Flying Carpet

November 13, 2017 2 Comments

The plan was to have the exterior of the house painted. The reality is our house now looks like swiss cheese after they opened up all the places where rot had set in from the rain and dampness of the last 20 years. Drilling, banging, ripping and patching. All I can do to save what’s left of my sanity is renting a magic carpet and flying to houses around the world that I have on my “to see” list. There is some breathtaking innovation out there, both in terms of how things are built but also what is, these days, considered award winning design.

I don’t know anything about architecture, be warned; what follows are just the musings of someone who looks at the wood/stone/steel/concrete and glass world and likes what she sees. Or not.

I believe the desire to impress with structures, to use them for psychological purposes as much as for practical ones, housing, worshipping, work or exhibition, is as old as humans’ desire to build. Think about how churches grew from humble meeting places to awe-inspiring cathedrals; how fences around your compound grew into fortified, walled castles. How the chief’s hut became the king’s palace. How the collections of patrons became exhibits in museums that proudly announce to the world what special cultural weight they carry.

I don’t mean to sound critical here – I think architecture has always been incredibly imaginative in pursuing its demanded purpose, and clever in finding ways of expressing individual ideas, making environments more habitable, more suited to any particularly groups’ needs; the innovation you see these days where money and technology are in large supply is stunning.

I’ll start with Den Blå Planet, the blue planet, a relatively new aquarium in Denmark outside of Copenhagen. It is on my bucket list to see one of these days. Indeed many of the buildings I’ll show this week are things that interest me but which I had not yet the occasion to visit. Photographs of these structures are from the web. Photographs of today’s jellyfish are my own, taken in Newport and Vancouver BC.

The building was designed by 3xN, a Danish architecture firm that also built the Danish embassy in Berlin (ugly) and the new museum in Liverpool (not overwhelmed.) But this spiral design here hits the spot. Wiki tells me that “the aquarium’s architecture was inspired by a whirlpool. From the entrance, guests step into the vortex of the whirlpool – the curved lobby – and from here are drawn out to the 53 aquariums and installations.”

For more details go to this link. https://www.archdaily.com/348532/the-blue-planet-3xn/

My fascination with this building comes from the combination of modern form somehow nestled just right in the surrounding environment while simultaneously representing some aspect of what it contains. For the aquarium that is of course the marine life – it did indeed remind me of jelly fish although one of their biggest attractions is apparently a shark tank. Some of the exterior resembles fish scales, and the curviness reminds of waves. In any case, I seem to react to echoes of sculpture in buildings, if I can put it that way. Not always, but often.

The spiraling complex is a large operation, not exactly a beacon of sustainability. But the link above explains: “Nevertheless the engineers have devised solutions to substantially cut energy consumption, for instance by using seawater in the cooling process, which is estimated to reduce energy consumption for cooling by 80%. The saltwater tanks also get their water from the sea while the freshwater tanks are supplemented by rainwater capture. In addition, the building is insulated to a high international standard and fitted with low-energy glazing.”

Worth a visit, don’t you think? Particularly when you flee construction noise.

 

friderikeheuer@gmail.com

2 Comments

  1. Reply

    Jennifer Ash

    November 13, 2017

    Some years ago, on an excruciatingly hot day in Genoa, I decided to go to the aquarium to cool off. I ended up spending several hours, absolutely mesmerized.
    We are back, and I hope to see you and Dan before too long. Or maybe we could just have coffee, you and I. First have to get rid of a lousy respiratory infection.
    Hope you are both well. The trip was truly marvelous…we lucked out on Air B and B both in France and Italy, with wonderful host(esses) in both places.
    Be well, Jennifer

  2. Reply

    Lee

    November 13, 2017

    While many contemporary buildings are wonderful forms to look at, I’ve read repeatedly about how few of them function well on the inside . . . especially with things like closets, hall ways, unusable wall and floor spaces (caused by severe & odd angles) etc. Even Frank L. Wright’s famous domestic buildings suffer from this.

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