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Architects: EXarchitects
- Area: 65 m²
- Year: 2012
Housed en Adra / EXarchitects
Redondeado / Carolina González Vives
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Architects: Carolina Gonzalez Vives
- Year: 2014
Situation Room / MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY
Marc Fornes & THEVERYMANY has constructed a light-weight, ultra-thin self-supported shell structure augmented by artist Jana Winderen’s engineered sounds at the Storefront for Art and Architecture in New York City. Now on view through November 21, the “Situation Room” presents itself, as Storefront describes, "a vibrating sound experiment that that aims to transform architecture into animated sensible form."
“The overall form is an aggregate of twenty spheres of incremental diameters, combined to create an envelope of experiential tension, a sort of sublime dialogue between the comfort of the known and an uneasy interaction with the unknown,” described Fornes. “The resultant morphology resonates with a series of distributed transducers and lighting sources playing out through streams of porosity derived from structural stress flows across the elements.”
More images and information about the “Situation Room,” after the break.
Vivienda Unifamiliar En Santa Ponça / GEO Arquitectos
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Architects: GEO Arquitectos
- Area: 700 m²
- Year: 2013
World Photo Day: Miguel de Guzmán by Carlos Arroyo
In honor of World Photo Day (August 19th) ArchDaily wanted to thank the photographers who bring to life the projects that we publish every day. So we asked architects to weigh in on the work of some of our most-appreciated architecture photographers. Here, Carlos Arroyo writes on behalf of Miguel de Guzmán.
SALES ODDITY by Andrés Jaque, Silver Lion for Research at the Venice Biennale
By the late 1960s, two dynamics were shaping a new urban reality in Italy: on the one hand, TV was heavily influencing Italian society, becoming an intrinsic part of daily life; on the other, the social tension resulting from student protests and accelerated immigration had begun to impact cities in a chaotic way. These dynamics paved the way for Milano Due, a new town on the outskirts of Milan, which promised a new, idyllic type of urbanism.
The complex, although traditional in appearance with its red pitched roofs, put into practice modern concepts: its 2,600 apartments, which had access to amenities for education and entertainment, were arranged around a giant artificial garden/lake and were connected via an elevated circulation system. Below ground, the complex housed the studios of the first private TV channel in Italy, a fact that would shape the lives of the inhabitants of Milano Due and eventually all of Italian society.
This interesting urban phenomena is analyzed by Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation in “SALES ODDITY: Milano 2 and the Politics of Direct-to-Home TV Urbanism,” a project that was part of the Monditalia section at the Venice Biennale and was awarded the Silver Lion for the Best Research Project. According to the jury “The project presents critically a fundamental aspect of modern societies: how the power of media occupies other social spaces, both physically and politically. It is based on innovative research combining surveys and interviews with planners and residents and re-appropriation of the mass media language. While based on an Italian case, this issue is present in many international contexts dominated by contemporary technological and neo-liberal cultures.”
Dossier, trailer, and more photos of the project by Miguel de Guzmán, after the break:
SALES ODDITY. Milano 2 and the Politics of Direct-to-Home TV Urbanism
by Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation
Medialab-Prado / Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
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Architects: Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
- Year: 2008
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Manufacturers: VALMIERA GLASS
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Professionals: Mecanismo, Úrculo Ingenieros
The EU Mies van der Rohe Architecture Award and The Future of European Architecture
ArchDaily is pleased to announce our partnership with the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture - Mies van der Rohe Award. The following is an essay from Constructing Europe by Pedro Gadanho, member of the 2013 Prize jury.
When one wants to consider the future of any form of activity, one is tempted to extrapolate trends from current conditions. One translates signs from the present onto the shape of things to come. The conditions of a given moment, however, may be too circumstantial, and one should be particularly aware of their transient nature. This is the dilemma one obviously faces when considering ‘the future of European architecture’.
At the time the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture - Mies van der Rohe Award commemorates its 25th anniversary, the European project from which this Prize emanates – and to which it owes its symbolic meaning and promoting purpose – is itself at a crossroads.
In between austerity measures, the South and North divide, growing unemployment, a feeling of impoverishment and insecurity, and the apparent unsustainability of the Welfare State model, which had given the region prosperity after World War II, Europe itself seems to be facing a pivotal, if transient moment.
San Lucas Pavilion / FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol
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Architects: FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol
- Area: 110 m²
- Year: 2013
Biblioteca Angel Gonzalez / Carlos de Riaño Lozano
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Architects: Carlos de Riaño Lozano
- Year: 2010
Tupper Home / Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation
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Architects: Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation
- Year: 2007
Sports Hall at C.P. Pablo Iglesias / Planta 33 Arquitectura
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Architects: Planta 33 Arquitectura
- Area: 830 m²
- Year: 2011
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Professionals: Construcciones San Luis 32, Cypsa, GV 408
High Speed Villena Station / COOTAR
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Architects: COOTAR
Casa Encuentro, A house in the Desert of Tabernas / Carlos Arroyo Arquitectos
AJ Releases Shortlist for 2014 Woman Architect of the Year
Architects’ Journal has just released the shortlist for theirWomen in Architecture Awards, which aim to "raise the profile of women architects in a sector where women still face an alarming degree of discrimination."
Christine Murray, Editor of Architects’ Journal, commented:“I’m delighted to announce this year's shortlist, which includes the women behind the celebrated Library of Birmingham, the new Stonehenge development and the Giant's Causeway visitor centre. The awards celebrate design excellence and leadership — qualities needed to succeed as an architect — and especially among women, who are under-represented in the construction industry.”See the list, after the break.