Monday, April 30, 2018

Luminous Drapes | Studio Toggle

Luminous Drapes, Studio Toggle was invited by Nuqat, a nonprofit organization based in Kuwait to create an outdoor space for their cultural forum “The Human Capital 2018”. The location given was the outdoor plaza of the newly opened Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Cultural Centre in Kuwait City. The design of the pavilion stemmed from a desire to create a lightweight, soft and malleable space habitable in novel ways. The pavilion is meant to be colonized based on the activities that it will accommodate. These activities were analyzed and broken down into its anthropometric parameters.

Photography: Gijo Paul George

These parameters then informed the various taxonomies of voids that catered to the programmed activities and were mapped on to a modular grid. A low-tech, cost-efficient, incremental, modular system was developed using re-usable construction scaffolding and laser-cut IKEA drapes. The voids created by the subtractive operations on the stacked drapes are taxonomized into activity facilitators and occupied as such. A modular grid 3x3M grid is made from construction scaffolding and IKEA drapes are cut and arranged in a pattern derived from a parametric algorithm. The differences in height and width result in people reacting to the spaces in different ways and colonizing it intuitively.

Modular Fabrication Diagram

During the night, the lit pavilion changes its ambiance and makes for a dynamic space. Light is used as a sculptural medium to elevate the perception of both the grid and space. It frames and defines the way the users engage with the pavilion. The pavilion represents an up-cycled habitat generated from a utilitarian and modular grid system.

Photography: Gijo Paul George

Project Info:
Architects: Studio Toggle
Location: Kuwait City, Kuwait
Lead Architects: Gijo Paul George, Hend Almatrouk, Hessa Al Thuwaikh, Lulwa Al Obaid
Area: 200.0 m2
Project Year: 2018
Photographs: Gijo Paul George
Manufacturers: Ikea, Kirby
Project Name: Luminous Drapes

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Museum of the Second World War | Studio Architektoniczne Kwadrat

Designed by Studio Architektoniczne Kwadrat, The Museum of the Second World War is built on a lot at Władysław Bartoszewski Square near the center of the city. It is located in a symbolic architectural space, which is also a space of memory, 200 meters from the historic Polish Post Office in Gdańsk and 3 kilometers across the water from Westerplatte Peninsula, both of which were attacked in September 1939.

Photography: Pawel Paniczko

The 1,700-square-metre lot set aside for the museum touches the Radunia Canal to the west, while its south side opens onto a wide panorama of the Motława River. Today, these are the outskirts of Old Gdańskbut, soon, it will be the core of the modern section of the city that will replace its shipyard.
Jurors of the competition for the museum’s architectural plan have described it as “a new symbol of Gdańsk”, “a new icon” and a “sculptural design”. Daniel Libeskind, the jury’s chairman and one of the world’s best-known architects, designer of the Jewish Museum Berlin, justified the selection of the project as “Using the language of architecture, the selected project narrates the tragedy of the past, the vitality of the present, and opens the horizons of the future. The rising, dynamic form symbolizes the museum below while giving a panoramic and spectacular orientation to the historic city and its future. Echoing the iconic skyline of Gdańsk, with its shipyard cranes and church towers, the building ties together traditional urban spaces, scales, materials, and colors of the city with a 21st-century museum”.

Photography: Pawel Paniczko

Its authors, Kwadrat studio, have called their project a silent design, intended to evoke powerful emotions and deep reflection. The museum’s spatial division into three areas symbolizes the relationships between the wartime past, the present, and the future: the past is hidden on the building’s underground levels, the present appears in the open space around the building and the future is expressed by its rising protrusion, which includes a viewing platform.
The building has about 23,000 square meters of floor area, of which the space reserved for the permanent exhibition covers around 5,000 square meters. The exhibition uses the most modern methods to present the Second World War from the perspective of big-power politics but, primarily, through the fates of ordinary people. It is not limited to the experiences of Poles, but recount those of other nations. Apart from the main exhibition space, 1,000 square meters are devoted to temporary shows. The museum’s mission is also to serve as a center of education, culture, and research.

Photography: Pawel Paniczko

“Entering the Museum of The World War II competition in Gdansk we were fully aware of the problems that may occur during the design process as well as its interaction with the environment and very complicated functionality.
To fit in the historic part of the city, and creating a form that may become its icon at the same time, we had to make a compromise between its form and monumentality, being careful with its impudence and aggressiveness. We wanted the architecture to be a delicate suggestion rather than strong quotation for the World War II tragedy. That is how the idea of dynamic, expressive form had been brought to live, tearing apart the symbolic and dramatic shell covering the world, created by the war. The design of the form is to be undefined by one literal meaning. It may be discovered in many ways by each and every individual viewer.

Photography: Pawel Paniczko

Following the design process, we have agreed to leave most of the site as an open public space, so we moved some part of an exhibition underground. Entering the subterranean levels is to be a mood-setting process. Starting from being unconcern and full of everyday thoughts, to be hanged in the balance and clear-minded, to finally fell the horror, frightens and even pain by a strong relationship with the exhibition. The underground part of the museum is a path through a hell of war, a time travel experience. The “back to reality” begins with the ground level and the public space surrounding the museum, the place to think, to gather the experience from the underground. But that’s not the end, the past is a creator of the future, so as the viewer climbs the tower to the very top, he sees hope and freedom, he sees an old and young town of Gdansk. He sees it having thoughts of the past he had just experienced.”

Plan -9.25

Project Info:
Architects: Studio Architektoniczne Kwadrat
Location: Plac Władysława Bartoszewskiego 1, 80-862 GdańskPoland
Architects in Charge: Jacek Droszcz, Bazyli Domsta, Andrzej Kwieciński, Zbigniew Kowalewski
Area: 57386.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Pawel Paniczko
Manufacturers: Saint Gobain, Peri
Project Name: Museum of the Second World War

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