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Architects: Fragmentos
- Area: 1000 m²
- Year: 2018
Fernando Guerra | FG+SG
Fernando Guerra has been a pioneer in the way architecture is photographed and divulged. Fifteen years ago, he opened studio FG+SG together with his brother, and both are responsible in large part for the diffusion of Portuguese contemporary architecture in the last fifteen years.
Campo de Ourique 70 Building / Fragmentos
Planar House / studio mk27
Wifaq Sport Center / Groupe3 Architectes
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Architects: Groupe3 Architectes
- Area: 7000 m²
- Year: 2015
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Manufacturers: Trend Group, AQUAPANEL, Armstrong Ceilings, Florim, Gerflor, +3
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Professionals: Atelier Bertrand Houin
PUMP Gyms / NOZ Arquitectura
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Architects: NOZ Arquitectura
- Area: 1250 m²
- Year: 2013
micasa vol.C / studio mk27
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Architects: Marcio Tanaka, Studio MK27 - Marcio Kogan
- Area: 230 m²
- Year: 2018
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Manufacturers: Rothoblaas, Carpinteria estruturas de madeira, Hunter Douglas, brigato esquadrias, idarti, +1
Bauman Corporate / Studio Arthur Casas
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Architects: Studio Arthur Casas
- Area: 9444 m²
- Year: 2017
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Manufacturers: Clamon, Grupo Prando, Herança Cultura, Oikos Group, Sysbuilding
Guelmim Airport / Groupe3 Architectes
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Architects: Groupe3 Architectes
- Area: 9000 m²
- Year: 2018
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Manufacturers: Eurocoustic Saint Gobain, Lakhssas Morocco, PMS alüminyum, PMS alüminyum (http://www.pmsaluminyum.com), Rockfon, +2
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Professionals: Atelier Bertrand Houin
Pasqua House / studio mk27
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Architects: Carolina Castroviejo, Diana Radomysler, Elisa Friedmann, Studio MK27 - Marcio Kogan
- Area: 572 m²
- Year: 2016
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Manufacturers: Carl Hansen, Dpot, Franccino Giardini, Granitorre, Knoll International, +6
Residence in Colares / Frederico Valsassina Arquitectos
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Architects: Frederico Valsassina Arquitectos
- Area: 333 m²
- Year: 2013
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Manufacturers: panoramah!®
Damião de Góis Museum and the Victims of the Inquisition / spaceworkers
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Architects: spaceworkers
- Area: 175 m²
- Year: 2017
Carrara House / Mário Martins Atelier
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Architects: Mário Martins Atelier
- Area: 400 m²
- Year: 2017
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Manufacturers: Duravit, Grohe, Saint-Gobain, Chainlight, Chainligt, +6
St. Ovídio Chapel By Álvaro Siza Through The Lens Of Fernando Guerra
A pure volume, slightly lit, sits in the middle of a garden. It is a private chapel in Quinta de St. Ovídio in Lousada, built between 1989 and 2001 and designed by Álvaro Siza Vieira. The project starts from a path, where you can see the prismatic white volume from afar. As you pass through the building and some steps, you arrive at the entrance square. Here you will notice that Siza differentiated the main facade, in stone, from the other three, in white painted concrete, giving it importance.
Villa G / GAAP studio associati
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Architects: GAAP studio associati
- Area: 520 m²
- Year: 2016
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Professionals: Studio Renato Pellizzari, Basso Arredamenti, Soc. 74 Costruzioni Assimpresa
Is Religious Architecture Still Relevant?
Some of the greatest architectural works throughout history have been the result of religion, driven by the need to construct spaces where humanity could be one step closer to a higher power. With more people choosing a secular lifestyle than ever before, are the effects that these buildings convey—timelessness, awe, silence and devotion, what Louis Kahn called the “immeasurable” and Le Corbusier called the “ineffable”—no longer relevant?
With the Vatican’s proposal for the 2018 Venice Biennale, described as “a sort of pilgrimage that is not only religious but also secular,” it is clear that the role of "religious" spaces is changing from the iconography of organized religion to ambiguous spaces that reflect the idea of "spirituality" as a whole.
So what does this mean? Is there still a key role for spirituality in architecture? Is it possible to create spaces for those of different faiths and those without faith at all? And what makes a space "spiritual" in the first place?
Praia da Torre / Sidney Quintela Architecture + Urban Planning
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Architects: Sidney Quintela Architecture + Urban Planning
- Area: 468 m²
- Year: 2017
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Manufacturers: LEIKEN KITCHEN I MARCENARIA, LUZ E SOM, MEGA BOX
Why Designing a Person's Home is the Most Challenging, Thrilling Task an Architect Can Face
This article was originally published by Common Edge as "Why Homes Are the Original Architecture."
Homes may be the most powerful projection of architectural value. Because shelter is essential for all of us, the home is architecture’s universal function. We’re all experts on what our own home must be, to us.
But architects often have a different view of home. Twenty years ago—during the recession before the last recession—I remember hearing an architect declare that he could earn a living designing houses until “real work came along.” Another architectural meme is the classic first job: designing a house for your parents.
Ma Yansong: “Some People May Say My Work Is Futuristic, But I See It as Traditional”
With the unconventional, undulating forms of his buildings—and the fact that his path to architectural success included a stint working for Zaha Hadid—Ma Yansong is often miscategorized as an architect of the latter generation of Deconstructivists, interested only in futuristic forms that push the boundaries of technology for the sake of innovation as an end in itself. But in fact Ma’s designs, especially those in his home country of China, are deeply rooted in nature and tradition, as he explains in the latest interview from Vladimir Belogolovsky’s “City of Ideas” series.