Saturday, January 14, 2012

Skin of Architecture: Pattern 3

Source: Hisao Suzuki archdaily.com
177 Social Housing In Vitoria, Bulevar de Salburua Kalea, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Álava, Spain, 2007 designed by Matos-Castillo Arquitectos
The façades are ventilated with ceramic pieces in lower floors and lightweight panels in upper floors. In both cases, we worked under the idea of camouflage. In lower floors, a pixelling effect, using almost the whole ceramic piece’s catalogue of colour, dissolve the outline of the windows. In upper blocks, shutters, that are the same material and colour of the façade, open up discovering holes, and close hiding them. Thereby, the houses change over day, night, sun and interior activity.  -- ArchDaily

Source: archdaily.com

Mosaic, Beijing, China, 2008 designed by SAKO Architects
The motif of “Mosaic” was adopted through out this project. It is consistently used as motifs of exterior, interior, signs, and landscape designs. The big volume consisting of “mosaics” is to convey the image of the landmark filled with festivity like the spectacle of fluttering confetti.  -- ArchDaily
 Source: Scagliola en Brakkee
380 Student Units and Public Space Design, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 2008 designed by Architectenbureau Marlies Rohmer
The facade consists of a grid of multicoloured aluminium panels in which the windows are omitted. Seen from a distance, the colours blend into a grey, scaly skin. The closer you come, the more it appears as a colourful honeycomb for the bright young students – our ‘smarties’ – from all over the world.  -- ArchDaily

Source: Wojtek Gurak @ Flickr
24 Social Housing,PAU Carabanchel, Madrid, Spain designed by Rafael Cañizares Torquemada & Eduardo Valdillo Ruiz

Source: chankrieger.com
Shapiro Cardiovascular Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 2009 designed by Chan Krieger Sieniewicz/ Cannon Design
The architecture of the building uses a unitized curtainwall of subtly shaded metal panels and fritted glass to present a quilt-like face to the city.  -- architect's web site

Source: Jean Nouvel archdaily.com
100 Eleventh Avenue, New York City, New York, USA designed by Jean Nouvel
Working with façade consultants, Front, Nouvel’s approach emphasizes the window mullions to the point that they become scattered frames. To simplify the construction process as the façade’s fragmented surface has quite varied window dimensions, megapanels that contain about 20 smaller individual windows can be used when there is a continuous vertical mullion. -- ArchDaily

Source: Cino Zucchi archdaily.com
Apartment building on the harbour, Ravenna, Italy designed by Zucchi & Partners
The main facades of the building are marked by a number of terracotta horizontal “notched in” mouldings – two for every floor height – framing a plaster rendering of different shades of warm, clay-coloured shades in different hues and a cobalt blue one, creating a “mosaic” pattern – somehow inspired by Ravenna’s famous Byzantine art – which generates a sort of scalar distortion in the perception of the building. This effect of momentary “camouflage” of the dimension of the building helps connecting its “domestic” dimension to its perception from the waterside and the city, where it stands alone as a temporary “landmark” waiting for the development to transform the landscape or this part of the city. -- ArchDaily

Source: Steve Montpetit archdaily.com
Fournitures Select, Dorval, Canada, 2010 designed by Blouin Tardif Architecture-Environnement
The exterior cladding panels of the project form an immense blue-tinted mosaic, bestowing the status of mega-object on the building and making the company noticeable in the midst of a grey-toned environment. -- ArchDaily

Source: Crepain Binst Architecture archdaily.com
Infrax West Offices, Torhout, Belgium, 2010 designed by Crepain Binst Architecture
The outer skin consists of screen printed glass panels in 3 colours and three degrees of transparency. The mosaic formed by all these elements and the wall’s ingenious construction have made an unmistakable contribution to the building’s expressive and dynamic character. -- ArchDaily

Source: Juan K. Ayala archdaily.com
Institute of Functional Biology and Genomics, Salamanca, Spain, 2010 designed by Mata y Asociados
The solution adopted led to the construction of a unitary and compact building, with a continuous and semi-transparent mask inspired in genetic coding processes, after which the plan is organized around eight functional large vertical holes (four indoor and four attached to the facade), thereby obtaining a foamed interior provided with natural lighting. -- ArchDaily

Source: Michael Moran / ottoarchive archdaily.com
Children’s Library Discovery Center, Jamaica, New York, USA, 2011 designed by 1100 Architect
The exterior façade of the building is composed of four different types of glass (transparent, translucent, opaque, and opaque with texture). The glowing glass façade is a beacon in the surrounding community and is elemental in increasing the library’s visibility and reintroducing it as a central cultural and social destination. -- ArchDaily

Source: Marcel van der Burg archdaily.com
Sports Hall, Rietlanden, The Netherlands, 2012 designed by Slangen + Koenis Architects
To accentuate the placement of the new structure, we created very colourful facades at the two sides that intersect the existing buildings, accentuating the contrast between old and new. The two front facades are very crisp and light with white colours in varying materials. -- ArchDaily

Source: Cino Zucchi Architetti archdaily.com
La Corte Verde di Corso Como, Porta Nuova, Piazzale Principessa Clotilde, 20121 Milan, Italy, 2013 designed by Cino Zucchi Architetti
The different materials and textures of the façades – plaster, Indian stone in two alternated finishes, bases in porphyry slabs, wood and metal window frames, folded and perforated copper plates, parapets in enameled steel and sanded glass – are unified by a colour palette in various warm grey tones, that together with the projecting single gable profile recalls the historical city without any direct quotation of its stylistic features. -- ArchDaily

Source: Jesús Granada archdaily.com
Agencia Andaluza, Sevilla, Spain, 2013 designed by Ruiz Larrea y Asociados
The envelope of the building, regulator system as well as controller of the interior environment, is constitute by a skin two layers with an air chamber. The external layer constitute a protective or permeable finish to the building, according to the different moments of the year. This skin is self regulated by the air chamber, which remains open or close according to the exterior climate conditions. -- ArchDaily

Source: Claus Graubner archdaily.com
CocaCola Headquarters in Berlin, Stralauer Allee 4, 10245 Berlin, Germany, 2013 designed by NPS Tchoban Voss
The water façade to the south is fully glazed; in front is a gallery-like balcony spanning the width of the building and faced with a structure that serves as a fixed sunscreen, comprising slim, vertically S-shaped profiles and horizontal beams at different spacing. The three other façades are divided by short strip windows, switching positions at each level, and are clad in glazed ceramic elements in various red tones. -- ArchDaily

Source: Shenzhen Upright & Pure Architectural Design archdaily.com
Vanke Sales Center Façade Renovation, Zhengzhou, Henan, China, 2013 designed by Shenzhen Upright &Pure Architectural Design
....employed aluminum panels as main material of building epidermis and used three kinds of colors combinations to enhance the feeling of “mutation” in one triangle surface. The arrangements of the aluminum panels in each face are interrelated and mutually varied. Each elevation has its specialized color gradient. They vary from cold to warm color in gradient, creating a “bloom” effect. -- ArchDaily

Source: Patrimonio Copparo archdaily.com
New Crematorium in Copparo, 44034 Copparo FE, Italy, 2014 designed by Patrimonio Copparo
Only three materials compose the whole project: reinforced concrete, glass and ceramic panels. These elements create vertical alternating strips of soft tones ranging from beige to gray. -- ArchDaily

Source: Jesús Granada archdaily.com
12 dwellings in Jaen, Calle Llana de San Juan, 41, 23004 Jaén, Jaén, Spain, 2014 designed by bRijUNi Architects
....the colorful facade, challenging the monotonous and constructive regulations, and the existing rich chromatic diversity in the surroundings, to become the protagonist of such a unified but not individualized project.... -- ArchDaily

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