Miran Kambič

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Incorporating Fire in External Projects: Tips and Examples for Fireplaces

Incorporating Fire in External Projects: Tips and Examples for Fireplaces - Image 1 of 4Incorporating Fire in External Projects: Tips and Examples for Fireplaces - Image 2 of 4Incorporating Fire in External Projects: Tips and Examples for Fireplaces - Image 3 of 4Incorporating Fire in External Projects: Tips and Examples for Fireplaces - Image 4 of 4Incorporating Fire in External Projects: Tips and Examples for Fireplaces - More Images+ 12

Yuval Noah Harari points out that, around 300 thousand years ago, Homo erectus, Neanderthals, and ancestors of Homo sapiens already used fire daily. According to the author of the international bestseller “Sapiens,” fire created the first significant gap between man and other animals. "By domesticating fire, humans gained control of an obedient and potentially limitless force." Some scholars even believe that there is a direct relationship between the advent of the habit of cooking food (possibly due to the domestication of fire) and the shortening of the intestinal tract and growth of the human brain, which allowed human beings to develop and create everything we now have.

The Laundry Room as an Unnecessary Luxury (or Where to Place the Washer in the Modern Home?)

In residential architecture, there have always been central, indispensable spaces and peripheral spaces more easy to ignore. When designing a home, the task of the architect is essentially to configure, connect, and integrate different functions in the most efficient way possible, necessarily prioritizing some spaces over others. And although today many are designing in ways that are increasingly fluid and indeterminate, we could say that the bedroom, bathroom, and kitchen are the fundamental nucleus of every house, facilitating rest, food preparation, and personal hygiene. Then meeting spaces and other service areas appear, and with them lobbies, corridors, and stairs to connect them. Each space guides new functions, allowing its inhabitants to perform them in an easier and more comfortable way.

However, fewer square meters in the bathroom could mean more space for the living room. Or, eliminating some seemingly expendable spaces could give more room for more important needs. In an overpopulated world with increasingly dense cities, what functions have we been discarding to give more space to the essentials? Here, we analyze the case of the laundry room, which is often reduced and integrated into other areas of the house to give space for other functions.

Rubikum For Three Apartment / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE

Rubikum For Three Apartment / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - Interior Photography, Apartments, Facade, DoorRubikum For Three Apartment / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - Interior Photography, ApartmentsRubikum For Three Apartment / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - Interior Photography, Apartments, Door, Column, ChairRubikum For Three Apartment / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - Interior Photography, Apartments, Kitchen, Door, Table, Chair, CountertopRubikum For Three Apartment / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - More Images+ 15

Ljubljana, Slovenia

What Types of Residential Floors Favor Wheelchair Circulation?

What Types of Residential Floors Favor Wheelchair Circulation? - Image 1 of 4What Types of Residential Floors Favor Wheelchair Circulation? - Image 2 of 4What Types of Residential Floors Favor Wheelchair Circulation? - Image 3 of 4What Types of Residential Floors Favor Wheelchair Circulation? - Image 4 of 4What Types of Residential Floors Favor Wheelchair Circulation? - More Images+ 16

One of the most important design considerations that residential architects have the responsibility to address is accessibility, ensuring that people with disabilities can comfortably live at home without impediments blocking basic home functionality. Accessibility for wheelchair users is a particularly important architectural concern due to unalterable spatial, material, and other requirements necessitated by wheelchair design and use. Because guaranteeing the comfort of all users, including disabled users, is one of the most essential obligations of all architects, designing for wheelchair users must be done with utmost the attention and care, especially in residential environments. Below, we delineate several strategies for designing floors for wheelchair circulation, helping architects achieve this goal of maximum comfort and accessibility.

Recycled Materials Journey Through Factories and Collecting Facilities

Recycled and reused materials continue to grow as a more attractive alternative in the construction field. They are at most times a coveted sustainable substitute to conventional building materials, offering a financially resourceful solution when appropriately sourced and implemented. Aside from saving up on raw material costs, establishing recycling facilities or factories might present a good opportunity to generate jobs within a local setting (collecting, handling). The recycling process might also be used as a gateway to lower energy consumption, with some plants eventually generating their own power through specific material transformation techniques (Heat generated power). 

Recycled Materials Journey Through Factories and Collecting Facilities  - Image 1 of 4Recycled Materials Journey Through Factories and Collecting Facilities  - Image 2 of 4Recycled Materials Journey Through Factories and Collecting Facilities  - Image 3 of 4Recycled Materials Journey Through Factories and Collecting Facilities  - Image 4 of 4Recycled Materials Journey Through Factories and Collecting Facilities  - More Images+ 6

Mirrors in Architecture: Possibilities of Reflected Space

Humans have used mirrors since as early as 600 BCE, employing highly polished obsidian as a basic reflective surface. Over time, people began to use small pieces of gold, silver, and aluminum in a similar manner, both for their reflective properties and for decoration. By the 1st century CE, people had started using glass to make mirrors, but it was only during the European Renaissance that Venetian manufacturers began making mirrors by applying metallic backings to glass sheets, remaining the most common general method of mirror manufacturing today. Since then, mirrors have continued to play both a decorative and functional role in architecture, serving a clean, modern aesthetic despite its ancient origins. Below, we investigate how mirrors are made, provide a brief history of mirrors in architecture, and offer several tips for architects looking to use mirrors in their designs.

Which Materials are Easiest to Recycle?

The construction industry is responsible for 75% of the consumption of earth's natural resources. Stone, sand, iron, and many other finite resources are extracted in huge quantities to supply the markets. Additionally, construction sites themselves generate enormous quantities of waste, whether through construction, demolition, or remodeling. In Brazil, for example, construction waste can represent between 50% and 70% of the total mass of municipal solid waste [1]. This waste often ends up in landfills and dumps rather than being properly disposed of, overwhelming municipal sanitation systems and creating informal disposal sites.

House For Simple Stay / Skupaj Arhitekti + mKutin arhitektura

House For Simple Stay / Skupaj Arhitekti + mKutin arhitektura - Exterior Photography, Houses Interiors, Garden, Facade, DoorHouse For Simple Stay / Skupaj Arhitekti + mKutin arhitektura - Interior Photography, Houses Interiors, Kitchen, Countertop, SinkHouse For Simple Stay / Skupaj Arhitekti + mKutin arhitektura - Interior Photography, Houses Interiors, Kitchen, Facade, Beam, Table, Lighting, ChairHouse For Simple Stay / Skupaj Arhitekti + mKutin arhitektura - Exterior Photography, Houses Interiors, Garden, Facade, Door, ChairHouse For Simple Stay / Skupaj Arhitekti + mKutin arhitektura - More Images+ 10

House for a Ceramic Artist / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE

House for a Ceramic Artist  / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - Interior Photography, Houses, Kitchen, Beam, Table, Lighting, ChairHouse for a Ceramic Artist  / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - Interior Photography, Houses, Door, FacadeHouse for a Ceramic Artist  / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - Exterior Photography, Houses, Courtyard, Facade, DoorHouse for a Ceramic Artist  / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - Exterior Photography, Houses, Facade, DoorHouse for a Ceramic Artist  / ARHITEKTURA / OFFICE FOR URBANISM AND ARCHITECTURE - More Images+ 17

Ljubljana, Slovenia

15 Details of Metal Structures and Facades for Residential Projects

The use of steel in both the past and present is mainly associated with the success of grand industrial and civic structures. But due to the commercialization and standardization of steel profiles, its use in residential projects (thanks to its mechanical properties and fast installation) has resulted in complex and interesting solutions on a domestic scale.

Dive into these 15 construction details from residential projects that have made use of steel structures and cladding. 

Walk-in Showers Without Doors or Curtains: Design Tips and Examples

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Because it doesn't include a bathtub, or require doors, screens, or curtains, the walk-in shower often makes bathrooms appear larger, cleaner, and more minimalist. 

However, some precautions must be taken when designing them. Most importantly, the shower cannot be left completely open, even if it appears to be at first glance. Most designs incorporate a tempered glass that prevents water from "bouncing" out of the shower space, subtly closing the area. When this transparent division doesn't have a frame, the appearance of fungi due to accumulation of water and moisture becomes less likely.

Koper Central Park / Enota

Koper Central Park / Enota - Park, GardenKoper Central Park / Enota - Park, GardenKoper Central Park / Enota - ParkKoper Central Park / Enota - Park, GardenKoper Central Park / Enota - More Images+ 28

  • Architects: Enota
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  26000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Ares
  • Professionals: Nom biro, Spicy Garden

Termalija Family Wellness / Enota

Termalija Family Wellness / Enota - Wellness Interiors, GardenTermalija Family Wellness / Enota - Wellness Interiors, Courtyard, Facade, Chair, LightingTermalija Family Wellness / Enota - Wellness Interiors, Garden, FacadeTermalija Family Wellness / Enota - Wellness Interiors, FacadeTermalija Family Wellness / Enota - More Images+ 42

  • Architects: Enota
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  8780
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018

Bus Station Velenje / Guzic Trplan arhitekti d.o.o.

Bus Station Velenje / Guzic Trplan arhitekti d.o.o. - Bus Station, FacadeBus Station Velenje / Guzic Trplan arhitekti d.o.o. - Bus Station, FacadeBus Station Velenje / Guzic Trplan arhitekti d.o.o. - Bus StationBus Station Velenje / Guzic Trplan arhitekti d.o.o. - Bus Station, FacadeBus Station Velenje / Guzic Trplan arhitekti d.o.o. - More Images+ 8

Skorba Village Center / Enota

Skorba Village Center / Enota - ChapelSkorba Village Center / Enota - Chapel, GardenSkorba Village Center / Enota - Chapel, Garden, FacadeSkorba Village Center / Enota - Chapel, FacadeSkorba Village Center / Enota - More Images+ 20

  • Architects: Enota
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  300
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Franc Černelč, Miran Fekonja, Štefan Topolovec

Wellness Plesnik / Enota

Wellness Plesnik / Enota - Hotels, Bedroom, Beam, ChairWellness Plesnik / Enota - Hotels, LightingWellness Plesnik / Enota - Hotels, Garden, Facade, ColumnWellness Plesnik / Enota - Hotels, Facade, Stairs, Handrail, Countertop, ChairWellness Plesnik / Enota - More Images+ 22

  • Architects: Enota
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  560
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2015
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  JUB, Metalglas, Sentiotec
  • Professionals: Elea IC, Elin, Nom biro

Life After Madrid / Arhitektura d.o.o.

Life After Madrid / Arhitektura d.o.o.  - Apartment Interiors, Bathroom, Door, BenchLife After Madrid / Arhitektura d.o.o.  - Apartment Interiors, Table, LightingLife After Madrid / Arhitektura d.o.o.  - Apartment Interiors, Chair, TableLife After Madrid / Arhitektura d.o.o.  - Apartment Interiors, Kitchen, CountertopLife After Madrid / Arhitektura d.o.o.  - More Images+ 12

  • Architects: Arhitektura d.o.o.
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  51
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  VELUX Group, Matej Štefanac, Rex Kralj

Office Building Podkriznik – “Propulsion” / Superform

Office Building Podkriznik – “Propulsion” / Superform - Office Buildings, Facade, FenceOffice Building Podkriznik – “Propulsion” / Superform - Office Buildings, Garden, FacadeOffice Building Podkriznik – “Propulsion” / Superform - Office Buildings, FacadeOffice Building Podkriznik – “Propulsion” / Superform - Office Buildings, Garden, FacadeOffice Building Podkriznik – “Propulsion” / Superform - More Images+ 8

Municipality of Nazarje, Slovenia
  • Architects: Superform
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1400
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2015
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  AJM, Doorson, REFLEX d.o.o