H.G. Esch

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CentoNew / GEWERS PUDEWILL

CentoNew / GEWERS PUDEWILL - More Images+ 9

Rostock, Germany
  • Architects: GEWERS PUDEWILL
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  12200
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Tiger Drylac, Warema

Green Heart | Marina One Singapore / ingenhoven architects

Green Heart | Marina One Singapore / ingenhoven architects - More Images+ 15

50Hertz Headquarter Berlin / LOVE architecture and urbanism

50Hertz Headquarter Berlin  / LOVE architecture and urbanism - More Images+ 20

Oeconomicum / Ingenhoven Architects

Oeconomicum / Ingenhoven Architects  - More Images+ 6

Düsseldorf, Germany

Quarter of Nations / Gerber Architekten

Quarter of Nations / Gerber Architekten - More Images+ 14

Boeselburg Council and Student Housing / Kresings GmbH

Boeselburg Council and Student Housing / Kresings GmbH - More Images+ 42

Münster, Germany

Light Matters: 7 Ways Lighting Can Make Architecture More Sustainable

Sustainable lighting design offers various well-being and environmental benefits in addition to economic advantages for clients and users. Although daylight provides a free lighting source,  for most spaces the amount and time of daylight is not sufficient and electrical lighting is necessary. A focus on sustainability becomes essential for minimizing energy consumption and improving the quality of life. Even though efficiency has significantly increased with LED technology, electrical lighting is still more widely used. Often the ambition for renovations or new applications goes along with a higher quantity of lighting instead of finding a better lighting quality with an adequate amount of energy.

Read on after the break for Light Matters’ 7 fundamental steps to achieve sustainable lighting.

Lanserhof Tegernsee / ingenhoven architects

Lanserhof Tegernsee / ingenhoven architects - More Images+ 12

Who Will Design Our Smart Cities? (Hint: Not Architects)

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Originally published by Metropolis Magazine as "Big Data, Big Questions", this article by Alex Marshall examines what is arguably the most important aspect of smart city design: not how they will be created, but who will create them. He finds that, though an apparently new phenomenon, smart cities are just like their forebears in that they are built primarily by political will, not microprocessors.

Not long ago, I bought a beetle-shaped piece of silicone and metal that slips into my pocket and keeps track of how much I walk. Called a Fitbit One, it’s essentially a glorified pedometer. The device’s shell is jammed with hard- and software that lets it talk to my computer and iPhone. It sends me attaboys! on its tiny screen and, most importantly, the gadget talks with my spouse’s Fitbit, which allows us to compete with each other.

The Fitbit is not on anyone’s list of smart-city phenomena, but I would argue for including it, because it’s changing my relationship with the streets I walk in New York City. It also illustrates the pervasiveness of smart technology, and its limitations. For all its coolness—and it is cool—my device is doing something digitally that had already been done well mechanically, and at a lower price. A lot of the smart-cities technology is like this—it’s changing how we do things, but often not what we do.

Read on for more about the changes brought about - or not brought about - by smart cities after the break

Im Zollhafen 22 / Gatermann + Schossig

Im Zollhafen 22 / Gatermann + Schossig - More Images+ 4

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  7200
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2011

Capricorn House Medienhafen Düsseldorf / Gatermann + Schossig

Capricorn House Medienhafen Düsseldorf / Gatermann + Schossig - More Images+ 10

Centre for Photovoltaics and Renewable Energy / HENN

Centre for Photovoltaics and Renewable Energy / HENN - More Images+ 7

Munich, Germany
  • Architects: HENN
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  12420
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2013

Henkel Asia-Pacific and China / HPP Architects

Henkel Asia-Pacific and China / HPP Architects - More Images+ 11

  • Architects: HPP Architects
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  22100
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2003

Yoo Apartments / Léon Wohlhage Wernik Architekten

Yoo Apartments / Léon Wohlhage Wernik Architekten - More Images+ 3

Hamburg, Germany

Porsche Pavilion at the Autostadt in Wolfsburg / HENN

Porsche Pavilion at the Autostadt in Wolfsburg / HENN - More Images+ 23

  • Architects: HENN
    : Martin Henn, Klaus Ransmayr Paul Langley
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1400
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2012

INCS Zero Factory / KPF

INCS Zero Factory / KPF - More Images+ 19

Nagano, Japan
  • Architects: KPF
    : Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  86000