26 posts tagged “architecture”
From The
Contemporist
(November) The New Zealand Yellow Pages is conducting a marketing promotion to show that no matter what your project is, the Yellow Pages can help you complete it. To prove it, they’re building a restaurant 10 metres up a redwood tree, and the idea is to source all products and services through Yellow Pages listings.
As you can see the treehouse is now complete. You can read the original post about the Yellow Treehouse Restaurant - here.
The Treehouse was designed by architects Peter Eising and Lucy Gauntlett from Pacific Environments Architects.
Photographs by Lucy Gauntlett.
Visit the Pacific Environments Architects website - here.
Visit the website for the Yellow Treehouse Restaurant - here.
Using a complex array of perforations, the pavilion’s surface allows light to pass through creating shifting patterns, which–during specific times of the year–transform into the legible text of a poem. The specific arrangements of the perforations reveal different shadow-poems according to the solar calendar: a theme of new-life during the summer solstice, a reflection on the passing of time at the period of the winter solstice. The time-based nature of the poem–and the visitor’s time-based encounters with it–allow viewers to have different experiences either seeing a stanza of the poem or getting the whole poem. All of these possible experiences are equally valuable and have meanings unique to the individual.
This technique has the potential for producing particular effects and meanings within an architectural environment. Without the use of a source of power other than the sun, this project uses light and shadow to push the boundaries of communication and experiential delight.
'Flying Saucer' Home Up For Grabs In Auction
Want to spend a small fortune on an investment that's out of this world? Head to Chattanooga, Tennessee. That's where you'll find a home like few others, a place where 'space' is literally at a premium. Welcome to the abode originally built by Claude King and his family, a dwelling that's now up for auction.
What's so special about this place? It has 2,000 square feet of living area, three floors, three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a nice kitchen, a living room, a large bar, and a wonderful scenic view of a mountain and a river. And did we mention it looks like every science fiction movie's image of a flying saucer?
The cylindrical house landed in 1970, just after the first moon landing and the cancellation of the original "Star Trek" TV series. It was considered state of the art when it was built almost four decades ago. What's inside this round rarity?
It boasts a series of small square windows, sits on six re-enforced cement "landing legs" and can only be accessed by a stairwell that retracts and extends whenever you hit a button.
There are also once-futuristic-like controls inside that operate a variety of different electronics. Those who like more traditional forms of transportation can find plenty of parking underneath the suspended structure.
And there aren't any aliens - although if a Canadian were to buy it, decided to live there and didn't have U.S. citizenship, you might be able to say there would be.
The home isn't for everyone. It's completely curved, which presents a bit of a challenge to those into decorating using more commonly available objects. That means the ceiling slopes, the walls are short, and it needed a custom bathtub to fit into the washroom.
The other thing you'll find - a bizarre curved bar, complete with a picture of an extra terrestrial and a sign that reads "I am only here for the beer."
It might take a lot of that liquid to get you to decide to buy something that will surely attract the attention of gawkers. The place is going under the hammer on Saturday and promises to garner a lot of interest - if not a lot of dollars.
The current owner has only been in the UFO home for about four months and hasn't given any reason for why he's put it back on the market.
"This is an opportunity to own a unique property and is ideal for that weekend get away," suggests real estate agent Terry Posey on the site promoting the sale. "This is truly the most unique property we have ever sold! If you are into Unique Homes, Space Ships, Flying Saucers, Star Trek, A Mountain Get Away Home, or Investment Properties, this is your opportunity. This property has never been offered at Auction before."
So far, he's had a $100,000 bid on the place. But those involved hope it will, you should pardon the expression, take off from there.
Photo courtesy: Crye-Leike Auctions
Hat tip: Jason Calacanis
via City News
Heatherwick Studio's Rolling Bridge is located within a new residential, office and retail quarter set around part of the Grand Union Canal.
Rather than a conventional opening bridge mechanism, consisting of a single rigid element that lifts to let boats pass, the Rolling Bridge gets out of the way by curling up until its two ends touch. While in its horizontal position, the bridge is a normal, inconspicuous steel and timber footbridge; fully open, it forms a circle on one bank of the water that bears little resemblance to its former self.
Twelve metres long, the bridge is made in eight steel and timber sections, and is made to curl by hydraulic rams set into the handrail between each section.
The Rolling Bridge opens every Friday at noon and won the 2005 British Structural Steel Award.
JCD Design Award / Award for Excellence
By using bookshelves to clad the exterior walls, this combination house and library protects the privacy of its inhabitants’ living space while inviting visitors into the surrounding library. Semi-transparent FRP divides the interior and exterior spaces, allowing soft light to filter in between the bookshelves during the day, and letting the light leak out at night. Light creates a connection between inside and outside.
via nendo | hat tip The Girl in the Green Dress
