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Pole House / DIN Projects

January 3, 2017 Valentina Villa 0

The Pole House is a year round cottage designed for a couple and their son on a heavily wooded site in the Manitoba Interlake, two and a half hours North of Winnipeg. The cottage lot, obtained through the provincial cottage lot lottery system, has Lake Winnipeg frontage, although a provincial easement limits the cottage’s proximity to the water. 

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Puertos Escobar Football Club / Torrado Arquitectos

January 3, 2017 Sabrina Leiva 0

The soccer club of Ports required a series of programs in principle dispersed, what tries the project is to order the programs and circuits of routes. The needs of the club were a parking area, locker rooms, shade area, multiple uses lounge, billboard and barbecue for third time. All these activities in principle individual and without cohesion, make up a unique building of mixed uses, flexible, and variable transparencies.

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Murmuur Architecten uses engineered wood and tiles for holiday home in rural Belgium

January 3, 2017 Jessica Mairs 0

Dark clay panels and light green tiles cover the cross-laminated timber structure of this holiday home created by Murmuur Architecten for a spot in the Flemish Ardennes countryside. The Belgian studio designed the holiday home named Buikberglos in Horebeke, a municipality in Belgium’s East Flanders. The structure is built from cross-laminated timber – a strong type of engineered wood that is becoming

The post Murmuur Architecten uses engineered wood and tiles for holiday home in rural Belgium appeared first on Dezeen.

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Lima Convention Center / IDOM

January 3, 2017 Sabrina Leiva 0

The project and construction of the Lima Convention Centre (LCC) is contextualized by the agreement between the Peruvian State and the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to hold in Lima the 2015 Board of Governors.

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Architectural Research: Three Myths and One Model

January 3, 2017 Jeremy Till 0

Jeremy Till’s paper “Architectural Research: Three Myths and One Model” was originally commissioned by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Research Committee, and published in 2007. In the past decade, however, it has grown in popularity not just in the UK, but around the world to become a canonical paper on architectural research. In order to help the paper reach new audiences, here Till presents an edited version of the original. The original was previously published on RIBA’s research portal and on Jeremy Till’s own website.