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Posts Tagged ‘Architecture’

The Architecture of Susan Desko — 30 Cheval, Bellevue, Idaho

08 Apr

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho
30 Cheval, Bellevue Idaho, Architect Susan Desko

Last month I had a wonderful opportunity to photograph one of the great unfinished homes of America, 30 Cheval in Bellevue, Idaho.

The house was designed by architect Susan Desko, a local Sun Valley, architect, who was one of the designers who worked on the famous Frank Gehry project, the Lewis House. For those of you who haven’t seen the documentary on Gehry’s work, A Constructive Madness: Wherein Frank Gehry and Peter Lewis Spend a Fortune and a Decade… End Up With Nothing and Change the World, on the Lewis House, definitely check it out. Susan and her work with Gehry are featured in that film.

30 Cheval is a remarkable home that was started but never completed, an unfinished masterpiece in the middle of Idaho. Construction has stopped on the home at this point leaving behind this grand structure high in the mountains of America. Hopefully someday someone will purchase it and finish Susan’s bold designs. The home has spectacular views, especially from the olympic length swimming pool up on the roof cantilevered above the home.

I’ll upload more photos of the home over time, but here are 25 photographs of this amazing property now. Thanks to my pal Scott Jordan for taking me to this fantastical work of art and introducing me to Susan.

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho
Scott’s dog Susie visited the home with us. :)

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho
The Idaho view from the full olympic length swimming pool.

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

30 Cheval, Sun Valley Idaho

Scott Jordan and Susan Desko, Bellevue, Washington, 2013
30 Cheval architect Susan Desko with Scott Jordan and his dog Susie.


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Visionary Videos: 7 Awe-Inspiring TED Talks on Architecture

02 Apr

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

ted architecture

Watch these videos and you will never see built environments in the same way again. Some tackle timeless questions of light, dark and color, while others address emerging technologies and the architectural problems of tomorrow. Skim the descriptions below to decide which you want to view – or take an hour of your day to enjoy them all!

Richard Kelly starts out with Le Corbusier’s modern classic Notre Dame du Haut in Ronchamp, illustrating the amazing plays of light and dark that together make for a deeply spiritual experience of space. He goes on to talk about Richard Kelly, a pioneer of lighting design, who talked in terms of focal glow (space-dominating sources), ambient luminescence (mood lighting) and plays of brilliants (bright points in a dark space). If you have any doubt about the importance of light and color in architectural design, you need to watch this video.

Daniel Libeskind is a designer who preaches what he practices. He abhors neutral and strives for inspirational, emotional, complex, risky, raw and story-telling architecture that both describes but also rises above the times in which it is built. At the same time, he is not a proponent of artistic expression for its own sake, but shows surprising pragmatism – architecture, like the Ground Zero memorial towers, should fit the consensus and respond to the needs of people occupying it.  Whether or not you are a fan of his elaborate Deconstructivist-style monuments and institutions, this talk will help you put one of today’s most energetic architects in context.

Rachel Armstrong proposes self-repairing and evolving metabolic materials that will step beyond design and history. She boldly proposes that sustainability means connecting to nature in a fundamental way: namely, with building blocks that can grow and change. It is more than just a vision, though – she brings actual material developments to the table that defy the inert qualities of familiar concrete, wood and bricks.  These can respond in real time to environmental conditions. Instead of imposing structure upon matter, these concepts, like what they contain, are necessarily dynamic – they will literally grow out of material science in the coming years.

Magnus Larsson has an improbable but grand project in mind, turning bacteria and grains of sand into a sandstone wall that could span the entire continent of Africa.  Each second, one billion grains of sand are created in the world – some become sandstone, but others collect in dunes and deserts. Each day, the Saharan frontier moves a meter forward, taking over human-occupied lands and displacing populations. To reclaim vast and uninhabited areas of the Earth, it only makes sense that we turn the destructive desertification power of sand to our advantage. This proposal would have multiple benefits, reclaiming such spaces, reducing droughts and curbing climate change.

Bjarke Ingels asks how we tell the architectural design stories outside of the finished project, using alternative media (including comic books!) to talk about history, evolution and the avante garde of architecture. If you enjoy offbeat comparisons, visual juxtapositions,  comedic concepts and experimental expression, this is a much-watch video.

Cameron Sinclair was and is an early proponent of open-source architecture to address everyday issues of sustainable global design, from emergency housing and transitional shelter to shipping container infrastructure, straw bale construction, mobile health clinics and more. This talk is now nearly a decade old, but the lessons are just as applicable today, or perhaps more so than ever.

Liz Diller (of Diller + Scofidio) describes architecture as a special-effects machine – beyond basic shelter, it is theatrical in essence. Her work challenges conventions of spatial use and building technology. Notably, she recognizes that her projects are not always easy to capture and display in museum retrospectives – they are about a time, place and experience, for better (and/)or for worse. This video should be a fittingly light-hearted end to these series of somewhat-heavy features.

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A+ Architecture: The World’s Most Dazzling Designs

21 Mar

[ By Steph in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

Architizer Architecture Awards 1

Can modern architecture be accessible – and even alluring – to everyone in the world? Architizer believes that it already is, and the 87 winners of its first annual A+ Awards prove that assertion with a dazzling array of designs ranging from dramatic mountain overlooks to bright, graphic pop-up stores. Chosen by a jury and 150,000 public voters, the A+ Award winners accomplish the blog’s goal of “breaking architecture out of the echo chamber.”

Architizer Architecture Awards 2

The point of the contest is not only to honor the world’s most incredible modern structures, but destroy the idea that architecture is only for a small group of elites. “The mission of the Architizer A+ Awards is to remind everyone in the world that they are fans of architecture, even if they don’t realize it,” says Architizer CEO Marc Kushner. “This year’s winners make our job easy. They are projects where noble ambitions match their formal sophistication – they represent the best architecture from across the globe – and more than one project I had never seen before!”

Architizer Architecture Awards 3

Winners include the Isbjerget apartment complex by JDS Architects, a tapered set of white buildings designed to resemble icebergs in the harbor of Denmark, and the National Tourist Route Trollstigen by Reiulf Ramstad Architects, a plateau between deep fjords in Norway that holds the title of most awards won by a single project.

Architizer Architecture Awards 4

Architizer Architecture Awards 5

Architizer Architecture Awards 6

Among other notable winners are Yayoi Kusama’s pop up store for Louis Vuitton, Dolomitenblick by Plasma Studio, and the Wuxi Grand Theatre by PES-Architects. See them all at Architizer.

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Airborne Architecture: 12 Images of Flying French Houses

08 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Photography & Video. ]

Context – that is the key to taking the ordinary and making it amazing in this series of displaced homes soaring up from forgotten streets of Paris. The results float like an intentionally mundane version of Pixar’s UP, or a modern-day urban Wizard of Oz Tale.

Laurent Chehere picks a range of dwellings, but most are dilapidated and seem perhaps sad in their crowded urban environment. She takes photographs of local buildings, tents and trailers, then photoshops their surroundings into something radically new.

Some are slathered in graffiti – others shown with clotheslines in everyday use. To this, she adds a few whimsical gestures – power lines, strings of lights, earthward ladders and other odds and ends to tie down each piece like a balloon and keep it from floating away.

One consequence of ripping these from the ground and setting them in the sky is simply an enhanced focus on an otherwise-connected building. In these isolating images, townhouses become standalone works, and we start to see them differently.

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Airborne Architecture: 12 Images of Flying French Houses

06 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Photography & Video. ]

Context – that is the key to taking the ordinary and making it amazing in this series of displaced homes soaring up from forgotten streets of Paris. The results float like an intentionally mundane version of Pixar’s UP, or a modern-day urban Wizard of Oz Tale.

Laurent Chehere picks a range of dwellings, but most are dilapidated and seem perhaps sad in their crowded urban environment. She takes photographs of local buildings, tents and trailers, then photoshops their surroundings into something radically new.

Some are slathered in graffiti – others shown with clotheslines in everyday use. To this, she adds a few whimsical gestures – power lines, strings of lights, earthward ladders and other odds and ends to tie down each piece like a balloon and keep it from floating away.

One consequence of ripping these from the ground and setting them in the sky is simply an enhanced focus on an otherwise-connected building. In these isolating images, townhouses become standalone works, and we start to see them differently.

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7 Monumental Abandoned Wonders of Military Architecture

05 Mar

[ By Steph in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

Abandoned Military Main

Rusted sea forts, top-secret submarine bases, sprawling military hospital complexes and entire islands still stand as silent reminders of wars long past, from Ukraine to New York’s Hudson River. These seven monumental wonders of abandoned military architecture are steeped in history, often still littered with decommissioned aircraft and pieces of weaponry.

RAF Stenigot, England

Abandoned Military RAF Britain

Abandoned Military RAF Britain 2

(images via: urban spaceman)

Massive, alien-looking radar dishes litter the landscape at RAF Stenigot, a World War II-era radar station in Lincolnshire, England. Part of the Chain Home radar network, which was intended to provide long range early warning for raids, the site continued to serve for other communication purposes after the war and was decommissioned in 1980. Most of it was demolished by 1996, but four tropospheric scatter dishes still remain, along with a few other structures.

Russian Island Base in the Sea of Japan

Abandoned Military Soviet Base Japan

Abandoned Military Soviet Base Japan 2

(images via: english russia)

A small horseshoe-shaped island in the Sea of Japan that was once the setting of a war over its gold resources, Askold has been abandoned for decades. In 1892, the Headquarters of the Vladivostok Fortress created a permanent observation post there, and it became a point of tension between Russia and Japan. The island is cluttered with the remains of what little was built or left behind – the base of a long-gone pier, derelict lighthouses, rusted artillery, a power station, a command post, barracks and a handful of vehicles.

The island has never been inhabited, and is rarely visited by tourists due to the difficulty of reaching it from the mainland. Unused since World War II, much of the infrastructure has crumbled, and one part of the island is now inaccessible after the collapse of a bridge. Though it was once a place of war, Askold is now remarkably peaceful – and still, incidentally, full of gold.

Beelitz Heilstätten Military Hospital, Berlin

Abandoned Military Beelitz 1

 

Abandoned MIlitary Beelitz 2

(images via: arcanum, studiospecialplace, 28dayslater)

This beautiful abandoned 19th century sanitarium complex located in Beelitz, just outside Berlin, was used by the Germans as a military hospital through the second World War and then occupied by the Russians for the same purpose until 1995, well after the German reunification. It was abandoned altogether in 2000. Surrounded by pine woods, the hospital complex consists of about 60 buildings including a surgery, psychiatric ward and rifle range. Its most infamous patient is none other than Adolf Hitler, who recuperated there after an injury sustained in World War I in 1916.

Some of the buildings have been painstakingly restored by a German preservation group, but most of them are left to ruin. It’s a popular destination for urban explorers in the area, but of course, not everyone goes there just to enjoy the bittersweet beauty of such an ornate decaying complex. In 2008, a photographer lured a model to the abandoned operating theater for a photo shoot, and murdered her. Its dark history also includes a period before it was abandoned when a serial killer known as The Beast of Beelitz began to terrorize local women connected to the sanatorium, strangling them with pink lingerie.

People who live in or near the restored buildings do so with caution. Local architect Michael Wetzlaugk bought and converted one of the outbuildings to live with his family, but stresses that he and his son are accomplished marshal artists with a collection of exotic weapons.

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Works of Impossible Architecture Built from Found Photos

04 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

found architecture

Like dreams while you are having them, these buildings make perfect sense subjectively and yet no sense objectively. They are seamlessly integrated, yet structurally surreal … and, like a dream when waking up: the details are hard to recall when you look away.

found architecture photo collages

Jim Kazanjian searches through tens of thousands of photographs in search of the perfect bits and pieces for each otherworldly creation. Some of the results seem almost plausible, while others stretch the limits of gravity, structural integrity and even the imagination.

found buildings black white surreal

Per his artist statement at 23Sandy (where you can also buy prints): “Jim Kazanjian’s surreal landscapes offer phantasmagoric visions of a where-is-this world, defined by impossibly complex architecture and M.C.Escher-esque black-and-white graphics.”

found architecture impossible structures

“Inspired by the imaginary realms of cult author H.P. Lovecraft—whose wild, cosmic short stories set the mold for much of the 20th century’s best science fiction—Kazanjian’s aim is to redress the “misunderstanding that photography has a kind of built-in objectivity…to defamiliarize the familiar.”

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7 Abandoned Wonders of Residential Architecture

19 Feb

[ By Steph in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

Abandoned Homes Main

Palatial chateaus, ordinary suburban homes, skyscraper residences and vertical slums alike have been abandoned by their human inhabitants and given over to rot and ruin. Whether they represent once-opulent refuges for the rich or some of the most shocking conditions of abject poverty in the world, these 7 ghostly abandoned wonders of residential architecture are deliciously creepy and strangely beautiful, if a bit sad.

Chateau de Noisy, Belgium

Abandoned Homes Chateau de Noisy 2

Abandoned Homes Chateau de Noisy 1

(images via: polanri)

Officially named Chateau Miranda, this neogothic castle was built in 1866 by an English architect who passed away before it was completed. It served as a summer residence for a wealthy family until it was commandeered by Nazis during World War II. For decades afterward, Chateau Miranda operated as a hotel and accommodation for children of Belgian road employees, but in 1991, a fire led to its abandonment. Since then, it has been given over to decay.

Touring the dilapidated chateau is fairly dangerous, as most of the upper floors have decayed and fallen through. It’s a shame to see something that was once so beautiful fall into ruin. Urban explorers give a firsthand account of sneaking in and taking some beautiful photos of the interior at TalkUrbex.com.

Sathorn Unique Skyscraper, Thailand

Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 2 Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 3 Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 1

(images via: abandonedjourney.com, earth-bound misfit)

The 47-story Sathorn Unique Tower was supposed to be a well-appointed modern residence for well-to-do citizens of Bangkok, Thailand. Now, it’s a ghost tower, standing eerily empty and silent against the skyline of the city, its concrete surfaces already stained and rusted. Developers built this and many other skyscrapers in Bangkok during an economic boom, but fortunes fell, the developers went bankrupt, and the buildings stand empty. During storms, debris from the structures rain down upon the streets below. Inside, it’s virtually pitch black, and exposed metal pipes and frames should make explorers wonder when they last had a tetanus shot. At the top, however, it’s easy to see why this would have become one of the city’s most prestigious addresses.

Abandoned Prince’s House, Russia

Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 1 Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 2 Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 3

(images via: english russia)

Perhaps abandoned mansions, castles and chateaus are so fascinating because it’s difficult for many of us to understand how something that cost so much money could be allowed to decay. Someone went through the trouble of designing the home, choosing decorative elements and purchasing fine fixtures, only for them to be ruined far before they should have. This Russian prince’s house located on the Black Sea in Abkhazia is one example. Overlooking what was known to upper-class Russians as the ‘Russian Riviera’, the castle is nearly 200 years old.

But, like many things, it lost its grandeur during the Soviet era. It was converted to the Hotel Seagull on Stalin’s orders, a summer residence for male government officials from Moscow. Once the Soviet Union collapsed, it was abandoned; with the nation of Georgia so often at war, restoring it is not exactly a high priority.

Kolmanskop, Namibia

Abandoned Homes Kolmanskop 1 Abandoned Homes Kolmansop 2

(images via: wikimedia commons, geoftheref, coda)

Among the most surreal abandonments is the old diamond mining town of Kolmanskop in Namibia. This ghost town was once a small but very rich village, filled with German miners who were attracted by the potential for quick and easy wealth. It’s built in a German architectural style. The town declined after World War I, and was abandoned altogether in 1954.

The most interesting thing about Kolmanskop is the fact that its homes, hospital, ballroom, school and other buildings are now filled with sand, making it seem as if they’re sinking. The hot, windy desert climate blows sand in through the windows and doors.

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7 Abandoned Wonders of Residential Architecture

04 Feb

[ By Steph in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

Abandoned Homes Main

Palatial chateaus, ordinary suburban homes, skyscraper residences and vertical slums alike have been abandoned by their human inhabitants and given over to rot and ruin. Whether they represent once-opulent refuges for the rich or some of the most shocking conditions of abject poverty in the world, these 7 ghostly abandoned wonders of residential architecture are deliciously creepy and strangely beautiful, if a bit sad.

Chateau de Noisy, Belgium

Abandoned Homes Chateau de Noisy 2

Abandoned Homes Chateau de Noisy 1

(images via: polanri)

Officially named Chateau Miranda, this neogothic castle was built in 1866 by an English architect who passed away before it was completed. It served as a summer residence for a wealthy family until it was commandeered by Nazis during World War II. For decades afterward, Chateau Miranda operated as a hotel and accommodation for children of Belgian road employees, but in 1991, a fire led to its abandonment. Since then, it has been given over to decay.

Touring the dilapidated chateau is fairly dangerous, as most of the upper floors have decayed and fallen through. It’s a shame to see something that was once so beautiful fall into ruin. Urban explorers give a firsthand account of sneaking in and taking some beautiful photos of the interior at TalkUrbex.com.

Sathorn Unique Skyscraper, Thailand

Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 2 Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 3 Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 1

(images via: abandonedjourney.com, earth-bound misfit)

The 47-story Sathorn Unique Tower was supposed to be a well-appointed modern residence for well-to-do citizens of Bangkok, Thailand. Now, it’s a ghost tower, standing eerily empty and silent against the skyline of the city, its concrete surfaces already stained and rusted. Developers built this and many other skyscrapers in Bangkok during an economic boom, but fortunes fell, the developers went bankrupt, and the buildings stand empty. During storms, debris from the structures rain down upon the streets below. Inside, it’s virtually pitch black, and exposed metal pipes and frames should make explorers wonder when they last had a tetanus shot. At the top, however, it’s easy to see why this would have become one of the city’s most prestigious addresses.

Abandoned Prince’s House, Russia

Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 1 Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 2 Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 3

(images via: english russia)

Perhaps abandoned mansions, castles and chateaus are so fascinating because it’s difficult for many of us to understand how something that cost so much money could be allowed to decay. Someone went through the trouble of designing the home, choosing decorative elements and purchasing fine fixtures, only for them to be ruined far before they should have. This Russian prince’s house located on the Black Sea in Abkhazia is one example. Overlooking what was known to upper-class Russians as the ‘Russian Riviera’, the castle is nearly 200 years old.

But, like many things, it lost its grandeur during the Soviet era. It was converted to the Hotel Seagull on Stalin’s orders, a summer residence for male government officials from Moscow. Once the Soviet Union collapsed, it was abandoned; with the nation of Georgia so often at war, restoring it is not exactly a high priority.

Kolmanskop, Namibia

Abandoned Homes Kolmanskop 1 Abandoned Homes Kolmansop 2

(images via: wikimedia commons, geoftheref, coda)

Among the most surreal abandonments is the old diamond mining town of Kolmanskop in Namibia. This ghost town was once a small but very rich village, filled with German miners who were attracted by the potential for quick and easy wealth. It’s built in a German architectural style. The town declined after World War I, and was abandoned altogether in 1954.

The most interesting thing about Kolmanskop is the fact that its homes, hospital, ballroom, school and other buildings are now filled with sand, making it seem as if they’re sinking. The hot, windy desert climate blows sand in through the windows and doors.

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Pirated Architecture: Chinese Copies of Famous Buildings

17 Jan

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Offices & Commercial. ]

china france copycat buildings

Consider what Le Corbusier would think if he were alive to see his famous church in France duplicated as a Chinese barbecue restaurant. Or imagine what an Austrian village  must feel about its entire township being copied to a lake in China. But more on that later – first: Zaha Hadid now is experiencing it all in real time, as she races to complete her original before its copycat takes shape.

copycat china architecture

Copycats exist in all disciplines, but reputation-sensitive architects are often self-policing, as they want their work to stand out as original – but there are exceptions. Hadid’s new project is the victim of the bold copiers (above) are not only building an identical complex to her Wangjing SOHO (below). And while the developers of the legitimate project may well be able to sue, it would only be for damages – not to stop (or undo) construction.

copycat zaha hadid

copycat zaha original complex

From Der Spiegel: “Satoshi Ohashi, project director at Zaha Hadid Architects for the SOHO complex that is now being cloned, said: ‘It is possible that the Chongqing pirates got hold of some digital files or renderings of the project.’ From these, he added, ‘you could work out a similar building if you are technically very capable, but this would only be a rough simulation of the architecture.’”

chinese duplicate village

As for the aforementioned village: Der Spiegel covered this strange phenomena a while back as well. Pictured above is the Chinese copy (top) of the Austrian original (bottom). Architects from China, passing as tourists, simply documented the entire town of 800, and, without permission, planned to replicate it back home as part of a large development. This may, of course, turn into a mixed blessing in the end – after all, it will almost certainly boost tourism as people experience the copy and seek out the original.

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