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Barely five weeks after the opening of the Rolex Learning Center, the verdict fellthe buildings architects, Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa (SAANA), were announced the winners of the 2010 Pritzker Prize, the most prestigious prize in architecture. The jury celebrated an
architecture that is simultaneously delicate and powerful, precise and fluid, ingenious but not overly or overtly clever; for the creation of buildings that successfully interact with their contexts and the activities they contain, creating a sense of fullness and experiential richness. At the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), the Japanese architects unique procédure allowed for a dream to become a reality by creating what one might call the first enhanced library. A building, a new heart for the campus , that gathers together all the different forms of knowledge access and exchange in one open space. A place for life as well; where a new rapport between the exterior and the interior is established. The list of technical challenges inherent in the construction of this gently sleeping giant, undulating over 160 meters, is almost infinite. Its construction unceasingly forced engineers and builders to imagine new solutions. This book tells the story of the genesis of the Rolex Learning Centerit opens the door to a revolution in knowledge access.
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Preface Book 1: The Dream Introduction Building as landscape Colonization of a countryside An infinite library The Emblem of Multi-Tasking Gathering Patronage and cooperation Twelve Projects, One Winner SANAA Yet to be invented Walter Niedermayr Work Book 2: The realization A promenade inside Amplified Space How to build perforated shells? Nicknames Flora and fauna Adoption Postface
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The Human brain is only 100,000 years old. Yet, this newly evolved organ endows us with unique creative capabilities beyond all other living creatures, including the gift to understand itself. As our very survival and success in life depends on utilizing our brains power, intense efforts have begun worldwide to understand the brain, reverse-engineer it and even augment its capacity.
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Although solar thermal systems are technologically mature and cost effective, they have not yet been sufficiently used in building design, where they should be playing a greater role in the reduction of fossil-fuel consumption. One main hindrance to adoption is the generally low architectural design quality of the building integration of these thermal systems.
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This groundbreaking essay on Le Corbusier provides a new perspective that is based on exhaustive archival research and the study of neglected or completely unknown documents stored at the Fondation Le Corbusier...
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Conditions for travel have changed and are still changing the world a world experiencing what John Urry, among others, calls the mobility turn. Since World War II we have been moving faster and going further a fact that has profoundly changed our way of experiencing both the world and ourselves.
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