powerful spaces - Giuliani Hönger AG

Transcription

powerful spaces - Giuliani Hönger AG
POWERFUL SPACES
CONCRETE ARCHITECTURE 2013 - 2015 / FS 2014
Atelier giuliani.hönger
LORENZO GIULIANI
CHRISTIAN HÖNGER
Lectures & Critics
by Structural Engineers
FÜRST LAFFRANCHI
Assistents
MICHAEL MEIER
RAPHAËL DUNANT
Contents
Themes
3
Notes
9
Project
11
Space-utilisation schedule
Site
13
Project perimeter
21
Teaching methods
23
Review requirements
Study Excursion
24
Timetable
28-29
References
31-59
Bibliography
Team
61
17
27
63
Cover:
S.C. Johnson & Son, Wax Building, Racine Wisconsin 1936-39
Frank Lloyd Wright
1
Themes
Concrete Architecture
Our two-year Guest Professorship at
the EPFL is integrated into the theme of
Orientation: Construction et béton. Within
that field, we offer the design course
Théorie et critique du project MA1 in the
studio, which is complemented by the
exercise module by Thierry Voellinger/
Véronique Amstutz Béton: Matière de
construction and by the theoretical
module by Roberto Gargiani Histoire du
béton: fabriquer de le béton (01), as well
as Antoine Picon’s Cours: de la structure
à l’ornement: une histoire culturelle de la
construction.
The term Concrete Architecture should
be grasped in more ways than one,
since it explicitly also addresses the
conceptual approach of the course: It
seeks innovative, distinct spatial concepts
in concrete, which are also feasible and
realizable “in concrete” with respect to the
load-bearing structure, construction and
materials. At the same time, we see the
design process itself as an analogy to the
concrete production process: Design ideas
are fed through the process of forming,
casting, condensing and hardening.
The building material of concrete
Concrete is a hybrid building material
that has different aggregate conditions
and does not have its own original
expressive form since it is cast in a mold.
Its constituents such as cement, water,
reinforcing steel and aggregates such as
gravel and sand merge together and are
no longer visible after the production
process. In a similar way, the distribution
of forces is hardly noticeable in this
hybrid, yet homogeneous material, in
which statically effective and filling areas
are not revealed within the overall form.
Reinforced concrete primarily gains its
form through the structure and properties
of the building shell which it assumes
in a negative form and turns into an
expression (02).
Concrete is an ancient building material.
Its precursor, quick lime, was even used
to build the pyramids. The Romans called
concrete opus caementitum (03) and used
it to build the Pantheon and aqueducts
in Rome. In more recent times, John
Semeaton 1755 carried out experiments
with concrete on the right ratios for
concrete aggregates. Joseph Monier
registered the patent for reinforced
concrete in 1867. Since then, reinforced
concrete has experienced enormous
success as a building material.
Concrete has diverse properties. It is
notably robust and durable. Special
treatment and processing can emulate
different materials – from light textiles
to heavy natural stone. By subsequently
finishing the surface, it can become coarse
and matt or fine and shiny, with highly
contrasting effects and perceptions in
daylight. Since the concrete and steel work
together within the material, reinforced
concrete has enormous load-bearing
potential, which is combined with a
wide range of undirected and threedimensional load-bearing structures, as
well as sculptural and geometric forms of
expression.
With respect to production and
application, one can distinguish between
two basic types of concrete: In-situ cast
concrete and prefabricated concrete that
Nordic Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, Italy 1962
Sverre Fehn
3
is delivered to the building site. We have
studied both applications and gathered
experience in our own practical work
for our office. Both applications will be
themes and fields of research during the
susbequent semester work.
Themes
In addition to our study of reinforced
concrete, one main focus in all four
semesters lies in designing powerful
interior spaces and building presences
that are compatible with urban locations.
In-situ cast concrete is above all sensible
in shaping interior spaces, while
prefabricated concrete elements are
especially suitable for façade design and
the creation of exterior spaces.
Powerful Space
“Architecture comes from The Making of a
Room” (04) (Louis I. Kahn) (04) and “Our
sense of space (Raumgefühl) and spatial
imagination (Raumphantasie) press
toward spatial creation (Raumgestaltung);
they seek their satisfaction in art. We call
this art architecture; in plain words, it is
the creatress of space (Raumgestalterin).“
(05) (August Schmarsow) are the two
mottos of the autumn semesters. The
focus lies on powerful spaces in in-situ
concrete and differentiated façades with
heavy prefabrication. Working together
with the structural engineer, the aim is
to seek congruence between space and
structure.
In the two autumn semesters, the projects
will focus on powerful interior spaces that
produce an identity, which will interest
us in our own practice and during our
course as sectional figures (06) and will be
implemented in in-situ cast concrete.
Urban Constellation
„[…] les ensembles sont plus importants
que les chefs-d’oeuvre isolés“(07)
(Fernand Pouillon) and „And now the
4
Ensemble!!!“ (08) (Miroslav Šik) are the
two mottos of the spring semesters. The
focus lies on differentiated facades with
heavy prefabrication and powerful spaces
in in-situ concrete. Working together with
the construction engineer, the aim is to
seek congruence between structure and
expression.
In the two spring semesters, we will
develop designs that create good urban
spatial constellations with façades in
prefabricated concrete, interpreting the
city with a compatible appearance, as well
as being able to build it further.
Construction
Since the oil crisis in the 1970s and the
introduction of contemporary energy
standards, today’s façade constructions in
our latitudes have often been multilayered.
Apart from a few exceptions, the
structurally homogeneous wall is a thing
of the past and continuous layers must be
developed with a so-called layered sketch.
Such multiple layering of the exterior wall
gives Carl Bötticher’s theory of a “core and
artistic form” (“Kern- und Kunstform”)
(09) a new, unexpected contemporary
relevance. In such cases, the actual loadbearing structure often forms the inwardly
aligned core form, which can itself develop
an artistic form that is homogeneous with
the primary system.
Competition for the University campus FHNW, Muttenz, 2011, 2. Price.
giuliani.hönger
Top: Interior perspective of the powerful space
Down: Section model
Load-bearing
Throughout architectural history,
an innovative approach to gravity
has been a basic precondition for
important architecture. The load-bearing
structure has a great design potential in
developing powerful spaces. Different
load-bearing systems and spans can
be used to illuminate and explore the
ideal relationship (10) between the loadbearing structure and the spatial span,
as well as deriving their spatial effects
in a very direct way. Therefore today’s
5
standard thinking patterns of support
and slab systems should be extended
in favour of three-dimensional loadbearing structures that include ceilings.
As a hardly questionable core form, it
can however also create a space that is
independent of current trends, which can
sustainably maintain its effect in a robust,
timeless way. The desired congruence of
spatial design and load-bearing system
can however only be achieved through
close and early collaboration between the
architect and the structural engineer (11).
Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro,
Affonso Eduardo Reidy
Triad
As a result of our practical experience
and teaching to date, we perceive
spatial design, space, the load-bearing
structure and the material of concrete
as a symphonic unity and as a harmonic
triad of space-structure-material.
Daylight should also be integrated into
this triad as a universal quality for spatial
development.
Innovative construction engineers – for
this course the engineering office Fürst
Laffranchi - will accompany us as partners
from the field of load-bearing structures.
The material of concrete plays a decisive
role both for spatial design and the loadbearing structure, since it can be used for
floors, walls and ceilings, as well as being
able to create a three-dimensional spatial
development and load-bearing structure in
the sense of a so-called espace texturé (12).
Teaching programme
The teaching programme in autumn
semester 2014 spans the themes of
spatial design, developing a load-bearing
structure and conscious handling of the
material of concrete and its wide range
of surface finishing. The term concrete
architecture is ambiguous since it denotes
the material of concrete, but also refers
6
to the concrete aspect of implementing
a concept in innovative spatial design, a
viable, innovative structure, a tangible
materialism and ultimately adequate
presentation.
At the end of the semester course the
student must be able to:
_ Develop an exciting spatial sequence
The aim is to design powerful spaces
that strengthen identity and encourage
communication, interaction and
encounter. Vertical sections and
sectional figures play a key role.
_ Recognise the potential of concrete as a building material.
Students should be able to understand
and apply production conditions,
manufacturing methods and surface
treatments. The interaction between
formwork and casting, as well as their
conditionality, should be recognised.
_ Know various load-bearing systems with varying spans and make them useful for the design.
The basic distribution of forces in loadbearing elements and the special forces
involved with concrete as a tensile
and compressive system should be
understood, to be able to apply that to
spatial design.
_ Know powerful spaces in architectural history and interpret them as references.
In that respect it is important to
recognise spatial and structural
potential in a way that is transhistoric
and free of stylistic classification.
7
Notes
(01)
Gargiani Roberto, Rosellini Anna, Beton Brut and Ineffable Space (1940 1965): Surface Materials and Psychophysiology of Vision (Essays in Architecture), Edition Detail 2014
(02)
Deplazes, Andrea, (Ed.): Concrete. In: Constructing Architecture – A Handbook, Basel, Boston, Berlin: Birkhäuser – Publisher for Architecture, 2008, P. 57-77
(03)
Kind-Barkauskas F., Kauhsen B., Polónyi S.,Brandt J.: Beton Atlas: Entwerfen mit Stahlbeton im Hochbau, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag 2001. In particular: Entwicklung der Betontechnologie, p.9-17
(04)
Kahn Louis I., Architecture Comes from the Making of a Room,
Drawing for City/2 exhibition, 1971
(05)
Schmarsow August, The essence of architectural creation 1893,
unter: http://bibliodarq.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/schmarsow-a-the-
essence-of-architectural-creation.pdf
Berkely Art museum and Pacific film Archive, Berkely California, 1970
Mario Campi
8
(06)
Giuliani Lorenzo and Hönger Christian: Schnittwerk, Zurich: gta Verlag, 2010, p. 14-23
(07)
Pouillon Fernand, Architecte méditerranéen, Marseille 2001, S. 19
(08) Šik Miroslav, And now the Ensemble!!!, Lars Mueller Publishers GmbH Zurich 2012
(09)
Bötticher Karl: Die Tektonik der Hellenen, Potsdam 1844, in: Stilhülse und Kern, Werner Oechslin (Ed.), Zurich: gta Verlag, Berlin: Ernst&Sohn Berlin, 1994, p.180-187
(10)
Kind-Barkauskas F., Kauhsen B., Polónyi S.,Brandt J.: Beton Atlas: Entwerfen mit Stahlbeton im Hochbau, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag 2001. In particular: Stahlbeton in der Architektur der Moderne, p. 18-43
(11)
Fürst, Armand and Laffranchi Massimo: Ways to innovative solutions, in: Dialog der Konstrukteure, Architekturforum Zürich and A. Flury (Eds.), Niggli, 2010, p. 113-118
(12)
Jacques Lucan, Hypothèse pour une spatialité texturée, in: matières numéro 9 - l‘espace architectural 2008, Herausgeber: Faculté Environnement naturel, architectural et construit ENAC, Institute d’architecture et de la ville IA und Laboratoire de théorie et d’histoire LTH, p.06-17
9
Project
Autumn Term 2014
In July 1835, the first iron steamship on
the European continent, the Minerva,
went into service on Lake Zurich.
Several decades later, in 1890/91, the
Zürichsee-Schifffahrtsgesellschaft was
founded. It has been called the ZürichseeSchifffahrtsgesellschaft, or ZSG for short
since 1957.
To cope with the enormous volume of
passengers at the turn of the 20th century,
two sister vessels, the Stadt Zürich and
the Stadt Rapperswil, which were large
paddle steamers, were built in 1909 and
1914 respectively. They are among the
last steamboats built by the company
Escher Wyss in Zurich and are considered
industrial monuments today. The current
fleet consists of 17 ships built between
1909 and 2007: two paddle steamers,
twelve motor ships and three river boats.
This term, new headquarters for the
Zurich Shipping Company are to be
designed including exhibition rooms. The
existing facility contains the company
harbour with anchoring for 17 ships, a
shipyard, an office building and a catering
building. On the company grounds, an
interactive building is to be designed with
workshops, offices and exhibition rooms
to replace the old workshop building.
The company has a harbour on the
left bank of Lake Zurich in ZurichWollishofen between Landiwiese and the
Rote Fabrik. The site is easily accessible
from Seestrasse and Wollishofen station.
It is a relatively unattractive section of
the unobstructed lakeside promenade
between the “Red Factory” and “Zürihorn”
The entire site is subject to seasonal
fluctuations in utilisation, being mainly
used in winter. The fleet of ships are in
operation on the lake during the summer
months allowing the premises to be
made available to interested parties.
For example the shipyard is used by the
“Annual Theatre Spectacle” or for other
events.
The following subjects should be
addressed by the building design:
_The lake promenade is to become more
open and the ZSG areal closely integrated
within it.
_The lakefront is to be integrated into or
at least harmonise strongly with the new
building design.
_ The new building should enhance the
location and form a harmonious whole
with the existing buildings.
_ An attractive sequence of spaces is to be
developed within the new building.
_Consideration is to be taken of the
seasonal third-party utilisation of the
entire premises or certain sections
thereof.
_ The history and specific activities of the
Zürcher Schifffahrtsgesellschaft are to be
presented to the public.
_The magic of water, the lakeside and
the wide open view is to be captured
atmospherically.
Chandigarh, India 1951-65
Le Corbusier
10
11
Space Utilisation Schedul
Space-Utilisation
schedule
program
sm height
ENTRANCE / ACCOMMODATION
lobby
foyer
shop
facilities
250
30
120
40
60
5.5
5.5
5.5
3.5
EXPOSITION STEAM-/DREAMBOAT
entrence
documentation centre
library
storage
340
20
240
40
40
5.5
5.5
3.5
3.5
GASTRONOMY
restaurant clients
service kitchen
pantry
office chef de cusine
storage
restaurant staff
pantry
storage
300
120
50
24
10
12
40
20
6
5.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
2240
16
24
24
60
2000
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
60
3.5
440
500
200
3.5
3.5
1200
14.0
320
80
200
40
3.5
5.5
5.5
WORKSHOP / OFFICE
single- teamoffice
secretariat
meeting room
workshops
Ship elevator and hall, shipyard ZSG Wollishofen
2
2
x
x
1740
3
2
x
x
1500
-
facilities
GASTRONOMY SERVICE
production kitchen
storrage
360
-
SHIPYARD HALL
big hall
TECHNIQUE / STORAGE
archive
heating, ventilation,...
delivery
description/comment
1*
cloakroom, restrooms, storage
1* models, planotèque, ...
2*, connected to terrasse
connected to service kitchen
2*
connected to service kitchen
existing buildings > replacement possible
3* , metalworking, carpentry, electricians,
paintings, mechanics, engine cleaning
cloakroom, restrooms, small kitchen
existing buildings > replacement possible
summer activities > preproduction shipkitchen
existing buildings > to be conserved
winter activities > ship (re-) construction
summer activities > events
connected to large elevator
SURFACE UTILE
3310
-
3890
sia 416
ACCESS / CIRCULATION
993
-
1556
1*/2* 30 - 40% of the surface utile
SURFACE DE PLANCHER
4948
-
6263
sia 416
EXTERIOR
terrasse
maine access / drive
parking (12 -15 cares)
120
scheme and design for exterior surfaces
terrasse, access, parking, sports,
facilities, ...
1* part of the powerful space
2* could be part of the powerful space
3* connected to the of powerful space
12
13
Salondampfer Stadt Zürich
Previous page: section, plan and elevation
14
15
Site
The urban fabric of Zurich, especially
the lake shore has been fundamentally
transformed during the past 150 years.
The 1830-map shows a small, urban
core along the river Limmat. A major
transformation was the opening of the
city towards the lake around 1860. Under
the administration of the engineer Bürkli
the lake shore became the new face and
the image of the business and trading
town. Until 1900, due to vast earthworks,
ground was reclaimed in order to built
parks, squares and promenades that
were designed from scratch. Later
on, the coastline was redefined for
the national exhibition ‘‘Landi 1939‘‘.
After the exhibition, several parks and
facilities, such as the Landiwiese or the
China Garden took place on the former
exhibition-site. 1985 the existing ZSG headquarter and shipyard was modified
and enlarged. Today, the Area around
Rote Fabrik and the ZSG - shipyard form
the endpoint of the public space along the
lake, within the city of Zurich.
Lakeshore concept 2004
Office for Urbanisme, city of Zurich
Aerial view of the rail station and the ZSG‘s
shipyard, Wollishofen ZH.
17
ZSG shipyard in Wollishofen
Lakeshore Zurich 2004
Overview key projects
Office for urbanism
18
19
4
13
10
3
7
11
8
9
2
5
12
6
1
1. Ship elevator
2. Shipyard hall / Event hall (to be conserved)
3. Service building - roofgarden
(workshop, offices, locker room)
4. Guesthouse - old headquarter (to be conserved)
5. Canopy for Limmatship
6. Dockside crane 125 kN
7. Old rail line for charcoal
8. Water‘s edge gangway
9. Private shipsbuilder hall
10. Oil tank
11. Gastronomy service building
12. Sailing clubhouse
Project perimeter
20
13. Storage
21
Teaching Methods
Models and Sketches from Nikolai Ladovskii‘s Studio at
VKhUTEMAS-VKhUTEIN (1922-1930)
Thematic treatment
The term is divided into three
thematic treatment phases according
to Kenneth Frampton: Topology,
Typology, Tectonics. Each phase lasts
4 weeks and is mainly concluded with
a “wall critique”, although inferences
from previous phases are always
permitted and encouraged. The first
stage, topology, is developed in teams
of two, while the subsequent stages
are individual work. In between
these phases, there are alternating
weekly supervision sessions with the
assistants and an interim critique by
the professors and assistants. The
development of the load-bearing
structure will be closely supervised
by qualified construction engineers
with practical experience (Fürst
Lanffranchi). The design should show
structural logic and considerable
sensuous and poetic quality. Spatial
and structural models are cast
enabling students to experience at
first hand the properties of formwork
and casting.
Working with References
The cultural wealth of the history of
architecture and art can be used as
an inspiration and a driving force for
developing one’s own thoughts. By
using a limited selection of topics,
treating them conceptually and
applying them to one’s own project,
it is possible to achieve translation
and development work that is
characterised by the interpreter and
his understanding of the reference
project.
Inputs
An accompanying programme
with thematic input communicates
underlying insight and professional
know-how on in-situ concrete and
heavy prefabrication, as well as
providing an overview of possible
load-bearing structural concepts and
their use, explaining the relationship
between the load-bearing structure
and space etc..
Instruments
The following forms of presentation
have proved to be suitable for our
project:
_1:100/1:200 project plans, in
which the spatial figure design is
recognisable as a public interior
space. The ground plan and crosssections should also make loadbearing and structural elements
clearly visible. Non-load-bearing and
partition elements are presented as
line drawings.
_A structural section representing
the spatial concept is presented as a
1:20 layered sketch (distinguishing
between load-bearing, insulating
and protective functions), with an
architecturally developed interior
view.
_Models present the quality of the
interior figure in the form of a spatial
structure or a cast spatial figure.
Structure concept sketch from Cecil Balmond
for the Seattle Central Library, OMA
22
23
Review Requirements
1. Review – Topology (teamwork)
Mon. 29.09.14/ Tue. 30.09.14
Final Review
Mon. 15.12.14/ Tue. 16.12.14
Concept model free scale (ev. casted)
Volumina model 1:200 (for integration into the area model)
Drawing 1:500 (roof view integrated into the surrounding area)
Drawings 1:200 (one main floor plan, one section, one elevations)
Concept model free scale (ev. casted)
Volumina model 1:200 (for integration into the area model)
Drawing 1:500 (roof view integrated into the surrounding area)
Drawings 1:200 (main floor plans, sections, elevations)
Construction section 1:20 or 1:33 (section with interior elevation and clipping plan)
Layout proposal, final review
Outdoor rendering (sketch)
Explanatory text (5-7 sentences)
Sketchbook (presentation of the project development)
2. Review – Typology (individual)
Mon. 03.11.14/ Tue. 04.11.14
Concept model free scale (ev. casted)
Volumina model 1:200 (for integration into the area model)
Drawing 1:500 (roof view integrated into the surrounding area)
Drawings 1:200 (main floor plans, sections, elevations)
Concept display: Structure (axonometric projection or structure model)
Interior rendering (sketch)
Outdoor rendering
Explanatory text incl. structure report (5-7 sentences)
Sketchbook (presentation of the project development)
Concept: Structure (axonometric projection or structure model)
Interior rendering (sketch)
Outdoor rendering
Explanatory text incl. structure report (5-7 sentences)
Sketchbook (presentation of the project development)
Reduction layout plans delivered in A3 to assistants
Delivered as vector-based PDF file
One-week semester exhibition
Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro 1953
Affonso Eduardo Reidy
3. Review – Tectonics
Mon. 01.12.14/ Tue. 02.12.14
Concept model free scale (ev. casted)
Volumina model 1:200 (for integration into the area model)
Drawing 1:500 (roof view integrated into the surrounding area)
Drawings 1:200 (main floor plans, sections, elevations)
Construction section 1:20 or 1:33 (section with interior elevation and clipping plan)
Layout proposal, final review
24
Concept: Structure (axonometric projection or structure model)
Interior rendering (sketch)
Outdoor rendering
Explanatory text incl. structure report (5-7 sentences)
Sketchbook (presentation of the project development)
25
Study Excursion
POWERFUL SPACES - POWER STATIONS
This years field trip takes us to powerful ‚infrastructural‘ architecture in Bern
and its surroundings. The hydroelectric power station Hagneck (2010-15) as
well as the recently completed sports hall Weissenstein (2008-14) are almost
didactic examples for congruence between space and structure. This is the
results of the fruitful collaboration between the architect Christian Penzel and
the structural engineer Martin Valier. In their project KVA Forsthaus (200812) Graber Pulver (architects) and Carlo Galmarini (engineer) create a power
station as a public building and part of the urban landscape in a transformed
industrial area. Next to it, in an old factory building giuliani.hönger built
(2005-10) two auditoriums and created a very specific learning environment for
the University of Bern. As architects for this university they stand in row with
the great Otto Rudolf Salvisberg and his partner Otto Brechbühl, how built the
Institutsneubauten Baltzerstrasse (1928-31) one of the first fairfaced concrete
buildings in this city.
1
Hagneck
4
5
6
PROGRAMM
Tuesday 07.10.14
09:10
Meeting point: Hagneck train station
09:30-10:40
Hydropower station Hagneck, Christian Penzel (1)
>> introduction Christian Penzel
11:09-12:07
Hagneck > Berne by train
Lunch in Berne
3
13:00-13:45
Sports hall Weissenstein, Christian Penzel (2)
On the way : Loryspital by Otto Rudolf Salvisberg (3)
14:15 - 15:45
KVA power station Berne, Graber Pulver (4)
>> introduction Thomas Pulver
16:00-16:45
Weichenbauhalle University Berne, Giuliani Hönger (5)
>> introduction Christian Hönger
17:00-18:00
Berne
2
Institutsgebäude University Berne, Otto Rudolf Salvisberg (6)
27
Timetable
LOCATION
TIME
GOALS
TEAM
GUEST
CONTENT
Lausanne rail station
07:40
Meeting on railway track
Assist.
-­‐
Handout Booklet
10:30
Meeting at the entrance of the building
Prof./ Assist.
-­‐
Meeting
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
28
Tue. 23.09.14
Mon. 29.09.14
Tue. 30.09.14
Mon. 06.10.14
Tue. 07.10.14
Mon. 13.10.14
13:30 -­‐ 14:30
ZSG Shipyard
14.30 -­‐ 16.30
Studio
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
Studio
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
Ship >> Wollishofen -­‐ Bürkliplatz
Studio
Studio
16.53
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
Topology / Urban form
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist.
-­‐
Topology / Urban form
Hagneck
07:45 -­‐ 12:00
Analyse of strong architecture / 'powerful spaces'
Prof./ Assist.
Christian Penzel
Architecture by Ch. Penzel
Studio
Berne
Studio
Studio
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
13:00 -­‐ 18:00
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
Studio
Studio
Studio
Studio
Studio
13:00 -­ 17:00
18:00 -­ 19:00
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
Tue. 18.11.14
Studio
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
Tue. 25.11.14
Studio
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
To be announced
To be announced
Studio
11:00 -­ 12:00
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
Mo. 15.12.14
Studio
To be announced
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
Tue. 16.12.14
To be announced
8:30 -­ 12:00
8:30 -­ 18:00
Analyse of strong architecture / 'powerful spaces'
Internal review
Internal review
Assist.
Prof./ Assist.
Assist.
-­‐
Tom Pulver, Graber Pulver
-­‐
To be announced
Typology / Spatial organisation / Powerful Space
Architecture by giulianihönger, O. R. Salvisberg, Graber Pulver, Ch. Penzel
Typology / Spatial organisation / Powerful Space
Workshop
Assist.
Guest II
-­‐
Yves Dussellier
Typology / Spatial organisation / Powerful Space
Internal review
Lecture II
Prof./ Assist.
Str. eng
-­‐
Massimo Laffranchi, Fürst Laffranchi
Typology / Spatial organisation / Powerful Space
Internal review
Prof./ Assist.
-­‐
Typology / Spatial organisation / Powerful Space
Internal review
Assist.
-­‐
-­
Typology / Spatial organisation / Powerful Space / Layout
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist.
-­‐
Typology / Spatial organisation / Facade
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist.
-­‐
Tectonics / Construction / Materials / Powerful Space
Internal review
Review II / TYPOLOGY
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
AAC114
Studio
Introduction typology / Internal rewiev
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
Tue. 09.12.14
-­
Topology / Urban form
Review I / TOPOLOGY
Studio
Mon. 08.12.14
-­‐
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
Tue. 02.12.14
Introduction typology / plans / model
-­‐
City tour / Visit
Studio
Studio
Mon. 01.12.14
Assist.
-­‐
-­‐
Topology / Urban form
Tue. 28.10.14
Mon. 24.11.14
Assist.
City tour / Visit
Christoph Wieser
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
Mon. 17.11.14
Internal review Assist.
Sternen Wurst
Matthias Haab, Project Manager ZSG
Guest I
Studio
Tue. 11.11.14
Internal review Assist.
City tour / Visit
Lecture I
AAC114
Mon. 10.11.14
study of the waterfront / lackeshore
Atelier organisation
Assist.
-­‐
Semester & context presentation
16:30 -­ 17:30
Tue. 21.10.14
Tue. 04.11.14
Site and plot study / Photography
All
-­‐
AAC114
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
Mon. 03.11.14
Lunch
Prof./ Assist.
-­‐
Booklet -­‐ Semesterprogram
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist.
Studio
Mon. 27.10.14
Analyse of strong architecture / 'powerful spaces'
Prof./ Assist.
-­‐
Review I / TOPOLOGY
AAC114
Mon. 20.10.14
Semester introduction
Assist.
8:30 -­‐ 18:00
8:30 -­‐ 12:00
Tue. 14.10.14
TOPOLOGY
39
Mon. 22.09.14
12:30 -­‐ 13:30
TYPOLOGY
Tue. 16.09.14
Walking Tour /
Lunch
10:30 -­‐ 12:15
Transfer
SPATIAL ORGANISATION
Mon. 15.09.14
07:50 -­‐ 09:58
Review II / TYPOLOGY
TECTONICS
38
Zürich Sihlhof
Lagerstrasse 5, 8021 Zürich
URBAN FORM >> teamwork
Train >> Lausannne -­‐ Zurich HB
CONSTRUCTION MATERIAL
CALENDER
TRANSPORT PRESENTATION
WEEK
Internal review
Internal review
Internal review
Assist.
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist.
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist.
-­‐
-­‐
Concrete Models
Concrete Structure
Typology / Spatial organisation / Powerful Space / Layout
Typology / Spatial organisation / Facade
Tectonics / Construction / Materials / Powerful Space
Lecture III
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist.
Guest III
-­‐
Aldo Nolli, Nolli Durisch
Tectonics / Construction / Materials / Powerful Space
Internal review
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist.
-­‐
Tectonics / Construction / Materials / Powerful Space
Internal review
Assist.
-­‐
-­
Tectonics / Construction / Materials / Powerful Space / Layout
Prof./ Assist.
-­‐
Tectonics / Construction / Materials / Powerful Space
Assist.
-­‐
Project / Presentation / Layout
Internal review
Review III TECTONICS
Review III TECTONICS
Internal review
Internal review
Final review
Final review
Assist.
Prof./ Assist.
Assist.
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist. / Guest
Prof. / Str. eng / Assist. / Guest
-­‐
-­‐
Andrea Bassi
Daniel Niggli, EM2N
Architecture by Nolli Durisch
Tectonics / Construction / Materials / Powerful Space / Layout
Tectonics / Construction / Materials / Powerful Space
Project / Presentation / Layout
TOPOLOGY / TYPOLOGY / TECTONICS / P0WERFUL SPACE
TOPOLOGY / TYPOLOGY / TECTONICS / POWERFUL SPACE
mmeier / rdunant / 20.08.2014
29
References
Baths of Caracallae, Rome 212-216 AD
Unknow
32
Hagia Sophia, Istambul 537-1453
Various
33
Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Florenz 1523–1572
Michelangelo
34
Palazzo Barberini, Rome 1628-33
Francesco Borromini
35
Bibliothèque Nationale (project), Paris 1785
Etienne-Louis Boullée
36
Austrian Post Office Savings Bank, Vienna 1904–1906
Otto Wagner
37
S.C. Johnson & Son, Wax Building, Wisconsin 1936-39 Frank Lloyd Wright
38
Hipódromo de la Zarzuela, Madrid 1935-41 Eduardo Torroja
39
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York 1943-52
Frank Lloyd Wright
40
Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro 1953
Affonso Eduardo Reidy
41
Church of Our Lady, Mexico, 1953-55
Felix Candela
42
National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo, 1954-57
Le Corbusier
43
Jardin Ipe Elementary School , Brazil 1965
Decio Tozzi
44
FAU-USP Faculty of Architecture, São Paulo, 1961-69
João Batista Vilanova Artigas
45
Papal Audience Hall, Vatican City, Rome 1963-71
Pier Luigi and Antonio Nervi
46
Administrativ Center, Pantin-Paris, 1963-72
Kalisz & Perrottet
47
Burroughs Wellcome Company, North Carolina 1969-72 Paul Rudolph
48
National Assembly of Bangladesh, Dhaka 1962-73
49
Louis I. Kahn
Danish National Bank Copenhagen, Denmark 1966-78 Arne Jacobsen
50
SESC Pompeia, São Paulo, 1977-86
Lina Bo Bardi
51
Museum La Congiunta, Giornico Switzerland 1989-92
Peter Märkli
52
Kirchner Museum, Davos Switzerland, 1989-92
Gigon Guyer
53
Sport hall, Losone Switzerland 1995-1997
Livio Vacchini
54
Museum Küppersmühle MKM, Germany, 1997-99
Herzog & de Meuron
55
Schaulager ,Munchenstein Basel 1998-03
Herzog & de Meuron
56
Long Museum , Xuhui, Shanghai 2011-14
Atelier Deshaus
57
University of Applied Sciences, St.Gallen 2003-13
giuliani.hönger
58
FAU-USP, Faculty of Architecture, São Paulo, 1961-69
João Batista Vilanova Artigas
31
Baths of Caracallae, Rome 212-216 AD
Unknow
Section
Perspective
32
Hagia Sophia, Istambul 537-1453
Isidore, Anthemius, Tiridates, Astras, Peralta, a.o.
Section
View of the interior
33
Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Florenz 1523–1572
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti
Section
View in the vestibule with staircase
34
Palazzo Barberini, Rome 1628-33
Francesco Borromini
Section through staircase
View in the staircase
35
Bibliothèque Nationale (project), Paris 1785
Etienne-Louis Boulllée
Section
Perspective
36
Austrian Post Office Savings Bank, Vienna 1904–1906
Otto Wagner
Section
View in Grand Kassenhalle
37
S.C. Johnson & Son, Wax Building, Racine Wisconsin 1936-39
Frank Lloyd Wright
Section
Great Workroom
38
Hipódromo de la Zarzuela, Madrid 1935-41
Eduardo Torroja (ing.)
Section of the structure
Space under the
39
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York 1943-52
Frank Lloyd Wright
Section
Exposition space in construction
40
Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro 1953
Affonso Eduardo Reidy
Section
Exposition space in construction
41
Church of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, Narvarte Mexico, 1953-55
Felix Candela
National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo, 1954-57
Le Corbusier
Isometry of the structure
Section
Interior (in construction)
Exposition central space
42
43
Jardin Ipe Elementary School, São Bernardo do Campo , Brazil 1965
Decio Tozzi
Section
Interior view
44
FAU-USP, Faculty of Architecture, São Paulo 1961-69
João Batista Vilanova Artigas
Section
Central hall
45
Paolo VI - Papal Audience Hall, Vatican City, Rome 1963-71
Pier Luigi and Antonio Nervi
Section
Hall in construction
46
Administrativ Center, Pantin-Paris, 1963-72
Kalisz & Perrottet
Section with ramps
Entrance hall with circulations
47
Burroughs Wellcome Company, North Carolina 1969-72
Paul Rudolph
Section perspective
Interior circulation and work space
48
National Assembly of Bangladesh, Dhaka 1962-73
Louis I. Kahn
Longitudinal section
View in the Garden Entrance Hall
49
Danish National Bank Copenhagen, Denmark 1966-78
Arne Jacobsen
Section
View in the entrance hall
50
SESC Pompeia, São Paulo, 1977-86
Lina Bo Bardi
Plan
Refurbished shed
51
Museum La Congiunta, Giornico Switzerland 1989-92
Peter Märkli
Longitudinal section
Exposition spaces
52
Kirchner Museum, Davos Switzerland, 1989-92
Gigon Guyer
Longitudinal section
Circulation spaces
53
Sport hall, Losone Switzerland 1995-1997
Livio Vacchini
Perspective section
Sport hall
54
Museum Küppersmühle MKM, Duisburg Germany, 1997-99
Herzog & de Meuron
Section
Stairwell in concrete
55
Schaulager ,Munchenstein Basel 1998-03
Herzog & de Meuron
Section
Interior view
56
Long Museum , Xuhui, Shanghai 2011-14
Atelier Deshaus
Floor plan
Exposition rooms
57
University of Applied Sciences, St.Gallen 2003-13
giuliani.hönger
Section
View in the library
Construction section
58
59
Bibliography
Bötticher Karl: Die Tektonik der Hellenen, Potsdam 1844, in: Stilhülse und Kern,
Werner Oechslin (Ed.), Zurich: gta Verlag, Berlin: Ernst&Sohn Berlin, 1994, p.180-187
Deplazes, Andrea, (Ed.): Concrete. In: Constructing Architecture – A Handbook, Basel,
Boston, Berlin: Birkhäuser – Publisher for Architecture, 2008, P. 57-77
Fürst, Armand and Laffranchi Massimo: Ways to innovative solutions, in: Dialog der
Konstrukteure, Architekturforum Zürich and A. Flury (Eds.), Niggli, 2010, p. 113-118
Gargiani Roberto, Rosellini Anna, Beton Brut and Ineffable Space (1940 1965): Surface
Materials and Psychophysiology of Vision (Essays in Architecture), Edition Detail 2014
Giuliani Lorenzo and Hönger Christian: Schnittwerk, Zurich: gta Verlag, 2010, p. 14-23
Kind-Barkauskas F., Kauhsen B., Polónyi S.,Brandt J.: Beton Atlas: Entwerfen mit
Stahlbeton im Hochbau, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag 2001. In particular: Entwicklung der
Betontechnologie, p.9-17
Kind-Barkauskas F., Kauhsen B., Polónyi S.,Brandt J.: Beton Atlas: Entwerfen mit
Stahlbeton im Hochbau, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag 2001. In particular: Stahlbeton in der
Architektur der Moderne, p. 18-43
Kahn Louis I., Architecture Comes from the Making of a Room, Drawing for City/2
exhibition, 1971
Lucan Jacques, Hypothèse pour une spatialité texturée, in: matières numéro 9 - l’espace
architectural 2008, Herausgeber: Faculté Environnement naturel, architectural et
construit ENAC, Institute d’architecture et de la ville IA und Laboratoire de théorie et
d’histoire LTH, p.06-17
Pouillon Fernand, Architecte méditerranéen, Marseille 2001, S. 19
Schmarsow August, The essence of architectural creation 1893,
unter: http://bibliodarq.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/schmarsow-a-the-essence-ofarchitectural-creation.pdf
Šik Miroslav, And now the Ensemble!!!, Lars Mueller Publishers GmbH Zurich 2012
Phillips Exeter Academy Library, Exeter New Hampshire USA 1965-71
Louis I. Kahn
61
Team
Lorenzo Giuliani
Born 1962 in St.Moritz, 1988 Diploma ETHZ, Prof. Ernst Studer; Assistent to Prof. Ernst
Studer, ETH Zurich, ; Assistent to Prof. Dr. André Corboz (Urbanism), ETH Zurich, 199193; since 1995 Professorship at ZHAW Winterthur (Architecture and Urbanism); since 1998
Professorship at ZHAW Winterthur (Design); since 2003 Professor at the ZHAW; since 1991
own pratice with Christian Hönger; Member of BSA, SIA; 2006 Exhibition: giuliani.hönger
at the Institut GTA ETH Zurich; 2010 Exhibition: Schnittwerk at the Aedes Galerie in Berlin.
Christian Hönger
Born 1959 in Zurich; Architectural Studies at Technikum Winterthur 1979-1982, Diploma
1982; Architectural Studies at ETH Zurich, 1983-1987; Diploma 1987, Prof. D. Schnebli;
Assistent to Prof. E. Studer (Design) ETH Zurich, 1990-1993; Assistent by Dr. B. Klein
(Urbanism) ETH Zurich, 1993-1994; Professorship (Design) at the FHNW, Basel, 19992003; Professor (Design) at the HSLU Luzern, since 1991 own pratice with Lorenzo Giuliani;
Member of BSA, SIA; 2006 Exhibition: giuliani.hönger at the Institut GTA ETH Zurich;
2010 Exhibition: Schnittwerk at the Aedes Galerie in Berlin.
Armand Fürst
Born 1965 in Wolfwil, 1989 Diploma as Structural Engineer HTL Bürgdorf; 1992 Diploma
ETH Gold Mention; employed by Engineers Grignoli Martinola Muttoni in Lugano, 19921994; Assistent to Prof. Dr. P. Marti, ETH Zurich, 994-2000; 2000 Dr. D. ETH with Theme
„Pre-stressed tension member of concrete for Bridge“, under Prof. Dr. P. Marti, ETH Zurich;
since 2000 own practice together with Dr. Massimo Laffranchi; Member of SIA; Member
of the SIA-Norms Committee; President of the Committee of Research about Structures
FEDRO (Federal Road Office), 2006-2011.
Structure test of the mexican shell
Felix Candela
Massimo Laffranchi
Born 1969 in Bellinzona, 1993 Diploma Structural Engineer ETH, 1993-99 Assistent to
Prof. Dr. P. Marti, ETH Zurich; 1999 Ph.D. ETH, focusing on the conception of curved
bridges, under Prof. Dr. P. Marti, ETH Zurich; employed by engineers Stocker & Partner
in Bern, 1999-2001; since 2000 own practice together with Dr. Armand Fürst; Member of
SIA; Member of the SIA-Norms Committee; 2007 Best Teaching Award at the Accademia
di architettura di Mendrisio; Professor at the Accademia di architettura di Mendrisio,
2000-2009; Professor for Reinforced Concrete Structures at Accademia di architettura di
Mendrisio, 2009-13; since 1995 collaboration with the Society Historic Civil Engineering,
since 2006 Commitee Member.
Michael Meier
Born 1981 in Bern; Psychology studies, University of Bern, 2002-03; Architectural studies,
Zurich / Glasgow, 2003-08; 2008 Diploma ETHZ, Prof. Josep Lluis Mateo, 2009; 2006
Intern at Barkow Leibinger, Berlin; 2010 Study trip to New York / Chicago,
Erich Degen-Stiftung; Project leader, Jessen + Vollenweider, Basel, 2009-13; since 2012
Partner SAAS, Geneva.
Raphaël Dunant
Born 1979 in Lausanne, Architectural Draughtsman Internship 1995-99; CMS EPF
Lausanne 1999-01; Draughtsman at CCHE Lausanne, Bauzeit Bienne, Hoyer Schindele
Berlin; Architectural studies at ETH Zurich 2002-09; Diploma ETHZ, Prof. Markus Peter,
2009; Junior Architect at Penzel gmbh, Zurich, 2006; Project leader assistant at Graber
Pulver Architects Zurich 2009-14; 2014 own architectural practice in Geneva.
62
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Address
EPFL ENAC Architecture
Building SG 2210 / Station 15
CH - 1015 Lausanne
+41 21 693 59 64
www.giulianihoenger.epfl.ch
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