The architecture of ‘Ojigi’ , the Japanese bowing.
A 7m glass structure in the shape of a sword’s tip pays tribute to the Camelot and Excalibur myth.
The hotel project is a small city project, a human settlement where habitat, commerce, education, politics, culture is combined.
Inhabiting two platforms- one flat and one undulating.
The playfulness of the prismatic rooflines and the use of weathered gray wood give the homes a unique orientation and distinct character.
Crisp, alien, periscope-like objects rise from the desert.
heri&salli have conceived a steel structure similar to a cocoon around a swimming pool in a private garden.
Free formed wave-like balconies ‘dance’ around the body of this housing block making it a recognisable landmark for the area.
The Museum of Polish History competition entry.
The highlight of this project is the patterned sustainable double skin inspired by traditional carved stone lattice screens.
A sneak preview of the OCT Design Museum currently under construction.
An expressive main façade within an open public space breaks the typological sequence of the area by keeping it inviting rather than aggressive.
Conceived as an abstract extension and transformation of the land, the Museum rests on a series of terraces that step up the hill and lay along the contours of the site with minimal disruption to the adjacent natural landscape.
A fully glazed façade shoots up paying tribute to the features of the local landscape.
Three single boxes placed on a cantilevered flat roof are connected by a glass corridor creating zones with different qualities.
Limited edition of a hybrid shelving unit by Saint-Etienne based designers Numéro 111 for Galerie Gosserez.
Madrid based stylist Jose Herrera explores the dark shades of austerity in an editorial for OXXO MAGAZINE.
This building hosts two dwelling units, but lacks of house scale. It uses the abstraction of the traditional dwelling elements to mislead the visitor and to attract his attention to the environment.
Technical solutions integrated seamlessly into the building’s ribbon-like form.