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INTERNATIONAL FOCUS


Showcasing the latest projects from around the world – visit www.architectsdatafile.co.uk for full information


SOLLENTUNA HILLS, SWEDEN SSM


SSM is now starting production of their second rental unit project, Sollentuna Hills. The project comprises 94 homes in Väsjön, Sollentuna, a growing urban area close to nature. The Sollentuna Hills project was initially planned as a pure co-operative apartment project with 183 apartments but was restructured into a rental unit project and a co-operative apartment project of 94 homes each. The architecture of Sollentuna Hills will feature plaster facades and building sections of varying heights. “It is with great pleasure that we announce the start of production of SSM’s second rental unit project. These 94 rental units will be a much-needed addition to Stockholm’s rental market,” says Mattias Roos, president and CEO of SSM.


BODRUM LOFT, TURKEY TABANLIOGLU ARCHITECTS


DJI HEADQUARTERS, CHINA FOSTER + PARTNERS


Foster + Partners have unveiled their vision for the new headquarters for robotics firm DJI. As the “heart of innovation” for the company, the new building “defies the traditional idea of office space to form a creative community in the sky”, said the architects. The twin towers combine research and development spaces with office and other public functions. The floors are arranged in “floating volumes” cantilevered from central cores by large steel megatrusses. The towers are linked by a sky bridge. Grant Brooker, head of studio, Foster + Partners said: “Our aim is to create a unique workplace environment that embodies the spirit of invention and innovation that has allowed DJI to lead the world in robotics and technology.”


Turkish architecture firm Tabanlioglu Architects’ Bodrum Loft project is located in the coastal hills of Turkey’s Mugla province. Tabanlioglu Architects were able to create a “perfect interaction” between nature and modern architecture. A mixture of open and closed spaces is the core of the design, that makes residents feel “a part of nature,” said the architects. The green roofs are designed to be “an elongation of the natural topography”. The “mixture of people and nature continues on the material level”; stones, excavated on the site, will be repurposed in facades, walkways and retaining walls.


WWW.ARCHITECTSDATAFILE.CO.UK


ADF JULY 2018


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