Completed in 1967 in Montreal city, Canada. Habitat 67, designed by the Israeli-Canadian architect Moshe Safdie as the Canadian Pavilion for the World Exposition of 1967, was originally...
加拿大,魁北克省,Habitat 67:蒙特利尔的 预制城市/Moshe Safdie 1967年,魁北克省蒙特利尔市举办了1967年世博会——20世纪规模最大也是最成功的世界博览会之一。由于住宅是此届世博会的主题之一,因此建筑师Moshe Safdie接受委托建造一座大规模的住宅综合楼,首先是供来访的政要使用,其次是供蒙特利尔市的居民居住。Safdi...
Lastly, the proposed housing expo, " Habitat 2017 ", in order to address the disappearance of young famipes from increasingly unaffordable urban centres ( the " demographic time bomb " ), borrows heavily from the original " Habitat 67 " urban residential concept introduced by architect Moshe Saf...
Habitat 67 Condo Kitchen MontrealThe article evaluates the architectural design of the interior of a kitchen in the Habitat 67 Condominium housing project in Montreal, Quebec, designed by architect Antje Bulthaup.Orrell, Rita Catinella...
Habitat 67.A photograph of the housing complex Habitat 67, illustrated by Steve McDonald is presented.EBSCO_AspArchitect
Explore freely or have architect Moshe Safdie take you through Hillside and the World’s Fair site himself in this easy-to-use executable. Download now Download the Habitat 67 scan data Comb through all the LIDAR and photogrammetry mesh data gathered while scanning Habitat 67. Download now Learni...
17 June 2011 Habitat 67 proves that buildings created for events – in this case Montréal’s Expo of 1967 – can continue to be useful. We meet three residents and talk to the architect about why the project has been such a success. ...
While Moshe Safdie may be more well known for the bold forms defining his portfolio of built projects—ranging from the National Gallery of Canada and the horizontal Raffles City Chongqing to the iconic Habitat 67—the architect considers his unbuilt works as important, if not more. Safdie ...
The event showed the country to be a major player in cultural domain.doi:doi:10.1088/1748-9326/9/2/024008Safdie, MosheCanadian Architect
While Moshe Safdie may be more well known for the bold forms defining his portfolio of built projects—ranging from the National Gallery of Canada and the horizontal Raffles City Chongqing to the iconic Habitat 67—the architect considers his unbuilt works as important, if not more. Safdie ...