Monday 20 February 2012

Ecological Children Activity and Education Center

this is another children education center.

article from Archdaily.


The 6 star hotel resort Soneva Kiri is located on Koh Kood, an island in the Gulf of Thailand. At this unique site, 24H-architecture designed a series of ecological icons to contribute to Six Senses’ high ambitions in design and ecology. Most prominent is The Children Activity and Learning Centre, which will provide visiting children a wide range of entertaining activities as well as raise the level of ecological awareness with them. This Den provides an Auditorium/Cinema for films, lectures and plays, a library with books on permaculture and local traditions, an Art room, a Music room and Fashion room, thus giving children both creative and ecological education while playing.

The Den is located at a rocky slope close to the sea. With its Manta-ray inspired bamboo dome, perched in an elevated position so as to offer magnificent views, it seems to launch itself into the bay. The structure and roof are made from local Thai bamboo, thus contributing further to the ecological approach of the resort. The interior is made from local plantation River Red Gum and rattan structural elements for the inner domes.

Next to the Den, the site provides a sleeping pod for toddlers, and a toilet building as well as a cooking cave with vegetable garden for the children to prepare their own lunch with a special cook.

The design adopts all bioclimatic aspects to suits its humid tropical environment. The roof cantilevers up to 8m acting like a big umbrella providing shade and protection from the heavy rains. The open design with the translucent elevated rooftop and setback floors allow a natural airflow inside and the use of natural daylight, limiting the building’s energy consumption.



 URL: http://www.archdaily.com/34946/ecological-children-activity-and-education-center-24h-architecture/

Friday 17 February 2012

Green school in bali

This article was sent by AR Lee Chor Wah via email.

Welcome to the green school in Bali , Indonesia . It provides its students with an education about the amazing environment that we live in. It is a holistic and relevant education. During the construction, only bamboo, elephant grass and clay were used. Cement was used just in some places in the foundation. The central and the most important building is the "heart of the school." It is perhaps the largest building in the world built entirely from bamboo. Its dimensions are 18 meters high and 64 meters long. General area of the school includes a variety of structures: apartment buildings, classrooms, office building, and cafes. The school gets electricity from environmentally friendly sources of energy: hydraulic turbine generators and installed solar panels. It seems that considering the way we are polluting the earth, everyone should attend

Tuesday 14 February 2012

more about OMA

architecture for OMA is more than its final product... although their architecture is very expresive in its form....
however, there is a whole lot and effort involving in the process and this processes eventually help them again and again to create better architecture.

http://notura.com/2012/02/rem-koolhaas-designing-the-design-process/
There is a slide presentation about OMA at the end of the article....

Spend some time reading it....

Sunday 12 February 2012

Team Spirit.



Instead of being coop up in the studio, lets have some fun on 14th February! Instead of always being at S Block all the time, it's time to step to other parts of campus! So remember to come and give us the support we need! For Architecture! :)

One team from juniors (Brooks) : The Cantilever
and one team from our batch : ArchiWarriors


Remember! 4pm! At the field in front of canteen! Get Mr Rahim to come and support us as well as all the lecturers!! =P Woohoo~


See you guys there!

Zaha Hadid – Once Upon A Time

zaha hadid young
Image source - Facebook

Once upon a time, in the land far far away... the side effects of too much architecture. To all beautiful young architecture students, it is still not too late.


Adapted from :
http://blog.miragestudio7.com/zaha-hadid-once-upon-a-time/3662/


I hope this post wont be a discouragement for my classmates..... : ]

Thursday 9 February 2012

Crooked-house

that is fact...

Word as Image

Check this out... 

Remember when we were kids and we used to see the fun in everything? Ji Lee tries to bring some of that magic back. The project (typography) asks us to play right along with him and see if we can contort letters inside words to come up with some clever images ourselves.

"When we were children, letters were like fun toys," he says. "We played with them through our building blocks. We colored them in books. We danced and sang along with TV puppets while learning C was for 'cookie.' Soon, letters turned into words. Words turned into sentences. Sentences turned into thoughts. And along the way, we stopped playing with them and stopped marveling at A through Z.




adapted from :

Wednesday 8 February 2012

Tuesday 7 February 2012

My Architect Presentation

Here's the list of the presentation schedule.


Recommendations from the tutors :
1. the general introduction of the architect is good for context.
2. however, the second part of the presentation should be focused on one or two famous project of the particular architect. so that you can use the project to explain the principle of the architect.
3. please include the reference of each quotes, or information or images taken from books or websites. Otherwise it will be strictly considered plagiarism. (esp. on the write-up)

Guideline :
Part 1
The Architect
1
 bibliography 
2
 education
3
 award
4
 list of selected projects
Part 2
The Selected Good Work
1
 Basic information
2
 Drawings
3
 sketches and/or photos
4
 analysis of the work
5
design principle/ direction / elements /
theory and philosophy / avocation
(can be part of Part 1 or Part 2)
Part 3
References

Wednesday 1 February 2012

UTAR FEStival.








Come one come all.


I hope to get support from you guys. :)




Thanks.