Issue 7/8.2023
Saving Space
Space is a type of resource we bring to light in this summer edition of Detail. In his essay, Andreas Müsseler addresses the current land-grabbing trend and discusses examples and methods to fight against it. Our Documentation section features innovative structures that make clever use of limited space. Highlights include a tiny townhouse with about 20 m² of floor space on each level, a coworking space, and Holborn House, a community centre in a dense part of London. Our Interiors section complements our main topic with a look at customized and recyclable interiors in existing buildings. Enjoy the issue! Sandra Hofmeister
Auf kleiner Fläche
Saving Space
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Plugged together
Do-it-yourself Building by Boano Prišmontas
At their London workshop, the two architects have developed and produced a building system, based on plug connectors, that enables construction by unskilled workers without heavy tools.
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Cradle to Cradle
Gjuteriet in Malmö by Kjellander Sjöberg
With the new headquarters of oat-milk producer Oatly at the port of Malmö, Kjellander Sjöberg combine reused building elements and a great deal of wood to create a compelling whole.
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Hideaway on stilts
Cabin Moss by Béres Architekten
"Measure twice, dig once” – Attila Béres and his client kept this motto in mind as they considered how to build the little cabin in a way that would protect the roots of the old trees at the woodland site.
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Floating lodges
Holiday Cabins on the Fjord: The Bolder by Snøhetta
On the edge of Lysefjord on the west coast of Norway, Snøhetta have designed four holiday cabins that float above the ground.
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Room to grow
House near Potsdam by c/o now
Lacaton & Vassal as a model: Following the house-in-house principle, an affordable single-family home that can easily be expanded as needed has been created in Brandenburg.
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A green oasis in a newly developed area
Casa Pedregal in Central Mexico
This single-family home by Studio Patricia Meneses in the central Mexican city of San Luís Potosí is radically different from its neighbours in the peripheral residential area: four cubes comprising living and sleeping areas are accessed by an exterior staircase.
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Reinterpretation of the historical predecessor
Weekend House near Brno
Actually, this small weekend house in the southern Moravian village of Bukovany was only supposed to be renovated. However, it turned out to be so dilapidated that the architects rebuilt it in the same shape and size; they also expanded it by a new wing with a sauna and pool on the roof.
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A small footprint
Weekend House in Quebec
Like a pulpit of wood and glass, the m.o.r.e. CLT Cabin by Kariouk Architects juts towards the nearby lake. The design minimizes both the cost of foundations and the need to interfere with the lakeshore terrain.
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Farnsworth in Sweden's skerries
Weekend House near Stockholm by Studio Nāv
The small residence by the architects of Studio Nāv on the islet of Lilla Kilskäret references Mies van der Rohe – but with wood and a pitched roof.
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Repurposed carcass
Chemsafe Office Building by Archisbang near Turin
In the small Piedmontese town of Parella, Archisbang has refashioned a half-finished dwelling house into an office building for the consulting company Chemsafe.
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A compact retreat
Prefabricated House in the Netherlands
Orange Architects, a studio headquartered in Rotterdam, have completed a compact, energy-efficient prefab house on the Dutch island of Texel.
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Cradle-to-cradle
Research Building for Sustainable Architecture in Coburg
The Circular Tiny House on the design campus of the Coburg University of Applied Sciences is particularly special, for it is made exclusively of reused, renewable and regenerative materials.
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Architekturbiennale 2023
Architecture Biennale 2023
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Architecture Biennale 2023
Younger, More Diverse, More Political
With Lesley Lokko as curator, the Architecture Biennale in Venice has taken on new momentum. Africa and its diaspora are the focus of the main exhibition, which demonstrates many different reflections.
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Architecture Biennale 2023 – national pavilions
Self-Reflection, Diversionary Tactics and Real Science Fiction
Decolonization and decarbonization are the guiding themes determined by Biennale director Lesley Lokko. The 64 national pavilions present rather humble self-portraits and timid approaches. Outside the green Giardini, the future of urbanization is being renegotiated: in the desert of Saudi Arabia.
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Architecture Biennale 2023
Kengo Kuma: Onomatopoeia Architecture
The retrospective Kengo Kuma: Onomatopoeia Architecture, which is taking place at the Palazzo Cavallli-Franchetti in Venice, is showing around 22 models of some of the Japanese architect’s most significant buildings. The exhibition focuses on the dialogue between people and materials, as well as Kuma’s preoccupation with onomatopoeia, or the formation of words by imitating sounds.
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Architecture Biennale 2023
In the Laboratory of the Future
On Saturday, 20 May, the 18th International Architecture Biennale will open in Venice. Under the motto The Laboratory of the Future, this year’s exhibition will focus on the African continent.
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Architecture Biennale 2023
Essential Homes by Norman Foster
Essential Homes is a joint research project by the Norman Foster Foundation and Holcim. The concept for living space will offer refugees security, comfort and a sense of well-being.
Vorherige Ausgaben
Previous Issues
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Architecture and Climate Protection 6.2023
Anyone asking the inevitable question about climate protection in architecture today will receive not one but many answers.
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Truth to Materials 4.2023
Debates about building materials in architecture inevitably mention the term “truth to materials” (known in German as “Materialgerechtigkeit”).
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Hotels, Hostels, Guesthouses 3.2023
Few sectors of the economy were so battered during the corona years as the hotel industry.
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Taking Stock 1/2.2023
Not only in Germany and Europe but also worldwide, building in existing structures is currently gaining in acceptance and relevance.
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Building Envelopes 12.2022
While compiling our personal favourites of the year in the Detail editorial office, I was surprised at the vast scope of projects my colleagues had experienced in 2022. For this issue’s review of the year, they describe their architectural observations in places like Jerusalem, Berlin, and Montagnana, Italy.
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Circular Economy 11.2022
If the aim is net zero, demolition and landfill disposal must be avoided at all costs. Today, a progressive architecture is one that takes part in the circular economy and reuses building materials.
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Lighting Interiors 10.2022
Our October issue is all about light and interiors. PPAG’s school in Vienna brings daylight into deep cluster spaces to foster daily well-being.
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Cultural Buildings 9.2022
In 1997, the Guggenheim Museum opened in Bilbao, and Frank Gehry’s eccentric new building transformed the Basque city into an overnight hotspot for international tourism.
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Urban Green 7/8.2022
Especially in big dense cities, roofs and facades are the only places left to make things greener.
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Simple and Affordable 6.2022
“Doing away with everything superfluous creates the potential for an architectural quality all of its own,” says Florian Nagler about “simple building” in an interview with Frank Kaltenbach.
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Prefabrication Modular Construction 5.2022
Naturstein und Hochlochziegel, Ortbeton und Stampflehm in vorproduzierten Elementen: Für die Massivbauweise kommen viele unterschiedliche Materialien in Frage, und oft ist ihre Anwendung regional motiviert.
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Solid Construction 4.2022
Natural stone and perforated bricks, cast-in-place concrete, and rammed earth in prefabricated elements – these are just a few of the diverse materials used in solid construction, and their use is often regionally motivated.
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Urban Housing 3.2022
“A villa in the countryside with a large terrace, in front of you the Baltic Sea, Friedrichstrasse behind you …”. Thus begins Kurt Tucholsky’s 1927 poem, “The Ideal”. While Tucholsky’s ideal of urban life might be unattainable in Berlin, there are cities where it has become a reality.