Thursday, November 11, 2010

Slim Rack


Slim Rack outside ECDC entrance

Visiondivision was commissioned to design a bike rack for the surrounding area of ECDC (European Centre of Disease prevention and Control) in Stockholm. To create an option that could compete with all the slightly boring looking pre-made bike racks, we designed a very slim, easy-to-produce module based on simple craftsmanship that can be multiplied in various options and also be adapted to the beautiful surroundings of the site.

Often do the pre-made average bike-racks come in one piece and the roof comes in another, thus not very well integrated with each other. This causes a rather clumsy product with a redundant material utilization.
Another problem is that the racks are designed with the idea that it could stand anywhere, which in reality means that it doesn’t fit perfectly anywhere.
By involving the craftsmanship aspect of our module system we can more easily
adapt to more complex situations and perform with an aesthetic that the campus demand.

The module has three functions; it should provide support to your bike and a possibility to lock it to the construction, it should also provide a roof. The design became a slim steel column that shapes itself after the requested functions. When two columns are placed back to back it becomes a Slim Rack. The Slim Racks are then placed in triangular shapes that can be multiplied in various combinations, making it adaptable to various sites at the ECDC Campus.

Since we put all functions into one pillar we could reduce unnecessary building mass. We could also produce a very slim construction since the length between different building parts becomes quite short. A single module needs only a thickness of 15 mm. Putting these two features together we end up with a very light construction that blends in by being thin and in some angles almost invisible. To make the construction even more invisible and adaptable to various situations the Slim Rack is painted in the same colour as the houses it is standing next to.


Slim Rack outside ECDC entrance


Two bent steel beams is welded together to a Slim Rack


The Slim Racks are welded together; U-profiles are locking the construction and holding the glass roof together


The racks can be produced in various shapes


Slim Rack detail


Details of extra function Slim Racks

The Slim Rack also served for some extra functions that were asked for in the project brief. The rack ís bended in the same manner to hold a small table, an ashtray and a garbage can for outdoor coffee breaks.


Facade of Slim Racks outside the main building


Facade of Slim Racks outside an annex

Friday, October 22, 2010

Storm Flipper



Competition entry for a new drinking fountain prototype in the parks of London.

The concept is quite simple; an image of bad weather is turned upside down and creates a very strong icon for a drinking fountain.




The overturned umbrella acts as the water basin, the raindrops as its structural support as well as water pipes and the cloud as its base.
A lightning coming from the cloud lights up during the night.
Rainy weather is a very suitable symbol for both a drinking fountain and the city of London and will surely attract many thirsty park visitors
around the city to quench their thirst.

Construction
Vertical metal pipes with drops mounted on them are holding the structure. The dimension of the pipes is changing depending on function, making the outer ones constructive pipes and also the water pipe is a bit thicker due to factors as vandalism. The sink is made of plastic that is later painted in various combinations. The base is cast and polished concrete with drilled holes for assembling the pipes underneath the base.
Materials can be altered after consultation depending on cost and durability.





There are an endless assortment of patterns and colours for umbrellas and no matter how they look they are still unmistakable recognized as umbrellas. The drinking fountains can therefore be carried out in a great variety as well, without losing its familiarity as an object.
The different styles can be chosen according to the various parks location and image and the result will be a great number of different drinking fountains that comes from the same module.
The bad weather module can also be done in a divided edition and can thus be wall mounted. There is also the possibility to sponsor some of the modules, just like corporate umbrellas.
Many thanks to our Colombian friend Andres Morelli for the renders.


Tuesday, October 19, 2010

100 000


100 000 brilliant architecture conoisseurs from all over the globe has now visited our website and hopefully found some inspiration among our many projects and adventures. We would like to thank you for your visits and the countless e-mails that hearten our organization to continue our ceaseless struggle in the field. According to Wikipedia the respectable sum of 100 000 equals a field army, thus giving us the feeling that we have achieved the incorruptable rank of Generals of brave and gifted architecture.

“It doesn't take a hero to order men into battle. It takes a hero to be one of those men who goes into battle.”

General H. Norman Schwarzkopf


Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Noah's House



A client wanted help to build a small summer house inside of an old shed at an island in the northern Stockholm archipelago. The shed is just next to the Baltic Sea and has been exposed to overflows every tenth year or so. Knowing that the house probably will be hit by another overflow and the fact that we were only allowed to build inside the shed forced a specific design.

To build a totally waterproof house would be too expensive, so this house is constructed as a lizard’s tail. If one part of the building gets exposed to water that particular part can easily be replaced without affecting the rest of the building.
The whole building is constructed by spruce boards and spruce pillars and with no synthetic materials in its lower regions. The horizontal spruce boards can be taken away when exposed to water to dry and later be put back or be replaced by new ones. The house is insulated like a hat to not be affected by an overflow. The electric parts of the house are also put in the higher regions of the house and will not be affected by an extreme overflow.
Since the client mostly spends his time there during the summer, we also had to come up with a warning system if the water levels have been reaching the construction underneath the floor and need to be ventilated during overflow season, which is usually at spring time. The warning system became a rising totem pole where the face changes its mood depending on how high the water level has reached underneath the house.




Since the shed was too slanted we could not rely on its structure and had to build a totally new house inside. To get as much space as possible we tried to build as close as possible to the old structure, giving the floor plan a long niche along one of the walls where we decided to put a battery of functions. The battery consists of a small kitchenette, a storage space and an expandable bunk bed which is all constructed out of spruce boards as well. One positive outcome of that is that you have the best view in the house from the bed so you can fall asleep watching the bay’s midsummer sunset. The only change to the existing façade is the big window and a wooden terrace with a outhouse on it towards the see and a new entrance door, hardly exposing the building’s new function which gives a pleasant surprise for visitors.




Plan

Section with an overflow chart


Function battery drawing

We did not design what furniture that would be put into the house but since the house will be occupied by lots of people with a sailing and surf interest we made a back wall filled with wooden hangers. Since a lot of the stuff that will be hanging on that wall will have sail and surf aesthetics
We made wall lamps using Nixon masks “Point Break” style to match all of those gadgets.


Nixon lamp


Assembly of the overflow warning system


Overflow warningsystem test


Early construction photo


Carving the totem pole

Friday, October 8, 2010

Architectural Model & Staging Space

Two new architecture books are now out in stores featuring some of the capacious project flora of visiondivision.
The Korean "Architectural Model" includes several prodigious models made by the enthusiastic team and the German "Staging Space" includes the remarkable Hill Hut.

Monday, September 27, 2010

VD Guide IX

Visiondivision gives you a brief tour of inspiring projects and phenomenon around the world. If you have more suggestions, dont hesitate to contact us at: info@visiondivision.com like our friend Charles Ranken from Australia did when he suggested the Makedonium Monument.
Many thanks for that.
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The Lightning Field - An array of steel poles to attract lightning
Birth: 1977
Location: Catron County, New Mexico, USA
Architect: Walter De Maria
VD says: A sublime and fundamental project

The Lightning Field by the American sculptor Walter De Maria, is a work of Land Art situated in a remote area of the high desert of southwestern New Mexico. It is comprised of 400 polished stainless steel poles installed in a grid array measuring one mile by one kilometer. The poles — five cm in diameter and averaging 7 meters in height—are spaced 70 meters apart and have solid pointed tips that define a horizontal plane. A sculpture to be walked in as well as viewed, The Lightning Field is intended to be experienced over an extended period of time, and visitors are encouraged to spend as much time as possible in it alone, especially during sunset and sunrise. In order to provide this opportunity, Dia offers overnight visits during the months of May through October.


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Penecost Island Land Dive - An ancient bungee jump structure
Birth: A long time ago
Location: Penecost Island, Vanuatu
Architect: Penecost islanders
VD says: Fearless stunts from impressive structures

The island is the spiritual birthplace of the extreme sport of bungee jumping, originating in an ages old ritual called the gol, or land diving. Between April and June every year, men in the southern part of the island jump from tall towers (around 20 to 30 metres) with vines tied to their feet, in a ritual believed to ensure a good yam harvest. The ritual is also now used to show acceptance into manhood.


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Shibam Hadhramaut - The oldest skyscraper city in the world
Birth: 16th century
Location: Shibam, Yemen
Architect: Hadhramaut Empire
VD says: An impressive and brave highrise conglomerate in the desert

Shibam is often called "the oldest skyscraper city in the world" or "the Manhattan of the desert", and is one of the oldest and best examples of urban planning based on the principle of vertical construction. The city has the tallest mud buildings in the world, with some of them over 30 meters high, thus being early high-rise apartment buildings. In order to protect the buildings from rain and erosion, the façades are thickly coated and must be routinely maintained.
This building technique was implemented in order to protect residents from Bedouin attacks.


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Palais Bulle - An organic modern super villa that already is classified as a historical monument.
Birth: 1970
Location: Cannes, France
Architect: Antti Lovag
VD says: A lovely and playful home

French star designer Pierre Cardin was looking to buy a nice house on the Cote d’Azur, but was horrified by all the unoriginal designs that he had seen and that didn’t match his avant-garde fashion designs . While searching, he stumbled across a construction site being built by architect Antti Lovag for a French industrialist. When the owner died before the home’s completion, Cardin asked the architect to complete it for him. Cardin was thrilled to acquire the almost finished residence that finally satisfied his exigent taste.
A heart attack inspired Lovag to reflect on life, and his new outlook of course influenced his architecture. "I discovered that I was mortal— meaning I discovered that I was free. I realized that building as if for eternity is an attack on time itself. Furthermore, it usually leads to an angular, aggressive organization of space. On the other hand, when one knows one's limits, all that is swept away. I began to think about improvised buildings, cobbled together on-site and adapted to a particular person's desires or idea of a house," he explains. "Instead of construction based on prefabricated panels, I began experimenting with frameworks that could be bent and changed and with techniques of concrete surfacing. That way, forms could move again." Architecture's first task, he came to believe, was to eliminate inhuman angularity.
Cardin, too, adores curves. "The circle is my symbol," he says. "The sphere represents the creation of the world and the mother's womb. Holes, cones, breasts—I've always used them in my designs."


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Guatemala City Sink Holes - 100 m deep circular holes in the ground
Birth: 2007 & 2010
Location: Guatemala City, Guatemala
Architect: Earth
VD says: Dangerous yet alluring

In February 2007, a large, deep circular hole with vertical walls opened in a poor neighborhood in northeast Guatemala city. This hole was 100 m deep, and was apparently created by fluid from a sewer eroding uncemented volcanic ash and other pyroclastic deposits underlying Guatemala City. The piping feature has since been mitigated and plans to develop on the site have been proposed. However, critics believe municipal authorities have neglected needed maintenance on the city's aging sewer system, and have speculated that more piping features ("sinkholes") are likely to develop unless action is taken.
In May 2010, another piping feature, which was larger than a street intersection, developed after Tropical Storm Agatha. It engulfed a three story building and a house. No one was miraculous hurt. This 2010 piping feature was at least 18 m wide and 60 m deep.The distance between the 2010 piping feature and the 2007 piping feature three years ago is about two kilometers


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The Weather Project - An indoor weather imitation
Birth: 2003
Location: London, UK
Architect: Olafur Eliasson
VD says: When one imitates the sun, that project earns a place in the guide

The weather project was installed at the London's Tate Modern in 2003 as part of the popular Unilever series. The installation filled the open space of the gallery's Turbine Hall.
Eliasson used humidifiers to create a fine mist in the air via a mixture of sugar and water, as well as a semi-circular disc made up of hundreds of monochromatic lamps which radiated single frequency yellow light. The ceiling of the hall was covered with a huge mirror, in which visitors could see themselves as tiny black shadows against a mass of orange light. The work reportedly attracted two million visitors, many of whom were repeat customers


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Cliftons Cafeterias - A serie of cafeterias with flamboyant decors
Birth: 1930s
Location: Los Angeles, USA
Architect: The Clifton's
VD says: Extravagant facades and vivid thematic interiors

In 1939 when the founders of Clifton’s decided to remodel the Pacific Seas cafeteria from a conventional dining establishment to the exotic setting, the Los Angeles Architectural Commission was so upset over the facade and the décor that it threatened suit.
This exterior with the waterfalls, geysers and tropical foliage – all of which are brilliantly illuminated in the evening, has become a mecca for tourists.
With the help of his capable, willing staff, a second Clifton's opened in 1935. It was named Clifton's Brookdale and it's interior was reminiscent of the California Redwood groves with waterfalls and brooks and remains today the largest public cafeteria in the world.


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Lake Kliluk (aka Spotted Lake) - A mineral lake that causes a cool effect during summertime
Birth: A long time ago
Location: British Columbia, Canada
Architect: Nature
VD says: A neat natural phenomenon

Spotted Lake is very highly concentrated with numerous different minerals. It contains some of the highest quantities (in the world) of magnesium sulfate, calcium and sodium sulphates. It also contains extremely high concentrations of 8 other minerals as well as some small doses of four others such as silver and titanium.
In the summer, most of the water in the lake evaporates leaving behind all the minerals. Large “spots” on the lake appear and depending on the mineral composition at the time, the spots will be different colors. The spots are made mainly of magnesium sulfate, which crystallizes in the summer. Since in the summer, only the minerals in the lake remain, they harden to form natural “walkways” around and between the spots.


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Makedonium Monument - An elaborate shaped memorial for the first republic on the Balkans
Birth: 1974
Location: Kruševo, Macedonia
Architect: Jordan Grabulovski
VD says: A rebellious monument with a mutinous architecture

The Makedonium was built in 1974 on the 30th anniversary of ASNOM (Anti-Fascist Assembly of the Liberation of Macedonia) and the 71st anniversary of the Ilinden uprising, which resulted in the 10 day Kruševo Republic, the first republic on the Balkans. The short lived republic was put down by an immense number of Ottoman troops, but is still remembered as a high point in the national history. The President of the Republic visits the Makedonium each 2nd of August and it remains an important symbol for the country and is also portrayed on their currency.


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Fontana di Trevi - A theatrical and lavish fountain
Birth: 1762
Location: Rome, Italy
Architect: Nicola Salvi
VD says: Masterful layout; dominating a small square and using a building as a powerful backdrop.

In 1629 Pope Urban VIII, finding the earlier fountain insufficiently dramatic, asked Gian Lorenzo Bernini to sketch possible renovations, but when the Pope died, the project was abandoned. Bernini's lasting contribution was to resite the fountain from the other side of the square to face the Quirinal Palace (so the Pope could look down and enjoy it). Though Bernini's project was torn down for Salvi's fountain, there are many Bernini touches in the fountain as it was built.
Competitions had become the rage during the Baroque era to design buildings and fountains. In 1730 Pope Clement XII organized a contest in which Nicola Salvi initially lost to Alessandro Galilei — but due to the outcry in Rome over the fact that a Florentine won, Salvi was awarded the commission anyway. Work began in 1732, and the fountain was completed in 1762.
This fountain is symbolic and almost theatrical in style. It is set against the facade of Palazzo Poli. In the background there is an Arch of Triumph, which frames a statue of Neptune. Two tritons try to master an agitated seahorse and a placid on each seahorse symbolizing a distinct mood of the sea.


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Salvation Mountain - A hill painted by one dedicated man
Birth: 1985
Location: Niland, California, USA
Architect: Leonard Knight
VD says: Well, we have said it before, dedication is the only true architectural quality.

Salvation Mountain is a colorful art installation covering much of a small hill north of Calipatria, California. It is made from adobe, straw, and thousands of gallons of paint. It was created by Leonard Knight to convey the message that "God Loves Everyone." Knight refused substantial donations of money and labor from supporters who wished to modify his message of universal love to favor or disfavor particular groups.
Steps cut into the side of the hill lead to the summit, which is topped by a cross. Salvation Mountain also features many large straw bale and adobe walls supported by a matrix of logs enclosing several cave-like spaces. Knight lives full-time at the site in a small cabin mounted on the rear of a 1930s-vintage Chevrolet two-ton truck. Like Salvation Mountain, Knight's "Salvation Truck" and a collection of other vehicles and machinery are entirely covered with paint and Biblical quotes. He estimates that more than 100,000 gallons of paint have gone into the creation of the mountain and that every California-based paint manufacturer has donated paint to the project.


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The Great Mosque of Djenne - A huge mosque made out of mud -
Birth: 1907
Location: Djenne, Mali
Architect: Djenné’s guild of masons
VD says: An exquisite "Genus Loci" approach

The Great Mosque of Djenné in the West African country of Mali was originally constructed in the 13th Century. It gradually grew to be an enormous structure before it fell into ruins by the 19th Century. From 1906-7, it was rebuilt using adobe — the original building material. It is today the largest adobe structure in the world.
The Great Mosque is built on a raised plinth platform of rectangular sun-dried mud bricks that are held together by mud mortar and plastered over with mud. The walls vary in thickness between 50 to 80cm, depending upon their height. These massive walls are necessary in order to bear the weight of the tall structure and also provide insulation from the sun’s heat. During the day, the walls gradually warm up from the outside; at night, they cool down again. The mosque’s prayer hall, with ninety wooden pillars supporting its ceiling, can contain as many as 3000 people. This helps the interior of the mosque to stay cool all day long. The Great Mosque also has roof vents with ceramic caps. These caps, made by the town’s women, can be removed at night to ventilate the interior spaces.


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Hill of Crosses - A pilgrimage site with 100 000 crosses
Birth: Early 20th century
Location: Šiauliai, Lithuania
Architect: Pilgrimes
VD says: The crosses are so many that they merge into one object, great.

The Hill of Crosses is a site of pilgrimage in northern Lithuania. The precise origin of the practice of leaving crosses on the hill is uncertain, but it is believed that the first crosses were placed on the former Jurgaičiai or Domantai hill fort after the 1831 Uprising.Over the centuries, not only crosses, but giant crucifixes, carvings of Lithuanian patriots, statues of the Virgin Mary and thousands of tiny effigies and rosaries have been brought here by Catholic pilgrims. The number of crosses is unknown, but estimates put it at about 100 000 in 2006 and counting.


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Pantheon - A temple with a huge unreinforced concrete dome with a central opening, allowing sun and rain to enter the building.
Birth: 100 AD.
Location: Rome, Italy
Architect: Marcus Agrippa
VD says: A 2000 old masterpiece that never gets out of fashion

Pantheon was commissioned by Marcus Agrippa as a temple to all the gods of Ancient Rome, and rebuilt later by Emperor Hadrian in about 126 AD.
The building is circular with a portico of three ranks of huge granite Corinthian columns under a pediment opening into the rotunda, under a coffered, concrete dome, with a central opening (oculus) to the sky. Almost two thousand years after it was built, the Pantheon's dome is still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. The height to the oculus and the diameter of the interior circle are the same, 43.3 metres. A rectangular structure links the portico with the rotunda. It is one of the best preserved of all Roman buildings. It has been in continuous use throughout its history, and since the 7th century, the Pantheon has been used as a Roman Catholic church dedicated to "St. Mary and the Martyrs" but informally known as "Santa Maria Rotonda."


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Jellyfish Lake - A lake chock-full with millions of golden jellyfish
Birth: A long time ago
Location: Eil Malk island, Palau
Architect: Nature
VD says: An otherworldly acquaintance

Jellyfish Lake is one of Palau's most famous dive (snorkeling only) sites. It is notable for the millions of golden jellyfish which migrate horizontally across the lake daily.
Jellyfish Lake is connected to the ocean through fissures and tunnels in the limestone of ancient Miocene reef. However the lake is sufficiently isolated and the conditions are different enough that the diversity of species in the lake is greatly reduced from the nearby lagoon. The golden jellyfish in the lake have evolved to be substantially different from their close relatives living in the nearby lagoons.