2017. január 31., kedd

This cozy cottage sits on stilts made out of recycled gas pipes

This year-round cottage on stilts in Canada, designed for a couple and their son, floats above a lakeside site prone to flooding and freeze-thaw weathering. Architecture firm DIN Projects designed the cottage as a vertical wood platform structure that overlooks Lake Winnipeg on stilts made out of recycled gas pipes.

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The owners obtained the cottage lot through the provincial cottage lot lottery system. The site has Lake Winnipeg frontage, but the regulations limit how close to the water the owner can build. The site was problematic due to flooding and the porous nature of the shallow layer of overburden. This is why the architects opted for stilts made from recycled gas pipes, with foundations drilled into the subterranean bedrock.

Related: Casa Quebrada is a tiny treehouse-like haven immersed in the Chilean forest

The house has three floors connected with a stair that winds around each floor plate. The wooden frame, studs and plywood sheathing are left exposed in the interior. Internal ducting helps provide fresh air and distributes it vertically. The main heating source is a cast iron stove in the center of the cottage.

+ DIN Projects

Via Archdaily



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World's most powerful wind turbine breaks 24-hour record for energy generation

Anyone who still thinks wind power is just a load of hot air obviously hasn't been paying attention. Witness the V164, a prototype wind turbine that Denmark's MHI Vestas Offshore tested at Østerild over December. With a rated power of 9 megawatts under optimum conditions, the V164
set a new energy-generation record by a single wind turbine by producing a staggering 216,000 kilowatt-hours over a 24-hour period.

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The V164 is no glorified windmill. Standing nearly 722 feet tall, the V164 boasts with a sweep area of 227,377 square feet—or larger than the London Eye. Its 262-foot-long blades, the equivalent of nine London double-decker buses, weigh 77,160 pounds apiece.

The platform is part of MH Vestas Offshore's "continued commitment to deliver affordable offshore wind power," Torben Hvid Larsen, the firm's chief technical officer, said in a statement.

Related: The World’s Most Powerful Wind Turbine Has Blades That Are Over 24 Stories Tall

“We are committed to delivering turbine technology that is in line with the development of our industry, based on our 20-plus years of offshore experience," he said. "Reliability remains a key enabler, and our approach to developing our existing platform supports this strategy."

With the new record secured, the prototype is now ready to go to market. Built with the unforgiving North Sea environment in mind, V164 has an operational life span of about 25 years, after which 80 percent of it can be recycled.

"We believe that our wind turbine will play an integral part in enabling the offshore industry to continue to drive down the cost of energy," Larsen added.

+ MHI Vestas Offshore

Via New Atlas



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Ikea flat-pack refugee shelters awarded Design of the Year

IKEA's flat-pack refugee structure, the Better Shelter, has been awarded Design of the Year by London's respected Design Museum. Developed in collaboration with the United Nations, the modular, solar-powered housing units have just 68 components, making them easily assembled in just a matter of hours. Since production started in 2015, thousands of Better Shelters have been installed in countries around the world to help with the ongoing refugee crisis.

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https://youtu.be/Ect-FwtK-84

The 17.5-square-meter shelters, which can sleep a family of five, are made out of galvanized steel frames with recyclable polymer plastic walls and lockable doors. A singular rooftop solar panel charges the indoor LED lamp and a USB port capable of charging mobile phones. Since production started on the shelters in 2015, thousands of units have been delivered to countries around the world to be used as homes, medical facilities, food distribution points, and offices.

Related: IKEA’s Modular Better Shelter Housing Unit is a solar-powered emergency home for refugees

The Better Shelter took home both the Architecture award and the 2017 Beazly Design Grand Prize this year. Presented by London's Design Museum, the awards recognize "design that promotes or delivers change, enables access, extends design practice or captures the spirit of the year."

+ Better Shelter

+ Beazly Design of the Year

Via CNN

Images via Better Shelter



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Artist ingeniously turns old plastic bottles into joining material for furniture

Old plastic bottles get a second shot at life in the creative hands of Royal College of Art graduate Micaella Pedros. The London-based designer collected discarded bottles and melted them down into a wood bonding material for furniture. Her experimental project, called Joining Bottles, explores upcycling of scavenged materials found across the city, including bits of wood and different colored plastic bottle waste.

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Pedros makes Joining Bottles furniture using a variety of timber types, from wood offcuts to tree branches. To improve the strength of the plastic joints, the artist creates notches and groves in the wood nearest to where the parts will be joined. After cutting off the top and bottom of a plastic bottle, she slips the plastic sleeve over the wood pieces and uses a heat gun to melt the PET plastic until the bottle shrinks and wraps tightly around the wood pieces to create a strong bond.

Related: The New Raw turns plastic waste into valuable raw material

“Both materials, wood and plastic bottles, are widely abundant in cities and other places,” writes Pedros. “There are lying there as waste, waiting to be reclaimed by people. Joining Bottles seeks to contribute to new beliefs based on what we, as individuals and communities, can do with what is available to us. In some countries, this project can make a real difference, promoting the collect of plastic bottles and wood waste, and helping people to empower themselves.” The plastic bonds are strong enough to create sturdy furnishing capable of supporting an average person’s weight.

+ Micaella Pedros

Images via Micaella Pedros



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2017. január 27., péntek

Haiti renovation project boosts community using local labor and materials

Nothing warms our design-loving hearts like a project built by and for communities, and with local resources to boot. Working pro bono, Thrive Architecture teamed with nonprofit organization Building Goodness Foundation and local workers to expand an existing Center of Hope Haiti school and orphanage just outside of Hinche. Not only is the project socially meaningful, but environmentally-conscious as well.

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The project, which was completed in October, 2016, included a series of new facilities for an existing school and orphanage run by The Center of Hope Haiti (COHH). As the funding allowed, the construction team was able to build four new buildings to create much-needed space for the educational complex.

Related: Earthquake-resistant orphanage is a welcoming ray of hope in Haiti

The entire project followed BGF's construction scheme, which includes using a team of skilled craftsmen and trade professionals along with local unskilled and semi-skilled laborers. The entire group works on the project from start to finish, from site planning and concept design to construction, allowing the communities to create a capable, self-sustaining labor force.

The layout for the school included a new "sheltering landscape" built on the highest elevation possible in order to offer additional protection during the storm seasons. The team was also careful to protect two existing Mango trees that offer shade from the tropical heat.

Related: Architectural Association School of Architecture bamboo workshops in Haiti teach post-disaster construction techniques

From the beginning of the project, the construction plan consisted of using conventional Haitian construction techniques, including the use of traditional Haitian “parging”, which was left unpainted. Locally-sourced materials made up a good part of the project, including quarried stone that wraps around each of the buildings' exteriors. Additionally, locally-sourced steel pipes were used as the tie-downs for the roofs, offering solid protection from strong winds. To reduce the school's energy usage and costs, the buildings mainly depend on natural daylight, but LED lighting is installed throughout the buildings.

All of the buildings were constructed with an extended roof, which double as shade and shelter from the harsh summers. As for the project's energy conservation strategy, the exterior walls have low operable windows on the courtyard side of the buildings designed to optimize natural air ventilation. For insulation, the walls were built with lightweight Ubuntublox made from repurposed Styrofoam trays that were cleaned, shredded and sewn into rice bags by women in Port-au-Prince.

+ Thrive Architecture

+ Building Goodness Foundation

+ Center of Hope Haiti

Images via Thrive Architecture and Tom Cogill



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CargoTek taps shipping containers for affordable UK homes and offices

Shipping containers can be a great solution for creating temporary, easily transportable spaces. London-based company CargoTek has recognized the versatility of modular, prefabricated structures with several cost-effective, rapidly deployable designs that require minimal infrastructure. Among their developments made from shipping containers is the Cobbler's Thumb Development in Brighton and an emergency housing scheme for London's Ealing borough.
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CargoTek's plug-and-play innovative space solutions work across many sectors and applications, for both semi-permanent and temporary developments. All of their projects are designed to the same standard as regular buildings and are fully compliant with local building regulations.

Related: Nha Trang’s first hostel built from recycled shipping containers pops up in Vietnam

The Cobblers Thumb Development in Brighton comprises eight small business units, which range from five to 28 square meters. It took just 10 weeks to complete by local sub-contractors. The emergency housing scheme for Ealing in London addresses a housing shortage for vulnerable populations, offering accommodation for people who would have otherwise had to relocate away from their families and jobs.

+ CargoTek



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