Showing posts with label Japanese architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese architecture. Show all posts

Friday, January 8, 2010

Architectural Chinese greatness

Urban Forest

In the modern world you are surprised — as architects of the past could build approximately in one style, according to the general mood of an epoch, and consider it as art?

The original architectural project

In Competition on Originality there was a new applicant. Peking bureau MAD has offered the skyscraper project on which each floor gardens will blossom.

The basic feature of a design — not at height, and on horizontal saturation. The tower represents a heap of the floors, one on another where each layer will shift aside, thus creating open space for a patio and gardens. A 385-metre tower name Urban Forest.

Urban Forest in China
Urban in China
Urban project
Art architecture in China
Design concept

Architectural heap

By the end of 2009 year architects plan to finish work on the design concept. The tower becomes the third studio in a portfolio. The studio offers new directions for development of city architecture in China. Namely actualisation of ecologically steady multiplane structures which would return the nature in cities. The city of Chongking became the fourth on size a city of China in 1997.


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Sun clock by Hironao Tsuboi

 
‘Sun’ is a clock that reminds us the time as dynamism of the universe by showing sunrise/down on its dial.
 

Thursday, December 10, 2009

House in Japan







Kochi architects interestingly solved problem of privacy in closely build colony of houses. House KN is designed for a suburban area of japanesse city Kanagawa. It is a classical concrete box slited to originate intimate, private garden. The patio oin the second floor is opened and at the same time saved from eyes from surroundings. Very impressive.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Embassy Of Finland In Tokyo, by Architects Lahdelma & Mahlamäki Ltd


"The most important is to create an image of Finland. The Embassy must represent Finland in the right way."

Rainer Mahlamäki

Architects Lahdelma & Mahlamäki Ltd
Embassy Of Finland In Tokyo
Tokyo

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