Showing posts with label wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wood. Show all posts

Fujimori Terunobu

The architecture of Terunobu Fujimori - houses with real dandelions or leeks planted on the roof, a tea room like a bird house perched on tall tree trunks with the bark still attached - is extremely original. It combines new concepts quite different from those of conventional architecture with a sense of nostalgia that evokes memories of a distant past. The modernist architecture of the 20th century was functional and based on science and technology. It excluded a relationship with nature or historical and regional qualities and adopted an "international style," universal qualities that were thought to apply around the world and were promoted as the main direction of new architecture. Because of its mechanical, artificial, mass-produced look, however, modernist architecture took away the human face of the city. At a time when contemporary architects were engaged in a trial-and-error attempt to overcome the contradictions in this style as they groped toward the future, Fujimori was designing "architecture that advances toward the past," incorporating things that had been rejected by modern architecture, including traditional techniques surviving in rural areas. Fujimori's architecture is international but vernacular. It is not tied to any particular stylistic category but goes back to a time before there were nations, national peoples, and architectural styles. He participates personally in the construction process with the Jomon Company, a group made up of friends and benefactors.

Terunobu Fujimori & Nobumichi Oshima, Teahouse Tetsu, 2006.
Photo: Masuda Akihisa.
Takasugi an house

text from operacity.jp


hybrid furniture

Hungarian textile designer kata monus has created an experimental storage piece in which soft material is organically integrated with wood in a way that it breaks free of the customary standards of furniture manufacturing. textile goes beyond its application and becomes an independent component of the object, connecting the two ashen elements as a knitted structure running through holes.







image © reka hegyhati

Invisible bridge

Project Name: Moses Bridge
Architects: 
RO&AD architecten

Contributing architects: Ro Koster, Ad Kil, Martin van Overveld
Structural Engineer : Adviesbureau, Lüning
 Doetinchem, 
The Netherlands


Contractor:
 AVK-bv
, Oude Tonge, 
The Netherlands
Client:
 Municipality of Bergen op Zoom
Location: 
Halsteren, Municipality of Bergen op Zoom
, The Netherlands
Used Materials: 
Accoya Wood, 
Angelim Vermelho