The Japanese Art Of Shou Sugi Ban

shousugiban shousugiban1 shousugiban3

Images via

Using fire as a tool for construction seems counterintuitive. But burning lumber being used in a project (just a little bit) can boost the end result structurally, as well as aesthetically

The process is fairly simple. Burn the planks on both sides to the desired amount of char. The carbon exterior will release the moisture inside the board as gas and steam. (Think of it as turning the wood’s surface into a chemical compound similar to the pure carbon a diamond.) After cooling the boards, brush and wash them to your aesthetic liking—the amount of char cleaned off changes the look of the wood. Finally, you can seal the board with a natural oil of your choice, or leave it unvarnished.

shousugiban4

Shou Sugi Ban by BYTR Architecten

This method of burning the surface of wood building materials began in Japan during the 1700s. Since Japanese builders traditionally used cedar, as well as cypress, the process is called shou sugi ban, or “burnt cedar.” In more recent years, Japanese have opted for plastic and other materials for their buildings, causing the shou sugi ban to wane.

Read the complete article on Architizer here.

shousugiban5

Sands Point Renovation by CDR Studio Architects, PC

Cats Rule Architecture

Cats

A Cabin in a Loft by Terri Chiao

It’s true: cats really do rule everything around us, or at least they act like they do. While some pet lovers may argue that the unquestioning affection of dogs is preferable, cat lovers know that the attention of felines is reserved for those of us with discerning taste… in architecture and companionship.

Cats3 Cats4

Hausboot Silverbeaver by Confused-Direction Design

Cats typically hate water, so a houseboat might seem like the last place they’d like to call home. However, this particular floating home is actually a cat’s paradise, featuring a wood-burning stove to warm up by and carpeted perches on the wall designed specifically for the feline residents.

Cats1

Softbox TiriPiri by ARHIS

This eco-conscious vacation home makes use of geothermal heat and solar panels. It also features an amazing split-tread staircase that would be perfect for any cat to climb (and likely trip up their owners!).

Cats2

coloro-desk / koloro-stool by Torafu

Cats aren’t known for their industrious natures—there’s a reason it’s called a “catnap.” This modular plywood workstation may be perfect for human productivity, but a feline can easily find another use for the in-stool storage.

Read the full article on Architizer here.

Léger And The Modern Metropolis

Leger_2

Ballet MécaniqueFernand Léger, 1923-24.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Paris was undergoing rapid transformation.New technology engendered a new experience of the surrounding environment, now a kaleidoscope of color and form: trains puffing white smoke across the French countryside, ubiquitous advertisements, and automobiles speeding at unprecedented velocities.

Leger

“The City,” Fernand Léger, 1919.

Paris was Léger’s primary metropolitan subject. Napoleon III and Baron Haussman undertook a massive urban planning program during the second half of the 19th century, imposing a rational grid of boulevards and train stations where medieval alleyways once stood. Once Paris had a structure, it was able to modernize, a process that changed the experience of the city entirely.

Léger wrote, “when one crosses a landscape by automobile or express train it becomes fragmented, it loses descriptive value but gains in synthetic value. The view through the door of the railroad car or the automobile windshield, in combination with the speed, has altered the habitual look of things.” In Léger’s mind, it was the artist’s job to depict this new myriad of sensory impressions; the desire to capture speed and fragmented detail led him to a nonrepresentational method of painting, similar to cubism and featuring contrasting colors to provoke feelings of dissonance.

Read the complete article on Architizer here.

LegerCorbu

Fernand Léger on left, Le Corbusier on the right. Image via.

Homes That Break Out Of Winter For An Endless Summer

EndlessSummer1

Endlesssummer7

Fish House by Guz Architects

The 1960s film “Endless Summer” followed a group of surfers from California around the world, chasing the hot weather so they could surf year-round.  But while the surfers in “Endless Summer” were in search of the perfect wave, I just want the perfect place to escape the cold.  Winter 2014 has been a bit exhausting with it’s Polar Vortex, extreme cold, and consistent snow.  Here are a few of a my favorite projects culled from the Architizer Project database for escaping Winter cold.

Read the full article on Architizer here.

EndlessSummer4

Rio Bonito House by Carla Juacaba

EndlessSummer2 EndlessSummer3

Waterfront House Coogee by JPR Architects

EndlessSummer5 EndlessSummer6

Nettelton 199 – Clifton by SAOTA – Stefan Antoni Olmesdahl Truen Architects

David Hockney’s Pool Paintings Capture The Best Of SoCal Modernism

hockney.a biggersplash

“A Bigger Splash,” David Hockney, 1967.

If the house is a machine for living, as Le Corbusier famously said, then the pool is the hedonistic machine for pleasure. And no artist captured the thrill of the quick plunge, or leisurely submersion, quite like David Hockney.

hockney.pool-2-figures

“Portrait of an Artist (Pool with Two Figures),” David Hockney, 1972.

hockney.nick-wilder

“Portrait of Nick Wilder,” David Hockney, 1966.

Though born in Yorkshire, England—which has to be one of the least sunny places in the world—Hockney was an apt renderer of the swimming pool and the architecture surrounding it. The artist began painting them during his first trip to Los Angeles in 1964, and the resulting vibrant, almost abstract, planes of color captured the clean lines, flat surfaces, and the openness to the natural environment of California Modernism.

Read the complete article on Architizer here.

“Lithograph of Water Made of Thick and Thin Lines and a Light Blue Wash and a Dark Blue Wash”

“Lithograph of Water Made of Thick and Thin Lines and a Light Blue Wash and a Dark Blue Wash,” David Hockney, 1978.

Hockney Photograph of Roosevelt pool

“Sun on the Pool,” David Hockney, 1982.

Rust Never Sleeps

Rust2

Redcliff House by MAP Architects

Kryptonite is the Man of Steel’s one weakness, but steel itself is far more vulnerable. As any architect knows, this otherwise strong material has a hard time standing up to water and air, which cause it to rust, eating away the metal and causing corrosion and structural damage. But weathering steel, or cor-ten, has a special superpower: It uses rust as a shield. This may not seem as impressive as being able to fly like Superman, but it is extremely useful for architects and engineers.

Rust

700 Palms Residence by Ehrlich Architects

The iron in standard steel forms ferrous oxide when exposed to moisture and oxygen. This is what we call rust, typified by its reddish orange color and flakiness. Corrosion in rusted steel occurs because the molecular bonds holding the iron together have been destroyed. Typical steel will flake away to nothing over time. The chemical process is similar to removing all load-bearing walls in a building, the internal structure is gone and the whole breaks into pieces.

Rust3

Haus Wurth by Hermann&Valentiny and Partners

Cor-ten prevents this by incorporating less reactive metals such as copper and nickel into the steel during its formation. The new alloys in the steel form a connective matrix throughout. This “sticks” the rust formed to the surface, creating a protective barrier similar to skin.

Read the full article on Architizer here.

Rust1

Sagaponack House by Bates Masi + Architects

Makers With Agenda

Makers1

T.4.2 by Makers With Agenda

To have an agenda is to have a distinct plan of action; there is intent as well as commitment.

That’s the thinking behind Makers With Agendas, a new design firm founded byJulien de Smedt of JDS, along with William Ravn and partner Wouten Dons. MWA seeks to directly address the question of design improving the lives of the user. Like de Smedt’s projects with JDS, MWA’s designs focus utility and versatility. “If a design centers exclusively around subjective beauty, I feel cheated,” says de Smedt of his design philosophy. “The concept of beauty is determined culturally; it is forged in our upbringing. It is not something you can completely rationalize. If you can say that a building succeeds in doing what was intended, it is much more beautiful and convincing in my opinion.”

Read the complete article on Architizer here.

makers2 makers3 makers4

Accordion by Makers With Agenda

A Residential Parthenon In Athens

AthensHome

A House In Three Buildings by Nikos Smyrlis Architect

Located in Athens, Greece, A House In Three Buildings by Nikos Smyrlis Architectis indebted to the historical and environmental setting in which it is located. Athens is also home to the Parthenon, a shining example of classical architecture that influenced the ideals of modernism. A young Le Corbusier visited the building at the age of 24, returning every day for three weeks.

AthensHoe

A House In Three Buildings by Nikos Smyrlis Architect

One of the most striking aspects of the Parthenon to the young Corbusier was how the structure related to the topography, sky, and built environment surrounding it. A House In Three Buildings engages its surroundings using a similar method: movement between buildings not only switches functions, it also blurs the distinction of interior and exterior. A central square near the pool has a direct view of the nearby sea and is utilized as an open-air dining room.

Read the complete article on Architizer here.

AthensHome1

A House In Three Buildings by Nikos Smyrlis Architect

The Myriad Designs Of Marc Newson

FORD-012C-by-Marc-Newson_yatzer_1

Ford 021C Concept Car, 1999. Designed by Marc Newson. Photo courtesy of Ford Motor Company.

Marc Newson’s colorful, exuberant designs invariably provoke a smile. Make no mistake, these objects—from a retro-future automobile to a humble tea cup—come straight from the vernacular of cartoons. The edges are rounded; the colors, bright; the shapes, biomorphic. Yet they also display innovation and wit. Newson is the rare designer whose products qualify as both objets d’art and mass-marketable crowd-pleasers, equally at home in the gallery as in the mall.

NewsonGallery2

Marc Newson: At Home, bedroom section of installation.

A new exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, “Marc Newson: At Home,” which runs through April 20, 2014, is the first survey of the 50-year-old Australian designer’s work in the United States. This is no small feat. Newson has produced copious design objects in myriad categories: toys, utensils, cars, clothing, airplanes, appliances, and (of course) furniture. The exhibition uses the conceit of a freestanding home within the gallery, complete with garage, kitchen, and bathroom, to show his range, demonstrating not only the designer’s breadth, but also that it is possible to live in a completely Newson world.

Read the complete article at Architizer here.

NewsonGallery1

Marc Newson: At Home, Living Room section of installation.

Beautiful Buildings Built Under Bloomberg

bloomberg2

Barclays Arena at Atlantic Yards by SHoP Architects

Michael Bloomberg has rarely sought the affection of the voters who put him in office. At times, his reign as mayor has been similar to that of a benevolent dictator, passing down edicts on smoking, trans fat, and sugary soda.

Bloomberg1

8 Spruce by Gehry Partners

Whatever you think of Bloomberg’s social edicts, one result of his terms has been a rampant proliferation of new buildings throughout the city. He is a mayor that can emphatically get things done, from new public greenways to rezoning areas for development.

Bloomberg

Alice Tully Hall by Diller Scofidio + Renfro

The majority of the building projects have been residential, with the city adding 40,000 new buildings and the census of 2010 finding a total of 170,000 new housing units. No other city has added more new housing units in the past ten years.

bloomberg3

ONE BRYANT PARK by COOKFOX Architects

The New York Times recently released a beautiful interactive map and slideshow to help readers visualize the areas of growth and change. Below are a few of the projects completed under the watchful eye of Bloomberg during his administration. Out of 40,000 projects, you must have a favorite, too! Let us know your pick in the comments.

Read the complete article at Architizer here.

bloomberg4

The High Line by James Corner Field Operations and Diller Scofidio + Renfro