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ILM modelmaker Marc Thorpe has passed away.

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Marc Thorpe Dies: ‘Star Wars’ VFZ Artist And Creator Of ‘Robot Wars’ Concept, Was 77
#News #Obituaries #MarcThorpe #Obituary #RobotWars #StarWars

https://deadline.com/2023/11/marc-thorpe-dead-robot-wars-1235642358/

Marc Thorpe Dead: 'Star Wars' VFZ Artist, 'Robot Wars' Creator Was 77

Marc Thorpe, the visual effects artist who worked on various Star Wars and Indiana Jones films and created the Robot Wars concept in the early 1990s – around the same time he was first diagno…

Deadline
Marc Thorpe Dead: 'Star Wars' VFX Artist Was 77

Marc Thorpe, the visual effects artist who worked on several 'Indiana Jones' and 'Star Wars' films before launching Robot Wars, has died. He was 77.

Variety

RIP Marc Thorpe - the pioneer and creator of the original Robot Wars, which lead to Robot Wars in the UK, BattleBots and so much more. Genuinely gutted to hear this news this morning.

#MarcThorpe #RobotWars #BattleBots

marc thorpe launches 'edifice upstate' to develop affordable, solar-powered homes

 

designboom | architecture & design magazine

Marc Thorpe designs Kampala houses made from local soil bricks

Architect Marc Thorpe has unveiled renderings of a set of houses in Uganda that will be constructed almost entirely from bio-bricks made from local soil and feature solar-panelled roofs.

Scheduled for completion this spring, Marc Thorpe is working on the project with social housing company Échale and Stage Six, an organisation that describes itself as supporting businesses in becoming sustainable franchises.

Ten houses will be built just outside of Kampala

The group will initially produce 10 houses of the same size just outside of Kampala, the capital city of Uganda, but hopes to expand the project in the region once this first stage is complete.

Comprised of just one storey each, the bungalows will be built from Échale's patented Ecoblocks, which are bio-bricks made of 90 per cent local soil, with a mixture of cement, sand, lime and water accounting for the rest of the material.

Bricks made from soil will be used to construct the project

"Ecoblock is a bioclimatic, thermal and acoustic insulator – ecological and more resistant than cement block," Thorpe told Dezeen.

"This, in turn, makes it locally sourced and fully recyclable, producing 30 per cent less carbon dioxide emissions," he continued.

Each house will feature a water tower

According to Thorpe, other sustainable features of the Kampala houses will include large, flat roofs made from corrugated steel and wood that are designed to hold solar panels that will generate electricity.

Each house's roof will also be fitted with gutters connected to an adjacent water tower so that rainwater harvested from the roofs can be stored and used.

Outside areas will be shaded by the houses' roofs

Crucially, the houses will have a water tower each rather than relying on a communal one, in order to prevent the community from being deprived of a water supply should there be a drought.

Visitors will enter each standalone property via large terraces that will wrap around the houses' fronts and sides, which will be shaded from the harsh sun by their roofs.

[

Read:

Mounds of surplus soil form walls in Japanese house by ADX

](https://www.dezeen.com/2021/05/31/adx-soil-house-minamisoma-japan-architecture/)

Each house will have three bedrooms and two bathrooms, as well as a kitchen and living and dining areas.

Wood-burning stoves – commonly found in Ugandan houses – will be placed on the terraces where they will be connected to the kitchens.

Wood-burning stoves will feature on the terraces

According to Thorpe, the project is designed to provide low-cost housing for middle- and lower-income families in Uganda, where the architect, Échale and Stage Six say there is a shortage of housing units.

"We always begin [the design process] with understanding the social, economic and environmental dynamics of a site," said Thorpe.

"We are currently working with a local developer and architect to best understand the programmatic requirements for the area around Kampala."

The properties are designed to provide low-cost housing

Thorpe also explained the reasons for using Ecoblock as the primary material for the Kampala houses, as opposed to more traditional construction materials.

"I think building based on need, using locally sourced materials and environmentally responsible methods that systemically integrate into an ecology is a sound direction," he said.

"If we plan on sticking around on this planet any longer we really don’t have an alternative. My approach to architecture is to design with responsibility and purpose."

Similar projects in Uganda that are driven by sustainability include The Mount Sinai Kyabirwa Surgical Facility, a self-sustaining building by local construction workers that is topped with a solar-panelled canopy.

The renderings are byTruetopia.

The post Marc Thorpe designs Kampala houses made from local soil bricks appeared first on Dezeen.

#residential #all #architecture #houses #solarpower #bungalows #soil #lowcosthousing #marcthorpe #uganda #sustainablearchitecture

Marc Thorpe designs Kampala houses made from local soil bricks

Marc Thorpe has designed a set of Ugandan houses that will be constructed almost entirely from soil and feature solar-panelled roofs that harvest rainwater.

Dezeen
marc thorpe design will build sustainable housing from compressed earth in kampala, uganda

 

designboom | architecture & design magazine

Marc Thorpe designs off-grid cabin retreat in the Romanian mountains

Architect Marc Thorpe has unveiled renderings of a holiday retreat in Romania, comprising off-grid wooden cabins informed by rural vernacular architecture.

Called Canton House, the project is designed to extend the Tara Luanei hotel in Romania's Carpathian Mountains, with construction scheduled to begin in summer 2021.

The Canton House project calls for three cabins clad in blackened shingles

The retreat will include three cabins clad from roof to wall in blackened, locally sourced wood, each featuring a kitchenette, bathroom, bedroom, and utility and storage rooms finished in plywood.

Subtly designed, the cabins will have slanted roofs and take cues from wood shingles often found in Romanian vernacular architecture such as rural towers and church spires.

The cabins are designed to generate their own electricity via solar panels

"The low profile and dark tones of the building do not call for attention, they in fact disappear into the wilderness through the play of shadow and light on the faceted surfaces of the roofline and walls," Thorpe told Dezeen.

The architect explained how the wooden cabins will operate off-grid. "The cabins will be outfitted with individual solar kits to be installed either on the side of the building facing south or away from the cabin on a small array field."

"Each cabin will be unique in its energy usage so depending on the client, the solar kit will be suggested," he added.

According to Thorpe, the design ethos that has governed the project centres on minimalism and ecological responsibility.

Plywood will line the interior of each cabin

Canton House is based on another of his projects called Edifice, a recently designed off-grid stained cedar cabin located in Upstate New York.

As well as the designs for the Tara Luanei hotel, additional versions of the Canton House cabins are currently available to buy and construct in other locations.

Each cabin will have a slanted roof

American architect Thorpe founded his eponymous design practice in 2010. Since then, he has completed a virtual house with vaulted concrete arches and a conceptual installation for Mexico that resembles a spaceship landing on Earth.

The renderings are byDRVR Studio.

The post Marc Thorpe designs off-grid cabin retreat in the Romanian mountains appeared first on Dezeen.

#residential #all #architecture #renderings #blackenedwood #shingles #news #romania #holidayhomes #woodenarchitecture #cabins #marcthorpe #offgridhomes

Marc Thorpe designs off-grid cabin retreat in the Romanian mountains

Architect Marc Thorpe has unveiled renderings of a holiday retreat in Romania, comprising off-grid wooden cabins informed by rural vernacular architecture.

contemporary off-grid cabin experience by marc thorpe lives in harmony with romanian nature

the canton house by marc thorpe design is an off-grid sustainable alternative to a traditional weekend retreat nestled in romanian mountains.

designboom | architecture & design magazine