Still among my favourite episodes! Learn something new every time I watch it.
@paulrand40387 күн бұрын
Please don't do any more videos
@luzvelez242313 күн бұрын
Maldita casa oh oh 😢
@stpeterscooksriver187314 күн бұрын
Yes it’s great, as long as you don’t expect to find a wealth of books there. The Cafe is a good place to be and the free internet is awesome!
@brighttooth359215 күн бұрын
Thank you
@justingriffin254618 күн бұрын
Someone needs to clean it....
@adrielrowley19 күн бұрын
14:38 LMAO So right about 3D imaging, set the camera height to different age groups and experience the space as they would. Cheers, Adriel
@kennethmartin218519 күн бұрын
It’s the digital fire place for me 😂😂 next to Kevin
@getrealnow7321 күн бұрын
thank you for turning me onto Australian architecture
@adrielrowley21 күн бұрын
That garage door is amazing! This solves the problem of typical garage door who is poor thermal barrier, worse, are a vast expanse of ugliness out of scale with the fenestration of the living spaces.
@adrielrowley21 күн бұрын
I am glad stumbled on this channel and been following the recommendations. You all are right, this needs to be known international. Though the conversion takes away from the original beauty.
@jona_archi23 күн бұрын
what an amazing example for what defines great architecture. i played this video only now, when going through the archimarathon videos again and taking a look at the few videos i haven't yet seen. the outside didn't catch my attention earlier, like lots of famous architecture does. but the inside, the spaces where people are, the big spaces, where people come in or come together, the small spaces where they focus, it is all executed so gorgeous. i could go on praising the interaction with the heritage, the materials and everyting said in the video. but even though we all already know, architecture is experienced by people moving through it, it just stunned me to get reminded of that fact this extremely
@sandponics24 күн бұрын
I wonder how many Chinese peasants died building that garden.
@jona_archi24 күн бұрын
it's such an amazing idea to make an archimarathon geoguessr map! i used to play geoguessr in the past. though sadly everytime, i try to play it, i get a pop-up that prompts me to get a geoguessr pro subscription :/ i would soo love to play these maps and see what i know about the projects and locations on earth, what i have learned from your videos and if i can remeber the context of the buildings you showed
@dcalvitti25 күн бұрын
I don't understand the portrait format for YT videos? Can someone fill me in? I'm missing like 80% of footage thanks to the crop. How is this viewable?
@unfilteredthoughts.917525 күн бұрын
i wish i discovered this channel when i started architecture. you talk about all the things i really struggled with and no one helped me in :( my years were terrible in school for the mere fact that no one cared to help the struggling ones by explaining to them some basic things. so i just tried to figure it out alone and felt lost and like a loser through the 4 years of school...better late than never
@ultraali45325 күн бұрын
.. we don't get to see the building
@rebirx.gamer.x395929 күн бұрын
this channel is a fortune that i have found
@Archimarathon29 күн бұрын
Glad you found us
@jesssmith2064Ай бұрын
Cheers guys. Bout to do my renders on sections. 1st year student 😅
@jacobtracy7847Ай бұрын
Friendship
@ranackerАй бұрын
Nice shoutout to Jyväskylä, we know you don't hate Aalto.
@timoraunela8566Ай бұрын
That was absolutely gorgeous ❤. The pond, the gardens… to have such a nugget of paradise gold in that urban environment. Lucky owners and good job.
@edstud1Ай бұрын
Food sounds great! I want some.
@danielfam27Ай бұрын
how would you layout this for a house in the tropic of Capricorn where the front of the lot faces the Northwest?
@Mega_CribsАй бұрын
😍amazing
@andizhanstueyАй бұрын
Lots for you to 'borrow from' there guys 👍
@jona_archiАй бұрын
we just finished a city planning project at university and for some reason some of the groups chose really odd dimensions for the buildings, which can make the new city blocks seem much smaller or larger than they are. but our professor knew exactly how big the blocks are, because they are so used to that 1:500 scale. my feel for scale is still in development, but damn it's a powerful tool! also drawing to scale is so important for evaluating if an idea fits on a site
@ArchimarathonАй бұрын
Glad to hear you have learnt to realise its value
@rustyrelicsfarm2406Ай бұрын
If I had an office in that building I could never be sad working in a magestic structure.
@uad1989Ай бұрын
The London Bus is a nightmare during summer, so hot it makes you car sick; and all the windows are fully fogged up during winter. They had to redesign and change the back door because it kept injuring passengers. The bridge in Paddington breaks all the time. He had a horrible, misguided attempt on sustainability with a tree sculpture for the Queen's Jubilee. The new google HQ in Kings Cross is a concrete mastodon with a lot of fake, timber boarded concrete columns and solar shades that is just out of place and scale. He helped burn £43 million of public money with a massively failed bridge project. The historic Olympia is currently turned into a circus mall. And that's just in London... He did do an ok job with the Coal Drops, and there's some cool Angel's Wings sculpture used as vents for the Underground.
@OlafsLeftArmАй бұрын
Personal opinion: Aaltos are probably the most over rated Finnish architects/designers. Beautiful shapes and interesting spaces, but the functional aspect is just dog s**t so often. Its the same thing with the famous Aalto vase. Its a beautiful object, but you need an ungodly amount of flowers to fill it or the flowers will just stick all over the place.
@jeraldbaxter3532Ай бұрын
I have a mild obsession with sitting on a porch, or some other roofed open space, during a rainstorm (with distant thunder for atmosphere). This garden offers so many places that would be ideal to sit on a rainy afternoon, drinking tea and enjoying the serenity.
@vic3925Ай бұрын
useless
@vic3925Ай бұрын
heatherwick's shit is shite
@vic3925Ай бұрын
great instructional fun
@Linda-zb6zqАй бұрын
Seniors who can age in place do not include stairs.
@juanmanuelfabresbriones5378Ай бұрын
"Hold the room" .. I'll keep that! Thanks!!!
@3210vcaАй бұрын
Are they a couple?.... They look so cuool and cute!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@mdataullah222Ай бұрын
wow😮 supper 👌nice 💯 Dhaka🇧🇩 to Helsinki 🇫🇮 I miss You 😰
@thomasrascati4340Ай бұрын
Love it. Thanks for sharing!
@3210vcaАй бұрын
There are beautiful houses and there is This Beautiful House..... This is a singularly beautiful, architectural masterpiece of a house. It is so homy, cozy and unpretentious!!!
@ianworley8169Ай бұрын
The Roman museum in Merida is spectacular. If anything though, its so stunning it almost detracts from the exhibits. I say 'almost' though, because it doesn't, but it internal scale and open galleries are perfect for the mosaic floors displayed vertically. I've never seen such incredible displays. Far, far too much to take it all in, in a single visit and literally all within stone's throw of the breathtakingly beautiful Teatro Romano and amphitheatre complex. Dont try to see Merida in a single day, or youll miss 90% of whats there to see. Luckily for me, its 50km from my home. Ive been dozens of times, but keep finding more every time. Weve already booked our plays for the 2024 Festival of Classical Theatre, held each summer in the 2000 seat Roman Theatre.
@Beba-qv3dbАй бұрын
My favorite airport. TY.
@billg9223Ай бұрын
Simply elegant.
@the.assistant.janitorАй бұрын
And Löyly. Or is it Centre, I guess not kzfaq.info/get/bejne/h5ikZ7NpmKvIk4E.html
@harperwelch5147Ай бұрын
You’re talking like real estate agents!
@harperwelch5147Ай бұрын
Average height of humans over the past 100 years has changed! We’re taller. FLWright’s house have lower ceilings too!
@harperwelch5147Ай бұрын
The 1893 ? Worlds Fair in Chicago had an Asian compound with tea house and gardens and was a big influence on young American designers and artists like FLW, Schindler, and many others. So Japanese influence was widespread. You’re in SoCal where earthquakes and land shifting can affect older buildings by tilting concrete.
@edwardduarte7393Ай бұрын
BIIIGGG Japanese influence. I photographed El Pueblo in La Jolla right after he finished this project. People do not even know it is there. People from Japan and Europe know more about this than the neighbors.
@anilemrac8566Ай бұрын
Thank you. I loved your feature btw about Equilateral House by Jorge Yulo. 🇵🇭