PLANETARY BOUNDARIES - rethinking Architecture and Design

 

This week is your last opportunity to see this important exhibition because Planetary Boundaries at the Royal Danish Academy on Holmen will close on Friday 5 April 2024.

The concept of Planetary Boundaries is a method for assessing the environmental state of our planet within nine areas that regulate the Earth's stability and balance. Humans have been successful because, over thousands of years, we have adapted to survive in a remarkable range of habitats from frozen tundra to parched landscapes with barely any vegetation and we have done that through the ways we have learned to exploit a huge range of natural resources. However, there are limits to those resources and limits to how much we can pollute the land, and the water and the atmosphere of Earth with waste before that has a serious impact. Mining, the generation of power and the consequent production of waste from industrial processes are all pushing those boundaries close to and, in many environments, way beyond those limits.

Shown here, is work from 25 research protects, that have looked at new materials or at new approaches to design and manufacturing and at changes in our building methods and planning policies that could control our demands for energy and reduce global emissions of CO2 and pollutants from mining extraction and from large-scale agricultural and industrial processes ... processes that have had such a detrimental impact on our rivers and seas and our atmosphere.

Manufacturing is responsible for over 50% of global energy usage and is responsible for 20% of global CO2 emissions.

A UN report from 2022 showed that construction work is now responsible for 34% of global energy demands and 37% of global greenhouse gas emissions.

So now, as the impact of climate change is becoming a reality, if there are not major changes to what we build and how we build, current predictions for the release of CO2 indicate that emissions from the production of building materials alone are set to double by 2060.

We have to to be rational and look at the materials we use and change how we use materials in building construction and in manufacturing.

Some of the new materials shown in the exhibition - such as fungi - or suggestions about how to use raw materials more efficiently or ideas about how to reuse salvaged materials have been proposed before but here there is a clear move on from theory to practical applications that have been or are being tested at scale.

For policy makers - now focused on making changes before we reach irreversible tipping points in global warming - these ideas may well be obvious and, for them, it is about when and how these changes are implemented but they will only be successful if a large number of people - the customers who are buying and using the products and the citizens who are living in and working in what could be very different forms of building - understand the reasons and are on board with those changes.

One project in the exhibition has looked at experiments in communal living with reduced personal space but increased shared space for shared facilities in housing and another project looks at increasing the density of housing in the suburbs of Copenhagen by building new houses on back plots and between existing buildings but such major change can only proceed with wide-spread consent.

The exhibition presents what are still options so the next stage should be broader and informed debate about how we use materials; about what we manufacture and how and about how we build and what we build in our cities in the future.

PLANETARY BOUNDARIES
Det Kongelige Danske Kunstakademis Skoler
for Arkitektur, Design og Konservering

Danneskiold-Samsøe Allé, 1435 København K
21 Sep 2023 - 5 Apr 2024 

Six of the projects will be shown at Form, the design center in Malmö. 

PLANETARY BOUNDARIES
Form Design Center
Lilla torg 9, Malmö, Sweden
13 April - 2 June 2024

new design & architecture - graduate projects at the Royal Academy

 

Shown here are more than 250 projects by new graduates from Det Kongelige Danske Kunstakademi - the Royal Academy of Architecture, Design and Conservation.

Set out through three tightly-packed spaces, the exhibition is arranged around the framework of the many and specific study programmes for architecture and design at the academy.

Since 2016, the UN Sustainable Development Goals have been a focal point for research and events at the royal academy and in their teaching programme and it’s graduation projects.

NEW DESIGN & ARCHITECTURE
23 June - 17 August 2023
note: closed 10-30 July

Det Kongelige Danske Kunstakademi
Skoler for Arkitektur, Design og Konservering
Danneskiold-Samsøe Allé
1435 København K

Sikke et spild / What a waste

When we talk about waste and recycling, we tend to think about items that have come to the end of their first use and that are then collected, sorted and either found a new owner where they are reused or they are broken down or processed to produce reusable materials … so glass from a bottle bank or newspapers and magazines used to make new paper.

But this exhibition is about the material left over from the manufacturing process after the factory has cut out or cut off what it needs.

In this age of carefully-calculated profit margins, something like, for instance, metal tubing from the steel mills will come in a standard length and anything shorter will actually cost more for less as that processing adds to the time and cost of production. Manufacturers will then cut what they need from a standard length and the off cut - still basically new material - can be sold on as “new waste” to a company that can make use of those smaller pieces.

This exhibition has been developed with THE UPCYCL - an association with bases in Aarhus and Copenhagen - that puts together manufacturers with new waste and companies that can use that waste.

Det Kongelige Akademi / the Royal Academy, now has a Materialebutikken or Materials Shop where students can select New Waste material supplied by members of THE UPCYCL for design projects.

The exhibition includes stools from Anno Studio that are made from off-cuts of steel tubing that are left over from the manufacture of industrial trolleys by Ravendo A/S; the Rhomeparket flooring system from WhyNature made from the waste from the primary production from Wiking Gulve and a shelving system from Studio Mathias Falkenstrøm based on leftover materials from JEVI, Ravendo & VTI.

It is easy to miss the exhibition as it is in the City Gallery at the Architecture Center …. the exhibition space that is under the main staircase that takes visitors up from the bookshop to the main exhibition galleries.

Sikke st spild / What a waste
7 June 2023 - 29 October 2023

Dansk Arkitektur Center / Danish Architecture Center
Bryghuspladsen 10
1473 København K

THE UPCYCL
New Waste materialebørs / New Waste material exchange

 

materials from Materialsbutikken at Det Kongelige Akademi

ADFÆRD / VELFÆRD at Det Kongelige Akademi

Adfærd / Velfærd - Behaviour / Welfare - is a major exhibition that has opened in Copenhagen at Det Kongelige Akademi …. the Royal Danish Academy for Architecture, Design and Conservation.

Twenty five projects, by students and researchers at the academy, have been selected to show how architecture and design, by changing behaviour, can improve health and welfare.

“The world has been through a health crisis that took us totally by surprise. Covid-19 locked down huge parts of the global community and put our health and well-being under pressure. The crisis opened our eyes to the vital role that design, and human behaviour play when it comes to our welfare .…. Architects and designers play a key role in coming up with diverse, local solutions based on a wide-ranging, interdisciplinary understanding of function, context and user needs.”

ADFÆRD / VELFÆRD
opened on 15 September 2022
and continues until 23 March 2023

Det Kongelige Danske Kunstakademis Skoler for
Arkitektur, Design og Konservering
,
Danneskiold-Samsøe Allé, 1435 København K

70% LESS CO2 - Conversion to a Viable Age

An important exhibition has just opened at the Royal Academy schools of Architecture, Design and Conservation.

Students and teaching departments were asked to submit their projects for inclusion and 31 were chosen for the exhibition to illustrate how new ideas, new materials and new methods of construction or manufacturing will help to reduce global emissions of CO2 by at least 70%.

Significant levels of CO2 are produced by the fashion industries from the production of the raw materials through manufacturing and through high levels of waste and around 10% of the global emissions of CO2 are from the ubiquitous use of concrete in all forms of construction so several projects here suggest major changes to what we make and build and how we use materials.

But there are also projects on using new materials from algae, lichen and mycelium and even one project that uses pine needles for insulation.

There are short assessments of all the projects on the academy site.

70% LESS CO2
Det Kongelige Akademi
Arketektur Design Konservering
Danneskiold-Samsøes Allé 53, København K
7 October 2021 - 14 January 2022

The future is now

L1057147.JPG

❝ No one knows the future. But it is important to try to imagine it anyway. The Royal Academy opens its doors for the exhibition 'The Future is Now', where visitors can see, listen to and immerse themselves in four different versions of the academy in 2050. ❞


The Future is Now
Det Kongelige Akademi
Philip de Langes Allé, København K
continues until 30 October 2021

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Det Kongelige Akademi - the new visual identity by Urgent Agency

 

On the 6 October the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts Schools of Architecture, Design and Conservation (KADK) launched a new visual identity created by the academy communications department and Urgent Agency. This is not just about graphics but appears to be a major rethink of how the Royal Academy presents itself, its students and their work to a wider public.

The name of the Academy and its design schools has been shortened to Det Kongelige Akademi - Arkitektur, Design, Konservering / The Royal Academy - Architecture, Design, Conservation and there is a new royal seal.

Without doubt, the old branding - with very heavy use of black borders and black blocks - was looking tired and dated and the online site was far from easy to navigate. The complete redesign of the online site cannot have been easy because it is the initial access point to a vast amount of information for students and staff; for potential students; for companies and potential employers and for a broader general public who are looking for information about the libraries, public exhibitions and so on.

Overall, the new visual identity is light and elegant and simple with just four colours - white, a strong and distinct orange, black and a light sand colour.

For all printed material and for the online site there is a new font called Akademi that has low ascenders and short descenders so it forms compact text blocks that are clean, neat and straightforward.

Even if, generally, you are not particularly interested in graphics or typefaces or layout it is worth looking at the online page for the new visual identity because it is itself a model of clarity. There are nice touches like an animation to show the new seal and information about the modular grid to be used for online pages and for all printed work. This is a crucial part of the design … a good grid has done it's job when it brings order and creates a consistent character but you don't register that it is there. Without a good grid, layouts quickly become muddled or crowded but without it being clear to the user exactly why.

Det Kongelige Akademi / Royal Danish Academy
Det Kongelige Akademi - visuelle identitet
Urgent Agency

SOLUTIONS

 

Over the Spring and through the Summer and Autumn, many major events have been postponed or cancelled because of the pandemic.

That includes the graduation show for design and architecture students at the Royal Academy that has been moved on line.

Shown here are 250 projects from the students who graduated this year.

Det Kongelige Akademi / The Royal Danish Academy
the 2020 Graduate exhibition
Solutions