Arq.to Posted November 27, 2007 Report Posted November 27, 2007 Study in Mass http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2306/2059229058_02aed71d96_o.jpg [image: Boutique Monaco by Mass Studies; view larger]. I've mentioned architect Minsuk Cho, of Mass Studies, on BLDGBLOG before: he designed the so-called "ring dome" for the Storefront for Art and Architecture's Z-A event last month in New York City, and he collaborated with Jeffrey Inaba's SCI-FI studio to propose an "urban district above the water" in Seoul. I'd say that Mass Studies is hard to beat for sheer spatial interest and originality; witness their Torque House, Pixel House, or Cheongam Media Headquarters, for instance – let alone the famously freaky Seoul Commune 2026. http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2080/2060413286_ecc8b75f7f_o.jpg http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2414/2060413256_7ac449d04b_o.jpg http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2088/2060413204_ffe42c083f_o.jpg [images: Three rendered views of the building's lobby and ground level exterior]. Or take a look at the Boutique Monaco, pictured here. The Monaco is "a high-density, massive building for residential/office/commercial/cultural activities to be located in the heart of the Seoul metropolitan life, the area around Gangnam station." http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2392/2059229100_13d0ec8145_o.jpg http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2200/2058443261_750c512490_o.jpg [images: Day and night renders of the project's exterior, complete with punctuated vertical bays of greenery and residential terracing; view both the top and bottom images larger]. As Mass Studies explains:Unlike the existing high-rises where one is segregated from the outside world as soon as he [or she] leaves the ground floor, Boutique Monaco will be a building where at each level will be a vertical open space accessible from different spots in the floor. The exterior, designed in an orthogonal pattern in the interest of efficiency in space allocation, is intended to strike a balanced harmony with the surrounding box-type high-rises.Further: "In the plan for Boutique Monaco, around 172 units are created in 49 different types and sizes and interconnected as if in an enormous puzzle. At the same time, different types of internal/external, private/public areas are to be installed." You can see some of the building's floorplans here. http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2175/2059632891_c8071dbf01_o.jpg [image: A kind of rooftop park and bioscape, complete with what appears to be a helipad]. The project can be seen in renderings, drawings, and diagrams on the Mass Studies website – but also now in photographs. The building is under construction even as this post is being written, and it should be open for inhabitation by late summer 2008. http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2135/2058443121_e6036c38b6_o.jpg [image: The Boutique Monaco under construction; view larger]. Meanwhile, I don't mean to uncritically promote the actions of a property developer in Seoul; nor do I wish to suggest that because this building has a few trees growing out of it that it's "green." But I do have to say that I like 1) the project's use of materials (the wood cladding inside the vegetated nooks is especially brilliant), 2) the punctuated bays themselves, which break up the facade in a really great way and add a spatially and experientially inspired dimension to the project, and 3) the diagonal bracing, however ornamental and non-structural it may be, of the podium. We may be seeing more and more of these sorts of structural weavings – but that's because they're cool. http-~~-//farm3.static.flickr.com/2055/2059229032_d6b24e5c08_o.jpg [image: Bracing at the base of the Boutique Monaco; view larger]. For other projects by Mass Studies, check out their archives. Ler artigo... Quote Arquitectura, Arquitetura, Construção, Engenharia e outros Espaço de Arquitetura e Fórum da Casa E LEGO, Comunidade LEGO, notícias e novidade LEGO
Sputnik Posted November 28, 2007 Report Posted November 28, 2007 Ainda no outro dia rebentou um apartamento em setúbal, todo o prédio foi desalojado. Sou incapaz de viver numa coisa dessas, chamem-me o que quiserem. Quote
Against Posted November 28, 2007 Report Posted November 28, 2007 As imagens fazem-me lembrar os programas do Discovery Channel sobre construções monstruosas! Lembro-me de ver uns descomunais, aquilo mais parecia uma cidade, onde as pessoas que lá iriam habitar não precisavam de ter qualquer contacto com o exterior, ali tinham tudo. Lembro-me que a circulação pelo edifício era feita com aquelas rampas deslizantes (não sei o nome técnico delas), e até tinham uma rede de transportes interno (eléctrico). O que não me lembro de ter sido falado no programa foi dos custos ambientais que construções daqueles tinham, o único ar que ali entrava era o produzido pelos AC. :icon_no: Sputnik viver num sítio destes torna-se necessário em países asiáticos, e provavelmente os mais eficazes, visto que se torna mais fácil crescer para "cima" do que para os lados. Assim, abrigam o maior número de pessoas em menos área “horizontal”. Quote
Sputnik Posted November 28, 2007 Report Posted November 28, 2007 Deves estar a falar no projecto para uma cidade piramidal para Tóquio, a construir em área a ganhar ao mar. Os tubos da mega-estrutura de suporte da pirâmide servem, simultaneamente, de canais de tráfego de pessoas - não existiriam carros. É uma coisa colossal! E o mais incrível é que só já não foi realizado porque os gastos energéticos inviabilizaram económicamente o projecto, porque de resto... Quote
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