Subscribe to
newsletter

Nu

The co-existence of differences /

Interview with Tom Weiss and Rolf Jenni of Raumbureau, Zurich -->

Specific and general solutions /

Interview with Jan De Vylder, Ghent (BE) -->

Public Space, Utopia and the Urban Project /

Interview met Bernardo Secchi -->

Recent

Kosice 2013 /

Lokale partner -->

Links

Colofon

City Visions Europe: Bordeaux, Kosice, Mechelen, Plzen is a design-research program focusing on the urban condition of four mid-scale European cities. It offers the framework for exchange between architects and cities to develop, present, and debate speculative architectural ideas on the future of these cities as well as the European city in general.

Berlage InstituteCentre for Central European ArchitectureVlaams Architectuurinstituutarc en ręve centre d’architectureMMMechelen

GGNA, Bratislava (SK)

GGNA (c) Dieuwertje Komen

Gutgut and n/a have collaborated in the last year on several urban proposals. Each of the offices has a slightly different design approach and attitude to urban problems; thereby enabling each to bring new insights and impulses into the process. A cooperation of two independent offices transformed into a collaboration of two complementary partners. Both offices have experience working in international environment. Gutgut is a young architecture and urban design studio run in Bratislava, founded by two generations of architects, Roman Halmi, Peter Jurkovič, Lukáš Kordík, Števo Polakovič. Their strategy of work is based on a synthesis, operative interpretation of the contemporary condition, analysis of the context and of programmatic approach. N/A is a label for the collaboration of Benjamin Bradňanský and Vít Halada, which started in 2003. They are operating on a field between architectural praxis and architectural education. N/A is dealing with the possibilities of various design approaches in academic research and building praxis (hybridization and parametric design strategies). Their recent urban projects include Golf Village Engerau, a residential complex, and Spark, a large-scale urban design plan in Bratislava.

Some text on this page was automatically translated by Google Translate.
You might want to consider reading the original English version.

Comment this article