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Puma House / nendo | ArchDoc

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© Daici AnoArchitects: nendo Location: Tokyo, Japan Construction: Loop Planning Studio Project year: 2011 Photographs: Daici Ano © Daici AnoThe interior design for the new Puma House Tokyo, located in the city’s Aoyama design district. Puma House Tokyo combines the brand’s press room and event space into one space for the first time. Puma House Tokyo is a multipurpose space that can be used for exhibitions, events, fittings, product launches and other media events. it is also available for rentals.plan© Daici AnoFor our design, we placed ‘staircases’ that climb around the existing features around the space like vines. But these staircases are not for people to climb. Rather, they function as display stands for PUMA’s sneakers and as a compositional element that gives the space a special character. The resulting effect is a strong reminder that we exercise our bodies daily going up and down stairs, and has a visual connection with stadium stairs and podiums too, to bring in PUMA’s important relationship with sports. The stairs bring a sense of movement to the interior, enabling a three-dimensional product display that fully uses its space and allows visitors to experience PUMA’s worldview.#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;}

Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
Puma House / nendo © Daici Ano
© Daici Ano
plan plan
plan

* Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.

The Wheeler School Nulman Lewis Student Center / Ann Beha Architects | ArchDoc

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© David Lamb PhotographyThis small Student Center is a hub and hinge for The Wheeler School’s urban campus in Providence, RI. The campus is constrained by its property size, limited green space, and location within an historic neighborhood. Composed of solid, institutional brick buildings and converted residential structures, the campus faces inward, with its back turned to the community. The Nulman Lewis Student Center sets a different course: transparent, welcoming, and decidedly contemporary. It is the new arrival portal, facing and welcoming the community. The setting and neighborhood may have assumed that a traditional building would be the only appropriate answer for its context, but this building looks forward, advancing contemporary design expression within an historic context. Architect: Ann Beha Architects Location: Providence, Rhode Island, USA Project Area: 5,000 sqf New Student Center, 5,000 sqf Renovation to Student Union and Alumni House Project Year: 2009 Photographs: David Lamb Photography© David Lamb PhotographyPrograms for student centers can be expansive and expensive. With only a 5,000 sqf footprint, this modest connective building has helped make adjacent spaces more useful to the school program. The selected site, a former maintenance and dumpster area, now strengthens a campus edge, and creates a connection to the enlarged campus courtyard. The new building links two historic buildings, the Alumni House and Student Union, and provides easy passage along a new campus spine. Every school day, over 1,000 students enter this structure, and from there, they find the adjacent renovated café, lockers, classrooms, and information center — and each other. Staff and students, faculty and parents, have made this their small and visible hearth, with views into the campus, and to the historic neighborhood beyond.Clad with a distinctive horizontal glass and zinc panel curtain wall system, this building combines visibility and opacity. Its massing relates to the residential scale of the adjacent historic neighborhood, and responds to the architectural organization and horizontal datum of its companion buildings. On the interior, the building’s cast-in-place concrete structure is left exposed as a continuous and durable finish for walls and floors. Through this intentionally simple and less “finished” design, students see how the building was put together. A steel stair with glass balustrades connects the levels of three buildings. As part of the landscape and site design, a stepped concrete plinth on the campus side of the new building provides a place for gathering.Committed to sustainability, the project includes a green roof, absorbing rainwater, reducing the impact on the storm water system, and keeping the building interior cooler. Other sustainable features include a daylight harvesting lighting system with light sensors; high efficiency mechanical systems; a curtain wall envelope with high efficiency glass that responds to window orientation and solar gain; deep horizontal window mullion profiles for shading direct sunlight; and solitube skylights in classrooms and corridors. Many of the materials used in the building have recycled content— classroom counter tops are 100% post-consumer cardboard; acoustical ceiling tiles contain approximately 70% recycled material; and all new carpet is 25% recycled content on a 100% sustainable backing system. This building has become a teaching tool for issues of environment and responsible use of materials and waste.elevation + sectionProject Team: Thomas M. Hotaling AIA, LEED AP, Principal-in-Charge; Steven Gerrard AIA; Jason Bowers AIA, LEED AP; and Lindsey MacDonald Contractor: Agostini Construction Co. Structural Engineer: Odeh Engineering Mechanical Engineer: Wilkinson Associates Electrical Engineer: Gaskell Associates Code and Fire Protection: Ramsey Loga, PE Civil / Geotechnical Engineer: Geisser Engineering Corporation Landscape Architect: Pressley Associates Lighting Designer: Sladen Feinstein Integrated Lighting Acoustician: Acentech Specifications: Wil-Spec Food Service: Crabtree McGrath Associates Estimator / Construction Advisor: Queastor Group#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;}

The Wheeler School Nulman Lewis Student Center / Ann Beha Architects © David Lamb Photography
© David Lamb Photography
The Wheeler School Nulman Lewis Student Center / Ann Beha Architects © David Lamb Photography
© David Lamb Photography
The Wheeler School Nulman Lewis Student Center / Ann Beha Architects © David Lamb Photography
© David Lamb Photography
The Wheeler School Nulman Lewis Student Center / Ann Beha Architects © David Lamb Photography
© David Lamb Photography
The Wheeler School Nulman Lewis Student Center / Ann Beha Architects © David Lamb Photography
© David Lamb Photography
The Wheeler School Nulman Lewis Student Center / Ann Beha Architects © David Lamb Photography
© David Lamb Photography
The Wheeler School Nulman Lewis Student Center / Ann Beha Architects © David Lamb Photography
© David Lamb Photography
elevation + section elevation + section
elevation + section

* Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.

Emmental Stairs Apartment / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti & Biljana Jovanović | ArchDoc

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© Gerardo AltemirInterior Design: Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti Stair Design: Biljana Jovanovic Location: Budapest, Hungary Construction: Gergő Markó Project year: 2011 Photographs: Gerardo Altemir © Gerardo AltemirThis apartment is siutated in a listed building just below the UNESCO protected area of Buda Castle in Budapest, Hungary. The client is a young creative family with two children, who planned the refurbishment of the apartment, the stair was designed by Croatian designer Biljana Jovanovic.© Gerardo AltemirThe apartment is a duplex with the living space (living room, dining room, kitchen, study) downstairs, and the private spaces with two bedrooms upstairs. The layout of the apartment was kept in its original state. Minimal structual changes were made in order to provide better connection between living and dining room. Since the owners have an exquisite design taste and passion for collecting and refurbishing interesting furniture, the whole apartment is painted white, and the space is accentuated only with indivudual furniture pieces. This ensures harmony between the historic ambiance of the apartment and contemporary aesthetic of its furniture.© Gerardo AltemirMain focus points of the space are huge old window and a newly designed interior stairs. The suspended encasement of the stairs separates the space and provides certain level of intimacy between dining and living room area, without isolating them. The circular perforations on the sides let the sunlight seep through, creating surfaces that change the dynamics of the whole interior. The motif for circles was inspired by large windows that another focus point of the apartment. As they remind a lot of holes in cheese, the project was named Emmental Stairs.planApart from being used for its original function, this “object” features a playful touch for children as well. It is used as an inspirational toy, that boosts their imagination and develops their creativity.Due to technical restraints the slope of the stairs had to be kept quite steep. This was somewhat eased through usage of angled treads that complements the visual effect of the stairs.#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;}

Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
Family Apartment with Emmental Stairs / Éva Katona, Péter Szigeti © Gerardo Altemir
© Gerardo Altemir
plan plan
plan

* Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.

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