No Image

Bench Architecture tops Brooklyn brewery with tile-lined pizzeria

February 29, 2024 Ellen Eberhardt 0

Local architecture studio Bench Architecture has topped a Brooklyn brewery with a pizzeria and bar outfitted in a “colourfully tactile palette” including a wall of aqua-blue tile. In East Williamsburg, Lala’s Brooklyn Apizza shop is located above the Grimm Artisanal Ales brewery – a converted automobile shop that opened in 2018 and was also designed

The post Bench Architecture tops Brooklyn brewery with tile-lined pizzeria appeared first on Dezeen.

No Image

Siri Residence / Design Kacheri

February 29, 2024 Hana Abdel 0

Siri is a tropical oasis cut away from the hustle and bustle of the tech city of Bengaluru. Located in Karishma hills, with a beautiful layout on the fringes of the Turahalli forest, the site was the perfect locale for this with its majestic teak, mango, and coconut trees. These trees and the gentle topography of the site were also the perfect starting point for the design. The house is designed as a seamless extension of the natural landscape – respecting, enhancing, and celebrating the existing vegetation while creating a luxurious and sustainable living environment. The structure is positioned to maximize natural light and ventilation while minimizing the impact on the existing trees.

No Image

Dezeen Debate features Snøhetta library with a “feeling of extravagance”

February 29, 2024 Saudatu Bah 0

The latest edition of our Dezeen Debate newsletter features Beijing City Library in China by Snøhetta. Subscribe to Dezeen Debate now. The Beijing City Library in China, designed by Norwegian studio Snøhetta, features a glass-lined structure punctuated by towering tree-like columns and rooms disguised as hills. Commenters analysed the structure closely, with one characterising it as

The post Dezeen Debate features Snøhetta library with a “feeling of extravagance” appeared first on Dezeen.

No Image

KYOYA Office / SAKUMAESHIMA

February 29, 2024 Hana Abdel 0

This is an Interior design project for the relocation of the new office building of KYOYA Corporation, which is a long-established company founded in 1928 that provides promotion, interior design, and display services. This project site is located in an area dotted with fashion brand offices, a short walk from JR Harajuku Station in the Sendagaya direction. The project utilizes an existing building with one basement floor and three stories above ground. The building was originally a vocational school and was converted into office space, a showroom, and rental space.

No Image

Discover Organic Modernism Through Ukraine’s Futuristic Nature Nests

February 29, 2024 HD Staff 0

Nestled in the serene embrace of the Ukrainian landscape, the GNIZDO House stands as a testament to the harmony between nature and architectural innovation. This unique family eco-lodges by Sergey Makhno invite you to discover Organic Modernism, where the traditional soul of Ukrainian design is reimagined for the future. With its walls that breathe and […]

No Image

K House / Mayresse Arquitetura

February 29, 2024 Valeria Silva 0

Three overlapping volumes, built in exposed concrete, natural stone and metal structure, give life to Casa K: designed to be the temple of a family that dreamed of waking up and spending their days overlooking the sunset.

No Image

A New Home Designed As Three Cascading Glass Boxes

February 29, 2024 Erin 0

Efficiency Lab for Architecture has designed a modern home nestled into the steep hillside of the Telluride Box Canyon in Colorado. The plan for the home focused on the architectural expression of three cantilevered glass boxes. Each glass box is positioned in a moment of suspension, providing a horizontal approach to the vertical terrain of […]

No Image

Les Perrières Residential Block / COSA

February 29, 2024 Valeria Silva 0

The industrial city, the child of railways and automobiles, has itself given rise to a new urban form: the dense suburb. Predominantly residential, it contains detached, semi-detached, and row houses, sometimes even small, collective clusters of housing along its main roadways and intersections. For the sake of comfort, major roadways avoid cutting through such dense suburbs. Its proximity to a large city allows for other forms of mobility, whether individual (soft) or collective (public). Its density entails a maximal use of public facilities and the presence of neighborhood shops.