IV International Student Competition: A Pavilion for MiamiResults Student Gold Rebeca Rios Pico, Universidad Marista Ciudad Mexico Student Silver Julieta Jimenez Perez, Universidad Marista Ciudad Mexico Student Honorable Mention Elizabeth Lopez Romero, Universidad Marista Ciudad Mexico Student Honorable Mention B Alejandro Lopez Vele and Raul Gonzalez FIU ____________ Announcement SPONSOR: Bienal Miami+Beach 2007 TYPE: Open, international, student, RfP LOCATION: Miami, FL LANGUAGE: English TIMETABLE: 30 Sep 2007 – Registration Deadline 01 Nov 2007 – Submission Deadline ELIGIBILITY: Students of Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Interior Design JURY: To Be Announced AWARDS: $1,000 at the jury’s discretion FEE: None THE COMPETITION: The Miami Chapter of the American Institute of Architects and the Bienal Miami + Beach announce the design competition for the interior of a Pavilion of 200 sq. ft. representing the city of Miami in the 2009 AIA National Convention to be held in San Francisco. The pavilion will be the main feature advertising the Miami 2010 AIA national convention. The selected project will be built following the winning design, and will eventually be reused in Miami as a welcoming and information booth. Designers are asked to consider issues of modularity, construction, lighting, sound, and electronic/digital media as much as cultural and image issues. Competition advisor: G.Stanley Collyer Jr. Ph.D., Competitions Magazine ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Inquiries and submissions: Attn: Jaime Canaves FAIA, IIDA 275 University Drive Coral Gables, FL 33134 USA Tel: (305) 348 3031 Fax: (305) 348 2650 director@bienalmiami.com http://www.bienalmiami.com |
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia Competition  Image: ©KPMB Architects Not to be outdone by other Canadian provincial capitals, Halifax has chosen to make its own ambitious museum statement on the city’s waterfront. New museums in Vancouver, BC, Calgary and Fredericton, New Brunswick, the latter two by KPMB Architects, are either in development or already under construction. Saskatoon’s Remai Modern by KPMB and OMA’s Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec in Montréal were more recently completed, and Vancouver’s new Art Museum by Herzog & de Meuron is still under development. Read more… Young Architects in Competitions When Competitions and a New Generation of Ideas Elevate Architectural Quality  by Jean-Pierre Chupin and G. Stanley Collyer published by Potential Architecture Books, Montreal, Canada 2020 271 illustrations in color and black & white Available in PDF and eBook formats ISBN 9781988962047 What do the Vietnam Memorial, the St. Louis Arch, and the Sydney Opera House have in common? These world renowned landmarks were all designed by architects under the age of 40, and in each case they were selected through open competitions. At their best, design competitions can provide a singular opportunity for young and unknown architects to make their mark on the built environment and launch productive, fruitful careers. But what happens when design competitions are engineered to favor the established and experienced practitioners from the very outset? This comprehensive new book written by Jean-Pierre Chupin (Canadian Competitions Catalogue) and Stanley Collyer (COMPETITIONS) highlights for the crucial role competitions have played in fostering the careers of young architects, and makes an argument against the trend of invited competitions and RFQs. The authors take an in-depth look at past competitions won by young architects and planners, and survey the state of competitions through the world on a region by region basis. The end result is a compelling argument for an inclusive approach to conducting international design competitions. Download Young Architects in Competitions for free at the following link: https://crc.umontreal.ca/en/publications-libre-acces/ Urban Adaptation Competition  Image ©Francesco Allaixand Julio Orduña Recently we are beginning to see a resurgence of wood as a primary building material, not only for detached residential housing, but also for multi-family and commercial urban structures. Masonry, steel, and composite materials are still the bread and butter of the construction industry; but wood may be making serious inroads into the future of commercial buildings. Yes, we have seen the use of wood in interiors of large buildings: one of the more impressive projects being that of the Christ the Light Cathedral by SOM in Oakland, California. Read more…  Aerial view of site – Courtesy National Finnish Museum When major cultural institutions in Finland plan a new building project, one can almost always assume that an open competition will be the vehicle by which the client settles on the building’s design. The only question is, will this be organized in a format open to local, Scandinavian, or international architects. In the case of the National Museum of Finland annex competition, it was open to architects throughout the world — resulting in 185 entries. Read more…
The Opening of Taichung’s Central Park by Catherine Mosbach/Philippe Rahm
 View from the south with downtown Taichung in the distance image: ©Mosbach/Rahm
The abandonment and closing of airports, including decommissioning those that were used for military purposes, has presented design communities with several opportunities to convert them entirely to civilian purposes. Notable among those which have been the result of competitions are Orange County Great Park, Irvine, California (Ken Smith Landscape Architects), The Estonian National Museum (Dan Dorell, Lina Ghotmeh and Tsuyoshi Tane), and Toronto’s less successful Downsview Park competition, whereby the winning design by OMA, with trees as the primary feature, has been basically ignored. Instead, the area has become the site of numerous commercial and residential projects.
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