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The Voss Law Center by Charles Todd Helton, Architect in The Woodlands, Texas

Monday, May 3rd, 2021

The building is a 7,200 square foot renovation/addition, in which we converted a typical residence into a New Orleans style Law office. It features two stories, with large balconies on the front elevation, and a center courtyard complete with brick pavers and a live oak tree as the focal point. It sits on a site on the Interstate 45, in The Woodlands, Texas.

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

  •     Architects: Charles Todd Helton, Architect
  •     Project: The Voss Law Center
  •     Location: The Woodlands, Texas
  •     Total Size: 7,200sqft
  •     Completed:   2011

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

 

Provided by Charles Todd Helton, Architect

Wencheng Forest Oxygen Bar Town Parlor in Wenzhou, China by GLA Design

Friday, April 24th, 2020

Article source: GLA Design

Surrounded by mountains, a large roof, more than 100 meters long and more than 30 meters wide, lies on one side of the mountain, leaning on a hillside about 300 meters high, and facing the west and the provincial road. In the settlement villages on the other side of the mountain, the residential houses lean against the mountain, and the eaves are cascaded. This is Xikeng Town, Wencheng County. As one of the four ethnic towns in Zhejiang, it has strong customs of She people. This large roof is Wencheng Forest Oxygen Bar Town Parlor.

As a national key ecological function zone, Wencheng has a forest coverage rate of 72.3% and abundant tourism resources. In addition to the natural landscapes such as Tongling Mountain Gorge, Baizhang Waterfall and Yanmen Grand Canyon, the Xikeng Town where the project is located also has such humanistic landscapes as Liu Ji’s hometown, Anfu Temple, and the folk customs of She people. This project, as a window to show the image of the town and the general situation of the town, integrates the functions of exhibition, reception, conference, tourism service and distribution. The total area of the project is about 10800 square meters, of which 5500 square meters of the basement is the distribution parking lot.

Image Courtesy © Yao Li

  • Architects: GLA Design
  • Project: Wencheng Forest Oxygen Bar Town Parlor
  • Location: Wenzhou, China
  • Photography: Yao Li

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Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara Receive the 2020 Pritzker Architecture Prize

Wednesday, March 11th, 2020

Chicago, IL (March 3, 2020) – Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara of Dublin, Ireland, have been selected as the 2020 Pritzker Prize Laureates, announced Tom Pritzker, Chairman of The Hyatt Foundation, which sponsors the award that is known internationally as architecture’s highest honor.

“Architecture could be described as one of the most complex and important cultural activities on the planet,” remarks Farrell. “To be an architect is an enormous privilege. To win this prize is a wonderful endorsement of our belief in architecture. Thank you for this great honor.”

Urban Institute of Ireland
Urban Institute of Ireland, photo courtesy of Ros Kavanagh

As architects and educators since the 1970s, Farrell and McNamara create spaces that are at once respectful and new, honoring history while demonstrating a mastery of the urban environment and craft of construction. Balancing strength and delicacy, and upholding a reverence of site-specific contexts, their academic, civic and cultural institutions, as well as housing developments, result in modern and impactful works that never repeat or imitate, but are decidedly of their own architectural voice.

“For their integrity in their approach to both their buildings, as well as the way they conduct their practice, their belief in collaboration, their generosity towards their colleagues, especially as evidenced in such events as the 2018 Venice Biennale, their unceasing commitment to excellence in architecture, their responsible attitude toward the environment, their ability to be cosmopolitan while embracing the uniqueness of each place in which they work, for all these reasons and more, Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara are awarded the 2020 Pritzker Architecture Prize,” states the 2020 Jury Citation, in part.

“Within the ethos of a practice such as ours, we have so often struggled to find space for the implementation of such values as humanism, craft, generosity, and cultural connection with each place and context within which we work. It is therefore extremely gratifying that this recognition is bestowed upon us and our practice and upon the body of work we have managed to produce over a long number of years,” says McNamara. “It is also a wonderful recognition of the ambition and vision of the clients who commissioned us and enabled us to bring our buildings to fruition.”

Their native Ireland, an island replete with mountains and cliffs, informs their acute sensitivities to geography, changing climates and nature in each of their sites. Their buildings consistently remain purposefully rich, yet modest, enhancing cities and lending to sustainability while responding to local needs. University Campus UTEC Lima (Lima, Peru 2015) is located on a challenging site with a highway sunk in a ravine on one side and a residential neighborhood on the other. The result is a vertical and cascading building responding to both site and climatic needs. Its open spaces were designed to deliberately welcome cooling breezes of the ocean and minimize the need for air-conditioning. At the Offices for the Department of Finance (Dublin, Ireland 2009), the selection of local limestone used in thick panels grants strength to the building. Windows recessed or flush with the façade have grills below them to circulate fresh air throughout the building. Exposures on all sides of the building, atypical of the architecture in this city, offer panoramic views.

University Campus UTEC Lima
University Campus UTEC Lima, photo courtesy of Iwan Baan

Université Toulouse
Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, School of Economics, photo courtesy of Dennis Gilbert 

The architects are continuously conscious of the dialogue between the internal and external, evidenced by the mingling of public and private spaces, and the meaningful selection and integrity of materials. “What we try to do in our work is to be aware of the various levels of citizenship and try to find an architecture that deals with overlap, that heightens your relationship to one another,” illustrates Farrell. Universita Luigi Bocconi (Milan, Italy 2008) fosters community between its occupants and the vibrant city that extends well beyond the vertical campus through its ground floor public space, which continues indoors, and its floating canopy that overlaps the ground below, engaging passersby with students. Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, School of Economics (Toulouse, France 2019) features brick buttresses, ramps and courtyards, which are metaphors for the city filled with bridges, walls, promenades and stone towers. North King Street Housing (Dublin, Ireland 2000) is intentionally void of external design elements to resonate with the restraint of the neighboring warehouses.“The collaboration between Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara represents a veritable interconnectedness between equal counterparts,” states Pritzker. “They demonstrate incredible strength in their architecture, show deep relation to the local situation in all regards, establish different responses to each commission while maintaining the honesty of their work, and exceed the requirements of the field through responsibility and community.”

Town House Building, Kingston University
Town House Building, Kingston University, photo courtesy of Ed Reeves

Farrell and McNamara have mastered proportion to maintain a human scale and achieve intimate environments within tall and vast buildings. “They have tried, with considerable success, to help us all overcome what is likely to evermore become a serious human problem,” explains Justice Stephen Breyer, Jury Chair. “Namely, how do we build housing and workplaces in a world with over half of its population dwelling in urban environments, and many of them who cannot afford luxury?” A contoured theater floor at the Solstice Arts Centre (Navan, Ireland 2007) creates a physical nearness between audience members and performers.

The generous placement of open spaces, windows, glass curtain walls and exposed ceilings allows natural light to filter through a passage of rooms, creating impressions of light through large and small spaces, and within the interlocking areas that compose Institut Mines Télécom in Palaiseau (Paris, France 2019).McNamara states, “Architecture is a framework for human life. It anchors us and connects us to the world in a way which possibly no other space-making discipline can.” Farrell continues, “At the core of our practice is a real belief that architecture matters. It is a cultural spatial phenomenon that people invent.”The pair established Grafton Architects in 1978 in Dublin, where they continue to practice and reside. In just over forty years, they have completed nearly as many projects, located in Ireland, the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Peru.Farrell and McNamara are the 47th and 48th Laureates of the Pritzker Prize, and the first two recipients from Ireland.

CyberНouse in Russia by Architectural bureau MODERN HOUSE

Sunday, March 1st, 2020

Article source: Architectural bureau MODERN HOUSE

Architectural bureau MODERN HOUSE with its chief architect Alex Wizhevsky from Russia developed a home for those who want to survive a zombie apocalypse.

The presentation of the new “Tesla”, presented by Elon Musk in November 22, 2019, caused logical bewilderment for many. The chief architect of the architectural bureau MODERN HOUSE Alex Wizhevsky proposed his own version of the development of events in which the technical and visual solutions of Cybertrack no longer look so far-fetched.

…On one of the secret biological laboratories has occurred a virus leak, that turns people into zombies. It would seem that popular culture has warned about the possibility of such a scenario for decades, but humanity was not ready. The unintelligent but purposeful living dead operate in large groups, ravaging city by city.

Image Courtesy © Architectural bureau MODERN HOUSE

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Power Picket in Texas by NADAAA

Thursday, September 19th, 2019

Article source: NADAAA

The City of Austin has been expanding westward and repurposing industrial sites of the city grid for civic, business and residential programs. As a result, the Seaholm Electrical Substation site, once at the edge of the city of Austin, was being surrounded by new civic interventions including the new Public library, the Shoal Creek park, an urban bikeway, several mixed-use development sites, and the renovated historic Seaholm Power Plant.

Image Courtesy © Casey Dunn

  • Architects: NADAAA
  • Project: Power Picket
  • Location: Texas, USA
  • Photography: Casey Dunn
  • NADAAA: Daniel Gallagher, Nader Tehrani, Jeff Dee, Austin Jarvis, Jonathan Palazzolo, Harry Lowd, John Houser, Arthur Chang, and Sarah Dunbar
  • Consultants:

    • Structural: PE Structural Consultants
    • Civil: Chan & Partners
    • Electrical: Encotech
    • Landscape: Ten Eyck
  • Project Size: 1,400 ft. long wall and integrated urban infrastructure around a 4 acre power station
  • Completion Year: 2018

(more…)

The Elevated Leisure Habitat by jantzen studio

Wednesday, June 26th, 2019

Article source: jantzen studio

The Elevated Leisure Habitat is the first in a series of new kinds of art structures that will function as very special vacation places. They were created to be rented to people who are looking for a completely unique experience.

This specific Elevated Leisure Habitat is meant to accommodate the needs of two people, with larger habitats to come. It consists of a small house and five amenities that are normally associated with a conventional vacation house, but that are normally located adjacent to the house in the surrounding landscape. In this case, the house and the associated amenities have been elevated high above the surrounding landscape at different levels.

Image Courtesy © jantzen studio

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Hannae Forest of Wisdom in Seoul, South Korea by Unsangdong Architects

Sunday, March 10th, 2019

Article source: Unsangdong Architects

Hannae Forest of Wisdom is not a cultural space generated by a big public development project. It was initiated by the idea of a creative space, where people enjoy to inhabit and willing to come back every day. Therefore we improved an abandoned urban space into a unique and attractive space with creative ideas. Development Order is as follow: 1) Requested by Nowon-gu Office as part of the community project 2) There were several options for the site, and through investigation and site analysis, an abandoned fountain space in a neighborhood park was selected 3) Opinion gathered through public hearing 4) Design and development 5) Construction 6) Completion 7) Local committee operates the library, café, and after-school learning class Urban regeneration in Seoul is no longer focused on the city-scale projects that transforms the entire block or the part of the city. Rather it happens through small projects on an abandoned site, through which the local people can reconnect themselves to the society.

Image Courtesy © Yoo Junhwan

  • Architects: Unsangdong Architects (Jang Yoon Gyoo , Shin Chang Hoon)
  • Project: Hannae Forest of Wisdom
  • Location: Seoul, South Korea
  • Photography: Sergio Pirrone
  • Design Team: Choi Soohoon
  • Site Area: 14,382m2
  • Building Area: 37m2
  • Gross Floor Area: 37m2
  • Completion Year: March 2017

(more…)

Antipodes in Bologna, Italy by Francesco Catalano

Tuesday, December 18th, 2018

Article source: Francesco Catalano

In a society that seems to focus on contrasts and move towards opposites Novoceram prefers to celebrate the beauty of opposites with its stand Antipodes for the 2018 edition of the Cersaie, International Exhibition of Ceramics for Architecture and Furnishings for Rooms from Baths, from 24 to 28 September 2018 in Bologna..

Image Courtesy © Francesco Catalano

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Chia Ching Mausoleum in Taipei, Taiwan by Álvaro Siza with CASTANHEIRA & BASTAI ARCHITECTS

Monday, December 17th, 2018

Article source: Álvaro Siza with CASTANHEIRA & BASTAI ARCHITECTS

We climb a gentle path to get there.

We are absorbed by silence as we contemplate this endless and ethereal space.

Again, here function determines the space. Open and endless.

At the centre, the family gathers around the memory of their loved ones.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra|FG+SG – Fotografia de Arquitectura

  • Architects: Álvaro Siza with CASTANHEIRA & BASTAI ARCHITECTS
  • Project: Chia Ching Mausoleum
  • Location: Jin San District, New Taipei City, Taiwan
  • Photography: Fernando Guerra|FG+SG – Fotografia de Arquitectura
  • Client: Chia Ching – Family Lin
  • Collaborators: Francesca Tiri, Luís Trigueiros Reis, João Figueiredo, Erica Musci, Pedro Afonso
  • Portugal Office: CC&CB, Arquitectos
  • Local Architectural Team: WZWX Architecture Group (Stephen Wang, Chiou-Huei Lin, Wen-Wei Cheng, Jianfei Cheng)

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Monument in Montréal, Canada by Blouin Tardif Architecture – Environment

Thursday, December 6th, 2018

Article source: v2com

Located in the heart of the Plateau Mont-Royal district in Montreal, the Monument project explores an architectural orientation that allows the design of bright and open residential spaces in a structure formerly dedicated to manufacturing and warehousing; while ensuring the conservation of the urban heritage in the conversion process.

Image Courtesy © Steve Montpetit

  • Architects: Blouin Tardif Architecture – Environment
  • Project: Monument
  • Location: Montréal, Canada
  • Photography: Steve Montpetit 
  • Client: Monument Immobilier
  • Design Team: Alexandre Blouin, Isabelle Beauchamp, Mathieu Lechasseur, Valérie Proulx, Yoanna Anastassova, Joannie Lussier, Kassandra Bonneville
  • Engineers: Calculatec
  • Project End Date: December 2016

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