A10

#39 May/Jun 2011

Nakladatelství: Boom publishers
Rok vydání: 2011
ISSN: 1573-3815
Formát: 24,5 x 33 cm, 70 stran, brožovaná
Jazyk: anglicky
Web: http://www.a10.eu
Běžná cena: 240 Kč
Naše cena: 200 Kč (bez 0 % DPH: 200,00 Kč)
  8,1 € (bez 0 % DPH: 8,10 €)
Skladem: 1 ks (standardní doba expedice do 5 dnů)
 

News and observations
The National Library of Latvia, Riga (LV)
Two new subway stations, Malmö (SE)
BIG wins five competitions so far this year
Update: new squares
Stefano Boeri presents BioMilano (IT)
Reality check: Kastner & Öhler department store, Graz (AT)
and more…

New projects
Conversion of Halles Alstom industrial halls, Nantes (FR) by Franklin Azzi Architecture
Faculty of Engineering, Nicosia (CY) competition winners
Office building, Višegrad (BA) by MIT-arh
Library, Bressanone (IT) by Michel Carlana, Luca Mezzalira & Curzio Pentimalli
Football academy, Luleburgaz (TR) by DDRLP

Hans van der Heijden: Unfashionable ordinariness
Hans van der Heijden heads the Rotterdam practice biq together with Rick Wessels. Swimming against the stream of the neomodern and supermodern tendencies that have long predominated in the Netherlands, biq has secured a position for itself with an architecture that prioritizes the everyday and the ordinary.

New buildings
School, Torre Pacheco (ES) by Huma Arquitectos
Office building and supermarket, Athens (GR) by Kokkinou Kourkoulas Architects
Two houses, Rybnik (PL) by jojko+nawrocki architekci
Health care centre and square, Badalona (ES) by Jordi Badía
School, Lille (FR) by Tank Architectes
Management school, Skolkovo (RU) by Adjaye Associates
Chapel interior, Sarajevo (BA) by Adnan Pašić
Music and conference centre, Pécs (HU) by Építész Stúdió

Malleable metal
Although metal made its entry into architecture at the end of the 19th century – in imposing station roofs, in the Eiffel Tower, in Art Nouveau ironwork stairs and balconies – we continue to associate steel and aluminium first and foremost with the rational modernism of the 20th century. The skyscrapers of Mies van der Rohe, the furniture and prefab facade panels of Jean Prouvé, the high-tech architecture of Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers… However, during the past ten years or so, that quasi-industrial character has ceased to be axiomatic. More and more, architects are discovering (or rediscovering) the craft-like qualities of metal.

Focusing on European countries, cities and regions
Jure Kotnik analyses the boom in kindergarten architecture throughout Europe
A tour of Murcia (ES)
Home: Annet Hof and Herman de Kovel's relaxed-modernist bungalow, Rotterdam (NL)

Buildings from the margins of modern history
Raine Karp's Linnahall concert hall in Tallinn (1976–1980) is one of the most advanced buildings of the Soviet era in Estonia. According to Triin Ojari it is unique both in its seafront location, and in its architectural concept.

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