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Floating OffShore Stadium / stadiumconcept

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© stadiumconcept

Developed by the german architects stadiumconcept for the FIFA World Cup 2022 the Floating OffShore Stadium represents an extraordinary and ambitious concept. The Floating OffShore Stadium is a swimming construction that can be relocated to seaside venues across the oceans. More images and complete architect’s description after the break.

Water Box / Nichols Brosch Wurst Wolfe and Associates

Water Box / Nichols Brosch Wurst Wolfe and Associates  - Image 1 of 4
Courtesy Nichols Brosch Wurst Wolfe and Associates

South Florida based Nichols Brosch Wurst Wolfe and Associates was recently awarded third place in the Miami Water Box competition for their roaming proposal. Additional images of their project in addition to a full description can be viewed after the break.

Alphabet Building / MVRDV

Alphabet Building / MVRDV - Image 2 of 4
© Courtesy of MVRDV

Amsterdam based project development corporation NIC started sale of the MVRDV designed Alphabet building. In Amsterdam small and mid-size creative companies have trouble finding suitable office space. The Alphabet building communicates through a clear exterior design which reveals on the East façade the house number and at the main façade the extension for each company, a letter of the alphabet. The interior is highly flexible and completed with a rough and pure finishing. The 3200m2 creative industry building will be completed in 2012 according to high energy efficiency standards.

Is Architecture Employment Improving

Is Architecture Employment Improving - Featured Image
© Rene de Wit

Is architecture employment improving?  According to C. J. Hughes recent article some firms need for design services has increased providing an opportunity to hire employees.  That being said the employment opportunities are still minimal some firms hiring only one or two employees while others are able to hire in the double digits.  Many principals are tentative about the future and are therefore proceeding cautiously not to over hire employees.

The full article Architecture Employment on the Rise by C. J. Hughes for ArchRecord following the break.

Proposed Renovation to the Phillis Wheatley Elementary School for the AIAS Competition for Schools of Tomorrow / Brian Albrecht, Kristopher Kunkel and Mary Rogero

Proposed Renovation to the Phillis Wheatley Elementary School for the AIAS Competition for Schools of Tomorrow / Brian Albrecht, Kristopher Kunkel and Mary Rogero - Featured Image
Competition board

Miami University graduate students, Brian Albrecht and Kristopher Kunkel, and their faculty adivsor, Mary Rogero, recently sent us their submission for the AIAS School of Tomorrow 2010 Competition. They chose to design for the Phillis Wheatley Elementary School that we recently featured on our site. Their proposed design seeks to accomplish two vital aspects of sustainability and design: the preservation of an iconic Modern structure that embodies the period in which it was built, and secondly adapts that structure to suit present day needs for an area with unique problems and a unique culture.

AD Round Up: Kindergarten Part VII

AD Round Up: Kindergarten Part VII - Image 2 of 4

Five great kindergartens for our seventh selection of previously featured projects. Check them all after the break.

Kindergarten Kekec / Arhitektura Jure Kotnik Kindergarten Kekec is an extension of a typical Slovene prefab kindergarten from the 1980s. Situated in one of Ljubljana’s residential areas, Kekec answers the growing demand for kindergartens. This comes as a result of Ljubljana having witnessed considerable population growth as well as legislative changes and a planned increase in building density inside the highway ring surrounding the city (read more…)

Dense Cities Conference

Dense Cities Conference - Featured Image

At an international symposium from 26/05/2011 till 28/05/2011 in Graz, attention turns to the question of how to shape an active role for architecture in the development of “Dense Cities“. The range of questions covers all levels of scale ranging from urban landscape and agglomeration through districts to blocks and individual buildings, covering everything from the development of new building typologies on through actual interventions in the urban setting to analyses of transformations of urban density.

Ecco / NAU

Ecco / NAU - Image 5 of 4
© NAU

As an all-electric vehicle, the Ecco has no emissions of its own, and can be quickly charged at a standard 240V station. But when used for extended living purposes, even where no electricity is available, its built-in photovoltaic panels and solar sail roof mean that it can cut out the middle man, and charge directly from the sun.

Berlin Tempelhof Airport / GROSS.MAX. + Sutherland Hussey Architects

Berlin Tempelhof Airport / GROSS.MAX. + Sutherland Hussey Architects - Image 6 of 4
© Grossmax & Sutherland Hussey

Two of Scotland’s leading design firms have won an international competition to transform Berlin’s famous Tempelhof Airport. GROSS. MAX. with Sutherland Hussey Architects have been awarded the commission to design a new park and associated buildings on the site of the recently closed airport. Additional images of the winning entry are available after the break.

AD Interviews: Preston Scott Cohen

I first learned about Preston Scott Cohen’s work when I read about the Goodman House, a simple and elegant operation of a concrete shell housing an ancient Dutch barn frame. But after further investigation, I was surprised to see a constant spatial and formal research of his work, that we have witnessed in the latest three public buildings from his office and featured on ArchDaily.

Holm Architecture Office (HAO) Wins Competition to Design Samaranch Memorial Museum

Holm Architecture Office (HAO) Wins Competition to Design Samaranch Memorial Museum - Image 12 of 4
© Courtesy of HAO

HAO / Holm Architecture Office in collaboration with Archiland Beijing and Kragh & Berglund landscape architects, has won first prize in a competition to design the Samaranch Memorial Museum in Tianjin, China.

Juan Antonio Samaranch of Spain was the president of the International Olympic Committee from 1980 to 2001. Throughout his presidency he advocated for reform and inclusion and was a strong supporter of China’s bid as host city for the 2008 Olympic Games. Tianjin, a city of over 12 million people in northwestern China near Beijing, was the site of several Olympic events. The new museum and memorial will both highlight Samaranch’s professional history and look to the future, offering space for rotating exhibits of contemporary art and culture.

Think Space: Ecological Borders Competition

Think Space: Ecological Borders Competition - Featured Image

The new – third Ecological Borders competition calls for a radical reimagination of the current relationship between humans and the built environment through the establishment of new architectural protocols of coexistence in the search of a new Partial-Total Ecology: “YUmentec-pharming”.

Mixed Use Scheme for Nuuk, Greenland / Regional Associates + 42 Architects

Mixed Use Scheme for Nuuk, Greenland / Regional Associates + 42 Architects - Image 1 of 4
Courtesy Regional Associates + 42 Architects

Regional Associates and 42 Architects have collaborated on the design of a mixed use scheme for Nuuk, Greenland. The design is part of a larger master plan designed by TNT Nuuk (GL) and Dahl&Uhre architects (NO) (D&U in collaboration with MDH architects(NO). The project is due to be exhibited in Nuuk, Greenland, opening on 5 April 2011. Images and a brief description of Regional Associates + 42 Architects work can be seen after the jump.

Update: Xi’an International Horticultural Exhibition / 10,000 Bridges / West 8 + DYJG Beijing

Update: Xi’an International Horticultural Exhibition / 10,000 Bridges / West 8 + DYJG Beijing  - Image 4 of 4
© West 8

Continuing our coverage of Xi’an Horticultural Exposition, a new garden exhibition by Dutch firm West 8 with DYJG Beijing has recently opened at the expo. Entitled Garden of 10,000 Bridges, the project features gently curving red bridges that are speckled across a wild landscape. According to the designers, “As both a distinct sense of enclosure and vantage points are provided, the Garden plays with the sensation of surprise. In the design advantage is taken of the strategic, central position of the plot, and views to other parts of the exhibition are integrated with those to the features of the park and surrounding landscape.”

More about the project after the break.

Tel Aviv Museum of Art / Preston Scott Cohen

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Courtesy of Preston Scott Cohen

The Tel Aviv Museum of Art, located in the center of the city’s cultural complex and designed by Preston Scott Cohen has completed construction and will open to the public shortly. The program for the Tel Aviv Museum of Art Amir Building posed an extraordinary architectural challenge: to resolve the tension between the tight, idiosyncratic triangular site and the museum’s need for a series of large, neutral rectangular galleries. The solution: subtly twisting geometric surfaces (hyperbolic parabolas) that connect the disparate angles between the galleries and the context while refracting natural light into the deepest recesses of the half buried building.

Tel Aviv Museum of Art / Preston Scott Cohen - Image 18 of 4Tel Aviv Museum of Art / Preston Scott Cohen - Image 25 of 4Tel Aviv Museum of Art / Preston Scott Cohen - Image 19 of 4Tel Aviv Museum of Art / Preston Scott Cohen - Image 12 of 4Tel Aviv Museum of Art / Preston Scott Cohen - More Images+ 21

Architects: Preston Scott Cohen Location: Tel Aviv, Israel Project Area: 200,000 sqf Project Year: 2007-2011 Photographs: Courtesy of Preston Scott Cohen

AD Recommends: Best of the Week

AD Recommends: Best of the Week - Featured Image

Three of last week’s best posts were museums! Did you see them? Check them all after the break.

Felix Nussbaum Museum / Daniel Libeskind The Felix Nussbaum Museum is an extension to the Cultural History Museum in Osnabrück and is dedicated to the work of Felix Nussbaum, the Jewish artist born in Osnabrück in 1904. The Museum displays Nussbaum’s graphics and paintings done prior to his extermination in Auschwitz, and houses a temporary exhibition space focusing on the themes of racism and intolerance (read more…)

Classics modeled with ArchiCAD15

Last week we told you about ArchiCAD 15, Graphisoft’s latest version of its premium design software for architects. Although you can see many videos showing the new features of the software, it’s great to see some projects modeled with ArchiCAD 15. Specially if we can see some of the projects we have featured in our AD Classics section, like SOM’s USAFA Cadet Chapel or William Van Alen’s Chrysler Building. Check the other two videos after the break.

Long Island Cinema Competition / Afsarmanesh Architects

Long Island Cinema Competition / Afsarmanesh Architects - Image 4 of 4
Courtesy Afsarmanesh Architects

Afsarmanesh Architects has recently won the suckerPUNCH Long Island Cinema Competition with their unique design process and approach of the theoretical. Further images and a brief breakdown of their design process can be viewed after the break. Additionally, you find a brief interview of the architects at their winning entry domain on suckerPUNCH.

Rainha Santa Isabel Secondary School / Oficina Ideias em Linha

Rainha Santa Isabel Secondary School / Oficina Ideias em Linha - Image 29 of 4
© Francisco Nogueira

Architects: Oficina Ideias em Linha – José Laranjeira Location: Estremoz, Portugal Project area: 13,000 sqm Project year: 2007 – 2010 Photographs: Francisco Nogueira

Rainha Santa Isabel Secondary School / Oficina Ideias em Linha - Image 5 of 4Rainha Santa Isabel Secondary School / Oficina Ideias em Linha - Image 4 of 4Rainha Santa Isabel Secondary School / Oficina Ideias em Linha - Image 30 of 4Rainha Santa Isabel Secondary School / Oficina Ideias em Linha - Image 27 of 4Rainha Santa Isabel Secondary School / Oficina Ideias em Linha - More Images+ 26

Video: A Plea for Modernism

Scheduled for demolition in Summer 2011, the Phillis Wheatley Elementary School is a treasured piece of regional modernism in New Orleans. Designed by Charles Colbert, the school has served the historic African-American neighborhood of Tremé since it opened in 1955. It is just one of over thirty public schools that were constructed at that time. These schools were designed by architects who practiced a regional modernism, incorporating innovative design for circulation, ventilation and lighting. Of the thirty schools only four are still standing, three of which are threatened with demolition (including Phillis Wheatley). DOCOMOMO Louisiana is advocating for the restoration through adaptive reuse for the Phillis Wheatley Elementary School. “A Plea For Modernism” was created by Evan Mather and is narrated by actor Wendell Pierce.

Barcelona Rock / UGO architecture

Barcelona Rock / UGO architecture - Image 3 of 4
Courtesy of UGO architecture

Poland-based UGO architecture shared with us their proposal for the Barcelona 2011 Bohemian Hostel for Backpackers International Competition. More images and architect’s description after the break.

Low Cost, Low Energy House for New Orleans / sustainable.TO

Low Cost, Low Energy House for New Orleans / sustainable.TO - Image 2 of 4
exterior

Hosted by Design By Many, the Passive House for New Orleans competition challenged designers to design a single-family dwelling that is sustainable in the broadest sense of the term: affordable to build and purchase, long-lasting, with minimal impact on the local environment, and affordable to heat and cool throughout the life of the building.

The winning proposal, designed by sustainable.TO, is based on the vernacular shotgun typology. The affordable, low-energy, single-family low cost, low energy house will help to revitalize the existing neighborhood of the Lower Ninth Ward. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Update: Tenant for Freedom Tower

Update: Tenant for Freedom Tower - Featured Image

Each week, progress is being made on Manhattan’s Freedom Tower as it slowly rises to meet its 1,776 ft mark. In addition to the skyscraper, we’ve shared Calatrava’s Transit Hub design with you and we are excited to see the completed complex. Although the new project will offer dynamic architecture in conjunction with a spiritual environment to remember the victims of the attacks, many wonder what companies will occupy the 2.6 million sqf of office space. A few days ago, media company Conde Nast (a publishing company responsible for the likes of Vanity Fair, Vogue, The New Yorker, among others) announced their plan to lease 1 million sqf, giving the Tower its first high-profile anchor. Christopher O. Ward, executive director of the Port Authority, told the Times, “We built a new reality at the World Trade Center, and this transaction will be the exclamation point on that turnaround.” This deal has appeased rising concerns that the Tower would be solely occupied with government offices; with such a progressive company slated to move in, hopefully others will follow suit. Governor Andrew M. Cuomo told the Times, “ sends a message to the global business community that Lower Manhattan is alive, growing and open for business.”

Bodega Bauer Winery / Field Architecture

Bodega Bauer Winery / Field Architecture - Image 8 of 4
rendering

Field Architecture‘s goal for Bodega Bauer was to create an architecture informed by the same particularities of the earth which are embodied in the wine of the region. Siting and materiality are guided by the subtleties of sun and wind exposure, climate, the unexpected nuances of each season, and the presence and absence of water and shade.

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