По-русски

Architecture of future: “Aerohotel”

On “Arabia-Expo” exhibition organized in Moscow in autumn, architects from A.Asadov’s studio showcased their most fantastic projects, including those designed for the Middle East. One of them is the conceptual project “Aerohotel”, a parking station for flying hotel-dirigible. It will be placed in the height of a 14-story building over the Persian Gulf.

18 December 2008
Object
mainImg

Among the initiatives there was the entrainment centre “Ibiza”, well known in Moscow, “Barviha-Club”, cottage settlement and a residential bridge “MiraxSad”. Surely, there were new futuristic projects, such as the project of a hotel in the Persian Gulf named “Aerohotel” fling over water.

History of “Aerohotel” comes from the other project by A.Asadov’s studio – Russian pavilion in the international exhibition in Shanghai which was the most avant-garde project. Following all the requirements to design of a pavilion – fast in erecting, light and good for recycling - for Russian delegation architects suggested the idea of a flying dirigible-hotel which is fixed in Russia and after flies from Moscow through the country to Shanghai. It is landing there onto already made pavilion’s carcass – this is the opening ceremony. After the exhibition is closed the dirigible flies away and becomes the first prototype in the series of hotel-travellers.

“Aerohotel” is further development of the idea found by the architects of A.A. Asadov’s studio in the contest on Shanghai pavilion. There will be a station for flying hotels, over ocean surface not far from the shore. Shape of the “Aerohotel” resembles a flying saucer hanging over. Along its edge there are landing stripes for dirigibles and hotel rooms. Special passages lead to the centre of the flying source with green oasis covered with a net of pedestrian paths, a kind of public transport. Hanging gardens fill almost the entire space within a ring of hotel rooms. The construction is on the height of a 14story building and is sited on a metal carcass of the three massive and twenty two thin supports. By the supports there are docks for yachts and over them, on the second level there are terrace-cafes.

Idea of a building on supports is not new. Remember horizontal skyscrapers by Ell Lisickiy, conquering from the city the space of the second level. “Aerohotel” takes space from the sea but not unlike Hollanders, who dry shores or Japanese raise islands, it is creating a kind of small town in the air. It may become an alternative to raising islands, amount of which is growing in the Persian Gulf. Islands are costly, but construction of a hotel over water can be easily fixed and is made of light processable materials, it is incomparable to a cost spent on rising an artificial island.

Well, artificial islands create not only a land, but beaches – and it is problematical to dive from a hanging construction (despite the system of swimming-pools on the water level). It doesn’t have such purpose. This is a fantastic and utopian project, which can be realized in our times. Somewhere in Dubai or another large resort place it would look fine, probably, it could become one of the attractions for tourists. At the same time remaining the development of one of the most important ideas of the XXth century - architecture's attempt to go beyond its own boarders, soaring to the sky.



18 December 2008

Headlines now
Pro Forma
Photos have emerged of the newly completed whisky distillery in Chernyakhovsk, designed by TOTEMENT / PAPER – a continuation of their earlier work on the nearby Cognac Museum. From what is, in essence, a merely technical and utilitarian volume and space, the architects have created a fully-fledged theatre of impressions. Let’s take a closer look. We highly recommend a visit to what may look like a factory, but is in fact an experiment in theatricalizing the process of strong spirit production – and not only that, but also of “pure art”, capable of evolving anywhere.
The Arch and the Triangle
The new Stone Mnevniki business center by Kleinewelt Architekten – designed for the same client as their projects in Khodynka – bears certain similarities to those earlier developments, but not entirely. In Mnevniki, there are more angular elements, and the architects themselves describe the project as being built on contrast. Indeed, while the first phase contains subtle references to classical architecture – light touches like arches, both upright and inverted, evoking the spirit of the 1980s – the second phase draws more distantly on the modernism of the 1970s. What unites them is a boldly expressive public space design, a kaleidoscope of rays and triangles.
Health Factory
While working on a wellness and tourist complex on the banks of the Yenisei River, the architects at Vissarionov Studio set out to create healing spaces that would amplify the benefits of nature and medical treatments for both body and soul. The spatial solutions are designed to encourage interaction between the guests and the landscape, as well as each other.
The Blooming Mechanics of a Glass Forest
The Savvinskaya 27 apartment complex built by Level Group, currently nearing completion on an elongated riverfront site next to the Novodevichy Convent, boasts a form that’s daring even by modern Moscow standards. Visually, it resembles the collaborative creation of a glassblower and a sculptor: a kind of glass-and-concrete jungle, rhythmically structured yet growing energetically and vividly. Bringing such an idea to life was by no means an easy task. In this article, we discuss the concept by ODA and the methods used by APEX architects to implement it, along with a look at the building’s main units and detailing.