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O/K Apartment.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Kolatan, Sulan, Author.
- MacDonald, William, Author.
- Series:
- Archaeology of the Digital ; 14
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Architectural criticism.
- Architecture.
- Genre:
- Ephemera
- Tracts (Ephemera)
- Ephemera.
- Pamphlets.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource.
- Place of Publication:
- [Place of publication not identified], Canadian Centre for Architecture, 2016.
- Summary:
- "Often referred to by one of its clients as "Cleopatra's submarine," the Ost/Kuttner loft converts two adjacent apartments in a pre-World War II building in New York City into a single but divisible space used as a pied-à-terre and guest house. Sulan Kolatan and William Mac Donald of KOL/MAC extended this hybrid character into the design of the renovation, drawing an analogy between the apartment layout and a city where various zones or sites can be activated and linked together. The loft is organized into areas defined less by their programmatic identities-bathroom, bedroom, living space-than by a series of undulating landscapes made up of custom, function-bridging forms, which Kolatan and Mac Donald developed by digitally compositing cross-sections of everyday domestic objects. These profiles were blended and allowed to propagate according to topological affinities, regardless of scale, generating what Kolotan and Mac Donald call a "co-citation" map of the apartment's hybrid parts. To produce the pieces, the architects worked intensively with contractors in a process directly informed by computer-aided fabrication in fields such as transportation (boats), sports (bobsleds), and entertainment (stage sets). Completed at a moment when digitally driven design was just beginning to take root outside experimental environments like Columbia University's school of architecture, the O/K Apartment was a testament to these forms' "buildability." Beyond acting as proof of the possibilities of direct-to-manufacture 3D modelling, however, the project also proposes a distinct aesthetic character native to and exported from a digital environment in which the virtual and the real "become increasingly indistinguishable."-- provided by distributor.
- Notes:
- Archived and cataloged by Library Stack
- Standard Copyright.
- Description from resource landing page (Library Stack, viewed on 09/29/2025).
- Access Restriction:
- Unrestricted online access
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