Friday, June 6, 2014

Dubai Frame design controversy



A row has broken out over the design of the Dubai Frame, a tourist attraction set to be constructed in Zabeel Park.
Fernando Donis, a Mexican architect, won a competition in 2009 to design the structure as his idea was selected from 926 designs in the ThyssenKrupp Elevator Architecture Awards – sponsored by Dubai Municipality, the body that would be responsible for building the structure.
But according to a report in newspaper The National, Donis claims changes to his design revealed by the local authority are in breach of the competition rules.
 He has written an open letter on the issue to Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai.
“The tone of the letter and intention to go public is to solicit the intervention of the Ruler of Dubai, as we assume he is not aware of this situation, to hopefully still participate in the process of the project; and now make them see that the design alterations they are making – next to unlawful – are misguided,” he was quoted by the newspaper as saying.“The project is being transformed from being non-figurative architecture to an overscale figurative photo-frame. That is, from being a modern, public monument to a postmodern pastiche.”
The structure, due to be completed next year, is to be 150m tall and 100m wide. Plans include a transparent walkway constructed from glass between its two sides to give visitors the impression they are walking through the sky, with 360-degree views across the city.

Expo 2020: Mega-projects to look out for in Dubai


Several mega-projects are set to commence in preparation for the much-anticipated Expo 2020, expected to be delivered earlier than 2020. These following mega mixed-use projects, when completed, will shape Dubai’s new  skyline.

Bluewaters Island: The Dh6 billion Bluewaters Island is set to be one of the largest tourist hotspots in the world. It will feature a demarcated retail, residential, hospitality and entertainment zones and will house Dubai Eye, the world’s largest Ferris wheel.


Mohammad Bin Rashid City: Comprising four key components, the new city will focus on family tourism, retail, arts and entrepreneurship. The first component focuses on family tourism, and will include a park equipped to receive 35 million visitors and a family centre for leisure and entertainment set up in collaboration with Universal Studios. There will be over 100 hotel facilities to meet the needs of visitors. The second component, focusing on retail, will feature the largest shopping mall in the world, “Mall of the World.” The third component will include the largest area for arts galleries in Mena. The fourth component will see the development of a unique area that will provide an integrated environment for entrepreneurship and innovation in the region.




Deira project: Nakheel will built the Deira project, which being be developed on four existing islands of Palm Deira project. The project, covering 1600 hectares, will be a waterfront destination, adding over 40 kilometres, including 21 kilometres of beachfront, to Dubai’s existing coastline. The cost of the project has not been disclosed.Three hectares have been dedicated to hotels and resorts and 424 hectares for mixed-use developments. A night market designed in the style of a Arabic souk will be built, having over 1,400 retail units and restaurants with a number of anchor stores.There will be an amphitheater with a capacity 30,000 people; a creek marina to accommodate large yachts and a range of additional marinas offering mooring facilities directly outside residences. The island will also have a number of waterfront plots for hotels, resorts and serviced apartments. The three remaining islands will also feature hotels, resorts and residential, commercial and retail units.



Dubai Adventure Studios: Meraas Holding is developing a Dh10-billion destination that focuses on delivering a multi-faceted leisure and entertainment experience to residents and tourists. Located at Jebel Ali, the project will feature five distinct theme parks based on movies, animals and fun characters that shall appeal to all demographics. Dubai Adventure Studios, the first phase of the development plans for which were announced by Meraas in December 2011, will anchor the new destination and is expected to be completed by 2014.





MBR District One: With a market value of Dh21 billion, Mohammed Bin Rashid City - District One will have 1,500 luxury villas, a 350,000 square meter water park, the largest crystal lagoon body of water in the world with seven kilometre of lagoons and man-made beaches, retail zones, leisure and sports attractions. The project, which will be delivered in four phases, will be completed in six to eight years time. Work has already commenced on the project, which is a joint venture between Medyan and Sobha Group.





Dubai Water Canal: The Dh7.34 billion Dubai Water Canal will connect the Business Bay with the Arabian Gulf passing through the heart of Dubai. The waterway will stretch 3 kilometers in length and width ranging from 80 to 120 meters. All construction works of the project’s infrastructure including drilling and building bridges is set for completion in 2017.The project comprises new shopping and entertainment centres linked through a uniquely designed bridge, over 450 new restaurants along with a wide array of luxurious marinas for yachts, and four world-class hotels.




Taj Arabia, Mughal Gardens: Taj Arabia, a replica of India's Taj Mahal, will be a 350-room hotel and serviced apartments. It will be part of Mughal Gardens development being developed by Link Global Group in Falcon City of Wonders in Dubailand. Taj Arabia will a 350-room hotel and serviced apartments and it will be an all-glass structure. India’s The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts will be managing the hotel.



The Lagoons: Dubai Holding and Emaar Properties will jointly develop The Lagoons, a waterfront city within the multi-billion-dollar Mohammed Bin Rashid (MBR) City. A master development, which will be over three times the size of Downtown Dubai, will cover an area of six million square metres. The centerpiece of the development will be the Dubai Twin Towers, a mixed-use development, which is envisaged to join the rank of the world’s most prestigious skyscrapers.


Tuesday, June 3, 2014

8 Rooms Showcasing Industrial-Style Design

              In the height of the industrial revolution, the exposed brick, duct work and pipes of factories were not a desirable look, but simply inevitable. Today, leaving the inner workings of a home exposed, or even bringing in recycled, raw materials is a strong design movement with emphasis on aesthetic, rather than necessity.

Industrial style adherents may have begun the style with raw, original and reclaimed materials, but today many retailers carry items, that although brand new, would look at home in a 19th century factory or barn.
Want to get the look? Here are eight rooms featured on Zillow Digs, to get those wheels — corroded metal ones, of course — turning.

Expose the ceiling

Lukas_living room
Embrace the duct work or exposed beams of a ceiling. Add minimal accessories and white walls to enhance the impact.

It’s concrete

Concrete countertops
Eco-friendly and affordable, concrete is a great choice for durable countertops in an industrial-inspired spaces.

Better with beams

Beams
Even if the home is not a factory loft, create the same feel as one with metal beams and simple pendant lighting.

Statement light

black light
Lighting is an easy way to change the feel of a room. This extended pendant light adds an immediate rustic feel to this simple kitchen nook, designed bybright designlab interior design.

Sleek cabinets

reclaimed cabinets
Custom steel and laminate cabinets are a nice juxtaposition against reclaimed wood floors.

Warm up a space with wood

kitchen with bar
Industrial doesn’t have to mean cold. Use reclaimed wood to create a statement bar.

Concrete walls

conrete walls
Cut down costs and increase a room’s cool factor and leave concrete walls as is in a living space.

Wall of windows

windows
Factory-style windows do wonders for brightening an industrial space.

Award winning loft manipulates conventional forms in interior design

What began as a simple renovation of a Melbourne loft apartment finished as an example of innovation in spatial planning and Australia’s best interior design for 2014.

The main spatial requirement of the client brief was to add a bedroom and recreational roof deck to the existing apartment. From there, project architect Adrian Amore said the design response was completely up to him, leaving him unencumbered scope to explore and experiment.
A by-product of Amore’s experimentation is the unique sculptural staircase and interior walling structure that showcases his fascination with contorting surfaces and traditional material manipulation.
“I am interested in this idea of shaping something as though it has been physically manipulated, by applying a force either through pulling, pushing, bending,” said Amore.
“So starting with a conventional form, and then shaping through the process of contorting the surfaces to give it life, movement. The stair is an example of this, where I started with a conventional circular stair on paper, then applied this process of manipulation so it appears as though it has been pulled and bent.”
The staircase’s external skin comprises a 6mm and 10mm plasterboard amalgamation covered with a hardplaster top coat and painted finished. This skin is now fixed to 6mm plywood sheeting that was bent on site, and braced by timber battens and hardplaster.  A steel frame and timber treads complete the unique staircase, which judges from the Australian Interior Design Awards called an expert exploration of volume and plasticity.
“Generated from a concept primarily focused on its interior, the apartment possesses a sculptural quality - made evident through the central staircase - that is ethereal and sophisticated in its execution,” cited the jury.
“The spatial planning within the apartment reveals the hand of the designer; a skilful hand that expertly creates and explores volume, plasticity and light, culminating in an interior that is invigorating, sumptuous and liveable.”












Amore said this spatial planning of the former warehouse apartment evolved through experimenting with functional layouts and partitioning options, and by considering natural light and movement patterns.
“The ground floor is on large space which has the ability to be divided into enclosed spaces, using floor to ceiling sliding doors to achieve this. There is the ability to control the level of permeability and movement through the space.”
With his 2D CAD, 3D Rhinoceros modelling software and his structural engineer Maurice Farrugia & Associates, Amore also overcame wall space and cavity issues that can be associated with sliding doors through considered spatial planning.
“The bathroom location is critical in the way it breaks up the ground floor space, acting as a buffer between the living and bedroom, and hiding the sliding doors in its walls.”
Furniture selection, a simplistic marble kitchen and bold joinery pieces top off the Adrian Amore Architects design, which in hindsight, did a little more than just meet the client brief.
The Adrian Amore project received the Premier Award for interior design excellence and innovation, as well as the Residential Design award and Best in State (VIC) at the 2014 Australian Interior Design awards.

Interior design companies see big demand as new projects are launched

Dubai: International and regional interior design companies say demand for interiors and fit-outs have gone up over the last year with the announcement of a number of residential, hospitality and retail projects.

Construction projects that are expected to be completed by the end of this year in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries are estimated to valued at $128.46 billion, up 92 per cent compared to 2013, according to management consultancy Ventures Middle East. The medical, residential and hospitality sectors are likely to account for more than half of the market, with shares of 24.43 per cent, 23.34 per cent and 22.64 per cent, respectively.
“The UAE market, and the Dubai market especially, is leading the way for the many different types of development. These new projects that are in different sectors will require fit-outs,” said Faisal Al Raisi, chief operating officer of Abu Dhabi-based Galaxy Trading.
“The business is booming in the UAE and there’s good demand. After the announcement of the World Expo 2020 [last November], everyone is more encouraged to come and develop,” he added.
While demand for interior fit-outs is up across different sectors, the most growth is seen in the residential sector, Al Raisi indicated. He was speaking during the International Interior Design Exhibition (Index 2014), which opened on Monday and will run until Thursday at the Dubai World Trade Centre.
According to estimates by consultancy JLL, 39,000 homes are to be delivered in Dubai over the next two years, up 9 per cent over the existing total stock of 365,000 units.
The residential sector accounts for 90-95 per cent of Algedra Interior Design Consultancy’s sales, said Nasser Al Shamali, the company’s sales manager. It also offers interior design services for hotels.
The UAE’s interior and fit-out market is expected to be valued at $2.73 billion this year, according to Ventures Middle East data. The country accounts for 35.5 per cent of the GCC’s interior fit-out market. Estimated expenditure on interiors and fit-outs in the region stands at $9.57 billion, up 29.63 compared to 2013.
Al Raisi expects the company’s sales this year to double from the “over Dh300 million” recorded last year. “We have at least 7-10 projects in the pipeline. We will supply the materials within this year,” he added.
Demand for interior fit-outs has strengthened compared to 2009-2012, according to Olga Gubanova, managing director of Design Group International, which does interior and exterior work for private homes and hotels.
“People are more willing to buy houses than in previous years. There are more hotels being built in the UAE and some GCC countries,” she said.
Egypt-based French Home Furniture, meanwhile, is participating at Index 2014 to look for distributors.
“Dubai is a big market. You have here multinational companies from Europe and Asia,” said Mohammad Al Eraky, the company’s export manager.