Thursday, September 22, 2011

Skin of Architecture: Double-skin 3

These are examples of multi-unit residential projects that employed double-skin design:

Source: Te-Ming Chang
Peabody Terrace Apartments, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA was designed by Josep Lluís Sert and constructed in 1964 and renovated by Bruner/Cott Architects between 1993 and 1995, contains 492 apartments. Adjustable system of sun-shades was installed on the East/West facing balconies.

Read a post from ArchDaily

Source: Dennis Gilbert archdaily.com
Carabanchel 19, Madrid, Spain, 2006 designed by Sheppard Robson
The louvre screening system that wraps around the building unifies the complex and creates a unique aesthetic. It also allows residents to control their own environment, providing shading and privacy to the balconies off each apartment. Pools and planting in the internal courtyards pre-cool the night air for natural ventilation and enhance the microclimate. -- ArchDaily

Source: archdaily.com
Formosa 1140, West Hollywood, California, USA, 2008 designed by Lorcan O’Herlihy Architects
External circulation is used as a buffer between public and private realms and articulated through layers of perforated metal and small openings.
The careful placement of outer skin panels and inner skin fenestration creates a choreographed effect, both revealing and concealing, while achieving a unique expression of form and materials. The exterior skin also keeps west facing units cooler by acting as a screen and shading device. -- ArchDaily

Source: betterbricks.com
Het Kasteel, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, 2008 designed by HVDN Architekten
This new housing project on the edge of Amsterdam uese a double skin facade to improve energy performace and comfort, and also to create flexible semi-enclosed outdoor spaces for each dwelling unit. Solar heat gain is managed through shading within the cavity. Natural ventilation is provided via operable inner and outer windows. The double skin also provides an acoustic buffer from an adjacent rail yard. -- betterbricks.com
Read a post from ArchDaily 

Source: Hisao Suziki archdaily.com
30 Dwellings in Manresa, Barcelona, Spain, 2009 designed by nothing architecture
A second skin of translucent white laminated glass in south facade works as a solar filter generating qualified intermediate, luminous, ethereal spaces… agreeable and comfortable. His first totally glazed skin slips from being a limit to become an extension from the interior towards the exterior. -- Arch Daily

Source: Juny Brullet archdaily.com
30 Houses Building, Barcelona, Spain, 2009 designed by Rahola Vidal
The new facade is defined by painted steel shutters. The individual windows are grouped in bigger bars unifying the whole. The shutter’s structure is advanced to the plane of the facade to generate terraces. These are conceived as an extension of the adjacent interior space. -- ArchDaily

Source: José Hevia archdaily.com
Apartment Building CASP 74, Barcelona, Spain, 2009 designed by Bach Arquitectes
The street facade is composed as a dialogue between fixed panels formed by steel framed vertical ceramic planks, and sliding aluminum blinds providing the necessary privacy and lighting control. Simultaneously the solution meets with the strict regulations of the Eixample area. -- ArchDaily

Source: Vincent Monthiers archdaily.com
Le Clos des Sablière, Bordeaux, France, 2009 designed by Agence Bernard Bühler
The passageways are open, ventilated and bright thanks to the front panels but also through vertical hoppers providing light in the heart of the movement. These breakthroughs have a vertical distance between the housing and the corridor. Open loggias on one side and on the corridors of the other units have therefore a double orientation for well-lit rooms. -- ArchDaily

Source: archdaily.com
Lofts @ Cherokee Studios, Los Angeles, CA, USA, 2010 designed by Brooks + Scarpa
The perforated anodized aluminum panels of the building creates an ever- changing screen that sparkles in the sun and glows at night, while simultaneously providing shade to cool the building, reducing noise, enhancing privacy, and still allowing for spectacular views, great natural light and ventilation from ocean breezes which pass through its millions of perforations even when all panels are closed.  -- architect's web site.

Source: construction.com
Metal Shutter House, New York City designed by Shigeru Ban completed in May 2011.
the 11-story condominium features a layered facade — one that opens completely. Enclosed by perforated-steel shutters that roll, and hangarlike bifold doors that fold up, the building front literally peels away, so that its eight units are filled with daylight, air, and marvelous city views. -- Architectural Record September 2011.
Read a post from ArchDaily.

Source: Cécile Septet archdaily.com
71 council and private flats, Sète, France, 2011 designed by CFA
There are balconies running along the façade and these outdoor extensions allow occupants to walk around the outside of their flats. A galvanised steel screen protects it during very hot weather and also provides a nice amount of privacy. It follows the curve created by the varying widths of the balconies. It lends harmony to the three blocks and makes them easier to interpret. They become gigantic steel cocoons whose materials remind us of the maritime world, while their shape is reminiscent of a ship’s stem and the wind in the screen slats sounds like the jangling of masts in a port. The screen also allow occupants to make appropriate their balconies without disturbing their neighbours, and to create a ‘homely’ feel while also enjoying the view and life in the town centre. -- ArchDaily

Source: Toni Villar archdaily.com
Houses Between Dividing Walls in Albacete, Calle Octavio Cuartero, Albacete, Spain, 2011 designed by Francisco Candel Giménez
The skin that forms the façade to the street has a dual function; on the one hand, it must capture the maximum amount of light considering its orientation and on the other hand, it must preserve the privacy of the interior spaces eventually avoiding the front view from the other side of the street building. To do this, the maximum sliding openings are arranged on the front façade, as large balconies, protected by extra-clear glass and a double exterior façade with cleaning walkways and motorized translucent glass panels, which act as mobile curtains. -- ArchDaily

Source: RMDM Architects archdaily.com
10 Logements, Paris, France, 2012 designed by RMDM Architectes
The buildings are clad with coated aluminum cassette panel cladding in three shades from grey to white. Plain panels on the standard sections alternate with perforated panels on the railings and the hinged shutters animate the façade according to the degree of opening, whilst also providing protection from the summer sun and maintaining the residents’ privacy. -- ArchDaily

Source: Nigel Young archdaily.com
Faena Aleph Residences, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 2012 designed by Foster + Partners
Faena Aleph Residences is inspired by the architecture of traditional Buenos Aires housing and its cultural legacy. The exquisite design of the apartments blurs the boundaries between exteriors and interiors and redefines the concept of urban housing. Double-height patios are combined with split-level living spaces, and each apartment has vaulted ceilings and bronzed sliding windows to maximize natural ventilation. Through a combination of moveable screens and balconies, shade can be modified for both low and high sun angles, ensuring privacy and drawing daylight into the living spaces and terraces. -- ArchDaily

Source: Marc Cramer archdaily.com
Irène, Montreal, Canada, 2012 designed by KANVA
Perforated aluminium panels were customized into a novel exterior building envelope that screens the upper three storeys of an addition above an existing industrial building. Drawing an analogy with a theatrical curtain, the metallic skin acts equally to veil and to reveal the activity within, serving a performative function that adds a touch of spectacle to the neighbourhood. -- ArchDaily

Source: Stephane Chalmeau archdaily.com
Legendre, Paris, France, 2012 designed by Avenier Cornejo Architectes
Contrasting sharply with the original streetscape, this unusual building imposes its presence and sets off the preexisting adjacent buildings. The street façade is a series of vertical, perforated metal panels. A pattern stretches across the multiple panels like a net to give the building a uniform feel. The cladding covers both solid and glazed sections. Over the windows, the metal panels act as full-height shutters that rotate outwards and animate the building facade. -- ArchDaily

Source: Luc Boegly archdaily.com
Square Vitruve, Paris, France, 2013 designed by Atelier du Pont
Basing its analysis on sun studies to assess the impact of the nearby high-rise buildings, Atelier du Pont suggested adding balconies wherever this made sense. This was a simple idea that was hard to put into practice, yet provided the apartments with outdoor areas and completely remodelled the architecture of the façades. -- ArchDaily

Source: Studio Farris Architects archdaily.com
Park Tower, Antwerp, Belgium, 2014 designed by Studio Farris Architects
The ingenious patchwork of glass façade panels that shelter the terraces from the wind add a playful, layered effect highlighted by a fascinating dynamic of light and shadow. -- ArchDaily

1 comment:

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