Re: 21st century architecture Reply #150 – 2014-04-27, 17:45:31 More King Abdullah Economic City[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05DYba3WprU[/video]
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #151 – 2014-04-27, 18:12:25 A city that embraces the future of gender apartheid.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #152 – 2014-04-29, 03:19:19 The Grand Mosque 4.0, Mecca. TBD 2020.[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GpvwJv5XxY[/video]Also see this.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #153 – 2014-04-29, 11:28:15 21st century architecture should be much more things like this:I suppose the above example is just a mere passive usage of energetic solutions, it's fundamental to integrate active energetic production (solar panels, windmills, Stirling engines, etc) in order to reach self sustainability as well as water efficiency (something that I suspect was not considered with so many areas of lawn).
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #154 – 2014-04-29, 12:07:13 It will probably be a bit of both. Supertalls are a bit of a showoff. Except for places that really run on limited land like Singapore there is no reason to build that tall, and they build dense rather than tall. Likewise if everyone built big garden villas the traffic would be immense.The video from Stockholm (Hammarby Lake Town) I posted a couple pages back is in the middle. The buildings are dense enough that you can actually walk somewhere other than to your neighbour's villa, while still quite open and light. It is quite central as well. This seems to be a typical case of what happens when the 19th (or early 20th) century industry shuts down or move out of the city.Quote from: jax on 2014-04-01, 17:45:00[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ha0AOqDm99Q[/video]
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #155 – 2014-04-29, 12:53:35 Quote from: jax on 2014-04-29, 12:07:13Likewise if everyone built big garden villas the traffic would be immense.We are concerned with different things. Your problem is how to accommodate more and more millions into cities, how to solve practical problems, mine to convince them to return to the countryside.Architecture by itself, it's neuter, it has solutions for both tendencies. I think that only by returning to the countryside architecture can help man to regain again the scale of his own proportion and, therefor, the key for an harmonious life.When architecture had a strong political meaning, as it had during the Reich with the magnificent work of Albert Speer, I could see reasons (agreeing or not) for it's existence but not anymore. The role of politics in Architecture was substituted by an emptiness that has created the trash people call modernity.Such emptiness should allow to make a major move, a radical shift at our destiny's direction.People can see my opinion as utopian's but it isn't. We are doing nothing at cities and when we do nothing we are nothing.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #156 – 2014-04-29, 12:58:47 Quote from: jax on 2014-04-29, 12:07:13when the 19th (or early 20th) century industry shuts down or move out of the city.Or a redesigned waste power plant, like from this hedonistic sustainability talk.[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogXT_CI7KRU[/video]This waste-to-energy ski slope has an opening date of 2016.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #157 – 2014-04-30, 04:48:51 Speaking of starchitects, MAD have just began constructing their Chaoyang Park Plaza in Beijing, based on their concept of mountain and water. The buildings are inspired by this oil painting by Wang Mingxian:
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #158 – 2014-04-30, 08:13:08 It should be called The Monster of the Lagoon...
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #159 – 2014-08-29, 14:07:09 The MAD architect was interviewed in Venice (can't embed though) about their mountain-water architecture and the rest.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #160 – 2014-08-30, 12:27:26 From the linkQuoteThe concept is based on a traditional style of Chinese painting, which depicts natural scenery such as mountains, rivers and waterfalls.Wrong. The concept it's to be the perfect scenario for a New Order and it's achieved by way of cheap plagiarism of Albert Speer's inspired vision of an architecture thought to serve the "One Thousand Years Reich".You can visualize a couple of Alfa people chatting together while super fast elevators leads them to their penthouses with a view while, at the underground, hordes of Epsilon slaves works to feed the masters. Time for a bit of Soma... I'm too much wake up.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #162 – 2016-03-29, 13:52:25 Quote from: jax on 2014-08-29, 14:07:09The MAD architect was interviewed in Venice (can't embed though) about their mountain-water architecture and the rest.What does MAD mean?
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #163 – 2016-03-30, 07:23:30 There are at least two MAD architects. This Chinese and a Norwegian. The case implies an acronym, as is the case for the Norwegian Moderne Arkitektur og Design, while the Chinese Ma Design, after the founder Ma Yansong, is more of an edge case of 马D → MAD. A more conventional way of forming abbreviations is to transcribe the characters into pinyin and take the initial letter from each. So Beijing, 北京, with the first character 北 Bei (north) and the second 京 Jing (capital) → BJ. Thus the souvenir t-shirts, beloved by tourists,with the legend I♥BJ.The building in still under construction, but you can see a video here.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #164 – 2016-03-30, 07:45:23 Quote from: jax on 2016-03-30, 07:23:30you can see a video here.Sort of. As is par for the course with such videos from China, it ranges from stuttering to freezing.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #165 – 2016-03-30, 08:31:33 Here you go[Video]https://youtu.be/GABttIqMW-c[/video]While at Youtube, one from Stockholm[video]https://youtu.be/ufwa0noh2mg[/video]
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #166 – 2016-04-01, 13:58:41 Starchitect Zaha Hadid just died, several of her works and plans are earlier in this thread. Some more: Zaha Hadid's 10 best buildings in pictures (The Guardian)Zaha Hadid: a life in buildings (Dezeen)[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDxzKn_t4Mc[/video]A local winning proposal for Upplands Väsby, the first station from Stockholm Arlanda airport to the city.[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idpFsktrJko[/video]
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #167 – 2016-06-10, 18:24:02 A new wine museum opened in Bordeaux, called La Cité du Vin. It's said to be inspired by the swirl of wine in a glass, although in some ways it looks more like an oddly shaped glass.https://vimeo.com/161025171Edit: all the boring info here in French http://www.bordeaux.fr/p47144/la-cite-du-vin Last Edit: 2016-06-10, 18:40:09 by Frenzie
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #168 – 2016-09-12, 07:41:40 Quote from: jax on 2014-04-29, 12:58:47Quote from: jax on 2014-04-29, 12:07:13when the 19th (or early 20th) century industry shuts down or move out of the city.Or a redesigned waste power plant, like from this hedonistic sustainability talk.[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogXT_CI7KRU[/video]This waste-to-energy ski slope has an opening date of 2016. Not sure if it is fully on schedule, but the opening is getting close. 1 Likes
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #169 – 2017-03-07, 10:43:35 Microsoft's office in Italy is made entirely of windows http://architizer.com/projects/microsoft-house-2/ 1 Likes
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #170 – 2017-03-07, 14:33:27 Quote from: ersi on 2017-03-07, 10:43:35Microsoft's office in Italy is made entirely of windows http://architizer.com/projects/microsoft-house-2/We have nothing to hide. It must be very funny to keep those windows clean and I don't mean malware but dirt.
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #171 – 2017-03-31, 10:23:59 Cool 21st century living, updated capsule hotel in Kyoto. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRT4dU6r-KQ 1 Likes
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #173 – 2017-04-01, 12:54:39 Quote from: Belfrager on 2017-04-01, 12:09:30Better to be in jail.Are you? Is that why you could not post so long?
Re: 21st century architecture Reply #174 – 2017-04-01, 13:13:06 Not yet, no, I still resist. What I meant it's that is better to be in jail than to be at such "capsule hotel". More room and for free.(English language gets paradoxal, free and jail got together...)