|
Showing 1 - 13 of
13 matches in All Departments
Stanisic Associates have designed and constructed an array of
apartment blocks throughout Sydney's inner-city that have provided
a new way to live and to work in a totally urbanized environment.
Many of these apartments have been built on the 'brownfield' sites
of the redundant industrial land south of the city centre. The
architecture has evolved - through an exploration of planning,
material usage, spatial organization and the maximization of
sunlight - into a climatically-responsive and appropriate
modernism: an architecture that can be described as
'Eco-Minimalism.' STANISIC LIVE/WORK documents this approach to
architecture and regenerative planning, and features all the
practice's most significant projects, as well as selected un-built
schemes that explored key ideas and strategies. All projects have
been photographed by Patrick Bingham-Hall, and the book is
illustrated with conceptual and schematic renderings, as well as
formal drawings.
|
The Australian House (Paperback)
Anna Johnson; Edited by Patrick Bingham-Hall; Illustrated by Patrick Bingham-Hall; Photographs by Patrick Bingham-Hall
|
R479
Discovery Miles 4 790
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
A major overview of Singapore's most exciting architecture
practice, documenting the complete corpus of WOHA's pioneering
sustainable and built work. WOHA is at the vanguard of urban and
ecological revitalization in Singapore and a pioneer of Southeast
Asia's green-building revolution. Founded by Wong Mun Summ and
Richard Hassell in 1994, Singapore's most dynamic architecture
studio is known for delivering innovative and sustainable design
solutions to combat the challenges of climate change, biodiversity
loss, and urbanization. Even within Singapore's leading-edge
architecture scene, WOHA have broken new ground, and they are
continuing to do so in our rapidly expanding cities where
far-sighted thinking is imperative to sustainable and sociable
development. Its projects stretch from Singapore to Bangladesh,
China and Australia, where the practice's ambitions are being
realized in works like the self-sufficient Punggol Digital District
in Singapore. This complete overview documents WOHA's pioneering
sustainable and built work, with important ongoing projects
followed by a listed chronology. It is a timely assessment of the
practical realization of WOHA's theories and principles, and the
environmental responsibilities now shouldered by architects and
urban planners worldwide.
It is by no coincidence that another collaborative project is
spear-headed by K2LD. Following the success of the Lien Villa
Collective at Holland Park, Singapore in 2009, Ko Shiou Hee was
asked to look at a similar concept for the Dalvey Estate property
and to select and lead a group of architects in the making of a
unique architecture expression and yet functional outcome, suitable
for contemporary living and fit for rental. It was learning from
Game Theory that Ko Shiou Hee succeeded in persuading his clients
to adopt this sharing strategy both in the Lien Collective and the
Dalvey 7 group. The selected architects must all adhere to the
rules of the game and work on the same fees and briefs. All have to
consider each other's placements and planning to maximise the
benefit for all parties as a whole and eventually benefit the
client. As architects, each firm, and their practicing architects,
has been educated to work with social, economic, and environmental
sensitivity. The world that architects operate in is driven by
developers and stakeholders who maximise their gain through
development strategies, but leave little chance to be true to the
architectural profession. It is perhaps even more pressing for
architects to address this issue of true collaborative spirit in
this increasingly distortive egocentric world. Through this Dalvey
7 project, there is hope in the idea outlined in Game Theory to
perpetuate and flourish in this profession to encourage sharing and
collaboration. Perhaps more form of joint venture in various scales
like big firm-small firm, local firm-foreign firm,
developer-architect venture, design-built etc, will begin to
surface.
Founded in 2007, G8A Architects gained rapid renown for its
projects in Switzerland. Drawn to new opportunities in Southeast
Asia, founding partners Manuel Der Hagopian and Grégoire Du
Pasquier soon expanded the firm's operations to include an office
in Vietnam's capital city, Hanoi, where they now attract a range of
commissions in a completely new environment. In 2010, upon winning
the commission for a major public housing development in Singapore
that set them amongst a new generation of designers for residential
projects in the region, they also opened a branch in the booming
city-state. The first book to document G8A Architects' achievements
to date, Contrast and Cohesion reflects the firm's work in these
starkly contrasting parts of the world. Featuring twenty-seven of
the firm's projects through drawings, photographs, plans, and
descriptive texts, the book also brings together essays that expand
on the different concerns and challenges that accompany the
creation of architecture in Central Europe and Southeast Asia.
Climatically, culturally, and economically, the rapidly growing
cities of Southeast Asia are a world away, but Der Hagopian and Du
Pasquier pursue a strategy of cohesion, which seeks to resolve the
contrasts between East and West with resulting benefits for both.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|