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Melbourne Theatre Company

Posted by Fabrik | July 13, 2009

Ashton Raggatt McDougal (ARM) architects completed the design of the Melbourne Recital Center. Rock!

The new home for the MTC is a 500 seat drama theatre, equipped with the latest theatre technology and full back stage facilities. The Sumner Theatre is a single rake house without balcony, providing the very best sight lines to the stage.

The stage, fly and wing configuration will make this one of the best drama facilities in the world. The Lawler Studio is a full rehearsal hall, capable of being used for functions or small performances seating up to 150 patrons. At front of house, there are café, patron lounges and bars.

Viewed at night the exterior of the building is a mesmerizing matrix of glowing tubes, hovering around the black box of the building, reminiscent of the tubing on the Arts Centre spire, but more graphic. More like an illusionistic painting, blurring two dimensional and three dimensional perception. Our design direction has been to draw on the shared traditions of spatial ambiguity that are imbedded in the histories of both architecture and the theatre.

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Freitag New Shop · Berlin

Posted by Fabrik | June 8, 2009

Freitag is now opening at Max-Beer Strasse 3 in Berlin. Here are some impressions of the shop!

www.freitag.ch

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Die Baupiloten

Posted by Fabrik | May 31, 2009

Die Baupiloten - “Play all day”

Die Baupiloten is a colourfull architecture and design studio based in Berlin, focused on the children interaction with the architectural space. Elementary school, kinder garden and another interesting things designed by Die Baupiloten at www.baupiloten.com.

The kids are alright!

Die Baupiloten -  Erika Mann Elementary School II [2006 - 2008]

project details>>>

Die Baupiloten - JFK Auditory [2001 - 2002]

project details>>>

Die Baupiloten - Erika Mann Elementary School I [2002 - 2003]

project details>>>

Die Baupiloten - Kindergarten Traumbaum [2004 - 2005]

project details>>>

Die Baupiloten - Carl Bolle Elementary School [2006 - 2008]

project details>>>

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From Gestalten.Tv

Founded in 2003 by Susanne Hofmann, Baupiloten is a Berlin-based architecture collective that has a unique approach to working with architecture students, giving them the opportunity to apply their creative energy to real life practical experiences. The award-winning studio specialises in realising innovative social design projects such as schools and kindergartens. Featured in one of our new book releases Play All Day: Design for Children, the Erika Mann Elementary School they designed in Berlin proves how innovative architecture can play a significant role in the creative and interactive interplay between students and their environment.

Switch on Gestalten.Tv!

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Ball-Nogues Studio

Posted by Fabrik | May 20, 2009

Ball-Nogues Studio - Maximilian’s Schell [Materials & Applications, 2005]

I’ ve already discovered Ball-Nogues browsing Archinect. It’s a integrated design and fabrication studio formed by Benjamin Ball and Gaston Nogues from Los Angeles. The goal of the studio is to create experimental built environments to enhance and celebrate the potential for social interaction through sensation, spectacle and physical engagement.

Below one of the best project firmed by Ball-Nogues, the “Maximilian’s Schell”: an impressive temporary outdoor installation in the Los Angeles exhibition space of Materials & Applications, warped the flow of space with a featherweight rendition of a celestial black hole.

Hovering over M&A’s courtyard, Maximilian’s Schell was a spectacle the size of an apartment building constructed in tinted Mylar resembling stained glass. The piece functioned as a shade structure, swirling overhead for the entire summer of 2005. The interior of this immersive experimental installation created a beckoning outdoor room for social interaction and contemplation by changing the space, color, and sound of the M&A courtyard gallery.

During the day as the sun passed overhead, the canopy cast colored fractal light patterns onto the ground while a tranquil subsonic drone from the integrated ambient sound installation by composer James Lumb entitled “Resonant Amplified Vortex Emitter” lightly rumbled below the feet of the viewer. When standing in the center or “singularity” of the piece and gazing upward, the visitor could see only infinite sky. In the evening when viewed from the exterior, the vortex glowed warmly while both obscuring and allowing glimpses of the building behind it.

The assembly paid homage to a character played by actor Maximilian Schell in Disney Studio’s forgotten sci-fi adventure The Black Hole. Dr. Reinhardt is a visionary tyrant on a monomaniacal quest to harness the “power of the vortex” and possess “the great truth of the unknown.”

An integration of structure and skin, the vortex behaved as a “minimal surface”: prestressed, always in tension, yet definable mathematically. Its lineage is in the soap film surfaces modeled by Otto in the 1950s and ’60s; a process now typically accomplished using software that performs “finite element” calculations. After receiving hand sketches and computer models made by the designers, membrane engineer Dieter Strobel digitally crafted and refined the minimal surface model. He quickly and precisely manipulated it during the “form-finding” process while accounting for the distorting effects of gravity and enabling the finished vortex-shaped canopy to be in tension everywhere across its top surface. This gave it a pure and smooth appearance, especially when viewed from the exterior. Seen from the interior, the piece resembled an enormous transparent flower with its petals lightly draping and curling downward with gravity.

All the rest about Maximilian’s Schell installation!

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A Ball-Nogues Studio project selection below. Enjoy!

Ball-Nogues Studio - Unseen Current [Extension Gallery, Chicago 2008]

Unseen Current is a navigable billow of fog flowing through Extension Gallery. Three thousand hanging strings or “catenaries” totaling 10 miles in length span between the walls of the gallery in precise arrangements. From a distance, this three dimensional array of catenaries suggests a surface or volume; upon moving to its center, it evokes a rolling fog. To this end, custom software was developed to explore the form of (and generate the plans for) the project. Like a pointillist painting in space inspired by the smoggy sky of Los Angeles, the color of the installation gradates from a rich orange to sky blue.

Architect Philip Johnson’s ethereal hanging-chain window treatments at the Four Seasons Restaurant in New York also served as inspiration for the project. Ball-Nogues “sample” what was essentially a two dimensional decorative motif for Johnson then reinterpret it for their three dimensional modulations in the gallery.

continue>>

Ball-Nogues Studio - Rip Curl Canyon [Rice University Art Gallery, 2006]

Rice Gallery commissioned this installation in collaboration with The Museum Fine Arts in Houston exhibition, The Modern West: American Landscape, 1890-1950. When the Gallery director mentioned a Modern West tie-in before we had settled on an approach to the project we realized that the notion of landscape and geological phenomena dovetailed with our design for Tiffany and Company’s Frank Gehry Jewelry Launch Gala on Rodeo Drive in 2006.

In the Tiffany project, the jewelry maker’s “body as landscape” ad campaign informed our approach to creating laminated cardboard walls and ottomans. At Rice, we expanded the potential of constructing landscapes in cardboard to include the viewer’s physical participation.

We invited visitor exploration by extending the casual social terrain of the campus into the gallery, transforming it into a traversable rolling playground. On any given day one might discover a group of gallery goers studying, snoozing, climbing, sliding down the rolling terrain, or making-out in one of the darkened recesses below the cardboard surface.

All the rest abou the project!

Ball-Nogues Studio - Liquid Sky, PS1 [Contemporary Art Center, 2007]

The Museum of Modern Art and P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center present an installation in P.S.1’s outdoor courtyard by Los Angeles-based firm Ball-Nogues, led by Benjamin Ball and Gaston Nogues, winner of the eighth annual MoMA/P.S.1 Young Architects Program. The competition invites emerging architects to propose an installation for the courtyard of P.S.1 in Long Island City, Queens.

The objective of the Young Architects Program is to identify and provide an outlet for emerging young talent in architecture, an ongoing mission of both MoMA and P.S.1. This year, five finalists selected by a closed nomination process were asked to present designs for an installation at P.S.1.

All the rest about “Liquid Sky”!

Below some info about Benjamin Ball and Gaston Nogues..

Benjamin Ball grew up in Colorado and Iowa where his mother’s involvement in theatre proved influential. While studying for his degree at the Southern California Institute of Architecture, Ball logged stints at Gehry Partners and Shirdel Zago Kipnis. Upon graduation, he sought work as a set and production designer for films (including the Matrix series) as well as music videos and commercials with such influential directors as Mark Romanek and Tony Scott. His experience ranges from work on the Disney Concert Hall and small residential commissions for boutique firms to complex medical structures and event design. In his current collaboration with Gaston Nogues, Ball is exploring the intersection of architecture, art and product design through physical modeling and the use of digital and more traditional forms of production. A major goal of his design endeavors is to create experiences; because of this, he feels “a building that is not built is not architecture.”

Gaston Nogues was born and raised in Buenos Aires before moving to Los Angeles at age 12. Frequently accompanying his father to his job as an aerospace engineer, Nogues acquired a fascination with the hands-on process of building. An honors graduate in architecture from SCI-Arc, he moved directly from school into a position at Gehry Partners where he worked in product design and production and became a specialist in creative fabrication. He remained there until 2005 except for a one-year stint in 1996 as an assistant curator at a fine arts publishing house, Gemini GEL. In his current collaboration with Benjamin Ball, Nogues is focused on fabricating what they visualize; on process as it relates to the built object. In his spare time, Nogues builds custom automobiles.

In 2006, Ball-Nogues Studio was awarded the Best of Category distinction for Environments for their installation Maximilian’s Schell by ID Magazine. Ball-Nogues is the recipient of two Los Angeles AIA Design Awards and Interior Design Magazines Best of Year Award for their installation Rip Curl Canyon. In 2007 their installation Liquid Sky was the winner of the Museum of Modern Art / P.S.1’s Young Architect’s Program competition and Ball-Nogues became one three design teams who were awarded a United States Artists Target Fellowship. In 2008 their site specific installation Echoes Converge appeared at the 11th Venice Biennale of Architecture and an exhibit of their work appeared at the Bejing Biennale. The Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles will host a new installation by the team in the summer of 2009. Their work has appeared in publications worldwide including the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Architectural Record, Architectural Digest, Interior Design, Icon, Log 10, Sculpture, and Surface.

All the rest at: www.ball-nogues.com

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Bastard Store [Milano]

Posted by Fabrik | May 12, 2009

Studiometrico - Bastard Store

One of the latest project firmed by the italian design studio “studiometrico” which converted an old cinema in Milan, into the new  Bastard flagship store. The spectacular and hazardous ultimate milan recreative device including an administrative offices and a suspended bowl…enjoy your fly!

The existing building

Designed by engineer Mario Cavallé in the 40’s, Cinema Istria is a cinema theater with an overall surface of 1.400 sqm and an overall volume of 6.600 m³ occupied by the old pit and by a suspended balcony of 350 sqm. The roof of the building is composed by several arches in reinforced concrete.

A 800 square meters ceiling light fixture is suspended under the vault through a steel construction. Although it had been used by its last owner as a car dealer for some years, at the time of our first visit the Cinema theater was still able to show its original character.

For this reason, and for its capacity to satisfy Comvert needs, it has been immediately perceived by designers and clients as a ‘unique place’. In 2006 the Cinema was purchased and in January 2007 the refurbishment started.

The project

studiometrico has first observed and gathered information concerning habits, attitudes and wishes of Comvert employees. These collected data have been drawn up, presented and discussed in several meetings with the aim of defining a desirable and shared idea of ‘working together’. This idea could be translated in facts through the construction of working places that could facilitate a continuous communication between employees. Organizing Cinema Istria as a space and having it equipped with all the necessary infrastructure was extremely complex. Nevertheless the cinema has proved to be an incredibly adapt environment for the realization of architectural places that could respond to those needs that had already been focused on. All the activities that constitute the history, the culture and the world of bastard are put in a continuous physical and visual communication.

Products Depot

In the 15 m tall and huge space of the old pit, against the wall on which the old screen used to lay, the metallic, black painted, two storey structure of the products depot has been placed.

The depot can be accessed from the administrative department or directly from a courtyard - connected with Via Slataper – that lays along one of the sides of the building.

One of the walls of the courtyard is characterized by an enigmatic  graffiti drawing done by artist and skateboarder Lorenzo Fonda. The products depot is the predominant element inside the volume of the pit and it doesn’t just act as a big container for the goods, but, more importantly, it carries and - through an industrial steep staircase attached to its structure - provides access to the bastard Bowl.

Showroom

The lower steps of the balcony have not been modified. The original wooden floor and wooden banisters have been restored and the existing levels have not been adjusted in order to guarantee the access from the curved staircases from the lower foyer and to obtain a free, flexible open space.

These lower steps are mainly used as showroom for the products that are presented to the sales representatives that sell them to more than 300 shops in Italy and abroad. The black-painted removable steel standers can be interchanged with the ones in the bastard Store and are characterized by two little ‘horns’ to recall the Comvert logo designed by studiometrico.

The showroom can be used, from time to time, for informal meetings, video projections, fashion shows to present the collections or, more simply, as a chill-out area.

Bastard Bowl

Suspended at 6m over the products depot, placed in front of the design department, the bastard Bowl is too important not to find a location inside the new headquarter of a company founded by skateboarders. It is the pride, attraction and ‘dream that comes true’ for Comvert partners, employees, friends and team-riders.

The idea of placing this 200 m² bowl on top of the products depot came from the need of saving space and from the desire of establishing a visual and spatial relation with the design department. The bastard Bowl is composed by glue laminated wooden element and steel curved beams, it has been designed by Comvert partners together with the engineer practice Atelier-LC and is a unique case in Italy.

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Photographs by Giuliano Berarducci & studiometrico

All the rest about the project, here, here and here

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The Quik House

Posted by Fabrik | May 1, 2009

Adam kalkin: The Quik House

The  Quik House is a prefabricated kit house designed by Adam Kalkin from recycled shipping. It has three bedrooms and two and one-half baths in its 2,000 square foot plan. The shell assembles within one day at your site, you will have a fully enclosed building. From start to finish, it should take no longer than three months to complete your house.

The  Quik House is 75% recycled materials by weight. Further green options include solar and wind energy sourcing, a green roof system and a super-insulating R-50 system.

The Quik House system includes almost everything from the ground up. The kit comes with six modified containers, stairs, walls, pre-fitted electrical and plumbing systems and aluminum glazing frames. Every project is different and responsibilities are set out in individualized contracts.

www.quik-build.com

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Rojkind Arquitectos

Posted by El Javi | May 1, 2009

The Laboratories for Neslte Company in Queretaro Mexico, recently project for the Mexican Architect Michelle Rojkin.

The center of Querétaro is a World Heritage declared by the UNESCO on 1996, there are some restrictions to build in the city in general, thast why Rojkind Architects decide to re-interpeted some architectural elements, the concept of the arch and the concept of the entrance ” a series of segmented domes” for this industrial project.

As in previous projects, Rojkind paid attention to the skill of the local workforce and rather than fabricating the domes and finishes by a digital fabrication process, he figured out the best geometrical and easiest way to build the “foamy” space by using steel concentric rings.

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Paco

Posted by Fabrik | April 29, 2009

I’ ve already found this crazy modular house browsing hitspaper, one of my preferred japanese blog. Is difficult to have informations about this product but for sure Paco is an “House Cube” produced in Japan with all kind of services. Seems to be a modern camping instrument to enjoy your vacations, that should be confuded for an installation. I love the architectural minimalism, but this time is really extreme!

www.paco.bz