AD Interviews: Chris Wilkinson & Jim Eyre / Wilkinson Eyre Architects

Click here to view the embedded video.

During the 2012 World Architecture Festival, we had the opportunity to interview Chris Wilkinson and Jim Eyre, the directors of the UK firm Wilkinson Eyre Architects who received the World Building of the Year Award for their Cooled Conservatories at Gardens by the Bay.

Chris Wilkinson founded the firm in 1983, partnering with Jim Eyre in 1987. Since then, the practice has displayed their innovation through the informed use of technology and materials, applied to projects in areas as diverse as transportation, the arts, infrastructure, masterplanning, as well as commercial, industrial, retail, leisure, educational, cultural and residential buildings. The firm has also developed a tremendous expertise in bridge design, with more than 30 projects of this type.

A good example of their applied innovation is the Cooled Conservatories, where climate control for 20,000 sqm in a complex environment posed a tremendous challenge. The sustainable cooling strategy lead to the reduction of, with air conditioning, would have been an otherwise big carbon foot print. 

For the 2012 Olympic Games, the firm designed the Basketball Arena, one of the biggest temporary venues erected for any Olympics, an iconic building that was the result of a tight budget and the requirement to recycle two thirds of the structure after the games.

More projects by Wilkinson Eyre Architects at ArchDaily:

AD Interviews: Chris Wilkinson & Jim Eyre / Wilkinson Eyre Architects originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 01 Apr 2013.

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Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan

“Whoever reviews Ito’s works notices not only a variety of functional programs, but also a spectrum of architectural languages.” — From the 2013 Pritzker Jury’s Citation

Toyo Ito has just been announced the winner of the 2013 Pritzker Prize. To commemorate this master architect, we’ve reached out to Iwan Baan, architecture’s premier photographer, and assembled a retrospective of some of Ito’s greatest works (all photographed, of course, by Baan) – including the Za Koenji Public Theatre, Toyo Ito’s Museum of Architecture, Silver Hut – TIMA, Ken Iwata Mother and Child Museum, Yaoko Kawagoe Museum, Suites Avenue Hotel, Huge Wineglass Project, Mikimoto 2, Tama Art University Library & White O. See them all, after the break…

Za Koenji Public Theatre

Toyo Ito Museum of Architecture

Silver Hut – TIMA

Ken Iwata Mother and Child Museum

Yaoko Kawagoe Museum

Suites Avenue Hotel

Huge Wineglass Project

Mikimoto 2

Tama Art University Library

White O

Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Toyo Ito Museum of Architecture © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Toyo Ito Museum of Architecture © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Toyo Ito Museum of Architecture © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Toyo Ito Museum of Architecture © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Toyo Ito Museum of Architecture © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Za Koenji Public Theatre © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Za Koenji Public Theatre © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Za Koenji Public Theatre © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Za Koenji Public Theatre © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Za Koenji Public Theatre © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Silver Hut - TIMA © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Silver Hut - TIMA © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Silver Hut - TIMA © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Silver Hut - TIMA © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Silver Hut - TIMA © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Ken Iwata Mother and Child Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Ken Iwata Mother and Child Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Ken Iwata Mother and Child Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Ken Iwata Mother and Child Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Ken Iwata Mother and Child Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Yaoko Kawagoe Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Yaoko Kawagoe Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Yaoko Kawagoe Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Yaoko Kawagoe Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Yaoko Kawagoe Museum © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Suites Avenue Hotel © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Suites Avenue Hotel © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Suites Avenue Hotel © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Suites Avenue Hotel © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Suites Avenue Hotel © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan White O © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan White O © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan White O © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan White O © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan White O © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Tama Art University Library © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Tama Art University Library © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Tama Art University Library © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Tama Art University Library © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Tama Art University Library © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Mikimoto 2 © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Mikimoto 2 © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Mikimoto 2 © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Mikimoto 2 © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Mikimoto 2 © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Huge Wineglass Project © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Huge Wineglass Project © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Huge Wineglass Project © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Huge Wineglass Project © Iwan Baan
Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan Huge Wineglass Project © Iwan Baan

Photography: Toyo Ito by Iwan Baan originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 17 Mar 2013.

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Flashback: Sendai Mediatheque / Toyo Ito

With the intentions of designing a transparent cultural media center that is supported by a unique system to allow complete visibility and transparency to the surrounding community, the Sendai Mediatheque by Toyo Ito is revolutionary in it’s engineering and aesthetic.

Six steel-ribbed slabs slabs, each 15-3/4″ thick, appear to float from the street, supported by only thirteen vertical steel lattice columns that stretch from ground plane to the roof. This striking visual quality that is one of the most identifiable characteristics of the project is comprable to large trees in a forest, and function as light shafts as well as storage for all of the utilities, networks and systems.

More on the Sendai Mediatheque by Toyo Ito after the break.

Each plan is free form, as the structural column lattices are independent of the facade and fluctuate in diameter as they stretch from floor to floor. The simplest intentions of focusing on plates (floors), tubes (columns), and skin (facade/exterior walls) allows for a poetic and visually intriguing design, as well as a complex system of activities and informational systems.

The four largest tubes are situated at the corners of the plates, which serve as the principle means of support and bracing. Five of the nine smaller tubes are straight and contain elevators, while the other four are more crooked and carry the ducts and wires.

Upon approaching the Sendai Mediatheque, the public is led into a continuation of the surrounding city into the double height hall of the main entrance through large panes of glass. This open square includes a cafe, retail shop, and community space that is capable of supporting film screenings and other events.

Another aspect unique to this building is the involvement of many designers, as the interior of each level incorporated another person. Kazuyo Sejima designed the ground floor, placing the administrative offices behind a translucent screen. The Shimin Library found on the second and third levels include a browsing lounge complete with internet access and specially designed furniture by K.T. Architecture.

The gallery space of the fourth and fifth levels contain a flexible exhibition space with moveable walls, and also a more static space with fixed walls and a rest area with seating designed by Karim Rashid. Ross Lovegrove took charge of the sixth level, adding a 180 seat cinema and green and white furniture fitting to the audio-visual multimedia library.

The tree-like nature of the metal columns of the Mediatheque are continuous with the natural surroundings of the area, as the design is found on a street lined with trees. The building changes along with the seasons, it’s openness reflective of the summer green and also the streets during winter.

Architect: Toyo Ito
Location: Sendai-shi, Japan
Project Year: 2001
References: Toyo Ito, Ron Witte, Rob Gregory
Photographs: RIBA, Archienvironment, Toyo Ito, Flickr- username: Yisris

smt_1_Nacasa and Partners Inc © Nacasa & Partners Inc
sendai1 © RIBA
sendai2 © Toyo Ito
sendai14 © Flickr- username: yisris
sendai12 © Flickr- username: yisris
sendai6 © Archienvironment
sendai13 © Flickr- username: yisris
sendai11 © Flickr- username: yisris
sendai10 © Toyo Ito
sendai9 © Toyo Ito
sendai8 © Toyo Ito
sendai5 © Toyo Ito
sendai4 © Toyo Ito
sendai3 © Toyo Ito

Flashback: Sendai Mediatheque / Toyo Ito originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 17 Mar 2013.

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Happy 84th Birthday Frank Gehry!

Frank Gehry, born February 28, 1929, turns 84 years old today. Known for his use of bold, postmodern shapes and unusual fabrications, Gehry is one of the most acclaimed architects of the 20th century.

Gehry has always challenged the mainstream starting with his Easy Edges cardboard furniture design, sold between 1969 and 1973. With the money earned from Easy Edges, Gehry was able to start his architecture career, beginning with the remodeling of his home in Santa Monica. Gehry’s design immediately caught the attention of the architectural world and he began regularly designing homes in Southern California in the 1980s. His work soon took on a grander scale, and by the end of the 20th century Gehry had received national fame.

We invite you to look through Gehry’s both past and current impressive works:

Sydney’s UTS building
Bacardi Complex
Facebook HQ Expansion
AD Classics: Vitra Design Museum and Factory
New World Center 
Eisenhower Memorial 
Dr. Chau Chak Wing Building
Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center
AD Classics: Norton House

Happy 84th Birthday Frank Gehry! originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 28 Feb 2013.

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The End of Critique: Towards a New Architecture

The following article was featured on Fulcrum #67 “The End of Critique”   and includes texts by Oliver “Olly” Wainwright (Architecture critic at The Guardian) and me, David Basulto (Founder and Editor in Chief of ArchDaily). Thanks to Jack Self  for the invitation and for his thorough editing. 

Towards a new architecture

Since the early 1900s, modern architecture has undergone incremental development, where each new iteration has been informed by previous findings and solutions designed by other architects. This process started at a very slow pace, when a young Le Corbusier  went east and published his findings and observations in Vers une Architecture.

The book became very influential among his contemporaries, who, based on his observations, produced their own iterations, second, third and forth waves, very quickly. These architects then started to unite. CIAM  is an instance of where this early knowledge was shared, replicated, and published, therefore advancing at a faster pace.

Since then, architectural knowledge pursued a steady curve of advancement, accelerated by architectural publications that made this knowledge available to different parts of the world. Ultimately, the Internet arrived, making the exchange rate of information so fast that new iterations of modern architecture are today accelerating this curve in unprecedented ways.

But when this general phenomenon met the Internet, it also adopted some of the particular advantages of Web 2.0. Web 2.0 permitted for an Internet where users could interact and collaborate with each other, changing the way digital content was produced, and enabling users to generate their own content. This took the form of blog posts, comments and updates on social networks. This new way of using the web allowed for individual voices to arise, offering architects a channel to express their inner critic.

This new critique was able to reach new audiences, not only restricted by those directly related to our field, and the language naturally evolved into something more digestible for the layman.

Don’t take this as a simplification of the development of architectural discourse, but rather, a way to effectively adapt and share the tools of the critic for the general population, enabling them to engage in a closer way with the architectural discussion.

Now, this presents a particular moment on the curve of architectural advancement.

Critique is not just something static, but it is also an important way for architects to get feedback about their work, and it accordingly forms part of the iterative and incremental evolution of architecture. Often restricted to a small number of critics (in relation to the amount of buildings and architects), you could say that only a few high profile architects, whose work was more public, were receiving this useful feedback. But with the proliferation of Web critique, more critics were criticizing (and giving feedback) to more and more architects, taking criticism to the long tail  of architecture and, again, making architecture advance faster.

Thanks to this new availability of the critic’s tools for the general population, they eventually entered into this dynamic of feedback, as architects started to hear the opinions (and critiques, often more in the form of criticisms) from these people outside the field, but who have an important role as the users of the buildings, bringing to the table a perspective that was traditionally left outside of this dynamic.

This flattening of the landscape of critique thanks to the Internet does not mean the end of it, but rather offers a tremendous opportunity to actually reshape its role to become a fundamental part of the process of advancing architecture, with all stakeholders (architects, critics, and the public) on board.

The End of Critique: Towards a New Architecture originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 28 Feb 2013.

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Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects

Architects: Rafael Viñoly Architects
Location: University of Chicago, Chicago, USA
Consulting Architects: Cannon Design
Mep/Fp Engineers: Affiliated Engineers and Primera Engineers
Structural Engineer: Thornton Tomasetti
Area: 111,484.0 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Tom Rossiter

Rafael Viñoly Architects is proud to announce that the 10-story, 1.2 million-square-foot Center for Care and Discovery at the University of Chicago Medicine will open in February 2013. An architectural and technological tour de force, the Center for Care and Discovery (CCD) uses design to foster collaboration and interaction among doctors, researchers, clinicians and staff to continue world-class science and medicine while putting the patient at the center of care.

“It is a design for the future that allows rapid integration of new technologies for advanced care in a way that maintains the patient and family at the center,” said Jeffrey B. Matthews, MD, surgeon-in-chief and chairman of the Department of Surgery, University of Chicago Medicine.

Cannon Design served as Consulting Architect/Medical Facilities Planner on the project, with  Affiliated Engineers, Inc. and Primera Engineers, Ltd., serving asMEP/FP engineers; and Thornton Tomasetti serving as the structural engineer.

When the University of Chicago Medicine (then the University of Chicago Hospitals) issued a Request for Proposal for a new hospital, the aim was to expand an existing facility. Over the course of the preliminary design discussions, however, Rafael Viñoly Architects successfully proposed that the medical center view the project as an opportunity for construction that would meet the institution’s long-term needs.

The resulting building occupies not only the given site but also bridges across Maryland Avenue to a site to the west. This connection advances the hospital’s goal of maximum efficiency because it allows varying functions to be contiguous to one another and reduces the need for staff to travel between floors. The building was designed to accommodate continually changing medical technology and practices; in particular, the 18-foot (5.5-meter) floor-to-floor height and large 31.5-by-31.5-foot (9.6-by-9.6-meter) structural square grid, developed in collaboration with Cannon Design, allows for extraordinary level of flexibility for reconfiguring departments and upgrading equipment.

The Center for Care and Discovery will focus both on providing a patient-centered experience and on using the latest technological innovations to improve health care.  Striving to provide comfort and convenience to patients and their families, the flexibility of the modular design also addresses the importance of evolving with advances in surgical, imaging and therapeutic technologies over time.  The design supports the delivery of high-tech care for complex illnesses, multi-organ transplants, robotic surgeries, cancer treatments and gastrointestinal diseases.

The focus on the patient can be experienced on multiple levels throughout the center.  All 240 private patient rooms can comfortably accommodate multiple family members. Privacy was a design priority in the patient rooms, as was expanding the visual connectivity between patients and nurses.  Waiting areas close to patient rooms and nursing stations are accessible from the main elevators.  These family waiting areas and lounges will provide communal space for visitors on patient floors.

The Sky Lobby on the seventh floor houses central reception, family waiting areas, a chapel, a business center, cafeteria, conference center and other public spaces. As the heart of the hospital, this Sky Lobby effectively lifts the social, contemplative, outdoor space of a traditional campus quadrangle into the air. For families waiting for several hours, the grandness and uniqueness of the Sky Lobby allow visitors to find their own space and define their waiting experience. The Sky Lobby provides visitors with expansive views of the university, Washington Park, Lake Michigan, and the downtown Chicago skyline. Architecturally, the Sky Lobby also provides an important visual break in the vertical mass of the building, as the interior spaces on this level are recessed from the main exterior enclosure.

The Center for Care and Discovery’s design also supports retail and other commercial functions at the ground level, which enhances the streetscape and provides public amenities to passersby.

Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects © Tom Rossiter
Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects Sketch Courtesy of Rafael Vinoly Architects

Center for Care and Discovery, University of Chicago Medicine / Rafael Viñoly Architects originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 15 Feb 2013.

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Happy 115th Birthday Alvar Aalto

Alvar Aalto, born February 3,1898, would have turned 115 years old today. Known for his humanistic approach to modernism, Aalto was concerned about creating a total work of art. He did not simply design buildings but also paid close attention to their interior features including furniture, lamps, and glassware design.

His architectural style began with Nordic Classicism and moved to International Style Modernism, and eventually evolved into a more synthetic and personal Modernism. He was one of the first and most influential architects of the Scandinavian modern movement. Aalto remains one of the greatest names in modern architecture.

To celebrate Aalto’s birth, we invite you to look back at his impressive collection of works:

•     AD Classics: Villa Mairea 
•     AD Classics: MIT Baker House Dormitory 
•     AD Classics: Jyvaskyla University
•     AD Classics: Muuratsalo Experimental House 
•     AD Classics: Wolfsburg Cultural Center 

Happy 115th Birthday Alvar Aalto originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 03 Feb 2013.

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Happy 115th Birthday Alvar Aalto

Alvar Aalto, born February 3,1898, would have turned 115 years old today. Known for his humanistic approach to modernism, Aalto was concerned about creating a total work of art. He did not simply design buildings but also paid close attention to their interior features including furniture, lamps, and glassware design.

His architectural style began with Nordic Classicism and moved to International Style Modernism, and eventually evolved into a more synthetic and personal Modernism. He was one of the first and most influential architects of the Scandinavian modern movement. Aalto remains one of the greatest names in modern architecture.

To celebrate Aalto’s birth, we invite you to look back at his impressive collection of works:

•     AD Classics: Villa Mairea 
•     AD Classics: MIT Baker House Dormitory 
•     AD Classics: Jyvaskyla University
•     AD Classics: Muuratsalo Experimental House 
•     AD Classics: Wolfsburg Cultural Center 

Happy 115th Birthday Alvar Aalto originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 03 Feb 2013.

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