Showing posts with label MVRDV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MVRDV. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 April 2014

gangnam hills

image by MVRDV


                                   http://europaconcorsi.com/projects/140531-MVRDV-SEGOK-HILLS


Description

The key challenge of this project was finding a way to work with the stringent restrictions that determine the current housing conditions in Seoul.  How to improve the internal and external qualities of social housing within the limiting factors of budgets and regulations? How to create for limited costs social housing that is socially, architecturally and environmentally innovative? How to make them suitable for valuable ecological environments? And how to realize all these ambitions in a both respectful and exemplary way?

image by MVRDV

By optimizing current known and financeable typologies, a process of a simple cost-effective and even cost reductive start can be made with a sequential list of qualitative add-on’s. In order to create a design process that allows to span the gap between the qualitative future demands and the stringent current rules and costing. The housing normally can be organized around cores with halls that give access to 4-5 houses or by galleries, based on a slab-typology as an efficient layout for housing units. By connecting these typologies next to each other, side facades can be avoided thus liberating budgets for additional qualities. By positioning these bands in an east west direction, following the contours of the landscape, the topography of the existing hillside is maintained and perfect day lighting is afforded to all the housing units. By expanding the green gaps between buildings in certain places,  larger collective programs like sport places, or gathering spaces, can be created. And by making them smaller on other positions, connections can be safe guarded, while introducing surprising, more intimate spatial qualities in the public space in-between. The existing vegetation will be partially maintained as a continuation of the surrounding green area and to give character to the neighbourhood. Paths are developed as natural paths in the landscape. One can take a ‘hike’ in the neighbourhood and its direct surroundings.

image by MVRDV

As a side effect the heights of the buildings will vary. At the bigger distances the southern building can become higher and at the smaller distances the southern buildings will become smaller. This approach can be seen as a three-dimensional interpretation of the standard regulations for volumes. It creates hill-shaped slabs, with sequences of peaks and valleys, which gives differentiation to the volumes, to the neighbourhood and the apartments. By shifting the positions of these bigger and smaller spaces, the sun conditions are further optimized and the higher buildings suddenly get better and wider views! It leads to the fact that more houses have more sun and better views. This sequence of shifted undulating bands will create coulisse-like silhouettes on the site. It recreates the image of a Korean classical painting. The clean volumes give it unity and character.  The facades are clad with local stones as an ‘echo’ of the mountains themselves. This treatment will turn the housing operation of Segok into an extension of ‘green’ hills within the Gangnam area.

image by MVRDV


Facts

Location : Gangnam, Seoul, South Korea 
Year : 2010 
Client : LH, Seoul, South Korea 
Program : 28.000 m2: housing, public amenities and parking 
Budget : Undisclosed

image by MVRDV


Credits

Design team : Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs and Nathalie de Vries with
Jeroen Zuidgeest, Marin Kulas, Nacho Velasco, Kysosuk Lee, Victor Perez Equiluz, Doris Strauch, Wenhua Deng, Michael Labory

 Co-architect : Hyundai Architects & Engineers Associates

image by MVRDV




Saturday, 29 March 2014

maquinnext green shopping

image by MVRDV




Description

Maquinnext represents an intense encounter between nature and the city. It is the response to an ambitious brief which calls for the transformation of a neighbourhood into a new focal point in Barcelona with a mixed used development, including both the extension of a major shopping centre and residential use. 

image by MVRDV


A key issue in the design is phasing, since due to the weak housing market, the housing development is not expected to begin construction for another 4-5 years. The proposal makes a conscious decision to create an efficient, sustainable open air shopping center which will strengthen the existing facility's connection with its surroundings. The roof of the shopping center becomes an undulated landscape, an accessible green roof providing a much needed oasis in the hard surfaced city.

image by MVRDV


Points are pulled upwards strategically to emphasize the entrances while others are pulled downwards to grant a soft entrance to the sublime, lifted forest which characterises the new development. The forest can be experienced visually from the entire neighborhood and physically from the new retail streets. 

image by MVRDV


The intense nature stimulates the shopping experience and pumps life into the district. It paradoxically merges into the urban fabric, as well as stands out. When the time comes for the residential development, slender high rise towers will emerge from the forest itself enriching the sky line of Barcelona.

image by MVRDV


Facts

Location : Barcelona, Spain

Year : 2012

Client : Unibail Rodamco, Paris, France

Program : 45.000 m2 shopping center with 57.000 m2 added residential complex and additional public spaces

Budget : Undisclosed


Credits

Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs, Nathalie de Vries with Marta Pozo, Tom Leahy, Davide Sacconi

image by MVRDV

Saturday, 22 March 2014

public art depot MBVB


image by MVRDV / antionio coco



Facts

Location : Rotterdam, Netherlands
Year : 2013+
Client : Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, De Verre Bergen Foundation, the City of Rotterdam
Program : 15.000m2 art depot with restoration facilities, exhibition spaces, offices, logistics, bar, restaurant, sculpture garden and private collectors facilities.
Budget : 50 million Euro

image by MVRDV / antionio coco


About

Collection Building is an art depot open to the public. A public route zigzags through the building, from the lobby on the ground floor where a café can be found up to an exhibition space, sculpture garden and restaurant on the roof. On the way up the route passes along and through art depots and restoration workshops. In depots visible from the route, the exhibition can be changed on a daily basis by simply moving storage racks so each visit to the building can offer a unique experience. On three floors the route passes through exhibition spaces which will be programmed by Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen.

image by MVRDV / antionio coco


The building - which will store the precious art collection of Rotterdam - will also have spaces not accessible to the general public. For example logistics, quarantine and room for private art collections whose owners can visit their art and even enjoy it in private spaces comparable to the art-equivalent of a sky box. This is a new commercial service offered by the museum. Additionally depots and an office of philanthropic foundation De Verre Bergen will be located in the Collection Building. 

image by MVRDV / antionio coco


The roof featuring a restaurant, sculpture garden and exhibition space offers wide views over Rotterdam and will be the new home for the Futuro, the ufo-shaped house of Finish architect Matti Suuronen.

image by MVRDV


The Collection Building will be realised on the northern edge of Rotterdams Museumpark, realised by OMA with Yves Brunier in 1994. In order to spare the park, the volume is designed as a compact round volume with a small footprint and will be clad with a reflective glass façade. This will make the building less visible and allow reflections, the public can see what is happening elsewhere in the park. Where needed the reflection will be lesser for transparency and to avoid unwanted light effects.

image by MVRDV 


40% of the 15.000m2 will be visible or accessible to the public. The building will feature seven different climatic conditions facilitating ideal conditions for art storage, offices and the public. The ambition is to reach sustainability classification BREEAM Excellent.

image by MVRDV 


Credits

Design Team: 
Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs, Nathalie de Vries with 
Fokke Moerel and Sanne van der Burgh, Marta Pozo Gil, Gerard Heerink, Elien Deceuninck, Saimon Gomez Idiakez, Nacho Velasco, Jason Slabbynck, Mariya Gyaurova

Partners:
Sustainability: BREEAM Excellent (goal)
Images: MVRDV - Antonio Coco
Structure: Pieters Bouwtechniek
Cost engineering: IGG Consultants 
Installations: DGMR Consultants
Legal Project: Richard Jan Roks, Kennedy Van Der Laan, Amsterdam, with Jan Knikker, Fokke Moerel

image by MVRDV