View Full Version : Glasgow School of Art - Charles Rennie Mackintosh


Manuel
May 8th, 2009, 12:40 PM
Mackintosh attracts stellar list of entrants7 May, 2009

By Will Hurst, Marguerite Lazell, Anna Winston

A host of Pritzker and Stirling Prize winners have entered a prestigious contest to design a £50 million new building for the Glasgow School of Art in what one entrant described as “the competition of the decade”.

Following last Friday’s deadline, contest organiser Malcolm Reading Consultants said the chance to design the 11,250sq m teaching and research building opposite the school’s famous Mackintosh building [/B on Garnethill had attracted [B]153 entries including 90% of firms shortlisted for the Stirling over the past five years and three Pritzker laureates.

Confirmed entrants include a number of high profile partnerships and individual entries from Zaha Hadid, Rogers Stirk Harbour, Studio Fuksas, David Chipperfield, Grimshaw, David Adjaye, Feilden Clegg Bradley, Alison Brooks, Allies & Morrison, Hopkins Architects, Gareth Hoskins and Graeme Massie.

But Foster & Partners and Herzog & de Meuron have both opted against throwing their hats into the ring.

“This is a great response to a very significant and exceptionally challenging project,” said organiser chairman Malcolm Reading.

“The level of international entries, as well as those from the UK, is exceptional and an indicator of the wide appeal of the project. Glasgow is going to have a sparkling list to choose from.”

Despite the stellar list of entrants, Reading insisted the school was keen to appoint an up-and-coming architect if possible. “There is a serious building to be delivered,” he said, “but the university was very keen that young architects should be encouraged. So we’ve encouraged people to form partnerships.

“Rennie Mackintosh was 28 when he won the competition in the 1890s. We don’t know if history will repeat itself, but the school is looking for something fresh.”

Since the competition launched in March, the expression of interest has been downloaded 11,000 times and the web site visited 57,000 times. Most of those actually entering are foreign architects with 60% from Europe, 30% from the US and 10% from Asia.

A jury including David Mackay from Barcelona-based firm MBM and Christine Hawley, dean of the built environment faculty at the Bartlett, will select a shortlist of between five and seven entries, to be announced on May 22.

Final design proposals will be submitted in July and a winner is due to be announced towards the end of September.

Manuel
May 8th, 2009, 12:46 PM
Glasgow School of Art, designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh in 1896, is one of the most important and influential art nouveau buildings in the world. Organic forms decorate this beautiful and unusual building.

Un lien vers le Mackintosh Society :
http://www.crmsociety.com/Attraction.aspx?NavPage=51&AttId=11


Photos de Stevcadman sur Flickr
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/70/197483727_2a34527dc5_b.jpg
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/70/197491137_cfa2357a2c_b.jpg

archimonde
May 9th, 2009, 02:02 PM
Je ne connaissais pas, je viens de lire un autre article le concernant:

Mackintosh proves he still has pulling power with Stirling cast of entries for Glasgow School of Architecture competition

His work remains undoubtedly some of the most recognisable architecture and despite being dead for over 80 years, Scottish architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh has proven he still has the power to excite the international architecture community, as evidenced by the recent level of interest in the Glasgow School of Architecture campus competition.

(...)

http://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/index.php?fuseaction=wanappln.projectview&upload_id=11564

LaBoumBe
September 13th, 2009, 10:04 PM
Merci pour les photos.

Un Maitre de l' art nouveau trop peu connu de ce coté de la Manche

Manuel
September 28th, 2009, 08:12 AM
Steven Holl wins Glasgow School of Art Mackintosh competition
8 September, 2009

By David Rogers

New York firm bags its first British project

New York practice Steven Holl Architects has won the competition to design a new £50 million building for the Glasgow School of Art.

The firm will carry out work on its first British project with local practice JM Architects.

The team beat Hopkins, Benson & Forsyth, Glasgow-based Elder & Cannon, Spanish architect Francisco Mangado Architects, Irish firm Grafton and a second team featuring John McAslan & Partners with Nord Architects.

Holl has worked widely in Europe, including schemes in Norway, France and Italy and has recently opened an art gallery in Danish capital Copenhagen.

The lead architect on the Glasgow project will be Chris McVoy with Holl himself expected to be based in the city while much of the work is carried out. JM Architects will take on the role of executive architecture.

A three-day judging process was held in Glasgow last week with the panel chaired by David Mackay of Barcelona-based MBM Arquitectes and also including broadcaster Muriel Gray and dean of the Bartlett, Christine Hawley.

As part of the competition, the eight-strong jury visited two completed buildings by each shortlisted firm over the summer.

Holl’s buildings were an art gallery in Kansas along with an architecture school, the Pratt Institute, in New York.


Read more: http://www.bdonline.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=426&storycode=3148238&c=1#ixzz0SNZDohR8



Read more: http://www.bdonline.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=426&storycode=3148238&c=1#ixzz0SNZAkzGT