Tag: architecture


katsuhiro miyamoto architects: bird house

August 20th, 2010 — 7:23pm

COMMENT: Embrace it…

From designboom…
http://www.designboom.com/weblog/cat/9/view/10948/katsuhiro-miyamoto-architects-bird-house.html


‘bird house’ by katsuhiro miyamoto
all images courtesy katsuhiro miyamoto & associates

located in nayoga – city, japan is ‘bird house’ recently completed by japanese architect
katsuhiro miyamoto. constructed primarily out of wood the private residence was designed
around the natural slope of the property. rather than leveling the slope the architects chose
to insert spikes into the ground, so that it would guarantee to be built securely.

by making use of the site characteristics, adjacent to the roads at the top and bottom of the site,
the foundation forms a zigzag approach just like a mountain trail  – connecting the two roads.
at the landings formed at the turning points of the zigzag, there are three ‘sites’. the name
‘bird house’ was given to the three white houses, as it is nested on the branch like foundation.


the main entrance


inbetween the two roads


the staircase connecting the two houses


floor plan


floor plan


section view

project info:
title: bird house
location: nagoya-city, aichi
principal use: residence
architects: katsuhiro miyamoto & associates 
principal in charge: katsuhiro miyamoto
project team: keishi yamamoto, takenori uotani
structural engineering: masaichi taguchi / taps
general contractor: ido kensetsu
site area: 428.21㎡
built area: 113.74㎡
total floor area: 117.46㎡
(main building / first floor area: 40.27㎡、
second floor area:67.89㎡
annex / first floor area:9.30㎡)
structure:wood: 2 stories
completion date: 2010

Comment » | architecture, current

Passive houses as type houses

July 20th, 2010 — 10:42pm

COMMENT: I like the concept of movement through space based on time — something about the full usage of the individual’s environment.

Passive houses as type houses

passive_house

Kjellgren
Kaminsky
has produced Swedens first series of passive
houses
sold as type houses in collaboration with Emrahus.
Their goal is to make this environmentally friendly building technique
available for all. Villa Nyberg is the first one to get built. The
villa has been customized for the Nyberg family and is situated in
Borlänge, central Sweden.

passive_houses

Passive houses are extremely well-insulated buildings that are
largely heated by the energy already present in the building – people
and the household equipment generate a lot of energy. The energy
simulations show that this villa will have an energy consumption for
heating of only 25 kWh/m²year.

passive_houses

The villa is situated by a lake in a fur forest in central Sweden.
The living room and kitchen open up towards the views of the lake, the
more private areas such as the bedrooms and bathrooms are situated on
the other side of the house with smaller windows overlooking the
forest. The round shape of the villa eliminates coldbridges and reduces
the enclosing wallarea of the house. It also effects the way you live
in the house, during the day one will move from room to room around the
building experiencing different views and daylight conditions.

kjellgren_kaminsky

passive_houses

passive_house

architecture

passive_houses

passive_houses

Comment » | architecture, current, thoughts

Alki Townhome in Seatle

May 10th, 2010 — 9:40pm
from abducted by design

Comment » | architecture, current

GAD: pina, bodrum

April 29th, 2010 — 10:37pm

by ridhika on designboom


pina, bodrum by GAD
all images courtesy GAD

turkish GAD (global architectural development) firm in collaboration with turkish architect
dara kirmizitoprak have designed a proposal for residential units on pina, a peninsula
on the aegean sea, located near bodrum on the southern coast of turkey.

surrounded by trees, the peninsula is an example of the local natural beauty. an active
decision was made that settlement on the peninsula shouldn’t ruin the natural beauty
present on the site. on the contrary, it should blend and unite with it. therefore, a number
of diagrams were created analyzing the present location of the trees, natural topography,
and possible locations for the necessary road branching. these diagrams were over-laid
on one another, and the resulting surfaces were molded, stretched and distorted to form
the spaces.

on the 44,500m2 site, there are 17 villas, 21 hotel rooms, event spaces, restaurants,
and recreation areas. each house has its own private deck, private pool, and private garden.
the location of each piece of the program allows the view to be seen from every point on
the site. the result is 3 prototypical residences.


aerial view


various shapes of residences


residential units


view from above


villas


hotel rooms


private decks


private decks


private decks

Comment » | architecture, current

Cliff House

April 27th, 2010 — 8:56pm

by Altius Architecture, Inc.

3,200 sf Cottage. Muskoka Lakes, Ontario. Completion 2009.

Design + Construction Management

Design

Project Description

Set on a rock formation overlooking a spectacular lake, the Cliff House seeks to enhance the extraordinary surroundings through the thoughtful integration of building elements with the natural assets of the site and terrain. The program called for intimate spaces carefully tuned to the unique views, light, and breezes of the site. Self-sufficiency was a key client mandate and the project is completely off-grid.

The dwelling emerges form the cliff and rests on a base crafted from local granite. A tall central void acts as an anchor that circulates movement, light and air into living spaces that pinwheel and extend into the landscape. Balancing the heavy mass of two interior fireplace cores; cantilevered volumes, flying roofs and floor-to-ceiling glass achieve a lightness of form and work to draw the lake into each interior space. Finely crafted materials, including hand-hewn stonework, wood ceilings, and structural board-formed concrete walls, define the residence and celebrate the skilled contributions of all tradespeople involved.

Living lightly on the site was important to the owners and the architects were given a strong mandate for sustainability. As a retreat for the family, the desire to become completely self-sufficient and independent from external infrastructure became critical to the design of this off-grid residence. The design achieves this aim by combining passive and active systems. Sustainable design in this case is not divorced from the experiential qualities of the dwelling but enhances the unification of building and landscape.

This design implements a passive gain and solar mass strategy that takes advantage of the sun’s daily passage and the movement of air in different seasons. In summer, solar shading limits heat gain while operable windows are orientated to take advantage of natural ventilation. Operable windows in the vertical circulation space are create a stack effect to vent hot, stale air above and draw cool, fresh air in below. Green roofs mediate temperatures and control runoff while connecting the building foreground with the distant landscape. Optimized glazing and solar orientation in conjunction with the thermal mass of concrete slabs and stone walls forms the basis of the heating system. A high performance envelope and super-insulated glass work to limit unfavorable heat loss and gains all year-round. These passive strategies reduce energy loads and augment comfort so that the demands on active systems are minimized.

Two contra-flow masonry heaters (ultra clean burning) in the fireplace cores take full advantage of abundant biomass available on site for supplemental heat. An array of evacuated tube solar collectors use the sun’s energy to heat water that circulates through 10 thermal storage tanks. This massive store of energy supplies hydronic radiant floor heating and provides domestic hot water. A series of photovoltaic panels and battery bank provide the building with electricity. Electrical loads have been carefully managed and are minimized through the use of energy efficient appliances and LED and compact fluorescent lighting.

Status

The building has been commissioned and occupied. We are closely monitoring energy use to adjust the system as needed.

The 10 kw PV array is being metred to gauge whether the electrical consumption is being met. The Solar hydronic heating sysrtem has also been metred to monitor the use of the back-up propane boiler. Our goal is zero consumption. Since a good portion of the heating system is user based and dependent, as in ironically the more the building is used the less the back up system is relied on, and less fossil fuels burned, this will take a year of use before we can fully guage our research.

Both the clients and all designers involved are very excited about the ongoing research component of the building.

One recent sunny November day had outdoor air temperatures under 10 degrees celcius while passive gains had indoor air temperatures over 25 degrees celcius at which point venting skylights moderate air temperature while the thermal mass slabs absorb solar gain for night time radiant heat.

Design goals are engineered that the solar mass tanks, when fully charged (one to two days of full solar gain) can provide enough hydronic solar to last four overcast winter days.

We will continue posting updates to our research findings.

Sustainability Features

  • Program and Spatial Optimization
  • Integration with the ‘Natural Assets’ of Site and Terrain
  • Site Specific View and Vista Optimization
  • Passive Solar Heating (Thermal Storage Mass)
  • Natural Ventilation and Passive Cooling
  • Natural Daylighting
  • High Performance Envelope Design
  • Renewable and/or Recyclable Materials and Finishes
  • Indoor Air Quality (IAQ) and Non-toxic Materials and Finishes
  • Advanced Wood Heating Systems (ie. Contraflow Masonry Heaters)
  • Radiant Heating
  • Heat Recovery Ventilation
  • Solar Hot Water Systems (Domestic and In Floor Radiant Heating)
  • Solar Electric (photovoltaic or PV systems)
  • Wastewater Heat Recovery
  • Low Energy Lighting & Appliances (LED, CFL lighting and Energy Star appliances)
  • Water Conserving Appliances & Fixtures (low flow/ dual flush toilets)
  • Green Roof Systems

Designed for an off-grid property, this cottage will feature a hybrid wood/solar radiant heating system with propane backup. Evacuated tube solar arrays will fill mass store tanks that feed a hydronic radiant floor system. This system will supplement a passive gain and solar mass strategy. Summer cooling is through solar shading and passive stack effect ventilation. A series of photovoltaic panels provides the buildings on the property with electricity. Large overhangs control the solar gain while green roofs mediate temperatures and control runoff.

Altius Project Team

Architecture: Trevor McIvor, Tony Round

Construction Management: Trevor McIvor, Tony Round

Project Partners

  • Engineering: CUCCO engineering + design, Toronto – Christopher Cucco
  • Mechanical: Canadian HVAC Design w/ Gravenhurst Plumbing & Mechanical
  • Construction: Orchard Contracting, Bracebridge – Doug Orchard

Publication

1 comment » | architecture, current

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