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Why would an architect burn a wooden building?
The Phaidon Atlas focuses on an ancient Japanese preservation technique employed by contemporary architects
Ring House by Makoto Takei and Chie Nabeshima/TNA. Burning a wooden building might seem like a strange way to ensure its preservation, but as the editors of the Phaidon Atlas explain in their latest focus, “Shou sugi ban uses fire to preserve. A process of treating wood that, among other things, circumvents the need for harsh chemicals in the treating process, it dates from 18th century Japan.” While it fell out of favour as more durable cladding materials came onto the market, slight burnt wood has found favour more recently among contemporary architects, who delight in both the material’s appearance and its properties.
Ring House - Makoto Takei and Chie Nabeshima/TNA. The steeply sloped, wooded site of this weekend house is one of 318 plots in a planned community one hour from central Tokyo by bullet train. The 9.4-meter (30.8 ft.) high mini-tower is clad in rings of vertical burnt red cedar panels that vary in height. This arrangement allows 360-degree views of the forest from inside and views straight through the building from outside.
Carbon House by Mjolk. This house, in a small town just south of Prague was built last year, for just €125,000. The architects say the burnt façade makes reference to the owner’s love of cooking; they also cultivate vegetables in the gardens of this plot.
Soda Pop Spa by Terunobu Fujimori . This Japanese spa was built in 2005 on hot springs of Nagayu, near Takeda City. Lamune Onsen translates as Soda Pop Spa, and refers to the warm, naturally carbonated spring water that serves as a draw for visitors to the area. The spa’s exterior walls consist of a black-and-white striped skin clad in carbonized cedar wood beams and plaster over a reinforced concrete framework.
The Lake Cottage Uffie is located within a densely forested area bordering the Kawartha Lakes in Ontario, Canada. A small annex - part of a larger family home - it sits independently from the rest of the plan. Mirrored cladding on front and back elevations camouflage the small structure within the surrounding trees. This is contrasted by a charred cedar facade on east and west elevations, as well as black steel on the steeply pitched roof.
Potters’ Fields Parkside Pavilion – DSDHA. DSDHA’s Potters’ Fields project consists of two pavilions, set on either side of Potters’ Fields Park. Blossom square pavilion was built in the shadow of Tower Bridge on the western side and is now demolished; Parkside Pavilion is situated at the base of City Hall. Despite sharing similar form and materials, visually they are strikingly different. The cladding of Parkside Pavilion has been treated by charring the exterior of the wood, leaving it a darkened brown. Blossom Pavilion, in contrast, is clad in a smooth blonde timber that blends with the light stone of Tower Bridge.
Astrup Farnley Museet / Oslo
Photos: KBiron
MAXXI Museum - Roma
Photos KBiron
Juin 2014
Architecte Zaha Hadid
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Gaetano Pesce
Précarité...
KBiron
Ken Robinson : changer l'Education
Le blogue
Ce blogue, comme le site web, témoigne de plusieurs champs d’intérêt. Bien que je ne travaille pas un matériau en particulier, j’ai des affinités avec certains. Bien que je ne travaille pas une forme spécifique, plusieurs voyagent un moment avec moi.
J’ai passé nombre d’années à évoluer dans le milieu scientifique, à me servir de cette rigueur d’organisation et de pensée tout en tentant d’introduire l’inventivité et l’intuition. La curiosité et l’adaptation demeurent la base des possibles.
Le corps humain en est un exemple magnifique. Nous avons beau construire de multiples systèmes de classement, catégoriser toutes les parties anatomiques du corps, toutes les malformations et les dérives, ceux-ci demeurent des guides, car toute forme a la fascinante singularité d’être toujours différente et unique. La création est à cette image…