Thursday, June 19, 2014

A New 1967 Building

Well actually, the building isn't new.  But it doesn't look old either.  Erected during the frenzy of modernism in 1967 the Celebreeze Federal Building stands at the epicenter of business in Cleveland. Expressed with a grid metal frame and window panels, the 32 story tower was designed by Peter van Dijk, a disciple of Eero Saarinen, as a building that broke the through the existing skyline in the 1960’s.  Today is stands amongst peers and is almost ready to unveil its new makeover.

Existing Facade
    
Rendering of Double Skin

Close-Up rendering of Double Skin


Call it a mid-life crisis.  Blame it on global warming.  The building is receiving a second skin to alleviate heating and cooling demands.  Still scratching your head?  The problem is the original construction, although beautiful, streamlined, and modern, is no match for the climate.  Over 3,000 non-insulated, single panes of glass are at war with the single digit winter winds off Lake Erie and the direct summer sun creating a giant greenhouse.  After over 4 decades of this cyclical battle, and with stimulus bucks available, the General Services Administration (GSA) is moving forward with an out-of-the-box idea, which ironically is an outside-of-the-existing-box idea. 

Designed by Interactive Design Eight Architects in Chicago, an additional glass wall will be hung from the existing façade and yet offset 30 inches to create an air buffer.  So there it is.  That is the big idea.  Although wrapped in flashy words like green, continuous occupancy, energy conservation, economical operation, and blast resistant in is weighted down with a heavy price tag of $121 million.  It is going to be completed this year and will join two other local examples of this approach.  But lets think about this as a bigger picture.


The building is 44 years old, which is just shy of 6 years to a National Register of Historic Places nomination.  Did we eliminate a chance to save a mid-century modern building from alterations and in extreme cases demolition OR did we alter a mid-century modern building to be saved from its own ill designed climate demise?

Construction at interface of new skin to existing facade.

30 inch air space between new and existing facades.

Friday, June 13, 2014

Melbourne's Laneways

TGIF to the viewers!
For this week’s YEOW, we’d like to share with you the Laneways of Melbourne.
This week’s YEOW posting is not a specific project, rather a collection of projects that have been shaped since the 1850s and in turn have shaped a city and its identity. The laneways and arcades of Melbourne, Australia have shaped the culture and identity of the city as much as they have been shaped by the culture and identity of the city itself. The evolution of these passageways represents a complete place-making venture over one hundred years in the works. Here is some quick background on their evolution to keep in mind as you check out the photos below:
1850s – Melbourne’s population grew 29,000 to 123,000 between 1851 and 1854 due to the discovery of gold in the surrounding region of Victoria.
1860s – 1890s - This growth coupled with new-found wealth placed a premium on real estate in the relatively small urban center. High-end retailers located in shopping arcades modelled after those popular in Europe at the time such as Burlington Arcade in London, or Passage du Grand-Cerf in Paris. Other merchants and retailers located in the maze of alleyways throughout the urban center.
1900s – 1940s – Following the Gold Rush, the arcades and alleys went into a period of decline, attracting opium dens, brothels, and crime.
1950s – 1980s – Suburban expansion pushed remaining retailers to move to malls located nearer their core customer base. The residential population of the urban core of Melbourne bottomed out at 700 in the 1980s.
1990s – 2010s – Artists, and independent businesses, began moving into the passageways in search of lower rent. Alleyways were repaved and the City began installing lighting and street furniture. Liquor laws were relaxed and it became affordable for small venues to begin serving alcoholic beverages. The urban core population has grown to over 20,000.
Present – Former shopping arcades have been renovated and again are hosting high-end retailers. Laneways now house cafes, galleries, and other independent retailers. Some areas of laneways are designated for street art installations or other interactive art exhibitions. The laneways are now one of the most visited areas of Melbourne and their flexibility in programming allows for 24/7 activity.

The Royal Arcade


Hardware Lane
Union Lane


Playing Sticke Tennis
Interactive Street Art

Here’s what some of our planners think:

“I like this. Reminds me so much of Hong Kong’s side streets.” – Arim Fermin




How often do you walk down an alley/laneway and find framed art on the outside of a building? Must be an incredibly surprising experience for the pedestrian—your own private viewing of a grassroots/guerilla art gallery. I enjoy the element of interactiveness such a unique experience provides.” – Laura Baker




“I like the pedestrian scale of the shops and laneway, there is a lot of activity that helps define a vibrant streetscape including open shop fronts, seating/dining in the ROW, pedestrians including shoppers/tourists, street musicians, and no sign of any vehicles. It has the feel of a neighborhood that has had time to develop its own personality, where part of the appeal is that it is a little chaotic, disorder helps give it character. Sure, there is some ugly graffiti, but there are also examples of some pretty interesting murals/art too (not present in this photo) which make it feel like a democratic place where everyone is welcome.” – Ryan Foster

Further Reading:

Friday, June 6, 2014

Epic Bridges

1. River Hull Footbridge

A bridge that swings you across the river

MB_Hull_TimothySoar_hh__56
Location:  Hull, UK
Passengers can “ride” this bridge to get across the river while it makes way for river traffic. The hub section even has a restaurant and a viewing platform that rotates with it. Photo via Archdaily

2. Aiola Island Bridge

The ultimate hangout bridge

Aiola Island Bridge
Location: Gratz, Austria
Designed to link nature with the city, this trendy island-bridge contains a bar, a cafe, a sunbathing area, an open-air theater, and a children’s playground. It was originally intended to be relocated to another river or city, but the people loved it so much, it stayed. Photo via Architecture Linked

3. Yongle Bridge

The only bridge with a Ferris Wheel attached to it

tianjin eye
Location: Tianjin, China
The Tianjin Eye,  towering 354 feet high, makes a full circle in 30 minutes. That’s a fun way to kill time when stuck in traffic. Photo via Windoworld

4. Vancouver Land Bridge

A gorgeous bridge that pays tribute to Northwestern American culture and history

Vancouver Land Bridge
Location: Vancouver, WA, USA
The Vancouver Land Bridge is part of a 2.3-mile trail winds through the historical sites of Fort Vancouver and the Columbia River. The trail is marked by Native American artwork among blooming flowers and indigenous plants grown in the earth-covered pedestrian bridge. Photo via Lando-Landscape Architecture

5. Foryd Harbour Cycle & Pedestrian Bridge

A flappy bridge

Location: Ryll, North Wales
To make way for passing ships, other bridges swing, twist, or elevate. This one flaps.

6. Pont Jacques Chaban-Delmas

A bridge with an elevator function

pont-bacalan-chaban-delmas
Location: Boreaux, France
A futuristic four-poster bridge that lifts traffic up for ships to sail through. Bet the view up there’s fantastic. Photo via Projets-Architecte-Urbanisme 

7. BP Pedestrian Bridge

A snaky bridge that blocks out traffic noise

BP-Pedestrian-Bridge-By-Frank-Gehry
Location: Chigaco, IL, USA
Designed by architect Frank Gehry, this stunning bridge was inspired by a certain scaly reptile that has haunted many of his works since the 1960′s. Photo via Designalmic

8. Gateshead Millennium Bridge

A winking, tilting bridge

Gateshead
Location: Gateshead, UK
The Gateshead Millenium is also called the  ’Blinking Eye Bridge’ or the ‘Winking Eye Bridge’ because of its peculiar movement when it pivots itself to provide clearance above the river. Tourists love watching the works. Photo via BBC News

9. Falkirk Wheel

A revolving boat lift from the future


Location: Falkirk, Scotland
Basically it lifts boats up from the water and on to the road above. Jaws drop.

10. Banpo Bridge

Korea’s famous rainbow fountain bridge

Rainbow_fountain_Seoul
Location: Seoul, South Korea
A bridge built to entertain. Its inbuilt fountain is programmed to play shows throughout the day. At daytime it plays with different shapes of sprays, while at night it sends jets of rainbow-colored water to the air while music plays in the background. Photo via Wikimedia Commons

11. Red Python Bridge

A bridge that will swallow you whole

python-bridge
Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands
Connecting Borneo Island and Sporenburg, this bridge is a popular destination for neighborhood youngsters to dive into the cool canal on hot summer days. Don’t let the snake-like form fool you. It’s perfectly safe. Photo via Jovarq

12. Henderson Waves

Singapore’s trendy hangout bridge

Henderson-Waves-by-night123
Location: Singapore
This is where all the cool kids in Singapore hang out. Its smooth, undulating wood panel hollows are the perfect place to take Instagrams. Photo via Yurtopic

13. Magdeburg Water Bridge

A bridge that connects rivers, not roads

magdeburg-water-bridge-aqueduct-woe2
Location: Magdeburg, Germany
The boss of all aqueducts, the Magdeburg Water Bridge is an engineering feat fusing two faraway rivers over another via an artificial river bridge thing that looks totally awesome. Photo via Home Desgn

14. Helix Bridge

 A bridge that resembles the structure of the DNA

Helixbridge7
Location: Singapore
Want to find out what the DNA looks like a million times magnified? Here’s an idea (minus the sparkly multi-color LED effect, of course).  Photo by Angus Martin

15. Hovenring

A floating bridge roundabout for cyclists

Location: Eindhoven, Netherlands
Cycling in Eindhoven is heaven, and this bridge is probably its most blissful spot. Suspended by steel cables from a balancing pylon, the Hovenring is practically floating on air while cyclists happily paddle around it. Photo via Reddit

16. Moses Bridge

A sunken bridge that lets you walk through, not over, water

Fort de Roovere 1
Location: Fort De Roovere, Netherlands
Remember Moses parting the Red Sea to free the Israelites from the slavery of Egypt? That’s the idea. Would have been cooler (or creepier) if the side walls were made of glass though. Photo via Best-Koeln

17. The Root Bridges of Cherrapunji

Natural bridges made entirely of living tree roots

cherrapunji-tree-root-bridges2
Location: Cherrapunji, India
Finally, a group of  epic bridges that weren’t built, but grown. Tribesmen in Meghalaya use a natural guidance system to direct roots of a particular Indian rubber tree to create a bridge crossing the river. These bridges are said to be 500 years old. Photo by avikdasgupta via Panoramio

Bridges, Bridges, Bridges...

19 Architecturally Epic Bridges You'd Want To Cross Again And Again 

1. River Hull Footbridge

A bridge that swings you across the river

MB_Hull_TimothySoar_hh__56
Location:  Hull, UK
Passengers can “ride” this bridge to get across the river while it makes way for river traffic. The hub section even has a restaurant and a viewing platform that rotates with it. Photo via Archdaily

2. Aiola Island Bridge

The ultimate hangout bridge

Aiola Island Bridge
Location: Gratz, Austria
Designed to link nature with the city, this trendy island-bridge contains a bar, a cafe, a sunbathing area, an open-air theater, and a children’s playground. It was originally intended to be relocated to another river or city, but the people loved it so much, it stayed. Photo via Architecture Linked

3. Yongle Bridge

The only bridge with a Ferris Wheel attached to it

tianjin eye
Location: Tianjin, China
The Tianjin Eye,  towering 354 feet high, makes a full circle in 30 minutes. That’s a fun way to kill time when stuck in traffic. Photo via Windoworld

4. Heatherwick’s Rolling Bridge

A bridge that rolls up on its own


Location: London, England
Created by designer/engineer Thomas Heatherwick, the rolling bridge can practically twist itself from a free-standing octagonal fixture into a smart-looking pedestrian bridge.

5. Vancouver Land Bridge

A gorgeous bridge that pays tribute to Northwestern American culture and history

Vancouver Land Bridge
Location: Vancouver, WA, USA
The Vancouver Land Bridge is part of a 2.3-mile trail winds through the historical sites of Fort Vancouver and the Columbia River. The trail is marked by Native American artwork among blooming flowers and indigenous plants grown in the earth-covered pedestrian bridge. Photo viaLando-Landscape Architecture

6. Foryd Harbour Cycle & Pedestrian Bridge

A flappy bridge


Location: Ryll, North Wales
To make way for passing ships, other bridges swing, twist, or elevate. This one flaps.

7. Pont Jacques Chaban-Delmas

A bridge with an elevator function

pont-bacalan-chaban-delmas
Location: Boreaux, France
A futuristic four-poster bridge that lifts traffic up for ships to sail through. Bet the view up there’s fantastic. Photo via Projets-Architecte-Urbanisme 

8. BP Pedestrian Bridge

A snaky bridge that blocks out traffic noise

BP-Pedestrian-Bridge-By-Frank-Gehry
Location: Chigaco, IL, USA
Designed by architect Frank Gehry, this stunning bridge was inspired by a certain scaly reptile that has haunted many of his works since the 1960′s. Photo via Designalmic

9. Gateshead Millennium Bridge

A winking, tilting bridge

Gateshead
Location: Gateshead, UK
The Gateshead Millenium is also called the  ’Blinking Eye Bridge’ or the ‘Winking Eye Bridge’ because of its peculiar movement when it pivots itself to provide clearance above the river. Tourists love watching the works. Photo via BBC News

10. Falkirk Wheel

A revolving boat lift from the future


Location: Falkirk, Scotland
Basically it lifts boats up from the water and on to the road above. Jaws drop.

11. Banpo Bridge

Korea’s famous rainbow fountain bridge

Rainbow_fountain_Seoul
Location: Seoul, South Korea
A bridge built to entertain. Its inbuilt fountain is programmed to play shows throughout the day. At daytime it plays with different shapes of sprays, while at night it sends jets of rainbow-colored water to the air while music plays in the background. Photo viaWikimedia Commons

12. Red Python Bridge

A bridge that will swallow you whole

python-bridge
Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands
Connecting Borneo Island and Sporenburg, this bridge is a popular destination for neighborhood youngsters to dive into the cool canal on hot summer days. Don’t let the snake-like form fool you. It’s perfectly safe. Photo via Jovarq

13. Henderson Waves

Singapore’s trendy hangout bridge

Henderson-Waves-by-night123
Location: Singapore
This is where all the cool kids in Singapore hang out. Its smooth, undulating wood panel hollows are the perfect place to take Instagrams. Photo via Yurtopic

14. Da Nang’s Fire-Breathing Dragon Bridge

Just a fire-breathing dragon bridge


Location: Da Nang, Vietnam
Nothing’s more badass than a fire-breathing, steel-hewn dragon bridge. It sprays water and lights up with rainbow LEDs too.

15. Magdeburg Water Bridge

A bridge that connects rivers, not roads

magdeburg-water-bridge-aqueduct-woe2
Location: Magdeburg, Germany
The boss of all aqueducts, the Magdeburg Water Bridge is an engineering feat fusing two faraway rivers over another via an artificial river bridge thing that looks totally awesome. Photo via Home Desgn

16. Helix Bridge

 A bridge that resembles the structure of the DNA

Helixbridge7
Location: Singapore
Want to find out what the DNA looks like a million times magnified? Here’s an idea(minus the sparkly multi-color LED effect, of course).  Photo by Angus Martin

17. Hovenring

A floating bridge roundabout for cyclists

Location: Eindhoven, Netherlands
Cycling in Eindhoven is heaven, and this bridge is probably its most blissful spot. Suspended by steel cables from a balancing pylon, the Hovenring is practically floating on air while cyclists happily paddle around it. Photo via Reddit

18. Moses Bridge

A sunken bridge that lets you walk through, not over, water

Fort de Roovere 1
Location: Fort De Roovere, Netherlands
Remember Moses parting the Red Sea to free the Israelites from the slavery of Egypt? That’s the idea. Would have been cooler (or creepier) if the side walls were made of glass though. Photo via Best-Koeln

19. The Root Bridges of Cherrapunji

Natural bridges made entirely of living tree roots

cherrapunji-tree-root-bridges2
Location: Cherrapunji, India
Finally, a group of  epic bridges that weren’t built, but grown. Tribesmen in Meghalaya use a natural guidance system to direct roots of a particular Indian rubber tree to create a bridge crossing the river. These bridges are said to be 500 years old. Photo byavikdasgupta via Panoramio