Nader Tehrani: Current Work

Posted on May 30th, 2017 by Jalisa Joyner

Posted under: Lectures

On April 5th, Nader presented NADAAA’s current work at a public lecture at the Cooper Union as part of The Architectural League’s Current Work series.

He organized his lecture around three projects for schools of design: the Hinman Research Building at the Georgia Institute of Technology, the Melbourne School of Design at the University of Melbourne, and the Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design at the University of Toronto. These projects explore the relationship of these buildings to spaces of scholarship, making, and the accidents that happen in between these moments and, “some kind of reciprocity between the institutions we [as architects] try to cultivate, and the spaces they foster.”

Edited video courtesy of the Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture of The Cooper Union.

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Domestic Tectonic: Translations Across Scales

Posted on May 22nd, 2017 by Lisa LaCharité

Posted under: Installations + Exhibitions, Lectures, Press

Nader Tehrani and Katie Faulkner presented the 2017 RISD Shoemaker Lecture on April 24, 2017 after the opening of the RISD Shoemaker Exhibit by NADAAA, Domestic Tectonic: Translations Across Scales, at the RISD BEB Gallery. Below is a summary and guide to the exhibit.

Domestic Tectonic occurs at a moment in our trajectory when the dialogue between research and practice has intertwined, not only in confluence, but in moments of friction when our design ambitions have not aligned with the possibilities of patronage, construction norms, or the fluctuations of the economy. The Rock Creek House, as such, does not so much represent the culmination of a form of thinking, but strategic compromise, reconciliation, and opportunism. The seeds for current thinking can be found in history, and many of the early works of both Office dA and NADAAA were houses. Taken together, the houses reveal not only speculation on the domestic realm, but also ways in which a small project may become an ‘amuse bouche’ for a larger construction.

Thus, we link the design and craft usually reserved for the scale of a home to the architecture of the very institutions that train the designers. Below are a few examples of these links as themes that stand out in our work: The first theme deals with the basic proposition of architectural composition in the context of typology, organization and configuration: each of these houses have explored the tensions between received conventions on the one hand –whether from history or the construction industry– and the idea of transformation and invention on the other. A second theme has transported each project into a research about the relationship between material units, their methods of assembly and the way in which means and methods might become transformative –formally, spatially, and technologically– as the basis for the production of new forms of knowledge. Thirdly, each project establishes some relationship with its site, if only as a reminder that architecture does not only operate in a vacuum, but also in a deeply entrenched relationship with its context, and hence a social, political and collective environment.

Below is an outline of the work included in the exhibit to provide a tour of the exhibition. The exhibition was organized around five episodes; each episode title is a link that provides additional information and context:

1 The Rock Creek House

As the centerpiece of the exhibit, the Rock Creek House represents the challenges of working with the infrastructure of an existing building, and how its history and embodied energy serves to advance an idea about resilience and preservation. At the same time, the project tests the limits of such a logic, radically transforming the southern side of the building to open it up to the landscape, framing broader views, letting in the sun, and consequently transforming the otherwise load-bearing brick wall into a curtain wall. The sectional excavations of the project are maybe its most transformative, effectively mining space out of an existing basement and attic to double the size of the house. Significant portions of existing brick were removed on the southern façade to make way for larger window sizes, and then subsequently recycled to expand the façade of the attic space: a conceptual cut and fill.

2 MOCK-UPS

The mock-ups in this exhibit are a key part of the research undertaken by NADAAA in collaboration with C.W. Keller & Associates to advance some of the material thinking of the project. Much of that thinking was aimed at organizing the house on the north-south grain of its structural walls and –with the insertion of diverse plywood elements– reinforcing that grain with the orientation of plywood laminations. These laminations then translate into butcher block stairs, picket railing, blank panel interior facades on the east-west grain, and a medium through which to organize all mechanical and electronic elements.

3- Tectonic Domestic Grid**

The grid of projects on the north-west corner of the gallery places this project in the context of other residential projects through which some of the key ideas have been iterated.

4 The Animations 

The projection wall brings the various projects into dialogue with each other through added images, and more importantly through animations that advance both the conceptual and experiential aims of each project.

5 The preface to the May 2016 issue of The Plan 

The preface to the May 2016 issue of The Plan is included as an introduction to the exhibit. It outlines some of our architectural preoccupations over the past years and how they have impacted the relationship between practice and pedagogy.

** Residences from left to right, top to bottom: Tongxian Art Center, Weston House, Newton House, Phoenix Residence, New Hampshire Retreat, Mill Road Residence, Villa Varoise (Dortoir Familial), Casa La Roca, House in New England

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Nader Participates in Drive, Design, Desire Roundtable

Posted on April 28th, 2017 by Jalisa Joyner

Posted under: Events, Lectures, Press

Drive, Design, Desire – dna10 Roundtable – moderated by Rodman Primack with Kelly Behun, Marc Benda, Jordan Hruska, Christian Larsen, Jeanne Greenberg Rohaytn, Christopher Schanck and Nader Tehrani

Saturday, May. 6th, 11am -1:30pm

Nader will participate in a freeform discussion on the current state of design. The event coincides with Friedman Benda Gallery’s 10th anniversary exhibition, dna10, which runs from May 4th to June 10th. To learn more click HERE and HERE.

Limited seating, please r.s.v.p gallery@friedmanbenda.com

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NADAAA PRESENTS SHOEMAKER LECTURE & EXHIBITION AT RISD

Posted on April 24th, 2017 by Jalisa Joyner

Posted under: Installations + Exhibitions, Lectures

Today at 6:30 pm, Nader & Katie will present the RISD Shoemaker Lecture which complements ‘Domestic Tectonic: Translations Across Scales’, an exhibit on view until May 12th in the BEB gallery.  The lecture at Metcalf Auditorium, Chace Center will follow the opening reception of the exhibition in the BEB Gallery at 5:30 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public.

DOMESTIC TECTONIC OCCURS AT A MOMENT IN OUR TRAJECTORY WHEN THE DIALOGUE BETWEEN RESEARCH AND PRACTICE HAS INTERTWINED, NOT ONLY IN CONFLUENCE, BUT IN MOMENTS OF FRICTION WHEN OUR DESIGN AMBITIONS HAVE NOT ALIGNED WITH THE POSSIBILITIES OF PATRONAGE, CONSTRUCTION NORMS, OR THE FLUCTUATIONS OF THE ECONOMY.  THE SEEDS FOR CURRENT THINKING CAN BE FOUND IN HISTORY, AND MANY OF THE EARLY WORKS OF BOTH OFFICE DA AND NADAAA WERE HOUSES. TAKEN TOGETHER, THE HOUSES REVEAL NOT ONLY SPECULATION ON THE DOMESTIC REALM, BUT ALSO WAYS IN WHICH A SMALL PROJECT MAY BECOME AN ‘AMUSE BOUCHE’ FOR A LARGER CONSTRUCTION.  THUS, WE LINK THE DESIGN AND CRAFT USUALLY RESERVED FOR THE SCALE OF A HOME TO THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE VERY INSTITUTIONS THAT TRAIN THE DESIGNERS.

Learn more HERE.

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A GENEROUS WELCOMING FOR DEAN TEHRANI AT COOPER UNION’S GREAT HALL

Posted on April 14th, 2017 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Events, Lectures, The Cooper Union

Last week the Architectural League and The Cooper Union’s Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture hosted Nader in Cooper’s Great Hall for a lecture on his work. President Sparks and Anthony Vidler introduced Nader and a discussion followed that was moderated by SO-IL’s Florian Idenburg.

At the after-party (clockwise from top left): Debora Mesa, Davie Lerner, Adi Shamir-Baron, David Erdman, Jing Liu, Daniel Gallagher, Marion Weiss, Ben Aranda, Anne Rieselbach,  and Jeffrey Brown.

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NADER TO PRESENT ‘CURRENT WORK: SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT’

Posted on April 3rd, 2017 by Jalisa Joyner

Posted under: Academic, Lectures

Today,  Nader will present ‘Current Work: Schools of Thought’. The lecture will include an introduction by Anthony Vidler and will be moderated by Florian Idenburg.  The lecture is co-sponsored by the Cooper Union and the Architectural League.

Tickets HERE.

 

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AZURE TALKS: ‘WHAT MATTERS NOW’

Posted on March 17th, 2017 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Academic, Lectures

Nader will be joining Nina-Marie Lister, John Tong, Michael Vanderbyl, and George Yabu in Toronto on March 21 for a panel on what architects and designers think “matters now”. Tickets are on sale HERE.

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ORIGINATION IN DESIGN AND COLLABORATION AT GEORGIA TECH

Posted on March 2nd, 2017 by Jalisa Joyner

Posted under: Lectures

On Saturday, March 11, Nader will present at the “Origination” Symposium and Exhibition hosted by Georgia Tech School of Architecture. Read more HERE.

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SAVE THE DATE: ‘Current Work: Schools of Thought’

Posted on February 21st, 2017 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Academic, Events, Lectures, The Cooper Union

vidler-tehrani-idenburg

Nader is presenting NADAAA’s work at a public lecture on April 5th at the Cooper Union as part of The Architectural League’s Current Work series. An introduction will be given by Anthony Vidler and a post-lecture conversation will be moderated by Florian Idenburg. This lecture is co-sponsored by The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture of The Cooper Union. Tickets will be available late March HERE.

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NADER TO LECTURE AT UT OF AUSTIN TODAY

Posted on January 30th, 2017 by Jalisa Joyner

Posted under: Lectures

Join UTSOA for The Jean and Bill Booziotis Lecture in Architecture featuring Nader Tehrani. The lecture is entitled ‘The Measure of Tolerance’ and will begin at 5pm in the Jessen Auditorium.

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