Bjarke Ingels Group
Copenhagen Experiments
Storefront for Art & Architecture
New York
If people are different, why are all apartments the same?
On view from October 2 - November 24, 2007
Photo courtesy Storefront for Art & Architecture
LEGO Houses model made of 250,000 LEGO blocks
The exhibition presents projects that are all specific urban experiments conducted in Copenhagen since January 2001 by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG).
At different stages of realization they portray a new breed of urban life forms, both locally specific and generally applicable, introducing residential diversity, programmatic alchemy, urban ascension, modular mania and political pro-action into the architectural species of the Danish welfare state.
The projects represents 5 specific takes on human accommodation and shows how the potent urban mix of different functions, public and private, can be infused directly into architecture itself.
Each project’s effect and reception is showcased dependant on to what extent it is already manifest in the public realm, ranging from images of life in the VM houses post-occupation,
through the 250.000 piece LEGO model inhabited by 1000 LEGO people, to the excessive political debate about Kløverkarreen.
VM Houses
The VM Houses compile 85 different housing types into a 225 unit complex, providing the residential diversity of an entire neighbourhood in to a single block.
Photo: arcspace
Photo courtesy Storefront for Art & Architecture
MOUNTAIN Dwellings
Can you combine the splendours of a suburban lifestyle with the convenience of urban density?
By placing a 100 unit residential slab on top of a block of parking, the architects create a new hybrid typology half villas half urban block. The result is 11 stories of terraced residences with generous garden courtyards, nested on top of a south facing slope of parking. In a country flat as a pancake, the only way to get a south facing hillside, is to do it yourself.
Photo: arcspace
Photo courtesy Storefront for Art & Architecture
SCALA Tower
Copenhagen used to be the city of towers, but in a post-modern disappointment with the urban residue of modernism the city has grown agoraphobic. Towers are seen as urban aliens that invest all their efforts in the skyline, rather than in the urban space. The Scala Tower focuses all its qualities from the waist down. A slim simple tower, that melts towards the city, merging with neighbouring blocks and public squares. The stepped and twisted volume allows the public to invade the facades, extending the public realm to the Copenhagen skyline.
Photo courtesy Storefront for Art & Architecture
Photo courtesy Storefront for Art & Architecture
LEGO Houses
The last 50 years the Danish building industry has been exclusively devoted to prefabrication.
Denmark has become a country built from LEGO bricks. Rather than seeing the modular mania as a straightjacket, this project is a homage to Danish building industry. By turning the site in to a modular matrix of 12 x 12 feet BIG created an elastic field of peaks and valleys. A thousand plateaus ascending and descending, separating and merging to form a fluid space of private and public plateaus.
Combining the rigorous and the adventurous. The box and the blob.
Photo courtesy Storefront for Art & Architecture
Photo courtesy Storefront for Art & Architecture
KLM Houses
"Architects always wait for the phone to ring or someone to announce a competition. As a profession we are always the last to get involved, and then only to “make it nice”. When the social democratic mayor of Copenhagen announced a plan to provide 5000 affordable homes in Copenhagen, we saw an opening for short circuiting the good old dilemma between development and preservation. Copenhagen’s former airfield, now home to 40 football fields, turned into the gargantuan courtyard of a 3 kilometer long building block, would accommodate 2000 people without sacrificing a single football field.
Rather than choosing between football or affordable homes . . . this project provides both."
Bjarke Ingels
Photo courtesy Storefront for Art & Architecture
Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) is a Copenhagen based group of 80 architects, designers, builders and thinkers operating within the fields of architecture, urbanism, research and development.
The opening at Storefront for Art & Architecture
Photo Joseph Grima
Bjarke Ingels at the opening.
Photo: Alan R. Tansey
The crowd at the Storefront for Art & Architecture
Photo: Alan R. Tansey
via : http://www.arcspace.com/exhibitions/big/cph_ex/cph_ex.html
via : http://www.arcspace.com/exhibitions/big/cph_ex/cph_ex.html
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