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Wood & Architecture: The Latest Architecture and News

Hello Wood’s Builder Summit Experiments with Construction Techniques to Revive an Abandoned Quarry in Hungary

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After a three-year break, Hello Wood’s builder festival returns to welcome students, architects, and young professionals from all across the world to join the 10-day builder camp to test their wooden construction abilities, learn to collaborate, and participate actively in on-site design and construction. For the first time in Hello Wood’s 13-year history, this year’s workshop takes place at a new location, in the crater of an abandoned basalt quarry on Haláp Mountain in Hungary. The workshop also aligns with and supports Veszprém’s title of 2023 European Capital of Culture, which also includes over a hundred other villages and towns across the Bakony-Balaton region. The event took place between July 6 and 15, ending in a two-day music festival open to all.

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Stockholm Wood City: Construction of the World's Largest Urban Development Project in Wood to Begin in 2025

Atrium Ljungberg has just revealed Stockholm Wood City – the world's largest urban construction project in wood. Construction on the project is expected to begin in 2025, and the first buildings are expected to be completed in 2027. The initiative is a demonstration of Swedish sustainability.

The largest wood-building project in the world is now in progress, covering an impressive 250,000 square meters. The project sets a sustainable example for the real estate market, which is essential because built structures contribute a sizeable 40% of the world's CO2 emissions. Furthermore, Stockholm Wood City is set to become a turning point in sustainable architecture and urban planning. Situated in Sickla, southern Stockholm, this innovative neighborhood will offer an additional 2,000 houses and 7,000 business spaces. By merging workplaces, homes, neighborhoods, dining establishments, and retail spaces, it aims to create a vibrant and dynamic urban environment.

Construction Works Begin on Shigeru Ban's Hybrid Residential Tower in Belgium

Shigeru Ban has just launched the office’s most recent project in Nieuw Zuid in Antwerp, Belgium. Named Ban, after its creator, and in collaboration with Bureau Bouwtechniek, the complex puts in place a 25-story residential tower and a separate building, creating a total of 295 residential units. During the breaking ground ceremony, the architect also inaugurated an exhibition of images highlighting his humanitarian work in conflict and disaster areas, in near proximity to the construction site.

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Mexican Interiors: 25 Spaces That Make Integral Use of Wood

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Over the years, interior design has evolved according to the needs that arise, but above all according to the experiences that we seek to provoke in the user. In the last two years, we have witnessed a radical change and a special interest in this subject because the pandemic forced us to pay specific attention to the configuration of the places we inhabit. This brought about much more holistic designs that cater to the wellbeing of the user, combining colors, sensory experiences, technology, and natural elements that promote health.

Leclercq Associés Explores the Use of Wood in Urban Architecture and Assesses The Future of Wood Construction

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To wholly document a survey on the state of French forests, the wood industry, and forestry R&D, François Leclercq and Paul Laigle, from the architecture and urban planning practice Leclercq Associés, are in collaboration with architecture editor Michèle Leloup and photographer Cyrille Weiner.

The Wood That Makes Our Cities explores the environmental, economic, industrial, and technical challenges involved in the use of wood for large structures and urban architecture and assesses the future of wood construction. The book retraces the practice’s twenty years of experience with wood construction through five of its projects, featuring contributions by historians, researchers, manufacturers, timber producers, and forestry specialists.

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"I Want My Places to Come Alive": In conversation with Brian Mac

American architect Brian Mac grew up near Detroit. He graduated from the Architecture School at the University of Detroit in 1988 and for the next five years worked for a preservationist firm, Quinn Evans Architects in Ann Arbor. There he learned to love historic architectural detailing, and, while working at the firm, in 1992, became a licensed architect. Then followed a short period of disillusion with the profession and moving to Ohio to work in a residential treatment center for adolescent felony offenders.

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24mm Plywood House / Alphaville Architects

24mm Plywood House / Alphaville Architects - Exterior Photography, Houses24mm Plywood House / Alphaville Architects - Interior Photography, Houses, Beam24mm Plywood House / Alphaville Architects - Interior Photography, Houses24mm Plywood House / Alphaville Architects - Interior Photography, Houses, Beam24mm Plywood House / Alphaville Architects - More Images+ 16

Kyoto, Japan
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  30
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2021
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  LIXIL , Panasonic, Sanwa
  • Professionals: 1050 Architects

PHASE DANCE / Takeshi Hirobe Architects

PHASE DANCE / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Exterior Photography, House InteriorsPHASE DANCE / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, House Interiors, Beam, Table, ChairPHASE DANCE / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, House Interiors, ChairPHASE DANCE / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, House Interiors, Beam, TablePHASE DANCE / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - More Images+ 37

House in URAWA / Kazuya Saito Architects

House in URAWA / Kazuya Saito Architects - Exterior Photography, HousesHouse in URAWA / Kazuya Saito Architects - Interior Photography, Houses, Door, BeamHouse in URAWA / Kazuya Saito Architects - Interior Photography, Houses, Kitchen, Stairs, Door, Handrail, Sink, CountertopHouse in URAWA / Kazuya Saito Architects - Interior Photography, Houses, Bedroom, Beam, BedHouse in URAWA / Kazuya Saito Architects - More Images+ 20

Saitama, Japan

Tieno Designs an Eco-Friendly City Block Constructed From Timber

The “Bosco” design schematic utilizes timber construction and ecological design practices to create a multi-sided residential city block. Not only are the private domestic spaces important, but the definition of ‘living space’ is expanded to include private outdoor and shared spaces.

In this way, the wood exterior becomes an extension of the interior. The use of timber, throughout, and the simple language of Bosco’s underlying geometric forms create a well-articulated and homogeneous ensemble of housing components.

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16 Mexican Projects That Use Wood in Wondrous Ways

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Wood has been an indispensable material in the history of civilization. Different regions from around the world have used it for specific climatic conditions. Mexico, as we have mentioned on several occasions, is an extensive country where different climates, resources and ways of life fit. Therefore the application of wood in architecture has been developed in a number of ways, from its structural use to produce roofs for Mayan huts to projects that seek to revive vernacular architecture.

While the handling of this material is difficult due to its specific detail management, it presents a multitude of benefits from its aesthetic appeal, air circulation, and even smell. Take a look at 16 Mexican projects that use wood in wondrous ways.