Source: DESIGN
Showing posts with label British Columbia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British Columbia. Show all posts
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Thursday, June 9, 2011
BCIT Aerospace Technology Campus in Richmond, Canada
Located in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada, BCIT Aerospace Technology Campus, designed by Kasian. The brief also emphasized the need for a historic bridge on campus, a mechanism to combine theory and practice on learning and cons of attraction and retention of students and teachers. The client envisioned the creation of a "media-centric" sense of place aims to double the capacity of students, addresses ambient noise and provide a world class institution labeling Vancouver as a gateway for aerospace industry.
Classrooms, laboratories, workshops and housing are inextricably linked, the difference between theory and practice, and leaves the potential of innovation, revolutionary changes in teaching methods is limitless. Students are able to extract the air, to examine its components and prototypes for the space of inspiration, absorbing the information and to apply the skills acquired in a hurry.
Classrooms, laboratories, workshops and housing are inextricably linked, the difference between theory and practice, and leaves the potential of innovation, revolutionary changes in teaching methods is limitless. Students are able to extract the air, to examine its components and prototypes for the space of inspiration, absorbing the information and to apply the skills acquired in a hurry.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
ETA Back To Nature By Improving Technology And Building Systems With The Wood Of Local Origin In Vancouver, Canada
Designed by Lubor Trubka Associates Architects, Lubor Trubka Associates Architects, based in Vancouver, Canada. LTA plans for specific projects and steel, but the creative passion for technology and society is to bring challenging projects that give the opportunity to promote the interests of the technical viability of building a wooden base even more.
To demonstrate the commitment of the ETA and passion to develop the culture of wooden architecture in British Columbia, they chose two completed projects and two are in phase of design and research. tree architecture, if properly designed and constructed, is not only appropriate but also very beneficial to any project size and function. This broad scope is shown in the selection of projects, ranging from the size of a mountain chalet with a private Olympic size ice arena.
To demonstrate the commitment of the ETA and passion to develop the culture of wooden architecture in British Columbia, they chose two completed projects and two are in phase of design and research. tree architecture, if properly designed and constructed, is not only appropriate but also very beneficial to any project size and function. This broad scope is shown in the selection of projects, ranging from the size of a mountain chalet with a private Olympic size ice arena.
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