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Posts Tagged ‘richard meier’

na/blog > últimos posts… 10/07 al 16/07/10

17 de julio de 2010 Via externa Comments off

na/blog > últimos posts… 10/07 al 16/07/10

Arquitectura

10/07 al 16/07/10 > Londres > Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2010, Jean Nouvel… video / Richard Meier Model Museum, Long Island City / Expo Shanghai 2010 > Pabellón de Alemania, Schmidhuber + Kaindl….
Arquitectura Diaria – http://www.arquitecturadiaria.com/
http://www.arquitecturadiaria.com/2010/07/16/nablog-ultimos-posts-1007-al-160710/

arquitectura

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Richard Meier Model Museum, Long Island City

14 de julio de 2010 Via externa Comments off

Richard Meier Model Museum, Long Island City

+ info e imágenes > Wallpaper*

Post relacionado > ‘Meier Model Museum

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Arquitectura urbana

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AAA: Architecture Advertising Automobiles

10 de junio de 2010 Via externa Comments off

AAA: Architecture Advertising Automobiles
Last year I posted about some advertising in Architectural Digest that used architects and architecture to sell cars. Well the other day I was flipping through a travel magazine and was surprised to see an ad for Buick Lacrosse using the America’s Cup Building in Valencia, Spain by David Chipperfield Architects. In my previous post I focused on how Lexus used the architect’s name (Richard Meier) more than his architecture for their purposes; in effect the architect was promoting the car. But for Buick it is the image of the building that matters; the architect in name or personality is nowhere to be found outside the architecture.

buick-sm.jpg
[Click image for larger view | image source]

Remembering other advertisements with cars using architecture as a backdrop (I blogged five years ago about VW and OMA’s Seattle Public Library), I think the America’s Cup Building works similarly here: it does a better job of distinguishing a car from its peers than the car does itself. Given that cars increasingly look like each other and buildings do the opposite and veer greatly in form and image from their contemporaries, this makes sense. In Buick’s case, the stacked horizontality of the building and the photo’s strong perspective enable the car and its rounded lines to stand out and be seen as something unique. (I’m assuming it’s a photograph because the building is complete, but the high level of polish of the images makes me wonder if it’s a rendering). It’s like a zig-zag with the building “going” one way (to the left) and the car the other way.

But beyond a two-dimensional graphic composition on the page or screen, I’m having a hard time seeing how architecture and automobiles relate in this and other ads. I think, like anything, architecture is seen as just another commodity and buildings are appreciated for its imagery more than its other traits (function, relationship to place, social role, etc.). Chipperfield’s building is not a totally uninspired choice, but it does veer from the curvilinear and dynamic shapes of Gehry, OMA, and Morphosis, whose buildings are more in line with the formal characteristic of today’s cars.

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Arquitectura urbana

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‘Meier Model Museum’

25 de mayo de 2010 Via externa Comments off

‘Meier Model Museum’
Más imágenes publicadas en: Cool Hunting / Archidose / Architizer

Richard Meier

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Meier Model Museum

23 de mayo de 2010 Via externa Comments off

Meier Model Museum
About a block from the East River and the Pepsi sign in Long Island City is the Richard Meier Model Museum. Its presence is subtly discerned by a sign rendered in the familiar typographics and abundant white space that graces the architect’s monographs, web page and everything else with the architect’s stamp of approval.

Richard Meier Model Museum
[the unassuming front door to the Richard Meier Model Museum]

Yesterday I was fortunate enough to attend a press tour of the museum with the architect himself, a day before it reopens to the public for its 2010 season. Below are some photographs I shot and some commentary on the 3,600sf space featuring works from the 1960s to the present.

Richard Meier Model Museum
[view of the museum from the direction of the entrance]

Entering the third floor museum, the primarily wood models stand out in the all-white space. About half of the square footage is occupied by Getty Center models, from small-scale studies to a huge highly detailed, 16-piece model (foreground above) and an inhabitable gallery space used for studying daylighting (background above). The effect is certainly overwhelming, further elevating the significance of the master architect.

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Book Review: Great Public Squares

23 de mayo de 2010 Via externa Comments off

Book Review: Great Public Squares
Great Public Squares: An Architect’s Selection by Robert F. Gatje
W. W. Norton, 2010
Hardcover, 224 pages

book-gatje.jpg

At a time when architecture books tend to focus on buildings, the objects that inhabit cities, it’s refreshing to see a book squarely focused on public space, pardon the pun. Robert F. Gatje, a former partner of both Marcel Breuer and Richard Meier, has assembled plans, photos, stats and descriptions on forty squares, most in Europe. Inspired by Camillo Sitte and other authors of books on urban spaces, the CAD-generated plans are rendered consistently (per the cover) and at the same scale, accompanied by dimensions, areas and other data in an effort to make the book a comparative study. Lest the book get bogged down in top-down views of city plans, the photos and descriptions go a long way towards giving readers a sense of what each space is like, while also providing historical information on the mostly old spaces (the most recent is Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland, Oregon, here marked by the construction start of 1981).

The lack of contemporary spaces makes me wonder if and why squares cannot be designed to the same effect as the ones presented here. Is it due to the quality and style of the buildings that overlook the squares? Is it the design of the spaces themselves? Or maybe the lack of decent spaces in cities for creating new squares? One need only look at the Project for Public Space’s Hall of Shame to see that new spaces are perceived as lacking in a number of ways (empty, unsafe, uninviting, etc.). Most of the members of the less-than-illustrious list are modernist and later creations, many surrounded by newer developments or within the post-industrial landscape of cities. While PPS’s list is certainly debatable, the apparent link between urban squares and the urban fabric around them is hard to deny. This is most strongly felt in Italy, from which 15 of the 40 squares in the book come. This link points to the importance of the larger context in the success of these urban spaces, not the comparative data that Gatje presents.

So Gatje has delivered a carefully and lovingly crafted book that can be seen as an homage to western history‘s greatest public squares, or as a lesson on how public squares can be created in a less “shameful” way. Living in New York City, I can’t help but think that a number of potentially great squares exist, such as Gansevoort Plaza in the Meatpacking District and the pedestrian zones in Times Square. But as is, devoid of the care required to make them great as well as popular, the spaces merely set aside, not designed. Investments towards implementing more permanent and careful designs need to happen. When they do, Gatje’s book is a very good place to learn from the successes of the past.

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Richard Meier

6 de febrero de 2010 TS No comments
Richard Meier (1934) es un arquitecto estadounidense de origen judío. Nació en Newark, sitio web de su oficina www.richardmeier.com

Richard Meier, es un Arquitecto de armonía y líneas puras en sus obras , se resiste a cualquier tendencia que sea moda o estilos temporales que al final no llegan a una elegancia exigida por su mentalidad , al principio se destaco por su estilo único , con el tiempo fue variando según han sido las necesidades de los proyectos según sus funcione, algunas de sus obras podemos ver en la siguiente galería , le he adjuntado a casa proyecto una imagen , para que así no se vuelvan locos buscando por internet.

algunas fuentes de imagenes e informacion usadas

richardmeier.com

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Casa Douglas

4 de febrero de 2010 TS No comments
Ubicación en contexto de Casa Douglas

Ubicación en contexto de la Casa Douglas

Richar Meier, es el Arquitecto autor de la Casa Douglas, esta casa tiene la característica especial de mezclarse con el paisaje a través de sus muros transparentes , de interior a exterior atrapan todo el entorno para hacerlo parte del paisaje a través de la pregnancia visual que se genera para el observador del proyecto, además de estar estratégicamente ubicado en una cerro , para así dominar visualmente el paisaje.

Arquitecto: Richard Meier

Año de construcción: 1971 – 1973

Ubicación: Harbor Springs, Michigan, Estados Unidos