Kim Jong-un Confirms Design For a $200 Million International Airport

Kim Jong-un Confirms Design For a $200 Million International Airport

First Instagram, now this: An architecture and planning firm in Hong Kong has reportedly been chosen to turn a military airstrip in North Korea into an international airport. The plans show two donut-shaped terminals that could contribute to what some are describing as a tiny-but-not-imperceptible North Korean economic boom.

Read more…

    

The Story Behind Ten Tiny Libraries That Popped Up in NYC This Summer

This summer, ten small libraries mysteriously appeared throughout New York City’s Lower East Side and East Village. But who paid for them? Who designed them? And what was the point? In a short film published today, the creators finally answer our many questions about how the Little Free Library came to be.

Read more…

    

Could You Imagine a Real Life Version of This Giant Lego Crawler Town?

Could You Imagine a Real Life Version of This Giant Lego Crawler Town?

That’s the premise of Crawler Town, an entire town mounted in a gigantic platform that looks pretty much like an enormous version of NASA’s crawler or the Jawa Sancrawler, which is pretty much the same thing but for tiny people.

Read more…

    

Most Beautiful Items: July 19 – 26, 2013

Most Beautiful Items: July 19 - 26, 2013

From an abandoned asylum that the Department of Homeland Security is moving into, to beer labels turned into animated GIFs, we posted all kinds of lustworthy things this week. So before you head off into weekend, check out the wonders of design, art, and architecture we’ve got for you.

Read more…

    

A Rare Glimpse Inside the Research Stations at the End of the World

A Rare Glimpse Inside the Research Stations at the End of the World

What does it take to build a habitable structure at the bottom of the world? Quite a bit of technology, for starters. The climate of the extreme south and north poles is unlike any other. Unstable ice, immense snowfall and incredibly low temperatures can—literally, in at least one case—chew up and spit out entire buildings. Not these, though.

Read more…

    

Homeland Security Is Moving Into an Abandoned Insane Asylum

Homeland Security Is Moving Into an Abandoned Insane Asylum

Did you know that the US government’s third-largest agency is ramping up a 20-year, $4.5 billion construction project that will turn the grounds of a former mental hospital into an "elaborate" headquarters for its sprawling network of agencies? It’s already a decade behind schedule and $1 billion over budget.

Read more…

    

A Century-Old Roman Palazzo Grows a Faceted Glass-and-Steel Parasite

A Century-Old Roman Palazzo Grows a Faceted Glass-and-Steel Parasite

We’ve talked about top-down demolition—where building are deconstructed one floor at a time, ending at the ground—before. But a newly-completed building in Rome, by Italian studio Fuksas, puts a twist on the concept: The old building’s facade was perfectly preserved.

Read more…

    

This Dorm Was Tailor-Made For the Deaf Students Who Helped Designed It

This Dorm Was Tailor-Made For the Deaf Students Who Helped Designed It

Architects are bound by law to design buildings that are accessible to the disabled, but the deaf often get left out of the equation. A group of designers and deaf students are now trying to change that—and their first building, a dormitory at predominantly deaf college Gallaudet University, is their manifesto.

Read more…

    

Rebuild Mankind’s Most Famous Cities Via 4D Cityscape Puzzles!

These clever puzzles take you through time to rebuild major cities.Here’s a clever puzzle that history, architecture and puzzle buffs will all appreciate: Can you remake major urban sprawls as they were in 1876? 1952? 1988? 2013?

Raiding Project: Crossover Architecture

The Raiding Project is a bold cross-cultural undertaking that involves several renowned Japanese architects designing ten multifunctional micro-houses in the Austrian countryside.

Raiding, a village of 850 residents, about a one-hour drive from Vienna is the birthplace of composer Franz Liszt and currently hosts a music festival in his name four times a year.

Stork House

Opened in October 2012, Stork House or Konotori-an was created by Japanese celebrity architect Terunobu Fujimori over a period of eight separate stays in Austria and is the first building of the Raiding Project. It is designed to accommodate people from all walks of life for overnight stays, and on occasion artists can stay for free as part of an artist-in-residence program. The structure was partially constructed from donated building materials and rental income will support future maintenance costs.

Stork House has two stories with a total living space of 34 square meters featuring a multi-functional living room on the ground equipped with kitchen, bathrooms and an open fireplace. The upper level, which covers one third of the ground floor, provides a sleeping space with Japanese futons.

The ceiling nips off in the center like the wings of a resting cicada and ascends seven meters high towards the northern building corner, which is marked by the trunk of an oak tree. Fujimori covered the white ceiling and the walls with a pattern of charcoal pieces that creates the illusion of black raindrops.

Above the sleeping area the oak trunk pierces through the roof where it supports a stork nest 13 meters high; migratory birds from Africa spent their first summer there in 2012.

The roof is made of reef – true to an old tradition shared by Japan and this part of Austria, known as Burgenland. The façade of Stork House consists of “yakisugi” – charcoaled wood planks which were burned by hand, based on a centuries old Japanese technique.

The Creators

Terunobu Fujimori, native of Nagano, architect and specialist in the History of Japanese Architecture is well known among architecture circles. His previous works featured in this book includes: Jinkochan Moriya Historical Museum, Tanpopo House in Tokyo and Takasugi-san in Nagano. In 2006 Fujimori represented Japan at the Venice Biennale.

Image via RMIT Architecture

In addition to Fujimori, the other architects to have already expressed ideas for the Raiding Project include Pritzker Prize winning team SANAA (Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa), Hiroshi Hara (whose small experimental building and two sculptural info-resting spots will be the next constructed), Jun Aoki, Toyo Ito, Kengo Kuma, Yasuhiro Yamashita and Klein Dytham Architects.

Tokyo based writer and photographer Roland Hagenberg, originally from Vienna is the initiator and curator of the Raiding Project. His stories and photographs have featured in magazines such as Vogue and Architectural Digest. His books on japanese architects have been published in English, Japanese and Chinese. Together with Susanne Wegleitner he initiated the Raiding foundation in 2010 to further the cultural exchange between Austria and Japan. In the same year that Hagenberg conceived the Raiding Project his latest book “24 Architects in Japan” was released.

Woschitz Engineering is an innovative Austrian civil engineering company lead by Dr. Richard Woschitz who develops solutions for the Raiding project in collaboration with the Japanese architects and supervises the construction process.

It should also be noted that, since opening, the Stork House quickly managed to have its first guests in the form of a stork couple that nested on the roof. Fujimori consulted with bird experts on the design of the nest, and the results are breathtaking.

Recent Developments

Hiroshi Hara, the second Japanese-star architect to design a structure for the project visited Raiding on June 22nd, 2013 for the Franz list festival where eight Japanese musicians were also invited by the Raiding Foundation to perform at the Franz Liszt Concert Hall.

Austrian TV reported on these visits and the overall importance of the Raiding Project for local tourism. In addition, Stork house was also featured at ”Eastern Promises” an exhibition at the Museum of Applied Arts in Vienna. More news and videos on the Raiding Project can be found at the project’s homepage or Roland Hagenberg’s youtube channel and homepage. So if you are in Austria go check out the Raiding Project!