architectural Landmarks Offer a Stylish Alternative to Typical Souvenirs

Russian designer Konstantin Kolesov has created a collection of finely-crafted souvenirs celebrating iconic architectural landmarks from around the globe. The Jsouv Collection consists of 15 pieces, depicting landmarks from New York, London, Tokyo, Dubai and more. Crafted from solid aluminum, the souvenirs are accompanied by a natural walnut base engraved with a 2D emblem of the city in question. With the souvenirs currently being crowdfunded on Indiegogo, Jsouv is also offering a t-shirt collection with unique prints of each city and landmark.

These Statuettes of Architectural Landmarks Offer a Stylish Alternative to Typical Souvenirs - Image 1 of 4These Statuettes of Architectural Landmarks Offer a Stylish Alternative to Typical Souvenirs - Image 2 of 4These Statuettes of Architectural Landmarks Offer a Stylish Alternative to Typical Souvenirs - Image 3 of 4These Statuettes of Architectural Landmarks Offer a Stylish Alternative to Typical Souvenirs - Image 4 of 4These Statuettes of Architectural Landmarks Offer a Stylish Alternative to Typical Souvenirs - More Images+ 9

Third-Place Proposal for Turkey's Bandirma Park Embeds Public Spaces in an Urban Landscape

In the recently concluded Bandirma Park competition, TARI-Architects in collaboration with Derek Pirozzi Design Workshop LLC, were awarded third prize for their proposed revitalisation of the Turkish city’s ecological core. In light of the competition’s vision of Bandirma as a new innovative hub, the proposal by the two practices combines the central Design Institute with excavated public spaces to minimize the architecture’s footprint on the park and its context.

Under the acronym B.R.E.A.K., or "Bandirma Regeneration As Knowledge," the project’s focal point is the Design Institute – “an operation that will attract a large number of academic gatherings from the Turkish region for hosting exhibitions and research conferences” from its vantage point overlooking the city and harbor.

Third-Place Proposal for Turkey's Bandirma Park Embeds Public Spaces in an Urban Landscape - Image 1 of 4Third-Place Proposal for Turkey's Bandirma Park Embeds Public Spaces in an Urban Landscape - Image 2 of 4Third-Place Proposal for Turkey's Bandirma Park Embeds Public Spaces in an Urban Landscape - Image 3 of 4Third-Place Proposal for Turkey's Bandirma Park Embeds Public Spaces in an Urban Landscape - Image 4 of 4Third-Place Proposal for Turkey's Bandirma Park Embeds Public Spaces in an Urban Landscape - More Images+ 17

Tesla's Solar Roof System to Begin Taking Orders Next Month

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has announced via Twitter that his company’s fully-integrated solar roof system is nearly ready to be released to the public, and will begin taking orders on the shingles starting next month.

The solar roof project was announced this past October after acquiring energy services provider SolarCity for $2.1 billion. Offered in four different styles – smooth glass, textured glass, French slate and Tuscan glass – the shingles would allow homeowners to make the switch to solar without having to change their aesthetic tastes. Though exact costs have yet to be released, Musk believes the system could be more affordable than a traditional roof.

Willis Tower To Receive $20 Million of New SkyDeck Attractions

Adrenaline junkies rejoice: the Willis Tower has announced plans for $20 million dollars of improvements to their popular glass-bottom SkyDeck observation attractions. Among the additions will be a series of new all-glass protrusions from the building, as well as a chance to rappel down a glass shaft suspended from the building’s 103rd floor.

3 Top Architects Selected to Design Community-Oriented Housing Library Developments in Chicago

The City of Chicago and the Chicago Housing Authority have announced the selection of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM), Perkins + Will and John Ronan Architects to lead in the design of three new “co-located” affordable housing and library developments in the Chicago neighborhoods of Little Italy, West Ridge, and Irving Park.

Selected from a shortlist of nine firms, the three Chicago-based teams were chosen for their “innovative ideas that will ensure that each community will have a design that best reflects its needs.” The practices will work intimately with their respective communities to develop their designs.

3 Top Architects Selected to Design Community-Oriented Housing Library Developments in Chicago - Featured Image3 Top Architects Selected to Design Community-Oriented Housing Library Developments in Chicago - Image 1 of 43 Top Architects Selected to Design Community-Oriented Housing Library Developments in Chicago - Image 2 of 43 Top Architects Selected to Design Community-Oriented Housing Library Developments in Chicago - Image 3 of 43 Top Architects Selected to Design Community-Oriented Housing Library Developments in Chicago - More Images

A Combination of Wonder and Structure: Christian Kerez on Swiss Architecture

In this fourth episode of GSAPP Conversations, third-year GSAPP Master of Architecture student Ayesha Ghosh speaks with Swiss architect Christian Kerez, who delivered the opening lecture of the school's Spring 2017 Semester. Kerez's recent projects include Incidental Space at the Swiss Pavillion of the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale, an amorphous structure which raised questions of the limits of imagination and technical feasibility in architecture today.

A Combination of Wonder and Structure: Christian Kerez on Swiss Architecture - Image 1 of 4

Kjellander Sjöberg Designs Four Cross-Laminated Timber Blocks to Enrich the Uppsala Cityscape

Swedish architecture firm Kjellander Sjöberg has released images of their proposed new city block to enrich the Swedish city of Uppsala. The four competition-winning residential buildings, known collectively as the Tunet, will feature cross-laminated timber construction and wood detailing, creating an environmentally-friendly addition to the city.

Kjellander Sjöberg Designs Four Cross-Laminated Timber Blocks to Enrich the Uppsala Cityscape - SustainabilityKjellander Sjöberg Designs Four Cross-Laminated Timber Blocks to Enrich the Uppsala Cityscape - SustainabilityKjellander Sjöberg Designs Four Cross-Laminated Timber Blocks to Enrich the Uppsala Cityscape - SustainabilityKjellander Sjöberg Designs Four Cross-Laminated Timber Blocks to Enrich the Uppsala Cityscape - SustainabilityKjellander Sjöberg Designs Four Cross-Laminated Timber Blocks to Enrich the Uppsala Cityscape - More Images+ 5

New Documentary to Explore the Life and Legacy of Jane Jacobs

IFC has announced the release of their latest documentary, Citizen Jane: Battle for the City, which will dive into “the enduring legacies of one of the most prominent figures of modern urban planning, Jane Jacobs, and talks about her David-Goliath fight to save NYC.”

MVRDV to Complete Two Stone Mixed-Use Towers in The Hague

MVRDV to Complete Two Stone Mixed-Use Towers in The Hague - Featured Image
© MVRDV

MVRDV and developer Provast has revealed plans for a two new mixed-use residential towers in The Hague that will add over 500 new apartments to the city’s Central Business District. Located on Grotiusplaats adjacent to the National Library and near the city’s Central Station, the “Grotius Towers” will offer 61,800 square meters of residential and commercial space to service the needs of The Hague’s growing downtown core.

The towers’ design reacts to the typical tower typology found in the Hague by focusing on high-quality details, a subtle facade, a ‘soft’ landing on the street and a ‘crown’ of large outdoor spaces. Inside, a mix of social housing and private accommodations will ensure the buildings are inhabited by a diverse community, while their ground-floor commercial plinths will make the complex a destination for shopping, dining and socializing.

Pavilion Made from Aluminum Cans and Cracked Clay Wins 2017 City of Dreams Competition

Cast & Place has been announced as the winner of the 2017 City of Dreams competition to create a pavilion for New York City’s Governors Island. Held by not-for-profit arts organization FIGMENT, the AIANY Emerging New York Architects Committee, and the Structural Engineers Association of New York, the competition called for a design to be the hub of FIGMENT’s free community arts festival during Summer 2017, based on questions of the future of New York, how design can confront environmental challenges, and how architecture can be built from recycled or borrowed material.

With these questions in mind, Cast & Place was conceptualized as a pavilion made entirely from waste. 300,000 recycled aluminum cans, cast into the cracks of dried clay, will form structural panels that assemble into shaded spaces for performance and play.

Pavilion Made from Aluminum Cans and Cracked Clay Wins 2017 City of Dreams Competition - Image 1 of 4Pavilion Made from Aluminum Cans and Cracked Clay Wins 2017 City of Dreams Competition - Image 2 of 4Pavilion Made from Aluminum Cans and Cracked Clay Wins 2017 City of Dreams Competition - Image 3 of 4Pavilion Made from Aluminum Cans and Cracked Clay Wins 2017 City of Dreams Competition - Image 4 of 4Pavilion Made from Aluminum Cans and Cracked Clay Wins 2017 City of Dreams Competition - More Images+ 4

How Artificial Intelligence Helped to Create a Gaudí-Inspired Thinking Sculpture

IBM and New-York-based design studio SOFTlab have teamed up to create the first thinking sculpture, inspired by Gaudí and developed with IBM’s Watson cognitive technology for the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.

In order to help design the sculpture, Watson was taught about the history and style of Gaudí and the architecture of Barcelona through volumes of images, literary works, articles, and even music. From these references, Watson helped to uncover critical insights on patterns in Gaudí's work—like crabs, spiders, and color palettes—that the design team didn't initially associate with Gaudí. The resulting four-meter-tall sculpture features a structural surface made of over 1200 unique aluminum parts, and is unmistakably reminiscent of Gaudí’s work both in look and feel, yet entirely distinct.

The sculpture was on display from February 27 to March 2 at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, where it interacted with visitors by changing shape in real-time, in response to sentiments from Twitter. To learn more about the sculpture, ArchDaily was given to opportunity to speak with IBM Watson Manager Jonas Nwuke.

How Artificial Intelligence Helped to Create a Gaudí-Inspired Thinking Sculpture - Image 1 of 4How Artificial Intelligence Helped to Create a Gaudí-Inspired Thinking Sculpture - Image 2 of 4How Artificial Intelligence Helped to Create a Gaudí-Inspired Thinking Sculpture - Image 3 of 4How Artificial Intelligence Helped to Create a Gaudí-Inspired Thinking Sculpture - Image 4 of 4How Artificial Intelligence Helped to Create a Gaudí-Inspired Thinking Sculpture - More Images+ 5

In alliance with Architonic
Check the latest Architecture NewsCheck the latest Architecture NewsCheck the latest Architecture News

Check the latest Architecture News