Apr 19, 2009

Tree House Brings Nature, Music to Life in Portland

Architect Robert Harvey Oshatz has created this awesome, artistic piece of architecture in the woods of Portland, Oregon, for a client who’s love of music would be translated into a modern home. This impressive design was seven years in the making, from the drawing board to its completion in 2004, and it was worth every last second of the wait. The main living level of this contemporary tree house sits in the canopy, among lush green leaves with the dewy earth rolling out below. It’s one of those designs that’s difficult to describe.
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
According to the architect, “Located on a flag lot, a steep sloping grade provided the opportunity to bring the main level of the house into the tree canopy to evoke the feeling of being in a tree house. A lover of music, the client wanted a house that not only became part of the natural landscape but also addressed the flow of music. This house evades the mechanics of the camera; it is difficult to capture the way the interior space flows seamlessly through to the exterior. One must actually stroll through the house to grasp its complexities and its connection to the exterior. One example is a natural wood ceiling, floating on curved laminated wood beams, passing through a generous glass wall which wraps around the main living room.Architect Robert Harvey Oshatz.
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge
Image(copyright oshatz),click 2 enlarge

Apr 17, 2009

Oil Rig Platform as Luxury Eco Resort - Winner of 2008 innovation award

Morris Architects,The grand prize winner, the Oil Rig Platform Resort and Spa makes use of one of 4,000 oil rigs out in the Gulf of Mexico and transforms it into a luxurious eco-resort and spa. As the recent winning design of the Radical Innovation in Hospitality Award, the concept which would transform rigs which would otherwise be destroyed into capital-gaining resorts, is awarded fresh prestige, and the architects a $10,000 prize.
Images(copyright Morris Architecture),click 2 enlarge
Sponsored by the John Hardy Group and Hospitality Design Magazine, the international design competition focused on innovations in hospitality. The Morris design team wanted to take advantage of the an abandoned oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico and reuse the structure, transforming it into a vibrant and commercially viable destination.
Images(copyright Morris Architecture),click 2 enlarge
The luxury resort offers many amenities including interaction with the surrounding ocean - boating, snorkeling, diving and other water sports. The Rig Hotel will also draw in conferences and business meetings, and will serve as a cruise ship’s main port of call en route to other locations in Mexico and the Caribbean.
Images(copyright Morris Architecture),click 2 enlarge
Each rig hotel would be able to accommodate over 300 guest rooms and luxury suites, a ballroom, restaurants, retail, pool and poolside bar as well as providing a marina for yachts, a casino, a dive bell for below sea excursions and facilities for water sports.
The Oil Rig Resort and Spa will provide unparalleled views of the Gulf through patron’s rooms as well as a glass lobby floor. The lobby will be naturally lit with ambient light, which will be reflect the ocean. A central core will be filled with water, which acts as a ballast to help stabilize the platform during stormy conditions. This central core will also host theatrical performances much like the Cirque du Soliel show ‘O’ in Las Vegas. Guests will be able to view the show from their own room every night.
Images(copyright Morris Architecture),click 2 enlarge
Encouraged as an ecological alternative to the destruction of the rigs which, according to Morris Architects, will all be decommissioned within the next century, the renovation would help to preserve the marine life gathered among the legs of the rigs. They would also function autonomously with alternative forms of energy production including wind, wave and solar.
Images(copyright Morris Architecture),click 2 enlarge
Individual guest rooms are prefabricated off site and transported via ship in a standard cargo container to the rig. The rooms are not large and have been optimized to maximize space. Couches turn into beds at night and can be moved over the hot tub for viewing of performances. The room can also extend out over the water for better views of the Gulf.
Images(copyright Morris Architecture),click 2 enlarge
The eco-resort provides a state-of-the-art luxury accommodations, as well as sea-water swimming facilities, a grand ballroom shopping, dining, nightly entertainment, a casino, and boat slips. And considering that there are over 4,000 oil platforms out there in the Gulf, it’s certainly a novel way to reuse the existing structures.
Images(copyright Morris Architecture),click 2 enlarge
The designers hope that the rigs could be used as ports of call for cruise ships traveling between the Caribbean and Mexico.
Images(copyright Morris Architecture),click 2 enlarge


More Information:
Oil Rig Platform Resort and Spa

Morris Architecture
www.radicalinnovationinhospitality.com

Recommended Books:


Hospitality
By Aric Chen, Michael Adams










Buildings: Innovation + Technology: STUDIOS Architecture
By Images Publishing

Two Tower for LA - Korean Air will build $1 billion project in Los Angeles

Korean Air and Thomas Properties Group Inc. have announced plans to develop a $ 1 billion mixed use complex in downtown Los Angeles that will transform the city’s skyline and be a symbol of civic pride for the city’s Korean community, the second largest outside of Seoul.The downtown Los Angeles’s first office high-rise since 1992, to capture rising demand after the U.S. recession. Korean Air has owned the hotel and the land since 1989.
Images (copyright ac martin),click 2 enlarge
Developed by Thomas Properties Group and designed by Los Angeles based A.C. Martin, the 1.75 million-sq ft project calls for two high rise towers.A 60-story office tower with 1.15 million square feet (107,000 square meters) of space and a 40-story hotel with as many as 700 rooms.“It’s reasonable to assume that the credit market will get fixed and start flowing again,” Thomas Properties Chief Executive Officer James A. Thomas said in an interview. “The ideal timing is to get everything lined up, and as you come out of the recession, you have the product to deliver. So I think our timing is really superb.”
Images (copyright ac martin),click 2 enlarge
The Los Angeles metropolitan area had about $7.5 billion in distressed properties as of the end of March, a 168 percent jump from December, according to data from Real Capital Analytics. While the economy is still in turmoil, the development process in Los Angeles is archaic and thus lengthy.
Images (copyright ac martin),click 2 enlarge
In making the announcement now, Thomas Properties, which has extensive experience building complex projects in the city, is positioning itself to be first in line when the rebound occurs. Jim Thomas, CEO of the development company, told the LA business journal that with its current 88 percent office occupancy level, downtown will need a Class A office building in the next three to five years. To meet that timeline we need to get started right now, Thomas said.
Images (copyright ac martin),click 2 enlarge
Korean Air and Thomas Properties said they expect financing will be available by the time construction begins in 2011.
Images (copyright ac martin),click 2 enlarge

More Information: www.acmartin.com
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