• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

APTUM's entry for Taiwan's Port of Kinmen Passenger Service Center

By Bustler Editors|

Monday, Feb 17, 2014

Drop-off area

The Port of Kinmen Passenger Service Center International Competition‏‎ is still in its final phase. Meanwhile, we wanted to share APTUM Architecture's proposal for the competition.

Although their entry was met with stiff competition and didn't make it into the final stage, the firm's pride in their work stands strong.

Keep reading to learn more about it.

Project description:

"With its distinct form, the new passenger terminal becomes the gateway to Kinmen as well as Taiwan. To the traveler arriving by ferry, the scalloped skyline of the terminal reflects the landscape of the island. Taking cues from the scalloped rooflines, archways and courtyard spaces of traditional Kinmen architecture, the new passenger terminal evokes a contemporary spin by scaling up these traditional elements for the new identity of Kinmen Passenger Terminal.

Bay view

The terminal opens itself along the long, south and north facades. Towards the south, a large cantilevering roof provides shelter and shade for passengers. Through the form and specific technical aspects of the building, the terminal provides a sustainable environment for its occupants as well as for the surrounding natural environment. Throughout the site, surfaces are constructed as pervious material for parking and bio-swales in-between the parking lots to control water run-off."

Courtyard

"The building is organized with a series of cores that serve programmatic, technical, and environmental needs throughout the building. The cores serve as programmatic organizers at the lower level with border control and security check points. They become courtyards in various spots throughout the building and are used for cross ventilation where air is able to move through them and up into the roofscape (controlled venturi effect). The courtyards also serve to capture grey water for bathrooms, service, and grounds keeping. They bring in light and nature on different levels and provide the travelers with a sense of orientation and relaxation."

Interior

Formal strategy: The terminal is seen as an investigation of structure and skin through the act of overlaying exterior form with an internal, structural logic. The terminal is an ideal typology to explore ways to be formally expressive and still maintain a sense of order and efficiency in how it’s built. The simultaneous exploration of form (skin) and logic (structure) began to create productive overlaps of contrasting elements.

Waiting area

Both the skin and structure are not seen as one in the same but actually oppose one another to create contradictions between form and space. That contrast becomes productive and the fusion of form and interior merge at the thresholds of archways.

Nightview

Images courtesy of APTUM Architecture.

Click the thumbnails below for additional images.

Related

taiwan ● kinmen passenger service terminal ● kinmen ● asia ● aptum architecture ● terminal

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

APTUM's entry for Taiwan's Port of Kinmen Passenger Service Center

Sponsored Post by Buildner

The Home of Shadows FINAL registration deadline is approaching!

Tables! Tables! Tables! unpacks the Eameses' underappreciated mastery of everyday design

Nigerian architect, sculptor, and designer Demas Nwoko receives the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement

Check out the 22 projects just named winners of WoodWorks' 2023 Wood Design Awards

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Milan Affordable Housing Challenge FINAL registration deadline is approaching!

Sponsored Post by Buildner

MICROHOME / Edition #6 advance registration deadline is approaching!

Taller | Mauricio Rocha’s Anahuacalli Museum expansion is the 2023 Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize winner

Toni L. Griffin awarded the 2023 Special Recognition for Architecture, Design, and Urbanism by the SOM Foundation

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Winners unveiled for Volume Zero's Tiny House 2022 competition

45 winners announced for the 2022 Brick in Architecture Awards

Michael Murphy and Michael Ford announced as keynote speakers for 2023 NeoCon

GSA announced 2022 Design Awards winners

Winners of Buildner's Rammed Earth Pavilion competition explore the beauty of alternative materials

Chicago Architecture Center features 42 design proposals in a new exhibition that addresses 'missing middle density' housing

Now on display in Japan, Heatherwick Studio's new exhibition opens at the Mori Art Museum

Next page » Loading

APTUM's entry for Taiwan's Port of Kinmen Passenger Service Center

By Bustler Editors|

Monday, Feb 17, 2014

Share

Drop-off area

Related

taiwan ● kinmen passenger service terminal ● kinmen ● asia ● aptum architecture ● terminal

The Port of Kinmen Passenger Service Center International Competition‏‎ is still in its final phase. Meanwhile, we wanted to share APTUM Architecture's proposal for the competition.

Although their entry was met with stiff competition and didn't make it into the final stage, the firm's pride in their work stands strong.

Keep reading to learn more about it.

Project description:

"With its distinct form, the new passenger terminal becomes the gateway to Kinmen as well as Taiwan. To the traveler arriving by ferry, the scalloped skyline of the terminal reflects the landscape of the island. Taking cues from the scalloped rooflines, archways and courtyard spaces of traditional Kinmen architecture, the new passenger terminal evokes a contemporary spin by scaling up these traditional elements for the new identity of Kinmen Passenger Terminal.

Bay view

The terminal opens itself along the long, south and north facades. Towards the south, a large cantilevering roof provides shelter and shade for passengers. Through the form and specific technical aspects of the building, the terminal provides a sustainable environment for its occupants as well as for the surrounding natural environment. Throughout the site, surfaces are constructed as pervious material for parking and bio-swales in-between the parking lots to control water run-off."

Courtyard

"The building is organized with a series of cores that serve programmatic, technical, and environmental needs throughout the building. The cores serve as programmatic organizers at the lower level with border control and security check points. They become courtyards in various spots throughout the building and are used for cross ventilation where air is able to move through them and up into the roofscape (controlled venturi effect). The courtyards also serve to capture grey water for bathrooms, service, and grounds keeping. They bring in light and nature on different levels and provide the travelers with a sense of orientation and relaxation."

Interior

Formal strategy: The terminal is seen as an investigation of structure and skin through the act of overlaying exterior form with an internal, structural logic. The terminal is an ideal typology to explore ways to be formally expressive and still maintain a sense of order and efficiency in how it’s built. The simultaneous exploration of form (skin) and logic (structure) began to create productive overlaps of contrasting elements.

Waiting area

Both the skin and structure are not seen as one in the same but actually oppose one another to create contradictions between form and space. That contrast becomes productive and the fusion of form and interior merge at the thresholds of archways.

Nightview

Images courtesy of APTUM Architecture.

Click the thumbnails below for additional images.

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Intermediate Architect

Studio Panduro

Intermediate Architect

New York, NY, US

Senior Interior Designer

BAMO

Senior Interior Designer

Providence, RI, US

Project Architect

GLUCK+ (formerly Peter Gluck and Partners Architects)

Project Architect

New York, NY, US

Project Manager / Project Architect

Paul A. Castrucci Architects

Project Manager / Project Architect

New York, NY, US

Project Captain

Studio of Relativity, Inc. dba Relativity Architects

Project Captain

Colorado Springs, CO, US

Advanced Architectural Designer

Selldorf Architects

Advanced Architectural Designer

New York, NY, US

Interior Designer

Think Wilder Architecture PLLC

Interior Designer

New York, NY, US

Lecturer/senior lecturer in architecture

Norwich University of the Arts

Lecturer/senior lecturer in architecture

Norwich, GB

Architect/ Experienced Brooklyn

David Bers Architecture

Architect/ Experienced Brooklyn

New York, NY, US

Corporate Marketing Director

NAC Architecture

Corporate Marketing Director

Los Angeles, CA, US

Next page » Loading