Bee Breeders Announce Winners of the Iceland Northern Lights Rooms Competition
Bee Breeders have announced the winners of the Iceland Northern Lights Rooms competition, where entrants were tasked with designing a series of guest houses that framed the beauty of the surrounding context. In response to the delicate landscape, Mývatn Lake in Iceland, the brief outlined a number of restrictions. These included no permanent construction within 200m from the lake, and that all guest houses were to be movable. Shared themes throughout all the successful proposals were specific material experimentation, ?distinct interaction with the site and sky,? scalable design, irand cost-conscious solutions.
Courtesy of Bee Breeders, In-Visible
Bee Breeders have announced the winners of the Iceland Northern Lights Rooms competition, where entrants were tasked with designing a series of guest houses that framed the beauty of the surrounding context. In response to the delicate landscape, Mývatn Lake in Iceland, the brief outlined a number of restrictions. These included no permanent construction within 200m from the lake, and that all guest houses were to be movable. Shared themes throughout all the successful proposals were specific material experimentation, ?distinct interaction with the site and sky,? scalable design, irand cost-conscious solutions.First Place: In-Visible Participants: Kamila Szatanowska, Paulina RogalskaThe first placed design ?In-Visible? creates ?a series of mirror-clad guest houses of varying sizes, movable and distributed abou...
Courtesy of Bee Breeders, In-Visible
Bee Breeders have announced the winners of the Iceland Northern Lights Rooms competition, where entrants were tasked with designing a series of guest houses that framed the beauty of the surrounding context. In response to the delicate landscape, Mývatn Lake in Iceland, the brief outlined a number of restrictions. These included no permanent construction within 200m from the lake, and that all guest houses were to be movable. Shared themes throughout all the successful proposals were specific material experimentation, ?distinct interaction with the site and sky,? scalable design, irand cost-conscious solutions.First Place: In-Visible Participants: Kamila Szatanowska, Paulina RogalskaThe first placed design ?In-Visible? creates ?a series of mirror-clad guest houses of varying sizes, movable and distributed abou...
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