2012년 10월 10일 수요일

National Museum of Afghanistan Competition Winner Announced




The Afghan Ministry of Information and Culture and the US Embassy in Kabul acknowledge the extraordinary design ideas that were submitted to the International Architectural Ideas Competition for the National Museum of Afghanistan. The Jury’s decision for the winning design submissions is based on the clarity of the architectural concept that responds effectively to the programmatic, functional, technical, economic and security requirements in the brief, and the architectural quality of the proposed design as a whole. This decision ultimately recognizes the distinguished architectural quality of the winning proposed design solution.


1st Prize: AV62 ARQUITECTOS SLP, Spain


The strength of this Design Proposal rests on the balance that has been achieved between the architectural form and the presentation of the collections that will be housed in the proposed new Museum building. This has been achieved by an exterior appearance that is distinctive yet understated and which responds to the local context, along with a coherent scheme of interior spatial articulation that takes into account the nature of the materials that might be displayed. Moreover, the design is a relatively simple building solution that is both affordable and realistic to construct with the materials and skills locally available – this design will enable the collection to be safely stored as soon as possible. The clear and simple circulation concept, along with a degree of modularity, results in an efficient spatial arrangement for staff and operations that also provides a degree of flexibility in responding to changing needs and variation of displays.


2nd Prize: Mansilla + Tuñón Arquitectos, Spain


This Design Proposal is a more demonstrative, monumental type architecture that expresses the functional spaces within. The scale of the proposed new museum building is bigger than that of the First Prize Winner and the exterior profile can be seen as visually responsive to the backdrop of the surrounding mountains. Like the First Prize Winner, the design is based upon a grid, offering easy expansion and interior flexibility, but here the grid is expressed more directly externally and the building becomes visually more assertive. The design has an identifiable and recognizable visual form and scale that is quite sculptural, without being too monumental.


3rd Prize: fs-architekten, Germany


This Design Proposal makes an extremely strong and creative architectural statement and represents the most successful of the free-form designs. This is achieved by very sculptural massings and volumes. The visual references to the adjacent mountains represent a further shift towards an architecture that speaks of the landscape and of the nature of protection. The design also has the potential to be quite dramatic: a building that could become a destination visit in its own right, encouraging an interest in the collection almost by default.



You can get more infos & other prizes on here.

But shame that the provided images are too small to watch.

Text & Images from: archdaily and S.E.E

2012년 10월 8일 월요일

A High Line for London Competition Winner


Selected from over 170 entries, 20 Green Infrastructure designs were shortlisted in a competition run by the Landscape Institute, Mayor of London and Garden Museum to find a new design for green space in the capital.

And the winner is 

05

Fletcher Priest | Pop Down
Creates an urban mushroom garden lit by sculptural glass-fibre mushrooms at street level inside the ‘Mail Rail’ tunnels beneath Oxford Street. 


Runner Up

19


[ Y/N ] Studio | The LidoLine
A channel in the Regent’s Canal makes it possible to swim the ‘Lido Line’ from Little Venice to Limehouse. 

Highly Commended

08

HTA | Bridge-It

HTA | Bridge-It
Unlocking corridors around the existing transport network – green linear parks and cycling and walking networks built over, under and beside railway lines. 

04

Erika Richmond and Peggy Pei-Chi Chi | Barge Walk
Connects people with water via the creation of a linear park, farm and wetland on floating barges at the edge of Canary Wharf.

18
Bus Roots | Wynne James


Wynne James | Bus Roots
Rooves of bus shelters become raised gardens with sparrow colonies, insect hotels and miniature wildflower meadows. 




Images & Text from Landscape Institute and World Landscape Architect

2012년 9월 20일 목요일

Renewable Energy Can Be Beautiful!!

It seems too late to post this. However, i introduce some LAGI 2012 entries.


The 2012 Land Art Generator Initiative, in partnership with New York City Department of Parks & Recreation, calls on artists and designers to submit proposals for a pragmatic art installation for Freshkills Park, Staten Island, New York City. A qualified entry must fulfill the following requirements and be developed to a concept design level of detail.

Here's what i most like.

PDF1
HELIOFIELD

PDF3
SOLAR LOOP


PDF1
SOLAR BATHS

PDF2
ELEC-TREE

PDF1
FIELD OF ENERY

PDF1
WALKABOUT

PDF1
VOLUNTEER GROVES

There are sooo many entries and i couldn't look all of it yet.

Visit here. and check last of all.

2012년 7월 2일 월요일

2012년 6월 13일 수요일

Manhattan Mountain

Manhattan Mountain: Re-Imagining Seward Park Redevelopment (SPURA) on the Lower East Side, New York

Manhattan Mountain | New York | Ju-Hyun Kim

첨에 제목보고는 좀 황당했지만... 웬 산이야 맨하탄에....일케..ㅋ

그렇지만 이 하나의 아이디어를 풀어가는 과정이란...

나도 모르게 마지막엔 감탄했다. 거기다 디자이너가 한국인? ㅎㅎ

I love the process of how this 'big idea' became a 'real design'.









Architect: Ju-Hyun Kim, AIA
Location: Seward Park Urban Renewal Site(SPURA) in Lower East Side, New York, USA
Project Area: 7 Acre
Year: 2012
Type: Speculative Research




2012년 5월 18일 금요일

IPHONEOGRAPHY

IPHONEOGRAPHY: using Iphone apps making New Art!!

오늘 처음 알았다. 아이폰 어플들 이용해서 팝아트 만드는 게 생겼다는걸....

세상에 할 거 참 많다.ㅋ

주로 건축을 이용하는 팝아트 예술가인 Lynette Jackson은 flickr에서 Page67로 활동하며 자신의 iphoneography 작품들을 공유하며, flickr에서는 이 외에도 수많은 iphoneography 작품들을 감상할 수 있다. visit here: one of iphoneography group at filckr.

그럼 Lynette Jackson의 작품 몇개 감상요~









All images © 


This is the proof that one person, Steve Jobs, change the world. I think.