To encourage exploration of various architects and buildings, I will post an image of a new building on a weekly basis, so we may all play "Name that Architect and Building!!!". Sorry to be lame, but I'm sort of tired of hearing how wonderful Rem is or how everyone hates Gehry. Let's get some other guys on the table, instead of regurgitating the same thing. Anyway,
I hope this link works
holz.box
Sep 6, 07 7:07 pm
dia
Sep 6, 07 7:16 pm
I know this one too - but i cheated.
xtbl
Sep 6, 07 8:08 pm
this is the best thread ever.
i don't know what any of these are, but it's fun just seeing all the cool stuff that's out there.
holz.box, that last one you posted is just beautiful!
Orhan Ayyüce
Sep 6, 07 8:27 pm
i don't know who's done the last one either, but it just seems it is done right.
David Cuthbert
Sep 6, 07 9:05 pm
this is an educational thread Cris, I know I'm learning alot, particularly about what people like.
Steven Ward
Sep 6, 07 9:09 pm
that house IS beautiful. reminds me of caruso st john's brick house - a lot of the same sensitivity to materials and an efficiency in the use of a just a few well-chosen but bold moves - but in the wrong part of the world from the looks of it.
holz.box
Sep 6, 07 10:39 pm
cris- yes it is.
i think the firm may have cheated, though. one of the partners has the same last name as a startchitect. don't know if they are related, but it is uncanny.
dia
Sep 6, 07 10:44 pm
And Steven - in the winter, it is a very different place I imagine... thick masonry walls would come in handy.
holz.box
Sep 6, 07 10:53 pm
nah, it has a mild winter compared to what lies around it
dia
Sep 6, 07 11:16 pm
Right. I've never been to that part of the welt.
snooker
Sep 6, 07 11:45 pm
I always wondered how that house weathered on Martha's Vinyard.
I have spent some time there and the climatic conditions can raise hell on just about any exterior surface that is so exacting? I wish I could walk up to this house and have a close look...but knowing it is Martha's Vinyard the owner....would probably be calling everyone from the police to the coast guard, cause of a curious individual is poking around his secluded estate. There was a day when I might of had an invite, but that day is gone...with the first wife.
james webb
Sep 7, 07 4:46 am
holz, your clue helped. the stone house is by Markus Wespi Jerome de Meuron Architects in Switzerland, and yes Jerome de Meuron is a cousin of Pierre de Meuron.
gee now ive gotta think of another to post...hmmmm
james webb
Sep 7, 07 8:49 am
now...before your post your answer...the office is not german
aml
Sep 7, 07 10:14 am
but... but... it looks so much like something sauerbruch hutton would do.....ok.
[i'm enjoying this thread a lot, and learning a lot, but i would really really like to name a building already... some buildings i knew, but had been guessed already by the time i found the thread. hmpf.]
holz.box
Sep 7, 07 11:40 am
yeah, that's extremely derivative of the firehouse, only s+h wouldn't have a base like that. yeck.
SDR
Sep 7, 07 12:38 pm
Yeah, holz.box, the ARO house is just an interesting variation on generic lapped siding -- but I couldn't help including it. The (mostly European ?) examples are really original, to my mind, in using wood as a permeable screen, for instance. . .
There's a wonderful house that has a continuous "louvered" exterior, with the boards variously angled from "closed" to "open" as they go up -- or is it down ?
holz.box
Sep 7, 07 12:46 pm
it's up, there are a few examples.
baumschlager + eberle's kern haus is a good one.
michael alder also has a few nice ones
SDR
Sep 7, 07 12:58 pm
Thanks. Of course, no one should think that some of these won't weather into a rather different condition; periodic replacement of the weathering material might be preferable to the inevitable repair: painting (!). Trex, anybody ? But I love them. . .
Thread hijack -- my bad.
phuyaké
Sep 7, 07 1:15 pm
check out the weathering that's occurred on the school for wood technology posted above:
tough to really see from the picture but you can see the way the sun bleaches the beams. i wish i had another picture of it but there's some large unobstructed walls that have that angle going all the way down them, nice effect.
phuyaké
Sep 7, 07 1:16 pm
<end hijack>
james webb
Sep 7, 07 1:54 pm
ok, the firm that did the SH look alike also did this...more clues needed.
its a dutch office - well known here, but internationally not so much yet.
a-f
Sep 7, 07 1:57 pm
It's Arons & Gelauff's kennel in Amsterdam - home to 180 dogs and 480 cats.
james webb
Sep 7, 07 1:59 pm
a-f, i kinda figured in the end only a dutchie would get it, but nice to expose those guys a bit.
SDR, that ARO continuous wood siding is one of my favorite details I've seen in recent years. Love it.
There are so many beautiful buildings out in the world!!!! This thread makes me feel very optimistic.
james webb
Sep 7, 07 2:13 pm
agreed LB, when you see all this stuff it makes you realise that great architecture is possible. not easy - but possible.
i've got no idea about your post a-f.
a-f
Sep 8, 07 3:02 am
Ok, no guesses at all? The architect was collaborating with two more famous contemporaries on this project:
james webb
Sep 8, 07 3:44 am
oh, that makes it whole lot easier!
UNESCO, Paris. Marcel Breuer with Pier Luigi Nervi and Bernard Zehrfuss.
and funnily enough your orginal post with the stairs made me think of ando's concrete cylinder on the same site - but i dont think that is how it is accessed from below?
james webb
Sep 8, 07 3:46 am
oops, but you are not saying the staircase is part of unesco. so its a breuer - just a case of which one.
a-f
Sep 8, 07 4:15 am
hehe, goede morgen p2an... no it's not unesco! it's not a breuer either... here's a lousy exterior shot:
james webb
Sep 8, 07 5:03 am
so by the process of elimantion, we will get there. i'm guessing Pier Luigi Nervi - because of that roof structure but i havent the time now to search out which one...
dierxap
Sep 8, 07 11:47 am
a-f...is it Lautner, although I don't remember that staircase. Definatly in the realm of his work....the outside shot looks like the Malibu house
a-f
Sep 8, 07 11:52 am
nooo... not Lautner!
nataizi
Sep 9, 07 6:12 pm
Bernard Zehrfuss - Musee de la Civilisation Gallo-Romaine - Lyon France
Especially when I don't know how to post an image!
SDR
Sep 9, 07 7:35 pm
aml
Sep 9, 07 7:48 pm
otto wagner, wagner villa at hutteldorf
aml
Sep 9, 07 7:53 pm
actually that was too easy, i just noticed the link that gave it away. i think i should renounce my place... nataizi, you're supposed to disguise the link!
SDR
Sep 9, 07 9:32 pm
Nataizi's link was missing a slash, so it appeared instead of the photo. I posted a corrected version.
aml
Sep 9, 07 11:28 pm
ok, still i feel i cheated [although i didn't see the broken link until after posting]. but for continuity, i'll post images:
dierxap
Sep 10, 07 8:53 am
Mathematics Facility in Santiago....
Alejandro Aravena
dierxap
Sep 10, 07 8:54 am
At the Universidad Catolica de Chile...he was at the GSD a couple of years ago..has some very nice work
aml
Sep 10, 07 9:41 am
cool dierxap, was curious about how well known he is. your turn!
dierxap
Sep 10, 07 1:25 pm
may be easy considering the amout of press over the last year..
but here goes..
phuyaké
Sep 10, 07 1:32 pm
Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Museu Brasileiro da Escultura (Brazilian Museum of Sculpture in Sao Paulo)
dierxap
Sep 10, 07 1:34 pm
wow..that was about 15 seconds :)
It is a wonderful building isn't it Phuyaka? Thought I shoudl keep it in the southern hemisphere after the Aravena building.
...ok..so you are up>
phuyaké
Sep 10, 07 1:44 pm
I was checking the thread right when you posted, good timing. Definitely a beautiful work and a worthy pritzker recipient.
To encourage exploration of various architects and buildings, I will post an image of a new building on a weekly basis, so we may all play "Name that Architect and Building!!!". Sorry to be lame, but I'm sort of tired of hearing how wonderful Rem is or how everyone hates Gehry. Let's get some other guys on the table, instead of regurgitating the same thing. Anyway,
I hope this link works
I know this one too - but i cheated.
this is the best thread ever.
i don't know what any of these are, but it's fun just seeing all the cool stuff that's out there.
holz.box, that last one you posted is just beautiful!
i don't know who's done the last one either, but it just seems it is done right.
this is an educational thread Cris, I know I'm learning alot, particularly about what people like.
that house IS beautiful. reminds me of caruso st john's brick house - a lot of the same sensitivity to materials and an efficiency in the use of a just a few well-chosen but bold moves - but in the wrong part of the world from the looks of it.
cris- yes it is.
i think the firm may have cheated, though. one of the partners has the same last name as a startchitect. don't know if they are related, but it is uncanny.
And Steven - in the winter, it is a very different place I imagine... thick masonry walls would come in handy.
nah, it has a mild winter compared to what lies around it
Right. I've never been to that part of the welt.
I always wondered how that house weathered on Martha's Vinyard.
I have spent some time there and the climatic conditions can raise hell on just about any exterior surface that is so exacting? I wish I could walk up to this house and have a close look...but knowing it is Martha's Vinyard the owner....would probably be calling everyone from the police to the coast guard, cause of a curious individual is poking around his secluded estate. There was a day when I might of had an invite, but that day is gone...with the first wife.
holz, your clue helped. the stone house is by Markus Wespi Jerome de Meuron Architects in Switzerland, and yes Jerome de Meuron is a cousin of Pierre de Meuron.
gee now ive gotta think of another to post...hmmmm
now...before your post your answer...the office is not german
but... but... it looks so much like something sauerbruch hutton would do.....ok.
[i'm enjoying this thread a lot, and learning a lot, but i would really really like to name a building already... some buildings i knew, but had been guessed already by the time i found the thread. hmpf.]
yeah, that's extremely derivative of the firehouse, only s+h wouldn't have a base like that. yeck.
Yeah, holz.box, the ARO house is just an interesting variation on generic lapped siding -- but I couldn't help including it. The (mostly European ?) examples are really original, to my mind, in using wood as a permeable screen, for instance. . .
There's a wonderful house that has a continuous "louvered" exterior, with the boards variously angled from "closed" to "open" as they go up -- or is it down ?
it's up, there are a few examples.
baumschlager + eberle's kern haus is a good one.
michael alder also has a few nice ones
Thanks. Of course, no one should think that some of these won't weather into a rather different condition; periodic replacement of the weathering material might be preferable to the inevitable repair: painting (!). Trex, anybody ? But I love them. . .
Thread hijack -- my bad.
check out the weathering that's occurred on the school for wood technology posted above:
tough to really see from the picture but you can see the way the sun bleaches the beams. i wish i had another picture of it but there's some large unobstructed walls that have that angle going all the way down them, nice effect.
<end hijack>
ok, the firm that did the SH look alike also did this...more clues needed.
its a dutch office - well known here, but internationally not so much yet.
It's Arons & Gelauff's kennel in Amsterdam - home to 180 dogs and 480 cats.
a-f, i kinda figured in the end only a dutchie would get it, but nice to expose those guys a bit.
arons en gelauff
this is an interesting one by them
My turn, what's this:
SDR, that ARO continuous wood siding is one of my favorite details I've seen in recent years. Love it.
There are so many beautiful buildings out in the world!!!! This thread makes me feel very optimistic.
agreed LB, when you see all this stuff it makes you realise that great architecture is possible. not easy - but possible.
i've got no idea about your post a-f.
Ok, no guesses at all? The architect was collaborating with two more famous contemporaries on this project:
oh, that makes it whole lot easier!
UNESCO, Paris. Marcel Breuer with Pier Luigi Nervi and Bernard Zehrfuss.
and funnily enough your orginal post with the stairs made me think of ando's concrete cylinder on the same site - but i dont think that is how it is accessed from below?
oops, but you are not saying the staircase is part of unesco. so its a breuer - just a case of which one.
hehe, goede morgen p2an... no it's not unesco! it's not a breuer either... here's a lousy exterior shot:
so by the process of elimantion, we will get there. i'm guessing Pier Luigi Nervi - because of that roof structure but i havent the time now to search out which one...
a-f...is it Lautner, although I don't remember that staircase. Definatly in the realm of his work....the outside shot looks like the Malibu house
nooo... not Lautner!
Bernard Zehrfuss - Musee de la Civilisation Gallo-Romaine - Lyon France
nataizi choose an image
This is probably going to be too easy
[img]http://www.bluffton.edu/~sullivanm/wagner/housefront.jpg[img]
Especially when I don't know how to post an image!
otto wagner, wagner villa at hutteldorf
actually that was too easy, i just noticed the link that gave it away. i think i should renounce my place... nataizi, you're supposed to disguise the link!
Nataizi's link was missing a slash, so it appeared instead of the photo. I posted a corrected version.
ok, still i feel i cheated [although i didn't see the broken link until after posting]. but for continuity, i'll post images:
Mathematics Facility in Santiago....
Alejandro Aravena
At the Universidad Catolica de Chile...he was at the GSD a couple of years ago..has some very nice work
cool dierxap, was curious about how well known he is. your turn!
may be easy considering the amout of press over the last year..
but here goes..
Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Museu Brasileiro da Escultura (Brazilian Museum of Sculpture in Sao Paulo)
wow..that was about 15 seconds :)
It is a wonderful building isn't it Phuyaka? Thought I shoudl keep it in the southern hemisphere after the Aravena building.
...ok..so you are up>
I was checking the thread right when you posted, good timing. Definitely a beautiful work and a worthy pritzker recipient.
going to move things a bit east: