MVRDV

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MVRDV Wins Competition to Redesign 600ha of Caen

Stretching beyond the natural constraints of Presqu’ile de Caen and into the neighboring towns of Mondeville and Hérouville Saint Clair, MVRDV’s competition-winning vision will transform 600ha of industrial brown fields into a collection of gardens punctuated by a mosaic of urban settlements. This ambition, titled ‘La Grande Mosaique’, is strongly based on respect for the existing structures and defined by small scale interventions that will result in a large scale structure vision for Greater Caen.

The proposal was selected from three submittals by the public development agency SPLA for being, as Caen Mayor Philippe Duron describes, the “most impressive plan”. It was commended by the jury for its “fresh view” on urbanism.

Hongqiao Business District Winning Proposal / MVRDV

Upon recently winning the competition, MVRDV's design for the Hongqiao Business District recently started construction. The plan comprises ten office towers, an underground shopping center, cultural program, parking and a sunken plaza which will bring a more intimate form of urban life into an area currently dominated by large boulevards and urban expressway’s. Located near the fourth busiest airport in all of mainland China, the 4.5ha site is divided into a small northern plot of 8,409 m2 and a larger southern plot. More images and architects' description after the break.

MVRDV's Book Mountain Wins Prestigious Red Dot Design Award

MVRDV’s “mountain of books” in the center of Spijkenisse’s town market square has just been announced as winner of the internationally acclaimed red dot design award for “high quality design” in the Architecture and Urban Design category. The jury selected MVRDV’s Book Mountain from 4,662 entries submitted from 54 countries, lauding the project for its “highly refined detail”.

More information on the building after the break...

Can We Please Stop Drawing Trees on Top of Skyscrapers?

Can We Please Stop Drawing Trees on Top of Skyscrapers? - Image 1 of 4
Peruri 88 / MVDRV. Rendering © RSI-Studio

Tim De Chant is the senior digital editor at NOVA and editor of NOVA Next. He also writes at Per Square Mile, the blog where this article originally appeared.

Just a couple of years ago, if you wanted to make something look trendier, you put a bird on it. Birds were everywhere. I’m not sure if Twitter was what started all the flutter, but it got so bad that Portlandia performed a skit named, you guessed it, “Put a Bird on It.” (“What a sad little tote bag. I know! I’ll put a bird on it.” Etc.)

It turns out architects have been doing the same thing, just with trees. Want to make a skyscraper look trendy and sustainable? Put a tree on it. Or better yet, dozens. Many high-concept skyscraper proposals are festooned with trees. On the rooftop, on terraces, in nooks and crannies, on absurdly large balconies. Basically anywhere horizontal and high off the ground. Now, I should be saying architects are drawing dozens, because I have yet to see one of these “green” skyscrapers in real life. (There’s one notable exception—BioMilano, which isn’t quite done yet.) If—and it’s a big if—any of these buildings ever get built, odds are they’ll be stripped of their foliage quicker than a developer can say “return on investment.” It’s just not realistic. I get why architects draw them on their buildings. Really, I do. But can we please stop?

Find out why it's not a good idea to put trees on skyscrapers, after the break...

The Beam / MVRDV and de Alzua+

The Beam / MVRDV and de Alzua+  - Mixed Use Architecture
© MVRDV

Development corporation ADIM Nord with MVRDV and de Alzua+ have been announced the winners of an urban renewal competition in the French town of Villeneuve d’Ascq. Dubbed ‘The Beam’, the winning proposal will transform a cluster of disused parking lots and a former petrol station into a dense, pedestrianized haven, whose 15,000 square meters of offices, retail space and lodging will hover over the adjacent motorway as a icon of a larger urban regeneration effort for the town center.

More information on The Beam after the break...

Glass Farm / MVRDV

Glass Farm / MVRDV - Urban Design , FacadeGlass Farm / MVRDV - Urban Design , FacadeGlass Farm / MVRDV - Urban Design , Facade, Handrail, Beam, DoorGlass Farm / MVRDV - Urban Design Glass Farm / MVRDV - More Images+ 13

  • Architects: MVRDV
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1600
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2013
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Dip-Tech

Le Monolithe / MVRDV

Le Monolithe / MVRDV - Apartments, FacadeLe Monolithe / MVRDV - Apartments, Facade, CityscapeLe Monolithe / MVRDV - Apartments, Facade, CityscapeLe Monolithe / MVRDV - Apartments, FacadeLe Monolithe / MVRDV - More Images+ 2

  • Architects: MVRDV
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  32500
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2010
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Schöck