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CONCEPT

Brooks + Scarpa
Eaves Pavilion, MMKM associates
Port of Tallinn 2030, Zaha Hadid Architects
Seoul Craft Museum, HAENGLIM Architecture
Rothschild Tower, Richard Meier & Partners
Pearl House, AONE Architects 222
CONCEPT
Volume. 222 Oct. 2017

Cover Photo Angle Lake Transit Station and Plaza

ARCHI Object 006 Benjamin Benschneider

Competition 018

Tectonic 060

Parameter 100

Architects
114
Concept

News 168

Index 174
CONCEPT
Volume. 222 Oct. 2017

ARCHI Object 006 Eaves Pavilion MMKM associates

Magasin 113 MVRDV


Monroe Blocks
Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects + Neumann Smith

Competition 018 Port of Tallinn Masterplan 2030 Zaha Hadid Architects


Seoul Craft Museum HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering
PUBLISHER & EDITOR Jeong Jiseong

EDITORIAL
Bucheon Animal Products Complex Chief of Editor_ Kim Dongjoo (ADF Architecture Design Force)
HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering Han Gwangho (SAN Architects & Enginners)
Busan Cooperative Fish Market Kim Hyoman (IROJE KHM Architects)
SPACE Group Co., Ltd. + Sangji Environment & Architects. inc Management_Yoon Gabjoong
Kim Kyoungmi · Jeong Moonho
Yang Eunyoung
Rothschild Tower Richard Meier & Partners Architects
European Central Bank EDITORIAL DESIGN
Tectonic 060 COOP HIMMELB(L)AU Wolf D. Prix & Partner ZT GmbH Jeong Moonyoung
Double Duplex Batay-Csorba Architects
Pearl House AONE Architects Construction & Engineers. Ltd CONSULTATIVE COMMITTEE
Lee Kisun (The Magazine) · Kim Jaeyoon (Yadah)
MANAGEMENT DEPT. Son Miran
ADVERTISING Kang Seongkyu · Management_Hwang Injoo
CurioCity Eray Carbajo
Parameter 100 Tree Tower Toronto PENDA Architecture & Design
MARKETING Hwang Injoo · Lee Inseob · Seong Kyewang
OVERSEA MARKETING Monica Park
PHOTO James Jeong, Kim Hansoo and more

HOMEPAGE www.capress.co.kr
Brooks + Scarpa
Architects E-MAIL capressconcept@gmail.com

114 Angle Lake Transit Station and Plaza, The SIX Housing
Center for Manufacturing Innovation Metalsa
Concept Gateway at Pembroke Pines ADDRESS
307 APEX Center, 18 Achasan-ro 7na-gil, Seongdong-gu, Seoul,
KOREA(04795)
TEL : 455-8040 FAX : 460-9292

News 168 News

Index 174 Architect Index


ARCHI Object

Eaves Pavilion
MMKM associates_Min Seohong

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Architects MMKM associates_Min Seohong Location 14-21, Sulmian-gil, Namwon-si,
Jeollabuk-do, Korea District Nature Green District Use Pavilion Structure SST Cable
Structure Max. Height 10.00m Exterior Finish T22 Steel Pipe, SST, Synthetic Textile Flag
Construction Art Stair_Song Insung Client Namwon City Photo CONCEPT_James Jeong

Floor Plan Section

Detail

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On August 27, 2017, one day in the late summer when the fields were yellow, I visited
Namwon City for the Namwon-Lu project. I visited Namwon City for the first time without
knowing anything other than Chunhyang and Mudfish soup, and I did not prepare anything
for this project before, as I wanted to work on it based on the impression of the day. The
small and big hanok roof eaves and gentle mountain terrain, that spread on the way to the
appointed place from the Namwon Station, seemed to give a warm welcome to the
strangers.

While touring the various attractions and project site of Namwon, I came to the Gwanghan-
Lu, and it reminded me the Chunhyang-Jeon, Im Gweontaek's film, that I watched long ago.
Among them, Lee Mongryong and Sung Chunhyang met at the Gwanghan-Lu for the first
time, which was the most beautiful scene to me, Chunhyang was having a swing with a shy
smile to feel him watching her and her face reddening. The beautiful curved lines drawn by
Her skirt! I also imagined beautiful lines of the ridges of Jirisan to be overlaid and unfolded
while I heard the city official explain that Namwon City was the main point to go up to
Jirisan.

In the end, I thought that I should build a structure to collect the lines found in Namwon for
the Namwon Pavilion project. Two steel columns were set up, and a chain link was made
between them. Then, a total of 100 stainless steel wires were stuck on the chain, and 1,700
flags were connected to the wires. Waseon-Lu, which can be seen in the form of the
mountain terrain of Jirisan, the roof of the hanok, and the skirt's hem of Chunhyang, howls on
the windy day here in the Hampawoo Sound Experience Center. Written by MMKM associates_Min
Seohong

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International

Magasin 113 Monroe Blocks Port of Tallinn Masterplan 2030

MVRDV Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects + Zaha Hadid Architects


Neumann Smith

Magasin 113 is located within Gothenburg's future Frihamnen The Monroe Blocks development will make an impact far beyond With the aim of finding a comprehensive, long-term solution to
RiverCity - the largest urban development project in Scandinavia. its surrounding context, it will become a destination, an icon for connect the city and its public spaces with the functions of the
The proposed 16,500m2 transformation and extension of the the future development of Detroit. The new office tower will offer port, Masterplan 2030 will form the basis for the redevelopment
existing warehouse is located on the riverfront, will create a more a combination of large floor plates, tall ceiling heights and access in the port area into an urban space that is both attractive and
inclusive and vibrant area of the city. to sunlight currently unprecedented in downtown Detroit. easy to traverse.
I N T E R N AT I O N A L + D O M E S T I C
COMPETITION

Domestic

HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering SPACE Group Co., Ltd. +
Sangji Environment & Architects. inc

Seoul Craft Museum Bucheon Animal Products Complex Busan Cooperative Fish Market

Seoul Craft Museum is a culture-producing device that We intended to construct a new one-stop distribution system Busan Cooperative Fish Market has been closely linked with lives
encourages tangible culture, the combination of craft and where all procedure from slaughter of livestock to process, of ordinary people for more than 50 years as the largest whole
technologies of living, and produce products. Through the packaging, selling and tasting and storage are possible at one sale fish market in Korea. The new Busan Cooperative Fish
regeneration of existing school building, it will become a practical place. Also, we wanted to develop the place as a landmark of Market will be reborn as a new landmark in the urban center
place where creation and production become a center through distribution of domestic livestock which is trusted by consumers with the modernized system. The architecture embodies an
the formation of the platform in which craft and living are fused. with the securement of hygiene and safety of livestock and low- image of departure towards ocean and provide visual frame of
priced distribution. the ocean view for the people of Cheonma mountain.
International Competition WINNER

Magasin 113 Gothenburg, Sweden


MVRDV

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Architects MVRDV_Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs, Nathalie de Vries Location Gothenburg,
Sweden Use Flexible Office, Art Centre, Pop-up Space, Cafe, Tourist Information, Shop,
Restaurant, Studio Area 16,500m2 Project Team Jacob van Rijs, Fokke Moerel with Klaas
Hofman, Daniella Persson, Mathias Pudelko, Alicja Pawlak, Mateusz Wojcieszek
Visualization Antonio Luca Coco, Pavlos Ventouris, Massimiliano Marzoli, Paolo Mossa Idra,
Davide Calabro Co-architects BSK Arkitekter Client Gothenburg City Council, Älvstranden
Utveckling Photo MVRDV

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Programmatic Layout

New Facade

Public Heart of Magasin 113

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Magasin 113 is located within Gothenburg's future Frihamnen RiverCity - the largest urban
development project in Scandinavia. The proposed 16,500m2 transformation and extension of
the existing warehouse is located on the riverfront, will create a more inclusive and vibrant
area of the city. The entire site occupies the edge of an existing public square while Magasin
113 itself located in an existing historical warehouse structure which will offer flexible
offices, an art centre, pop-up spaces, a cafe, tourist information, shops, a restaurant and
studios. Gothenburg-based advertising agency Forsman & Bodenfors and Goteborgs
Konsthall have plans to establish its offices in the building.

The current brick facade and interiors of the warehouse will be restored and repaired, with
the existing concrete frame will support three new levels of timber-framed floors above.
These new levels will create space for additional programs and allow the experience of
different atmospheres across levels from ground level upwards. To combine the need for
insulation and the desire to maintain the existing brick facade, a transparent glass protective
'raincoat' will be wrapped around the existing warehouse and the new extension on top. This
will add an exciting blend of a building that is 'old' and new, raw and smooth, and solid and
transparent at the same time. A new public space will be carved out between these two
levels, visually uniting them and also enabling public activity from the exterior square within
the building. Inside, a family of different types of stairs weaves through the building to create
a dynamic but visually unified public route through space.

Magasin 113's location will become a public node through its close connections to other
public spaces in the area. Combined with the nearby park and pool, it aims to attract a wide
range of tenants and services, which in turn will help to create an inviting and desirable
neighbourhood. Written by MVRDV
International Competition WINNER

Monroe Blocks Detroit, USA


Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects + Neumann Smith

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Architects Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects + Neumann Smith Location Detroit, USA Use Mixed-Use (Office, Retail,
Residential, Public) Site Area 12,542m2 Area Office_75,000m2, Retail_15,000m2, Public_4,400m2 Engineer Buro Happold
Engineering Landscape Architect SLA Client Bedrock Management Service LLC Photo courtesy of Schmidt Hammer Lassen
Architects

Propose One Urban Carpet Introduce New Green Spaces Create Porosity

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Monroe Blocks will make a diverse reflection on urban life. The mix of uses allow space for
varied activities complimenting each other to make safe vibrant 24-hour public spaces.
Functions include office, residential, high-street retail, grocery stores and food markets,
entertainment, sport and leisure facilities and the potential for exhibition spaces and
performance venues.

The Monroe Blocks project is an important piece in the puzzle for downtown Detroit's
development, connecting some of the city's key central public spaces: Cadillac Square,
Campus Martius, Library Square and Woodward. These new connections will not only bind
the city center but also enrich, strengthen and unify the already popular public spaces.

What we're doing from a public space standpoint within the development is going to be
special. It's not just a big, tall building. It's a big, tall building that interacts with street level
and public spaces throughout. There's going to be different pods and nods of great spaces to
hang out and for people to get together.

Our Scandinavian heritage has a strong influence on the way we approach city building on
this scale. We always try to think urbanism, city space and the built environment in that
order. In Detroit, we found many existing spaces that held a great amount of urban qualities,
but laid undefined due to the vast amount of open space. Our project is very much about
stitching together and re-establishing some of the indisputable qualities of the original
masterplan. Whilst at the same time we aim to frame a new contemporary approach to city
life - build on some of the keywords that Detroit is made of: Density, Dynamic and Diversity.
Written by Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects

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International Competition WINNER

Port of Tallinn Masterplan 2030 Tallinn, Estonia


Zaha Hadid Architects

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Architects Zaha Hadid Architects_Patrik Schumacher Location Tallinn, Estonia Use
Masterplan Project Director ZHA_Gianluca Racana Project Architect ZHA_Gerhild
Orthacker, Ludovico Lombardi Project Team ZHA_Andres Madrid, Ashwanth Govindaraji,
Craig Kiner, Delfina Bocca, Johannes Elias, Kyle Dunnington, Magda Smolinska, Marius
Cernica, Martina Rosati, Natasha Gill, Pauline Gidoin, Petra Ross, Sergiu-Radu Pop, Vincent
Yeung, Yooyeon Noh Local Architect RemPro Urban/Landscape/Sustainability/Traffic
Consultant Tyrens UK Real Estate and Cost Consultant Colliers Estonia + RLB uk Client
Port of Tallinn Render by VA, courtesy of Zaha Hadid Architects

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Tallinn is one of the fastest growing ports in Europe, meeting an increasing demand for its
services due to its success as a growing hub for cruise ship and ferry passengers as well as
cargo. The masterplan consolidates and improves all the vital activities of the port while also
offering land for civic use and development.

As one of the best preserved medieval cities in Europe, Tallinn's Old Town is a UNESCO
World Heritage Site, while the Estonian capital is a global leader in advanced digital
information technology, establishing one of the world's most connected societies. The new
masterplan celebrates this diversity and links together disparate districts of the city, creating
a vibrant new community near the city centre that will provide an alternative to the city's
Soviet-era housing stock.

The masterplan re-establishes and reinforces the links with the Port of Tallinn and the Old
Town, as well as the links between the city and the sea; providing connectivity from the ferry
and cruise terminals to the city centre, and at the same time creating an integrated new
neighbourhood for the people of Tallinn. With vastly improved access to the waterfront and
new public spaces, the masterplan ensures the Port of Tallinn will become a popular civic
focus for generations to come

While contemporary in concept, the new masterplan deliberately preserves the city's urban
fabric, its vistas to historic landmarksand its views to the sea. The new city blocks within the
masterplan will continue the existing scale of adjacent districts. The flexibility of the
masterplan's civic zones allows for a rich combination of uses - including culture,
entertainment, shopping and hotels - to serve Tallinn's residents and its growing number of
annual visitors (anticipated at over 5 million in 2017). The new pedestrian quayside
incorporates terraces served directly by cafes and restaurants. The masterplan is structured
around a central pedestrian promenade to create a sequence of varied civic spaces which
connect the city and its harbour and link together the different phases of development. Written
by Zaha Hadid Architects

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Domestic Competition WINNER

Seoul Craft Museum

HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering


Architects HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering_Lee Yongho Location 175-2, 175-102,
Anguk-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul, Korea District General Commercial Area, 1st, 2nd General
Residential Area, Site for School Use Cultural and Assembly Facility (Museum) Site Area
12,823.6m2 Bldg. Area 3,614.38m2 Gross Floor Area 10,627.77m2 Bldg. Coverage Ratio
28.19% Gross Floor Ratio 82.88% Bldg. Scale 5F Structure Masonry Wall, R.C., Steel Max.
Height 16m Parking Lot 106 Cars Exterior Finish Stone, Brikc, Low-E Double Glazing
Project Team Yoon Jungjun, Han Seungjin, Shin Hyunsoo, Choi Siein Client Urban Space
Improvement Bureau, Seoul Metropolitan Government

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The "Craft Ground"
Seoul Crafts Culture Museum, with its concept of a crafts network, suggests a "sharing
platform" that fills a void instead of an extravagant design with the exterior and interior of the
building. The two core design elements are the Redemption of Topography and the Craft Hut.

Part of the wide school field was paved with arch-stone, thus restoring the traditional
appearance of the land by creating an area reminiscent of the platform in front of Jongmyo
Palace and transforming the place into a plaza to host a variety of events. Additionally, the
stone walls of the detached palace minimized this modification, but it continued the flow of
people from the city by opening the lot's Gingko tree knoll and the art platform to visitors.

The Craft Hut, a new construction, also presented the minimum amount of equipment to
create a space that visitors to the Crafts Culture Museum could create themselves, rather
than restricting the usage of the area. During the day, it is used in connection with the
exhibition hall, and at night it is linked to the Donated Craft Center's cafe, serving as a
platform for networking and discussions between visitors and artists by staying open late.
Written by HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering

Section

West Elevation South Elevation

East Elevation North Elevation

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1st Floor Plan

2nd Floor Plan

3rd Floor Plan

4th Floor Plan

4th Floor Plan

5th Floor Plan

3rd Floor Plan

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Domestic Competition WINNER

Bucheon Animal Products Complex

HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering

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Architects HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering_Lee Yongho Location Samjeong-dong ~ Wonjong-dong, Ojeong-gu,
Bucheon-si, Gyeonggi-do, Korea District Distribution Business Area, Productive Green Area, Natural Green Area Use Animal
and Plants Facilities, Commercial Facilities Site Area 62,269m2 Bldg. Area 12,800m2 Gross Floor Area New Built_40,000m2 +
Remodeling_13,000m2 Bldg. Coverage Ratio 44% Gross Floor Ratio 140% Project Team Han Seungjin, Kim Jungpyo, Shin
Hyunsoo, Cho Sehee, Kim Woongsik Client Nonghyup Agribusiness Group

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5th & 6th Floor Plan 7th Floor Plan

1st & 2nd Floor Plan 3rd & 4th Floor Plan

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We intended to construct a new one-stop distribution system where all procedure from
slaughter of livestock to process, packaging, selling and tasting and storage are possible at
one place. Also, we wanted to develop the place as a landmark of distribution of domestic
livestock which is trusted by consumers with the securement of hygiene and safety of
livestock and low-priced distribution. I had to consider process line, automation facilities,
HACCP, expandability, noise and bad odor and approached from the efficient, sustainable
and innovative aspects.
An optimal space arrangement plan was set considering sustainable operation of the
facilities through the remodeling of existing facilities and extension of building. The flow of
human traffic was separated according to the cleanness level of going and coming vehicles
and those vehicles were planned to be divided by facility. A clean hygiene facilities were
equipped that meet the HACCP criteria through the cooperation of an overseas engineering
company which had advanced technologies. From slaughter to process and selling, an
optimized process flow was suggested by planning a transfer passage between existing
facilities and new building to build a one-stop distribution procedure.

[EFFICIENT]
Due to the nature of slaughter house, thorough hygiene management and effective working
flow were the focus of design. The zoning by function was prioritized. And the space
separation by species of the livestock was clearly made to prevent cross-contamination was
prevent. The facilities were arranged taking monsoon into consideration to prevent bad odor
and civil complaints.
[SUSTAINABLE]
A phased construction plan was made considering the connection of process flow from the
early stage to construct sustainable complex.
[INNOVATIVE]
In terms of hygiene management, the space was planned with the understanding of
advanced slaughter facilities as foundation. The state-of-the-art automation system was
introduced preparing against the increase of logistics and a successful task performance
method was proposed by planning VE/LCC analysis.Written by HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering

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Domestic Competition WINNER

Busan Cooperative Fish Market

SPACE Group Co., Ltd. + Sangji Environment & Architects. inc

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Architects SPACE Group Co., Ltd. + Sangji Environment & Architects. inc Location 202, Chungmu-daero, Seo-gu, Busan,
Korea District Semi-industry Zone, Port Facility Protection Area Use Transportation (Port Facility), Commercial, Office Site
Area 60,088.70m2 Bldg. Area 40,251.45m2 Gross Floor Area 76,836.47m2 Bldg. Scale B1, 8F Structure R.C., S.R.C., PC
Structure Max. Height 51.7m Landscape Area 7,540.31m2 Parking Lot 1,074 Cars Exterior Finish Low-E Triple Glass, Wooden
Deck, Metal Panel, Granite Stone Project Team SPACE Group Co., Ltd._Kim Kwangshik, Wooh Jinwoo, Choi Sangyong, Lee
Choonghun, Jeong Jaerim, Lee Dongsub, Song Yina, Yoon Hongchul + Sangji Environment & Architects. inc_Oh Chulho, Park
Jinho, Cho Junho, Kang Jikook, Oh Jihee, Kwon Hyunjung Client Busan Metropolitan City Construction headquater

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Departure at the break of day
Busan Cooperative Fish Market has been closely linked with lives of ordinary people for more
than 50 years as the largest whole sale fish market in Korea. The new Busan Cooperative
Fish Market will be reborn as a new landmark in the urban center with the modernized
system. The architecture embodies an image of departure towards ocean and provide visual
frame of the ocean view for the people of Cheonma mountain.

REmind - a memory of Busan Cooperative Fish Market's life and emotions


REconnect - a pathway to Reconnect the disconnected urban fabric
REplace - a clean, fresh and convenient fish market

A large entry yard has been planned around frontal roads for pedestrians' accessibility, and a
Pedestrian Network has been planned to connect sales facilities, a promotion hall and
Observatory Deck. The consignment sales area is symmetrically composed along two piers to
allow zoned utilization possible during and after the peak season. In addition, a waste water-
disposal plant and a refrigeration factory are adjacently arranged in the light of the
relationship with the consignment sale area.
The elevation and the roof are designed by the shape of fishing net which is expected to
create pleasant pedestrian and parking lot environments by installing shade planting. An
Observatory Deck is made on the partially raised roof of the consignment sale area, and side
window of the lower deck is effectively used for natural ventilation and natural lighting. The
most beautiful sea in Busan will be appreciated on a higher observatory deck of the
consignment sale area. Written by SPACE Group Co., Ltd.

West Elevation South Elevation

East Elevation North Elevation

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Longitudinal Section

Transverse Section

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1st Floor Plan

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2nd Floor Plan

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3rd Floor Plan

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4th Floor Plan

5th ~ 8th Floor Plan

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Rothschild Tower European Central Bank

Richard Meier & Partners Architects COOP HIMMELB(L)AU Wolf D. Prix & Partner ZT GmbH

The new Rothschild Tower is inspired by the scale and Bauhaus design principles of its neighbors in The design for the new premises of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt combines the horizontal
Tel Aviv’s White City. The building's image of lightness and transparency is the result of a double structure of the landmarked Grossmarkthalle with a twisted double tower, which rises to 185
layer facade comprised of clear glass with a delicate white louver screen inspired by traditional meters. United by an entrance building, these two elements form an ensemble of special
Middle Eastern clothing and prominent corner balconies derived from the low to mid-rise architectural significance. Featuring bridges, pathways and platforms, the glass atrium between the
neighboring buildings. two highrises creates a vertical city.
W O R K S + D E S I G N

TECTONIC

Double Duplex Pearl House

Batay-Csorba Architects AONE Architects Construction & Engineers. Ltd

The Double Duplex was created in response to the cities growing need for alternative housing Housing is a place to live in a certain place and house is the basis for life, a place to give stability and
models due to the rising cost of urban real estate and the need for urban densification within a place to design the future in that space. Therefore, everyone is afraid of a situation where there is
Toronto's sought after historic residential neighbourhoods. no house. The house is the shelter of life and the center of life.
Rothschild Tower Tel Aviv, Israel
Richard Meier & Partners Architects

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Architects Richard Meier & Partners Architects_Richard Meier, Reynolds Logan Location Tel
Aviv, Israel Use Apartments(147 Unit), Retail Spaces, Amenities(Pool, Spa, Wine Cellar, Lounge)
Site Area 2,470m2 Net Floor Area 750m2 Bldg. Scale 42F Structure Concrete Frame with
Aluminum and Curtain Wall Max. Height 154m Project Architects Thibaut Degryse, Ananth R.
Sampathkumar Collaborator Gil Even-Tsur, John Jourden Associate Architect BLK Architects
and Town Planners Client Berggruen Residential ltd. Photo Roland Halbe Model Photo Scott
Frances Drawings courtesy Richard Meier & Partners Architects

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East Elevation South Elevation

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Richard Meier & Partners has completed its first international residential tower and its first
project in Israel. The new Rothschild Tower is inspired by the scale and Bauhaus design
principles of its neighbors in Tel Aviv's White City. The building's image of lightness and
transparency is the result of a double layer facade comprised of clear glass with a delicate white
louver screen inspired by traditional Middle Eastern clothing and prominent corner balconies
derived from the low to mid-rise neighboring buildings. A large "urban window" frames the
western views to the sea from the Penthouse terraces.
The new residential tower is anchored to Rothschild Boulevard in the heart of Tel Aviv's White
City. The neighborhood is filled with thousands of Bauhaus buildings designed by German
Jewish architects who began immigrating to Israel before WWII. The city holds the world's
largest concentration of Bauhaus buildings, 4,000 in total, dating mostly from 1931 to 1956, but
also encompassing subsequent designs that were built as a tribute to the style.
Rothschild Tower is a simple graceful residential tower lightly resting on a retail base. The
design is inspired by Bauhaus principles that were based on functionality and a certain
sparseness or economy of means using modern mass produced materials, and in this case a
repetitive planning module. The fundamental considerations that shape the tower design are the
quality of light in the plan, views to the city and sea, an efficient assembly of "served" and
"service" spaces around the core, and the building's relationship with the existing fabric and
massing on Rothschild Boulevard.
Lightness and transparency of the tower and base are the primary goals, not only to reduce the
apparent scale and mass in the context of the low to mid-rise neighborhood, or the scale-less
reflective towers in the area, but to express the optimism, openness, and energy of the more
secular modern character of Tel Aviv. The delicate louver screen is an elegant white "veil,"
inspired by the ventilated protective layers of more traditional Middle Eastern clothing. It both
defines and obscures the distinction between the public image of the building and the private
realm within. The louver elements of the screen protect the delicate clear glass skin, and have
local architectural precedents in the ubiquitous "treeseem", the sliding louver blinds enclosing
open air porches or negative spaces so common in the existing neighborhood Bauhaus
buildings. Written by Richard Meier & Partners Architects

West Elevation North Elevation

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Section 1 Section 2

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1st Floor Plan

Typical Floor Plan

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European Central Bank Frankfurt, Germany
COOP HIMMELB(L)AU Wolf D. Prix & Partner ZT GmbH

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Architects COOP HIMMELB(L)AU Wolf D. Prix & Partner ZT GmbH Location Frankfurt,
Germany Use Office Site Area 120,000m2 Gross Floor Area 185,000m2 Max. Height 220m
(North tower_185m + South tower_165m) Structural Engineering B+G Ingenieure, Bollinger
und Grohmann GmbH Client European Central Bank (ECB) Photo Paul Raftery, European
Central Bank/Robert Metsch Plan & Diagram COOP HIMMELB(L)AU Wolf D. Prix & Partner
ZT GmbH

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The design of the Viennese architectural studio Coop Himmelb(l)au for the new premises of the
European Central Bank in Frankfurt combines the horizontal structure of the landmarked
Grossmarkthalle with a twisted double tower, which rises to 185 meters. United by an entrance
building, these two elements form an ensemble of special architectural significance. Featuring
bridges, pathways and platforms, the glass atrium between the two highrises creates a vertical
city. The semi-public and communicative functions are located in the former Grossmarkthalle.
The exceptional atrium and visible steel support structure show that the ECB building belongs to
an entirely new typology of skyscrapers.

The hyperboloid cut


From the beginning it was an explicit request of the ECB to create a unique, iconic building as a
symbol for the European Union. A distinctive and unique building can only be achieved by a
completely different kind of Geometry. The design concept of the ECB is to vertically divide a
monolithic block through a hyperboloid cut, wedge it apart, twist it and fill the newly created
intermediary space with a glass atrium. The result is a very complex geometry and a
multifaceted building offering a completely different appearance from each angle: massive and
powerful from the South-East, slender and dynamic from the West.

The principle of the "Vertical City"


The architectural concept of the ECB is to vertically divide a monolithic block through a
hyperboloid cut, wedge it apart, twist it and fill the newly created intermediary space with several
glass atriums. The connecting and transitioning platforms divide the atrium horizontally into
three sections with heights from 45 to 60 meters. This is where all vertical entry points are joined
- and just like public squares, they invite visitors to communicate. The planned "hanging
gardens" ensure a pleasant room climate while elevators and stairs connect these places with
the offices and communication areas of the Grossmarkthalle. Written by COOP HIMMELB(L)AU

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Section

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Double Duplex Toronto, Canada
Batay-Csorba Architects

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Architects Batay-Csorba Architects Location Toronto, Ontario, Canada Use Residence Site Area 588.54m2 (Each Site) Gross
Floor Area 325.16m2 (Each House) Bldg. Scale B1, 3F Project Team Jodi Batay-Csorba, Andrew Batay-Csorba, Lola Abraham
Client Mada Group Inc. Photo Doublespace Photography

1. Entry
2. Kitchen
3. Bedroom
4. Front Courtyard

Section

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Section Section
1. Rear Courtyard 5. Front Courtyard 1. Entry 6. Living
2. Living / Dining 6. Bedroom 2. Living 7. Bedroom
3. Kitchen 7. Bathroom 3. Patio 8. Bathroom
4. Lower Entry 8. Upper Entry 4. Entry 9. Deck
5. Master Bedroom

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The Double Duplex infill project is located on Melbourne Avenue in Parkdale, one of Toronto's
most notable historic neighbourhoods for their century old Victorian and Bay and Gable
mansions. The existing double wide site was severed into two separate properties with a four
storey 3,500 square foot detached duplex residence being constructed on each site, allowing
property owners to either rent out one of the units to subsidize their own income or to use it as a
live work space. Double Duplex pays tribute to the existing context and the beauty of its craft and
local artistry by making contextual relationships through massing and geometry along with
texture and detail of paramount concern. Using an abstraction of the pervasive Bay and Gable
typology the project becomes a reinterpretation of contextual architectural elements.
By leveraging digital fabrication techniques and use of new material technologies for perceptual,
spatial and formal effect we translate the notion of 19th century craft by way of a two story brise
soleil. The brise soleil encloses the front and rear balconies, allowing for controlled lighting
conditions and privacy. Constructed of a bio-enhanced, rot resistant and sustainable softwood
the individual pieces are organized to create a large scale dynamic facade. During the day the
light is filtered and illuminates the interior spaces with ephemeral dappled light effects. And at
night the screen reads as a decorative glowing lantern.
The project also represents strategies for dynamic and spatial integration of exterior and interior
spaces within a typical narrow and deep Toronto infill lot. Each duplex residence consists of a
two storey lower unit and a two story upper unit. The lower unit is carved out in the front and
back with double height volumes that flow out to sunken courtyards maximizing the amount of
natural daylight entering the unit and transgressing the basement apartment stereotype. The
lower unit's courtyards are wrapped in brightly painted murals by local artists. The upper unit is
organized around a double height atrium space which brings natural light and ventilation into the
center of the unit. Two exterior courtyards punctuate either end of the unit's floor plate behind
the wooden brise soleil, to the front a double height balcony overlooks the street and to the rear
provides for a master bedroom terrace. Written by Batay-Csorba Architects

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1. Entry
2. Patio 1. Bedroom A
3. Study 2. Bedroom B
4. Kitchen 3. Bathroom
5. Dining 4. Master Bedroom
6. Living 5. Patio

2nd Floor Plan 3rd Floor Plan

1. Patio
2. Entry
3. Study 1. Entry
4. Dining 2. Bedroom A
5. Kitchen 3. Bathroom
6. Living 4. Bedroom B
7. Rear Patio 5. Master Bedroom

Basement 1st Floor Plan 1st Floor Plan

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Pearl House Jeju, Korea
AONE Architects Construction & Engineers. Ltd

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Architects AONE Architects Construction & Engineers. Ltd_Lee Donghyun Location
1113-29, Daeheul-ri, Jocheon-eup, Jeju-si, Jeju-do, Korea District Plan Management
Area, Landscape Conservation Area Use Single House Site Area 854.00m2 Bldg. Area
338.54m2 Gross Floor Area 354.76m2 Bldg. Coverage Ratio 39.64% Gross Floor Ratio
41.54% Bldg. Scale 3F Structure R.C. Max. Height 11.30m Parking Lot 4 Cars Exterior
Finish Granite, Double Glazing Project Team You Imcheol, Lee Minho, Hong
Changwoo, Jeong Mingyeong, Lee Jisung Construction Lee Huiyeong Structure
Engineer DOHWA Engineering_Park Chaesam HAVC & Electrical Engineer SEWON
Engineering_Park Jongsung Photo CONCEPT_James Jeong

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Housing is a place to live in a certain place and house is the basis for life, a place to give stability
and a place to design the future in that space. Therefore, everyone is afraid of a situation where
there is no house. The house is the shelter of life and the center of life.
It is a repository of the history of a particular individual. In addition to the meaning of the place, the
way of life of the inhabitant is drawn like a map through components such as exterior design,
internal space composition, ornaments and furniture.
The house is made of materials, but it is a place to build up memories so that memories of
family will grow in it.?The house will live a life like the owner in a special bond style that the house
and the human being have. Pearl House will change and evolve with the life of the owner.

epilogue
One day a phone call came to my friend. He said he wanted to build a house where he can spend
his life effortlessly spending time with his family and inviting his friends. I knew the life of my
friend, but I talked a lot with my friend to hear his thoughts.
He asked for a few things while building his house; Pilotis structure to avoid moisture in Jeju
Island and worms on 1st floor, Small swimming pool overlooking Hamduk Beach, Rooftop
overlooking Mt. Halla on a clear day, Space directing that facade and nature are harmonious,
and Energy-saving building using new renewable energy.
A friend trusted the opinions of the architect about the space composition and the elevation
design during the basic design process. The building was completed through site consultation
during construction. And now we laugh at each other and say thank you. My friend says “thanks
for designing a good building” and I say “thanks for trusting me.” Written by You Imcheol

Front Elevation Rear Elevation

Right Elevation Left Elevation

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Transverse Section

Longitudinal Section

1. Bedroom 6. Boiler Room


2. Living Room 7. Powder Room
3. Kitchen 8. Terrace
4. Bathroom 9. Storage
5. Entrance

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1. Bedroom
2. Living Room
3. Kitchen
4. Balcony
5. Bathroom / Dress room

3rd Floor Plan Roof Floor Plan

1. Bedroom
2. Living Room
3. Entrance
4. Kitchen
5. Terrace
1. Piloti (Parking) 6. Swimming Pool
2. Entrance 7. Bathroom / Dress room
3. Hobby Room 8. Linen Room
4. Boiler Room

1st Floor Plan 2nd Floor Plan

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CurioCity_ Eray Carbajo

Science is "empirical, rational and logical" It is an endless journey. Curiosity is the fuel of Science.
Curiosity ignites research. If you are curious, you try different ways to reach something. CurioCity is
designed with this in mind. The design of the clusters presents different paths, different openings,
different doors, different buildings, leading to different journeys and various experiences
Tree Tower Toronto_ PENDA Architecture & Design

The architects of Penda teamed up with the wood consultants of CLTbrand Tmber to propose a modular
and natural highrise tower in Toronto, Canada. The 'Tree Tower Toronto' should be seen as a catalyst for
future residential buildings that are 'more efficient to construct' and 'more ecological to our environment'
than common construction methods.
CurioCity Cairo, Egypt
Eray Carbajo

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Architects Eray Carbajo_Inanc Eray, Gonzalo Carbajo Location Cairo, Egypt Use
Science Center Area 85,000m2 Structure Concrete, Stone Max. Height 15m
Landscape Area 88,200m2 Parking Lot 2,300 Cars Project Team Ugur Imamoglu,
Marco Mattia Cristofori, Emana Ljajic, Egemen Onur Kaya, Ali Cem Bozdag, Marius
Pasculescu, Mehmet Onur Koklu, Evren Yazici Client The Arab Republic of Egypt,
The Library of Alexandria

Main Axis

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Science is "empirical, rational and logical" It is an endless journey. Curiosity is the fuel of
Science. Curiosity ignites research. If you are curious, you try different ways to reach
something. CurioCity is designed with this in mind. The design of the clusters presents
different paths, different openings, different doors, different buildings, leading to different
journeys and various experiences. At first glance the organization of clusters look like a maze,
yet as the spaces unfold, the proposal seeks, a series of sustainable, inspiring outdoor
promenades, courtyards. Human-Nature interaction being at the heart of the main idea,
these spaces will evoke curiosity that will help people to explore and continuously search
through the CurioCity Science Park.

Stone Tablets vs Stone Walls


Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs found on stone tablets is a display of Egypt's innovative past
and creative Egyptian persona. Egyptians communicate their politics, social activities,
technology through these carvings for decades. Inspired on this idea, the design proposal
seeks to establish stone walls that will serve to separate as well as integrate different zones
of the masterplan. While these walls will become the main communication tool for the
CurioCity Science Park for the residents and the visitors, they will also serve to help
establishing the microclimate and outdoor comfort. Spanning from west to east, diagonally
on the site, these walls are protecting the park from extensive sun, also from the strong
Northern Wind and the Southern Sand Storms. When needed these walls twist open to
create the building roofs where the functional program is located. With a continuous flow
through indoor and outdoor, whole building cluster, functions as one big science path, while
individual parts are self-sufficient. Written by Eray Carbajo

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Programme Diagram

Master Plan

Wall to Roof Shade

Function Diagram

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Tree Tower Toronto Toronto, Canada
PENDA Architecture & Design

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Architects PENDA Architecture & Design Location Toronto, Canada Use Residential Gross Floor Area 5,000m2 (Residential
Area_4,500m2 + Public Area_550m2) Bldg. Scale 18F Structure Wood (CLT Timber) Max. Height 62m Photo PENDA
Architecture & Design

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The architects of Penda teamed up with the wood consultants of CLTbrand Tmber to propose
a modular and natural highrise tower in Toronto, Canada. The 'Tree Tower Toronto' should be
seen as a catalyst for future residential buildings that are 'more efficient to construct' and
'more ecological to our environment' than common construction methods.

Our cities are a assembly of steel, concrete and glass. If you walk through the city and
suddenly see a tower made of wood and plants, it will create an interesting contrast. The
warm, natural appearance of wood and the plants growing on its facade bring the building to
life and that could be a model for environmental friendly developments and sustainable
extensions of our urban landscape.

The 'Tree Tower Toronto' is a joined effort of ‘penda’ as architects and canadian CLT-
consultancy 'Tmber' to envision a sustainable high-rise proposal in urban areas. The 18-
storey tower will stand 62m high and will comprise 4,500 sqm of residential areas and 550
sqm of public areas with a cafe, a children’s daycare-center and workshops for the
neighbouring community.

Due to its natural appearance, the building shifts the usual relation from a 'building to city'
relation to a 'building to nature' relation. The tower tries to establish a direct connection to
nature with plants and its natural materiality. Written by PENDA Architecture & Design

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Timber Building Cycle

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architect concept Brooks + Scarpa

Brooks + Scarpa is a collective of architects, designers and creative thinkers dedicated to


enhancing the human experience. Honored with the 2014 Smithsonian Cooper- Hewitt
National Design Award, the firm is a multi-disciplinary practice that includes architecture,
landscape architecture, planning, environmental design, materials research, graphic, furniture
and interior design services that produces innovative, sustainable iconic buildings and urban
environments.

Awarded the 2010 State of California and National American Institute of Architecture Firm
Award for nineteen years of consistently exemplary work seamlessly blending architecture,
art and craft, Brooks + Scarpa has also garnered international acclaim for the creative use of
materials in unique and unexpected ways. The firm has also been recognized for pioneering
more holistic approaches to delivering award winning environmentally responsive designs.

While the Brooks + Scarpa team practices architecture with an extremely rigorous and
exacting methodology, incorporating cross-discipline research and digital technologies, we
remain open-minded, so that our work can adapt throughout the dynamic process of making
places for people. Each project is designed to address our client’s needs, budget and specific
site conditions incorporating important global issues such as sustainability and digital
fabrication.

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Angle Lake Transit Station and Plaza
Brooks + Scarpa
Washington, USA

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With ample space for people to live, work, and play, the new Angle Lake Transit Station and
Plaza is an Envision certified sustainable mixed-use facility consisting of a 1-acre connecting
plaza and community event spaces, a drop-off area for light rail users, retail space with
dedicated bike storage and parking and a 35,000 square-foot parcel for future transit-oriented
development. It also includes a parking structure for 1,150 cars designed to accommodate
conversion to new future uses. Serving over 2,500 passengers daily, including the
headquarters for Alaska Airlines, which employs more than 7,500 people in the immediate
surrounds and over 4,000 people living within 1/2 mile of the station, Angle Lake Station is
an important transit hub in the Sound Transit portfolio of transit facilities.
Inspired by William Forsythe's improvisational piece 'Dance Geometry' where dancers
connect their bodies by matching lines in space that could be bent, tossed or otherwise
distorted, we began to think of the possibilities where simple straight lines are composed to
produce an infinite number of movements and positions with little need for transition. This
idea lessens the need to think about the end result and focus more on discovering new ways
of movement and transformations'.
Using ruled surface geometry, the undulating facade is formed by connecting two curves
with a series of straight lines to form the surface of the facade. Each of the custom aluminum
facade elements were designed and segmented into standardized sizes for the most efficient
structural shape and material form, while maximizing production, fabrication and installation
cost efficiency. This technique allowed the design team to work with complex curved forms
and rationalize them into simple, cost-effective standardized components, making them easy
to fabricate and efficient to install. The entire facade was installed in less than three weeks
without the use of cranes or special equipment. Written by Brooks + Scarpa

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Architects Brooks + Scarpa Location 28th Ave South, SeaTac, Washington, USA Use Public
Plaza, Transit Station, Parking Total Area 28,328m2 Parking Lot 1,150 Cars Project Team
Brooks + Scarpa_Lawrence Scarpa, Angela Brooks, Mario Cipresso, Emily Hodgdon, Mark
Buckland, Jeff Huber, Chinh Nguyen, Cesar Delgado, Fui Srivikorn, Christina Wilkinson,
Royce Scortino, Sheisa Roghini, Soha Momeni, Ryan Bostic Local Engineers/Architects
Berger ABAM_Bob Griebenow, Lars Holte, P.E. Landscape Brooks + Scarpa,
BergerABAM_David Sacamano Structural Engineering BergerABAM Electrical and Lighting
Stantec Mechanical Sazan Group, Inc. Lighting Design Luminescense Civil Engineering
BergerABAM Stantec Security Geotechnical Shannon & Wilson Wayfinding Brooks + Scarpa
Contractor Harbor Pacific/Graham Specifications Brooks + Scarpa, BergerABAM Facade
Engineering Brooks + Scarpa, Lars Holte, P.E., Walter P. Moore Facade Fabrication APEL
Extrusions, Intermountain Industrial Fab Client Sound Transit Photo Benjamin Benschneider,
Brooks + Scarpa

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East Elevation

West Elevation

South Elevation North Elevation


Landscape Design Concept

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Section Detail Exploded Wall Detail

Section Diagram

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1. Retail
2. Transit Drop Off
3. Canopy Above
4. Open to Below
5. Public Art
6. Transit Station
7. Water Feature
8. Restroom

Plaza Level Plan

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Perspective Cross Section Perspective Tunnel Section

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Level 7 Floor Plan

Level 5 Floor Plan Level 6 Floor Plan

Level 3 Floor Plan Level 4 Floor Plan

Level 1 Floor Plan Level 2 Floor Plan

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Section A

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The SIX Housing
Brooks + Scarpa
Los Angeles, USA

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Architects Brooks + Scarpa Location 811 S. Carondelet Street, Los Angeles, California, USA
Use Housing, Service Facility Gross Floor Area 3,739.35m2 Bldg. Scale 5F Project Team
Brooks + Scarpa_Lawrence Scarpa, Angela Brooks, Emily Hodgdon, Chinh Nguyen, Cesar
Delgado, Mario Cipresso, Brooklyn Short, Royce Scortino, Ryan Bostic Landscape Brooks +
Scarpa Structural Engineering JAMA MEP Engineering IEG Civil Engineering Barbara Hall
Specifications Phil Easton Client Skid Row Housing Trust Photo Tara Wujick

East Elevation

North Elevation

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The SIX is a 52-unit affordable housing project provides a home, support services and
rehabilitation for previously homeless and/or disabled veterans. It is located in the MacArthur
Park area of Los Angeles. McArthur Park has one of the highest densities in the USA with
over 38,000 people per square mile and a total population of 120,000 people in 2.72 square
miles.

Offering shelter and comfort, The SIX breaks the prescriptive mold of the traditional shelter by
creating public and private "zones" in which private space is deemphasized, in favor of large
public areas. The organization of the space is intended to transform the way people live-
away from a reclusive, isolating layout towards a community-oriented, interactive space.

The ground level contains offices, support spaces for the veterans, bike storage and parking
while the second level has a large public courtyard. Surrounded by four levels of housing
units with balconies wrapped with a wood screen made from recycle planking the courtyard
has large openings with green roofs that visually connects the space to the street on the
lower level beyond. This allows the tenants to enjoy a secured open space while still
connecting to the larger community. The uppermost level has a green roof, large public patio
and edible garden with panoramic views of the area. Written by Brooks + Scarpa

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Section BB Section AA

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1. Roof Deck
2. Roof Planter
West Elevation 3. Open to Below
4. Photovoltanic Array

Roof Floor Plan

South Elevation

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Detail Section - Cantiliver

Detail Section - Stepping Planters

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1. Parking Garage
2. Bicycle Storage / Workshop 7. Laundry Room
3. Reception 8. One-Bedroom Unit
4. Conference Room 9. Community
5. Courtyard 10. Hallway / Circulation Space 4th Floor Plan
6. Standrad Studio Unit 11. Open to Below

1st Floor Plan 2nd Floor Plan 3rd Floor Plan

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5th Floor Plan

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Center for Manufacturing Innovation Metalsa
Brooks + Scarpa
Nuevo Leon, Mexico

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Architects Brooks + Scarpa Location Parque de Investigacion e Innovacion Tecnologica, Apodaca, Nuevo
Leon, Mexico Use Research Lab, Office, Industrial Testing Facility, Storage Area Phase I_1,750m2, Phase
II_3500m2 Bldg. Scale 2F Project Team Lawrence Scarpa, Daniel Poei, Abby Katcher, Oliver Liao, Darien
Williams, Jordan Gearhart, Ching Luk, Mark Buckland, Angela Brooks, Emily Hodgdon, Daniel Safarik
Architect of Record Homero Fuentes, Centro de Diseno Landscape PEG Office Structural Engineering
Carl W. Howe Partners, Inc. MEP Cobalt Engineering Engineers of Record Structural and Civil_SPID
Ingenieros, Mechanical_SENSA, Electrical_DINELEC LEED Consultant Zinner Consultants Project
Management Araltec_Alex Ruiz Cruz, Evelia Garcia Client The Proeza Group Photo courtesy of Brooks +
Scarpa

West Elevation Roof Serial

Overall Patterning

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Master Planning for a 5,000m2 research lab, office and industrial testing facility serving an
automotive industry client who designs and manufactures automotive and heavy truck
chassis. The first phase encompasses a total of 15,500ft2, including 5,500ft2 of office space
and 11,000ft2 of research labs and warehouse space for testing and developing prototypes.
The second phase consists of an additional 5,500ft2 of office space and 34,000ft2 of research
labs and warehouse space. The approach to this project was to preserve the integrity of a
high bay industrial facility and program, while providing a model environment for the users
and visitors.
A saw-toothed roof draws from the geometry of old factories and the surrounding Monterrey
Mountains. By modulating space and light thru a fractured roof geometry, the building is able
to maintain a rational plan to meet the rigorous requirements of the program, while providing
a strong connection to the landscape both visually and metaphorically. The second major
feature of the building is the perforated metal skin that clads the entire facade. The custom
aluminum skin is both perforated and etched. It incorporates interplay of solid and void,
orchestrating areas of both light and shadow, while limiting views into the research areas,
necessary to protect proprietary trade secrets.
Programmatically, the building is divided into two volumes - warehouse/labs and offices
functions. The upper story of the offices cantilever over the lower story to the west and is
clad in a highly perforated metal skin and is the main entry facade. The lower story is mainly
glazed and open to reveal portions of the research laboratory, machine room and other
industrial functions not requiring visually security. From the exterior, the warehouse appears
to float lightly over the mechanical and intellectual heart of the program, reversing the notion
that an industrial building should be solid and protected. Rather, the building seems very
open and is intended to feel vulnerable revealing parts of its inner program to public view.
Written by Brooks + Scarpa

Roof Manipulation

System Axonometric

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Sustainable Section

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Facade Panels

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Section

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1st Floor Plan 2nd Floor Plan

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Gateway at Pembroke Pines
Brooks + Scarpa
Florida, USA

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Architects Brooks + Scarpa Location Pembroke Pines, Florida, USA Use Gateway Sculpture
Project Team Lawrence Scarpa, Jeff Huber, Chinh Nguyen, Arty Vartanyan Fabrication
Wyetiweurks Art + Engineering Engineering Nick Geurts Client The City of Pembroke Pines
Photo courtesy of Brooks + Scarpa

Elevation B

Elevation A

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Public art should not be merely decoration or after thought, it should enhance user
experience and celebrate a place. As part of the new Pembroke Pines City Center that
includes a public plaza, a 3,500 seat performing arts hall, the city hall and The Frank art
gallery for the City of Pembroke Pines, the architect designed the Gateway Sculpture and
attending landscape features to complement these activities and programs. Essentially
Pembroke Pines was a city, without a city (no downtown or community space) and the new
City Center and Gateway Sculpture provide a community anchor that did not exist prior.

With a limited budget, the architect worked with The Gateway Sculpture and landscape
elements frame a pedestrian gateway into a new public plaza, providing way-finding and
anchoring a sense of arrival. Designed as public art, the stainless steel sculpture emerges as
tree columns that lead up to an array of perforated plates that appear to spin in the
continuous breeze of south Florida. The experience under the sculpture creates a dappled
light effect as you walk between bromeliad mounds - an experience like that of a subtropical
hardwood forest. The sculpture provides a shaded area for seating, as well as programmable
up lighting that enhances user experience day or night. During performance and art events
the Gateway will be a meeting ground for pre and post-show activities, and a gathering place
for the community. Written by Brooks + Scarpa

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Curved Pipe Structure Unrolled Perforated Canopy Geometry

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COMPETITION

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EXHIBITION

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NEWS / BOOKS

New BOOK CONCEPT


INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE OF COMPETITION

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Busan Cooperative Fish Market, Space Group_Lee Sangleem /
INDEX
LEE Sang-Leem is currently Chairman of the Space Group, an honorary president of Korean Institute of Architect (KIA) and American Institute of Architect (AIA) honored
LEE, Sang Leem with an honorary fellowship. He was a UNESCO chair professor (Social Sustainability of Historic Districts). He has participated in numerous exhibitions
and has received numerous awards and accolades. Some of his current architectural projects are Sejong Government Complex (Korea), Gyeonggi Province Hall,
Casablanca Stadium (Morocco), InterContinental Hotel & Casino (Angola) and Jangbogo Antarctic Research Station.

CurioCity, Eray Carbajo /


Eray Carbajo is an international architecture and design studio based in Brooklyn and Istanbul. With over 20 international awards in architecture, interior design, planning
and product design; the studio is known to solve design problems with innovative and value-adding solutions.

Eaves Pavilion, MMKM associates_Min Seohong /


Mr. Min, Seohong established MINIMAX architects in 2013 and has been exploring total solutions between architecture and urbanism. At the same time, he teaches the
architectural design and urban design at Hongik University and Ewha Womans University in Seoul. In 2016, He established a new design brand, MMKM associates in
cooperation with Sekyung Kim, the principal of KM architects, and built a cooperative relationship with a diverse group of experts in furniture, installation art, interior
design, architecture and urban design based on space design.

Seoul Craft Museum, Bucheon Animal Products Complex, HAENGLIM Architecture & Engineering_Lee Yongho

Haenglim Architecture advances an architecture that stimulates and inspires; an architecture that tells the story of places, of institutional aspiration, and of synergy
between the natural and built realm. Pursuing a harmony of sites and programs, holistic function and essential components, We derive aesthetic integrity, an enduring
and innovative design character through continuous exploration. We orchestrate a partnership fully and precisely with clients, professional consultants, and our staff, in
order to galvanize the best resources of innovation and experience.

Pearl House, AONE Architects Construction & Engineers. Ltd_Lee Donghyun /


Lee Donghyun founded AONE Architects Construction & Engineers. Ltd. He is full member of Korea Institute of Registered Architects and is working as APEC Architect.
He teached architecture lecture at Daelim Univ., from 2004-2007 and Bucheon Univ., from 2003-2012. He designed Hwagok 6-1 Public Parking Lot, Gangnam Irwon-dong
Welfare Center, Tanhyeon Medinuri Hospital, Guri Smart venture tower etc.

Rothschild Tower, Richard Meier & Partners Architects /

The work of Richard Meier & Partners is instantly recognizable and internationally respected. For over five decades, we have been appointed to create important public
and private buildings. Our offices in New York and Los Angeles employ a multicultural staff of talented professionals practicing architecture, urbanism, product design
and exhibition design. We aspire to thoughtful, elegant contemporary architecture that exceeds our clients’ expectations for beauty and elegance.

Brooks + Scarpa /

Brooks + Scarpa is a collective of architects, designers and creative thinkers dedicated to enhancing the human experience. Honored with the 2014 Smithsonian Cooper-
Hewitt National Design Award, the firm is a multi-disciplinary practice that includes architecture, landscape architecture, planning, environmental design, materials
research, graphic, furniture and interior design services that produces innovative, sustainable iconic buildings and urban environments. While the Brooks + Scarpa team
practices architecture with an extremely rigorous and exacting methodology, incorporating cross-discipline research and digital technologies, we remain open-minded,
so that our work can adapt throughout the dynamic process of making places for people.

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