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Architects: SAKO Architects
- Area: 2593 m²
- Year: 2024
MONOCHROME in Fukuoka Residential Complex / SAKO Architects
LATTICE in Fukuoka Multi-tenant Building / SAKO Architects
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Architects: SAKO Architects
- Area: 666 m²
- Year: 2022
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Professionals: SAKO Architects
Tsumugu House / Archipatch
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Architects: Archipatch
- Area: 159 m²
- Year: 2021
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Professionals: ASA, Ishihara Kazuyuki Design Laboratory
Gokayama Cross Base / yHa architects
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Architects: yHa architects
- Area: 1069 m²
- Year: 2019
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Professionals: yAt Structural Design Office, LIGHT PLAN, TETUSIN DESIGN, landscape core, kyumeikyo, +1
Tetusin Design Re-use Office / yHa architects
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Architects: yHa architects
- Area: 117 m²
- Year: 2021
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Professionals: EX Works
Carla Juaçaba Studio Wins the AR Emerging Architecture Awards 2018
Brazil-based Carla Juaçaba Studio has been announced as the winner of the AR’s Emerging Architecture Awards 2018 in Amsterdam. The firm will receive a £10,000 prize in recognition of exemplary projects such as their chapel for the Pavilion of the Holy See at the 2018 Venice Biennale, and the Casa Santa Teresa in Rio de Janiero.
The practice was chosen from a shortlist of 14 by a judging panel featuring Spanish architect Ángela García de Paredes of Paredes Pedrosa, finalists of the inaugural 1999 AR Emerging Architecture awards; Indian architect Gurjit Singh Matharoo commended in the 2009 edition; and Ronald Rietveld of Dutch practice RAAAF, winners in 2013.
Contemporary Religious Architecture That Rethinks Traditional Spaces for Worship
Constructing places of worship has always been an intricate practice, managing to detach the human, and release the boundary between body, mind, and spirit. Holy presence has been crucial in designing and constructing sacred places, which is why almost all religious building possessed similar characteristics: grandiosity, monolithic material, natural elements, and a plan that compliments an individual’s circulation through the space. Contemporary religious structures, however, found a way to adapt to the evolution of architecture. Unlike the Gothic or Baroque periods, modern-day architecture does not have a dominant identity. It is, in fact, a combination of postmodernism, futurism, minimalism, and everything in between. Architects have found a way to transform these exclusive, religion-devoted places into structures of spirituality, manifestation, and fascination.
Here is a selection of contemporary religious buildings that prove once again that architects are breaking all boundaries of creativity.
Systems to Incorporate Natural Lighting in Your Projects
There is nothing more rational than taking advantage of natural lighting as a guarantee to improve the spatial quality of buildings, as well as saving energy. The awareness of the finitude of natural resources and the demands for reducing energy consumption has increasingly diminished the prominence of artificial lighting systems, forcing architects to seek more efficient design solutions. With this goal in mind, different operations have been adopted to capture natural light.
These systems can also guarantee excellent spatial properties if projected correctly. Below we have gathered five essential systems for zenithal lighting.
Agri Chapel / Yu Momoeda Architecture Office
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Architects: Yu Momoeda Architecture Office
- Area: 125 m²
- Year: 2016
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Professionals: Modulex, Jun Sato Structural Engineers, AURA CREATE, Yushin Construction
Boulanger Kaiti / MOVEDESIGN
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Architects: MOVEDESIGN
- Area: 138 m²
- Year: 2014
House in Nanakuma / MOVEDESIGN
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Architects: MOVEDESIGN
- Area: 142 m²
- Year: 2013
Shining Deep Well / MOVEDESIGN
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Architects: MOVEDESIGN
- Area: 159 m²
- Year: 2013
Living with Sun Light / MOVEDESIGN
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Architects: MOVEDESIGN
- Area: 154 m²
- Year: 2010