• 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
Tagged: glow

Luminous Passage by Hadrian Predock + John Frane

By Bustler Editors|

Friday, Oct 1, 2010

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Santa Monica-based partnership Predock_Frane Architects have shared with us their built work for the 2010 GLOW festival.

Hadrian Predock + John Frane’s project for the 2010 GLOW festival in Santa Monica titled “Luminous Passage” links the City to the Ocean as a porous and luminous land bridge.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Connecting the existing Bay Street boardwalk to the ocean’s edge, the passage makes visible the connection across the sand to the edge of the Pacific.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

This is a physical tensile structure that supports light and connects the urban landscape of Santa Monica to the edge of the water, but also forms a conceptual leap that transitions from the “logics” that define the city to the those of the ocean.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Taking the vertical nature of the city and merging it with the horizontal impulses of the pacific, a visceral and intense space twists and emerges. 

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Composed of luminous lines of color (Electroluminescent wire - EL wire), the ambitous scale of the project is a relatively simple construction with only six fixed paper struts as primary support.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

From the boardwalk, the piece begins with serial vertical lines and gradually transitions and twists toward the horizontal.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Emerging from the tunnel of glowing lines at the edge of the water, a space is defined akin to the classic California beach campfire - a gathering spot - where the wildness of the ocean is made present in sound and smell.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Instead of a literal fire, a glowing orb defines the center of this space, slowly transitioning in color and pattern over the course of the night.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

The overall piece is interactive at several levels.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

As a spatial contstruct, movement through the piece is transformational and sensate.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Along the edge of the water the EL wires hang more loosely which naturally act as a field of motion in the wind.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

As a funnel and gathering space the piece encourages social grouping and interaction.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Lastly, from discreet angles the piece is perceived in different ways, from the North and South appearing as a bridge-like element that filters movement up and down the beach, while from the East and West a tube of space linking boardwalk to water’s edge.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas
Photograph by Ian C. Thomas
Photograph by Ian C. Thomas
Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Related

santa monica ● john frane ● hadrian predock ● glow

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Luminous Passage by Hadrian Predock + John Frane

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

Luminous Passage by Hadrian Predock + John Frane

By Bustler Editors|

Friday, Oct 1, 2010

Share

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Related

santa monica ● john frane ● hadrian predock ● glow

Santa Monica-based partnership Predock_Frane Architects have shared with us their built work for the 2010 GLOW festival.

Hadrian Predock + John Frane’s project for the 2010 GLOW festival in Santa Monica titled “Luminous Passage” links the City to the Ocean as a porous and luminous land bridge.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Connecting the existing Bay Street boardwalk to the ocean’s edge, the passage makes visible the connection across the sand to the edge of the Pacific.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

This is a physical tensile structure that supports light and connects the urban landscape of Santa Monica to the edge of the water, but also forms a conceptual leap that transitions from the “logics” that define the city to the those of the ocean.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Taking the vertical nature of the city and merging it with the horizontal impulses of the pacific, a visceral and intense space twists and emerges. 

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Composed of luminous lines of color (Electroluminescent wire - EL wire), the ambitous scale of the project is a relatively simple construction with only six fixed paper struts as primary support.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

From the boardwalk, the piece begins with serial vertical lines and gradually transitions and twists toward the horizontal.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Emerging from the tunnel of glowing lines at the edge of the water, a space is defined akin to the classic California beach campfire - a gathering spot - where the wildness of the ocean is made present in sound and smell.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Instead of a literal fire, a glowing orb defines the center of this space, slowly transitioning in color and pattern over the course of the night.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

The overall piece is interactive at several levels.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

As a spatial contstruct, movement through the piece is transformational and sensate.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Along the edge of the water the EL wires hang more loosely which naturally act as a field of motion in the wind.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

As a funnel and gathering space the piece encourages social grouping and interaction.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

Lastly, from discreet angles the piece is perceived in different ways, from the North and South appearing as a bridge-like element that filters movement up and down the beach, while from the East and West a tube of space linking boardwalk to water’s edge.

Photograph by Ian C. Thomas
Photograph by Ian C. Thomas
Photograph by Ian C. Thomas
Photograph by Ian C. Thomas

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

Senior Technical Designer, Commercial Interiors - New York Office

Fogarty Finger

Senior Technical Designer, Commercial Interiors - New York Office

New York, NY, US

Project Architect

Berliner Architects

Project Architect

Culver City, CA, US

Architect / Urban Designer

Office for the Next Environment (OFTN)

Architect / Urban Designer

New York, NY, US

Interior Project Manager

HLW International LLP

Interior Project Manager

New York, NY, US

Registered Architect

Advantage Point Group, Inc.

Registered Architect

Saint Paul, MN, US

Marketing and Architectural Assistant

AGENCIE / Architecture & Engineering

Marketing and Architectural Assistant

New York, NY, US

Associate - Interior Designer

FitzGerald Associates Architects

Associate - Interior Designer

Chicago, IL, US

Junior to Intermediate Architect

Totum

Junior to Intermediate Architect

Sherman Oaks, CA, US

Project Architect

AYON Studio

Project Architect

New York, NY, US

Project Architect

BuildingWork

Project Architect

Seattle, WA, US

Next page » Loading