Monday, 9 December 2019

LOHA designs affordable housing complex for difficult site in Los Angeles

Isla Intersections by LOHA

American firm LOHA has unveiled plans for an affordable housing complex in Los Angeles, comprising stacks of shipping containers arranged on a triangular site near a busy highway interchange.

The complex, called Isla Intersections, is slated to be built on a three-sided parcel that is just under a half-acre. Located in South LA, the property is near "one of the world's busiest freeway interchanges", said local firm LOHA (Lorcan O'Herlihy Architects) – a winner of a 2019 Dezeen Award.

For the challenging site, LOHA has envisioned a housing block with stretches of green space. The complex, slated to open next year, is reserved for tenants who were formerly homeless.

The design features a series of 16 "staggered towers" arranged around a central courtyard. Walkways and pocket parks encircle the cluster of buildings, forming a "green lung" that filters car emissions and other air pollutants.

Isla Intersections by LOHA
LOHA has designed the affordable housing for tenants who were fomerly homeless

"The landscaping is site-specific, with trees, shrubs and vines chosen for their ability to clean the air and offer a respite from the sea of concrete enclosing the site," the studio said.

The tower heights vary. On the east side, where the site approaches a low-scale neighbourhood, the buildings transition from five storeys to two. This side of the complex runs along Broadway, a major thoroughfare.

On the property's west side, which is more pedestrian-friendly, the design incorporates a tree-lined promenade, envisioned as a "slow space" that preferences walkers and cyclists.

"Our aim was to create something that was compartmental but solid, strong enough to withstand the demands of the project's location but porous enough to engage the residents on a human scale with outdoor activities and places to work and socialise," the firm said of the overall scheme.

Isla Intersections by LOHA
It will comprise 16 staggered towers built from shipping containers

The complex is designed to be quickly constructed using steel shipping containers. The team has designed a modular unit that consists of three containers welded together. The units are then stacked to form interconnected towers with shared circulation.

The 480-square-foot (45-square-metre) units will feature "compact and efficient" interior layouts. Each will serve as a one-bedroom apartment that complies with requirements outlined in the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

The proposed design would result in 54 individual apartments and a total square footage of 34,000 square feet (3,159 square metres). In addition to the apartments, the scheme calls for retail and support spaces.

"While the project is predominantly residential and green space, the ground level along the paseo will provide a number of storefront spaces for retail, incubation and job training and support services, as well as administrative offices," the firm said.

The plan also calls for rooftop farms and edible gardens, which will provide fresh food for tenants.

"This project has the chance to become part of a larger network of urban farms in the area, whose mission is to preserve the tradition of farming in South Los Angeles, bringing affordable produce to what many consider a food desert," the team said.

The architects cited the Stanford Avalon Community Garden, a nine-acre (3.6-hectare) urban farm that sits under power lines in the Watts neighbourhood.

Isla Intersections by LOHA
The project will occupy a triangular site in Los Angeles

"Isla aspires to build on their legacy, harnessing the potential to be a part of a much larger green lung that can potentially wind its way through the city," the studio said.

The Isla Intersections project is part of an initiative by the City of Los Angeles to address its housing crisis. In 2018, more than 1,700 city-owned parcels were made available to developers of affordable housing, according to LOHA.

The sites are less than ideal, with many located near freeways or situated along heavy traffic corridors. In some instances, the sites are a composition of parcels that "have been left untouched for decades".

"It is in this kind of liminal space, fraught with ambiguity, that we see opportunity, and a potentially significant next step for the future of housing in the city," said the firm.

LOHA was founded in 1987 and is run by Irish architect Lorcan O'Herlihy. Isla Intersections marks its second collaboration with Clifford Beers Housing, a nonprofit developer. The other is MLK1101, a housing complex in LA for homeless residents that features white facades and a sloped green roof. The project was named housing project of the year in the 2019 Dezeen Awards.

Other projects by the firm include student housing at a university in central California, an apartment building in West Hollywood, and a housing block in LA's Koreatown.

Images are by LOHA.


Project credits:

Architect: Lorcan O'Herlihy Architects (LOHA)
Client: Clifford Beers Housing in collaboration with the Annenberg Foundation

The post LOHA designs affordable housing complex for difficult site in Los Angeles appeared first on Dezeen.



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Call for entries to AHEAD Americas awards 2020

AHEAD Americas awards 2020 call for entries

Architects and designers working across the Americas are now invited to submit their entries to the 2020 edition of the AHEAD Awards.

Championing standout hospitality projects from around the world, the AHEAD Awards focuses on four different regions: the Americas, Asia, Middle East and Africa (MEA) and Europe.

The 2020 AHEAD Americas competition will review projects that have opened, reopened or launched in the continent between November 2018 and December 2019.

AHEAD Americas awards 2020 call for entries
The Siren Hotel was named as Hotel of the Year at the 2019 AHEAD Americas

Submissions will be arranged into 15 categories: Bar, Club or Lounge; Event Spaces; Guestrooms; Hotel Conversion; Hotel New Build; Hotel Renovation & Restoration; Landscaping & Outdoor Spaces; Lobby & Public Spaces; Lodges & Tented Camps; Resort Hotel; Restaurant; Spa & Wellness; Suite; Transport and Visual Identity.

AHEAD Americas awards 2020 call for entries
The judging panel praised the Detroit hotel for preserving original features

Projects will then be scrutinised by a panel of industry experts that the AHEAD team feels represents the "wide spectrum of disciplines involved in delivering new hotels".

Judges last year included Studio Tack's creative director, Jou-Yie Chou, managing partner of Yabu Pushelberg, Johnathan Garrison, and partner of Rockwell Group, Greg Keffer.

AHEAD Americas 2019 awards shortlist
Los Angeles' Gold-Diggers hotel – which has its own music studio – was also a 2019 winner

Winners will be announced at a June 2020 ceremony at the OMA-designed Faena Forum in Miami.

First-place projects in the 2019 edition of the AHEAD Americas included Solaz Los Cabos, a resort hotel in Mexico that's surrounded by luscious greenery, and Gold-Diggers, a sultry hotel in LA that has its own recording studio.

AHEAD Americas awards 2020 call for entries
Solaz Los Cabos also took home an award in the 2019 AHEAD Americas

The much sought-after Hotel of the Year title was won by The Siren Hotel in Detroit, which is in a 1920s office building.

Judges praised the project for its preservation of historical details and said it "creates a fantasy of what Detroit could be".

AHEAD Americas awards 2020 call for entries
The Mexican resort hotel is surrounded by an abundance of greenery

Entries to the AHEAD Americas cost $250 (plus VAT) for the first project and $99 (plus VAT) for additional submissions. Champions will go on to contend against winners from other regions in a Global Biennale, where worldwide titles are awarded.

To find out more about the AHEAD Awards, visit its website.

The post Call for entries to AHEAD Americas awards 2020 appeared first on Dezeen.



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The Adobe MAX Creativity Tour shed light on how to creatively empower ourselves

Adobe-max-creativity-tour-sponsored-content-event-itsincethat-list
Last week, on the evening of Tuesday 3 December, creatives around the world tucked into an evening of innovation on screen or in person for The Adobe MAX Creativity Tour. Bringing some of the UK’s most creative minds together in a bubbling line up, the event delved Adobe’s latest updates and programs on offer.

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Director Tom Chancellor stages a rave at a model village for Minirig ad

Tom-chancellor-minirig-small-rave-massive-advertising-itsnicethat-01
The two-minute promo, called Small Rave Massive, is a collaboration with electronic duo Orbital and features miniature versions of the musicians playing to tiny ravers using Minirig speakers.

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Geometric Volumes and Humanoid Figures Shape-Shift in a New Animation by Guldies

Malleable sculptures formed from plasticine topple, bounce, and shape-shift between geometric volumes and humanoid figures in UTOPIA, a new stop motion animation. The minimalist short film is set on a plain aqua-toned background with a restricted clay color palette of white, pink, orange, and burgundy. UTOPIA’s tightly controlled aesthetic centers the viewer’s attention on the fast-moving shapes as they transform and interact with each other. The short was created by Alexander Unger, a Swedish animator who goes by Guldies (previously). Watch more animations from Unger on his YouTube channel and Instagram.



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