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Architects: Renzo Piano Building Workshop
- Year: 2015
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Manufacturers: UniFor, Astec
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Professionals: Silvano, Studio Giorgetta
Michel Denancé
Valletta City Gate / Renzo Piano Building Workshop
Rue Du Chateau Des Rentiers’ Housing / Explorations Architecture
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Architects: Explorations Architecture
- Area: 1400 m²
- Year: 2014
La Sucriere / Z Architecture
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Architects: Z Architecture
- Area: 10991 m²
- Year: 2011
When One Size Does Not Fit All: Rethinking the Open Office
Workplace design has undergone a radical transformation in the last several decades, with approximately seventy percent of today’s modern offices now converted to open plans. However, despite growing concerns over decreases in worker productivity and employee satisfaction, the open office revolution shows no sign of slowing down. The open office model has proliferated without regard for natural differences in workplace culture, leading to disastrous results when employees are forced into an office that works against their own interests. If we are to make offices more effective, we must acknowledge that ultimately, design comes out of adapting individual needs for a specific purpose and at best, can create inviting spaces that reflect a company’s own ethos.
Eiffel Tower’s First Floor Refurbishment / Agence Moatti-Rivière
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Architects: Agence Moatti-Rivière
- Area: 4260 m²
- Year: 2014
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Manufacturers: Bellapart, Roschmann Group
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Professionals: SETE
Critical Round-Up: Renzo Piano's Harvard Art Museums
With the opening of the Harvard Art Museums a week ago today, Renzo Piano was able to finally complete on a project which, in various guises, has been in progress for seventeen years. The relationship between Piano and Harvard began with a 1997 plan to build a new branch of the Fogg Museum on the Charles River and ended, after objections from locals and then the 2008 recession, in the decision to consolidate the university's three museums (The Fogg, Busch-Reisinger and Arthur M Sackler Museums) under one roof.
With its long history, restricted space, the listed facade of the original Fogg Museum and the ultimate difficult neighbor in Le Corbusier's Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, the Harvard Art Museums project was inevitably going to cause a fuss on completion. So how did Piano do? Find out what the critics said after the break.
Harvard Art Museums Renovation and Expansion / Payette + Renzo Piano Building Workshop
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Architects: Payette, Renzo Piano Building Workshop
- Area: 204000 ft²
- Year: 2014
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Manufacturers: Goppion, Zone Display Cases, Thrislington Cubicles
In Defense of Rewarding Vanity Height
Recently, ArchDaily editors received an interesting request from an anonymous Communications Director of an unnamed New York firm, asking us “In your reporting, please do not repeat as fact, or as "official," the opinion that One World Trade Center in New York will be the tallest building in the United States.” He or she goes on to explain that the decision maker who 'announced' the building as the tallest in the US, the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH), is not officially endorsed by the AIA or the US Government, and that while their work is beneficial for architecture and cities as a whole, their criteria for height evaluation are flawed and have been criticized by many in the industry.
The desire to have the tallest building in a city, country or even the world goes back to at least the medieval period, when competing noble families of Italian hill towns such as San Gimignano would try to out-do each other's best construction efforts (jokes about the Freudian nature of such contests are, I imagine, not much younger). Perhaps the greatest symbol of this desire is the decorative crown of the Chrysler Building, which was developed in secret and enabled the building to briefly take the prize as the world's tallest, much to the surprise and ire of its competitors at the time.
With this competitive spirit apparently still very much alive, I thought it might be worthwhile to address the issue raised by our anonymous friend.
Critical Round-Up: The 2014 RIBA Stirling Prize Shortlist
The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) has now announced the six projects that form this year's Stirling Prize Shortlist, the award that is the ultimate prize for any British building. As the RIBA's most publicly prominent award, the Stirling Prize is often a prime demonstration of the tension between architecture that is widely appreciated by the general populace, and that which is lauded by architectural critics and practitioners.
This year is no exception, with perhaps the country's highest-profile project in years - the Shard - just part of the controversy. What did the critics make of the RIBA's selection? Find out after the break.
RIBA Announces 2014 Stirling Prize Shortlist
The RIBA has announced the six projects that will compete for the 2014 Stirling Prize, the award for the building that has made the greatest contribution to British architecture in the past year. The six nominees will now be judged head to head for British architecture's highest honour, based on "their design excellence and their significance in the evolution of architecture and the built environment," with a winner announced on October 16th. See the full shortlist after the break.
Terrasson's Library / Architecture Patrick Mauger
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Architects: Architecture Patrick Mauger
- Area: 1932 m²
- Year: 2011
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Professionals: Synesthésie, OTCE
ZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU
- Area: 6500 m²
- Year: 2013
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Professionals: AUA Paul Chemetov, SA Paysage, HERVE SA
Boucicaut / MG-AU / Michel Guthmann Architecture et Urbanisme
- Year: 2013
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Professionals: CMB, Deschamps - Lathu, E. Grenon et Fils, Garrigues, HERVE SA, +1
Renzo Piano-Designed Residential Tower Planned to Neighbor the Shard
Sellar Property Group has announced plans to commission yet another Renzo Piano-designed tower in London at the base of The Shard. Replacing the current Fielden House, a 1970s office building located on London Bridge Street, the new 27-story residential tower plans to provide 150 apartments, retail space and roof garden. As part of the area’s regeneration plan, the project will be the third Piano-designed building on the block.
Marie Paradis Gymnasium / Explorations Architecture, Igrec Ingénierie
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Architects: Explorations Architecture, Igrec Ingénierie
- Area: 1950 m²
- Year: 2013
Lardy Sports Hall / Explorations Architecture
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Architects: Explorations Architecture
- Area: 3000 m²
- Year: 2012
Development Banks of the Meurthe / Atelier Cite Architecture
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Architects: Atelier Cite Architecture
- Area: 20000 m²
- Year: 2012
54 logements ZAC Seguin Rives de Seine / PHD Architectes
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Architects: Philippe Dubus Architectes
- Area: 4005 m²
- Year: 2010