View allAll Photos Tagged funkis
Architect:
Built in: 1938-1939
Builder: Malmö Yacht Klubb
Hamnpaviljongen, (The Port Pavilion), formerly a summer restaurant, has been a popular destination for many locals. In 1996 the last restaurant closed and the building became an office building.
The building has been developed in various phases. The oldest part in functionalist architecture was built between 1938 and 1939 as the clubhouse for Malmö Yacht Club. The building in the former marina was then partially built on stilts in the water. In 1960-1961 the marina was filled and the building, which then came to stand completely on land, was extended in order to accommodate the restaurant Hamnpaviljongen.
Hamnpaviljongen is a good example of simple Swedish seaside functionalist architecture.
bellavista housing, klampenborg, 1931-1934.
architect: arne jacobsen, 1902-1971.
simple and elegant solution to the meeting of a staircase and a corner window.
/iphone
A snap on a walk in the Simmering District in Vienna probably the year 2009-2010???
Peace and Noise!
/ MushroomBrain a viewfinder
Oslo City Hall was completed in 1950. The building is designed by architects Arnstein Arneberg and Magnus Poulsson.
Bulevardi, Helsinki - a beautiful Functionalist building designed by architect Karl Malmström in 1936.
Villa Mairea in Noormarkku, Finland
Villa Mairea was designed by Alvar and Aino Aalto and completed in August 1939. The Aaltos designed this house as a home for their friends Maire and Harry Gullichsen. Harry Gullichsen was the CEO of the family company A. Ahlström Oy. Maire Gullichsen was a collector and a patron of the arts.
Details of Lasipalatsi, a notable example of 1930s functionalism in Helsinki.
The building was designed by the architects Viljo Revell, Heimo Riihimäki and Niilo Kokko and completed in 1936.
Helsinki, Finland 2024.
Olympus Trip 35
Foma Fomapan 100
Compard R09 One Shot 1+100
60 min semi-stand at 19°C
Agitation: 1 minute + 10s at 30 min
cm đi cm đi ! :X:X:X
☺ SmiLe ☺
• hình như tôi trưởng thành hơn trong từng đợt ảnh !
• cảm ơn vì điều đó !
• tôi thích chụp ảnh ! và điều đó ko bao giờ bị ngừng lại !
píc hôm 25-7-2011
♥ save !!!
☺ Funki ☺
p\S : ko chùa nhé ! chùa = chó =))
villa sørensen, nordre strandvej 53B, elsinore, denmark 1935.
architect: arne jacobsen, 1902-1971.
teak detailing of back door. I doubt you could find a front door of that order done today :)
the reference to maritime detailing typical of the funkis years is discreet and not inappropriate for a villa so close to the coast (or indeed anywhere else).
Camera: Asahi Pentax Spotmatic SP
Lens: Super-Takumar 50mm F1.4
Exposure: 1/60 @ F/8.0
Film: Ilford FP4+ (exp. 2009) developed in D-76 1+1 in Jobo ATL-1500 film processor
Built in 1929. This building at Igeldammsgatan has a seriously nice penthouse. A ninety square meter apartment. With a 250 square meter terrace. The architect was Björn Hedvall. You will have to pay around 20 000 000 kronor to get this place. There is a spa and shower on the terrace that you can enter from the bedroom. Photographed from Stadshagsplan, the highest point on Kungsholmen.
Former Jernkontoret office & building materials storage (now CARTER boutique & café) in Aarhus.
Architecture: C.F. Møller & Kay Fisker, 1935
The Storting building (Norwegian: Stortingsbygningen) is the seat of the Storting, the parliament of Norway. The building is located at 22 Karl Johans gate in central Oslo, Norway. It was taken inaugurated on 5 March 1866. It was designed by the Swedish architect Emil Victor Langlet.
Following the establishment of the Parliament of Norway in 1814, which had happened at a private home belonging to Carsten Anker in Eidsvoll, the newly established legislature started meeting at Christiania lærde Skole at Tollbodgaten and Dronningsgate.
From 1854, the legislature started using the grand hall at the Royal Frederick University.
However, proposals of an own parliament building had arisen. The parliament voted down a government proposal to create such a building in 1833, but in 1836, the work to establish a permanent building started.
The government decided to build in the Palace Park, and this was passed by the parliament. However, instead the government chose to purchase the current lot instead. This was approved by parliament in 1857.
The next discussion was related to the architecture. Several proposals were made, and twelve of these have been preserved.
A design competition was initiated in 1856, and this was won by the architects Heinrich Ernst Schirmer and Wilhelm von Hanno. However, the Storting decided to reject the proposal because it looked too much like a church.
Instead, a proposal from the Swedish architect Emil Victor Langlet was chosen with 59 against 47 votes on 18 May 1860.
Construction started on 3 August 1860, and the cornerstone was laid on 10 October 1861. The building cost 957,332 kr. The parliament moved in on 5 March 1866.
Initially, the building was too large for the needs of the legislature, and several other government agencies, including the Office of the Auditor General of Norway, the National Archival Services, the Mapping and Cadastre Authority and the Director of Canals were also housed there. As the parliament has expanded, these various agencies have moved out.
During the German invasion of Norway on 9 April 1940, the Storting relocated and held two meetings, once in a cinema in Hamar and once at Elverum Folk High School (Elverum folkehøgskole).
The remaining meetings during World War II were held abroad.
During the war, the building was taken over by the German forces, and at first used as barracks.
Later, Reichskommissar Josef Terboven with administration moved into the building. The Lagting Chamber was refurnished, with the ceiling lowered and the interior redecorated with mahogany panels and funkis style.
From 1951 to 1959, a four-story office building was built at the back of the building. The courtyard was filled in, and the chamber expanded. This work was led by architect Nils Holter (1899-1995).
The building is built in yellow brick with details and basement in light gray granite. It is a combination of several styles, including inspirations from France and Italy. A characteristic feature of Stortingsbygningen is the way the plenary chamber is located in the semi-circular section in the front of the building, as opposed to the building's centre. The back side of the building mirrors the facade of the front, with the meeting chamber of the now-abolished Lagting legislative chamber. The interior of the building is also designed by Langlet.
Villa Mairea in Noormarkku, Finland
Villa Mairea was designed by Alvar and Aino Aalto and completed in August 1939. The Aaltos designed this house as a home for their friends Maire and Harry Gullichsen. Harry Gullichsen was the CEO of the family company A. Ahlström Oy. Maire Gullichsen was a collector and a patron of the arts.
a. jespersen og søn, nyropsgade, copenhagen, 1952-1955.
architect: arne jacobsen.
jacobsen's early essay in the curtain wall, the jespersen office building in copenhagen, has lost its original facade.
if you believe, as I do, that the lessons of the masters are unaffected by time, "new and improved" is not a real option.
jacobsen's ultra light weight escape stair in the shape of a glass tube is still here, though, and as dirty as ever.
jacobsen is an inescapable presence in copenhagen, he is equally in your street and in your kitchen drawer. at times, that may induce a kind of blindness which subsequently places the details of his buildings in danger...I doubt this house is even listed.
more arne jacobsen
A snippet from Wikipedia:
"Another important work is the extension of the Gothenburg Courthouse Extension building which Asplund started on 1913 and finished 1937 - it shows his transformation from neo-classical to functionalist architect, a transformation in parallel with other European modernists like Erich Mendelsohn."
Regentropfen an der geschlossenen Blüte einer Funkie _ _ TimeOut in Hungary - Foto #454 of1043(H1309)
anna kirke, 1911-1928.
architect: p.v. jensen-klint (1853-1930).
the anna church was built in three stages in a dirt poor working class neighbourhood in outer nørrebro, copenhagen, over a period of 17 years. it is the first of jensen-klint's three copenhagen churches and the most charming in its modest size and ingenious urbanism.
the photo shows one of the gables in the now familiar hanseatic neo-gothic style next to a functionalist housing block completed only some ten years after the church. the ugly windows are not original but the exposed yellow brickwork is and shows the lasting influence of klint's thoughts and buildings on Danish modernism.