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MARK 65. December 2016 / January 2017

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MARK 65. December 2016 / January 2017

All Aboard!

Uitgever:MARK Magazine

  • Paperback
  • Engels
  • 21 nov. 2016

Mark #65 sees the realisation of the highly anticipated Port House in Antwerp by Zaha Hadid Architects. Are interventions always so dramatic?



Cross Section
Diller Scofidio + Renfro/Gensler; Fujiwaramuro; Nio; JDS; PLAYstudio/YES; V+; Idom; SO-IL/Bohlin Cywinski Jackson; Infographic; Michael Sorkin Studio; Studio Prototype; Tomohiro Hata; DRAA; Martin Dubeau/Jonathan Jacques-Belletête; Freelon Group/Adjaya Associates/Davis Brody Bond; Aranza de Ariño

Perspective: Blaibach
Peter Haimerl never planned to reinvent the village of Blaibach. It happened gradually. House by house.

Long Section
• Zaha Hadid Architects’ porthouse reflects the ambitions of Antwero’s harbour
• Keiichi Kiriyama builds houses like forests. Interior trees help to connect the inhabitants to nature
• Father and son duo Marcio and Gabriel Kogan team up with architecture photographer Pedro Kok and filmmaker Lea Van Steen for a series of short films featuring some of the houses they designed over the years
• Edouard François plants a nature-inclusive tower in Paris
• Building high-rises in wood is becoming increasingly widespread. In Stockholm, plans are being made for a 34-storey apartment building
• Fuhrimann Hächler built a house in Olten that pays homage to Le Corbusier’s principles of modern architecture
• 6a’s studio for fashion and art photographer Juergen Teller lends itself for a variety of photo shoots
• Students on the University of Colorado Denver’s design-build programme creates a series of huts in perfect harmony with their forest location
• Amateur Architecture Studio designed houses for the people of the Chinese village of Wencun. They don’t like them, but the tourists are happy to stay there
• Joseph Giovannini talks about reading and writing, eccentric architects and about the Deep South, where people are still friendly

Mark #65 sees the realisation of the highly anticipated Port House in Antwerp by Zaha Hadid Architects. Are interventions always so dramatic?



Cross Section
Diller Scofidio + Renfro/Gensler; Fujiwaramuro; Nio; JDS; PLAYstudio/YES; V+; Idom; SO-IL/Bohlin Cywinski Jackson; Infographic; Michael Sorkin Studio; Studio Prototype; Tomohiro Hata; DRAA; Martin Dubeau/Jonathan Jacques-Belletête; Freelon Group/Adjaya Associates/Davis Brody Bond; Aranza de Ariño

Perspective: Blaibach
Peter Haimerl never planned to reinvent the village of Blaibach. It happened gradually. House by house.

Long Section
• Zaha Hadid Architects’ porthouse reflects the ambitions of Antwero’s harbour
• Keiichi Kiriyama builds houses like forests. Interior trees help to connect the inhabitants to nature
• Father and son duo Marcio and Gabriel Kogan team up with architecture photographer Pedro Kok and filmmaker Lea Van Steen for a series of short films featuring some of the houses they designed over the years
• Edouard François plants a nature-inclusive tower in Paris
• Building high-rises in wood is becoming increasingly widespread. In Stockholm, plans are being made for a 34-storey apartment building
• Fuhrimann Hächler built a house in Olten that pays homage to Le Corbusier’s principles of modern architecture
• 6a’s studio for fashion and art photographer Juergen Teller lends itself for a variety of photo shoots
• Students on the University of Colorado Denver’s design-build programme creates a series of huts in perfect harmony with their forest location
• Amateur Architecture Studio designed houses for the people of the Chinese village of Wencun. They don’t like them, but the tourists are happy to stay there
• Joseph Giovannini talks about reading and writing, eccentric architects and about the Deep South, where people are still friendly

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