Posts tagged housing
15 Union Square West / ODA Architecture and Perkins Eastman Architects | ArchDoc
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© Robert GranoffThis structure overlooking Union Square Park was originally designed for Tiffany & Company in the late 19th century. With careful consideration for upholding its historical place within the city, 15 Union Square West is gracefully translated into a 21st century residential masterwork. Creating harmony between the bygone and the present, the design for luxury living wraps the 12-story condominium residence in a translucent, layered glass skin, preserving the prominent cast iron arches of the original 5-story construction and dramatic 16’ceiling height.
Architectural Designer: ODA – Architecture P.C. Architect of Record: Perkins Eastman Architects P.C. Location: New York City, New York, USA Project Area: 62,000 sqf Photographs: Robert Granoff, Alberto Guglielmo
diagramThe curtain wall of glass is offset from the outside surface of the cast iron facade creating an interstitial space between the apartments. The black zinc framed panels are double insulated, low E protection and low iron laminated glass having little refraction. This technology creates a near perfect reflection of the park during the day with gentle transparency at night cueing the historic structure while only hinting at the individual apartments located within. The design creates 7 new floors – a series of elegant glass cubes set at different angles to allow for vivid, unobstructed park and city views with spacious, private outdoor terraces.#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;}
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- © Robert Granoff
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- © Alberto Guglielmo
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- © Robert Granoff
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- © Alberto Guglielmo
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- © Alberto Guglielmo
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* Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
Loloma 5 / will bruder+PARTNERS | ArchDoc
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© Bill TimmermanThe architecture of Loloma 5 is a thoughtful and sophisticated acknowledgement of the traditional and modern roots of its Old Town Scottsdale context—a place with pride in its false-front, covered boardwalk, and “old west” friendly downtown image. The project creates a live/work environment in the heart of Scottsdale that celebrates both the historic and physical context of the place.
Architect: will bruder+PARTNERS Location: 3707 North Marshall Way, Scottsdale, Arizona, USA Project Area: 7,700 sqf Photographs: Bill Timmerman
© Bill TimmermanApproached from its west face along Marshall Way, clients and friends of the Loloma community are welcomed by a small natural desert garden. The project emerges from the plane of the land by a first level architectural plinth of sandblasted random coursed rose/gray concrete masonry units. Above the block the west façade serves as a shield against the sun with it random width ribbed gray Rheinzinc cladding and deep recessed narrow vertical windows of varied widths.
sectionAlong the south, patios connect in a linear courtyard to create intimate entries for each of the five units. Above the doors, angled planes project outward, breaking down the verticality and further expressing each individual unit. These corrugated metal planes seem to fly passed one another, connected only by a long sliver of light from recessed slot windows. Limiting the intense southern light, each of the corrugated planes is punctured only with a single simple square of glass.
© Bill TimmermanThe undulation at the south is mimicked at the north façade where the architecture becomes an accordion with each of the interior spaces folding out to capture dramatic views of Camelback Mountain. Carefully detailed window walls are screened from the sun behind perforated aluminum scrims, while private cantilevered balconies project behind aluminum plate railings. Parking stalls tuck quietly below each of the balconies, supporting the dramatic energy of the space. The entire auto court is veiled behind a perforated metal gate and an ocotillo fence.
© Bill TimmermanThe layering of the materials and transparencies creates a street presence at the exterior while maintaining privacy on the interior. At the ground level, the minimal footprint accommodates an entry foyer and the office space for the unit. Ascending the narrow stair to the second level, the eye is turned to the long open views to Scottsdale and Camelback Mountain beyond. This view remains a backdrop for the social functions within the unit as well as from the outdoor balcony. The sleeping suite at the upper floor also enjoys this same view. At the south side of the sleeping suite, a large private patio captures views of the nearby Papago Buttes and the open desert sky.
elevationIn scale, proportion, finely articulated details, massing, and materially, Loloma 5 draws carefully from its local context and environment, carving out a unique place between the history and future of Scottsdale, for comfortable and sustainable urban desert living.
© Bill TimmermanProject Team: Jeff Densic (Project Manager), Rob Gaspard, Joe Herzog, Ben Nesbeitt, Dominique Price Structural Engineer: Rudow & Berry, Inc. Mechanical/Plumbing Engineer: Otterbein Engineering Electrical Engineer: Associated Engineering Inc. Civil Engineer: HPTO Landscape Architect: Burnette Winters General Contractor: Preferred Building Systems, Inc.* Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
© Hisao SuzikiArchitects: nothing architecture - Joan Ramon Pascuets, Monica Mosset Location: Barcelona, Spain Project area: 4,500 sqm Project year: 2005 – 2009 Photographs: Hisao Suzuki

© Hisao SuzikiThe dwellings are organized by a flexible and multifunctional form about a central core of baths that allows natural crossed ventilation while transverse views of the house. A second skin of translucent white laminated glass in south facade works as a solar filter generating qualified intermediate, luminous, ethereal spaces… agreeable and comfortable. His first totally glazed skin slips from being a limit to become an extension from the interior towards the exterior.
main elevationA communicative building with and unitary treatment but simultaneously neutral, superposes the successive skins generating multiple and changeable reflections of unexpected opaqueness creating atmospheric effect… frivolously and vaporous… reflections on the white glass of the sky, the clouds, the sun… extreme delicacy, formal austerity, rigor, eco efficiency, prefabrication, efficiency, exclusion of everything superfluous, purity, neutrality, absence, emptiness, silence, fluency, to non-be, absence of architecture, nothing , to develop imperceptibly.
© Hisao SuzikiThe building is organized by two communications center that serve two and three apartments per floor. To achieve the area there are two typologies, one oriented north-south with bathrooms in the centre and the other one faced to one facade with water area located inside. The first one has crossed ventilation through opposite fronts, while the second one also have transverse ventilation with perpendicular facades.#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;}