Bold use of colour has never frightened the 40-year-old, Lisbon-based
architect Pedro Gadanho. The colour extravagance of the recently
completed single-family residence in Oporto, Portugal, follows
Gadanho’s established modus operandi of using white and bright colours
as key elements of a space. The petrol-blue kitchen and sanguine
stairway draw the attention while at the same time punching up the
power of snowy white.
Colour played an important part also in the widely reviewed and admired
Orange house he designed with Nuno Grande. The private residence was
completed in 2005 in Carreço, Portugal.
Another example of
Gadanho’s use of color is the high-profile Ellipse Foundation Art
Centre in Estoril/Alcoitão, Portugal. He designed the 20,000
square-foot converted warehouse with Atelier de Santos. It was
completed in 2006.
Gadanho’s thought-provoking architecture matches his overall attempt to
provoke critical thinking about the relationship between architecture
and current culture. He is known not only as an architect but also as a
free-lance critic, curator and teacher. He’s taught architecture theory
and history at Faculdade de Arquitectura da Universidade do Porto and
curated the Portuguese presence at the 2004 Venice Biennale. And for
those of us who like lovely names, his full name is Pedro César Clara
do Carmo Gadanho. Tuija Seipell
One of the easiest ways to make a boring space more vibrant is to use colour. However, as so many of us can remember, obvious opportunities to do this have been missed for decades in schools, universities and hundreds of other places where young people are more or less stuck for long periods. Luckily, today’s kids have better luck — at least in the schools where Amsterdam’s i29 has had its say.
i29 Interior Architects consists of two interior designers — Jaspar Jansen and Jeroen Dellensen — and is known for clear, bold solutions. A good example of this is their custom furniture project for a Het Veer. It is a public school in Almere, a city located 25 kilometers east of Amsterdam and often referred to as the most modern city in Europe. Het Veer is a school for children with learning and concentration difficulties and the objective of i29’s work was to express and entice concentration, playfulness and movement. Their eight different white and red tube furniture pieces can be mixed and matched creating various formations. They play off the Buzz Wire science game that teaches about electric circuits and is based on concentration and hand coordination.
At the Caland Lyseum in Amsterdam, 1,500 students work in a sport-centric environment where they receive coaching for their specific sport and in academic topics. i29 was asked to envision the public spaces — including the main hall, staff room, library and computer/media room — for the new Bos & Partners architects-designed building with its gray brick, glass walls and unusual floor plans. They used large images of the school’s famous sports hero alumni and then custom-created multi-functional tables, benches and signage, plus a color scheme for the common areas. The award-winning solution matches the dynamic and multicultural life of the school yet lets the buildings features dominate. - Tuija Seipell