Friday, June 29, 2012

BA Interior Architecture at OPEN 2012




A few photos by recent graduate Olivia Dunin of the current BA Interior Architecture installation at University of Westminster's OPEN exhibition.  The installation, which re-purposed discarded office chairs and incorporated student designed and fabricated frames from The Tell-the-Tale Detail Exhibition, will be transported to Freerange at the Truman Brewery and then on to the VOLA London Showroom as part of the London Design Festival. 


See a photo of last year's installation here.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Louisiana State Museum and Sports Hall of Fame by Trahan Architects

From Archdaily:
"Designed by Trahan Architects, in coordination withMethod Design and CASE, the new $12.6 million venue", is currently under construction and "will house donated memorabilia.  Being the focus of the organic interior space, the atrium will serve as a space for community gatherings and special events. A system of 1150 unique cast-stone panels will be washed with natural light, sculpting the interior walls."



Monday, June 11, 2012

Berndnaut Smilde makes real clouds appear inside gallery



Artist Berndnaut Smilde makes real clouds inside gallery
Dutch artist Berndnaut Smilde makes real clouds form inside of empty rooms. He uses a fog machine and carefully adjusts the temperature and humidity to produce clouds just long enough to photograph.

Watch a video of Smilde creating a cloud at booooooom.com.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Conference Hall by SelgasCano

Madrid-based architects selgascano designed an 18,500-square-metre seaside auditorium and conference hall in the port city of Cartagena, Murcia. The double facade of translucent extruded polycarb panels exposes the building's metallic structure and adds to the game of transparencies and tonalities created by injecting tiny dabs of neon paint into each piece, with different colours and intensities.



More images and text at domus.

Issey Miyake Turns Plastic Bottles Into Glowing Origami

In collaboration with Italian lighting brand Artemide, Miyake’s Reality Lab researched and developed a translucent fiber made from recycled PET plastic bottles (which likely held water or soda in their previous incarnations). The seven 3-D geometric shapes in the series were created using mathematic programs, but the effect is less technical than ethereal--no surprise considering IN-EI is Japanese for “shadow, shadiness, nuance.” Convenience isn’t on that list, but it could have been--each piece can be collapsed, but will retain its shape without the need for an interior frame when expanded again.


more at Fast Co. Design

Friday, April 27, 2012

Steven Holl: Proposal for Institute for Contemporary Art

Sited at the edge of the Virginia Commonwealth University campus in Richmond, Virginia, the new Institute for Contemporary Art will link the University with the surrounding community.  The new Institute for Contemporary Art is organized in four galleries, each with a different character. Flexibility allows for four separate exhibitions, one continuous exhibition, or combinations. Galleries can be closed for installations without affecting the circulation to the others. 




For plans, sections, and renderings of the proposed project visit archdaily.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Resonant Chamber by rvtr

Resonant Chamber, an interior envelope system that deploys the principles of rigid origami, transforms the acoustic environment through dynamic spatial, material and electro-acoustic technologies. The aim of rvtr is to develop a soundsphere able to adjust its properties in response to changing sonic conditions, altering the sound of a space during performance and creating an instrument at the scale of architecture, flexible enough that it might be capable of being played.





more video info and images at ArchDaily.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Archipelago Cinema by Buro Ole Scheeren

A work with a strong connection to the local community, Archipelago Cinema is based on the techniques used by fishermen to construct floating lobster farms. The raft is built out of recycled materials as a series of individual modules to allow for flexibility for its future use. 




more at ArchDaily.