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Diploma project

Magnus VåganEirik Martin Tollåli


Erik Fenstad Langdalen
Claudia Andrea Pinochet Rojas
Our work revolves around the restoration and expansion of an early modernist swimming hall in Tromsø.

The original author is Jan Inge Hovig, an architect whose work has had great impact in the north of Norway.

Our approach to the field of restoration is largely based on the theoretical work of Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc and Jorge Otero- Pailos, where the architecture itself and the role of the author is given great importance.

Our take on the building is in the re-joining of the pieces of an “ideal” design. One the product of 1965, the other of today. 
Xian WuYeung Kwun Ting Tommy


Per Olaf Fjeld
Rolf Gerstlauer
This new collective is offering an absence of city for public where allows the people meeting and aware of Buddhism. The public allows freely walking in the temple. He/she is invited to come up to the rooftop through the continuous gardens or the outer stairs. The continuous gardens are connected by the funiture complex. Through climbing up the furniture to enter the next garden, the properties of the furniture have been changed into the infrastructure. The ambiguity discussion performs in different parts of the temple.
Eskil Frøyen NybøEven Småkasin


Marius Nygaard
The Inn consists of one central building on the harbour where the ferry arrives, and individual rooms scattered throughout the historical centre. At the harbour, the central building contains the Inns reception, visitors centre, gallery, restaurant and bar. Together with the existing grocery store and the new guest harbour, it will frame a new village square.


 



Li Zhang


Per Olaf Fjeld
Rolf Gerstlauer
Lisbeth Funck

Mathilde Engen Stabekk


Beate Marie Manthey Hølmebakk
Anna Røtnes
Tor Olav Austigard
This thesis investigates how we deal with areas of nature protection and their inhabitants. How to communicate value, how to facilitate these areas for conscious activities and careful traffic. It explores architecture’s potential of clarifying borders, and the possibility of changing the human experience of nature into something different and more sustainable.

Who are the prisoners of preservation?

 



Annette Katherine Mohr


Neven Mikac Fuchs
Jonas Lippestad
The hostel concept Nui from Japan has now established Nui Oslo in the heart of Grünerløkka. The word “Nui” means hand-sewing in Japanese and reflects the project’s architectural discourse between the program and the various physical elements; the existing buildings, the new additional buildings and the adjacent urban spaces. The project provides a variety of affordable “homes” away from home for all kinds of guests. In addition, the hostel features a food court, a cafe and a bar, a comic book library, and a gallery on the ground floor.
Ingrid Fallet


Peter Paludan Hemmersam
Sabine Muller
Thomas Forslund Johnsen
Rather than just a linear infrastructure, the project envision the line as a vibrant network - generating experiences and recreational and visual qualities, as well as transportation. 

Three areas along the corridor have been highlighted, where the design of new tram stops adresses different urban situations: the opening of the Alna River, the stop as a public square and densification along a new park with historical references.
 

Mona Kleven Lauritzen

11.12.2015 - 30.06.2016

Andrew David Morrison

This information is brought to light through a physical installation with data on the hourly amount of phone calls made by Telenor’s 2.1 million customers in 2013. By displaying this spatially the installation offers an opportunity to communicate big data to a wider audience.

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