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October 05, 2012
Metropolis Magazine Announces Annual Next Generation® Design Competition Call for Entries
Winning Design to be Awarded $10,000. Entry Deadline is February 18, 2013

July 25, 2012
Opening Games: Next Generation winner designs for London’s East End
London Mayor’s office has commissioned an urban installation called BLOOM Games, by Bartlett architecture professor and Next Generation winner Alisa Andrasek, for Victoria Park in the East End.

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Radiant Living

August 01, 2004

Emergent turns infrastructure into ornamentation with a concept house based on systems of circulation.

By Peter Hall

Most architects go to some lengths to hide the heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning systems in their buildings, but recent history has been marked by some notable exceptions—famously Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers’s Centre Georges Pompidou, in Paris, which sported ductwork on its exterior. A project by the firm Emergent—a concept for a “Radiant Hydronic House,” which will be on show at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art this October—goes a step further by proposing a heating-and-cooling system as the defining structure of a building and a “performative” feature of its spaces. The concept house—a runner-up in the Metropolis Next Generation® Design Competition earlier this year—is formed around a central armature for moving heat, air, electricity, and data, which doubles as the building’s structure, folding and turning to form ramps and bridges.

The design, which was commissioned by a film director and a T.V. writer for a site in west Los Angeles, revisits the eco-idealism of 1960s architecture with less sentimentality and a lot more technology. In winter, rooftop thermal pools of radiator fluid collect solar heat, which is redirected to the rest of the house. In summer, liquid is replaced by air, as louvers open up in the roof, drawing westerly night winds through the spine to cool the floor slab. The central HVAC system becomes an aesthetic feature of the house with the help of transparent materials and water features—including warm baths. “We have these flowing liquid elements and radiant pools—not just on the roof but inside the house,” Emergent principal Tom Wiscombe says. “You can get into the pools at some points, and other times they’re behind glass in the floor; you’ll be living on a glass floor with glowing radiant elements down below.”

The idea of turning structure into decoration marks a shift in architecture that has emerged with the use of digital design and fabrication methods, according to SF MoMA curator Joseph Rosa, who selected Emergent’s project for the upcoming show Glamour: Fashion, Industrial Design, Architecture. The Radiant Hydronic House will share a room with a model of Herzog & De Meuron’s Prada Tokyo building, examples of what Rosa calls the “monocoque box.” As he explains, “The simple definition of a monocoque is where structure and surface become one, and Tom’s building does that.”

A network of architects who maintain active roles at larger firms (Wiscombe is a senior designer in the Vienna-based Coop Himmelb(l)au), Emergent was behind the 2003 P.S.1/MoMA Urban Beach project and has two ongoing house projects. But the group’s gurgling, energy-efficient hydronic home will not be built. The patrons, Wiscombe laments, “decided to rent.”



January 21, 2009
The Freer Masons
Michael Silver’s new audio software liberates bricklayers from their paper plans.

January 12, 2009
A CASE in Point
2004 Next Generation Runner-up launches an original academic program

June 04, 2008
Growing Full Steam Ahead

November 01, 2007
Shelter from Taliesin to Manila

June 06, 2007
More on Molo
See what’s unfolding for a past runner-up

February 16, 2005
Updates: Forsythe + MacAllen, Lira Luis, Jeanine Centuori
Updates on 2004 Metropolis Next Generation® Design Competition runners-up Forsythe + MacAllen, Lira Luis, and UrbanRock Design/Jeanine Centuori.

December 22, 2004
Seattle Waterfront Plan Dealt Setback
Next Generation Design Competition runner-up Cary Moon and her People’s Waterfront Coalition were dealt a blow this week when Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels announced the city’s plan to replace the Alaska Way Viaduct with a six-lane tunnel.

December 01, 2004
A Place to Dock
Architect Lira Luis’s temporary shelter would give Manila seafarers someplace to come home to.

December 01, 2004
Building Blocks
A young designer finds a way to recycle plastics into reusable building components.

December 01, 2004
Flower Power
Landscape-architecture studio StoSS proposes a plan that uses phytoremediation to make brownfields into public gardens.

December 01, 2004
Reclaiming the River
Pete Seeger and friends promote a permeable swimming structure for the newly cleaned-up Hudson River.

November 22, 2004
A Backup Plan
When his study of leading task chairs revealed that most of them force the sitter into unhealthy postures, industrial designer Jeff Jenkins decided to start with healthy postures and work backward.

November 22, 2004
Improv Theater
Architects often espouse the idea of adaptability, but they rarely give it center stage.

November 10, 2004
Software Aims to Revamp Masonry Practice
Michael Silver, a 2004 Next Generation® Design Prize runner-up, and the International Masonry Institute are developing Automason, a software program that delivers precise instructions to on-site masons.

October 01, 2004
Do the Strand
Seattle activists suggest that the best plan for a troubled waterfront freeway may be to eliminate it.

July 01, 2004
Mapping the Competition ‘04
Where did all these ideas for the Metropolis Next Generation Design competition come from?

July 01, 2004
Accordion Architecture
A Canadian firm’s material experiments produce flexible living spaces.

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