Ah, finally a proper explanation of why this dudes name is coming up repeatedly recently.
#architecture #thomasheatherwick
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2023/oct/27/thomas-heatherwick-humanise-vessel-hudson-yards
#Cities Need to Realize the Value of #EmotionalDesign – Amid isolation fatigue, #architects must incorporate more feeling into #urban #spaces, as doing so will benefit both #people and the #planet #architecture #design #environment #CityLiving
https://www.wired.co.uk/article/buildings-architecture-emotions
By designer #ThomasHeatherwick
Dezeen Agenda newsletter features a Google campus designed by BIG and Heatherwick Studio
The latest edition of our weekly Dezeen Agenda newsletter features Google's Bay View campus in Silicon Valley, which was designed by BIG and Heatherwick Studio. Subscribe to Dezeen Agenda now!
Designed by London-based Heatherwick Studio and Danish firm BIG, the 1.1-million-square-feet Google campus in the city of Mountainview, California, contains three structures with loosely domed profiles that taper towards ground level.
Each structure is covered in a tent-like roof with sweeping, scale-like panels.
Louis Vuitton debuts 2023 cruise collection at Louis Kahn's Salk Institute
Other stories in this week's newsletter include the debut of Louis Vuitton's 2023 cruise collection at Louis Kahn's Salk Institute, The Royal Mint's design for a rainbow 50p to mark the 50th anniversary of Pride UK and Archmongers Architects' Little Brownings refurbishment, which has been named London's best house extension.
Dezeen Agenda
Dezeen Agenda is a curated newsletter sent every Tuesday containing the most important news highlights from Dezeen.Read the latest edition of Dezeen Agenda or subscribe here.
You can also subscribe toDezeen Debate, which is sent every Thursday and contains a curated selection of highlights from the week, as well as Dezeen Daily, our daily bulletin that contains every story published in the preceding 24 hours on Dezeen.
The post Dezeen Agenda newsletter features a Google campus designed by BIG and Heatherwick Studio appeared first on Dezeen.
#all #architecture #officearchitecture #thomasheatherwick #google #dezeenagenda #big
First images of Heatherwick's Tree of Trees at Buckingham Palace revealed
UK-based Heatherwick Studio has released images of a sculpture containing 350 trees, designed to celebrate the Queen's Jubilee, which is nearing completion outside Buckingham Palace in London.
Shaped like a giant tree, the 21-metre-high sculpture was designed by the Thomas Heatherwick-led studio to draw attention to a tree-planting campaign to mark 70 years of the Queen's reign.
The Tree of Trees is nearing completion in London. Photo by Heatherwick Studio
It will be officially unveiled on 2 June as part of the Queen's Platinum Jubilee weekend celebrations.
The images show the sculpture outside Buckingham Palace, which is the Queen's London residence, largely complete. The final section of the sculpture is due to be installed at the top of the tree-like form later today.
It will form part of the Queen's Platinum Jubilee weekend celebrations
When complete the tree-like form, fabricated by UK-based Millimetre, will support 350 living trees on its steel branches, giving it the name Tree of Trees.
It has a central steel structure surrounded by stacked steel tubes that twist to form the tree's trunk and extend to form branches at the upper levels.
[
Read:
Drone video showcases exterior of 1,000 Trees by Heatherwick Studio
](https://www.dezeen.com/2022/01/19/1000-trees-heatherwick-studio-drone-video/)
Supported on the branches will be 350 trees of different types found across Britain. The trees were placed in aluminium pots and will be maintained using an integrated irrigation system during the two-week installation.
Following the Jubilee celebrations, the structure will be dismantled and the trees returned to storage before being donated to community groups across the country for planting in October.
The final section is set to be installed today
Tree of Trees was designed to draw attention to a tree-planting program called the Queen's Green Canopy, which aims to encourage tree planting to mark the Jubilee. Since October the program has seen over a million trees planted in the UK.
Founded by Heatherwick, Heatherwick Studio is a London-based architecture and design studio.
Previously the studio has integrated trees and plants into several buildings including the recently completed 1,000 Trees project in Shanghai, a plant-filled Maggie's Centre in Leeds and a skyscraper in Singapore with balconies overflowing with plants.
It was designed by Thomas Heatherwick. Photo by Heatherwick Studio
Previously in London, Heatherwick proposed creating a tree-covered bridge across the river Thames, which was called the Garden Bridge. Following several investigations, the project was scrapped in 2017.
The photography is by Thomas Ravenscroft unless stated.
The post First images of Heatherwick's Tree of Trees at Buckingham Palace revealed appeared first on Dezeen.
#all #design #london #england #thomasheatherwick #sculptures
BIG and Heatherwick complete Google campus topped with "dragon scale" roofs
Search engine company Google has opened its BIG and Heatherwick Studio-designed Bay View campus in California's Silicon Valley, which features sweeping, scale-like panels across its roof.
Located in the city of Mountain View, California, the Bay View campus contains two office buildings for Google alongside an events centre and 240 short-term employee accommodation units.
Bay View was designed by BIG and Heatherwick Studio
The 1.1-million-square-feet campus designed by London-based Heatherwick Studio and Danish studio BIG contains three structures with loosely domed profiles that taper towards ground level.
Each structure is covered in a tent-like roof made up of a system of inward curving panels which were fitted with a combined total of 90,000 silver solar panels that can generate almost 7 megawatts of energy.
The campus is comprised of three buildings
The upper levels of the campus' two office buildings were designed with a flexible floor under the tent-like canopy supported on slim white columns.
Gathering and social spaces were placed below these large, open plan spaces.
Its roof is covered in a solar skin
Various cubicles and partitions were used to zone Google's different work areas.
Roofed volumes were placed beside planter partitions while curtains and transparent walls similarly follow a gridded layout to create a "neighbourhood" feel.
"The second floor design has variation in floorplates to give teams a designated 'neighborhood' area that is highly flexible to change with their needs," said Google.
[
Read:
Google buys Renzo Piano's Central Saint Giles as London office
](https://www.dezeen.com/2022/01/17/google-buys-central-saint-giles-office/)
"The idea of the 'office' has been stuck for a long time," added Heatherwick Studio founder Thomas Heatherwick, "Yes, people have done different aesthetic treatments. But there hasn't been a fundamental questioning of the workplace at this scale."
"Our approach has centred on the emotions of individuals and the imaginations of teams and how you create a whole different atmosphere of work."
The office buildings have open-plan upper floors
Each of the campus' inward curving roof and ceiling panels were connected by clerestory windows that bring light into the interior.
Automated window shades monitor light throughout the day and open and close when necessary.
As a result of Bay View's solar panel skin and nearby wind farms, Google explained that the building will be powered by carbon-free energy 90 per cent of the time. Its solar skin will generate around 40 per cent of its energy needs.
"To help deliver on its commitment to operate every hour of every day on carbon-free energy by 2030, the first-of-its-kind dragonscale solar skin, as well as nearby wind farms, will power Bay View on carbon-free energy 90 per cent of the time," Google said.
The work area was designed to reflect a neighbourhood
According to Google, the campus is expected to meet a LEED-NC v4 Platinum certification while also becoming the biggest facility to achieve the International Living Future Institute LBC Water Petal Certification – a certification that recognises waste- and storm-water reuse.
The structures are surrounded by 17.3 acres of natural landscapes including wetlands, woodlands, and marshlands which form part of a Google initiative to restore natural habitats in California's wider Bay Area.
The roof will provide 40 per cent of the offices' energy
"The result is a campus where the striking dragon scale solar canopies harvest every photon that hits the buildings; the energy piles store and extract heating and cooling from the ground, and even the naturally beautiful floras are in fact hardworking rootzone gardens that filter and clean the water from the buildings," said BIG founder Bjarke Ingels.
BIG and Heatherwick Studio are two of the world's most in demand architecture studios. They are also collaborating to build Google's London campus at King's Cross, which is set to feature a rooftop garden, running track and swimming pool.
Heatherwick Studio has recently completed a shopping centre in Shanghai covered in 1,000 Trees and is designing a volcano-like performing arts centre in Hainan.
BIG is currently designing a "flood-proof" floating city and the world's "largest neighbourhood" of 3D-printed homes.
Photography is byIwan Baan.
The post BIG and Heatherwick complete Google campus topped with "dragon scale" roofs appeared first on Dezeen.
#all #architecture #big #officearchitecture #thomasheatherwick #google #siliconvalley #us
Dezeen Debate newsletter features Buckingham Palace sculpture by Thomas Heatherwick
The latest edition of our weekly Dezeen Debate newsletter features Thomas Heatherwick's design for a tree-covered sculpture at Buckingham Palace. ****Subscribe to Dezeen Debate now!
British designer Heatherwick is set to create a 21-metre-high sculpture named Tree of Trees at Buckingham Palace.
Erected as part of the Queen's Platinum Jubilee weekend celebrations, the sculpture will contain 350 types of trees found in Britain.
Commenters aren't sold on the idea. One called it, "another colossal waste of resources".
DnA_Design and Architecture transforms Chinese quarries into cultural spaces
Other stories in this week's newsletter include a series of stone quarries in China that DnA_Design and Architecture has transformed into cultural spaces, Norman Foster's plan to "rehabilitate" the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv following the Russian invasion and news of Japan's tallest tower topping out in Tokyo.
Dezeen Debate
_Dezeen Debate is a curated newsletter sent every Thursday containing highlights from Dezeen. _Read the latest edition of Dezeen Debate orsubscribe here.
_You can alsosubscribe to Dezeen Agenda, which is sent every Tuesday and contains a selection of the most important news highlights from the week, as well as _Dezeen Daily , our daily bulletin that contains every story published in the preceding 24 hours and Dezeen.
The post Dezeen Debate newsletter features Buckingham Palace sculpture by Thomas Heatherwick appeared first on Dezeen.
#all #design #london #thomasheatherwick #dezeendebate #sculptures