KTH Arkitekturskolan

KTH Arkitekturskolan

Public events, guest lectures and student work from the KTH School of Architecture in Stockholm. For more, see www.arch.kth.se

The Royal Institute of Technology School of Architecture was founded in Stockholm in 1877 and today offers architectural education at all levels, from a prepatory course in Architecture and Urban Planning in Tensta in northwestern Stockholm, to doctoral studies within the Swedish Research School in Architecture. There are currently around 550 students enrolled in the professional programmes at Basic and Advanced level. The school has a staff of around 120 teachers, professors and researchers, and 15 administrative and technical employees. It has a well-equipped workshop, a digital fabrication lab and an extensive collection of books and journals in the KTH Library. Since the summer of 2015 the school is housed new building, designed by KTH alumni Tham & Videgård arkitekter.

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Пікірлер

  • @devicetestsandvine-hn2gg
    @devicetestsandvine-hn2gg5 ай бұрын

    NICE VIDEO

  • @yueteng2046
    @yueteng2046 Жыл бұрын

    did he mention about the LEGO house?

  • @yueteng2046
    @yueteng2046 Жыл бұрын

    and some fashion design for buildings lol

  • @dedisetiadi7642
    @dedisetiadi76422 жыл бұрын

    Wow brilian man

  • @svantehallgren1312
    @svantehallgren13122 жыл бұрын

    Den här föreläsningen var guld värd

  • @jonsonronson7270
    @jonsonronson72703 жыл бұрын

    every building he has shown was so bland , out of place . why are architects so afraid to add detail , symmetry , ornamentation and human proportions. It used to be every building was up to a very high architectural visual quality where no building stood out but connected to form a cohesive enviroment and the ones that did stand out were magnificently detailed and designed. something this guy doesnt even think about .

  • @adamsayash
    @adamsayash3 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting topics and studios!

  • @anikan865
    @anikan8653 жыл бұрын

    5:45

  • @patrikahlvik8607
    @patrikahlvik86073 жыл бұрын

    Detta är så vackert och välgjort

  • @ilDavid9
    @ilDavid93 жыл бұрын

    I think that even if all projects pick features from the surrounding or history, some of them I think are just disconnected from the landscape.

  • @michaelschone3406
    @michaelschone34063 жыл бұрын

    coolstuff :peace:

  • @georgecosbuc4475
    @georgecosbuc44754 жыл бұрын

    this guy is a joke reminds me of billy maize selling detergent on south park. Just a salesman not architect

  • @libarhit
    @libarhit4 жыл бұрын

    Bra Tack! Det är Väldigt aktuellt! Tyvärr, men oftast “uttvecklaren” är inte estetik-orienterad. Bara förtjänst. Och förlät mig för min svenska .))))

  • @user-qg6vd9tc2i
    @user-qg6vd9tc2i4 жыл бұрын

    In the last few minutes, prof said that, we are not asking student about what an effect of a historical door but what you observed, it's very similar to the notion of "tacit knowledge" that means you do know but you're never asking why.

  • @dougmorris1664
    @dougmorris16644 жыл бұрын

    Ingels and his BIG Project could save the traditional farmlands of central Arizona, USA. In the developing areas like Gilbert, AZ. Were mundane housing developments are just being leveled and wiped out, and all signs of the past and traditional farm land, which are not only a productive source of usable products but a visual and environmental source of cooling the desert air and temperatures. It is a interesting paradox at hand, these elements of traditional farmlands and open spaces and vistas are part of what attract people to this area, and as they come at greater numbers it is the exact reason it will become a unattractive and wasteland. As Bjarke Ingels, so clearly articulates is his interviews and concepts make clear, the making of a sustainable development. One of Ingels mountain housing project could go along way to not only help save this area it would be a great influence on such backward and mundane concepts of housing and would be I believe, a huge hit with the young generation that are settling in the Southwest and ultimately the inhabitants and caretaker of this area. I think it's profoundly important that the concepts of housing is presented to the people by people like Bjarke Ingels, as most people do not and have such a clear vision, but they do have a great appreciation of that vision when they are lead the the top of the mountain and they can see a 360 degree view. These elements are not only material, but they go to the heart, to soul of humanity and inspiration and the quality, the wonder of life. Thank You for the videos and your work.

  • @simonwax7575
    @simonwax75754 жыл бұрын

    This is a great lecture and some really beautiful and interesting work.

  • @riccia888
    @riccia8884 жыл бұрын

    So he predict what happen now in HK?

  • @johnz6241
    @johnz62415 жыл бұрын

    1:32 i like bjarke's response, social entrepreneuralism is the way to go for architects in the states, I know of an architect that is getting a pool built in the hudson river and funded through kickstarter, idk why the lady is complaining about American transportation ?

  • @goobert23456
    @goobert234565 жыл бұрын

    Wow just wow

  • @ifeelgoodhere4327
    @ifeelgoodhere43276 жыл бұрын

    3:35 BI starts

  • @EduardvanNiekerk
    @EduardvanNiekerk6 жыл бұрын

    Authenticity, period.

  • @builtart
    @builtart6 жыл бұрын

    A big thinker and a good person to "include" many others ideas...that is a good quality for an Architect...leader....however my only critisizm as a fellow architect /artist....is some of the buildings have an ugly overall massing shape...proportion...the massive shapes can become quite monolithic and unbalanced looking..... if not broken down and separated into smalller masses a bit more... Frank Lloyd Wright had a sensitivity to the larger visual aesthetic....the massive aesthetic...Frank was a master of simplicity...and very close studier of nature....nature does the massive in beautiful ways ...so follow natures ques...for shapes ,forms ,proportions....for example mountains become smaller as they grow higher...so proportionally perfect to the eye...so to create a building that grows larger as it gets higher is exactly the opposite to natures principles of design...still more to learn Bjarke...but you are certainly in a powerful position to do what you choose ...well done . Darren

  • @SCervanters
    @SCervanters6 жыл бұрын

    you buggin.....

  • @gaybroshevik4180
    @gaybroshevik41806 жыл бұрын

    Hesonistic Sustainability, bitch. We're Millennials. Accept it.

  • @soffa93
    @soffa936 жыл бұрын

    Som någon med erfarenhet från arkitekturbyggnaden kan jag bara säga såhär: om det finns ett helvete för byggnader hoppas jag att den hamnar där.

  • @nataliabonilla764
    @nataliabonilla7647 жыл бұрын

    Ljud är dåligt!

  • @nataliabonilla764
    @nataliabonilla7647 жыл бұрын

    Ljudet är dåligt!

  • @skstan1965
    @skstan19657 жыл бұрын

    His CV says it all. phd.aaschool.ac.uk/faculty/mark-cousins/Only in the UK could someone so unqualified, an MA in art history who has never published even a decent article would sit as head of a PhD program and theory program at a top school for 30 years. No wonder nothing cool has happened since the mid-80s. He knows nothing about architectural history. He basically talks kaka for one hour, in this one, making something out of nothing, of course.

  • @Lugo42
    @Lugo427 жыл бұрын

    If only architects who wrote have found a place in the History of architecture, maybe we should blame it on the Architecture Historians who search in the books instead of searching in the buldings right ?

  • @odinfarwanderer
    @odinfarwanderer7 жыл бұрын

    noice

  • @kevinwehrer4605
    @kevinwehrer46057 жыл бұрын

    I could watch these videos all day

  • @jakeinao5349
    @jakeinao53498 жыл бұрын

    his accent is addicting., =)!

  • @Foster_The_Wild
    @Foster_The_Wild7 жыл бұрын

    I love BIG, I think their work is unparalleled. I use them as precedents for all my work at arch school and I've started to say Architecture like Bjark hahaa

  • @jakeinao5349
    @jakeinao53497 жыл бұрын

    hahah., same here., my erasmus classmates even asked me why i pronounced "architecture" like bjarke and im asian., LOL!

  • @theoryg
    @theoryg8 жыл бұрын

    I think architecture as in the corporate office lobby environment can very often be off limits for people to look at the scaled models specifically. In a way they run ahead of common folks thinking.

  • @Neil1701
    @Neil17018 жыл бұрын

    Epic. I'm fully behind this revolution.

  • @lteodorescu
    @lteodorescu8 жыл бұрын

    kind of project kind of interesting kind of

  • @gigisimbajon4625
    @gigisimbajon46258 жыл бұрын

    hE IS AS INTERESTING AS HIS WORKS... AWESOME AND GENIUS...

  • @kash1992ify
    @kash1992ify8 жыл бұрын

    Hes brilliant...Genius born once in a thousand years...

  • @milicabravacic7110
    @milicabravacic71106 жыл бұрын

    Mozart of modern architecture..same unstoppable talent and innocent human being

  • @stonedTom
    @stonedTom4 жыл бұрын

    Oh! No, he is brilliant, no doubt on him. It seems your list of brilliant thinkers is way too short! :O guess there are way more than you thought! Keep looking for them!

  • @skstan1965
    @skstan19658 жыл бұрын

    Astonishing, for ten minutes in, he shames beginning architecture students for not knowing classical orders, but then never explains or speaks about the subject he claims to know about: yet in the age of Internet: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_order

  • @Daydreamer0605
    @Daydreamer06054 жыл бұрын

    moron.

  • @themnax
    @themnax9 жыл бұрын

    i think he's missing a bet by not replacing the automobile with solar powered narrow gauge transit, or considering obsoleting the city, the idea of city, or most of the ideas of city as we think of them today, entirely. but i like his thinking. it goes beyond some of the familiar boxes, but it needs to go further beyond some of the familiar sacred cows.

  • @veverica39
    @veverica399 жыл бұрын

    32:07 Photo that shows Rem who is standing in the back. Beatriz really demonstrated the power of collaborative practice.

  • @nihilsinemagnovita
    @nihilsinemagnovita9 жыл бұрын

    They are great architects but Stockolm does not need any skyscraper: in my opinion they did not preserve the caracter of the city.

  • @jclabart
    @jclabart9 жыл бұрын

    It seems to me a big thinker for human fun and pleasure but faaar away from our need of sustainablility!!!

  • @Foster_The_Wild
    @Foster_The_Wild7 жыл бұрын

    He works it in, its not really his job to do that, that's why he has a team. Play with strengths and let other people do the hard bits.

  • @niory
    @niory9 жыл бұрын

    Really liked their works please do not ever delete this video I would love to come back to it in few years to rewatch it !

  • @skstan1965
    @skstan19659 жыл бұрын

    Colomina does not mention that plenty of architects never studied architecture, it was part of working with architects, such as Frank Lloyd Wright or even Le Corbusier. But please distinguish interesting theorists like Kwinter from old-fashioned historians like Cousins at the AA, and other historians who follow art history, like Hal Foster, who do not get the difference between art and architecture.

  • @JumpNationFilms
    @JumpNationFilms9 жыл бұрын

    ugly. UGLY!

  • @MihaiMoldovan666
    @MihaiMoldovan6669 жыл бұрын

    Lol... Boring............

  • @marvelfuture7193
    @marvelfuture71939 жыл бұрын

    like if you're watching this for TOD... P.S I cant even continue after 10mins..

  • @IchibanNoHime
    @IchibanNoHime9 жыл бұрын

    Do you know who`s done it already? Can we reference from them TAT

  • @marvelfuture7193
    @marvelfuture71939 жыл бұрын

    LOL. Who u! XD

  • @IchibanNoHime
    @IchibanNoHime9 жыл бұрын

    Damon Lin I am he who is from 01. HUEHUEHUE !

  • @marvelfuture7193
    @marvelfuture71939 жыл бұрын

    K CAN ==

  • @marvelfuture7193
    @marvelfuture71939 жыл бұрын

    ***** do ur work la aiden xD

  • @ArkitekFAA
    @ArkitekFAA10 жыл бұрын

    Interesting insight

  • @jonathanmontebon4120
    @jonathanmontebon412010 жыл бұрын

    A great inspirational video. Has successfully displayed the multi disciplinary and collaborative nature of architectural profession. Good material for aspiring Architects.

  • @tolarms9900
    @tolarms990010 жыл бұрын

    OMG! THE VIDEO DIDN'T PLAY ON MY COMPUTER, WHAT SHOULD I DO?

  • @nikasamkharadze836
    @nikasamkharadze8369 жыл бұрын

    GET FLASH PLAYER

  • @jonaspedersen5990
    @jonaspedersen599010 жыл бұрын

    He somehow insinuates that you can't make fun of the prophet Muhammed. How ridiculous. I love the 8 house. Visited it whilst in Denmark last summer. Lovely, almost surreal landscape adjacent to it!

  • @CarloEsquivelT
    @CarloEsquivelT10 жыл бұрын

    I have come to realize that is inspiration that gives you the nerve (balls) to sell the unthinkable, and is talent that makes you achieve the unthinkable. Masters like Mr. Ingels and his team, have the opportunity to do it often. Great Lecture!!

  • @PeterRockClausen
    @PeterRockClausen10 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic lecture, I'm from Denmark, studying Software Development, but I have an interest in Architecture too, so watching Bjarke Ingels projects and his person is really inspiring, and I can also draw perspective to my own work, even though it's a different study :) And I can actually go see his architecture as I'm currently living in Copenhagen :) Very nice video, really enjoyed it, thank you for uploading, I really appreciate it :)

  • @ArchitectureMug
    @ArchitectureMug10 жыл бұрын

    I wonder how much of a critisism, or backlash they get on their projects in a social stand point, if any. I mean to me it seems they research a lot to make a smart decition on the political or social message they want to send in a project. Like the "Parlament prism" project, was brilliant and very ballsy!