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Pavilion: The Latest Architecture and News

Hypar Pavilion / Diller Scofidio + Renfro + FXFOWLE

Hypar Pavilion / Diller Scofidio + Renfro + FXFOWLE - Pavilion, Handrail, FacadeHypar Pavilion / Diller Scofidio + Renfro + FXFOWLE - Pavilion, Table, Chair, LightingHypar Pavilion / Diller Scofidio + Renfro + FXFOWLE - Pavilion, Garden, Facade, CityscapeHypar Pavilion / Diller Scofidio + Renfro + FXFOWLE - Pavilion, Table, ChairHypar Pavilion / Diller Scofidio + Renfro + FXFOWLE - More Images+ 3

A Canopy and a Pavilion at Porte des Lilas / Matthieu Gelin & David Lafon

A Canopy and a Pavilion at Porte des Lilas / Matthieu Gelin & David Lafon - Public Architecture, Fence, Facade, BenchA Canopy and a Pavilion at Porte des Lilas / Matthieu Gelin & David Lafon - Public Architecture, FacadeA Canopy and a Pavilion at Porte des Lilas / Matthieu Gelin & David Lafon - Public Architecture, FacadeA Canopy and a Pavilion at Porte des Lilas / Matthieu Gelin & David Lafon - Public Architecture, Facade, ColumnA Canopy and a Pavilion at Porte des Lilas / Matthieu Gelin & David Lafon - More Images+ 8

A House in Luanda Competition Winner / Pedro Sousa + Tiago Ferreira + Tiago Coelho + Bárbara Silva + Madalena Madureira

A House in Luanda Competition Winner / Pedro Sousa + Tiago Ferreira + Tiago Coelho + Bárbara Silva + Madalena Madureira - Featured Image
Courtesy of Pedro Sousa + Tiago Ferreira + Tiago Coelho + Bárbara Silva + Madalena Madureira

A couple of weeks ago, we featured the winners of the House in Luanda: Patio and Pavilion Competition promoted by the Lisbon Architecture Triennale together with Luanda Triennale. Now, we can have a better look at the winning proposal, designed by the team of Pedro Sousa, Tiago Ferreira, Tiago Coelho, Bárbara Silva, and Madalena Madureira.

More images and architect’s description after the break.

Simpson Park Hammock Pavilion / Oppenheim Architecture + Design

Simpson Park Hammock Pavilion / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Pavilion, Garden, Arch, Facade, Column, ForestSimpson Park Hammock Pavilion / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Pavilion, Garden, Facade, Door, ForestSimpson Park Hammock Pavilion / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Pavilion, Garden, Fence, Facade, Handrail, Balcony, ArchSimpson Park Hammock Pavilion / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Pavilion, Garden, Door, Facade, Chair, ForestSimpson Park Hammock Pavilion / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - More Images+ 13

  • Architects: Oppenheim Architecture: Oppenheim Architecture + Design
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  300 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2009

Solar Decathlon: Lumenhaus / Virginia Tech

Solar Decathlon: Lumenhaus / Virginia Tech - Featured Image
Courtesy of Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech garnered the first price for LUMENHAUS, their design of cutting edge responsive architecture. The 10-day inaugural Solar Decathlon Europe competition featured 17 inventive designs from around the world. The competition challenged the designs to “clearly demonstrate that solar houses can be built without sacrificing energy efficiency or comfort, and that they can be both attractive and affordable.”

Designed as a modern day pavilion and inspired by Mies Van der Rohe’s Farnsworth house, the LUMENHAUS successfully created open flowing spaces connecting occupants visually to their surrounding environment.  More photographs and a detailed description about LUMENHAUS following the break.

Lightwave / AnL Studio

Lightwave / AnL Studio - Image 3 of 4
Courtesy of AnL Studio

The Parklands, South Bank, Brisbane, Australia, has played host to Lightwave, a sensory light installation at the Unlimited festival. At 10m x 16m x 5.5m, Lightwave is not just a sculpture or an art piece, but an object that can be interacted with, like a large animated toy or hybrid living creature—glowing and pulsing by the river. The design by AnL Studio was intended to provoke conversations about using contemporary parks as a performative public space. By offering a new and unexpected experience between people and the object (displayed art), or between nature and the (artificial) object, Lightwave responds in a purposefully dynamic and playful way, engaging and inviting public participation. The object is responsive to the new environment, therefore generating a new pattern into the place and time. More explanation and photographs of Lightwave following the break.

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Architects: AnL Studio Location: Brisbane, Australia Project Architects: Keehyun Ahn and Minsoo Lee Prototyping Design/Interactive Consultant : Rory Nugent, Andy Doro Project Management: Laing O’Rourke, Byte Logic Curator: Creativesight, Hassell Electrical Engineers and Lighting/Interactive Consultants: Webb Australia Structural engineer: OPUS Cost Planning: Mitchell Brandtman Building Certification: Certis Surveying: LandPartners Construction and Construction Management: Laing O’Rourke Project Year: 2010 Photographs: Courtesy of AnL Studio Interactive Fabrication: Watthouse, Zenith, Xenian, CTI, Imaginus Fabrication: Flow Force, Heyday Landscaping: Dig It, South Bank Corporation, Concrete Supply: Boral

Brittlebush / Simon De Aguero

Brittlebush / Simon De Aguero - Image 10 of 4
Courtesy of Simon De Aguero

Brittlebush was developed as a design-build experience for Simón De Agüero, graduate student, designer, and project manager. The design is an experimental desert dwelling for winter residents at Taliesin, the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture. Simón envisioned the design to be an open-air living space with protective roof and walls for the sleeping area.

Approximately 90% of the steel in the project was salvaged from the school scrap yard; 100% of the rammed earth for the walls was from the school property; 100% of the wood used for the formwork was salvaged from onsite renovation waste.

Follow the break for more images and information about Brittlebush.

Architect: Simon De Aguero Location: Scottsdale, Arizona, United States Assistant Project Manager: Erik Krautbauer Project Year: 2010 Photographs: Simon de Aguero & Saskia Jorda

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Video: The Brochstein Pavilion at Rice University

Last year we featured the Brochstein Pavilion designed by Thomas Phifer & Partners and The Office of James Burnett. Since then, the pavilion has received a National AIA Award, a National ASLA Honor Award and the ASU Architectural Citation. Today, we’d like to share with you a video that The Office of James Burnett made about the pavilion. Enjoy!

Lincoln Park Zoo South Pond / Studio Gang Architects

Lincoln Park Zoo South Pond / Studio Gang Architects - Image 28 of 4
Courtesy of Studio Gang Architects

The project transforms a picturesque urban pond from the 19th century into an ecological habitat buzzing with life. With the design’s improvements to water quality, hydrology, landscape, accessibility, and shelter, the site is able to function as an outdoor classroom in which the co-existence of natural and urban surroundings is demonstrated.

Architect: Studio Gang Architects Client: Lincoln Park Zoo Project Area: 4 acres Project Year: 2010 Photographs: Beth Zacherle and Studio Gang Architects

Rietveld Pavilion at the Kröller-Müller Sculpture Garden / Gerrit Rietveld

Rietveld Pavilion at the Kröller-Müller Sculpture Garden / Gerrit Rietveld - Pavilion, Garden, Facade, DoorRietveld Pavilion at the Kröller-Müller Sculpture Garden / Gerrit Rietveld - Pavilion, Garden, Door, FacadeRietveld Pavilion at the Kröller-Müller Sculpture Garden / Gerrit Rietveld - Pavilion, Garden, Facade, Handrail, ArchRietveld Pavilion at the Kröller-Müller Sculpture Garden / Gerrit Rietveld - Pavilion, Garden, FacadeRietveld Pavilion at the Kröller-Müller Sculpture Garden / Gerrit Rietveld - More Images+ 7

Sukkah City Design Competition proposal / UGO architecture and design

Sukkah City Design Competition proposal / UGO architecture and design - Image 7 of 4
Courtesy of UGO architecture and design

After the H3Ar split earlier this year, Hugon Kowalski founded UGO architecture and design, and he shared with us his proposal for the Sukkah City Design Competition in New York. More images and architect’s description after the break.

Flockr Pavilion / SO-IL

Flockr Pavilion / SO-IL - Pavilion, Facade, CityscapeFlockr Pavilion / SO-IL - Pavilion, Facade, CityscapeFlockr Pavilion / SO-IL - Pavilion, FacadeFlockr Pavilion / SO-IL - Pavilion, FacadeFlockr Pavilion / SO-IL - More Images+ 7

Beijing, China

Bamboo Shelter by Esan Rahmani + Mukul Damle

Bamboo Shelter by Esan Rahmani + Mukul Damle - Image 6 of 4
© Esan Rahmani + Mukul Damle

Australian designer Esan Rahmani in collaboration with Mukul Damle have designed “Bamboo Pavillion”, a synthesis of sustainable ideas for a communal shelter for the disadvantaged around the Indian Ocean Rim.

Focusing on readily available materials in the region, the whole pavillion is designed to be made from bamboo. Bamboo’s extraordinary physical characteristics make is suitable for all types of structures including roofing, water pipes, drainage, flooring. This along with smart joinery means that there is little need for any other materials.

Encants Market / JDS Architects

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© JDS Architects

For JDS Architects Encants Market in Barcelona, the firm employs their conventional strong geometry to create an open market place. The occupiable roof measures 7 meters in thickness and contains about half of the market’s activity (the other half occurs between the roof and the parking level). Inside, a ramp brings visitors to ground level, echoing the same circulation ideas found in Frank Lloyd Wright’s New York Guggenheim. From ground level, the open sides of the market create a feeling of permeability, allowing easy access for those passing by.

More images after the break.

KOSHO / Studiometrico

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© Studiometrico

New York’s Sukkah City competition was a great success, as both the winning entries and the other proposals developed creative and thoughtful spaces. Check out Studiometrico’s proposal for the competition which is more of a do-it-yourself sukkah. People can build their own space using a triangular module that folds over itself to provide a sheltered condition. Interested in the actual construction of the sukkah, the studio built a 1:1 scale prototype to test its feasibility and decided to present the idea to the Citizens of New York by telling the story of how it was built once upon a time, in a hypothetical place, by three imaginary boys.

More images and information about the sukkah, including a short video after the break.

B(h)uis / Hoogte Twee Architecten

B(h)uis / Hoogte Twee Architecten - Image 2 of 4
© Hoogte Twee Architecten

Netherlands-based Hoogte Twee Architecten shared with us their project B(h)uis, a small pavilion built with PVC tubes. More images and architect’s description after the break.

The Hollow / Visiondivision

The Hollow / Visiondivision - Image 12 of 4
© Visiondivision

Recently, we shared Visiondivision’s Cancer City project – if you haven’t seen it, be sure to check it out as the firm’s fresh outlook results in a new kind of landscape for the animals. Moving from designing a new metropolis for crayfish, the architects have switched gears for their latest project to create a sukkah for an annual Jewish harvest festival. The proposal is part of the New York competition for Sukkah City (be sure to view the finalists here), which asked participants to re-imagine the temporary pavilion by developing new methods of material practice and parametric design. For Visiondivison’s proposal, the organic pavilion changes the conditions for social interaction and behavior within a simplistic structure of compression.

More images and more about the proposal after the break.

French Pavilion at the Venice Biennale

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© Patricia Parinejad

Photographer Patricia Parinejad shared with us some photos of the French Pavilion at the Venice Biennale designed by Dominique Perrault Architecture. You can see more images after the break.