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Residential Architecture: The Latest Architecture and News

The Future of Brick: Biodegradable And Bacterial

MoMA’s PS1 exhibit in Queens is a showcase for young architects with lofty ideas. This year’s winning firm “The Living” designed "Hi-Fy" - a biodegradable brick tower. Although the idea might seem far-fetched for housing, the idea is gaining traction. North Carolina start-up bioMason, recently won the Cradle to Cradle Product Innovation Challenge for their “biodegradable bricks.” So Kieron Monks at CNN had to ask the question, would you live in a house made of sand, bacteria or fungi? Find out the benefits of these modern bricks here.

Planning Finally Granted for Chelsea Barracks Scheme

A design by Squire and Partners for the controversial Chelsea Barracks site has been approved for planning. The approval comes five years after an earlier scheme by Richard Rogers was derailed by Prince Charles, sparking a row over what some perceived as the Prince abusing his status by bypassing proper planning procedure. Since then the plans were put on hold due to the UK's poor economy, before being resurrected last year.

Read more about the new plans after the break

ZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU

ZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - ApartmentsZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - ApartmentsZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - ApartmentsZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - ApartmentsZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - More Images+ 24

Trollbeads House / BBP Arkitekter

Trollbeads House / BBP Arkitekter - Houses, Facade
© Jens Lindhe
Copenhagen, Denmark

Trollbeads House / BBP Arkitekter - Houses, Facade, DoorTrollbeads House / BBP Arkitekter - Houses, FacadeTrollbeads House / BBP Arkitekter - Houses, FacadeTrollbeads House / BBP Arkitekter - Houses, Table, ChairTrollbeads House / BBP Arkitekter - More Images+ 31

Love Building / CHT Architects

Love Building / CHT Architects - ApartmentsLove Building / CHT Architects - ApartmentsLove Building / CHT Architects - ApartmentsLove Building / CHT Architects - ApartmentsLove Building / CHT Architects - More Images+ 14

North Melbourne, Australia

BDP & SOM Reveal Plans For New Covent Garden Market

BDP and SOM have submitted plans for 'The Garden' a new market which will be the largest new development in the Nine Elms area around Battersea Power Station in London. The £2 billion plans replace the existing New Covent Garden Market, the UK's largest fruit, vegetable and flower market, in addition to adding a mixed-use neighborhood of 3,000 homes and over 200,000 square feet of office and retail space.

Working together, BDP and SOM have created a "seamless masterplan" which extends from the detailed design of the new market structure through to a new riverside park connecting Battersea Power Station to Kieran Timberlake's US Embassy building.

Read on for more on the design

GRAFT + Kleihues+Kleihues Design Work/Live Housing in Berlin

GRAFT and Kleihues+Kleihues has teamed up with Genossenschaft für urbane Kreativität (Cooperative for urban Creativity) to realize a complex of five towers centered around working and living in Berlin, Germany. Titled “Eckwerk,” the new complex is set to rise within the confines of an existing viaduct, whose shape and materiality served as the project’s main source of inspiration.

Social Housing Rental "Le Bois Habité" / Pich-Aguilera Architects

Social Housing Rental "Le Bois Habité" / Pich-Aguilera Architects - Social Housing, Facade, BalconySocial Housing Rental "Le Bois Habité" / Pich-Aguilera Architects - Social Housing, Facade, Column, BeamSocial Housing Rental "Le Bois Habité" / Pich-Aguilera Architects - Social Housing, FacadeSocial Housing Rental "Le Bois Habité" / Pich-Aguilera Architects - Social Housing, FacadeSocial Housing Rental Le Bois Habité / Pich-Aguilera Architects - More Images+ 13

  • Architects: Pich-Aguilera Architects
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  9685
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2011

Home for Home RVH / MCGONIGLEMCGRATH

Home for Home RVH / MCGONIGLEMCGRATH - Apartments, Door, Facade, Table, Chair, LightingHome for Home RVH / MCGONIGLEMCGRATH - Apartments, Door, Facade, Chair, TableHome for Home RVH / MCGONIGLEMCGRATH - Apartments, Stairs, Facade, HandrailHome for Home RVH / MCGONIGLEMCGRATH - Apartments, FacadeHome for Home RVH / MCGONIGLEMCGRATH - More Images+ 13

SAFARI / ARCHITECTENZAAK

SAFARI / ARCHITECTENZAAK - Housing, Garden, FacadeSAFARI / ARCHITECTENZAAK - Housing, Garden, FacadeSAFARI / ARCHITECTENZAAK - Housing, Facade, Handrail, BalconySAFARI / ARCHITECTENZAAK - Housing, Handrail, Facade, ChairSAFARI / ARCHITECTENZAAK - More Images+ 11

Maarssenbroek, The Netherlands
  • Architects: ARCHITECTENZAAK
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  12575 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2013

The Observatories: Micro Living for UK Artists

Five young design graduates based in Britain have recently won a competition to design an artist’s residency in the south-western region of the United Kingdom. Titled "The Observatories," these residences are split into two separate volumes: a study and a workshop. Artists will be able to live in the private back section of the study, which has a fold-out bed and necessary amenities. The workshop will be more open, allowing artists to teach and engage with the public. Both volumes are capable of rotating 360 degrees, giving residents a fresh frame of view, and facilitating interaction between these residents and passerby.

Minha Casa, Nossa Cidade: Brazil’s Social Housing Policy & The Failures of the Private-Public System

Minha Casa, Nossa Cidade: Brazil’s Social Housing Policy & The Failures of the Private-Public System - Image 5 of 4
Courtesy of Ruby Press

In 2009, the Brazilian government launched the social housing program “Minha Casa, Minha Vida” (“My House, My Life”), which aims to build 3.4 million housing units by the end of 2014. Minha Casa—Nossa Cidade (Ruby Press, 2014), produced by the MAS Urban Design program at the ETH Zurich, examines the project at a critical time and presents ways to improve its design and implementation. Divided into three chapters, the book reviews the history, guidelines, and construction of the “Minha Casa, Minha Vida” program (MCMV) through long-form essays, opinion pieces, interviews, diagrams, and photographic image material. The following excerpt, written by Sandra Becker, proposes an answer to the question of why the program - despite its aims to meet the huge demand for housing for low-income families - has thus far failed to provide the Brazilian people the “quality cities [they] desire.”

From the Publisher. In June 2013, Brazil saw a wave of protests unprecedented in the country's history. Millions of people filled the streets demanding better education, public transportation, and healthcare. While the rage driving the protests was directed at politicians, it is unlikely that the problem can be reduced to the failure of the political system. Instead, shouldn't the protests point out the inequalities caused by the neoliberal policies that dominate the global economy?

In the first quarter of 2009, responding to the global financial crisis that had begun the previous year, the Brazilian government launched an ambitious social housing program to encourage the economy's construction sector. The program, “Minha Casa, Minha Vida,” was initially developed to build one million houses. In September 2011, the program launched its second phase with a goal of providing another 2.4 million housing units. The program aims to confront a historical deficiency in housing, a shortage of approximately 5.8 million dwellings.

NBRS Proposes to Extend High Line Vertically

NBRS Proposes to Extend High Line Vertically - Skyscrapers
Exterior View. Image © NBRS + Partners

In response to New York City’s rapidly expanding population, NBRS + Partners has proposed a 40 story tall skyscraper that could help the city embrace its rapidly shifting demographics and size. Entitled “VIVO on High Line,” the adaptable steel-frame tower is essentially the vertical extension of the city’s beloved High Line park.

“The podium screen engulfs the High Line folding it in and extending the lifeblood into the building base, like capillary action drawing it vertically,” described the team.

Ormond Road Apartments / Jost Architects

Ormond Road Apartments / Jost Architects - Apartments, FacadeOrmond Road Apartments / Jost Architects - Apartments, Facade, FenceOrmond Road Apartments / Jost Architects - Apartments, Door, Beam, FacadeOrmond Road Apartments / Jost Architects - Apartments, Door, FacadeOrmond Road Apartments / Jost Architects - More Images+ 23

Grove Towers / 3XN

Grove Towers / 3XN - Skyscrapers
Street View. Image © 3XN

Construction has begun on 3XN’s first project in India. Aesthetically inspired by local foliage, the 136-meter “Grove Towers” are designed to interweave at their base, much like the roots of the native mangrove trees. These lower, “interwoven” floors will house retail establishments, while the upper floors will be given over to residential units.

Vila Aspicuelta / Tacoa Arquitetos

Vila Aspicuelta / Tacoa Arquitetos - Apartments, FacadeVila Aspicuelta / Tacoa Arquitetos - Apartments, Stairs, Facade, HandrailVila Aspicuelta / Tacoa Arquitetos - Apartments, Garden, Fence, Facade, CityscapeVila Aspicuelta / Tacoa Arquitetos - Apartments, Facade, Fence, HandrailVila Aspicuelta / Tacoa Arquitetos - More Images+ 26

São Paulo, Brazil
  • Architects: Tacoa Arquitetos
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  915
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2013
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Itu mármores, Reka Iluminação, alumitelas, blocos renger, f&f serralheria, +4

Kop van Kessel-Lo Leuven / SeARCH + AR-TE

Kop van Kessel-Lo Leuven / SeARCH + AR-TE - Apartments, FacadeKop van Kessel-Lo Leuven / SeARCH + AR-TE - Apartments, FacadeKop van Kessel-Lo Leuven / SeARCH + AR-TE - Apartments, FacadeKop van Kessel-Lo Leuven / SeARCH + AR-TE - Apartments, Facade, CityscapeKop van Kessel-Lo Leuven / SeARCH + AR-TE - More Images+ 25

  • Architects: AR-TE, SeARCH
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  75000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2013

3XN Designs Residential Complex for Downtown Vienna

International design firm 3XN has recently won a competition to design a residential building in downtown Vienna, Austria. Being so close to the historic center of the city, the project required a unique but unobtrusive appearance. With this in mind, a subtle, curving façade composed of warm colors was developed for the exterior.