Sky Village: Made With 60m Building Blocks

Posted on 04 Nov 2008 | Tagged as: Architecture | 185 views

Sky Village

An interesting looking boxy structure is soon going to help fill the skyline in Copenhagen, Denmark. Sky Village, designed by MVRDV and co-architect ADEPT, will contain space for retail, offices, housing, parking/storage and a hotel. The design is based on a grid of 60 meter pixels that allow the flexibility to re-design units like giant Lego blocks. These ‘pixels’ all surround the central core of the building.

More @ Contemporist.


Jenga Inspired Apartment Won’t Collapse

Posted on 16 Sep 2008 | Tagged as: Architecture | 170 views

Jenga Inspired Apartment

A new apartment building in New York will be a 57-story residential complex housing 145 residences, each with its own unique floor plan and private outdoor space. Each floor will be a seperate apartment. The 2 to 5-bedroom living spaces will range from $3.5 million to $33 million per floor and it looks like they will have great views too.

56 Leonard


China Central Television Building Nears Completion

Posted on 07 Aug 2008 | Tagged as: Architecture | 189 views

China Central Television Building

The China Central Television in Beijing has finished its facade just in time for the Olympics. Construction of this 600,000 square meter project began in September 2004 and is due for completion by the end of 2009. So how did they design this building to be structurally sound? Lots of steel. More can be seen at Dezeen.


Skyscraper With No Internal Structure

Posted on 01 Aug 2008 | Tagged as: Architecture | 185 views

Honeycomb Skyscraper

This is the Sinosteel International Plaza in Tinajin, China, designed by Beijing-based architects MAD. What will make this skyscraper different is that unlike a traditional building structure, the Sinosteel International Plaza carries its support on the outside, similar to the exoskeleton of a bee. Construction has already begun on the plaza and should be complete in 2012. It will feature office space, a hotel and the complex will be a key building in the Binhai New District, the new economic hub of Northern China. Check out Dezeen for more pics and info.


Rotating Skyscraper Being Built in Dubai and Moscow

Posted on 25 Jun 2008 | Tagged as: Architecture | 271 views

Self Rotating Skyscraper

Architect David Fisher has designed the first ever rotating skyscraper. Each floor can rotate up to once an hour, changing the overall look of the building daily. According to the plans, the rotation of the floors will be powered by wind turbines placed between the floors.

Each floor will be pre-made and lifted to the top and work its way down, a building method that differs from the usual bottom to top construction method. Make sure your checkbooks are handy because the going rate is $3000/sq foot.

Video of the building in action can be seen here.


Book Fanatics Stairway to Heaven

Posted on 09 Jun 2008 | Tagged as: Architecture | 145 views

Reading Stairway

You are staring down a stairwell (Notice the door handle below). That’s right, someone in London made this stairwell with 270 degrees of books. Seems like a good way to utilize space and be creative at the same time. I wonder how DVDs would look in place of the books.


The Ups and Downs on Elevator Trivia

Posted on 09 Jun 2008 | Tagged as: Architecture | 645 views

  • Elevator TriviaThe Door Close button is mostly there to give passengers the illusion of control. The button is only enabled in emergency situations with a key held by an authority.
  • The only known occurence of an elevator car free falling due to a snapped cable (barring fire or structural collapse), was in 1945 when a B25 Bomber crashed into the Empire State Building and severed the cables of two elevators. The elevator car on the 75th floor had a woman on it, but she survived due to the 1000 feet of coiled cable that had fallen, which lessened the impact.
  • Elevators are twenty times safer than escalators. There are twenty times more elevators than escalators, but only 1/3 more accidents
  • The New York Marriott was the first to introduce a smart elevator system that assigned passengers to elevators depending on what floor they were heading to.
  • Elevators used to require a two-man dispatcher/operator team to function. The advent of navigational buttons rendered those jobs obsolete.
  • Elevator hatches are generally bolted shut for safety reasons. In times of elevator crisis, the safest places is inside the elevator.

Gateshead Millennium Bridge Rotation

Posted on 09 Jun 2008 | Tagged as: Architecture | 164 views

Gateshead Millennium bridge Rotation

Here’s something pretty amazing. The Gatehead Millennium Bridge is located in Newcastle/Gateshead, England and goes over the Tyne River. It was designed by Wilkinson Eyre and was built and lifted into place on November 20, 2000. It cost about $14M to make.

It features six 450mm diameter Hydraulic rams which rotates the bridge 40 degrees to let ships sail underneath and pedestrians cross over top. It takes about four and a half minutes for the bridge to go through one rotation cycle depending on the wind speed. The bridge won many awards and is just fun to watch (If not in person then on video).