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The Peak Leisure Club | Zaha Hadid | Via
In 1982, Zaha Hadid won the competition for a new private club located in the hills ofKowloon. The architect proposed a horizontal skyscraper formed by different layers in order to create a new artificial topography. These layers were designed as large cantilevered beams that came from the ground and float above the site. One of the most interesting features of the project is the recovery of the suprematism proposed by El Lissiztky among others during the Russian Avant Garde as a starting point of her careerr. The superposition of different horizontal layers builds the project, adapting the programs into the design. Moreover, the open spaces between the beams are also one of the most interesting parts of The Peak. These areas create dramatic spaces where Zaha Hadid introduces leisure programs as the swimming pool.
sportscollaborative @ archleague
The Gold Mines of Serra Pelada | Via
In the early 1980s, Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado travelled to the mines of Serra Pelada, some 430 kilometers south of the mouth of the Amazon River, where a notorious gold rush was in progress. A few years earlier, a child had found a 6-grams nugget of gold in the banks of a local river, triggering one of the biggest race for gold in modern history. Motivated by the dream of getting rich quickly, tens of thousands of miners descended into the site swarming like ants in the vast open-air pit they had carved into the landscape. Salgado took some of the most haunting pictures of the workers there, highlighting the hazardous conditions in which they worked and the sheer madness and chaos of the operation.
During its peak, the Serra Pelada mine employed some 100,000 diggers or garimpeiros in appalling conditions, where violence, death and prostitution was rampant. The diggers scratched through the soil at the bottom of the open pit, filled it into sacks each weighing between 30 to 60 kilograms, and then carried the heavy sacks up some 400 meters of wood and rope ladders to the top of the mine, where it is sifted for gold. On average, workers were paid 20 cents for digging and carrying each sack, with a bonus if gold was discovered. Thousands of underage girls sold their bodies for a few gold flakes while around 60–80 unsolved murders occurred in the nearby town, where the workers lived, every month.
Andreas Papastergiou, Untitled, graphite on paper, 40 x 30 cm, 2016.
OMA structures axel springer campus around digital valley