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Image 6 of 9 from gallery of BANQ / NADAAA. Photograph by John Horner
When Renzo Piano’s addition to the Kimbell opened in late 2013, critical responses ranged from “both architects at the top of their games”...
Recently, so many people have taken a shot of this cool looking lobby on Bourke street in Melbourne, so I thought I would too.
Manuel Sayrach i Carreras (Catalan, 1886-1937) Casa Sayrach, Entrance Lobby, Barcelona, circa 1918 Reminds me of : HR Giger Bar More
NYC-based studio SOFTlab was commissioned by one state street to create an installation for their recently renovated lobby.
The streets, parks, and landmarks of New York have been romanticized in books, on film, and in song, so it makes sense that its hotels enjoy a similarly idealized status. And it doesn’t hurt that they genuinely have l’amour down to a science, with just the right blend of ambiance, amenities, and impeccable service to impress the object of your affection no matter what the occasion. To help you plan the perfect rendezvous, we’ve rounded up 10 of Manhattan’s most romantic hotels.
Image 13 of 27 from gallery of The New York Times Building Lobby Garden / HM White Site Architects + Cornelia Oberlander Architects.
Situated in Valencia’s Central Market, part of the historic city center, is VaquetaGastro Mercat. A combination green-grocer and restaurant, the
The IIDA has revealed winners of its 2016 Healthcare Interior Design Competition, which recognizes outstanding design of healthcare interiors.
Inside a hotel lobby in Ellenville, New York
Image 24 of 24 from gallery of In Progress: Lotte World Tower / KPF. image by dbox branding & creative for KPF
Image 1 of 27 from gallery of Richard Ivey Building / Hariri Pontarini Architects. Photograph by Nikolas Koenig
The newest F&B concept to open in Hong Kong heritage site Tai Kwun, The Magistracy by Black Sheep Restaurants and Joyce Wang Studio is an evocative homage to heritage architecture and quintessential London restaurants
Image 5 of 27 from gallery of The New York Times Building Lobby Garden / HM White Site Architects + Cornelia Oberlander Architects.
Image 35 of 40 from gallery of The Factory / Ricardo Bofill. Photograph by Courtesy of Ricardo Bofill
Located within the campus of St. James’s University Hospital, Maggie's Leeds is the charity's 26th centre in the UK and the first completed healthcare project designed by Heatherwick Studio
Structural glass box with ClearGlaze pivoting glass doors. All supported of low iron glass fins and beams.
More in Hi-Res @ www.burieddreams.nl/
Image 1 of 19 from gallery of Hub Creatic / TETRARC. Photograph by Stéphane Chalmeau
More inspiration at tenniswood.co.uk
Atlanta Marriott Marquis; 2016
Food lifestyle preferences have been changing in the recent and with that we have noticed a shift in the hotel dining experience.
In a central location on the Delft University of Technology campus, the educational building ECHO was proposed in 2017. The construction is designed to offer maximum flexibility. A superstructure is placed on 8 fixed “table legs” serving as cores, containing lifts, stairwells, shafts, toilets and other technical areas. The amphitheatre and large lecture rooms are separate from the primary supporting structure, ensuring the entire building can be delivered column-free and is highly flexible in terms of its layout and for future adaptations in education. For the façade a vertical modular sawtooth profile has been chosen, closed on one side and transparent on the other. The closed side makes it possible to connect flexible walls to the façade in the future. The sun-oriented roof also consists of a sawtooth profile, incorporating PV panels, which continue onto the façade. Echo has a powerful all-round appearance. The central atrium creates a fluid connection between inside and outside: a real Living Campus! A healthy and pleasant interior climate forms the basis for a good working and learning environment. This is based on individual controllability, good ventilation, acoustic absorption and pleasant light levels. Echo gets pleasant daylight entry through the use of north-oriented shed roofs, high vertical glass sections in the sawtooth facade and a recessed transparent plinth at ground level. A large void in the middle of ECHO ensures that daylight penetrates deep into the building. High sustainability ambitions in this assignment require an integrated approach and ECHO should become truly energy neutral, a challenging task that we have tackled with a strategy based on the motto: “calculate first, then draw”. We have chosen to make a compact building with a relatively limited glass percentage across all floors. Smart building technologies have been implemented in ECHO with a “sensory network” throughout the building, which tracks data about the indoor climate, occupancy and visitor flows over time. Via Analytics, data can be processed into valuable information about the operation costs of the building. Via the façade, ECHO functions as a kind of wind-driven cooler in the intermediate and winter season and as a heat harvester in the summer. By applying low glass percentages and a minimal investment in PV panels, we keep the environmental impact low. The loose and permanent design can look at the use of circular materials and products, in order to respond to flexibility in use, adaptations to the changing future and sustainability.