National Theater - Hungary
Japanese Maritime Museum
Concrete Tall Ship Korea
Gerechtsgebouw, Antwerp

The Ship Residence
The Ship Residence - High upon a promontory on South Bass Island in Lake Erie at Put-in-Bay, Ohio, sits the Owners and Captains Quarters of the former Great Lakes Shipping Boat, The Benson Ford. The boat was built by Henry Ford and named after his grandson many years ago. After fifty years of service on the Great Lakes, the Benson Ford was scheduled in 1986 to be scrapped at the Port of Cleveland, Ohio. On the top front section of the boat were the walnut paneled state rooms, dining room, galley, and passenger lounge designed by Henry Ford for his own pleasure while traversing the Great Lakes on business. (Source: Sea-Fever)
Collingwood’s Vessel: a Retirement Home for Elderly Fisherman
Ship Drydock Design - The scheme is a retirement home for elderly fisherman that also houses a working men’s club for members of Newcastle’s fishing community,” Pearson writes. “As a reflection of the separation and torpor of this unique society, the scheme takes the notion of the ship in an architectural context, to create an ersatz environment which interacts with the city around it as if it were a dry docked vessel. The environmental technologies and the ways in which the notional ship has been translated into an architectural system are the focus of this study.” (Source: BLDBLOG)
BIG Maritime Museum Denmark
BIG’s Maritime Museum - BIG [the Bjarke Ingels Group], has recently won a competition [by unanimous decision, even though they apparently didn’t adhere to the design brief - ninjas in true form] to design the Danish Maritime Museum in Helsingør, DK. While searching for an appropriate site for the proposed project, the firm discovered an abandoned 150m long, 25m wide, and 9m deep concrete dry dock within eyesight of Kronborg Castle . (Source: MNY)
The Floating Islands
Floating Islands - A design by Vincent Callebaut Architectures, Floating Islands is a flexible masterplaned multi-energy town. By using current power generators and other green technology this is a futuristic design for green living. Callebaut’s vision is “creation which consists in mixing a scientifical and cultural survey with a computer programmatic approach in order to transcribe in architecture landscape distortions or ecosystem abstractions. Each architectural project at any scale, wants to anticipate through this digital hybridization, the future lifestyles by inventing new imaginary worlds. More poetic worlds. More equitable worlds. More natural worlds. Actually, more humanistic worlds! ”
Performing Arts Center, Seoul
Performing Arts Center, Seoul - ” Whereas the orchestra is in rehearsal, we continue our walk towards the places switched by the sound of the soprano and the violins. The both performing rooms of 1500 seats each are megaliths submerging from the floor. They are located at the extremities of the island and each of them is isolated from the road by two blocks gathering together annex functions like workshops and rehearsal rooms, public sanitary, offices and technical spaces. Their double layer of concrete protects the shows from feared sounds of low frequencies coming from the freeway traffic. They are very white and diffuse a extraordinary light ! The roundness of these hulls makes us think of the most beautiful ships and plays with the shadows of the linen seams which projects itself at the surface. ” (Source)
Nantes Slavery Memorial
Nantes Slavery Memorial, France - Bonder + Wodiczko are received an ACSA award for their work on the design of a memorial to the abolition of slavery [Memorial à l’abolition de l’esclavage] in Nantes, France. Visitors to the memorial will walk along an altered landscape, littered with plaques commemorating each ship that carried slaves into Nantes [the plaques will display the name of the ship, the date, the number of slaves on board, and the number of slaves who lost their lives on the voyage]. Having walked along the length of the glass [which you can see actually slips through the ground plane], visitors descend a monumental staircase into a subterranean passage where these three aforementioned witnesses - the river, the quay, and the sky - meet [through the reflection from the glass] in one confined space. (Source: Architecture.MNP)UPDATE: Reader Submissions
Milwaukee Art Museum
Milwaukee Art Museum - The Calatrava-designed Quadracci Pavilion, the first Calatrava-designed building to be completed in the United States, first opened to the public May 4, 2001. On that date the museum opened the new exhibition galleries, larger museum store and auditorium in the Quadracci Pavilion along with the completely renovated and reinstalled permanent collection galleries. (Via Joe Smith)
Canada Place, Vancouver Cruise Ship Terminal
Canada Place - Constructed for Expo 86 as the pavilion for Canada and was the only venue for the fair that was not at the main site on the north shore of False Creek. It can be reached via the SkyTrain line and the nearby Waterfront Station subway terminus. The striking white sails of the building has made it a prominent landmark for the city, as well as drawing comparisons to the Sydney Opera House in Sydney, Australia. (Google Earth View)
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11 responses so far ↓
1 Steve // Feb 11, 2008 at 2:33 am
Don’t know how this list could have missed Canada Place, the cruise ship dock, in Vancouver.
http://www.vcmbc.com/Images/imax_image2.jpg
I enjoy the blog…keep up the great work.
Steve
2 IMC Brokers // Feb 11, 2008 at 7:26 am
and not to forget the new Courthouse in Antwerp - http://www.bouwenwonen.net/nieuwbouw/special/gerechtsgebouwantwerpen/
roof design inspired by the sails of historic tallships
3 Joe Smith // Feb 11, 2008 at 12:07 pm
Very nice. The Milwaukee Art Museum isn’t really a ship, but it sure looks like it was inspired by one:
http://mam.org/thebuilding/index.htm
4 John // Feb 11, 2008 at 9:19 pm
Steve,
I wasn’t expecting to get called out on that one but it was on my mind. My wife ran the Vancuover marathon a few years ago which was hosted in that very building. I simply failed to find any great photos of it.
Thanks IMC and Joe… all three are great finds and have been added to the post!
Anyone know of more?
5 ships in concrete | deputydog // Feb 12, 2008 at 10:43 am
[…] ships in concrete. go. […]
6 Jeff // Feb 15, 2008 at 9:26 pm
Where is the Sydney Opera House?
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10 outsourcing Technology // Jul 5, 2008 at 3:21 am
Concrete ships are ships built of steel and ferrocement and the advantage of ferrocement construction is that materials are cheap and readily available….
11 outsourcing Technology // Jul 5, 2008 at 3:22 am
WAW!! I love the architectural work done on these ships. Concrete ships are everywhere in South Korea as Restaurants
or pub..These ships are usually built of steel and Ferrocement. The good thing about ferrocement construction is that materials are cheap and readily available
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