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Architecture | Design | Art | Photography | Fabrication
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archatlas

A Chapel in the Pampas 

Located in the Pampas plains, in the east of the province of Cordoba, Argentina, Capilla San Bernardo by Nicolás Campodónico rises in a small grove, originally occupied by a rural house and its yards, both dismantled in order to reuse their materials, especially its one-hundred-year-old bricks. The site does not have electricity or any other utilities; nature imposes its own conditions.

In the limit between the trees and the open country, the chapel´s volume opens up towards the sun, capturing the natural light of the sunset in the interior. Outside, a vertical and a horizontal poles are placed separately and projected towards the interior. As a result, every day all year round, the shadow of these, slides along the curved interior, finishing its tour overlapping with each other.

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4 months ago • 2,696 notes
ionarchitecture:
“Behind the Building: VIA 57 West by BIG Find the perfect product for your next project through Architizer’s new community marketplace for building-products. Manufacturers: Check out the latest construction leads and sign up now.
VIA...

ionarchitecture

Behind the Building: VIA 57 West by BIG

Find the perfect product for your next project through Architizer’s new community marketplace for building-products. Manufacturers: Check out the latest construction leads and sign up now.

VIA 57 West defies convention. Challenging the status-quo, the iconic skyscraper was designed by Bjarke Ingels Group as a new landmark in the skyline of lower Manhattan. Named the best skyscraper of the year by Emporis, the project’s “courtscraper” form combines the best qualities of a European perimeter block and a classic American skyscraper. BIG’s first major commission in the United States, VIA 57 West features a distinctive sloped façade and a series of terraces that look out over the Hudson River.

The tetrahedral design rises to 450 feet at its north-east corner while preserving adjacent views from Helena Tower to the river. The signature sloping roof was designed as a simple ruled surface that reflects a fishbone interior wall pattern. The building combines a communal garden area with apartments, resident lounges, a gym, fitness lounge and swimming pool. Exploring one of the world’s most iconic new buildings, we uncover the manufacturers and fabricators that made VIA 57 possible:

VIA 57VIA 57Metal Façade Panels

Manufactured by Contrarian Metal Resources

To achieve the building’s hyperbolic paraboloid form, several façade systems were integrated together. While the north elevation features a fishbone patterned curtain wall, the south facing façade was designed with a unitized stainless steel sloped wall system. Over 1,200 prefabricated metal façade panels were formed, each five feet tall and spanning between 18 inches and 30 feet in height. The systems were created using laser metrology, a technology borrowed from the automotive industry.

The stainless steel façade was given a non-directional, sandblasted finish. This allowed optimal orientation when laser-cutting the panels to reduce waste. Each panel is unique, generated in Rhino and Grasshopper and assembled by Enclos in Virginia. The outer steel panels work as a rainscreen, shedding water in tandem with a network of gutters so that no drains penetrate the skin.

VIA 57VIA 57Glazing

Manufactured by Vitro

VIA 57 was designed with over 350,000 square-feet of curtain wall and extruded aluminum window frames. The curtain wall was engineered and fabricated by Tecnoglass, and included Duranar Arcadia Silver coatings by Vitro. The floor-to-ceiling windows are parted of an integrated energy management program built around a high-efficiency mechanical system, lighting occupancy sensors, and a hybrid water source heat pump.

Vitro’s Solarban 70XL glass was used throughout 5,000 window units to preserve views and minimize solar heat gain. Made with a triple-silver coating, the glazing blocks more than 70 percent of ambient solar energy. Working together, Tecnoglass, ENCLOS, Techniform and Bunting Architectural Metals created the curtain walls along the building envelope.

VIA 57VIA 57Woodwork

Manufactured by 9Wood and PGS Millwork

Built using responsibly forested wood, VIA 57 has a number of communal and private residential spaces that feature a range of woodwork. Expanding on the material concept for the building’s interior, the design is “Scandimerican” to reflect another layer of the European-American hybrid. Inspired by a combination of Scandinavian sensibility and local New York materials, the main materials in the apartment spaces are white-oak wood floors and cabinets.

In the communal lounge areas, 9Wood created a series of custom, suspended wood ceilings to bring warmth to the interior. These wood ceilings are made alongside millwork by PGS, covering a range of surfaces throughout the building. The linear ceilings are formed with narrow planks and reveals that create an inviting setting for socialization and gathering.

VIA 57VIA 57 Tile

Manufactured by Creative Materials Corporation and Daltile

Over 80,000 sq feet of tile was used throughout the building. The porcelain tile features custom mesh mounts in a Herringbone pattern. It was provided by Creative Materials Corporation to build upon the idea of “Scandinavian sensibility” and work alongside the white-oak woodwork. Chosen for their durability, the tile sheet sizes were carefully created to balance speed and precision of installation alongside production efficiency.

Beyond the Herringbone pattern, Daltile created a series of surfaces for the indoor swimming pool. Their simple, subway-tile pattern can be found along the interior walls of the pool, while a hexagonal pattern is used along the floors. Both surfaces are made with white tiles that create a bright space to concentrate on laps.

VIA 57Via 57Exterior Lighting

Manufactured by Selux, BEGA and Delta Light

A range of ambient interior lighting and exterior lighting was chosen for the courtscraper. Roller shades and LED lighting can be found in amenity areas and residences, with occupancy sensors for lighting in shared spaces. Moving outside, a grand staircase connects to the central courtyard on the third floor that echoes the proportions of Central Park.

Creating a mini-ecosystem in the building’s interior, the project’s court is an urban oasis inspired by Copenhagen. A series of exterior lighting follows a redbrick path that guides visitors through plantings reflecting three landscape typologies native to the region, including a lowland birch grove, open forest glade, and a mountain overlook space. The latter features views of the Hudson River with lighting for barbecue stations and curving benches, as well as purpose-built chess tables.

Search for the best façade products through Architizer’s new community marketplace for building-products. Click here to sign up now. Are you a façade manufacturer looking to connect with architects? Click here.

The post Behind the Building: VIA 57 West by BIG appeared first on Journal.

Eric Baldwin via Journal http://bit.ly/2GW2Ob3
7 months ago • 9 notes
4

really-shit

Woven Ellipsicoon, designed by UN Studio

“This outdoor pavilion is a detached, secluded space for solitary moments of rest, reading, contemplation, or even a cocoon-like theater for conversation and communication. The structure’s curved sides taper inwards as they rise, with the rounded openings blurring the boundary between internal and external space. inside, a sunken seating area follows the fluid contours of the space.”

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7 months ago • 618 notes
10

crossconnectmag

Architectural Paintings by Ben Johnson

With dedication, concentration, and a self-admitted obsession with perfection and hard work, British painter Ben Johnson creates detailed photorealistic paintings of architecture and cityscapes that require an enormous amount of effort and time to complete. 

Born in 1946, Johnson has been focusing on architecture as a subject matter for over 50 years and has even collaborated with architect Norman Foster to create depictions of his buildings (for the first Venice Architecture Biennale, 1991). Though widely known, especially for his large-scale, mind-bogglingly realistic panoramas of cities like Hong Kong, Liverpool, and London, Johnson’s work resides mainly in private collections. 


Like what you see? Follow Cross Connect for the gorgeous art!

posted by Margaret via

9 months ago • 3,715 notes
10

archatlas

Reforming The Built Environment: Architecture Photo Collages by Michael Jantzen

Michael Jantzen is a conceptual artist, designer, architect, inventor and engineer currently based in Los Angeles, California. Michael explores art, architecture and design in his imaginative renderings of conceptual buildings and structures inspired by nature, technology and science. He describes this series as a surreal reinterpretation of known structures such as houses, churches, apartment buildings, and other conventional built forms, including furniture.

11 months ago • 3,625 notes

No One Saw Tesla’s Solar Roof Coming

kdhume

This is a huge step, not because they’re pretty solar panels (though that’s nice too and will lead to more people using them), but because they’re extremely durable solar panels. This could change everything.

black-geek-supremacy

Assuming the fossil fuel industry allows it in which they probably won’t.

zektheterrible

This is incredible honestly

hunyp0t

Cooler thing about this is tesla has their patents for this solar paneling open so other companies have access to them and can copy or improve on what they have already created legally.

kdhume

I think I’d forgotten that bit because it seems so incredibly good and forward thinking and like something heroes in a sci-fi novel would do that it’s hard to comprehend a major American company doing it in real life. 

solarpunkprincess

Really?  That’s so awesome!  I can’t wait to see what other companies come up with on this score, too.

the-bitch-goddess-success

Me and my father argue about solar energy all the time. His favorite response is “where are we gonna put all these solar panels?” And I always counter with “rooftops.” He shoots back “who wants that on their roof?”

And now I’m so glad I can reply “anyone who wants their roofing to last three times as long”

sourcedumal

I was worried about it not lasting in colder climates but they can be retrofitted with heating filaments, thus eliminating that problem. This is really cool!

11 months ago • 14,805 notes