*요르단의 시네마틱 아트 스쿨 [ s y m b i o s i s design ] Red Sea Institute of Cinematic Arts “RSICA”

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대지의 역사를 영화로 담아내다:

시네마틱 아트 스쿨은 대지와 영화의

상관 관계를 읽는 것에서 부터 시작한다.

대지에 투영되는 빛, 그림자, 소리,

영화의 역동성, 공간, 제작과정 등의

레이어를 랜드스케이핑을 통하여

각레이어를 수직과 수평으로
나누어 조닝하였다.
단순히 컨셉에 의한 랜드스케이핑이 아닌
지속가능한 건축물의 요소로 나누어
각 부분별 계획을 반영한 것이 특징이다.
특히 중정의 풀장은 빛과 그림자 그리고
미시기후를 조절하는 역활을 하는데,
물의 증발열을 통한 온도조절은
중정을 통하여 각 건물간의
환기와 온도를 자연스럽게
유지시켜주는 역활을 한다.
반 투명 필름과 같은 외피는
내부로 빛의 투과를 적절히 유지시켜주면서
마치 영화의 필름들이 상영되는 듯한
느낌 마저 들게 한다.

영화와 건축은 뗄레야 뗄 수 없는 사이이다.
공간을 디자인 하는것과
공간이 투영된 시간을 디자인하는 것은
툴과 방법에 차이 일 뿐이지
사람의 삶을 조명하고 비추는 것은
동일하기 때문이다.

The Red Sea Institute of Cinematic Arts (RSICA) designed by s y m b i o s i s design was completed in 2008.  It is an architectural and spatial interpretation of the explorative and creative process of film-making and producing, designed specifically to encourage reflection on oneself and observation of the world outside oneself.



The architecture of the school is an explorative and didactic ground-scape environment capturing deduced emulations of the layers that make up film.  The building stages different conditions that allow the student to understand a great measure of intangibles or often immeasurable notions and conditions that are best understood intuitively through experience.


In order to claim the majority of the property to landscape, many functions were pushed to sub-grade levels, in turn, giving a non abrasive sculptural disposition of buildings above. The landscape theme is a minimalistic one and where oasis are introduced as sub-grade light wells, rocks from the Rum desert are staged as mystical elements and reflective pools capture sun rays and passing clouds above. Sharing the campus with the main RSICA complex is a luxurious boutique concept hotel offering a unique experience about film and film-making with a film museum connecting back to the film school, and state-of-the-art three screen public cinemas on the other side of the campus.


Light as a matter

Natural light conditions are exploited in the buildings creating ranges between washed out and intense.  The lighting is staged to allow students the opportunity to observe the nature of light.  Light showers down on many areas and often in intense slices through sculptural skylights.

Shadows as matter

Like light, shadows are enhanced as a matter in a variety of form; dark areas percolate both still and moving shadows while other forms cast vivid and textured ones.



Dynamic Motion

The building forms descend into the ground and ascend out and over the ground creating paths and spaces in flux, roaming, and encouraging motion from different unconventional vantage points to allow students to explore spatial paradigm shifts necessary to understanding and planning scenography.

Sound as a matter

Natural raw sounds of winds and breezes, of still water and the rain, of different footsteps, are captured through basic pipe channels from distant staged points to secluded ones for students to appreciate sound matter even when they are not near its sources.

Introspective domain

Many smaller areas fold inwardly unto themselves creating places of detachment in the form of dwelled-in niches necessary for students to silently explore their own minds – the introspective domain.  Imagination demands many walk-through rehearsals in the mind where reality can be stretched beyond the conventional and towards the magical.

Exchange domain

Great films are a byproduct of collaborative and synergetic team effort.  Most circulation spaces and open outdoor ones are articulated to become social and celebratory domains where conversations and exchange of ideas are not only welcomed but enhanced and promoted.


Layering

Like montage in filming, different spaces and building forms were juxtaposed as single layers; however the student can perceive different compositions from different points depending on their position in space.  Long visual axes inlayed with a variety of compositional elements are staged as Forced Perspectives offering the students explorative grounds of visual montage.

Studio Tectonics

The entire campus building celebrates the studio building typology as an active production place, and as a generally raw building by exposing most electrical and mechanical elements such as duct work and large lighting fixtures; as well as echoing tools and instruments of the profession such as speakers and hovering steel cat-walks.  The building will be a transparent technical blueprint to the students.

Film Making Chronology

The building facilities that entail preparatory and technical works in the pre-production, production and post-production chronology are laid out in plan in a clear sequence.  Not only students, but also visitors, will be able to clearly read the sequence of film making in actual plan, especially where some functions are exposed through transparency to circulation areas.

Architect: s y m b i o s i s designs ltd.
Location: ,
Project name: Red Sea Institute of Cinematic Arts (RSICA) ­
Program: Film School with 160 seat screening room, media Library, 2 large sound stages, set stage, equipment storage rooms, green room, camera lab, smart classrooms, animation lab, edit and audit suites, hovering Café’, administration building and staff residences, in addition to a luxurious 80 room Boutique Hotel
Client: Red Sea Institute of Cinematic Arts (collaboration with The University of Sothern California school of Cinematic Arts and The royal Film Commission)
Project team: Khalid Nahhas, Ramiz Ayoub, Faiha Katbi, Lina Asa’d, Dina Hadaddin, Onur Lambaz
Structural Engineer: s y m b i o s i s designs ltd., Omega Consulting Off.
Electrical & Mechanical Engineer: Spectrum Mep Consulting Engineers Off.
Media/Audio/Visual Consulting Services: Sand Hill Media, Berkeley, CA
Acoustical Consultant: Newson Brown Acoustics LLC, Santa Monika, CA
Land Area: 20,200 sq. m
Built-up Area: 30,000 sq. m
Project year: 2008
3D images: Courtesy of s y m b i o s i s  designs ltd.



from  archdaily
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