Salam semua.
Latest Entry kali ni , just wanna share world's futuristic buildings yg strukturnya direka begitu abstrak, di inspirasikan oleh alam semesta yg semulajadi atau simbol budaya & engineered to reach higher, glow brighter, curve, and swoop.
Antaranya...(sumber dari Yahoo)
Tjuvholmen
Icon Building, Oslo
Renzo Piano designed this arts and culture
center, which debuted in 2012 along a disused harbor southwest of Oslo’s city
center. Bridges link three buildings—a museum, office space, and culture
center—across canals formed from reclaimed land, and a sculpture park gently
slopes toward the sea.
The entire project is developed along a new
promenade that starts at Aker Brygge and ends on the sea at a floating dock,
providing unbroken visual contact with the water. It looks, from above, like a
docked spaceship, with a curved roof that dips down to meet the
parklands.
Palazzo Lombardia, Milan
Milan's Garibaldi-Repubblica district got an
infusion of 21st-century cool when this ecofriendly curvilinear office tower was
completed in 2011. Designed by Pei Cobb Freed & Partners, the 525-foot-high
building connects light-filled office space with outdoor areas.
The
largest of the public spaces, Piazza Città di Lombardia, is covered by a roof
composed of transparent “pillows” made from ETFE film (a fluorine based
plastic), while other high tech/environmentally sensitive features include green
roofs, active climate walls—two layers of separated glass containing rotating
vertical blades to provide shade while maximizing transparency—and a geothermal
heating system.
Perot Museum of Nature and Science, Dallas
Opened in December 2012, this
180,000-square-foot facility, designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Thom
Mayne, is itself a feat of scientific ingenuity. His firm Morphosis Architects
set a goal of creating an attractive urban environment that also adheres to
green principles.
Hence features like a 54-foot, continuous-flow
escalator contained in a glass-enclosed, tube-like structure that extends
outside the building—along with landscaping (courtesy of Talley Associates) that
includes a roofscape planted with drought-tolerant species, an interactive water
feature, and a “Leap Frog Forest” of glowing amphibians.
Galaxy
Soho Building, Beijing
Given China’s reputation for bold and speedy construction, it’s no
surprise that 2012 marked the arrival of this cool new building in the capital
city of Beijing. Designed by Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid—the first woman
to be awarded the Pritzker Prize—this 18-story office, retail, and entertainment
complex consists of four domed structures connected by bridges and platforms,
crafted from aluminum, stone, glass and stainless steel. Inspired by nature, the
flowing lines and organic forms create a lusciously harmonious
effect.
The Crystal, London
This dynamic, low-rise glass
building—touted as one of the world’s greenest at its 2012 unveiling—hosts the
largest exhibition on urban sustainability. Set in the Royal Victoria Docks, the
heart of London's new Green Enterprise District, the building is inspired by
crystalline forms, a reference both to “a multi-faceted urban world” and the
Crystal Palace built for London's Great Exhibition in 1851, which showcased the
latest technology from the Industrial Revolution. The Crystal’s present-day
innovations include rainwater harvesting, black water treatment, solar heating,
and charging stations for electric cars.
Burj Khalifa, Dubai
The world’s tallest building opened in early
2010 and remains one of the most talked-about structures. Why? Not only is the
Burj Khalifa the world’s tallest building (2,716.5 feet), it’s also the tallest
free-standing structure, with the highest number of stories, the highest
occupied floor, the highest outdoor observation deck, and an elevator with the
longest travel distance in the world.
Then there’s the show-stopping
architecture: a tower comprising three elements arranged around a central core,
inspired by the spider lily and courtesy of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill with
consulting designer Adrian Smith. A Y-shaped floor plan shows off views of the
Persian Gulf, and when seen from above, the building echoes the onion dome motif
prevalent in Islamic architecture.
Ordos Museum, China
The
copper-toned metal exterior and undulating shape of the Ordos Museum reflect the
surrounding Gobi Desert of Inner Mongolia. It’s the brainchild of the
Beijing-based architectural firm MAD, known for fluid designs and imaginative
urban solutions. The company intended the large-scale museum as “the irregular
nucleus” for Ordos, a newly developed town that, as of 2011, already has its
first architectural icon.
W57 Pyramid, New York City
Bjarke Ingels, head architect at the
Danish firm BIG, has taken on his first North American project: W57 Pyramid, a
600-unit residential building between 10th and 11th avenues. Changing according
to the vantage point, it appears as a kind of squashed pyramid from the West
Side Highway side, and as a slender spire from West 58th Street. The high-rise
is designed around an outdoor green space, and each apartment has natural
daylight. Or as Ingels puts it: “The building is conceived as a crossbreed
between the Copenhagen courtyard and the New York skyscraper—the communal
intimacy of the central urban oasis meets the efficiency, density, and panoramic
views of the tall tower in a new hybrid typology.”
Launch
Date: 2015The National Museum of Qatar, Doha
Qataris have high hopes for their tiny
nation-state’s future as a cultural destination, with the National Museum of
Qatar as its crown jewel. The original museum opened in 1975 in a restored
palace built by Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim Al-Thani; French architect Jean
Nouvel is giving it a makeover inspired by the surrounding desert rose
(crystallized sand that forms just below the desert surface). The series of
buildings will consist of intersecting discs resembling petals, all clad with
glass fiber-reinforced concrete panels, an effect both starkly geometric and
lyrical.
Launch Date: 2014
Wine Museum,
Lavaux, Switzerland
For sheer audacity, nothing beats these
plans for a monument to the Lavaux wine-making region. Swiss firm Mauro Turin
Architectes envisions cantilevering the museum from the side of a mountain
overlooking the historic vineyards (some of which date back to the 11th
century)—a feat of engineering those ancient vintners would surely never have
imagined. Visitors will walk along a glass and steel walkway jutting from a rock
in the mountainside, with glass sides creating unbroken views over the vineyards
and out to Lake Geneva.
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