Thursday, 19 February 2009

 

living in a nest or the garden of eden

This organic eco building is so cool I just had to share it with you.







Here's the original commentary uncovered by me while researching organic archtiecture - i've bolded the points of interest to me

Ricciotti Designs Bamboo 'Pterodactyl' Nest
December 17, 2007
By Robert Such
“A bird’s nest for a greedy pterodactyl” is how French architect Rudy Ricciotti describes a bamboo building he has designed in Paris. The $41 million project, dubbed T8 after its plot number, will provide offices, shops, and some 40 apartments overlooking an irregular-shaped courtyard pool. Built on a concrete platform astride a railway line, the seven-story, 47,684-square-foot building will occupy a two-acre rectangular site in the up-and-coming Tolbiac Chevaleret quarter, opposite the French National Library.



Images: Courtesy Rudy Ricciotti
Rudy Ricciotti surrounded the exterior of the T8 apartment building in Paris with a screen of bamboo, resembling a bird’s nest. Unlike typical French multifamily blocks, the building’s interior features an irregularly shaped courtyard garden and pool.


Wrapped in a bamboo latticework skin, the building is divided into three principal parts by a T-shaped courtyard. Ricciotti, who won the French Grand Prix d’Architecture in 2006, offers here a different approach to traditional Parisian courtyard design. Most courtyards are square or rectangular and lack greenery. In Ricciotti’s project, plant life will hang from green roofs in what he describes as an “imaginary Eden.” The building depth will range from 39 feet to 66 feet, creating an undulating surface of green-tinted glass around the central pool.

In terms of materials and colors, Ricciotti chose a somber palette for the street-side facades. Shop and cafe signs will be made of bronze, brass, or copper. Floor deck profiles will be made of rough black concrete. To bounce daylight throughout the interior, on the other hand, oyster shell-based plaster will line entry halls.

Ricciotti intentionally limited the number of materials in the project, and employed a simple palette, but maximized the ways in which each one was used. “No other material will be used, such as aluminum, PVC, or other rubbish that’s in vogue in the French (construction industry),” Ricciotti says. Residents of this iconoclastic bamboo building should be able to feather their nests when construction finishes in 2011.

Labels:


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Subscribe to Posts [Atom]

e-Newsletter

Sign up for my FREE
e-Newsletter.

Name Required
E-mail RequiredInvalid format.

 

Survey

Please click here to complete our online happy@work survey - we'd love to hear your views re how to improve the quality of life at work:)

Archives

October 2007   November 2007   January 2008   April 2008   May 2008   June 2008   July 2008   August 2008   September 2008   October 2008   November 2008   December 2008   January 2009   February 2009   March 2009  

New Book

happy@work Book

by Cassandra Gaisford

New Book
Signed copies of Cassandra's new book 'happy at work' will be available to buy online soon...

Price: NZ$45.00

More Information »

 

 

ebooks

Best Fit Career
NZ$12.50 - BUY NOW »

 

Get The Job You Want
NZ$18.50 - BUY NOW »

 

More eBooks Click Here »

 

Also in Our Shop

Paintings »

Photography »

A3 Art Prints »

Canvas Art »

Block Art »

Greeting Cards »

 

Recommended Reading

Buy at FishPond »

 

Recommended Career and Life Coaches

Worklife Solutions »