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HQ Architects: The Latest Architecture and News

What Will Post-Pandemic Performance Venues Look Like?

What Will Post-Pandemic Performance Venues Look Like? - Featured Image
Grand Junction Rendering.. Image Courtesy of HWKN Architecture

Metropolitans take pride in their storied cultural venues, the chroniclers of intellectual acumen and architectural achievement. While these icons revel in their ornate design, immersive grandiosity, and dramatic acoustics, the pandemic has introduced numerous challenges to the rules of assembly.

Recognizing changes in the rituals of attending a show—from procession and gathering to engagement—architects and cultural leaders are designing the next generation of performance venues while asking the question: How does architecture solve issues raised by a building’s inherent purpose? Is it possible to maintain the essence of a venue through gentle yet effective changes in people’s habits? The answers seem to rely on updating the auditorium culture (which dates as far back as the Colosseum) with contemporary design solutions rooted in new technologies.

Fein 1 Central / HQ Architects

Fein 1 Central / HQ Architects - Interior Photography, Apartments, FacadeFein 1 Central / HQ Architects - Interior Photography, ApartmentsFein 1 Central / HQ Architects - Exterior Photography, ApartmentsFein 1 Central / HQ Architects - Interior Photography, Apartments, FacadeFein 1 Central / HQ Architects - More Images+ 29

  • Architects: HQ Architects
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  6400
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2021

Tel Aviv's New Skyline Brings Residential Density

Tel Aviv's New Skyline Brings Residential Density - Image 4 of 4
Harugei Malchut by HQ Architects

With the completion of the citywide light-rail expected in 2020, connecting Tel Aviv’s city center to neighboring Ramat Gan, Ramat HaHayal, Bat Yam, Jaffa, and Givatayim brings a new wave of residential architecture to transform the skyline. The city of Tel Aviv boasts the highest land value in the Middle East, and with this new connectivity it is only projected to increase demand and value.

The city Tel Aviv is deemed a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its collection of over 4,000 Bauhaus and Eclectic Architecture-style builds. The original city plan was made in 1925 by Sir Patrick Geddes, and is about to witness a significant shift. To promote density, the “TAMA 38” policy gives developers the opportunity to add additional units and floors in exchange for updating the existing units and infrastructure.

HQ's Blooming Flowers React to the Presence of Pedestrians

Shade isn't hard to find in Jerusalem's Vallero Square, thanks to these giant urban flowers designed by HQ Architects that bloom in the presence of pedestrians. "Warde," as the installation is called, is a set of four inflatable flowers at the entrance of the city's market square and adjacent tram station that "open up" whenever pedestrians walk by or the tram is approaching.