Monday, August 29, 2011

Midwest Summer Office

The team is now back in the US where they have set up a temporary office to refine the last details of Chop Stick which is scheduled to be open for public next summer.
As always you can reach them on their e-mail which they check on a daily basis.


Monday, August 8, 2011

Chop Stick



Visiondivision was commissioned by the Indianapolis Museum of Art to create an innovative concession stand for 100 Acres: The Virginia B. Fairbanks Art & Nature Park, which will begin construction this summer.

The design is based on the universal notion that you need to sacrifice something in order to make something new. Every product is a compound of different pieces of nature, whether it is a cell phone, a car, a stone floor or a wood board; they have all been harvested in one way or another. Our project is about trying to harvest something as gently as possible so that the source of what we harvest is displayed in a pure, pedagogic and respectful way—respectful to both the source itself and to everyone visiting the building.

The raw material we selected is a 100-foot yellow poplar tree, the state tree of Indiana, known for its beauty, respectable size, and good properties as hardwood. We found a great specimen standing in a patch of forest outside of Anderson, Indiana. Our goal is to make the best out of this specific poplar tree, from taking it down and through the whole process of transforming it into a useful building that will be part of one of the finest art parks in the United States. As the project proceeds, we continue to be surprised by all of the magical features that are revealed in refining a tree into a building; both in the level of craftsmanship and knowledge of woodworkers and arborists, and also of the tree itself.


Master diagram

The first step is to cut down the tree, which is done when the ground is dry enough to manage a crane on the site, with special mats placed on the ground to secure the crane’s operation. A cushion of small, already chopped-down trees is created to reduce the impact of the tree’s fall and to keep the majority of its limbs intact.

The tree is then transported to the park site, where it becomes the suspended horizontal beam of this new structure, which will be almost entirely made out of the tree itself. The tree’s bark is removed to prevent it from falling on bystanders, a process that occurs naturally as the moisture content in the wood drops, causing the tree to shrink and the bark to lose its grip. Craftsmen loosen entire cylinders of bark from the trunk that are then flattened and cut into a standard shingle length. The shingles are carefully stacked and placed under pressure to avoid curling. The stacks are then kiln dried to the proper moisture content, sterilized, and kept in climate-controlled storage until they are ready for use. Bark shingles are very durable, long lasting (up to 80 years), and maintenance free.

After debarking, pieces of wood are extracted from the suspended tree and used for each of the components of the concession stand; structural support of the entire construction, pillars and studs for the kiosk, swings under the tree for kids, benches and tables to be placed under the tree’s crown, from which special fixtures made out of branches will hang. Many school children visit 100 Acres, and we had those kids in mind when we decided to hang swings from the tree.

On a smaller scale, we are exploring ways to use other parts of the tree in the concession stand, including its root system, which is separated from the tree when cut down. The roots have many edible features, such as root bark used to make tea and tonics that could be sold in the kiosk, for example. Pressed leaves and flowers taken from the tree will be ornaments in the front glass of the kiosk. There is also the possibility of extracting honey from poplar tree flowers, which could be something for sale on site. The branches that are less than five inches in diameter are cut away to prevent eventual rotting, and those can be used for details such as legs for the chairs and tables, or grinded down into sawdust for use as insulation.


The cut down of the tree and the transportation to the IMA
(Image courtesy: Donna Sink)

Here is a series of pictures from the two intense days in Indy this summer when the tree was taken down gently from a forest outside of Anderson, Indiana and taken to the 100 Acres: The Virginia B. Fairbanks Art & Nature Park at The Indianapolis Museum of Arts.


The fine craftsmen of Indiana conferencing before the chop down


Connecting the wires to the crane, and choping down smaller limbs


The yellow poplar tree hanging from the crane


the tree in a horizontal position


Flowers from the tree and smaller limbs are saved for later use


The back part of the tree is cut in slices for tables at the outdoor seating area


A first debarking of the tree to fit the truck


Getting the tree on the back part of the truck


The truck is finally loaded



The tree outside Anderson, Indiana, ready to roll


Truck on its way to Indianapolis on narrow roads with police escort


The tree was later debarked on the temporary studs at the 100 Acres



The crown of the debarked tree at the 100 acres ready for further refinement.

A huge thanks to our collaborators!

Curator: Lisa Freiman
Curator: Sarah Green
Local architect: Donna Sink
Engineer: Dave Steiner
Logger: Dave and Dave
IMA CEO: Max Andersson
And all the other staff of the IMA and other involved people at the Chop Stick project

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Cancer City on display at the Tallinn Architecture Biennale

Our knock out project Cancer City will be on display at the splendorous Kadriorg Palace during the ambitious Tallinn Architecture Biennale which will be held September 8-11 2011.
Tallinn Architecture Biennale is a new architecture forum that brings together theory and practice, young and experienced architects in order to arouse rich discussion over architecture, urban planning and landscape issues.
We are so happy to be a part of it that we will personally transport a model across the Baltic Sea to secure the fragile conveyance.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Preparations for Milan

Visiondivision has been invited by the Architect School at “Politecnico di Milano” to hold a workshop by building a green structure at the schools campus in September this Autumn. To train our planting skills the team went out to a dear friend of ours estate to get a lesson in how to plant trees.


Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Visiondivision holds mini-lecture in Stockholm

Visiondivision will hold a small lecture on the 9th of June at the annual summer-gathering for the Swedish architect foundation.
The talk will be about our latest piece of greatness , all accompanied by free champagne and star-strucked eyes.

Monday, April 25, 2011

VD Guide XI

The VD Guide XI gives you a range of vernacular delights and animal ingenuity sparkled with some natural phenomenon and sharp architecture.
Thanks once again to our Australian friend Charles Ranken for his contribution "House of Mirrors". If you are holding on to a piece of great architecture that hasn't been featured yet, feel free to drop us a line (info@visiondivision.com)
Enjoy!
/the vd team
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Social Weaver's Nest - Huge bird nest that can accomodate hundreds of birds
Birth: A long time ago
Location: Southern Africa
Architect: The Social Weaver bird
VD says: Proves once again that some animals can compete for the Pritzker Prize

The Social Weavers are small African birds that are extremely gregarious. Sociable weavers construct permanent nests on trees and other tall objects. These nests are the largest built by any bird, and are large enough to house over a hundred pairs of birds, containing several generations at a time. The nests are highly structured and provide birds with a more advantageous temperature relative to the outside. The central chambers retain heat and are used for nighttime roosting. The outer rooms are used for daytime shade and maintain temperatures of 7-8 degrees Celsius inside while outside temperatures may range from 16-33 degrees Celsius.
The nests consist of separate chambers, each of which is occupied by a pair (sometimes with offspring) roost and breed. Nests are built around large and sturdy structures like Acacia trees or sometimes even telephone poles. These nests are perhaps the most spectacular structure built by any bird.


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Loess Belt Dwellings - Dug out settlements for ten million Chinese
Location: Loess Belt, China
Architect: Chinese
VD says: Great site adaptation and agricultural finesse

One of the most radical solutions in the field of shelter is represented by the underground towns and villages in the Chinese loess belt. Loess is silt, transported and deposited by the wind.
Because of its great softness and high porosity (45 per cent), it can be easily carved. In places, roads have been cut as much as 15 meters deep into the original level by the action of wheels.
The photographs show settlements of the most rigorous, not to say abstract, design near Tungkwan (Honnan).
The dark squares in the flat landscape are pits about the size of a tennis court.
Their vertical sides are 9 to 10 meters high. L-shaped staircases lead to the apartments below whose rooms are about 10 meters deep and 5 meters wide, and measure about 5 meters to the top of the vaulted ceiling.
They are lighted and aired by openings that give onto the courtyard.
Not only habitations but factories, schools, hotels and goverment offices are built
entirely underground.
The floor/roof has a double function: shelter and crop field. Neither additional air-conditioning nor heating is required, due to natural thermal lag kept in the soil mass. Furthermore, grain from the fields may be dried above ground, and afterwards
storaged downstairs in the cave dwelling, simply by letting it directly fall into the storage room, through a hole on the floor/roof.
The weather conditions are very extreme in this part of the world, with harsh long winters and very hot summers, thus the cave dwellings make the climate more stable for its inhabitants. It is estimated that over ten million people live in underground settlements in China.


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Dutch Tulip Fields - Three billion tulips in various colors
Birth: Beginning of the 17th century
Location: Fields all over Holland
Architect: Dutch farmers
VD says: A kaleidoscope of colors

With more than 10,000 hectares devoted to the cultivation of these delicate flowers, the Dutch landscape in May is a delight of colors when the tulips burst into life.
The bulbs were planted in late October and early November, and these colourful creations are now ready to be picked and sold as bunches of cut flowers in florists and supermarkets.
More than three billion tulips are grown each year and two-thirds of the vibrant blooms are exported, mostly to the U.S. and Germany.


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Byholma Lumber Storage - Worlds largest lumber storage due to a hurricane
Birth: 2005
Location: Byholma, Sweden
Architect: The hurricane Gudrun
VD says: Immense scale

The fierce hurricane Gudrun swept over Southern Sweden in January 2005 and caused over 300 000 000 trees to fall in this region, an airbase outside the small town Byholma has been converted to the largest lumber storage in the world, now including 1 000 000 m3 of timber. This will stay at this place until 2010, otherwise the market would be saturated. It is now a popular tourist place with a tourbus going in the summer.


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Kariakoo Market - A water collecting market place
Birth: 1972
Location: Dar-Es-Salaam, Tanzania
Architect: Beda Amuli
VD says: Great solution

The Kariakoo market in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, is such an example. Built in 1974 by the architect B.J. Amuli, the building offers three layers of market area and forms the centre of the Kariakoo market which is spread out in the neighborhood. The building is perfectly adapted to its function, but also to its environment. It provides for the necessary air circulation and the roof exists of a series of gigantic funnels to harvest the rain, to be stored in underground collection tanks.


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Teatro Olimpico - A trompe oeil theatre scenery
Birth: 1580-1585
Location: Venice, Italy
Architect: Andrea Palladio and Vincenzo Scamozzi
VD says: Staggering stage set!

The Teatro Olimpico ("Olympic Theatre") is a theatre in Vicenza, northern Italy: constructed in 1580-1585, it is the oldest surviving enclosed theatre in the world. The theatre was the final design by the Italian Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio, Renaissance, and was not completed until after his death. The trompe-l'œil onstage scenery, designed by Vincenzo Scamozzi, to give the appearance of long streets receding to a distant horizon, was installed in 1585 for the very first performance held in the theatre, and is the oldest surviving stage set still in existence.

The Teatro Olimpico is, along with the Teatro all'antica in Sabbioneta and the Teatro Farnese in Parma, one of only three Renaissance theatres remaining in existence. Both these theatres were based, in large measure, on the Teatro Olimpico.


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Danakil Desert - A volcanic desert
Birth: A long time ago
Location: North-eastern Ethiopia
Architect: Earth
VD says: Wonderous and grim landscape

Danakil Desert in northeast Ethiopia has been called “Hell on Earth,” but that doesn’t dissuade thrill-seeking travelers from flocking there to see some of the strangest conditions on the entire planet.
Walking in the incredible landscape of the Danakil desert is probably as close as you can get to stepping foot on an alien planet. The desolate landscape is marked by volatile volcanoes and the scorching hot air is filled with hazardous gases.
It was named by National Geographic as the "Cruelest Place on Earth".


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Southampton Versailles - Renovation of boring apartment into French Royal
Birth: 1985 and still going
Location: Southampton, UK
Architect: Adrian Reeman
VD says: Admirable effort

Being a proper British eccentric, Mr Reeman has spent 25 years transforming his once ordinary flat in Southampton, Hampshire into the lavish Palace of Versailles, once home to the French Royal Family until 1789.
His two bedroom flat, nine stories up an unremarkable tower block, is now covered in opulent wooden panels, ornate glass fittings and elegant scroll work from ceiling to floor.
Adrian has never even been to Versailles, which is on the outskirts of Paris, despite it being only 300 kilometres away from his home, about the same distance as between New York and Boston. But with a home like his, he's no need to.
But tragically, Adrian and Annette may have to rip out all his hard work if they ever move.
'The council have a policy that tenants must restore flats to their original condition before moving out,' he says.
'There's no way I could put this place back to how it was, it would be impossible, so it looks like I'm trapped here until they pull the whole block down.'


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Prince Saint Vladimir - A floating church
Birth: 2004
Location: Volga River, Russia
Architect: Russian Church
VD says: Great concept for religious buildings

The Prince Saint Vladimir is basically an old boat converted into a floating church that could make the sacred relics on board accessible to people in remote areas along the Volga River.

Built back in 2004, the unique church was designed to reach even the shallowest waters, so that all the people of the Volvograd region could have access to a church and priest. There were two other similar churches built before, but because they were practically converted barges, they could only be moved by tugboats. The Prince Saint Vladimir is, however, a self-propelled craft.

On September 13, 2010, the great river voyage of the Prince Saint Vladimir began. The floating church will travel around 3,000 kilometers along the shores of the Volga, from the river mouth, all the way to Moscow. It will make stops in both cities and small communities along the shores, allowing people access to relics of eight great saints from the era of the Undivided Church. Its voyage will take the sacred ship to areas that have suffered from drought and terrible wildfires, and the Russian Church hopes it will bring comfort to locals.


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Galathee - An underwater house for ocean observation
Birth: 1977
Location: The Mediterranean
Architect: Jacques Rougerie
VD says: Cool design, but even cooler mission

French architect Jacques Rougerie suggests that we should build underwater. Between 1977 and 1981 he constructed underwater habitats and villages, named Galathee, Aquabulle and Hippocampe, which have been tested in the course of scientific and educational operations in the Mediterranean.


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La Tomatina - A tomato fight event
Birth: 1950
Location: Buñol, Spain
Architect: Buñol townsmen
VD says: One hour is all that is necessary to radically change the public space - in this case the change is done with tomatoes.

La Tomatina is a festival that is held in the Valencian town of Buñol, in which participants throw tomatoes at each other. It is held the last Wednesday in August, during the week of festivities of Buñol.
At around 10am festivities begin with the first event of the Tomatina. It is the "palo jabón", similar to the greasy pole. The goal is to climb a greased pole with a ham on top. As this happens, the revellers work into a frenzy of singing and dancing whilst being showered in water from hoses. Once someone is able to drop the ham off the pole, the start signal for the tomato fight is given. The signal for the onset is at about 11 when a loud shot rings out, and the chaos begins.
Several trucks throw tomatoes in abundance in the Plaza del Pueblo. The tomatoes come from Extremadura, where they are less expensive and are grown specifically for the holidays, being of inferior taste. For the participants the use of goggles and gloves are recommended. The tomatoes must be crushed before being thrown so as to reduce the risk of injury.
After exactly one hour, the fight ends with the firing of the second shot, announcing the end. The whole town square is coloured red and rivers of tomato juice flow freely. Fire Trucks hose down the streets and participants use hoses that locals provide to remove the tomato paste from their bodies. Some participants go to the pool of “los peñones” to wash. After the cleaning, the village cobblestone streets are pristine due to the acidity of the tomato disinfecting and thoroughly cleaning the surfaces.


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Flood Spider Webs - Enormous spider webs in trees after the Pakistan flooding
Birth: 2010
Location: Sindh, Pakistan
Architect: Spiders
VD says: Spiders are going Christo, but in comparison with him, these webs also have a positive function; an anti-malarian effect.

When Pakistan experienced severe flooding in 2010, it had the unexpected side effect of driving millions upon millions of spiders to the trees, where they could escape the floodwater. Since the flooding lasted for such a long time, many trees became blanketed in thick layers of web.

But according to the UK government, which assisted in the flood release effort this may have actually had a positive health effect: On-the-ground reports suggest that there are fewer mosquitos than would have been expected after the influx of so much stagnant water. This, in turn, may have reduced the very real risk of malaria to local populations afflicted with flooding.


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Bliss & Son's Tweed Mill - Victorian looking factory
Birth: 1872
Location: Chipping Norton, UK
Architect: George Woodhouse
VD says: A quite humoristic building

The Bliss Valley Tweed Mill built to resemble a great house in a park and far removed from the simplicity of Early Victorian industrial architecture. It has a balustraded parapet and square corner cowers with urns. A chimneystack of the Tuscan order dominates. It rises from a domed tower and is dated 1872. The architect was George Woodhouse from Lancashire, who specialised in the design of mills and factories.


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Nash Tower of Value - Stacked cars in moving glass elevator
Birth: 1933 Death: 1933
Location: Chicago, USA
Architect: Nash Motors
VD says: Wonderful and ingenius display

The Nash Tower of Value was a feature of the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair.
This parking tower is 25 meters tall, and it carries sixteen cars,
each car in a pocket, its full height. Colored lights bathe the tower,
and Nash cars pass up and down in continuous movement,
bringing each car into a glass-fronted show room at the tower's base.
The tower’s sleek see-through design also demonstrated the space-saving advantages of mechanical car storage in a parking garage.


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Valle de la Prehistoria - A vast park of dinosaur statues
Birth: 1980
Location: Santiago de Cuba, Cuba
Architect: Cuban inmates
VD says: What stirs the imagination better than real size dinos?

Valle de la Prehistoria, near the city of Santiago de Cuba, is a prehistoric-themed tourist attraction that features life-size models of over 200 dinosaurs and cavemen.

Located inside the Bocanao National park, Valle de la Prehistoria spreads over 11 hectares of land and is as close as it can get to a real-life Jurassic Park. The vast recreational park dedicated to science and palaeontology is split into multiple areas separated by geological epochs, and features lush vegetation, man-made waterfalls and 227 concrete statues representing 59 different species, including dinosaurs, mammoths, felines and early cavemen.
According to people who visited this popular tourist attraction, it is indeed a fun way to travel back in time, and no other facility manages to recreate a prehistoric atmosphere as faithfully.
Valle de la Prehistoria was opened to the public in 1980 and its detailed statues were apparently built by a group of inmates, using a popular technique known as ferrocement.


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Horsetail Fall - A waterfall that glows in some February sunsets
Birth: A long time ago
Location: Yosemite, USA
Architect: Earth
VD says: Earth shows one of her many natural spectacles, what a magician

Horsetail Fall is one of the most beautiful waterfalls on the North American continent, but it’s only truly special for two weeks a year. The first firefalls of Yosemite Park were man made. Large fires were started atop Glacier Point and the red-hot embers were pushed down the granite wall, in the evening. It was a nice show of fireworks, until the fire hazard of the 1960s, when the dangerous practice stopped.

But that didn’t mean Yosemite was left without a firefall, if anything, people got to discover a much more beautiful one. When the natural conditions are just right, tourists can enjoy a unique spectacle where water turns into burning fire. During the last two weeks of February, when the sun shines above Yosemite Valley, and water pours down the granite wall, the firefall phenomenon takes place. But because clouds and storms are common during the winter months, and sometimes California has dry years, Horsetail Firefall can only be witnessed rarely, and timing is of the essence.


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Tower of David - A squatter skyscraper
Birth: 1994
Location: Caracas, Venezuela
Architect: David Brillembourg
VD says: An interesting skyscraper paradox

Some people still call the 45-story skyscraper the Tower of David, after David Brillembourg, the brash financier who built it in the 1990s. The helicopter landing pad on its roof remains intact, a reminder of the airborne limousines that were once supposed to drop bankers off for work.
The office tower, one of Latin America’s tallest skyscrapers, was meant to be an emblem of Venezuela’s entrepreneurial mettle. But that era is gone. Now, with more than 2,500 squatters making it their home, the building symbolizes something else entirely in this city’s center.
The squatters live in the uncompleted high-rise, which lacks several basic amenities like an elevator. The smell of untreated sewage permeates the corridors. Children scale unlit stairways guided by the glow of cellphones. Some recent arrivals sleep in tents and hammocks.
Few of the building’s terraces have guardrails. Even walls and windows are absent on many floors. Yet dozens of DirecTV satellite dishes dot the balconies. The tower commands some of the most stunning views of Caracas.


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Hyderabad Windscoops - Windscoops to cool down houses
Birth: 16th century Death: The introduction of air condition made them obsolete
Location: Hyderabad, Pakistan
Architect: Hyderabad inhabitants
VD says: A repetetive object that changed the skyline

From April to June the temperature in Hyderabad, Pakistan can exceed 50° C, but the wind always blows from the same direction, so the position of the windscoops is fixed. Rudofsky (Architecture without Architects): “In multistoried houses they reach all the way down, doubling as intramural telephones. Although the origin of this contraption is unknown, it has been in use for at least five hundred years.” I suppose modern air-conditioners, punched into the buildings’ walls, have replaced them – but soon afterwards satellite dishes will have taken their place on the roof.


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Garbage City - A waste management slum
Birth: Some time ago
Location: Cairo, Egypt
Architect: The Zabbaleen
VD says: This looks like a Wall-E dystopia

The Manshyiat Naser slum, on the outskirts of Cairo, is often referred to as “The City of Garbage” because of the large quantities of trash shipped here from all over Egypt’s capital city.
Like in any other normal community, you’ll find streets, houses and apartments throughout the settlement, but everything and everyone here depends on garbage. The inhabitants of Manshyiat Naser (called Zabbaleen) bring the trash into the city, by truck, cart, or any other means necessary, and sort any recyclable or useful waste.
Every street and every building in Manshyiat Naser is stacked with mountains of garbage, and you’ll see men, women and children thoroughly digging through them, looking for something they can sell. Although it may seem like an outdated system of handling trash, the Zabbaleen do a far better job than any of the waste handling systems of the modern world. Around 80% of the trash is recycled and resold, while the rest is either fed to the pigs roaming through the city streets, or burned for fuel.
The Zabbaleen barely manage to survive on what they make sorting out garbage, but many of them have done it for generations and wouldn’t conceive living their lives otherwise. They dispose of about a third of Cairo’s garbage, at no cost to authorities, and manage to make a decent living for them and their families. The Model of Manshyiat Naser has been copied in various cities around the world, including Manila, Bombay and Los Angeles.


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Chand Baori - A deep and well-crafted stepwell
Birth: 9th Century
Location: Abhaneri, Jaipur, India
Architect: Thirsty Indians
VD says: Beautiful solution for a well

Chand Baori is a famous stepwell situated in the village of Abhaneri near Jaipur in the Indian state of Rajasthan.
It was built in the 9th century and has 3500 narrow steps in 13 stories.
All forms of the stepwell may be considered to be particular examples of the many types of storage and irrigation tanks that were developed in India, mainly to cope with seasonal fluctuations in water availability. A basic difference between stepwells on the one hand, and tanks and wells on the other, was to make it easier for people to reach the ground water, and to maintain and manage the well.
In some related types of structure (johara wells), ramps were built to allow cattle to reach the water


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Seventh Kilometer Market - An enormous market made up of containers
Birth: 1989
Location: Odessa, Ukraine
Architect: Ukrainians
VD says: The big daddy of all container-architecture

Empty shipping containers are commonly used as market stalls and warehouses in the countries of the former USSR.
The biggest shopping mall or organized market in Europe is made up of alleys formed by stacked containers, on 170 acres (69 ha) of land, between the airport and the central part of Odessa, Ukraine. Informally named "Tolchok" and officially known as the Seventh-Kilometer Market it has 16,000 vendors and employs 1,200 security guards and maintenance workers.
The independent traders on the market sell goods in all price ranges, from authentic merchandise to all sorts of cheap Asian consumer goods, including many counterfeit Western luxury goods. According to the impressions of S. L. Myers of the New York Times who visited the market in 2006,
"the market is part third-world bazaar, part post-Soviet Wal-Mart, a place of unadulterated and largely unregulated capitalism where certain questions — about salaries, rents, taxes or last names — are generally met with suspicion."
And Zerkalo Nedeli wrote in 2004 that
"it is a state within a state, with its own laws and rules. It has become a sinecure for the rich and a trade haven for the poor."


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House of Mirrors a.k.a. Miracle on the Mountain - A 7-story house made by found objects and recycled materials
Birth: 1940-72 Death: 1974
Location: Ohayo Mountain, New York, USA
Architect: Clarence Schmidt
VD says: Stubborn architect = great architecture

Clarence Schmidt was born in 1897 in Queens NY. At the age of 31, he moved to an inherited property on Ohayo Mountain in Woodstock. By the late 1930s, Schmidt had built and sold his first house, called Journey's End. He began work on the second, a single room log cabin, at the same time.
By 1967, that single room cabin had evolved into a seven story structure with ramps, balconies and rooftop gardens. Schmidt referred to the original cabin space as his "Inner Sanctum" and to the gardens as his "Mirrored Hope."
The large house was a labyrinth of passageways leading to spaces covered in aluminum foil, paint, flowers, wood and shards of mirrors.
Schmidt resurfaced the house with foil over tar and added projections of aluminum foil-covered string. Outside, the branches of bushes and trees were wrapped in foil and small shrines and grottos were added in the area he called the "alleyway." Most striking were the shrines that incorporated rubber masks, hands and feet.
In 1968 a fire fueled by the gallons of tar Schmidt had used to "preserve" the huge house of mirrors destroyed it. He stayed at a motel for the winter, returned to the property in the spring, and began work on a second house.
This second structure, known as the Mark II, consisted of three rooms built over a station wagon. The walls were covered with tree branches wrapped in aluminum foil and the surrounding foliage was wrapped and decorated as well. In December 1971, the Mark II was destroyed by fire.
Clarence Schmidt moved back into town, sleeping in doorways and wherever else he could find shelter. A local agency placed him in a state hospital for observation and when he was found to have diabetes, Schmidt was placed in a nursing home in Kensington NY.
By 1974 only rubble from the houses, some fragments of the shrines and grottos, and the gardens with their stone terracing remained.
In the 1970s-80s, Schmidt's son Michael added some of his own sculptures to the remains of Journey's End. This site has vanished due to vandalism.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Paper Cut Parlor



Visiondivision with Wild Windows has made a waiting room for a private clinic in Stockholm that specializes in athletic injuries. The clinic has two functions; it consists of a rehab gym and an arthroscopic centre. The clinic is occupying a storey in a larger hospital with a staircase and elevator unit that goes through all the floors in the building. We wanted to separate the clinic from the rest of the rather bland hospital environment when creating the new waiting room, and make a clearly defined space that is fresh and diverse while still being comfortable and relaxed to hang around and work in.



A glass partition with an automatic sliding door is separating the common corridor from the new waiting room to make the new space more secluded. What stands out most in the room is the ceiling which has its origins in the usual 60cm x 60cm plates as is found in the hospital and in most public spaces around Sweden, but here we have made a custom disc of form pressed transparent paper which also serves as lighting. The module looks like an upside down pyramid found in three different modes: closed, semi closed and open. The closed version is the most common that even though it is closed also lets through some light because of the semi-transparent properties of the material. The semi-open module sits above the benches and the open ones are located above the reception desk, tables and spots that need to be well lit. Behind the paper sheets are LED-lightning that can change colour, which changes the character of the room and makes the whole room vary slightly depending on when you're there. In addition to the three variants, there is also another unique module that is larger than the others and that can be projected from above and becomes an information display which can be seen from four directions. Here you can view information about the clinic, photo slideshows, movies or whatever is suitable according to the occasion. The ceiling itself is thus a sort of a light fixture that you can focus your attention on while waiting and with its jagged shape it also has excellent acoustic properties. The 60cm x 60cm modular system means that we also can use many standard fixtures regarding electricity, ventilation and so on.



The actual interior is made out of different woods that are darker closer to the floor and lighter closer to the ceiling and the light. The floor is a plastic mat due to cleaning reasons that mimics dark walnut parquet. The reception desk is 75 cm high so it will be easily accessible for people in wheelchairs and the low height also gives a relaxed first impression, opposite to the high reception desks which can feel somewhat stiff and bureaucratic. The reception desk has three computer stations where individuals can check in to the gym or to the arthroscopic centre with a proximity to the concierge if any questions should arise. The gym and the clinic each have a clear sign at each receptionist. The two height adjustable workstations are built-in the desk for a cohesive look. A small gap between the desk and the wall creates a small short cut for the receptionist closest to the gym. The waiting room consists of 27 seats and some spaces next to a high table for clients that prefer to stand while waiting. The table has also gym products at display and some informative brochures. The clients gets a small beep gadget that alerts them when it is their turn, which means that the doctors doesn’t need to come out in the waiting room and call up the patient. Overall it is a pleasant and comfortable waiting room that works well for both the gym and the arthroscopic clinic. The ceiling gives the room a visual consistency and also the ability to vary the experience for those waiting.
Expected completion date: late summer 2011.


Plan, click on the image for a larger view Section, click on the image for a larger view

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Media Sharks

Visiondivision will not be published in the ’1000 x European Architecture’ nor be awarded the WAN prize.

"Dear visiondivision,

since the release of ’1000 x European Architecture’ in 2006, the world of architecture has gone through some major changes: in the midst of a seemingly unstoppable building boom the banking crisis descended on the world economy in 2008, but since 2010 a spirit of optimism has taken hold again.

Right now we are preparing a new volume of this bestseller, featuring 1000 new projects from the past years on 1000 pages. The book will be published in English, released in autumn 2011 and distributed worldwide. We would like to invite you to present your project Hill Hut in this new edition of ’1000 x european architecture’.

If you would like your work to be published in this compendium please provide us with six to eight printable and copyright-free pictures, plans and drawings as well as a short text. Furthermore we are asking for an order of 10 copies of the book for a special subscription price of 75,00 EUR per copy for each of your published project – the retail price will be EUR 125,00.

Dear Architect, it would be our pleasure to present your work in ’1000 x European Architecture’. To assure your participation, please send us the attached form by fax or email until April 11, 2011. As soon as we have received it, we will send you the information on all the data that is needed for the presentation of your project.

We look forward to hearing from you. If you have questions, please don’t hesitate to contact us anytime.
Yours sincerely
Stephan Goetz


--
Sales & Distribution
Tel. direct: +49.30.88 71 23 11
goetz@braun-publishing.ch

for:
Braun Publishing AG
Arenenbergstrasse 2
8268 Salenstein
Switzerland
Tel.: +41.44.586 11 97"

"Hi Stephan,
Thank you for your Swiss hospitality. We respectfully decline your offer.

Best regards
Anders Berensson & Ulf Mejergren
visiondivision"

(We have now been offered to be in the book ’1000 x European Architecture’ without paying and respectfully accepted that offer. Since it’s against the principal of visiondivision to change already posted texts we hereby take back the accusation of shark similarities for ’1000 x European Architecture’. ’WAN Healthcare Award 2011’ is however still fishy.)

"Dear Anders & Ulf, I am writing to you regarding your “Children's Hospital Prototype” project, in connection with our WAN Healthcare Award. We think it could be a contender for the WAN Healthcare Award 2011, so I wanted to confirm if the project was completed in the last 3 years? If so, would you be interested in submitting the project as an entry for the competition?The competition is open to entry for all healthcare projects completed on / after 1st January 2008 - we are looking for outstanding, innovative and unique designs to take part in this competition, and believe that your project exhibits all the required qualities to be a potential winner, so we would be delighted if you decide to take part.Please find attached a copy of the invitation - you can also find more information on entry submissions at the following link:

http://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/index.php?fuseaction=wanappln.healthcaredetails&y=2011

The entrance fee is £350 but an early registration price of £295 GBP/$448.06 USD/$533.68 AUD/$476.86 CAD/ 357.04 EURO is available for entries made before 31st March 2011.



(Also, for this competition there is a category for unbuilt / design only projects, for any unrealised gems that you would like to showcase to WAN’s global audience!)Could you please confirm whether you might be interested in entering this or any other recent projects for this year’s award? I look forward to hearing from you.Thanks & Kind Regards,
_________________________
James Forryan
WAN Awards
World Architecture News
Suite 101b - Media Centre
21-22 Old Steyne
Brighton
BN1 1EL
Tel: +44 (0)1273 648 935
Fax: +44 (0)20 7657 3434
web: www.worldarchitecturenews.com"


"Thanks but no thanks and have a jolly good day!
/visiondivision"


Quick maths:

Mr Goetz takes 750 EUR for each project (1000 projects) = 750 000 EUR

Mr Forryan takes £350 for each contribution (last year 840) = £ 294 000

Great work guys.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Historic Preservation Commission

This video was captured from an excellent television program that came to our attention while zapping randomly through our 400+ channels in our living room while staying in Indianapolis.
Having so much channels means that some of them turned out to be quite specific, like the one that broadcasts from a hearing at the City council in Indianapolis for example, where a hardworking and upright citizen gives the speech of his life to convince the decision makers at the Historic Preservation Commission so that he could keep his aluminum clad windows that he by different reasons decided to replace from the original wooden ones.
The commission has also applied some pressure on the man to replace his front door with a more proper "French door".