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New generation DNA

After the triumph of the boarding school in Kozhukhovo which brought a number of prestigious professional awards to the architectural studio "Atrium" and reputation of social-oriented developer to the "DON-Stroi" company, their co-operation simply had to be continued. Anton Nadtochy and Vera Butko designed children educational campus, consisting of a school for 1100 students and two pre-school facilities, for the 12th district of Shchukino. It’s been dominated by DON-stroi "Alye Parusa" for a few yeas now.

02 March 2010
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The task for architects was complicated by the ground height difference amount up 15 meters. The new school will occupy shallow but wide valley. There should be water running but the problem geology of the area was a headache for the architects. But they overcame it and came to a great solution: they placed the two constructions of the school at the opposite sides of the valley. Between the "ticks" of the school buildings there formed the inner yard which looks like a natural amphitheater due to the relief height difference. It seems during some small cataclysm the two schools parted, miraculously keeping in touch through the zigzag fractured gallery-passages. Their outline shows the touch of Butko and Nadtochy, however, the architects say the complex silhouette is used here not because it is their favorite but they needed to observe the insolation regulations. All the buildings are united by very bright coloring of facades. Tested on Kozhukhovo method of finishing by Minerit of the brightest colors the "Atrium" used it here, so the construction facades amaze with cheerful colors. Must say a "colorful school" has turned into a separate genre for the recent 10 years. So it is not enough to say "school is colorful". It is remarkable how color and form interact in Schukino.
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02 March 2010

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”.