Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Major Project - Warehouse and Office Complex


Renzo Piano


Renzo Piano was born in Genoa on September 14,1937. In Genoa he still maintains a home and office (Building Workshop). He runs his firm from three offices in Genoa, Paris and Berlin.

Its name, Renzo Piano Building Workshop, indicates the concentration tradition that he inherited from his family, which led him to be faithful to his materials, by pushing them to their limits, improving their performances and enhancing their characteristics.

Renzo Piano's work is based on a search for the human face of technology, on an attempt to demonstrate that modern building processes do not inevitably lead to cold, mechanized industrial buildings, but can give rise to warm, luminous spaces catering to the needs of human beings.

Technology is used in all his projects to tone down light, evaluate the context and find a means to integrate them into nature. After designing buildings where technology represented an end in itself, Piano moved towards projects in which innovative building techniques are merely a tool used to obtain comfortable, sustainable and ecological spaces.

The most common materials used in his buildings are: glass, timber, stone & steel.

Renzo Piano concentrates on the relationship between the interior and the exterior as one of his main aspects.


Buildings I'm focusing on for the major project:


1. Beyeler Foundation, Riehen (Basel), Switzerland (1992-1997)


2. Jean Marie Tjibaou Cultural Centre, Noumea, New Caledonia (1991-1998)



3. Niccolo Paganini Auditorium, Parma, Italy (1997-2001)


4. Padre Pio Church, San Giovanni Rotondo (Foggia), Italy (1991-2003)


5. Kansai International Airport Terminal, Osaka, Japan (1988-1994)

6. Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, Switzerland (1999-2005)

6 comments:

Daniel O said...

Amazing Nicole, simply amazing. Where did you get such brilliant structural details of these buildings? I can't wait to see what you come up with.

Jeremy Ham's Construction Blog said...

i'll second that!
excellent research nicole
Jeremy

Nick C said...

the Jean Marie Tjibaou Cultural Centre are amazing buildings.

Also, I dunno if you know, but the Kansai International Airport is way out in Osaka Bay, so the form of the terminal building was dictated by the winds.

Anonymous said...

yeah fantastic photos

- said...

Wow, you've done a great job at researching Renzo. Those photos are fantastic. Can't wait to see your final model and posters. Well done!

andrewfehervari said...

yeah have to agree, stuff looks amazing. haven't seen alot of his stuff but i think ill have to have a bit of a look at his oeuvre