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SCI-Arc's Ball-Nogues Studio Installation + 2x8: Taut Exhibitions

SCI-Arc's Ball-Nogues Studio Installation + 2x8: Taut Exhibitions  - Featured Image
Yevrus 1, Negative Impression / Courtesy of Ball-Nogues Studio

SCI-Arc will be presenting two main exhibitions this upcoming month. The Ball-Nogues Studio: Vevrus 1, Negative Impression exhibition starting June 1 until July 8 that will host Benjamin Ball, Gaston Nogues and Hsinming Fung to discuss the installation on Monday, June 25 at 7pm. The site specific installation is a disposable architecture of literal references that calls into question the contemporary architectural vogue for digital complexity and abstraction. The cast impressions of 1973 Volkswagen Beetles and speedboats unite to form a strong structural whole that serves as a lookout tower. Then, two projects by SCI-Arc students will be featured this year at the AIA LA hosted 2×8 exhibition, opening June 5, 6-9pm at the A+D Museum in Los Angeles. Fore more information on the events, please visit here.

ReSpace Design Competition

ReSpace Design Competition - Featured Image
Courtesy of ReSpace

The ReSpace Design Competition: ‘You Design It! We Build It!’, which focuses on small space design, green building, and sustainability, is currently accepting entries. They are on the hunt for talented architects, artists, builders, and dreamers with a knack for innovation. The challenge: Design a small, unique, and transportable structure that can be built with reuse materials. The grand prize winner receives $1,000 and a chance to see their design come to life. The winning design will be constructed in a 48 hour build overseen by Habitat for Humanity Wake County using materials from their Raleigh, North Carolina ReStore. A total of $3,000 in awards will be presented to multiple winners. Registration ends June 15 with the deadline of submissions August 15. For more information, please visit here.

Infographic: Public Interest Design

Infographic: Public Interest Design - Image 1 of 4

Public Interest Design is the next frontier of the sustainability movement. Taking a triple bottom line approach, it positions design to more tconsider economic, environmental, and social factors - creating better places, products, and systems for people to live their best lives. Inherently human-centered and participatory, public interest design seeks to improve the quality of life for all people, regardless of their socio-economic background.

First images of Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012

First images of Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 - Image 29 of 4
© Daniel Portilla

Starting tomorrow, the 12th version of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion will be open at the Hyde Park in London. As we announced some months ago, the design was commissioned to Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei. The final proposal was published just at the beginning of this month, showing an interesting ground work. This year’s pavilion is half sunk into the landscape, as if it were carved in the terrain and covered with a liquid layer, reflecting the the surrounding light and landscape.

First images of Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 - Image 28 of 4First images of Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 - Image 18 of 4First images of Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 - Image 17 of 4First images of Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 - Image 26 of 4First images of Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 - More Images+ 25

More info and images after the break

Eisenhower Family Comments on Gehry's Revisions

Eisenhower Family Comments on Gehry's Revisions - Image 2 of 4
The General: Courtesy of Gehry Partners, LLP, 2012

President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s family has released their thoughts on the latest design changes proposed by Frank Gehry that were released in May. Most changes were “positive and welcomed” by the family, however they remain unhappy with the metal tapestries that surround the memorial. Gehry appeased the families concerns with the memorials original focus on the Kansas roots of Eisenhower by replacing the carved images on the stone reliefs with two sets of 9-foot statues that depict Eisenhower as a World War II hero and president. These statues join the remaining life-sized statue of Eisenhower as a boy, which remains in the center of the memorial.

More about the family’s response after the break.

El Palmar Green Boulevard / Amann-Cánovas-Maruri

El Palmar Green Boulevard / Amann-Cánovas-Maruri - Image 9 of 4
Courtesy of Amann-Cánovas-Maruri

The proposal by Amann-Cánovas-Maruri in the ideas competition for the organization and design of the access to the city of Murcia through El Palmar Avenue establishes a slanted axis that generates different urban scenes. In creating a sustainable action based on participatory urbanism and new high density urban nodes in contact with and related to the farmland, the architects generate public spaces that link together both sides of the boulevard. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Semper Kaleidoscope / sTARTT

Semper Kaleidoscope / sTARTT - Image 5 of 4
© sTARTT

Our friends from Italian design firm sTARTT have shared their most recent restoration project which transforms an abandoned warehouse into a spatial urban kaleidoscope. Situated in the historic center in Porfiri of the Latina Province, the area is marked by architectonic elements from the city’s earliest foundation that now co‐exist with “inconsistent” contemporary parts of the center. In that sense, the project seeks to bring a continuity to the context, as sTARTT has envisioned a way to allow users to appreciate the historic roots of their city within a contemporary atmosphere.

More about the project after the break.

GLOW/SHIFTboston Copley Square Competition Proposal / Khoury Levit Fong

GLOW/SHIFTboston Copley Square Competition Proposal / Khoury Levit Fong - Image 3 of 4
Courtesy of Khoury Levit Fong

Khoury Levit Fong shared with us their proposal for the GLOW/SHIFTboston Copley Square Competition. Their concept consists of an urban room, and hanging in the middle of it is a great chandelier. Dewdrop-shaped globes hang from a funicular mesh support, each illuminated by a wick-like row of low-energy addressable LEDs. It is light which is given weight and pulls down upon its supports to produce an inverted dome of scintillating light. Through the middle, the oculus at the center, the unobstructed sky is visible again. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Tervete National Park Information Center / Sampling Architects

Tervete National Park Information Center / Sampling Architects - Image 10 of 4
Courtesy of Sampling Architects

The main goal of Sampling Architects for designing the interactive forest information center was to create a generic contemporary addition for the nationally famous National Park of Tervete. They believed the project should allow the discovery of the delight of ‘life of the forest’ through an educational center, but more importantly, creating a space for exchange of know-how of forest science between professionals, students and the general public. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Khokak Panoram Resort / FCHY Architect Lab, C2H3.ch

Khokak Panoram Resort / FCHY Architect Lab, C2H3.ch - Image 16 of 4
© FCHY Architect Lab, Mimax Digital Technology Co.

Architects: FCHY Architect Lab, C2H3.ch Location: Yunlin, Taiwan Projecta Area: The main building: 1152 sqm, The secondary architecture 400 sqm Completion: 2012 Photographs: FCHY Architect Lab, Mimax Digital Technology Co.

Khokak Panoram Resort / FCHY Architect Lab, C2H3.ch - Image 15 of 4Khokak Panoram Resort / FCHY Architect Lab, C2H3.ch - Image 14 of 4Khokak Panoram Resort / FCHY Architect Lab, C2H3.ch - Image 13 of 4Khokak Panoram Resort / FCHY Architect Lab, C2H3.ch - Image 12 of 4Khokak Panoram Resort / FCHY Architect Lab, C2H3.ch - More Images+ 14

Video: Ames Boston Hotel

Video: Ames Boston Hotel - Image 1 of 4

HWKN commissioned to rebuild Fire Island Pines Pavilion

HWKN commissioned to rebuild Fire Island Pines Pavilion  - Image 3 of 4
Arrival - Courtesy of HWKN

Due to a devastating fire last November, New York architects HWKN (Hollwich Kushner) have been commissioned by FIP Ventures to redesign and rebuild the legendary Pavilion dance club of Fire Island Pines. Located just four miles off the coast of Long Island, the popular gay resort welcomes over 800,000 summer visitor each year. The wooden pavilion will be the harbor’s main attraction, welcoming visitors as they arrive by ferry with two, lively stories of outdoor terrace and a “Welcome Bar”.

“Although the new building will have the same envelope and mix of uses as its predecessor, the similarities end there,” says Matthew Blesso, developer and managing partner of FIP Ventures. “The Pavilion will be in context with other Pines architecture. It will be made of wood and be modern and casual, yet bold and iconic. It is the first thing visitors see when getting off the ferry, and we’ve envisioned it to be the heart of the Pines community.”

Renzo Piano and Zoltan Pali to design the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

Renzo Piano and Zoltan Pali to design the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures - Featured Image

Award-winning architects Renzo Piano and Zoltan Pali will design the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science announced today. “Renzo’s track record of creating iconic cultural landmarks combined with Zoltan’s success in transforming historically-significant buildings is a perfect marriage for a museum that celebrates the history and the future of the movies,” said Dawn Hudson, Academy CEO.

The Realization of the “Cosmic Quilt” / The Principals

The Realization of the “Cosmic Quilt” / The Principals  - Image 4 of 4
© Walling McGarity Photography

Remember the “Cosmic Quilt” kickstarter campaign we published a few weeks ago? Well, it was a success! With the help 20 students from the Art Institute of New York, The Principals were able to construct a reactive architectural environment just in time for the New York Design Week that took place May 19-21.

Continue after the break for more.

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The Dream / Brad Ascalon

The Dream / Brad Ascalon - Image 5 of 4

“Within the boundaries of a society largely living above its own means, an unregulated banking system that plays by its own rules, and a government that idly stands by as millions of homes are being foreclosed upon, there lies an absolute truth: the direction we’re moving as a society has become unsustainable and toxic. This is the new promise of the American dream.” - Brad Ascalon

When you think of Suburbia, you inevitably think of the white picket fence. But the picturesque Suburbia you envision, never truly existed, and now, with an economy plunging, poverty rising, and people hurting, the truth has become too hard to ignore.

In this piece for the “Love It or Leave It” exhibition at New York’s Gallery R’Pure, going on now until June 1st, Brad Ascalon has inverted this typical Suburban symbol in order to comment upon the state of the American Dream – today, “nearly impossible for most Americans to realize.”

More Photos of Brad Ascalon’s “The Dream” after the break…

For more on Suburbia, check out our Burbs Going Bust Infographic and our popular Saving Suburbia series – Part I: “Bursting the Bubble,” on the damaging Suburban Myth.

Survival Architecture Workshop

Survival Architecture Workshop - Image 11 of 4
© Nikita Wu

Led by envir­on­mental archi­tect and anarch­ist, Marco Casagrande, representing the Aalto University Environmental Art Masters Program, stu­dents were to join in the cre­ation of a nomadic city on the ice, both weath­er­ing and embra­cing the cold and wind, and altern­at­ing bliz­zards and slush over the course of ten days. There were twenty of them in total. In addi­tion to Marco him­self, his wife, Taiwanese journ­al­ist Nikita Wu, his long time friend Norwegian archi­tect Hans-​Petter Bjørnådal, Czech MA stu­dent and carpenter-​extraordinaire Jan Tyrpekl, made up the organ­iz­a­tional team. The Lapland nat­ive believes in an almost cruel method to his medium, where human inten­tions come nat­ur­ally second to nature’s. It is with this in mind that one needs to approach his work­shop on the frozen lake of Rössvatnet in sub­arc­tic Norway. More of the team’s description, by Guoda Bardauskaitė and Suzanne van Niekerk, on the workshop after the break.

Connect:Homes Offers Affordable, Modern, Sustainable Homes

Connect:Homes Offers Affordable, Modern, Sustainable Homes - Image 28 of 4
Courtesy of Connect:Homes

Jared Levy and Gordon Stott, formerly of Marmol Radziner Prefab, recently launched a new company that hopes to solve the endemic problem of prefab to date: price. They knew how to make beautiful, sustainable prefab. But now, with their patent-pending technology, which allows them to build modules to a whopping 95% complete at the factory, and ship them like shipping containers by rail, sea, or truck, Connect:Homes has figured out how to provide the same level of modern style at an all-inclusive price of $145/sf out of the factory. That’s all inclusive with no surprises. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Rigshospitalet Hospital Expansion / 3XN Architects + aarhus architects

Rigshospitalet Hospital Expansion / 3XN Architects + aarhus architects - Image 1 of 4
Courtesy of 3XN Architects

3XN architects and Aarhus Architects in collaboration with Nickl & Partner Architechten, Grontmij and Kirstine Jensen Studio, has won the prestigious competition for the expansion of Copenhagen’s main hospital, Rigshospitalet, which is expected to be completed in early 2017. The winning proposal for Copenhagen’s most centrally located hospital extension ensures 76,000 m2 of efficient and timesaving logistics, while daylight, green spaces and views of the neighboring park contribute to the wellbeing of patients, staff and visitors. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Neri Oxman: On Designing Form

Neri Oxman is an architect and founder of MATERIALECOLOGY with the MIT Media Lab. Her work focuses on computational strategies for form finding; she chooses to define and design processes that generate form. She has published numerous papers and has contributed to various texts. Her work has also been featured at the MOMA for the exhibit “Design and the Elastic Mind“, which she designed four systems of processes. In this lecture posted by PopTech, Oxman discusses what the processes of nature can teach designers and how computational strategies defined by materials and the environment can expand the possibilities of the generation of form through algorithms and analysis.

Follow us after the break for more.

Okinawa Institute of Science & Technology / Nikken Sekkei + Kornberg Associates + Kuniken

Okinawa Institute of Science & Technology / Nikken Sekkei + Kornberg Associates + Kuniken - Image 10 of 4
© Kiyohiko Higashide

Architects: Nikken Sekkei + Kornberg Associates + Kuniken Location: Okinawa, Japan Owner: Cabinet Office of Japan / Okinawa Institute of Science & Technology Area: 2.3 million sqm total; 700,000 sqm first phase Photographers: Kiyohiko Higashide, Kornberg Associates Architects

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New Terminal at Lucknow Airport / S. Ghosh & Associates

New Terminal at Lucknow Airport / S. Ghosh & Associates - Image 21 of 4
Courtesy of S. Ghosh & Associates

Architects: S. Ghosh & Associates Location: Lucknow, India Team: Sudipto Ghosh and Sumit Ghosh (Principle Designers) as well as Mitesh Kapadia, Rashmi Vakharia, Naeem Rushnaiwala and Ketan Bhartia (Associate Designers) Terminal Area: 20,000 sqm. Site Area: 56,000 sqm. Total Cost: Approx. US $ 23 million Photographs: S. Ghosh & Associates

New Terminal at Lucknow Airport / S. Ghosh & Associates - Image 12 of 4New Terminal at Lucknow Airport / S. Ghosh & Associates - Image 15 of 4New Terminal at Lucknow Airport / S. Ghosh & Associates - Image 14 of 4New Terminal at Lucknow Airport / S. Ghosh & Associates - Image 13 of 4New Terminal at Lucknow Airport / S. Ghosh & Associates - More Images+ 18

Designing the Extraordinary / Heatherwick Studio

Designing the Extraordinary / Heatherwick Studio - Image 6 of 4
© Daniel Portilla

Today we had the chance of attending the opening of this impressive exhibition. As we mentioned previously some weeks ago, the Victoria & Albert Museum in London prepared this event focused on the work of the British firm Heatherwick Studio, responsable for the last Shanghai 2010 British Pavilion, as well as the Rolling Bridge, or the New Bus for London that was just released in the 38 route. The exhibition comprises a large range of different scales of design, going from specific objects or furniture, to large infrastructural and urban projects. It will be open for the public from next Thursday 31st.

Make it Right Homes in NOLA

Make it Right Homes in NOLA - Image 5 of 4
BiLD / Photographs © James Ewing/OTTO

Over the past five years, the Make it Right Foundation in New Orleans has been realizing its commitment to build 150 affordable, green storm resistant homes for families living in the Lower 9th Ward. The foundation, established by Brad Pitt, has completed seventy-five homes with the time and efforts donated by local and international architects such as Gehry Partners, Morphosis, Kieran Timberlake, Pugh+Scarpa, and McDonough+Partners.

Photographer James Ewing shared the documentation of his visit to the Make it Right Homes of New Orleans, citing the designs he most admired by Shigeru Ban, Adjaye Associates, Hitoshi Abe, and BiLD.

More on Make it Right and the homes after the break.

ArchDaily lecture series in Moscow, Russia

ArchDaily lecture series in Moscow, Russia - Featured Image

After great lectures at the Escola da Cidade in Sao Paulo and the Center for Architecture in New York, this week ArchDaily is heading to Moscow to lecture at three important institutions: The High School of Design (May 31st), the State Museum of Architecture (June 1st) and the Strelka Institute (June 3rd).

More information about the lectures after the break, including links to register for each event.

We look forward to meet and connect with Russian architects and architecture students in Moscow!

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