‘Le Corbusier/New York’ Symposium

Held in conjunction with MoMA’s exhibition Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes, “Le Corbusier/New York” is a two-day international symposium taking place June 8-9. The event will examine this world-renowned French architect’s ideas on the city before and after his first trip to the United States, along with his influence on generations of American architects. The journey through Le Corbusier’s work will begin on Saturday with an exclusive preview of the MoMA exhibition led by its curator Jean-Louis Cohen and Sunday’s events include engaging lectures at the Center for Architecture. Discussions will focus on how Le Corbusier’s ideas about New York City influenced his work and how, in turn, Le Corbusier’s legacy impacted the city’s built environment. For more information, please visit here.

'Le Corbusier/New York' Symposium originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 16 May 2013.

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‘Le Corbusier/New York’ Symposium

Held in conjunction with MoMA’s exhibition Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes, “Le Corbusier/New York” is a two-day international symposium taking place June 8-9. The event will examine this world-renowned French architect’s ideas on the city before and after his first trip to the United States, along with his influence on generations of American architects. The journey through Le Corbusier’s work will begin on Saturday with an exclusive preview of the MoMA exhibition led by its curator Jean-Louis Cohen and Sunday’s events include engaging lectures at the Center for Architecture. Discussions will focus on how Le Corbusier’s ideas about New York City influenced his work and how, in turn, Le Corbusier’s legacy impacted the city’s built environment. For more information, please visit here.

'Le Corbusier/New York' Symposium originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 16 May 2013.

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‘Le Corbusier/New York’ Symposium

Held in conjunction with MoMA’s exhibition Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes, “Le Corbusier/New York” is a two-day international symposium taking place June 8-9. The event will examine this world-renowned French architect’s ideas on the city before and after his first trip to the United States, along with his influence on generations of American architects. The journey through Le Corbusier’s work will begin on Saturday with an exclusive preview of the MoMA exhibition led by its curator Jean-Louis Cohen and Sunday’s events include engaging lectures at the Center for Architecture. Discussions will focus on how Le Corbusier’s ideas about New York City influenced his work and how, in turn, Le Corbusier’s legacy impacted the city’s built environment. For more information, please visit here.

'Le Corbusier/New York' Symposium originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 16 May 2013.

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‘Le Corbusier/New York’ Symposium

Held in conjunction with MoMA’s exhibition Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes, “Le Corbusier/New York” is a two-day international symposium taking place June 8-9. The event will examine this world-renowned French architect’s ideas on the city before and after his first trip to the United States, along with his influence on generations of American architects. The journey through Le Corbusier’s work will begin on Saturday with an exclusive preview of the MoMA exhibition led by its curator Jean-Louis Cohen and Sunday’s events include engaging lectures at the Center for Architecture. Discussions will focus on how Le Corbusier’s ideas about New York City influenced his work and how, in turn, Le Corbusier’s legacy impacted the city’s built environment. For more information, please visit here.

'Le Corbusier/New York' Symposium originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 16 May 2013.

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Ground/Work: A Design Competition for Van Alen Institute’s New Street-Level Space

Ground/Work is a design competition just launched yesterday that seeks to recognize emerging design talent with a highly visible built project in New York City for Van Alen Institute. Since 1982, the Institute has occupied the sixth floor of its building at 30 West 22nd Street in Manhattan, where a diverse program of competitions, curatorial initiatives, and public events has made Van Alen an influential center for design innovation. This year, the Institute is making its public-oriented mission central to the reinvention of its own office and event space, transforming the ground floor and lower level of its building for a new venue to house its entire work space and public programs. The deadline for submissions is June 13. For more information, please visit here.

Ground/Work: A Design Competition for Van Alen Institute’s New Street-Level Space originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 16 May 2013.

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Video: One World Trade Center Tops Out

Caution: This video may induce vertigo.

As the final segment of the One World Trade Center was hoisted into position – topping the structure out at a patriotic 1,776 feet – Curbed NY captured its journey via a small Go-Pro camera to reveal its fascinating, and somewhat nauseating, view of Manhattan.

While the US rejoices this monumental feat, a debate amongst architects, engineers and city officials lingers on whether or not the 408-foot spire will count towards the One WTC’s overall height and allow it to officially claim its title as the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere. Although the Port Authority argues that the spire doubled as a radio antenna is considered as non-essential telecom equipment and therefore should not be considered as part of the “architectural top”, the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat will make the final call in October.

Video: One World Trade Center Tops Out originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 13 May 2013.

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Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA

Architects: INABA
Location: New York, USA
Inaba Principal In Charge: Jeffrey Inaba
Inaba Project Architect: Ostap Rudakevych
Inaba Project Team: Yoichiro Mizuno, Alan Kwan, Sean Connolly, Steven Tsai, Shuning Zhao, Allyn Hughes, Stephanie Lee, Richard Yoo
Architect Of Record: SLAB Architecture
Area: 38200.0 ft2
Year: 2013
Photographs: Greg Irikura

Slab Architecture Principal In Charge: Jill Leckner
Slab Architecture Project Architect: Matt Voss
Slab Architecture Project Team: Laura Trevino, Min Chen
Environmental Graphics / Wayfinding: MTWTF – Glen Cummings (Principal), Aliza Dzik, Pedro Goncalves, Ly Le, Virginia Chow, Farzin Lofti-­‐Jam (Project Team)
Lighting Design: Tillotson Design Associates – Suzan Tillotson (Principal), Erin de Vries, Christopher Cheap (Project Designer)
Structural Engineering: Buro Happold – Cristobal Correa (Associate Partner), Jeff Thompson (Project Engineer)
Mep: Kam Chiu Associates

Jeffrey Inaba’s firm INABA was commissioned by Red Bull Music Academy to transform four floors of a vacant building in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood into a model learning environment. INABA has used dramatic walls and lighting to create unique collaborative work areas in place of the traditional classroom.

Curving walls throughout the 38,000 square foot forum give shape to the distinct spaces. On the ground level the walls extend far into the former warehouse allowing passersby and users unrestricted views across the floor. They reveal a cross section of the types of activity taking place which include performances, private workshops, music production and broadcasting, aimed at making a statement that the space is different in its use from the shops, galleries, and cafés of the area. Below, on the cellar level, the arcing walls of the capsule-­‐shaped lounge are interrupted only to establish long views from the recording studio located at the south end to the open-­‐air patio at the north. On one of the upper floors, the similarly rounded walls enclose eight collaborative music studio pods. Each has large windows facing onto open workrooms and the city skyline.

Since learning occurs in different kinds of contexts, the street and cellar levels are organized for a range of encounters for groups of varying sizes. The central areas accommodate big gatherings like receptions or performances. In nearby spaces people can interact for an extended period of time in a more personal setting including lounges, a radio studio, living room-­‐like auditorium, production studio, and rehearsal room.

In an interior that is used at all hours of the day, the lighting plays a key role in setting the architectural atmosphere. During the day the ground level receives generous amounts of natural light from high floor-­‐to-­‐ceiling windows, while at night it is illuminated by rows of warm-­‐colored custom-­‐fabricated neon fixtures. Diffused LED lighting illuminates the radio studio and a programmable LED system focuses light on rows of acrylic tubes above the bar. Curved FRG light diffusers and indirect lighting lend an intimate setting to the auditorium while the ceiling structure supports light riggings for more theatrical effects. In smaller ancillary spaces, colored neon and grazing fixtures are employed in combination with high saturation paint. The cellar lounge has a low ceiling embedded with hundreds of linear LED fixtures to create a distributed field of light.

The Red Bull New York studios will be used as a space for experimentation. The programming is geared to encourage exchange and production with the goal being to share ideas, make things, and test the results. For example, the ground level will serve as an event venue for people to meet and talk, at other times as a working studio for producing content inspired by such discussions, and at others as a gallery where that work is displayed, together producing a feedback loop of trial-­‐and-­‐error learning.

Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA © Greg Irikura
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA Cellar Floor Plan
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA First Floor Plan
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA Seventh Floor Plan
Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA Eighth Floor Plan

Red Bull Music Academy New York / INABA originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 13 May 2013.

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Architectural League Prize 2013 Winners Announced

The Architectural League just announced the winners of Range, the thirty-second annual Architectural League Prize for Young Architects + Designers. One of North Americaʼs most prestigious awards for young architects, the program exemplifies the Leagueʼs longstanding commitment to identifying and nurturing the development of talented young architects and designers. This yearʼs winners are: Luis Callejas, Lcla Office, Cambridge and Medellín; Brandon Clifford and Wes McGee, Matter Design, Boston and Ann Arbor; Marc Fornes, MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY, Brooklyn; Rafael Luna and Dongwoo Yim, PRAUD, Boston and Seoul; Skylar J.E. Tibbits, SJET, Boston; and Bryan Young, Young Projects, Brooklyn. More images and information on the winners after the break.

MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY
Marc Fornes, founder of Brooklyn’s MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY, is a leader in the development of computation applied to design and digital fabrication. He realizes geometrically complex and self-supporting structures for both artistic and commercial settings, from pop-up stores to gallery installations to park pavilions. Though composed of flat elements, Fornes’ digitally designed skins appear to undulate, simultaneously acting as both surface and support. 

With an emphasis on building as a test of digital design, MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY evaluates the algorithms and rules “encoded” in computational systems against the “explicit” forms – the end products that are guided by precise but unpredictable operations – that the systems produce. His prototypes have been displayed as part of the permanent collections of the Centre Pompidou, the FRAC Centre, and the Centre National des Arts Plastiques (CNAP).

Lcla Office
Luis Callejas is the founder and director of Lcla Office, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Medellín, Colombia. His practice, positioned at the intersections of the fields of landscape, architecture, and urbanism, explores “new forms of public realms through environmental and territorial operations,” such as the Tactical Archipelago project in Kiev, Ukraine. There, Lcla reconsiders 37 islands in the city’s Dnieper River as places for recreation, ecological infrastructure, transportation, and, through a series of micro-clusters inserted on the river’s surface, itinerant zones of activity and services. Other recent projects include the Aquatic Centre for the 2010 South American Games and the renovation of the main soccer stadium in Bogotá, Colombia.

PRAUD
Rafael Luna and Dongwoo Yim, the founders of PRAUD, focus on the interplay between “topology and typology,” or the contrast between iterations of the same form (topology) and the types of forms and functions that the built environment offers (typology), as a means of understanding urban development and morphology in their work. The office experiments with reconfiguration, the relationship between solid and void, and the opportunities created by overlapping structural and spatial functions. Their holistic view of the architect as a researcher, practitioner, theorist, and visionary is illustrated by their interest in research and publications, which serve as the generator of what the office calls a “new autonomous language” – an internal logic that produces new expressions of form and function – for contemporary architecture. PRAUD is based in Boston and Seoul.

Young Projects
Principal Bryan Young founded the Brooklyn-based design studio Young Projects in 2010. With an emphasis on building, Young Projects draws from digital methods and traditional construction techniques to uncover “loopholes and glitches,” or unexpected moments where digital and traditional forms interact, to produce “elements of the bizarre and fictional.” As an example of his interest in the unexpected and contemporary, Young completed a master’s thesis investigating the diagrammatic spaces of Donkey Kong and Pac-Man.

SJET
Skylar J.E. Tibbits is the principal and founder of SJET, a research-based practice in Boston with an emphasis on prototype development that “crosses disciplines from architecture and design, fabrication, computer science to robotics.” Tibbits’ research interests include self-assembly technologies, programmable materials, and the reinvention of fabrication methods. He has exhibited work at the Guggenheim Museum in New York and the Beijing Biennale and has built large-scale installations in Paris, Calgary, Philadelphia, New York City, Berlin, Frankfurt, and Cambridge.

Matter Design
The work of Ann Arbor- and Boston-based Matter Design combines Brandon Clifford’s “dedication to design” and Wes McGee’s “proficiency in fabrication,” placing the studio at the confluence of several contrasts: drawing versus making, digital versus physical. Described by its principals as an “inter­dis­ci­pli­nary aca­d­e­mic research stu­dio ded­i­cated to re-imagining the role of the archi­tect in the dig­i­tal era,” Matter Design explores such issues as volume over surface and the usage of scale experiments to adapt the tenets of masonry construction to contemporary methods of construction.

This year’s League Prize jury included Teresita Fernandez, artist and sculptor; Paul Lewis, principal, LTL Architects; Thom Mayne, principal, Morphosis Architects; Charles Waldheim, professor and Chair, Department of Landscape Architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design; and Meejin Yoon, principal, Howeler + Yoon Architecture. Committee members were Benjamin Aranda, Aranda/Lasch; Seung Teak Lee, stpmj; and Michael Szivos, SOFTlab.

Winners will lecture in June and display their work in an exhibition on view through the summer. Their work will also be featured in a new volume of the Young Architects series jointly published by Princeton Architectural Press and the League, and their ideas and work will be featured in original interviews and video on the Leagueʼs website here.

Architectural League Prize 2013 Winners Announced “nonLin/Lin Pavilion” | Permanent collection of the FRAC Centre | Orleans, France | 2011 Design: MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY / Courtesy of Francois Lauginie
Architectural League Prize 2013 Winners Announced Kiev Botanical Garden, underwater (in collaboration with Melissa Naranjo and ManonMollard) / Courtesy of Lcla Office
Architectural League Prize 2013 Winners Announced Casa Periscopio / © Federico Trujillo
Architectural League Prize 2013 Winners Announced Playa Grande Main House, Dominican Republic / © Young Projects
Architectural League Prize 2013 Winners Announced 4D Printing: Single strand self-folding into a 3D cube / © Skylar Tibbits | The Self-Assembly Lab, MIT; Education & Research & Development | Stratasys; Bio/Nano Programmable Matter Research Group | Autodesk
Architectural League Prize 2013 Winners Announced Matter Design with Supermanoeuvre, Periscope: Foam Tower, 10Up! National Architecture Competition Winning Entry, Atlanta Georgia (2010) / © Brandon Clifford

Architectural League Prize 2013 Winners Announced originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 13 May 2013.

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