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Showing posts from March, 2002

Metro Stops

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Metro Stops in Hanover, Germany by Despang Architekten, 2000   The following text is excerpted from Phyllis Richardson's Big Ideas, Small Buildings , published in 2001 by Thames & Hudson, for Despang Architekten 's Metro Stops in Hanover, Germany. "Urban space is not always treated very kindly," says Martin Despang, whose firm won a competition to design thirteen tram platforms and waiting facilities for the new D-South urban-rail line in Hanover. In a "holistic approach" to the functional, technical and economic parameters, Despang created a system of vertical rectangular blocks that could be covered in a range of materials, and to which could be added the structure's individual "attire". [The architect] conceived different claddings and finishings in response to each facility...

Mitchell-DeCario House

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Mitchell-DeCario House in Galiano Island, Canada by Stephanie Forsythe Todd MacAllen Architecture, 1998 The following text and images are by Stephanie Forsythe Todd MacAllen Architecture for their design of the Mitchell-DeCario House on Galiano Island, British Columbia, Canada. This long narrow house consists of a series of rooms arranged along a hallway which has a gallery on one side and a library on the other. Following the shape of a natural stone plinth, the house is slightly kinked. The shape is perceived in the gallery/hallway as a transition from the public spaces of the house to the private areas. The kink also affects views and the way south light enters. Sunlight bounces off wood and white plastered surfaces and renders soft indirect light onto the artwork. Ever shifting splashes of reflected color (yellow, blue, green, pink ...

LOOK UP

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LOOK UP in Gelsenkirchen, Germany by Anin + Jeromin + Fitilidis & Partner Based in Gelsenkirchen, Germany, the young advertising agency LOOK UP looked to the Dusseldorf-based firm Anin + Jeromin + Fitilidis & Partner to design their headquarters near Essen. The simple, rectangular building, composed primarily of concrete and glass, was the second building completed in the industrial redevelopment area. Light and heavy, clear and opaque, the box fits into the industrial landscape while providing an identity for the ad agency. The rectangular box is violated only by the entry stair, which connects the first two of the three office floors, and two cantilevered concrete balconies. Production spaces are contained on the ground floor, a heavy base with few punched openings in the poured-in-place concrete. "Creativity zones...

2281 NW Glisan

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2281 NW Glisan in Portland, Oregon by Allied Works Architecture The following text and images are by Brad Cloepfil's Portland, Oregon-based firm Allied Works Architecture . Featured is 2281 NW Glisan, a mixed-use project, also in Portland. The more particular the act of architecture, the greater the resonance created by it. When a building establishes a strong position, a determined sense of inclusion and exclusion, it can clarify a moment in history. The 2281 NW Glisan Building is an urban in-fill project incorporating office and retail spaces with a penthouse apartment. A taut skin of glass, metal mesh, and stone tile wraps the neutral structural grid. Floor to ceiling glass on two exposures maximize the available light while the mesh panels serve as sunscreens and rails for operable doors. The building asserts a simple volume...