New Projects
Showcasing manufacture under a wood roof
- Santo Shop _ UID Architects
- Interview _ UID Architects + SoWon Kim
House of music offers audiences the roof
- Nisarga Art Hub _ Wallmarkers
- Interview _ Wallmarkers + HyoJin Jeon
Urban infrastructure linking 9m height difference
- Areal am Kronenrain _ Mono Architekten
Wide concrete eaves emulate forest canopy
- Wenzhou Medical University International Exchange Center _ Atelier FCJZ
Book valley under the ginkgo canopy
- Beijing City Library _ Snøhetta
- Interview _ Robert Greenwood + YuMi Hyun
Reflective oasis blends with the earth and the sky
- Kalyon Karapınar Central Control Building _ Bilgin Architects
- Interview _ Caner Bilgin, Begüm Yılmaz Bilgin + Idil Ayral
Aluminum facade showcasing corporate identity
- Bonfiglioli Headquarters _ Peter Pichler Architecture
- Interview _ Peter Pichler + SoWon Kim
Let’s work together!
Let’s work together! _ Herbert Wright
Monumental block with a collaborative heart
- UCL East Marshgate _ Stanton Williams
- Interview _ Richard Wardle + Herbert Wright
Wooden circulation connects branching spaces
- Faculty of Arts at Warwick University _ Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
Pezo von Ellrichshausen
in their house and structures
Forms of Intentionality, Intentionality of Forms _ Myung Seok Hyun
Interview _ Sofia von Ellrichshausen, Mauricio Pezo + YuMi Hyun, Myung Seok Hyun
A cloistered house in the Andean foothills
- Luna House _ Pezo von Ellrichshausen
A slender stacked tower to view Andes panorama
- Rosa Pavilion _ Pezo von Ellrichshausen
A primal structured shelter atop rugged terrain
- Lama Pavilion _ Pezo von Ellrichshausen
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C3 no.431 (2024-3/6)
C3's third issue of 2024 is now live!
In the first section, 'Let's Work Together,' we explore two UK university buildings that foster collaboration and learning through transparent, flexible, and interactive spaces. The second section showcases three new projects by Chilean-based architecture studio Pezo von Ellrichshausen, known for their distinctive architectural universe that emphasizes uncluttered, simple geometry.
Additionally, this May issue includes seven other notable projects from around the world, encompassing a diverse range of typologies from residential projects to corporate offices across Asia and Europe.
Let’s work together!
When departments inside an organization fail to share information with others, we call it the ‘silo mentality’. A silo cuts off its interior to everything beyond its walls. Universities have suffered from this, with learning and research in one field literally walled off from others. Architecture physically expressed this in separate faculty buildings and in partitioned space within them. But architecture can also create a very different environment — transparent, flexible and encouraging interaction. The two UK colleges we look at in this section are excellent examples. Both also exploit vertical circulation in central atrium spaces, which gives them an unusual dynamic dimension. [...]
Pezo von Ellrichshausen in their house and structures
British art historian Michael Baxandall suggests that when art historians and critics write about a work of art, they don’t actually explain the work itself; instead, they explain their remarks about the work. As he puts it: “we do not explain pictures: we explain remarks about pictures.” 1 In other words, art historians’ and critics’ words refer to other words and thoughts about seeing the work. Furthermore, language is not the most equipped medium for offering notations of visual objects such as paintings, sculptures, and architectural projects. [...]
C3 no.431 (2024-3/6)
C3's third issue of 2024 is now live!
In the first section, 'Let's Work Together,' we explore two UK university buildings that foster collaboration and learning through transparent, flexible, and interactive spaces. The second section showcases three new projects by Chilean-based architecture studio Pezo von Ellrichshausen, known for their distinctive architectural universe that emphasizes uncluttered, simple geometry.
Additionally, this May issue includes seven other notable projects from around the world, encompassing a diverse range of typologies from residential projects to corporate offices across Asia and Europe.
Let’s work together!
When departments inside an organization fail to share information with others, we call it the ‘silo mentality’. A silo cuts off its interior to everything beyond its walls. Universities have suffered from this, with learning and research in one field literally walled off from others. Architecture physically expressed this in separate faculty buildings and in partitioned space within them. But architecture can also create a very different environment — transparent, flexible and encouraging interaction. The two UK colleges we look at in this section are excellent examples. Both also exploit vertical circulation in central atrium spaces, which gives them an unusual dynamic dimension. [...]
Pezo von Ellrichshausen in their house and structures
British art historian Michael Baxandall suggests that when art historians and critics write about a work of art, they don’t actually explain the work itself; instead, they explain their remarks about the work. As he puts it: “we do not explain pictures: we explain remarks about pictures.” 1 In other words, art historians’ and critics’ words refer to other words and thoughts about seeing the work. Furthermore, language is not the most equipped medium for offering notations of visual objects such as paintings, sculptures, and architectural projects. [...]