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Posts Tagged ‘Buildings’

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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The ABC of Architects: 26 Famous Buildings in 100 Seconds

14 Jan

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

abc of architects

An adult-fascinating and kid-friendly overview of 26 works by architectural greats from the last 100 years. Watch as this fantastic collection of animated iconic buildings comes to life in less than two minutes.

G raphic designer Federico Gonzalez worked with architect Andrea Stinga to create this instructive-yet-comical tour de force, animated in the style and set to the same sort of tune you might expect from a vintage cartoon.

abc mid century modernists

Aalto, Barragan and Calatrava lead ultimately to Xenakis, Yamazaki and Zaha – their aim was to cover a worthy structure from each of the 26 architects, and diversify their selections in terms of style and nationality.

abc architect examples

The creators’ only lament: that they could not include more works – but as any architect will tell you: sometimes having limitations and guidelines (like a 26-building limit, in this case) helps you focus on what is most important, and create the best design possible.

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Crossed Up: 9 Twisted Swastika-Shaped Buildings

13 Jan

[ By Steve in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

swastika-shaped buildings
Swastikas are ancient symbols of positivity tarnished by a negative recent past, which explains why modern architects have generally avoided employing the hooked cross design in their blueprints. With that said, a little digging turns up more than a few swastika-shaped buildings – some where one might expect to find them, others most definitely not.

Barracks at Naval Air Station North Island, Coronado CA

swastika-shaped building coronado Nay(images via: Si1very and Google Sightseeing)

The United States Navy’s Naval Air Station North Island in Coronado, California was established in 1917 and during the Second World War it was the main naval base supporting the war effort in the Pacific. Post-war construction at the base salutes the American armed force’s victories with streets named “Tulagi” and “Guadalcanal” to name just a couple. Though nobody’s admitting it, commemorative construction may have moved beyond roadways and into the base’s buildings.

swastika-shaped building Coronado Navy(images via: San Diego City Beat, IsraelMilitary.net and The Power Hour)

The buildings in question are a six-building complex currently occupied (according to a USN Public Affairs Officer) by the U.S. Navy’s Amphibious Construction Battalion 1 (the Seabees). Originally designed by John Mock of Hendrick & Mock Architects in the late 1960′s, the Navy’s original specs called for “a boiler plant and a recreation room; and a single ‘L’-shaped 3-story barracks.” The plan was then amended to have the dormitory building “be repeated three times and placed at 90-degree angles to the central buildings.” It was only after ground was broken on the project that the Navy realized what shape the complex would display when seen by the air but as very few people overflew Naval Air Station North Island in the early 1970s, figured it wasn’t a big deal.

swastika-shaped building coronado(images via: About Facts)

Which it wasn’t, for decades, until the Internet and Google Earth allowed anyone and everyone to enjoy birds-eye views of anywhere and everywhere… and some folks did NOT enjoy what they viewed at the Navy’s Coronado barracks. The cost of adding additional landscaping and associated construction to camouflage the barracks’ shape has been pegged at $ 600,000 though a, er, final solution to the matter has yet to be implemented. Curiously, a pair of buildings just beside the barracks appear to be modeled after World War II-era bombers flying directly at the “swastika” (the other side of which sits an empty baseball field) though neither the Navy nor the architects will confirm this.

Glendale AZ Medical Buildings

swastika buildings Glendale medical(images via: Cloverangel7, Thunderbird Internal Medicine and City-Data)

Located just north of Thunderbird Hospital on W Thunderbird Rd west of 56th Ave. in Glendale, Arizona you’ll find the Thunderbird Internal Medicine building and its doppelganger to the south, the Oakeson Physical Therapy building. Known together as “The Fountains”, the buildings house a number of small to mid-sized doctor’s offices, labs and diagnostic facilities. The low-lying, nested cluster of buildings feature coppery-red terracotta tiled roofs and exhibit a blueprint more like a child’s pinwheel than a classic swastika. The coordinates of the buildings on Google Earth are 33.36.48.96 N by 112.10.43.02 W.

swastika buildings Phoenix(image via: Phora)

Curiously, another group of 4 buildings (probably by the same architect) is situated relatively nearby at 33.28.50.87 N by 111.56.45.60 W. The two buildings at either end of the row display a full swastika/pinwheel plan while the inner pair display 3/4 crosses only. What’s up with metro Phoenix and swastika-shaped buildings? Like many such designs, structuring these buildings in a swirled cross design optimizes the exterior wall area to allow for a maximum number of outward-facing windows. While visually pleasing for those working there, the plan also eases the need for air conditioning, an important factor when planning architecture in the desert southwest.

Kenyatta National Hospital

swastika buildings Nairobi Kenya(images via: TechMtaa and YouTube)

Located on the grounds of Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya, is an “estate” of four low buildings that from the air display swastika floorplans. Two of the buildings are oriented in the traditional counterclockwise direction as employed for several thousand years by cultures as disparate as India’s ancient Sanskrit-speaking Indus Valley Civilization and the Native American tribes of the American desert southwest.

swastika buildings Nairobi Kenya(image via: Kikulacho)

Another two buildings on the hospital grounds are laid out in the clockwise (right-facing) direction similar to the swastika design adopted by Germany’s Nazi Party in 1920. As far as the Kenya buildings are concerned, it’s estimated they house nurses who work at the Kenyatta National Hospital and/or its associated buildings such as the Kemri University of Oxford Wellcome Trust Collaborative Programme offices just across the street.

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Your Text Here: Messages of Light Displayed on Buildings

08 Jan

[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

Your Text Here Projection Bombing Urban Art

City dwellers are bombarded each day with the demands of advertisers, government, media and other groups that dominate communication, and their own voices can be lost in the din. Signs, images and symbols confront us on every possible surface with messages that tell us what to do and how to think. YOUR TEXT HERE, an installation by artist Marcos Zotes, flips that dynamic, displaying the words of citizens in bold type on the sides of buildings.

Your Text Here Projection Bombing Urban Art 2

YOUR TEXT HERE is an urban light art installation that projects short messages from participants onto buildings, allowing them to broadcast their thoughts and feelings back to the city. Users enter their messages through a website on their mobile phones, enabling their voices to be heard while remaining anonymous.

Your Text Here Projection Bombing Light Art 4

More than 1,000 anonymous messages were projected for 10 to 20 seconds each during DLECTRICITY, an outdoors light art festival that took place in midtown Detroit in October 2012.

Your Text Here Projection Bombing Urban Art 3

While this particular project was approved by local officials, ‘projection bombing‘ is often done guerrilla-style. Because it’s temporary and the source of the light can be hard to pinpoint, it offers a relatively easy way to get messages across to a large number of people without fear of getting in trouble with the authorities. This technique was used by activist Mike Read during the peak of Occupy Wall Street to display messages like “Look around, you are a part of a global uprising.”

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Penny Wise: 12 Cool Copper-Clad Buildings

06 Jan

[ By Steve in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

copper_clad_main
Copper’s fiery glow, relative abundance and famed durability have served civilization well for countless centuries. The metal‘s many attributes have also endeared it to architects of all ages, from all ages. Now a new breed of urban designers have warmed to copper‘s practical beauty, employing it to clad buildings of all sizes and why not: it doesn’t just make cents.

//hapo Museum – Tshwane, South Africa

copper-clad //hapo(images via: Phaidon and Freedom Park)

The //hapo Museum (“//hapo” means “hope” or “dream” in the Khoi language) was designed by GAPP, Mashabane Rose Architects and MMA to showcase over 3 billion years of South African history. The 11,000-square-meter (118,405 sq ft) building complex is clad with custom-made copper panels that are meant to age naturally, displaying a rich patina in response to the effects of sun, wind and weather.

copper-clad //hapo(images via: ZArchitecture and Inhabitat)

As the centerpiece of the Freedom Park located in Tshwane, near Pretoria, the //hapo Museum’s core design concept is meant to echo that of a traditional healer’s garden with faux rock outcrops enclosing story-telling areas. “With walls and roof all clad in copper sheeting,” state the architects, “the ‘outcrop’ will, with time, rust to green and merge with the natural landscape.”

Fujitsubo Beauty Parlor – Tokyo, Japan

copper-clad fujitsubo tokyo(images via: The Motor, Architizer and Dezeen)

Should not a beauty parlor itself be beautiful? Call it an exercise in zen philosophy if you like but the Fujitsubo (“barnacle” in Japanese) beauty parlor in Tokyo’s trendy Omotesando district is gorgeous any way you slice it. Credit Japanese architects Archivision Hirotani Studio with this exciting example of copper cladding applied continuously from rooftop to ground level.

copper-clad fujitsubo tokyo(image via: Designboom)

Copper sheeting laid in an overlapping shingle pattern climbs the parlor’s triple-pyramid roof in horizontal layers while the vertical walls show off the traditional staggered brickwork design to best advantage. Bright and reflective when applied, the copper is expected to age incrementally to degrees dependent upon the varying amounts of sunlight and rain received at different areas of the structure.

Evesham Leisure Centre – Worcestershire, England

copper-clad Evesham Leisure Centre UK(images via: Wychavon and Leisure Property)

The Evesham Leisure Centre in Worcestershire, England, was designed by Limbrick Limited: Architecture and Design (now part of Roberts – Limbrick Architects) and opened in late 2009. The complex features two swimming pools, a climbing wall, a 100-station fitness room and a beauty salon but it was the building’s striking sea-green copper-clad exterior that garnered it the Vale of Evesham Civic Society’s Merit Award for 2011.Browse our partner-sponsored Glasses, with a variety of options to suit every taste and budget, available to buy online

copper-clad Evesham Leisure Centre UK(image via: TECU Consulting UK)

In keeping with Evesham’s long, intimate and occasionally tempestuous relationship with the River Avon which runs through (and occasionally into) the town, the architects chose to apply pre-patinated copper cladding to portions of the building so that its final tinting would be set from the start. As copper is the longest-lasting exterior construction component in use today, the decision to “go green” from the get-go is perfectly understandable.

Waipolu Gallery and Studio – Oahu, Hawaii

copper-clad Waipolu Gallery Hawaii(images via: Architype Review and PCS)

Completed in 2010, the Waipolu Gallery on the Hawaiian island of Oahu was designed by Peter Bohlin of Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, with “Dirty Penny™” copper cladding provided by Zahner of Kansas City. Stately, subdued but possessed of an ageless solidity, the structure appears as if it grew naturally out of the island’s primordial volcanic substrate.

copper-clad Waipolu Gallery Hawaii(image via: Zahner)

By installing pre-patinated copper, the Waipolu Gallery gets a jump start on the long road to antique verdigris while in the meantime, shows respect for the serious and subdued tone required by a facility of the Waipolu Gallery’s reputation.

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In The Doghouse Again: 13 Odd Animal-Shaped Buildings

30 Dec

[ By Steve in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

Animal_House_main

If you liked Animal House the movie, you’ll love Animal House the, er, house. This unlucky group of 13 zoomorphic buildings make being sent to the doghouse (or cathouse, as the case may be) a decidedly different experience… we can only imagine what pets think about living there.

Big Chicken – Marietta, Georgia, USA

Big Chicken Marietta Georgia(images via: The Suss-Man, Steveartist and BDOnline)

Built in 1963, damaged by a storm in 1993 and subsequently rebuilt following massive public outcry, the 56-foot (17-meter) tall Big Chicken in Marietta, Georgia will be celebrating its 50th anniversary this coming year. Though it’s enhanced a KFC outlet for decades, the steel-sided structure originally promoted Johnny Reb’s Chick, Chuck and Shake until owner S.R. “Tubby” Davis sold the restaurant to his brother.

Big Chicken Marietta Georgia(image via: Encourage Faith)

Though not a livable building as such, the Big Chicken is hollow to allow access for occasional maintenance work on the motorized moving eyes and beak. Visitors looking to check out the Big Chicken up close and personal will find it at the intersection of Cobb Parkway (U.S. 41) and Roswell Road (Georgia 120), though it’s not known whether the KFC outlet still offers souvenir Big Chicken keychains.

Katzenkindergarten – Wolfartsweier, Germany

cat kindergarten Alsace(images via: HPMayer and MILK Magazine)

You’d think a zoomorphic kindergarten in Alsace would look like an Alsacian but nooo… the Katzenkindergarten is as cat-like as Hello Kitty though it’s a lot less cute – and that’s a good thing. Turkish-born architect Ayla Yöndel designed the building based on a concept by local artist Tomi Ungerer. It opened in 2002 and stands as an expression of the “Europe Without Borders” project between the German region of Baden-Württemberg and the French region of Alsace.

Cat Kindergarten Alsace(image via: MILK Magazine)

The Cat Kindergarten isn’t just a novelty though its appearance is novel indeed. Entry is through the mouth, doomed-mouse-style while the legs house game-playing areas and the belly is where you’ll find the kitchen. Children and young-minded adults can access the back yard via a slide in the shape of a cat’s tail.

Elephant Building – Bangkok, Thailand

Elephant Tower Bangkok Thailand(images via: Wikipedia, Varming.dk and Stan G)

Known locally as the Tuk Chang, the so-called “Elephant Tower” building in Bangkok, Thailand’s Chatuchak district features 32 floors and stands 335 feet (102 meters) high. Designed by Thai architects Dr. Arun Chaisaree and Ong-ard Satrabhandhu, the iconic structure was completed in 1997.

Elephant Building Bangkok Thailand(image via: -AX-)

Like it or not – and the building has its fair share of lovers and haters – the Elephant Tower has been generally well received locally and in 15 years of existence has become a must-see Bangkok landmark. Some sources report the top (horizontal) section has never been finished due to a combination of financial and logistical considerations: do the elevators run sideways?

Cat Cabin Resort – Tashirojima, Japan

Tashirojima Cat Island Japan(images via: Zooming Japan and Ehte Eve)

Tashirojima is a small island located off the northeastern coast of Japan that’s become famous for its population of semi-feral cats. Revered by local fishermen for their rumored ability to forecast storms, Tashirojima’s cats demonstrated their innate weather prognostication powers by loudly moaning in unison just after the 9-magnitude Great East Japan Earthquake struck the island on March 11, 2011. Both cats and residents quickly made for high ground and no casualties (human or otherwise) were reported after a monster 30-ft (10-meter) tsunami rolled in from the sea.

Tashirojima Cat Island Japan(images via: U.S.News and World Report and Zooming Japan)

Some years ago the cats of Tashirojima began to get publicity which resulted in a growing number of tourists visiting the island. A local entrepreneur hired manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori, famed for Kamen Rider among other titles, to design a group of cat-like cabins for a resort known as “Manga Island”. All things considered, the island and the cabins are less visited than usual of late.

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Projection on Buildings

27 Jan

Impressive and stylish projections on buildings, a renewing way of communicating. For those who want to carry out a message in a striking and visually attractive way with guaranteed exposure: 3D Projection on buildings is the communication tool of 2009, and what an impact! NuFormer Digital Media develops high-skill 3D video mapping projections. These 3D projections will be custom-made to fit any specific building and will be exposed by a battery of powerful projectors. Please note that this is a simulation which shows the creative possibilities. The live performance can be found here: www.youtube.com

3D Animation
Video Rating: 4 / 5