Modern Architecture and Design


A house that was built in a day

Firstly, apologies for the absence of blog posts this past fortnight. Diseño Earle have been enjoying our summer break and are now refreshed and ready to go. To get things rolling, have a look at this:

Oxley Woods

Houses are expensive things nowadays. Especially in England, where even a modest starter-home can set you back over 200,000GBP. In 2005 the British government launched a competition to build homes for less than 60,000GBP. No easy task, thats for sure.

Oxley Woods

Developers George Wimpey joined with the architects at Rogers Stirk Harbour to win the competition from the field of 221 other competitors. Love them or loathe them, I can see why they won.

The main cost saving method was to have the floors, ceilings and walls all pre-fabricated in a factory and delivered ‘flat-pack’ style to the site, ready to be assembled. Due to the simple nature of the houses, they can be put together remarkably quickly, in less than a day. That’s right; a day. The results, as you can see, look great, and in a couple of years when the surrounding gardens have matured a little, I think this estate is going to look fantastic.

From a design point of view, the houses are simple and certainly nothing special, but they do have a nice modern feel and, let’s face it, are far more interesting to look at than most of the twee houses you normally find on British housing estates.

In a country with a big shortage of affordable housing, these are winners in my book. Watch the video below to see these being put together; it shows that whilst the building of Rome in a day was highly unlikely, constructing a modest family home isn’t outside the realms of possibility.

 Article found on The Contemporist

 

Shaping the Wind

Wall Thingy

A temporary structure designed and constructed by nArchitects, “Windshape” isn’t much to speak of – just a wall of PVC pipes wove with 50 kilometers of string.  But the 8-meter wall structure is undeniably beautiful.  In contrast to its stony site in Lacoste, France the pavillion catches the wind to wave gently like a reed.  See link below for more details.

Wall Structure from nArchitects

http://www.archdaily.com/4608/windshape-narchitects/

zeroHouse

zeroHouse

This funny looking structure, designed by Specht Harpman, is aims to not only have a host of green technologies, but also to be smarter than other homes. Rather than just throwing a few solar panels on a standard design, zeroHouse maximises it’s efficiency by controlling all aspects of energy management. The house is powered by solar energy, taken from the array of photovoltaic panels that span the roof and stored in an onboard battery. The clever control of power means that the house can operate for up to a week without any sunlight. Perfect for patchy winter months.

zeroHouse

On top of this, the unit collects and stores rainwater and even processes it’s own waste - turning it into a clean, dry compost. Even with regular use, this system need only be emptied twice a year.

As mentioned before, the real advantage of this is the fact that it’s fully controllable and adaptable to the owners personal usage patterns. An interesting looking design and a thoroughly sensible answer to making a modern, adaptable living space environmentally friendly.

zeroHouse

zeroHouse

Click here for more information on the zeroHouse

Cool Pools

Cool Pool

Crisp planes. Glossy white finishes. Honestly, will architects ever get tired of them?  Judging from Jean Nouvel’s recently completed baths building in Le Havre, France – probably not. Enjoy stunning images below.

Flickr Images

Fake Wooden Trees

Canopy

Good design always seems so simple. The Jardín Botánico de Medellín in Colombia by Plan B is a great example – it takes a pretty basic program (a canopy in a botanical garden) and a pretty straightforward idea (hey, why not emulate the surrounding trees) and makes something pretty elegant.  Made of reclaimed pine, the tree-like structures shade the garden courtyard, collect rainwater, and glow like lanterns at night. See video below.

NOMADHOME – style icon for today’s innovative nomad

Following on from our Stacked Living piece, and a big thanks to Kim at Nomadhome for sending us the information on this, is this solution to modern living. The Nomadhome responds to the transient and nomadic nature of our modern lives by providing a beautiful living space that is both mobile and temporary.

Nomadhome

Nomadhome

The idea behind the Nomadhome was to develop an efficient modular concept with a maximum of flexibility and to bring this unique product to standard production without losing its stylish form & high-class complexity. The beauty of the Nomadhome is that the unit can be transported, assembled and then disassembled and transported to a new location without any degredation in form, making it a truly versatile design.

Nomadhome

Construction time is only 3 days. massively reducing the cost of building a permanent home, and can be dismantled in just 1 day. The unit is completely changeable and expandable to meet the needs of the indivdual it is housing. This is perhaps one of the strongest points of this design - it’s flexibility. The design of the home fits around the indivdual’s lifestyle as opposed to changing your lifestyle to fit the unit.

Nomadhome

The units uses are as varied as the potential of the layout, as the creators of Nomadhome explain:

The NOMADHOME is a chameleon. Even its facade is changeable and available in many various designs, colors and surfaces. The easy change of NOMADHOMES outside makes it perfect for companies who need to change their branding from time to time.

Nomadhome’s high-class quality interior materials guarantee a very comfortable living or working-atmosphere with pleasant acoustics.

A brilliantly exectuted solution, unique in it’s design and flexibility, and perfect for those of us constantly on the move yet wanting our own space. I’m saving up for one.

Nomadhome

Nomadhome

You can visit the Nomadhome website here, or read the Nomadhome blog here.

Old Versus Nouvel

Tower

I’ve never been a huge fan of the work of French architect Jean Nouvel - most of it seemed interested in being provocative and little else. That being said, his design for a 75-story residential building in New York is really pretty brilliant. The tower grows skyward like a glass and steel tree, contorting to fit the confines of the City Zoning setbacks to create a drop-dead gorgeous form that is completely logical. Predictably, the neighbors hate it – but as yet the project is moving ahead.

See link below.

http://www.observer.com/2008/landmarks-commission-gives-nod-nouvel-s-moma-tower

Linked Hybrid by Steven Holl

We’ve been fans of Steven Holl’s work for a long, long time.  As an architect, his work is not always beautiful, but you have to admire its energy, ambition and variety in its pursuit of a larger philosophical idea.  His latest design is a high-rise residential complex in Beijing with sky bridges. See videos below.

Gehry Answers his Critics

Gehry Tower Manhattan

Frank Gehry - arguably the most famous and prolific architects of the last fifty years, - is consistently criticized for solving every design problem with the same pile of crumpled metal sheets. For me, this hardly seems fair –  I would argue that most artists work within a relatively narrow band of exploration and interests.  In any case, Gehry’s new design for a 76-tower building in lower Manhattan is an eye – opener, a novel solution to a problem that has vexed him repeatedly in the past – the punched window. 

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Mixing the Old with the New

International Architects Diseño Earle have just finished preliminary designs for a large 5 star hotel and country club resort set in the Ukraine.

L'Viv Country Club - The Palace front

The futuristic rear of the castle

Scale was the main challenge in developing an abandoned palace in the Ukraine into a world class hotel. At little more than 2500 square meters, the existing structure simply wasn’t capable of providing the amenities required for a viable development. To this end, Diseño Earle decided to enlarge the palace with a series of additions that would provide needed program space while celebrating the existing character of the original property.

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