


Arquitectura Viva 230 BIG Bjarke Ingels Group
7.99€
Arquitectura Viva 230 BIG Bjarke Ingels Group
BIG BJARKE INGELS GROUP. DOSSIER PATRIMONIO: ENRICH, JULIÀ CAPDEVILA, TWOBO + TWOSE, GUALLART // NORMAN FOSTER · JACQUES HERZOG · QUÉ HACER ANTE EL VIRUS
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ArchPAPERS Digital books and magazines on Architecture – Revistas y Libros Digitales de Arquitectura
INDEX / INDICE
Arquitectura Viva 230









BIG Bjarke Ingels Group




Arte y cultura / Art & Culture



Libros / Books

Heritage in Catalonia




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Product Description
Arquitectura Viva 230 BIG Bjarke Ingels Group
BIG BJARKE INGELS GROUP. DOSSIER PATRIMONIO: ENRICH, JULIÀ CAPDEVILA, TWOBO + TWOSE, GUALLART // NORMAN FOSTER · JACQUES HERZOG · QUÉ HACER ANTE EL VIRUS

Arquitectura Viva 230 BIG Bjarke Ingels Group
Monuments molt: they change skin, change image, and change meaning. As living heritage, they renew their renders and their walls, transform their outer appearance, and modify their symbolic content; and as vulnerable heritage, they experience decadence and neglect, give testimony of their ruins, and are reborn as facsimiles or replicas. Over a century ago, in ‘The Modern Cult of Monuments,’ Alois Riegl taught us that, aside from their historic value, monuments possess the value of age, because the traces of time apparent in their material decay make us aware of their organic nature. Constructions are no less fragile than us, they are no less perishable, and they are no less susceptible to being cast into the abyss where oblivion dwells. All of them mutable and ephemeral, monuments and people see matter and memory vanish in the current of time, and only the tenacious regeneration of buildings and lives delays their disappearance.
The Great Mosque of Djenné is the world’s most impressive adobe construction, and the most important monument of Sdanese architecture. In the inner delta of the Niger River, Djenné was, like Timbuktu, a hub of Trans-Saharan trade and Islamic knowledge, and the present mosque was raised in colonial times over the ruins of a previous one. Once a year, when the rain season ends, the mosque must repair damage by renovating its facade with banco (a timeless recipe that mixes mud, straw, shea butter, and baobab dust), a task fulfilled in one day by the whole community, and that has become a unique ritual. The archaeologist and photographer Luis Monreal – with whom I was fortunate to travel across those areas of Mali, off limits today due to the presence of an Islamist guerrilla – documents in his latest book the extraordinary regeneration of this living monument, which is reborn periodically in tune with nature.
In violent contrast with this ceremony of fertility, and coinciding with the 75th anniversary of the Nuremberg trials, Germany has decided to preserve the ruins of the Zeppelinfeld, where Speer built the huge stand from which Hitler presided Nazi rallies. Here, paradoxically validating the architect’s Ruinenwerttheorie (which argues that buildings should be designed considering their beauty and magnificence when time has turned them into ruins), the country proposes changing the meaning of the work, so that the remains are preserved as a reminder of an ominous past that must not be repeated: a ‘lieu de mémoire’ that is also a gesture of expiation in the city that enacted the laws that led to the murder of six million Jews. If monuments can be renewed physically and symbolically, changing their face like animals shed skin, they can also be ethically and emotionally regenerated by surviving as a ruin, a reminder, and a warning.
BIG Bjarke Ingels Group. With over forty built works in different parts of the planet – and more than twice that number in projects, including one outside our orbit – the practice established in 2001 by Bjarke Ingels (Copenhagen, 1974) lives up to its name. From four offices the firm runs a vast network of professionals that has produced an architecture halfway between pragmatism at its strictest and utopia at its most idealistic, always with a sustainable approach which, beyond the programs, seeks to improve the quality of people’s lives. This is the philosophy that shines through in the works featured here: a museum in Switzerland, dwellings in Sweden, and a zoo and an unusual waste-energy plant in Denmark.
BIG Bjarke Ingels Group
Topografías sostenibles
Dossier: Patrimonio en Cataluña
Actualidad / News
Luis Fernández-Galiano
Monumentos mudables Molting Monuments
Focho: Planeta en peligro Bubble Threats
España exterior Barozzi Veiga, AZPML, Pinearq
Obras de ensanche Three Madrid Offices
Casas: Idearch Studio House for an Artist
Interiores: Arquitectura-G Acne Studios Flagship Store
Exteriores: Wutopia Lab White Upland
BIG Bjarke Ingels Group
Centro de observación de pandas
Panda House
Museo Atelier Audemars Piguet
Musée Atelier Audemars Piguet
Edificio de viviendas 79&Park
79&Park Hillside
Planta de energía CopenHill
CopenHill Power Plant
Arte y cultura / Art and Culture
Luis Fernández-Galiano
Evocación de la obra Rafael Moneo Thinks Aloud
Norman Foster
Discurso en Ginebra United Nations Forum of Mayors
Jacques Herzog
Carta desde Basilea What Should Architects Do?
Libros / Books
Filosofías de la belleza Peter Sloterdijk, Byung-Chul Han
Un gran salto BIG’s Architectural Timelapse
Fuera de tiempo On Loos, Rossi, and Hejduk
Una biografía intelectual On Fernández-Galiano’s Essays
Patrimonio en Cataluña / Heritage in Catalonia
Carles Enrich
Recuperación de la Torre de Merola en Puigreig
Merola Tower Reconstruction in Puig-reig
Josep Maria Julià Capdevila
Escuela de Medios Audiovisuales Can Batlló en Barcelona
EMAV Can Batlló in Barcelona
Twobo + Luis Twose
Recinto Fabril Aguas de Vilajuiga
Aigües de Vilajuïga Industrial Plant
Guallart Architects
Casa Rec en Igualada
Rec House in Igualada
Luis Fernández-Galiano
Aprender a esperar
Vaccines Offer Hopes of an Ending