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20131214

Japanese House #1

Been meaning to start a Japanese house series. Let's start with this one, seems like tsunami-ready:

© Toshiyuki Yano

© Toshiyuki Yano

© Toshiyuki Yano

© Toshiyuki Yano

The House of Yagi in Hiroshima, Japan by suppose design office. Via ArchDaily.

20131125

MAS Context 19: Trace

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"This issue explores physical remnants and selective memories, tangible and intangible reminders of a past that influence our present and future. At the same time, it discusses the traces that we continue to leave, both physical and digitally, and how those will affect us in the future. What are the consequences and opportunities that can emerge from the new traces we create? Who benefits from the generation of new traces? Which traces should we embrace and which ones should we dismiss or even fight against? Is ignoring all traces the only way to truly move forward and foster radical changes?"
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+ Download pdf via mascontext.
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20130925

House in the Asian Tropics 17

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Shigeru Ban's Villa Vista in Weligama, Sri Lanka. Via Inhabitat. Photos by Hiroyuki Hirai.
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20130822

20130731

MAS Context 18: Improbable

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"Unlikely futures envisioned in the past that never became a present. Improbable situations that, beating the odds, became the most tangible reality. Ambitious, grandiose and experimental, all these dreams and schemes radically challenged their present and envisioned a new future. They outlined principles for collective ambitions, defining new physical, political, economic and social organizations. Whether realized or not, these proposals hold valuable lessons for our present and future."
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MAS Context 17: Boundary

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''We all set our personal and physical boundaries. They are important to keep us running as well as sane. Other boundaries, established by people, countries or nature are used to define edges, separate two entities, and interrupt natural flows such as human migrations and ecosystems. Natural and artificial boundaries exist and will continue to do so in one way or another. Is it possible, then, to rethink what a boundary is, what its potential in our society can be, and if we even need them?''
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20130604

House in the Asian Tropics 15

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The Nest is a house in Vietnamese province of Binh Duong. Architecture by a21studio. Photography by Hiroyuki Oki. Via Dezeen.

20130504

House in the Asian Tropics 14

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Photo by Invy and Eric Ng
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Photo by Albert Lim K.S.
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Photo by Albert Lim K.S.
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Shophouse in Singapore by CHANG Architects. Via archdaily brasil.
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House in the American Tropics 15

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A House in Bragança Paulista, Brazil by Centro Arquitetura. Via archdaily. Photography by Pregnolato and Kusuki.
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20130313

G+ House Shadow Study

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Hourly time lapse showing shadow cast on north elevation
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Monthly time lapse showing shadow cast on north elevation
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20130221

House in the Asian Tropics 13

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W House in Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand by IDIN Architects. Photography by Spaceshift Studio. Via Contemporist.
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20130220

House in the Asian Tropics 12

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'Wonderwall' house in Chang Mai, Thailand by SO Architects. Photography by Piyawut Srisakul. Via ArchDaily. 

20130214

[AD201302_03] The Innovation Imperative: Architectures of Vitality

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Innovation has become the golden goose of the 21st century, as expressed by Barack Obama in his presidential victory speech on 7 November 2012 in Chicago: "We want our kids to grow up in a country... that lives up to its legacy as the global leader in technology and discovery and innovation with all of the good jobs and new businesses that follow." For stagnating developed economies, innovation remains the great white hope—the essential stimulus to ongoing prosperity sought through entrepreneurship, Internet startups and biotech, software and hardware companies.
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For the practice of architecture, no simple equation exists between innovation and commercial success. Most truly innovative designers are not purely motivated by wealth. In contemporary architecture, innovation
is a life force. Architecture thrives off the impulse to innovate. At a day-to-day level it is what elevates architecture beyond mere building production, and the original and analytical thinking that makes clients
come back for more, while making us reach for our smart phone to see the latest architectural project on Facebook. What guest-editors Pia Ednie-Brown, Mark Burry and Andrew Burrow bring to this issue is a
new clarity and tautness to the definition of 'innovation' in architecture. Their subtitle for the publication—'architectures of vitality'—chimes with notions of emergence, but also of architecture as a collective practice in tune with current processes and cultural shifts.
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What drew AD to the theme of this issue—aside from the opportunity to work with key members of the Spatial Information Architecture Laboratory (SIAL) at RMIT in Melbourne—was its timeliness. The innovation imperative today requires a greater intensity than it might have 50 years ago. As the guest-editors state in their introduction: "The urge to examine innovation more closely—and in relation to architecture in particular—is inflected by the broadly defining conditions of rapid change we find ourselves in." A new level  of ingenuity is called upon not only to keep in step with shifts in technology, but also to retain architecture's relevance at a time of economic, social, environmental and political change.
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—Helen Castle
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20130106

MAS Context 16

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"MAS Context, a quarterly journal created by MAS Studio, addresses issues that affect the urban context. Each issue delivers a comprehensive view of a single topic through the active participation of people from different fields and different perspectives who, together, instigate the debate."
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