Rem koolhas
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Transcript of Rem koolhas
Rem KoolhasOffice for Metropolitan Architecture
The Architect•Born November 17, 1944 in Rotterdam, Netherlands
•Definitely a celebrity architect, at the opening of the Prada stores of his design in New York and Los Angeles, he was a recognizable figure
•Former journalist and screenwriter who studied architecture at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London
•"Professor in Practice of Architecture and Urban Design" at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design
The Architect•In 1975 Koolhaas along with some other architects founded the OMA (Office for Metropolitan Architecture), dedicated to finding "new synergies" between architecture and contemporary culture
•In 2005, he co-founded ‘Volume Magazine’ together with Mark Wigley and Ole Bouman.
Awards•Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate for the year 2000
•TIME Magazine Best Architecture for 2004 (Seattle Central Library)
• RIBA Gold Medal (2004). In 2005 Rem Koolhaas received the Mies van der Rohe Award for the Netherlands Embassy, Berlin
A Visionary Architect
From the Pritzker Prize Jurors:
A. Rem Koolhaas is that rare combination of visionary and implementer —philosopher and pragmatist — theorist and prophet — an architect whose ideas about buildings and urban planning made him one of the most discussed contemporary architects in the world even before any of his design projects came to fruition.
B. He is not a formalist, yet he creates form. He is not a functionalist, yet programs are the generators of his solutions; he is not a theoretician, yet ideas dominate his work.
Design Philosophy
• Boldly produces buildings that differ visually to their surroundings
• Celebrates the "chance-like" nature of city
• Interrogated the "Program“ to oppose the notion “ an act to edit
function and human activities “ as the pretext of architectural design
• His work emphatically embraces the contradictions of two
disciplines- architecture and urban design
Important Work• Kunsthal, (Rotterdam, 1993) • Euralille (Lille, 1988) • Netherlands Dance Theater (The
Hague, 1988) • Educatorium, (Utrecht, 1993-1997) • Netherlands Embassy (Berlin, 2003) • Guggenheim Museum, (Las Vegas,
2002) • Nexus Housing (Fukuoka, Japan) • Retail design for Prada stores (New
York 2003, Los Angeles 2004) • McCormick Tribune Campus Center,
(IIT Chicago, Illinois, 1997-2003) • Seattle Central Library (2004) • Casa da Música (Oporto, 2005) • CCTV HQ, Beijing (2008)
Euralille (Lille, France 1988)
Educatorium, (Utrecht, 1993-1997)
McCormick Tribune Campus Center,
(IIT Chicago, Illinois, 1997-2003)
Kunsthal, (Rotterdam, 1993)
Casa da Música (Oporto,
Portugal 2005)
Casa da Musica concert hall in Porto was completed and was already voted as one of the most important concert halls in the world by the New York Times” (April 10th 2005)
Netherlands Embassy (Berlin, 2003)
Prada Los Angeles
Seattle Central Library
CCTV HQ Beijing
Project DetailsArchitects:Rem Koolhassand OMAEast China Architecture and Design Institute of
Shanghai (ECADI)
Engineers:OveArup and Partners
Financing:Chinese Government (est. Investment: $1.2
Billion)
Location: New central business district in Beijing, China
Building Footprint: 160m x 160mFloor Space: 450 000 sq.mHeight: 234m, 49 storeys (+3 basements)
Architectural Concept
• It takes the state-run broadcaster to a new level of global broadcasting, expanding from its previous operation of running 13 channels to over 200 upon completion.
• Combines administration and offices, news and broadcasting, programme production and services – the entire process – in a single loop of interconnected activities
Production
Service
New Media
Broadcasting
Administration
News
Cultural Center
Hotel
Production
Service
New Media
Broadcasting
Administration
News
Cultural Center
Hotel
Production
Service
New Media
Broadcasting
Administration
News
Cultural Center
Hotel
• Consists of nine-storey ‘Base’, the two leaning Towers that slope at 6° in each direction, and the nine to 13-storey ‘Overhang’, suspended 36 storeys in the air
• A visionary design, radical shape – defying the traditional skyscraper
• A landmark building, reflects the new image of China
• A major engineering design and construction feat
Siteplan
Design
The design not only adds to the interest of the internal space but also complements the functionality of the building, which needs to support the full range of processes involved in TV production.
The variable space and the continual loop structure make the building ideal for creating the desired interconnected sequence of activity, and provide a fitting new home for CCTV.
CCTV Tower Beijing
•The facade mirrors the form of the structural braces.
•The leaning towers and the interconnecting section created a real challenge in engineering terms and required an innovative approach to make the uniquely-shaped building possible.
Structure
The weight of the floor plates is taken by structural coresThe forces at the skin are distributed along diagrid skeleton.
Regular grid of columns and edge beams
Patterned diagonal bracing
Braced tube system + =
Structure• The positioning of the columns
and diagonal tubes on the exoskeleton reflects the distribution of forces in the surface skin of the building
• Forms irregular pattern on the façade
• Uses about 20% less steel compared to a single tower of similar area
• For better appearance exoskeleton under a curtainwall layer
Significance in theContemporary Scene
• An influential architect of the contemporary scene - Aspiring, adventurous, visionary and innovative
• Creates new precedent with ‘top down skyscraper’ for a ‘top down organisation’
• New Concepts of architecture and structure. First instance of a loop form implemented for a building
• Emphasis on exploiting present day materials• Brings in technology, structure as a key component in buildings• Rem Koolhaas has extended the boundaries of the possible through
his radical designs
Criticism
• Deconstructivist? Structuralist? Late modernist?• Often criticized for lack of aesthetic consideration.• Simply architecture that wants to be different• Though a landmark, the boldness of the “twisted loop” is out of
place in Beijing’s skyline and Chinese culture.
Thank You