Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow

The Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem designed Market Hall in Ghent reinstates the presence of old urban areas that had become unrecognizable. As an urban interior, the inside embraces the passer-by with a dual modulated wooden ceiling, whose small windows scatter light inwards. The exterior, the entire building in fact, seems to assume a respectful role relative to the nobler historic stone buildings.

We have previously brought you images of the project, but these latest images by Hufton + Crow truly capture the experience and highlight the project’s materials and principles. A complete gallery of their photos can be viewed after the break.

Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow
Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow © Hufton + Crow

Market Hall in Ghent / Marie-José Van Hee + Robbrecht & Daem, by Hufton + Crow originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 08 May 2013.

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Writer’s Studio / Cooper Joseph Studio

© Elliott Kaufman

Architects: Cooper Joseph Studio
Location: Dean Road Ghent, NY, USA
Architect In Charge: Wendy Evans Joseph
Project Manager: Thruston Pettus
Desing Team: Farzana Gandhi, Jonathan Lee
Project Year: 2007
Photographs: Elliott Kaufman

Project Area: 525.0 sq ft
Landscape Architect: Peter Rolland
Landscape Contractor: Rusty Dunbar

The writer’s studio is a place for one person to work, read and listen to music. Open vistas to a pond and fields are to one side, the other side is immersed in deep woods. The overall impression of the structure is deceivingly simple. Each façade is composed with distinct apertures specifically arranged to the light, the views and tailored, like a bespoke suit to his size and eye level. The inside is, uncluttered and elegant, unified by the use of walnut.

© Elliott Kaufman

Design solution

Minimalist detailing, open glazed corners and transparency running the length of the structure challenge the simplicity of the “box”.  Given harsh winters, the fireplace becomes the visual center, anchoring the asymmetrical composition with large, richly conceived hearth.  On a structural level, the fireplace also anchors the large cantilevered corners to either side. The studio volume is a small, rectilinear and restrained single-room space in the woods. The entire interior is immersed in walnut in varied ways. The rigid orthogonal geometry of the room is juxtaposed with dynamic sculptural designs of the furniture – a desk, a side table and two black leather armchairs.

The sliding doors are walnut plank, the pantry counter is walnut, the floors are highly polished walnut, the sink in the bathroom is made of walnut as well as some of the wainscoting in the main room. On the outside, cedar received a matte black stain, the same surface treatment for the flat broader, horizontal boards and the highly textured, thinner slats. Each was a precisely laid and mitered at the corner. Copper trim and scuppers set off the forms. The choice of using only wood framing was pragmatic, but it worked very well for even the large cantilevered roof sections over corner glass-to-glass windows at the north side of the building.

© Elliott Kaufman

Energy and sustainability

Our strategy involves efficient equipment, passive heating and cooling, locally available materials and a wood-burning fireplace that uses wood fuel from trees on the property. The stone is black slate. By locating the house in the deep deciduous woods, we are able to take advantage of the leaves as sun shading in the summer months. In the winter, when the trees lose their leaves, the building’s black exterior absorbs sunlight and with the fireplace, there is a reduction in fuel consumption.

© Elliott Kaufman

Interior finishes:

The interior walls are a composition of walnut slats and white surfaces. A bookshelf, the kitchen and the window seat are all entirely of solid walnut allowing for uniformity of texture and color. The sliding door to the kitchen is walnut as well. As sunlight is filtered through the trees, the floor becomes a key surface, reflecting natural light with a warm hue. It’s high polish balances nicely with the lower intensity sheen on the walls and horizontal surfaces. The fireplace has a river stone surround (to code) set flush to the wood slats. Next to it is the wood storage area. The wood enters this alcove from behind, as there is a hidden door in the north façade of the building allowing the fire to be easily maintained without having to bring the wood through the front door.

© Elliott Kaufman

Bathroom:

With a shower wall entirely in glass and a ceiling-mounted “rain” fixture, it feels like being outdoors. Its drains are all hidden so that there is virtually no reading of the shower except when in use. The same slats continue in the bathroom on the entire entry wall and elsewhere above the local black slate. We designed the bathroom sink in walnut as well. Here we used solid stock with channels cut to carry the water to a trench drain cut into the wall. The channels are sloped. They are closer together near the faucet and further apart to the edges there providing more surface for a cake of soap or glass.

Plan

Furniture:

As there are very few objects within the space, it was critical that their design and materiality work well with the minimal interior finishes. Again, for the desk and table we turned to walnut for its warmth, strength and texture. The desk is located on axis with a fireplace with views around it north to a pond and fields beyond, but it has an asymmetric relationship to the elements of the room. Technically, it was an achievement to make a large, heavy, wood top cantilever and its sculptural form makes this possible. In this way, when you enter the room, there is no visible structure and the plane of the surface floats freely.  Below, on the backside there is a shelf (with hidden pencil drawer) for the printer.

The electric connection is under the open base, and only a small slot for the cord disturbs the desk surface. The “scholar stone” sits above this slot. The magazine table echoes the form of the desk nearby but with a ribbed construction that relates to the slatted walls in the room. Once more, the triangulated geometry sets it apart from the architecture. Each rib differs in configuration from its neighbor so that viewed in one direction it emphasizes the angular surfaces and from the other the surfaces blend to appear as solid planes. It’s a bit of an optical illusion due to the precise geometry. The form holds the books or newspaper on the open shelf against the lounge chair so that the room still appears free of clutter.

Writer’s Studio / Cooper Joseph Studio © Elliott Kaufman
Writer’s Studio / Cooper Joseph Studio © Elliott Kaufman
Writer’s Studio / Cooper Joseph Studio © Elliott Kaufman
Writer’s Studio / Cooper Joseph Studio © Elliott Kaufman
Writer’s Studio / Cooper Joseph Studio © Elliott Kaufman
Writer’s Studio / Cooper Joseph Studio Plan 01

Writer’s Studio / Cooper Joseph Studio originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 10 Aug 2012.

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In Ghent, a Sprawling Pop-Up Library Offers Free Literature to Go With Your Wine


Photos courtesy the artist.

Ah, sweet, sweet summer. It’s a time for barbecues, free concerts, al fresco dining, and pop-up libraries.

Yes, there’s no better time to get your book on than in the summer, especially in Ghent, where Italian artist Massimo Bartolini has planted no fewer than a dozen bookcases on the sloping green of St. Peter’s Abbey. According to The Pop-Up City, the artist deliberately placed his Belgian art festival entry in alignment with the abbey’s vineyard, using space to liken the mind-broadening capacity of books with that of a friendly glass of vino. The green bookshelves mimic the abbey’s rows of grapevines, only sprouting endless public library books instead of grapes. The books are available to be borrowed, exchanged, or purchased until Ghent’s “Track: A Contemporary City Conversation” festival comes to a close in September. Please tell us there will be a pop-up artisanal cheese festival within walking distance.

House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu

© Filip Dujardin

Architects: architecten de vylder vinck taillieu – Jan De Vylder, Inge Vinck, Jo Taillieu in collaboration with Joris Van Huychem
Location: , Belgium
Design Team: Jan De Vylder, Inge Vinck, Jo Taillieu, Joris Van Huychem, Sander Rutgers, Lauren Dierickx
Area: 304 sqm
Completion: 2011
Photographs: Filip Dujardin

© Filip Dujardin

Starting point is a plot with trees and a little gingerbread house on the edge of the site.

The key document is a survey map with the exact position and diameter of every tree.

© Filip Dujardin

The building is at odds to and separate from the wood.

The wood runs through, around, and in the house.

The ground is left untouched.

The building must be only a part of the whole.

The building can distance itself and look back at itself through the wood.

© Filip Dujardin

Structurally, the house is made up of two concrete slabs, kept at a distance from each other by concrete plates that also dictate the internal division.

Where a larger span is needed, a supporting chimney breast is used.

© Filip Dujardin

A foundation on wells ensures that roots can go their own way freely underneath the house.

Because the lengths to be spanned by the roof slab are greater on the outside than on the inside, a difference in slab thickness is possible, with natural drainage towards the inside as a consequence.

The large gutter takes water and leaves downwards.

axon

Structure is finishing. The drawing of the shuttering is the diagram of the texture. An alternation of flat shuttering, shuttering with sheets of plywood, and board shuttering defines and characterises the different spaces.

exterior sketch

18 windows. The facade is made up of windows.

Windows that both mark and cancel out the transition between outside and inside.

One window is on top of another; the kink is emphasised by the thickness of the next window-frame.

House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
House BM / architecten de vylder vinck taillieu © Filip Dujardin
axon axon
exterior sketch exterior sketch
interior sketch interior sketch
kitchen sketch kitchen sketch
floor plan floor plan
site plan site plan
structure floor plan structure floor plan



House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten

© Fay Pynaert

Architects: GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten
Location: Frans De Potterstraat 9 – 9000 ,
Completion: 2011
Site area: 162 sqm
Built area: 234 sqm
Photographs: Fay Pynaert, Philippe Brysse, GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten

© Philippe Brysse

The rear building of the house, dating from the early 20th century, is no longer adapted to the needs of the client or the demands of today’s living comfort. The new multipurpose room, with a maximum sense of space, the various activities taken in the foreground and absent themselves more to draw. Central to the room, the table is placed as a symbol of everyday life. The three monumental canvases perforate the new room and light each on a different part of the house and its surroundings. The two horizontal frames in the roof allow light to deep into the existing house and both offer a different view on the rear. Through extending the material and color outward, a unit is created. Relations with outside are strengthened. It opted for the cooking area and sink to store in closets. The island thus betrays its function. We try in this way an almost abstract space where the light can write her poetry on the walls. In the main volume only the strictly necessary interventions occurred. The existing bathroom was too small in proportion to the house. It was decided to split this into two quality areas. At the site of the old bathroom was the toilet and shower fitted. The ceiling of the shower was replaced by a glass of 2m ² which a magnificent view is released. The bathroom has been moved to the top floor. The furniture is a concatenation of a sink, a bathtub and a toilet.

House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Philippe Brysse
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Philippe Brysse
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Philippe Brysse
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Philippe Brysse
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten © Fay Pynaert
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten Courtesy of GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten Courtesy of GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten
House W-DR / GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten Courtesy of GRAUX & BAEYENS architecten
plans plans
section section