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Alternative Ways for Architects to Architect

The more architecture students that I converse with, the more I hear this common dissent amongst them: “I don’t want to become an architect.” Despite participating in long studio hours for a five-year professional degree, somehow very few peers actually want to become the kind of architects that create buildings.

Aside from the conventional alternatives of interior or graphic design, there is a rising trend in the popularity of firms that use architectural skills for beyond the scope of designing luxury condominiums for wealthy clients. For prospective architects (and current ones), below are examples of firms that may not be what one initially imagines to do with their degree, but a taste of the potential of what they can.

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AD Classics: Grundtvig's Church / Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint

This article was originally published on July 28, 2016. To read the stories behind other celebrated architecture projects, visit our AD Classics section.

Six million yellow bricks on a hilltop just outside Copenhagen form one of the world’s foremost, if not perhaps comparatively unknown, Expressionist monuments. Grundtvigs Kirke (“Grundtvig’s Church”), designed by architect Peder Vilhelm Jensen Klint, was built between 1921 and 1940 as a memorial to N.F.S. Grundtvig – a famed Danish pastor, philosopher, historian, hymnist, and politician of the 19th century.[1] Jensen Klint, inspired by Grundtvig’s humanist interpretation of Christianity, merged the scale and stylings of a Gothic cathedral with the aesthetics of a Danish country church to create a landmark worthy of its namesake.[2]

It was decided in 1912 that Grundtvig, who had passed away in 1873, had been so significant to Danish history and culture that he merited a national monument. Two competitions were held in 1912 and 1913, bringing in numerous design submissions for statues, decorative columns, and architectural memorials.[3]

AD Classics: Grundtvig's Church / Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint - Landmarks & Monuments, Column, Arcade, Arch, Door, Chair, BenchAD Classics: Grundtvig's Church / Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint - Landmarks & Monuments, Facade, ArchAD Classics: Grundtvig's Church / Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint - Landmarks & Monuments, Door, Facade, Arch, ArcadeAD Classics: Grundtvig's Church / Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint - Landmarks & Monuments, Column, Arcade, Arch, FacadeAD Classics: Grundtvig's Church / Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint - More Images+ 13

Homes for All - Dortheavej Residence / Bjarke Ingels Group

Homes for All - Dortheavej Residence / Bjarke Ingels Group - Social Housing, Beam, Facade, Table, Lighting, ChairHomes for All - Dortheavej Residence / Bjarke Ingels Group - Social Housing, FacadeHomes for All - Dortheavej Residence / Bjarke Ingels Group - Social Housing, Stairs, Facade, Handrail, Beam, DoorHomes for All - Dortheavej Residence / Bjarke Ingels Group - Social Housing, Facade, Balcony, HandrailHomes for All - Dortheavej Residence / Bjarke Ingels Group - More Images+ 19

Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  6800
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Contiga, HB Trapper

The New Noma by Bjarke Ingels Group Opens to the Public

Bjarke Ingels Group has designed a cluster of buildings as the new home for Noma, one of the world’s most acclaimed restaurants. Situated between two lakes within the community of Christiania in Copenhagen. Built on the site of an ex-military warehouse once used to store mines for the Royal Danish Navy, the project is imagined as an intimate culinary garden village. With interiors completed in collaboration with Studio David Thulstrup, the project dissolves the restaurant’s individual functions into a collection of separate yet connected buildings.

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NOMA 2.0 / BIG

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Andres Gallardo Captures Copenhagen's Surreal and Colorful Geometric Forms

Andres Gallardo Captures Copenhagen's Surreal and Colorful Geometric Forms - Featured Image
© Andres Gallardo

Andres Gallardo's ongoing Urban Geometry series captures unique forms, colors, and shadows of modern architecture of various cities. The project is a personal one for Gallardo, as it has been a long-term photo series that has accompanied him throughout his journey in becoming a professional photographer, displaying his development and evolution as he captures the architectural beauty of cities such as Beijing, Helsinki, Seoul, and Copenhagen.

Below is the Copenhagen chapter of the series, a visual poem that allows us to see the city in new ways. Through flowing line and bright bursts of color, Gallardo displays an almost surreal version of the city, where the jagged forms and smooth curves of its modern architecture have replaced human presence.

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Youth Housing, Nansensgade / Christensen & Co. Architects

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  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  600
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Troldtekt, Alucobond, 412, Copper, Natural, +1

Helmet House / Werkt Studio

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Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Architects: Werkt Studio
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  192
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Investwood, Sika, ELEVATE, VELUX Group, Velfac

LEGO House and Bicycle Snake Honored in 2018 Danish Design Awards

Bjarke Ingels Group’s LEGO House and DISSING + WEITLING’s Bicycle Snake have been recognized by the 2018 Danish Design Awards, an initiative which “highlights the impact and value of design, celebrates companies and designers across the country and showcases the difference their solutions make to industry, everyday life, and society at large.”

The LEGO House was victorious in the “Feel Good” category, while the Bicycle Snake was awarded the “Icon Award.”

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Lundgrens / Årstiderne Arkitekter

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  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  3000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Andreu World, ADEA, ADEA Furniture, Anour, Arper, +14
  • Professionals: Over Byen Arkitekter

New Photographs Explore BIG’s Waste-to-Energy Plant as Ski Slope Roof is Installed

Photographer Aldo Amoretti has captured new images of one of 2018’s most awaited projects, as the BIG designed Amager Bakke Waste-to-Energy Plant takes shape in Copenhagen, complete with an SLA-designed park and ski slope. The images show to the completed power plant, which opened in March 2017, while work progresses on the 170,000-square-foot (16,000-square-meter) park and ski slope that will cap the scheme.

Initially master planned by BIG, the unique design seeks to reclaim a typically unused element of a building for the public through the introduction of the nature-filled program. During summer months, the SLA-designed rooftop activity park will provide visitors with hiking trails, playgrounds, fitness structures, trail running, climbing walls, and of course, incredible views. In the winter, the park will be joined by over 1,640 feet (500 meters) of ski slopes designed by BIG.

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OMA’s Ellen van Loon on the Influence of Casa da Música in Her Latest Project, BLOX

On Saturday, at the opening of her latest building, Ellen van Loon sat on the terrace of BLOX in Copenhagen exuding the satisfaction and fulfillment that comes with finishing a major public building. A day of opening activities concluded, van Loon spoke with ArchDaily about the 27,000-square-meter mixed-use building. Built for client Realdania, it’s the Danish Architecture Center’s new home on the edge of the harbor, located on an incredibly challenging site that is bifurcated by a busy street.

BLOX / OMA / Ellen Van Loon

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  • Architects: OMA
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  28000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018

OMA's Ellen van Loon Discusses the Firm's New Danish Architecture Center

Louisiana Channel has released a new video interview with Ellen van Loon, the Dutch “design duchess” of OMA. In the interview, available to watch below, van Loon discusses the concept of “architectural contamination” behind OMA's new mixed-use "BLOX" scheme, home of the Danish Architecture Center in Copenhagen.

Van Loon discusses the process of “re-invention” needed for the scheme’s realization, in terms of both function and location. Situated on an old brewery site, the scheme seeks to embed architects and visitors in their own field of study, “placing them in the center of the building, which meant they would contaminate all other functions.”

Elephant House / Foster + Partners

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Copenhagen, Denmark

The Waterfall / BIG + Cobe

Danish firm COBE has released images of their proposed aquatic center in Copenhagen Harbor, a scheme entered for a design competition which was won by Kengo Kuma. The proposal, designed in collaboration with Bjarke Ingles Group (BIG), formed part of COBE’s competition-winning masterplan for Paper Island, which was chosen for development in 2016.

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C.F. Møller Wins Competition for Active-Learning School in Copenhagen

In May 2017, C.F. Møller and Tredje Natur’s interactive education design won the New Islands Brygge School competition. The new education facility sets up innovative, sustainable and active spaces for sixth to ninth grade students to participate in experience-based learning.

C.F. Møller Wins Competition for Active-Learning School in Copenhagen - Dining HallC.F. Møller Wins Competition for Active-Learning School in Copenhagen - Dining HallC.F. Møller Wins Competition for Active-Learning School in Copenhagen - Dining HallC.F. Møller Wins Competition for Active-Learning School in Copenhagen - Dining HallC.F. Møller Wins Competition for Active-Learning School in Copenhagen - More Images+ 19

Kengo Kuma & Associates Reveal Plans for New Aquatics Centre on Copenhagen's Waterfront

Kengo Kuma & Associates, led by Yuki Ikeguchi partner in charge, have recently won a competition to design a new waterfront cultural centre as part of the masterplan for Copenhagen’s Paper Island. The unique cone shaped form will combine facilities for sports associations, harbour baths and an indoor/outdoor pool along the edge of the main canal. In a press release from Copenhagen City they praised the project on the connection created between land and sea, fulfilling Copenhagen’s vision of a new addition to Paper Island. Kengo Kuma & Associates' proposal was up against strong competition from BIG, 3XN Architects, AART Archtitects + Cubo Arkitekter and ALA Architects + Studio Octopi.

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