Topio7’s Revitalisation of Former Cemetery Merges Urban Park and City in Athens

Topio7’s Revitalisation of Former Cemetery Merges Urban Park and City in Athens, Courtesy of Topio7 Architects
Courtesy of Topio7 Architects

A competition for the transformation of a former cemetery in Nikea, just west of central Athens, has been won by Greek firm Topio7, with a proposal that creates a revitalized public park as a result of “a mutual osmosis between the park and the city”. A number of green buffer zones – “the elastic limit” – are utilized to frame a procession-like journey from the bustle of the city to the calm of the park’s landscape.

Highlighting the importance of the site’s previous use, the architects explain that the “main objective of the project is the creation of an open, accessible public space, a contemporary urban park with ecological-bioclimatic character, with special emphasis on the social dimension and the site’s memory.”

Courtesy of Topio7 ArchitectsCourtesy of Topio7 ArchitectsCourtesy of Topio7 ArchitectsCourtesy of Topio7 Architects+14

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Courtesy of Topio7 Architects

Courtesy of Topio7 Architects
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Courtesy of Topio7 Architects

Courtesy of Topio7 Architects

Previously inaccessible to the public, the renewed site is based on a series of circular zones, connecting the promenade and plazas on the perimeter to the heart of the park. Here, a clearing provides rest areas and recreation spots, as well as an embedded restaurant featuring a corten steel façade, which offers views of a meadow from its accessible rooftop.

Following the same linear axes as the original cemetery, the park’s primary promenades are composed of cobblestone and green joints, overgrown with wildflowers. Landscaped zones are central to the project’s design, and include a Church plaza, embedded amphitheater, Mediterranean gardens, fruit tree clearings and a wetland. Fauna such as cypress and water jets have been preserved, complimenting new plantings that combine to create a filter of vegetation.

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Courtesy of Topio7 Architects

Courtesy of Topio7 Architects
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Courtesy of Topio7 Architects

Courtesy of Topio7 Architects

The elastic green buffer zones offer new uses for the space, as a continuous connection with the urban fabric. Sports courts, playgrounds, outdoor gyms, picnic areas, a mountain bike track and a small farm are potential programs that could be implemented, in addition to lightweight wooden kiosks for information services and outdoor bazaars.

A walking, jogging and cycling track snakes its way between the green zones, allowing users to experience the diverse areas of the park at different paces.

News via: Topio7 Architects.

Swing French door / wooden / thermally-insulated SUPERIOR

Swing French door / wooden / thermally-insulated SUPERIOR GORLINI REMO

Characteristics

  • Opening system:

    swing

  • Material:

    wooden

  • Technical characteristics:

    thermally-insulated

Description

Ideal if you are looking for doors and windows with a qualitative and aesthetic surplus value achieved through carefully tailored details.

Glued laminated timber profile (68 mm door/ 68 mm frame)
Triple TPE seals
Glazing beads with no visible nails or screws, fixed with the glassblock invisible system
External seal for insulated glazing instead of silicone
Thermoinsulated threshold with thermal break (on DW
“Allwood” dripstone (on W)
DK burglar-proof hardware with concealed hinges
Standard and special finishes

This New VR Analytics Tool Allows Architects to Track Users’ Attention Within a Virtual Model

With virtual reality technology becoming a more and more common tool in architecture offices, engineers have already begun thinking about the next wave of advancements that could add even more functionality into their products. One of these advancements is through the use of one of the information age’s biggest revolutions: analysis of user feedback.

Lauching today, 3D visualization company InsiteVR has implemented these features into their software for the first time – allowing architects to learn about how people are viewing their models in real time.

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This New VR Analytics Tool Allows Architects to Track Users' Attention Within a Virtual Model, via InsiteVR

via InsiteVR

With Analytics, InsiteVR walkthroughs can be replayed with an overlaid heatmap, which provides data on the distribution of users’ attention while travelling through the virtual space. Avatars representing each user can be followed through the space, giving you the ability to track and analyze where someone may have been standing when they paused to look at a particular feature, or how the strayed from the intended circulation path.

One example InsiteVR uses is that of a basketball arena: what is the visibility from a particular seat of the stadium, and how can the architecture be used to enhance that particular viewer’s experience?

InstiteVR suggests that the software could be used to improve wayfinding strategies for large buildings such as hospitals, airports and other public spaces. The effectiveness of signs can be accurately measured by how long it takes viewers to find them, and how often they are lead to their intended destination.

Learn more about Analytics, and how it works, here.

Steven Holl Architects To Complete Four Buildings This Year

Steven Holl Architects To Complete Four Buildings This Year, © Steven Holl Architects
© Steven Holl Architects

Steven Holl Architects has released updates on four of its latest projects slated for completion this year. The projects, located in the United States and the United Kingdom, include two university arts buildings, a community library, and a cancer support center.

We are very excited about the intensity of the architecture for an unprecedented four Steven Holl Architects’ projects opening in 2017, said Steven Holl. Each ones serves as an inspiring ‘social condenser’ for their community.

Hunters Point Community Library. Image © Steven Holl ArchitectsLewis Center for the Arts – Princeton University. Image © Steven Holl ArchitectsHunters Point Community Library. Image © Steven Holl ArchitectsInstitute for Contemporary Art – Virginia Commonwealth University. Image © Steven Holl Architects+15

Lewis Center for the Arts – Princeton University

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Lewis Center for the Arts – Princeton University. Image © Steven Holl Architects

Lewis Center for the Arts – Princeton University. Image © Steven Holl Architects

Built in 21 million-year-old Lecce stone blocks set against the concrete structure, the Lewis Center for the Arts shapes an amazing new campus quadrangle with the same spatial proportions as The Campidoglio in Rome. It will present transparent connections to all the performing arts facilities, shaping the space and offer a large Forum dappled by sunlight thru water.  The building will be celebrated during an arts fair among all LCA disciplines the weekend of October 5-8.

Institute for Contemporary Art – Virginia Commonwealth University

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Institute for Contemporary Art – Virginia Commonwealth University. Image © Steven Holl Architects

Institute for Contemporary Art – Virginia Commonwealth University. Image © Steven Holl Architects

The building is slated to open with its inaugural exhibition “Declarations” on October 28th.  Soon Richmond and VCU will have a publicly accessible gateway through the Arts at the intersection of Broad and Belvidere.

Hunters Point Community Library

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Hunters Point Community Library. Image © Steven Holl Architects

Hunters Point Community Library. Image © Steven Holl Architects

Set to open this Fall, the Hunters Point Community Library will have sweeping views of the city, a public rooftop cafe and serve as a new “social consensus” for the community.

Maggies Centre Barts

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Maggies Centre Barts. Image © Steven Holl Architects

Maggies Centre Barts. Image © Steven Holl Architects

London’s Historic West Smithfield will soon have a calming collective support space for cancer patients, survivors and their families and friends. The concrete frame of Maggies Centre Barts is complete and the roof slab and concrete stairs will be cast in the next few weeks. A topping out ceremony will be held on the 17th of May and the building is set for substantial completion December 5th.

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