Workbook 2006 (abridged)

Page 1

J O Ã O B R AV O D A C O S TA W O R K B O O K 2 0 0 6


For Elena. Се е можно – са тобом.


FORE W O RD ‘Workbook 2006’ is a compilation of work carried out during my first years as an architect. It was a fruitful period (a planned six-month training in the Netherlands that stretched into a seven-year residence), both for the rich professional experience, as well as for the pivotal personal one. I had the opportunity to collaborate and share experiences with many people from around the world, with whom I worked on numerous and very diverse assignments. Each was a unique challenge and an opportunity to learn something new. Three professional experiences were the sources for the material shown here: my work at the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA), at the Architekten Cie. and as an independent architect. To keep the format compact, I selected the projects that were most significant to my personal history and to which I contributed the most. I intended to present the most disparate scales, types of assignment, project phases and geographic locations. For example, the Poldra project – for a house in Portugal – was done single-handedly. Most other projects were the collaborative effort of small design teams. The preliminary design of CCTV, on the other hand, involved around 80 architects, engineers, and consultants over a period of months. As a compilation, this volume is the work of one person, but it represents the effort of many. ‘Workbook 2006’ is dedicated to the friends and colleagues who not only made it possible but also helped and taught me. JBC


WORKBOOK

1

A group of projects developed in independent practice

2

Two exhibition designs

3

Significant projects in which I took part as a staff architect


2006 con te nts 8 ‘Het Nie uw e L a n d h ui s ’ Competition entry for a Dutch villa design 1 4 Poldr a Preliminary design for a countryside guest house and residence. 2 0 House o f M ulti ple D i m e n s i on s Concept 3 0 ‘Uit het D e p ot’ /  O ut of th e D e p o t Exhibition design 4 2 Ex pansi on /  N e gl e c t Installation for the 51st Art Biennale in Venice – o f f i c e f o r m e t r o p o l i t a n a r c h i t e c t u r e 5 4 Deut sch e s M e e r e s m us e um O z e a n e u m Competition entry for a sea museum – d e a r c h i t e k t e n c i e . 6 4 Pr ada Sh a n gh a i Preliminary design for a fashion and culture outlet – o f f i c e f o r m e t r o p o l i t a n a r c h i t e c t u r e 8 2 AIST Camp us Competition entry for a university campus master plan – o f f i c e f o r m e t r o p o l i t a n a r c h i t e c t u r e 9 4 Penang T r op i c a l C i ty Competition entry for a master plan – o f f i c e f o r m e t r o p o l i t a n a r c h i t e c t u r e 1 1 6 CCT V  / T VCC Project for the headquarters, cultural center, media park and support facilities of the Chinese Central Television corporation – o f f i c e f o r m e t r o p o l i t a n a r c h i t e c t u r e 1 3 6 Epilogue What, when, where, who.



1


8  ·  Het Nieuwe Landhuis


Het Nieuwe Landhuis C o m p e t i t i o n e nt ry Almere, Netherlands

Het Nieuwe Landhuis  ·  9


‘Het Nieuwe Landhuis’ (The New Country House) was an idea of the Almere City Council. The Council had planned a new suburban district as a part of the city’s growth strategy. Unlike most urban extension areas in the Netherlands, though, this one was designated as privately owned and built housing. Each parcel had an area of 3,000 m2 and owners were expected to commission oneoff projects for their own houses. The concept was so novel to the Netherlands that the City Council thought it appropriate to give the initiative an initial push. Architects were invited to submit plans and a competition with accompanying exhibition was organized, hoping that potential buyers would be persuaded. The mood was ambitious: Almere (founded 1975) had just celebrated its 25th anniversary and it was already aiming at becoming the 4th most populous city in the Netherlands. A new city center and a high rank in the Dutch public’s attention set the background.

10 · Het Nieuwe Landhuis


Yet this assignment was simple enough: very strict envelope boundaries and not much else. And it made Dutch sense: the neighbors were not far, but you should mind your own plot and ignore them. This project simply took the flatness of the polder landscape as a starting point and the house as a ‘wave’ that introduces movement and agitation. The wave simultaneously belongs to the surface and is a singularity within it. We rejected a language of horizontal lines (seen on most other entries) that would merely restate the flatness of the polder, regardless of the details of the composition. The house was designed for a family, with space for a small professional practice. We used the maximum allowed height, split into basement, ground floor and two upper floors (see plans at right). The design received some attention in the press, but failed to attract any clients.

Het Nieuwe Landhuis ¡ 11


12  ·  Het Nieuwe Landhuis


Het Nieuwe Landhuis  ·  13


14 路 Poldra


POLdRa co u n t r y s i d e g ue st ho use a nd re si d e nce A l je z ur, Po rt uga l

Poldra 路 15


The first plausible commission. Real clients with credible plans, good understanding, open minds: a rare occasion for a beginning architect. I welcomed this task with enthusiasm and hope, and fit the preliminary design between other professional obligations.

The assignment was to design a house that would double as residence for the owners and small countryside inn for nature lovers visiting this region. The status of countryside inn is bound to strict regulations concerning the impact on the landscape, the compliance with local building practices etc. The owners were not so particular with their own demands. The size of the house had to be manageable, but, for the rest, the brief for the project mostly consisted of rules and guidelines for this protected natural reserve.

One of the bases of the design is the approach to the house. Sitting slightly above the road, the house should signal its presence but, at the same time, suggest privacy. For this reason, the south facade overlooks the road and is seen continuously as one drives along. The rest of the house is only visible from within the premises.

The other basis of the design is a plan organized around three courtyards with different characters: one in the main living area (enclosed), one in the guest area (open) and a third one in the residents’ area (semi-enclosed). The courtyards work as centers around which the three main areas of the house are organized: the common living area for sitting and meals, the guest room area open to the landscape, and the residential area, which is more private. To the north, a swimming pool on a plateau allows views of the surrounding hills, far into the horizon.

GUESTS

RESIDENTIAL

Courtyard

16  ·  Poldra

Courtyard

LIVING

Courtyard


Approach: driving along the road, south facade is visible.

Arrival: more and more is slowly revealed.

GUESTS

RESIDENTIAL

LIVING

Models: The main elements of the house were disposed according to visibility, privacy and sun exposure.

Poldra 路 17


A number of devices are used throughout the house to control the excessive summer heat and low night temperatures, while at the same time allowing the house to be open to its environment – physically and visually. The house should provide an inviting haven of privacy for city-dwellers willing to enjoy the outdoors. It is a complimentary insertion in the full expanse of rolling hills and vast silence. It is introspective and calm.

Years after, the project has not yet materialized. All parties were satisfied then, but the clients’ priorities have changed. The project has become more of a snapshot than a finalized plan.

18  ·  Poldra


Poldra  ·  19



3


94  ·  Penang Tropical City


Penang Tropical City

Penang Tropical City  ·  95


MOUNTAIN

SEA

5km

SITE

GEORGE TOW N

Regional scale Connections by air to regional nodes

Local scale Left to right: Local points of interest Major local businesses SITE

i ¨

Provincial scale Left to right:

2:3 0 tohailand T

Tourism figures

0:3 0 toasa R aya S ng 0:15 to Gurne y Drive

Main attractions

SITE

SITE

0:20o tBe ach St

Local transportation 0:10 to am Air It

PENANG ISLAND

PENANG ISLAND

0:20err fy cro ssing

0:20 bridge oss ing cr 3:3 0 to KL

0:25o tBa yan Lepas

0:3 0 to Airpor t

(Propo sed bridge oss i cr ng)

96  ·  Penang Tropical City

DRIVING TIMES


CO NTEXT

Site Located between mountain and sea, just outside

This project is a competition entry for an urban redevelopment plan in the island territory of Penang, in West Malaysia. The site is a former turf club just outside Georgetown, the state capital, and is located at the foot of a dramatic mountain range covered in lush green. It is also just about 5 kilometers from the coast and, therefore, a privileged location. Relevant aspects of the surrounding urban context (transport, economical activity, tourism) were analyzed and mapped.

Georgetown, the site was formerly the grounds of a turf club. The horse-racing track is visible at the foot of the mountain.

Penang Tropical City  ·  97


Pr ogr am The program was given: 1.67 million square meters of new urban substance, mostly housing, but also offices, hotels, and communal health, cultural, entertainment and retail facilities. The method of organizing it was hinted by the surroundings of the site: islands of modernization within a continuous texture of spontaneous greenery. In planning terms, this corresponds to contained areas of maximum investment and value – the islands – amid informally organized territory – the greenery. The ‘islands’ are the foci of the infrastructure and the places of planned urbanity (housing, hotel and offices), while the green backdrop remains largely unplanned but is punctuated by prominent communal facilities (concert hall, clinic, retail outlets etc) around which urban activity should develop spontaneously, in the manner of the Asian tropical city.

?

TROPICAL OPICA MO IMPROVI D IMPROVISED INFO INFORMAL L

DERE GULATED DE

MES SY S

ACT IV VE

LOU D FLEXIBLE FLEXI E

LOW OW INVESTMENT T

SMALL MALL S CAL E

SOF O T

GREEN R N

UBIQUITOU U US

NON-TYPOL OGI OGICAL DISTIBUTE STIBU D

100  ·  Penang Tropical City

PL LANNED FO OR MAL RE EGULA TE OR RDERED PA AS SIVE QU UIET FI IXED HI IGH INVE LA ARGE SC A HA ARD GR REY IC CONOGR A TY YPOLOGIC CO ON SOL ID


1.67 MILLION SM

RESIDENTIAL 55,200 SM

RESIDENTIAL 775,500 SM

RESIDENTIAL 775,500 SM

HOTELS 142,500 SM

RESIDENTIAL 129,330 SM

OVT SCHOOLS 8,500 SM

OVT SCHOOLS 8,500 SM

CH

RESIDENTIAL 144,300 SM OFFICE 314.700 SM

HOTELS 142.590 SM

SERVICE APARTMENTS 93,000 SM

NVENTIO N CENT 37,000 SM

RESIDENTIAL 295,200 SM

HOTELS 235,900 SM

CAL CEN ,300 S

Cultur 50,000 SM

HARMO 500

OFFICE 314.700 SM

RETAIL 93,000 SM

Publi 71,000 SM

OFFICE 314.700 S

LIBRARY 16,000 SM

RETAIL 227,500 SM

RESIDENTIAL 58,500 SM

RESIDENTIAL 93,000 SM

SEVICE APARTMEN 93,400 SM

RETAIL 227,500 SM

PHILHARMONIC 5,500 SM LIBRARY 16,000 SM CHILDREN'S MUSE UM 10,000 SM PENANG EXPERIENCE 4,000 SM (2) GOVT SCHOOLS 18,500 S MEDICAL CENTER 9,300 SM MOSQUE 1,500 SM CONVENTION CEN TER 37,000 SM PMU/TNB 17,000 SM WATER RESERVOIR 2,000 SM

PROPO SED PROGR AM

PROGR AM

BUBBLES

"HARD" PROGRAM & "SOFT" PROGRAM

L MODERNITY

PROVI D PROVISED INFO INFORMAL L

DERE GULATED DE

MES SY S

ACT IV VE

LOU D EXIBLE EXI E

INVESTMENT T

ALL S CAL E

SOF O T

GREEN R N

UBIQUITOU U US

TYPOL OGI OGICAL DISTIBUTE STIBU D

PL LANNED FO OR MAL RE EGULA TED OR RDERED PA AS SIVE QU UIET FI IXED HI IGH INVESTMENT LA ARGE SC A ALE HA ARD GR REY IC CONOGR AP APHIC TY YPOLOGIC AL CO ON SOL IDATED

Penang Tropical City 路 101


102  ·  Penang Tropical City


Penang Tropical City  ·  103


WATER RESERV

HO

PENANG EXPERIENCE

f easiBi L it y The feasibility of the plan called for some atypical solutions – the road network and car access to the islands, for example. All the infrastructure had to be compatible with a phasing sequence that made optimal investment sense.

Land use

Road traffic

On Ground

MULTIL EVE L AIR-BORNE (Car ele vator)

4 LEVELS

Above Ground

LANDBRI DGE

1 LEVEL

6 LEVELS

Above Ground

LAND USE

2 LEVE LS

TRAFFIC

Above Ground

2 LEVELS PODIUM

PODIUM

2 LEVELS

PROPO SED PENANG OUTER RING ROAD PROPO SED SCOT LAND RO AD FLYOVE R

0.5 Above Ground 1.5 Belo w Ground

2 LEVELS

INNER LOOP

PODIUM

OUTER LOOP LOC AL ROADS SERVICE NETWORK

1 LEVEL

SPIRAL Above Ground

3 LEVELS

Underground

R

DE

UN

2 LEVELS

Split-le vel Above Ground

110 · Penang Tropical City

SS PA

1 LEVEL

Underground

On Ground


VOIR

SEMI DETACHED HOUSES GARDEN HOUSING

OTELS

GE

LANDBRID

CONVENTION CENTER

WATER TOWERS

RESIDENTIAL TOWERS

CIRCULAR HOUSING

OFFICE TOWERS

MALL SUPERLINK HOUSING SS PA

R

DE

UN

SERVICED APARTMENTS

PARK APARTMENTS

PHASE 1 - 1:3000 Phase 1

PHASE 3 - 1:3000 Phase 2

PHASE 4 - 1:3000 Phase 3

Penang Tropical City 路 111


114  ·  Penang Tropical City


Penang Tropical City  ·  115


116  ·  CCTV / TVCC


CCTV / TVCC C h i n e s e C e n t r a l Te l e v i s i on Head q u a r t e r s , Cu l t u r a l Ce n t e r, M e d i a P a rk a nd sup p o rt f a c i l i t i es

CCTV / TVCC  ·  117


CO N TEXT CCTV is located in the Beijing Central Business District (CBD). The CBD is a showcase for China’s ambition of modernity, a territory where architecture competes for height. The race for tallness is futile, a predictable parade of temporary victories. The CCTV complex presents an escape from the dictates of the standard skyscraper typology - stacked repetition - and an engagement of urban territory through form and program.

Great Wall

Beijing International Airport Ruins of Yanminguyuen

Fragrant Hills Park

New Technology Area

Summer Place

International Olympic Sports Center

BTV Shijingshan Amusement park

Existing CCTV

New Embassy Area Chaoyang Park

Wangfnjing Street

Shopping Street

Shijingshan Amusement Park

Financial District

Embassy Area

Yuyuantan Park

CCTV Tower

Worker's Gymnasium& Stadium

Forbidden City

Tinanmen Square

Beijing Railway Station

Beijing West Railway Station

Tiantan Park

CBD

Beijing Amusement Park

Beijing World Park Beijing Economic& Technological Development Area

118  ·  CCTV / TVCC


Pr ogr aM

S tu d io

One structure (CCTV) accommodates all facilities required for the televisionmaking process (administration, offices, production areas, news production areas, broadcasting and support areas). They are arranged in a loop that promotes the interconnectedness of the process and the people involved in it. A second structure (TVCC) accommodates the public facilities: a theater, recording studios, several cinema rooms, a ballroom, news conference rooms, a hotel and two restaurants. Support facilities (electrical power generation, truck parking and security central) are housed in a third structure,

S k y

F5 2 9 F5 F4 1 F5 0 8 F4 F4 9 F4 Ca 8 ntte F4 ee 7 n F4 6 F4 en 5 te F4 nte 4 Ca F4 3 F4 2 E 38 F4 xe Sk F 1 cu F4 tiv Re 0 e F3 Flo 8 9 or F3 F3 8 S F3 ky 7 Lo37 F bb F3 ou y 6 F3 ng 5 e F3 4 F3 3 F3 2 F3 1 F3 8 0 F3 F2 9 F2 8 F2 7 F2 6 F2 F 5 F2 4 ng F2 3 F2 2 F2 1 F2 0 F1 9 F1 8 F1 7 F1 6 F1 F9 5 F1 4 F1 0 3 25 io F1 Stud 1 2 F1 en 0 1 nte 25 io F1 Stud Ca 0 F0 9 (F F0 1) 8 F0 (B P 7 1) /A cto F0 6 rs s F0 dio 5 Stu F0 4 F1 F0 3 F0 14 dio 2 Stu F0 1 B0 1 I B0 R F1 E 2 Wby B0 b TO 2 o 1 3

F10 F09 F08 F07

F06 F07 F07

9

11

7 F3

7

0 F2

fe Ca

a s g

n

ti

80 80

0

80

A c to rs

P O

13

0 40 io

Stud

12 1 B

0 40 io

VIP

Lo bb y

A c to rs /S e c le c te S d ta A ff u d ie n c e

00

15

0 40 io

Stud

1

F1

al

St

50io 2ud

St

VIP

(B 1)

0 25 io

0 25 io

Stud

Stud

Kit

ch en

Sta

ff C

G y m

ntr

0 25 io

Stud

50io 2ud

2 B

Ce

0 25 io

Stud

C e n te r

by

1 B

H e a lt h

ob

io

Stud

H a ll

F1

S p o rt s

4

L M o e u e n t g i e n g

cL

V + IP

bli

by

ob

an Tra

8

8 F1 7 F1 6 F1 5 F1 4 F1 3 F1 2 F1 0 15 1 F1 10 F 0 21 9 F0 8 F0 7 F0 0 25 6 F0 5 s F0 io d 4 Stu F0 en p 03 O ios F 2 tu0d2 0 S F en F 1 Op F0 1 B0 II 2 R E B0 Wby 3 TOob B0 L

0 15

L fer sfe

00

0 F2 9 F1

80

80

Stud

Pu

g tin ee +M 80

80

00 2S0tudio

L

F

0 F3 9 F2 7 F2 8 F2 6 F2 5 F2 4 F2 3 F2 2 F2 1 F2

c

en ce

VIP

fe Ca ff y Sta obb 8 yL F3 Sk

d

VIP

2

F3

8 F3

a

F04 F03 F02

F01

F 0 F4 9 F3

8 F3 7 F3

2 F4

ro B

F06 F05

3 2

F4

4 r F 1 4

loo

eF

e utiv fe Ca xec E

VVI IPP LLo ou un ng ge e

F12 F11

8 F3

C a n te e n

F20 F19 F18 F17 F16 F15 F14 F13

t El ce Elevator vic rvic errv erv Se Se

F22 F21

e it u S

F24 F23

t n e id s

F26 F25

re

F28 F27

P

F31 F30 F29

an

tee

n

ng

eti

rk

Ma

pt.

De

CCTV / TVCC 路 119


L oop CCTV is organized as a three-dimensional loop. A linear route inside this loop connects all the facilities and personnel involved in the process of making television. Visitors are also allowed to use this route and get a glimpse behind the scenes on selected key locations inside the building.

8 F3

1 0

8 F3

9 6

4

8

7 F3

7

11

3

1

F1

14

F1

2 15

120  ·  CCTV / TVCC

ne nin za ez M

F1

13

12


CCTV / TVCC 路 121


122  ·  CCTV / TVCC


CCTV / TVCC  ·  123


124  ·  CCTV / TVCC


Facade 150

151

Hotel Lobby 159

Health Club / Hotel Reception

156

157

Theater

CCTV / TVCC  ·  125


View from the stage

TV CC Th eate r The theater is one of the main features of TVCC. It seats 1,500 people and allows different configurations, depending on the nature of the performance. The desired flexibility called for innovative design solutions as well as state-of-the art expertise in acoustics, visual performance and comfort. The result is a theater that pushes some of the boundaries of the rather restrictive science of theater design. The theater is an integral part of TVCC with its own requirements, from the public access and foyer arrangement to the artists’ facilities, recording studios, accessibility and security.

Studio lobby

126  ·  CCTV / TVCC

Artists’ lounge


Foyer

Theater entrance

Access to theater boxes

Access to balcony

CCTV / TVCC  ·  127


128  ·  CCTV / TVCC


TV CC Hot el A hotel tower is contained within the envelope of the building. The rooms rise in two 80m high stacks, forming a central atrium surrounded by a ballroom, wellness center and restaurants. TVCC was designed to accommodate the international media facilities for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games and is, therefore, equipped with press release rooms and offices for press correspondents.

F31 F30 F29 F28 F27

F26 F25 F24 F23 F22 F21 F20 F19 F18 F17 F16 F15 F14 F13 F12 F11 F10 F09 F08 F07

F06 F07 F07 F06 F05 F04 F03 F02

F01

SWIMMING POOL SHOPS HOTEL RECEPTION KITCHEN

DINING AREA SPECIALTY SHOPS

HOTEL

DIGITAL CINEMAS

THEATRE FLY TOWER NEWS RELEASE\ EXHIBITION AUDIO VISUAL ROOMS RECORDING STUDIO 200 m2 60 m2 CONTROL ROOM

80 m2 CONTROL ROOM OFFICES / LOUNGES

60 m CONTROL ROOM 2

SERVICE BOX THEATER

480 m2 RECORDING STUDIO

CULTURAL CENTER

CCTV / TVCC  ·  129


130  ·  CCTV / TVCC


CCTV / TVCC  ·  131


Reality

Top: CCTV, November 2005 Above: CCTV, April 2006 Below and bottom: TVCC, March 2006 Opposite page: CCTV, September 2005

132  ·  CCTV / TVCC

CCTV / TVCC was a unique opportunity to take part in a project that embodies many aspirations, contains significant symbolism and also stirs polemics. This is perhaps inescapable given the political and economical context that generated it, a context of change, marked by bold initiatives under unique conditions. Those conditions set the mood for us, an overworked project team who ‘lived the impossible’ as a daily reality.


CCTV / TVCC  ·  133


134  ·  CCTV / TVCC


CCTV / TVCC  ·  135


Fuller Projection: The Dymaxion™ Air-Ocean World Map 136

·

Epilogue


Epilogue

Epilogue  ·  137


Wh at, w h er e, w h e n, who Below is a timeline of the work I have done since 2001, as a staff architect (w h e r e and w h a t columns) and autonomously (m o r e column). On the opposite page, a map shows the locations of the projects listed in the timeline. • indicates the location of an OMA project; • indicates a location of an Architekten Cie. project; • indicates a location of an assignment developed in independent practice. The following pages list additional data and credits for the featured projects.

Wh er e

Whe n

Wh at

M o re  page

Architectural A ssociation London, United Kingdom

Sep

May SSE – Shenzhen Stock Exchange

2006

AIST Campus, Abuja  Central Square, Guangzhou

60

‘Out of the Depot’ Exhibition 

26

House of Multiple Dimensions 

18

Baltic Pearl, St. Petersburg

2005

Prada Epicenter Shanghai ‘Expansion / Neglect’ exhibition 

32

Prada Epicenter Shanghai 

42

‘Genetics of the Modern Museum’ Study Penang Tropical City  72 Almere / Koningin Julianaplein Cordoba Congress Center CNM – China National Museum Quarter 75, Moscow

CCTV / TVCC – China Central Television  94 2004

OMA – O ffice for Metropolitan A rchitecture Rotterdam, Netherlands

Jul Loosduinen Apartments HAL Laboratory

JHK Architecten Utrecht, Netherlands

Deltion College Campus Feb 2003 www.bravodacosta.com Oct Osdorp Urban Redevelopment Rabobank Headquarters DMM Ozeaneum Poldra Country House 

12

‘Het Nieuwe Landhuis’ 

6

Sheltered Housing Block 2002 Waterfront Development, Copenhagen Westerdokseiland Housing, Amsterdam

de Architekten C ie. Amsterdam, Netherlands

Sep

2001

138  ·  Epilogue


Shanghai

Beijing

• cctV cNM

• Pr a da Guangzhou ce Nt r a L s Qu a r e

•• Shenzhen sse

Penang

St. Petersburg B aLtic Pe ar L

Copenhagen

Moscow

• Quarter

• Ptc

75

• wat erfroNt • dMM

Stralsund

B Lo o k 5 s tudy H e t Nieuwe La NdH uis Almere Amsterdam The Hague o sdo rP r eiN ei we s t e r d o kse iL a N d k .j . PLei • Venice Lo o sduiN sdui eN BieNNa Le

Logroño

• Peri

Cordoba Aljezur

• ccc

• Po Ldra

Abuja

• aist

Epilogue · 139


Project d at a

aist campus Location Abuja, Nigeria · Status Master plan competition entry · Date February 2006 · Program Educational facilities, research institue, housing · Built area 236,333m² · Site 112.12ha in southern expansion district OMA – office for metropolitan architecture: Partners in charge Rem Koolhaas, Floris Alkemade · Project team Ademide Adelusi-Adeluyi, Ade­kunle Adeyemi, Pablo Barrera, João Bravo da Costa, Christian Brimmer, Haiko Cornelissen, Maria Derevencova, Beth Hughes, Felix Tonnis ‘Uit h et D ep o t /  Out of t he D e p ot’ Ex hibit ion Location Utrecht, Netherlands · Date February 2006 p r o j e c t t e a m João Bravo da Costa, Emilie Gomart ‘Ex pansio n /  N e gl e c t ’ Install at io n Location Venice, Italy · Date June 2005 OMA – office for metropolitan architecture: Partners in charge Rem Koolhaas, Reinier de Graaf · Project team João Bravo da Costa, Emilie Gomart, Jens Hommert, Felix Madrazo, Brendan McGetrick, Holger Pausch, Alexander Reichert, Todd Reisz Prada Epicenter Shanghai Location Shanghai, China · Status Preliminary Design · Date June 2005 Program Fashion outlet, showcase, store, cultural area, parking · Built area 2,175m² · Site Circa 200m along the Bund (riverside avenue) OMA – office for metropolitan architecture: Partner in charge Rem Koolhaas · Project architect Shohei Shigematsu · Project team Joshua Beck, João Bravo da Costa, Levent Kerimol, Mee Michelle Liu Penang Tr o p i c a l C i ty Location Penang, Malaysia · Status Master plan competition · Date December 2004 · Program Housing, offices, hotels, retail, public facilities, cultural facilities · Built area 1,670,000m² · Site 104.81ha, 5km west of Georgetown

140  ·  Epilogue

OMA – office for metropolitan architecture: Partner in charge Ole Scheeren · Project team João Bravo da Costa, Catarina Canas, Ivo van Capelleveen, Miha Cebulj, Eric Chang, Jens Eberhardt, Pieter Janssens, Trine Kobbelvedt, Julius Kranefuss, Felix Madrazo, Yusuke Okabayashi, Marc Verheijen Associate architect Ang Chee Cheong · Renderings Frans Parthesius · Photography Hans Werlemann H ous e o f M u lt iple D i m e n sio n s Status Competition entry for the Shinkenchiku Residential Design Competition 2004, proposed by Steven Holl · Program Conceptual design p r o j e c t t e a m João Bravo da Costa, Rob van Houten · Science Martijn Meel­ huijsen CCT V /  T V CC Location Beijing, People’s Republic of China · Project phase Extended preliminary design, EPD handover · Program China Central Television Corporation’s television station and headquarters, cultural center, support facilities and media park · Built area 575,000m² · Site 18ha in new Central Business District · Budget €600,000,000 OMA – office for metropolitan architecture: Partners in charge Rem Koolhaas, Ole Scheeren · Project manager Dongmei Yao · Project designers Shohei Shigematsu, Erez Ella · Project architects Adrianne Fisher, David Chacon, Charles Berman · Senior architects Anu Leinonen, Chris van Duijn, Hiromasa Shirai · Architects Gabriela Bojalil, João Bravo da Costa, Catarina Canas, Holly Chacon, Stephane Derveaux, Keren Englman, Gaspard Estourgie, Chris James, Abhijit Kapade, Michel van de Kar, Peter Lee, Xiaodong Liu, Stuart Maddox, Joseph Monteleone, Cristina Murphy, Daan Ooievaar, Andre Schmidt, Torsten Schroeder, Wenchian Shi, Tian Tian Xu, Dirk Zschunke · Trainees Jeffrey Bolhuis, António Bran­co, Max Burianek, Gonzalo Cantos, Shangwen Chiu, Steffen Ell, Pedro Gama, Hendrik Gruss, Yiannis Kanakakis, Suse Koch, Lawrence Leung, Menno van der Meer, Florian Pucher, Beatriz Ramo, Max

Rink, Beatrice Schiavina, Max Schwitalla, Manuel Shvartzberg, Arianna Spaccasassi, Laurent Troost, Steffie Wedde, Anna Weilhartner · Support May yan Fan, Jasmine Tsoi ECADI – east china architectural design institute (in Rotterdam): Project architects Wang Xiaoan, Li Yao, Xu Jialong · Architects Chen Li, Fan Yifei, Guo Yi­ ming, Huang Renying, Jiang Wenwei, Jiang Xinhua, Sun Yu, Wu Zheng, Xiang Ming, Xu Nuo, Zhao Weiliang. consultants: Structural engineering Arup · Building services Arup · High rise engineering DMJMH+N · Acoustics Dorsser Blesgraaf · Scenography Ducks­ Scéno · Facade Front · Vertical transport Lerch Bates & Associates · Food Services Romano Gatland Studio and broadcast design Sandy Brown Associates · Buildability Stephen Scanlon · Lighting design LPA · Model Made by Mistake · Photography Hans Werlemann D M M O ze a n e u m Location Stralsund, Germany · Status 2nd phase competition · Date April 2002 · Program Marine life and science exhibits, indoor and outdoor tanks, support facilities, offices, cafeteria, terrace · Site former industrial plot on the Baltic Sea harbor area de architekten cie. – architecture & planning: Partners in charge Branimir Medić, Pero Puljiz · Project architect Andreas Huhn · Project team Pasqual Bendicho, Søren Bjarnø, João Bravo da Costa, Sophia Neuhaus P o l dra Location Aljezur, Portugal · Status Preliminary design · Date March 2002 · Program Guest house and residence · Built area 900m² · Site 2ha plot in rural area of southwestern Portugal a r c h i t e c t João Bravo da Costa H e t N ie u w e La n dh u is Location Almere, Netherlands · Status Competition entry · Date May 2001 Program Single-family house, home office · Built area 530m² · Site 3,000m² plot in Almere Buiten residential suburb p r o j e c t t e a m Eli Aschkenasy, João Bravo da Costa, Theo Veldboer


Fu r th er r e f er en c e

Domus d’Aut or e #1: Pos t- O c c upa n c y AMO & Koolhaas, Rem. Editoriale Domus, 2006 cct v by oma Architecture and Urbanism July 2005 special issue, A+U Publishing Co., Ltd ar chpl us 1 74 & 175 ARCH+ Verlag GmbH Cont ent Koolhaas, Rem, ed.Taschen, 2004 Pr of ession A r c h i te c t 1987- 2002 Crimson & De Architekten Cie, Uitgeverij 010 Publishers, 2002

Epilogue  ·  141


142  ·  Epilogue


Epilogue  ·  143


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.