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Such a various wood

On the 7th of April, the 17th International Construction Exhibition «MosBuild 2011» will be hosting a conference on eco-stable low-rise housing. Among the participants there will be PTAM Vissarionov with a number of projects. We’d like to present you with two of them today.

07 April 2011
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The first project is a complex of apartment-houses. It is designed for the Adler district of Sochi and will be constructed nearby ski slopes. This neighborhood suggested the architectural theme of chalets – traditional Swiss cottage with roughcasted ground floor and the main bulk made of wood and covered with a wooden gable roof. The complex includes six residential units and in fact is a townhouse. On the plan it resembles a square bracket in the "joints" of which on the ground floor will service and office spaces, then can serve as cafes and shops. In addition to entrances with lobbies there will be passenger lift in those corner sections. Besides, each unit has an inner staircase with daylight illuminations, and in the basement of the two central sections there are also designed small swimming pools. Ground floor of the complex is faced with ceramic tiles, the upper floors are made of laminated beams. Intense honey shade of the wood is finely accentuated by the "laid on" elements - square console of balconies, arranged. Balcony balustrades are made of thin wooden slats, which also were used for entrance area decoration. Combination of a traditional chalet image and strict geometric forms adds a modern and stylish twist to architecture of the complex. The second is a reconstruction project of a cottage in Moscow region, within which traditional model of “new Russian” construction turned into a work of “architectural minimalism” (this definition belongs to the authors). The entire residential unit had “cosmetic surgery, but most adjustments were done to the roof and a semi-circular building-high bay window, which the architect suggest to glass and finish with vertical wooden slats. The quite large volume will gain more of visual lightness and some extravagancy, and the inner spaces will have more of daylight illumination.
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07 April 2011

Headlines now
Daring Brilliance
In this article, we are exploring “New Vision”, the first school built in the past 25 years in Moscow’s Khamovniki. The building has three main features: it is designed in accordance with the universal principles of modern education, fostering learning through interaction and more; second, the façades combine structural molded glass and metallic glazed ceramics – expensive and technologically advanced materials. Third, this is the school of Garden Quarters, the latest addition to Moscow’s iconic Khamovniki district. Both a costly and, in its way, audacious acquisition, it carries a youthful boldness in its statement. Let’s explore how the school is designed and where the contrasts lie.
A Twist of the Core
A clever and concise sculptural solution – rotating each floor by N degrees – has created an ensemble of “dancing” towers: similar yet different, simple yet complex. The designers meticulously refined a single structural node and spent considerable effort on the column construction – after that, “everything else was easy”. The architects also rotated the core walls on each floor to maximize the efficiency of the office spaces.
The Sculpting of Spring Forest Matter
We’ve been observing this building for a couple of years now: seemingly simple, perhaps even unassuming, it fits in remarkably well with the micro-district context shaped by the Moscow MCD road junctions. This building sticks in the memory of everyone who drives along the highway, even occasionally. In our opinion, Sergey Nikeshkin, by blending popular architectural techniques and approaches of the 2010s, managed to turn a seemingly simple structure into a statement “on the theme of a house as such”. Let’s figure out how this happened.
Water and Wind Whet the Stone
The Arisha Terraces residential complex, designed by Asadov Architects, will be built in a district of Dubai dedicated to film and television production. To create shaded spaces and an intriguing silhouette, the architects opted for a funnel-shaped composition and nature-inspired forms of erosion and weathering. The roofs, podium, and underground spaces extend leisure opportunities within the boundaries of a man-made “oasis”.