A cantilevered barn shaped building balancing on the edge of the slope becomes an observatory, with paradoxical openings that reveal its voyeuristic intentions.
A cluster of small shelters for skaters in one of the coldest cities of the world.
Evoking a feel of beauty and wellness, the spa plays with light and vistas as it interrelates with the garden.
An invited international competition won by Plasma Studio with collaborators GroundLab and LAUR Studio.
Simulating the softness of a paper curtain flapping away in the wind, a steel ribbon screen encloses the amazing paper characters of the Nebuta festival.
Its fair faced hollowed-out concrete structure overhangs the natural settings and acts as a raised observation platform blending the boundaries of interior and exterior.
LAN strike back by dramatically cutting through the façade, providing alleyway-like access to the back courtyard and the building as such through a rift.
An intriguing ring in the colours of the rainbow floats above the museum’s roof.
The tsumuji (the crossroad) formed the basis for the concept of the residences.
NEX and Buro Happold complete innovative ‘bio-mimicry’ design for The Times Eureka Pavilion at Chelsea Flower Show.
The spatial layout achieves further visual depth by constructing several interior-exterior sequences.
A dynamic, angular form rises from a pedestal to reach the sky.
A fluid, organic installation that floats in an atrium’s void revealing unexpectedly complex geometries.
The design concept is based on two intersecting prisms situated on a naturally inclined site within the trees ensuring the survival of natural environments.
Taking the form of a raised platform, the building gives the impression of emerging from the ground, a logical outgrowth from the landscape.
Tinted, desaturated colours and ‘empty’ frames, dominated by the scale of the old walls in the background, highlight the black garments.
With their original concepts, these freshly pop watches differentiate themselves from traditional wristwatch design aesthetics.
The new design offers a uniform, open space which expands, becoming more complex or dense depending on its orientation and use.
The Jellyfish House, a beautiful and unique sample of the expressive architectural research and experimentation, is now part of the SFMOMA permanent collection.