Winners of the 2021 WARMING Competition propose urban sedimentology, whale-based carbon capture, and flood-proof farming
The winning entries of Arch Out Loud's 2021 WARMING Competition have been revealed. The challenge invited students and professionals from the fields of architecture, planning, and design to create and imagine the future of our built environment as it responds to our world's greatest crisis: climate change. "How will our built environment react to rising sea levels, extended droughts, climbing temperatures, and other symptoms of global warming?" the brief asked. "How can our buildings and cities prevent the severity of natural disasters, degrading air quality, melting ice caps, and climate change at large?"Participants were asked to propose new or adapted architectural spaces that address issues of global warming. Entries were not restricted to any particular program, scale, or site. This year's WARMING Competition jury comprised noteworthy architects and designers, including Thom Mayne, Sou Fujimoto, Asif Khan, Alice Britton, Tei Carpenter, Rossana Hu, Sheila Sri Prakash, Lola Sheppard, Neyran Turan, and Ken Yeang.Overall Winner: Urban Sedimentology by Boji HuProject excerpt: "Urban Sedimentology is an architectural paradigm operating within a new legislative framework. It opposes excavation, demolition, expansion, and provokes reuse, re-purposing and the re-assembling of what we already have. It introduces architecture as a resistant force against climate change, by reflecting on the construction process within the geological time scale. It questions the life cycle of urban artefacts and seeks solutions to stimulate the pursuit of longevity." ~ Read moreRead the full post on Bustler
The winning entries of Arch Out Loud's 2021 WARMING Competition have been revealed. The challenge invited students and professionals from the fields of architecture, planning, and design to create and imagine the future of our built environment as it responds to our world's greatest crisis: climate change.
"How will our built environment react to rising sea levels, extended droughts, climbing temperatures, and other symptoms of global warming?" the brief asked. "How can our buildings and cities prevent the severity of natural disasters, degrading air quality, melting ice caps, and climate change at large?"
Participants were asked to propose new or adapted architectural spaces that address issues of global warming. Entries were not restricted to any particular program, scale, or site.
This year's WARMING Competition jury comprised noteworthy architects and designers, including Thom Mayne, Sou Fujimoto, Asif Khan, Alice Britton, Tei Carpenter, Rossana Hu, Sheila Sri Prakash, Lola Sheppard, Neyran Turan, and Ken Yeang.
Overall Winner: Urban Sedimentology by Boji Hu
Project excerpt: "Urban Sedimentology is an architectural paradigm operating within a new legislative framework. It opposes excavation, demolition, expansion, and provokes reuse, re-purposing and the re-assembling of what we already have. It introduces architecture as a resistant force against climate change, by reflecting on the construction process within the geological time scale. It questions the life cycle of urban artefacts and seeks solutions to stimulate the pursuit of longevity." ~ Read moreRead the full post on Bustler