Luc Boegly

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LESS / AAVP Architecture

LESS / AAVP Architecture - More Images+ 19

  • Architects: AAVP Architecture
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  5004
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Aquilon, JMF77

Goh Lanno School / Studio 02 Architectes

Goh Lanno School  / Studio 02 Architectes - More Images+ 12

Pluvigner, France
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  600
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2015
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Technal, Pavigrés

BNL-BNP Paribas Headquarters / 5+1AAAlfonsoFemiaGianlucaPeluffo

BNL-BNP Paribas Headquarters / 5+1AAAlfonsoFemiaGianlucaPeluffo - More Images+ 27

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  75000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Skyfold, Estel

The French International School of Beijing / Jacques Ferrier Architecture

The French International School of Beijing / Jacques Ferrier Architecture - More Images+ 23

Beijing, China
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  19000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Gerflor, TECSOM
  • Professionals: Agence TER

COP22 Village / OUALALOU+CHOI

COP22 Village / OUALALOU+CHOI  - More Images+ 14

  • Architects: OUALALOU+CHOI
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  93000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  IASO, Serge Ferrari
  • Professionals: OUALALOU+CHOI

CEMEX Building Award Finalists 2016 International Edition

For the International Edition of the CEMEX Building Award 2016, 62 finalists from 20 different countries in North America, South America, Asia and Africa will compete in 5 main categories and and 4 special prize categories. The award, given by CEMEX— the Mexican multinational building materials company—recognizes the best architecture and construction projects that highlight innovation aesthetic and constructive uses of concrete.

The projects that are now set to compete at a global level range from a cultural center in Poland to a school and Spain and even a dam in the US. See this year's finalists below and see the previous winners here.

The Gardens of Gabriel / Atelier(s) Alfonso Femia

The Gardens of Gabriel / Atelier(s) Alfonso Femia - More Images+ 36

Asnières-sur-Seine, France

High School with international sections of Noisy-le-Grand/Bry-sur-Marne / Ateliers 2/3/4/

High School with international sections of Noisy-le-Grand/Bry-sur-Marne / Ateliers 2/3/4/ - More Images+ 23

Noisy-le-Grand, France

The Claude Bernard Overpass / DVVD Engineers Architects Designers

The Claude Bernard Overpass / DVVD Engineers Architects Designers - More Images+ 8

Hipark Hotel / Manuelle Gautrand Architecture

Hipark Hotel  / Manuelle Gautrand Architecture - More Images+ 20

Paris, France

33 New and Rehabilitated Housing Units / Antonini + Darmon Architectes

33 New and Rehabilitated Housing Units / Antonini + Darmon Architectes - More Images+ 12

La Mantilla / Jacques Ferrier architecture

La Mantilla / Jacques Ferrier architecture - Retail , Facade
© Luc Boegly

La Mantilla / Jacques Ferrier architecture - More Images+ 16

Marseilles Docks / 5+1AAAlfonsoFemiaGianlucaPeluffo

Marseilles Docks / 5+1AAAlfonsoFemiaGianlucaPeluffo - More Images+ 24

Yidian Office Complex / Jacques Ferrier Architecture

Yidian Office Complex / Jacques Ferrier Architecture - More Images+ 17

Cultural Center in Baud / Studio 02 Architectes

Cultural Center in Baud / Studio 02 Architectes - More Images+ 17

Nanterre Co-Housing / MaO architectes + Tectône

Nanterre Co-Housing / MaO architectes + Tectône - More Images+ 21

Nanterre, France

Tech, Big Data, and the Future of Retail Design

With the rise of the internet, old-fashioned brick-and-mortar stores have struggled, as online ordering services have increasingly made it unnecessary to actually go to a store. The answer for the physical stores of the future? Make spaces not for purchasing the things people need, but experiencing the things people want, as explored in this article by Matt Alderton originally published on Autodesk's Redshift publication as "How Technology and Big Data in Retail Are Shaping Store Designs of the Future." Alderton looks at how forward-looking stores are being designed to appeal to customers, finding that the same technology revolution that threatened to make stores obsolete might also play a key role in saving them, too.

Shopping used to be stimulating. Although its end was sales, its means was a mix of status and spectacle. It was social commerce in which partakers transacted not just cash, but also cachet.

Nowhere was this more evident than in the earliest department stores, whose architects designed them to be destinations. In London, for instance, Harrods boasts the motto “Omnia, Omnibus, Ubique”—Latin for “All Things for All People, Everywhere.” Established in 1849, it has seven floors, comprising more than 1 million square feet across more than 330 departments. The store installed one of the world’s first escalators in 1898, opened a world-famous food hall in 1902, and sold exotic pets such as lion cubs until the 1970s.

Tech, Big Data, and the Future of Retail Design - More Images+ 4

Le Serpentin Refurbishment / Agence RVA

Le Serpentin Refurbishment / Agence RVA - More Images+ 18