Posts tagged australia

Y704 House / MARC&CO + coarchitecture | ArchDoc

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© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitectureArchitects: MARC&CO in collaboration with coarchitecture Location: Brisbane, Australia Project Team: Angus Munro, Craig Channon, Anna O’Gorman, Ceirwen Burton Contractor: Pensar Building Structural Engineer: AD Structures Project area: 600 sqm Project year: 2010 Photographs: Scott Burrows, Jason Haigh © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitectureThis river front home is designed to engage with water views to the north and views into large fig trees to the south. At the centre of the house is a large double height living area which becomes the main space of the house and allows rooms deep with the plan to have an outlook, through the main room, to the river.© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitectureThe site is flanked by neighbouring houses. To allow sunlight to enter from the north, and control privacy, a double wall was created. The wall gives a wash of light in the afternoon, creating a desired calmness.plan 02Each end of the house is formed in over scaled off-form white concrete. The scale and smoothness of the concrete is contrasted with timber screens that scale down and humanise. The delicate screens, deep reveals of concrete and landscaped foreground create a series of layers between the river front boardwalk and the interior of the house. The house is a calm private sanctuary within a busy urban environment.© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitectureAs one moves through the house there is a series of contrasting experiences. The house uses compressed spaces to enhance the scale of spaces beyond, textured materials to enhance the smoothness of concrete, darkness to enhance the light levels of a space beyond.© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitectureThe house uses both thermal mass and cross ventilation as a means of passive cooling for the subtropical climate. The north facing plan has large overhangs with automated louvers allowing cross ventilation as required. The eastern and western facades have minimal openings, acting as a thermal barrier. There is also a 22000L underground watertank and extensive use of LED lighting.#gallery-1 {margin: auto;}#gallery-1 .gallery-item {float: left;margin-top: 10px;text-align: center;width: 33%;}#gallery-1 img {border: 2px solid #cfcfcf;}#gallery-1 .gallery-caption {margin-left: 0;}

Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
Y704 House / MARC&CO, coarchitecture © Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
© Courtesy of MARC&CO, coarchitecture
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E589 Residential Development / Architects EAT | ArchDoc

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© Architects EATSituated at 587-589 Elizabeth Street in Melbourne, Australia, E589 is the latest residential development helping to transform the northern part of Elizabeth Street. E589 will burst into the vibrant and energetic 3000 postcode, offering residents a cosmopolitan lifestyle just north of the city’s buzzing epicenter.Architecturally unique, Architects EAT have created a geometric facade to the building; contemporary in design, yet stylishly understated so as not to weary over time. More images and architects’ description after the break.© Architects EATThis state of the art boutique development comprises just 55 one and two bedroom dwellings, spread over nine levels along with two ground floor retail stores. Dwellings range from 42m2 to 67m2 with three beautiful and opulent color schemes available to suit the purchaser’s individual taste. Both retail stores have already been sold by CBRE agent Andrew Leoncelli who expects an experienced and reputable cafe operator to establish a great coffee experience for all residents.© Architects EATThe patterned and artistic façade of E589 will continuously alter, as per the occupant’s input. When all of the louvers are shut, the building literally becomes a uniform minimal cube. When opened up, it becomes a see through glass structure. Inside each apartment, design and living luxuries include stone bench tops, European stainless steel appliances for the kitchens, solar hot water and reverse cycle air conditioning. Additionally, in consideration to ESD, each balcony has an individual louvre system allowing residents to effectively control the amount of sunlight entering their apartments, keeping them cooler in the summer and warmer and brighter in winter, reducing the development’s impact on the environment.© Architects EATWithin easy walk to the University of Melbourne, RMIT, Flagstaff Gardens and some of the city’s most celebrated restaurants, cafés and bars, E-589 is bound to attract much attention from investors and the 25-34 age bracket of first homebuyers.Lygon Street’s buzzing culture is a 10-minute walk and the vibrancy of Melbourne’s premier Queen Victoria market, is a mere 250m away making the weekly shop for fruit and vegetables an easy part of our residents weekly routine.Whether it is for investment or lifestyle, one and two bedroom apartments at E589 offers both functional and enjoyable living spaces, for compelling prices.#gallery-1 {margin: auto;}#gallery-1 .gallery-item {float: left;margin-top: 10px;text-align: center;width: 33%;}#gallery-1 img {border: 2px solid #cfcfcf;}#gallery-1 .gallery-caption {margin-left: 0;}

E589 Residential Development © Architects EAT
© Architects EAT
E589 Residential Development © Architects EAT
© Architects EAT
E589 Residential Development © Architects EAT
© Architects EAT
E589 Residential Development © Architects EAT
© Architects EAT

Australia’s 1st completed Building Information Modelling (BIM) High Rise wins more awards | ArchDoc

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Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit FokkemaCoca-Cola Place (previously known as ARK) has won the Property Council’s NSW Development of the year. This award is the equivalent of the “Oscars” for the property industry in Australia and is yet another for this 21-level iconic building north of Sydney, New South Wales in Australia.The Property Council’s Innovation and Excellence Awards is the pre-eminent property industry program in Australia. The annual awards celebrate the achievements of the sector’s finest professionals and companies.Integrated into North Sydney’s heritage precinct, the form of Coca-Cola Place breaks boundaries, challenges traditions and sets new design benchmarks. It was conceived as a set of layered elements which responds to the grain of the Heritage Street, natural environment, public domain, and city skyline. Completed in 2010, it was conceived, designed, documented and built using Building Information Modelling (BIM).More about it after the break.Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit FokkemaOwners of the building; Investa -were quick to identify the benefits of Building Information Modelling and insisted that disciplines working on Coca-Cola Place complete the entire project using BIM.Designed using GRAPHISOFT ArchiCAD by Architects Rice Daubney and built by Thiess, Coca-Cola Place embraces environmental sustainability. The design achieves a 6 Star Green-Star, Design and As-Built ratings through a number of passive and active initiatives; a northern core, maximising views to the harbour, shaded narrow east and west elevations, tri-generation, grey and stormwater recycling systems,cycling facilities and a series of car parking spaces for a fleet of electric and hybrid cars aimed at a building car pool.Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit FokkemaCreating a 3D building model has on-going applications for the management and maintenance of property assets. All of Ark’s intellectual property built within the Building Information Model can now be used as a centralised source to manage and maximise building performance now and into the future.Current tenants Coca-Cola Amatil (CCA), Vodafone Hutchison Australia (VHA) Australian Worldwide Exploration (AWE) and Regus are fortunate to have panoramic views of Sydney Harbour, across the City and to the Blue Mountains.Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit FokkemaDarren Tims, Principal of Rice Daubney talking about this project and their decision to move to GRAPHISOFT ArchiCAD over 10 years ago: YouTube Preview ImageFor more information on Rice Daubney, visit their website at: www.ricedaubney.com.au.#gallery-1 {margin: auto;}#gallery-1 .gallery-item {float: left;margin-top: 10px;text-align: center;width: 33%;}#gallery-1 img {border: 2px solid #cfcfcf;}#gallery-1 .gallery-caption {margin-left: 0;}

Investa Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Investa Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Investa Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Investa Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Investa Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Investa Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Investa Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Investa Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
Courtesy of Investa / Photographer: Gerrit Fokkema
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