arsitektur ekologi
The Final stage in the process of choosing entries from the national ‘Designs for Australia’s cities 2050+’ competition to be exhibited in the Australian Pavilion at this year’s Venice Biennale has been announced. A total of 17 proposals were chosen from the shortlist.
Most of these will be rendered in 3D for screening in the Australian Pavilion in Venice, while others may be incorporated in a smaller capacity.
The Creative Directors were impressed by the range of approach and philosophy of the ideas expressed in both stages of the ‘Designs for Australian Cities 2050+’ Competition. In many ways the competition exceeded expectations and they look forward to broadcasting selected entries on the worldwide stage of the Biennale.
The team’s two-part ‘NOW + WHEN Australian Urbanism’ exhibition will highlight six of Australia’s most interesting urban and anti-urban regions as they are ‘NOW’, before dramatically representing the 17 futuristic urban environments from the competition imagining a ‘WHEN’ we reach 2050 and beyond.
The teams chosen to contribute to the exhibition are:
Sydney 2050: Fraying Ground, RAG URBANISM, Richard Goodwin (Richard Goodwin Art/Architecture), Andrew Benjamin, Gerard Reinmuth (TERRIOR)
Symbiotic City, Steve Whitford (University of Melbourne, Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning) + James Brearley (BAU Brearley Architects and Urbanists, Adjunct Professor RMIT)
The Fear Free City, Justyna Karakiewicz, Tom Kvan and Steve Hatzellis
A City of Hope, EDMOND & CORRIGAN, Design – Peter Corrigan (everything), Realisation – Michael Spooner (and support)
Mould City, Colony Collective, Madeleine Beech, Jono Brener, Nicola Dovey, Peter Raisbeck and Simon Wollan
Sedimentary City, Brit Andresen and Mara Francis
Aquatown, NH Architecture with Andrew Mackenzie
Multiplicity, John Wardle Architects & Stefano Boscutti
Ocean City, Arup Biomimetics, Alanna Howe, Alexander Hespe
-41 + 41, Peck Dunin Simpson Architects, Fiona Dunin, Alex Peck, Andrew Simpsons in association with Martina Johnson, Third Skin, Eckersley Garden Architecture, Angus McIntyre, Tim Kreger
Survival vs Resilience, BKK Architects (Tim Black, Julian Kosloff, Simon Knott, George Huon, Julian Faelli, Madeleine Beech, Jane Caught and Steffan Heath) Village Well, Charter Cramer and Daniel Piker
Terra Form Australis, HASSELL, Holopoint & The Environment Institute, Tim Horton, Tony Grist, Prof Mike Young, Ben Kilsby, Sharon Mackay, Susie Nicolai, Mike Mouritz
Island Proposition 2100 (IP2100), Scott Lloyd, Aaron Roberts (room11) and Katrina Stoll
Implementing the Rhetoric, Harrison and White with Nano Langenheim, Marcus White, Stuart Harrison and Nano Lagenheim
How Does it Make You Feel (HDIMYF), Ben Statkus (Statkus Architecture), Daniel Agdag, Melanie Etchell, William Golding, Anna Nguyen, Joel Ng
Loop-Pool / Saturation City, McGauran Giannini Soon (MGS), Bild + Dyskors, Material Thnking, MGS – Eli Giannini, Jocelyn Chiew, Catherine Ranger, Bild – Ben Milbourne, Dyskors – Edmund Carter, Material Thinking – Paul Carter
a tale of two cities, Billard Leece Partnership Pty Ltd
-
via Bustler
RADDblog yesterday reported on the winning entries for the eVolo 2010 Skyscraper Competition, and now we would like to highlight a few of the winning entries that we felt were pretty spectacular. Water Purification Skyscraper / Jakarta by Rezza Rahdian, Erwin Setiawan, Ayu Diah Shanti, Leonardus Chrisnantyo took home the Second Place Prize.
from the designers:
Jakarta, the capital city of Indonesia, was originally designed as a water city where thirteen rivers that crossed the city utilized completely as source of livelihood by the citizens. Ciliwung River as the largest river that cuts right along the center of the city is the main river that supports the citizens’ life. Unfortunately, today the river had become disaster for the citizens, because surge of water flooded the city, and the number of slums along the riverbanks adds a new problem, namely the pollution of watershed’s surrounding.
Ciliwung Recovery Program (CRP), a project aims to purify the Ciliwung River’s environment to its original form. Through the new system in the building, CRP is expected to be able to repair and become the sustainability generator for Jakarta.
There are three main lines in the process of purifying the Ciliwung river, first line is the flow of the polluted river water into the building through pipes by utilizing capillary vessel systems, into the filtrating section. At this stage, the river water is separated from garbage, the organic garbage then used as raw materials to fertilize the soil around the river basin, while garbage-free water proceeded to the next stage or channeled back into the river.
The second line is the phase of river water purification through elimination of dangerous contaminants, and addition of various good minerals to the water, so it is safe for daily needs of CRP building occupants, which is people who previously lived in the slums along Ciliwung River. Removal of riverbank dwellers into the CRP building aims to open and expand Ciliwung watersheds that will be prepared to be the new open spaces for more “green” Jakarta and to secure the flood plane.
The third line is the re-processing of household waste products into water which is safe to be returned to the Ciliwung River. Some of processed water are being distributed to lands around Ciliwung River in two ways. First, through capillary pipes under the ground that not only bring water, but also fertilizer produced in the first line. Capillary tubings are connected to generator towers around the damaged lands, and create a new environment that’s usable for agriculture. Second, by spraying processed water through the skin of the building. Spraying water from height raises the humidity in the lower part of the building that triggers the growth of pioneer plants that will contribute to the creation of a new ecosystem. CRP’s ecosystems will create a good microclimate for Jakarta, as well as a response to the lost of many open green spaces around the world that leads to global warming.
CRP buildings generate energy for itself, including the use of passive technology systems in the building. The skin of the building is designed with many layers, where the outer layer of the skin receives large amount of wind that used as a wind power generator. For solar power generator, there is a gigantic solar reactor at the top. The elevator of CRP building uses Archimedes principle of vessels. It will move up and down by accommodating its specific gravity. The excess energy generated from CRP system will be distributed to buildings around the Ciliwung River.
-
via eVolo (please click the images below for higher res)
The winners of eVolo’s 2010 Skyscraper Competition were announced today. After several years of organizing, this annual competition has become a renowned architectural prize around the world. The main idea of the contest is to examine the relationship between the skyscraper and the natural world, the skyscraper and the community, and the skyscraper and urban living. The competition asked to push our imagination to redefine the term skyscraper through the use of new materials, technology, aesthetics, programs, and spatial organizations. Globalization, environmental warming, flexibility, adaptability, and the digital revolution are just some of the multi-layered elements that were in the focal point.
First Place: Vertical Prison by Chow Khoon Toong, Ong Tien Yee, Beh Ssi Cze, Malaysia (project info)
Second Place: Water Purification Skyscraper in Jakarta by Rezza Rahdian, Erwin Setiawan, Ayu Diah Shanti, Leonardus Chrisnantyo, Indonesia (project info)
Third Place: Nested Skyscraper in Tokyo by Ryohei Koike, Jarod Poenisch, United States (project info)
For Special Mentions click here.
-
via Bustler
RADDblog previously reported on MAP 001 ANTARCTICA by David Garcia Studio, and they are now releasing the second installment: MAP 002 QUARANTINE.
from the designers:
DAVID GARCIA STUDIO is proud to be exhibiting at the prestigious STOREFRONT FOR ART AND ARCHITECTURE in New York, at the “LANDSCAPES OF QUARANTINE” exhibition, curated by Geoff Manaugh and Nicola Twilley. The Studio will be exhibiting and launching the second issue of MAP (Manual of Architectural Possibilities). MAP 001 focused on Antarctica, and with MAP 002 QUARANTINE will be investigating and questioning the subject through research and projects, and the realm of architectural ideas. Four projects are treated on this issue: A Domestic Isolation Unit, an Instantly Quarantinable Farm, a Zoo of Infectious Species, and a Quarantined Library on a cargo ship. Along with the projects, our fact page will focus on a series of topics regarding quarantine, from the biological to the political, the geographical and beyond. We are happy to have Peter Cook along again, writing the introduction. Each number of MAP 002 is individually numbered from 1 to 2000.
The opening will take place Tuesday evening, March 9th at 7 pm, where MAP will be on sale.
“LANDSCAPES OF QUARANTINE”
9th March – 17th April, 2010
STOREFRONT FOR ART AND ARCHITECTURE
97 Kenmare Street New York, NY 10012
-
via MAP and BLDGBLOG
Here’s a very cool event you should not miss if you’re in New York this March or April: Pratt Manhattan Gallery will present “Envelopes,” an exhibition that will explore new and sustainable potentials of the architectural surface in terms of the skin of a building and also as a sensorial space that envelops the body.
“Envelopes” will feature full-scale, interactive models accompanied by architectural renderings in the form of drawings and computer animations, and documentation of the process of investigation into these models from eight international firms and designers. The exhibition will run from March 5 through May 5, 2010 and will be celebrated with an opening reception on Thursday, March 4 from 6–8 PM. The exhibition and opening reception are free and open to the public.
“Envelopes” is guest curated by Christopher Hight, an associate professor at Rice University’s School of Architecture. Hight’s inspiration for the exhibition title and concept originated from parallels between the envelope of a building and the envelope of human skin; the building envelope repeats the metaphor of the building as a body and as a prosthetic second skin that allows human beings to exist within a hostile environment. Inspired by early 20th century biologist Jacob von Uexküll and his interest in how living beings relate to and perceive their environment, the title of the show refers to the role of the building envelope and the idea of envelopment of one’s body and senses within a larger environment.
“Issues of sustainability and ecology raise many conceptual and design issues about the nature of the boundary between body, building, and larger environments,” said Hight. “The architects in ‘Envelopes’ are all exploring relationships between systems—human, animal, plant, and energy flow—as a site for architectural innovation in the 21st century,” he added
Hight pursues design research on the nexus of landscape, ecology, and emerging forms of urbanization. He is co-editor of AD: Collective Intelligence in Design (Academy Press, 2006), Heterogeneous Space (Wiley, 2009), and has recently published a book on cybernetics, post-humanism, formalism, and post-World War II architectural design, titled Architectural Principles in the Age of Cybernetics (Routledge, 2008).
Participating architects and architecture firms include:
-
via Bustler
Danau Balang Tonjong merupakan daerah tangkapan air yang senantiasa basah, meskipun kondisi geologisnya berbatuan, namun secara alami terbentuk celah (crack) yang dirembesi air. Sehingga saat musim kemarau, wilayah tersebut tidak pernah kering. Awalnya, danau ini merupakan reservoir alami. Selain sebagai penampung air, juga berfungsi sebagai pengendali banjir.
Namun kini, keberadaan danau tersebut sedikit demi sedikit terabaikan karena tidak terawat. Saat ini hampir seluruh permukaan danau dipenuhi tanaman enceng gondok yang salah satu akibatnya adalah semakin tebalnya endapan lumpur di dasar danau yang mengakibatkan debit air danau semakin bertambah.
Balang Tonjong merupakan kawasan lindung dan ruang terbuka hijau yang juga memiliki kontribusi bagi pelestarian alam. Di samping itu, masyarakat sekitar menginginkan agar lingkungan sekitar Danau Balang Tonjong segera ditata agar dapat memberi nilai tambah bagi kehidupan mereka baik dari segi ekologis, estetika, ekonomi, sosial budaya, dan pelestarian lingkungan. Konkritnya, selain untuk tujuan rekreasi, juga memberi nilai tambah ekonomis, dan sebagai pengendali banjir.
Danau ini ditetapkan menjadi daerah resapan air sesuai dengan Peraturan Daerah Kota Makassar tentang Rencana Tata Ruang Wilayah Kota Makassar 2005-2015 serta draft Peraturan Presiden mengenai Kawasan Mamminasata. Untuk mewujudkan hal tersebut dengan hasil yang maksimal, pemerintah Kota Makassar menyelenggarakan sayembara Penataan Danau Balang Tonjong.
Mainframe Design
Konsep desain yang diberikan untuk penataan kawasan danau Balang Tonjong ini adalah harmoni antara alam, manusia, dan lingkungan binaan—melahirkan sebuah desain yang mempertimbangkan sustainable development.
Dengan pendekatan konsep ini, pengembangan Balang Tonjong Eco Garden dapat dilakukan tanpa mengurangi fungsi asli danau sebagai kawasan resapan air sekaligus mendukung program pemerintah daerah untuk mewujudkan Sulawesi Go Green. Dengan tantangan untuk mengurangi dampak lingkungan dalam pengembangan kawasan, maka konsep dasar hijau dijadikan mainframe penataan kawasan ini.
Untuk memudahkan pelaksanaan konsep ini, kawasan danau Balang Tonjong dibagi menjadi tiga area, yakni 1)Area konservasi berfungsi menjaga dan mengembangkan kualitas dari fungsi utama site sebagai danau resapan dan Ruang Terbuka Hijau (RTH) kota Makassar. 2) Area observasi berfungsi melakukan pengelolaan, pengembangan, dan penelitian pada site yang dapat bermanfaat bagi seluruh masyarakat, khususnya bagi pelajar, mahasiswa, dan peneliti. 3) Area rekreasi berfungsi menjaga dan mengembangkan fungsi rekreasi, sehingga mampu menjadi alternatif destinasi wisata kota yang terjangkau oleh semua kalangan masyarakat.
Strength and Opportunity Design
Pengolahan Balang Tonjong sebagai eco-garden yang paling utama adalah resapan air dan pengolahan air, baik yang masuk dari kawasan permukiman di sekitarnya maupun yang mengalir ke danau tunggu, dengan sistem water plant yang mampu mengolah air menjadi Pembangkit Listrik Menengah sebagai solusi dari krisis listrik yang dialami Sulawesi Selatan saat ini.
Endapan yang ada dapat digunakan sebagai timbunan pada area visitor centre dan fungsi lainnya. Sementara populasi enceng gondok dilokalisir sehingga dapat menjadi salah satu fungsi rekreasi dan observasi pada kawasan ini tanpa mengesampingkan kondisi sosial dan ekonomi masyarakat. Begitu pula pasar yang dilokalisir pada area public Balang Tonjong Eco Garden, sehingga dapat tertata rapi dan tetap berfungsi maksimal sebagai penunjang ekonomi dan fasilitas kawasan.
Konsep Kesatuan Bentuk
Bentuk bangunan yang atraktif mencerminkan simbol rekreasi dan responsible sebagai wujud sustainable design terhadap kondisi lahan. Diharapkan Balang Tonjong Eco-Garden dapat menjadi node kawasan sekaligus landmark kota Makassar.
Visitor centre sekaligus sebagai fasad awal pada kawasan ini dibuat dengan konsep tanah lapang sehingga view awal yang terlihat oleh pengunjung adalah tanah hijau yang terhampar luas, memberikan kesan sejuk dan nyaman sehingga diharapkan mampu memikat pengunjung untuk singgah di danau Balang Tonjong.
Bentuknya yang miring dan hampir menyatu dengan tanah sebagai bentuk harmonisasi antara lingkungan binaan dan environment. Lapisan rumput pada atap visitor centre berfungsi mempertahankan fungsi alami lahan sebagai resapan.
Rest Area dan shopping corner didesain dengan nuansa atraktif dengan atap berbentuk segitiga sehingga dapat memberikan sebuah sensasi desain yang menyatu dengan alam. Konsep panggung yang dipertahankan sebagai wadah interaksi sosial yang tepat berada di atas shopping corner sekaligus berfungsi sebagai sirkulasi udara alami yang terbentuk antara bangunan shopping corner dan atap bangunan
Konsep Material
Material yang digunakan pada umumnya berbahan aluminium dan baja. Pengurangan penggunaan material kayu pada bangunan dimaksudkan dalam mendukung penghijauan. Sedangkan warna yang digunakan lebih menuju ke warna-warna alam, seperti hijau daun, putih-biru (awan dan air), serta coklat (tanah), diharapkan penggunaan warna-warna alami dapat memberikan nuansa yang lebih segar dan sejuk di tengah hiruk-pikuknya kota Makassar.
The Final stage in the process of choosing entries from the national ‘Designs for Australia’s cities 2050+’ competition to be exhibited in the Australian Pavilion at this year’s Venice Biennale has been announced. A total of 17 proposals were chosen from the shortlist.
Most of these will be rendered in 3D for screening in the Australian Pavilion in Venice, while others may be incorporated in a smaller capacity.
The Creative Directors were impressed by the range of approach and philosophy of the ideas expressed in both stages of the ‘Designs for Australian Cities 2050+’ Competition. In many ways the competition exceeded expectations and they look forward to broadcasting selected entries on the worldwide stage of the Biennale.
The team’s two-part ‘NOW + WHEN Australian Urbanism’ exhibition will highlight six of Australia’s most interesting urban and anti-urban regions as they are ‘NOW’, before dramatically representing the 17 futuristic urban environments from the competition imagining a ‘WHEN’ we reach 2050 and beyond.
The teams chosen to contribute to the exhibition are:
Sydney 2050: Fraying Ground, RAG URBANISM, Richard Goodwin (Richard Goodwin Art/Architecture), Andrew Benjamin, Gerard Reinmuth (TERRIOR)
Symbiotic City, Steve Whitford (University of Melbourne, Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning) + James Brearley (BAU Brearley Architects and Urbanists, Adjunct Professor RMIT)
The Fear Free City, Justyna Karakiewicz, Tom Kvan and Steve Hatzellis
A City of Hope, EDMOND & CORRIGAN, Design – Peter Corrigan (everything), Realisation – Michael Spooner (and support)
Mould City, Colony Collective, Madeleine Beech, Jono Brener, Nicola Dovey, Peter Raisbeck and Simon Wollan
Sedimentary City, Brit Andresen and Mara Francis
Aquatown, NH Architecture with Andrew Mackenzie
Multiplicity, John Wardle Architects & Stefano Boscutti
Ocean City, Arup Biomimetics, Alanna Howe, Alexander Hespe
-41 + 41, Peck Dunin Simpson Architects, Fiona Dunin, Alex Peck, Andrew Simpsons in association with Martina Johnson, Third Skin, Eckersley Garden Architecture, Angus McIntyre, Tim Kreger
Survival vs Resilience, BKK Architects (Tim Black, Julian Kosloff, Simon Knott, George Huon, Julian Faelli, Madeleine Beech, Jane Caught and Steffan Heath) Village Well, Charter Cramer and Daniel Piker
Terra Form Australis, HASSELL, Holopoint & The Environment Institute, Tim Horton, Tony Grist, Prof Mike Young, Ben Kilsby, Sharon Mackay, Susie Nicolai, Mike Mouritz
Island Proposition 2100 (IP2100), Scott Lloyd, Aaron Roberts (room11) and Katrina Stoll
Implementing the Rhetoric, Harrison and White with Nano Langenheim, Marcus White, Stuart Harrison and Nano Lagenheim
How Does it Make You Feel (HDIMYF), Ben Statkus (Statkus Architecture), Daniel Agdag, Melanie Etchell, William Golding, Anna Nguyen, Joel Ng
Loop-Pool / Saturation City, McGauran Giannini Soon (MGS), Bild + Dyskors, Material Thnking, MGS – Eli Giannini, Jocelyn Chiew, Catherine Ranger, Bild – Ben Milbourne, Dyskors – Edmund Carter, Material Thinking – Paul Carter
a tale of two cities, Billard Leece Partnership Pty Ltd
-
via Bustler
Water Purification Skyscraper / Jakarta by Rezza Rahdian, Erwin Setiawan, Ayu Diah Shanti, Leonardus Chrisnantyo
RADDblog yesterday reported on the winning entries for the eVolo 2010 Skyscraper Competition, and now we would like to highlight a few of the winning entries that we felt were pretty spectacular. Water Purification Skyscraper / Jakarta by Rezza Rahdian, Erwin Setiawan, Ayu Diah Shanti, Leonardus Chrisnantyo took home the Second Place Prize.
from the designers:
Jakarta, the capital city of Indonesia, was originally designed as a water city where thirteen rivers that crossed the city utilized completely as source of livelihood by the citizens. Ciliwung River as the largest river that cuts right along the center of the city is the main river that supports the citizens’ life. Unfortunately, today the river had become disaster for the citizens, because surge of water flooded the city, and the number of slums along the riverbanks adds a new problem, namely the pollution of watershed’s surrounding.
Ciliwung Recovery Program (CRP), a project aims to purify the Ciliwung River’s environment to its original form. Through the new system in the building, CRP is expected to be able to repair and become the sustainability generator for Jakarta.
There are three main lines in the process of purifying the Ciliwung river, first line is the flow of the polluted river water into the building through pipes by utilizing capillary vessel systems, into the filtrating section. At this stage, the river water is separated from garbage, the organic garbage then used as raw materials to fertilize the soil around the river basin, while garbage-free water proceeded to the next stage or channeled back into the river.
The second line is the phase of river water purification through elimination of dangerous contaminants, and addition of various good minerals to the water, so it is safe for daily needs of CRP building occupants, which is people who previously lived in the slums along Ciliwung River. Removal of riverbank dwellers into the CRP building aims to open and expand Ciliwung watersheds that will be prepared to be the new open spaces for more “green” Jakarta and to secure the flood plane.
The third line is the re-processing of household waste products into water which is safe to be returned to the Ciliwung River. Some of processed water are being distributed to lands around Ciliwung River in two ways. First, through capillary pipes under the ground that not only bring water, but also fertilizer produced in the first line. Capillary tubings are connected to generator towers around the damaged lands, and create a new environment that’s usable for agriculture. Second, by spraying processed water through the skin of the building. Spraying water from height raises the humidity in the lower part of the building that triggers the growth of pioneer plants that will contribute to the creation of a new ecosystem. CRP’s ecosystems will create a good microclimate for Jakarta, as well as a response to the lost of many open green spaces around the world that leads to global warming.
CRP buildings generate energy for itself, including the use of passive technology systems in the building. The skin of the building is designed with many layers, where the outer layer of the skin receives large amount of wind that used as a wind power generator. For solar power generator, there is a gigantic solar reactor at the top. The elevator of CRP building uses Archimedes principle of vessels. It will move up and down by accommodating its specific gravity. The excess energy generated from CRP system will be distributed to buildings around the Ciliwung River.
-
via eVolo (please click the images below for higher res)
eVolo Announces Winners of 2010 Skyscraper Competition
The winners of eVolo’s 2010 Skyscraper Competition were announced today. After several years of organizing, this annual competition has become a renowned architectural prize around the world. The main idea of the contest is to examine the relationship between the skyscraper and the natural world, the skyscraper and the community, and the skyscraper and urban living. The competition asked to push our imagination to redefine the term skyscraper through the use of new materials, technology, aesthetics, programs, and spatial organizations. Globalization, environmental warming, flexibility, adaptability, and the digital revolution are just some of the multi-layered elements that were in the focal point.
First Place: Vertical Prison by Chow Khoon Toong, Ong Tien Yee, Beh Ssi Cze, Malaysia (project info)
Second Place: Water Purification Skyscraper in Jakarta by Rezza Rahdian, Erwin Setiawan, Ayu Diah Shanti, Leonardus Chrisnantyo, Indonesia (project info)
Third Place: Nested Skyscraper in Tokyo by Ryohei Koike, Jarod Poenisch, United States (project info)
For Special Mentions click here.
-
via Bustler
MAP Manual of Architectural Possibilities) 002 QUARANTINE by David Garcia Studio
RADDblog previously reported on MAP 001 ANTARCTICA by David Garcia Studio, and they are now releasing the second installment: MAP 002 QUARANTINE.
from the designers:
DAVID GARCIA STUDIO is proud to be exhibiting at the prestigious STOREFRONT FOR ART AND ARCHITECTURE in New York, at the “LANDSCAPES OF QUARANTINE” exhibition, curated by Geoff Manaugh and Nicola Twilley. The Studio will be exhibiting and launching the second issue of MAP (Manual of Architectural Possibilities). MAP 001 focused on Antarctica, and with MAP 002 QUARANTINE will be investigating and questioning the subject through research and projects, and the realm of architectural ideas. Four projects are treated on this issue: A Domestic Isolation Unit, an Instantly Quarantinable Farm, a Zoo of Infectious Species, and a Quarantined Library on a cargo ship. Along with the projects, our fact page will focus on a series of topics regarding quarantine, from the biological to the political, the geographical and beyond. We are happy to have Peter Cook along again, writing the introduction. Each number of MAP 002 is individually numbered from 1 to 2000.
The opening will take place Tuesday evening, March 9th at 7 pm, where MAP will be on sale.
“LANDSCAPES OF QUARANTINE”
9th March – 17th April, 2010
STOREFRONT FOR ART AND ARCHITECTURE
97 Kenmare Street New York, NY 10012
-
via MAP and BLDGBLOG
“Envelopes” Exhibition at Pratt Manhattan Gallery’s
Here’s a very cool event you should not miss if you’re in New York this March or April: Pratt Manhattan Gallery will present “Envelopes,” an exhibition that will explore new and sustainable potentials of the architectural surface in terms of the skin of a building and also as a sensorial space that envelops the body.
“Envelopes” will feature full-scale, interactive models accompanied by architectural renderings in the form of drawings and computer animations, and documentation of the process of investigation into these models from eight international firms and designers. The exhibition will run from March 5 through May 5, 2010 and will be celebrated with an opening reception on Thursday, March 4 from 6–8 PM. The exhibition and opening reception are free and open to the public.
“Envelopes” is guest curated by Christopher Hight, an associate professor at Rice University’s School of Architecture. Hight’s inspiration for the exhibition title and concept originated from parallels between the envelope of a building and the envelope of human skin; the building envelope repeats the metaphor of the building as a body and as a prosthetic second skin that allows human beings to exist within a hostile environment. Inspired by early 20th century biologist Jacob von Uexküll and his interest in how living beings relate to and perceive their environment, the title of the show refers to the role of the building envelope and the idea of envelopment of one’s body and senses within a larger environment.
“Issues of sustainability and ecology raise many conceptual and design issues about the nature of the boundary between body, building, and larger environments,” said Hight. “The architects in ‘Envelopes’ are all exploring relationships between systems—human, animal, plant, and energy flow—as a site for architectural innovation in the 21st century,” he added
Hight pursues design research on the nexus of landscape, ecology, and emerging forms of urbanization. He is co-editor of AD: Collective Intelligence in Design (Academy Press, 2006), Heterogeneous Space (Wiley, 2009), and has recently published a book on cybernetics, post-humanism, formalism, and post-World War II architectural design, titled Architectural Principles in the Age of Cybernetics (Routledge, 2008).
Participating architects and architecture firms include:
- !ndie Architecture, a Denver-based firm that engages in a range of architectural and urban questions through research projects and practice, with a specialization in digital and industrial technology, housing, and suburbanism
- HouMinn Practice, a Houston and Minneapolis-based firm recognized for its research and innovative design whose collaborative efforts reach beyond the discipline of architecture
- Mary Ellen Carroll—MEC design studios, a New York-based conceptual artist, with Kevin Topek of Permaculture Design, LLC; and Carlise Vandervoort
- Michael U. Hensel and Defne Sunguroğlu Hensel are research directors and board members at OCEAN Design Research, an international, interdisciplinary, and independent research firm that conducts research by design in the intersection of architecture, design, music, and science with the goal of improving the current built environment and anthropobiosphere
- Nataly Gattegno and Jason Kelly Johnson are founding design partners of Future Cities Lab, an interdisciplinary design and research collaborative bridging architecture and landscape urbanism with material sciences, robotics, and engineering
- Philippe Rahm, an architect who practices out of Paris and Lausanne and focuses on “meterological” architecture
- Tobias Emilsson, Jonah Fritzell, Marcelyn Gow, Ulrika Karlsson, and Chris Perry of servo, an international research and design collaborative that focuses on the development of architectural environments through the proliferation of electronic and digital equipment and interfaces
- Weathers, a Chicago-based environmental design office that studies social, spatial, and organizational structures and their implications to lifestyle and environment.
-
via Bustler
Namun kini, keberadaan danau tersebut sedikit demi sedikit terabaikan karena tidak terawat. Saat ini hampir seluruh permukaan danau dipenuhi tanaman enceng gondok yang salah satu akibatnya adalah semakin tebalnya endapan lumpur di dasar danau yang mengakibatkan debit air danau semakin bertambah.
Balang Tonjong merupakan kawasan lindung dan ruang terbuka hijau yang juga memiliki kontribusi bagi pelestarian alam. Di samping itu, masyarakat sekitar menginginkan agar lingkungan sekitar Danau Balang Tonjong segera ditata agar dapat memberi nilai tambah bagi kehidupan mereka baik dari segi ekologis, estetika, ekonomi, sosial budaya, dan pelestarian lingkungan. Konkritnya, selain untuk tujuan rekreasi, juga memberi nilai tambah ekonomis, dan sebagai pengendali banjir.
Danau ini ditetapkan menjadi daerah resapan air sesuai dengan Peraturan Daerah Kota Makassar tentang Rencana Tata Ruang Wilayah Kota Makassar 2005-2015 serta draft Peraturan Presiden mengenai Kawasan Mamminasata. Untuk mewujudkan hal tersebut dengan hasil yang maksimal, pemerintah Kota Makassar menyelenggarakan sayembara Penataan Danau Balang Tonjong.
Mainframe Design
Konsep desain yang diberikan untuk penataan kawasan danau Balang Tonjong ini adalah harmoni antara alam, manusia, dan lingkungan binaan—melahirkan sebuah desain yang mempertimbangkan sustainable development.
Dengan pendekatan konsep ini, pengembangan Balang Tonjong Eco Garden dapat dilakukan tanpa mengurangi fungsi asli danau sebagai kawasan resapan air sekaligus mendukung program pemerintah daerah untuk mewujudkan Sulawesi Go Green. Dengan tantangan untuk mengurangi dampak lingkungan dalam pengembangan kawasan, maka konsep dasar hijau dijadikan mainframe penataan kawasan ini.
Untuk memudahkan pelaksanaan konsep ini, kawasan danau Balang Tonjong dibagi menjadi tiga area, yakni 1)Area konservasi berfungsi menjaga dan mengembangkan kualitas dari fungsi utama site sebagai danau resapan dan Ruang Terbuka Hijau (RTH) kota Makassar. 2) Area observasi berfungsi melakukan pengelolaan, pengembangan, dan penelitian pada site yang dapat bermanfaat bagi seluruh masyarakat, khususnya bagi pelajar, mahasiswa, dan peneliti. 3) Area rekreasi berfungsi menjaga dan mengembangkan fungsi rekreasi, sehingga mampu menjadi alternatif destinasi wisata kota yang terjangkau oleh semua kalangan masyarakat.
Strength and Opportunity Design
Pengolahan Balang Tonjong sebagai eco-garden yang paling utama adalah resapan air dan pengolahan air, baik yang masuk dari kawasan permukiman di sekitarnya maupun yang mengalir ke danau tunggu, dengan sistem water plant yang mampu mengolah air menjadi Pembangkit Listrik Menengah sebagai solusi dari krisis listrik yang dialami Sulawesi Selatan saat ini.
Endapan yang ada dapat digunakan sebagai timbunan pada area visitor centre dan fungsi lainnya. Sementara populasi enceng gondok dilokalisir sehingga dapat menjadi salah satu fungsi rekreasi dan observasi pada kawasan ini tanpa mengesampingkan kondisi sosial dan ekonomi masyarakat. Begitu pula pasar yang dilokalisir pada area public Balang Tonjong Eco Garden, sehingga dapat tertata rapi dan tetap berfungsi maksimal sebagai penunjang ekonomi dan fasilitas kawasan.
Konsep Kesatuan Bentuk
Bentuk bangunan yang atraktif mencerminkan simbol rekreasi dan responsible sebagai wujud sustainable design terhadap kondisi lahan. Diharapkan Balang Tonjong Eco-Garden dapat menjadi node kawasan sekaligus landmark kota Makassar.
Visitor centre sekaligus sebagai fasad awal pada kawasan ini dibuat dengan konsep tanah lapang sehingga view awal yang terlihat oleh pengunjung adalah tanah hijau yang terhampar luas, memberikan kesan sejuk dan nyaman sehingga diharapkan mampu memikat pengunjung untuk singgah di danau Balang Tonjong.
Bentuknya yang miring dan hampir menyatu dengan tanah sebagai bentuk harmonisasi antara lingkungan binaan dan environment. Lapisan rumput pada atap visitor centre berfungsi mempertahankan fungsi alami lahan sebagai resapan.
Rest Area dan shopping corner didesain dengan nuansa atraktif dengan atap berbentuk segitiga sehingga dapat memberikan sebuah sensasi desain yang menyatu dengan alam. Konsep panggung yang dipertahankan sebagai wadah interaksi sosial yang tepat berada di atas shopping corner sekaligus berfungsi sebagai sirkulasi udara alami yang terbentuk antara bangunan shopping corner dan atap bangunan
Konsep Material
Material yang digunakan pada umumnya berbahan aluminium dan baja. Pengurangan penggunaan material kayu pada bangunan dimaksudkan dalam mendukung penghijauan. Sedangkan warna yang digunakan lebih menuju ke warna-warna alam, seperti hijau daun, putih-biru (awan dan air), serta coklat (tanah), diharapkan penggunaan warna-warna alami dapat memberikan nuansa yang lebih segar dan sejuk di tengah hiruk-pikuknya kota Makassar.
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