For Jakarta-based architect Willis Kusuma, no material captures timelessness better than concrete. “I remember looking at the works of the great masters, Le Corbusier and Louis Kahn, who used concrete frequently and always marveled at how they arrived at structures that transcend time. They were constructed in the past but could well belong to the present too! I wanted that same quality for my building.”
A chaotic site
Before the runaway success that is Mister Sunday Café, there was a 250-square-meter lot on a crowded residential street in the throes of commercial reinvention. The local government had just rezoned Jalan Cikajang (Cikajang Street) to allow retail establishments, and in the mad rush to open establishments, shops and restaurants sprouted up higgledy-piggledy. The scarcity of parking space was a major issue on the narrow street.
Kusuma’s client, a young couple with pets, wanted a three-story structure for their home, graphic design studio, and their café business. Says Kusuma: “Seeing all these chaotic business establishments along the street convinced me that my addition needed to look rooted and permanent. At the same time, we wanted to stretch our horizons with the usage of concrete. We’d worked with concrete in some of our earlier projects, but never to the extent as Mister Sunday.”
Concrete plan
Bu hikaye BluPrint dergisinin Volume 4 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye BluPrint dergisinin Volume 4 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Windows Over Windows
It’s what you do when you’re a green-loving architect like Formzero’s Cherng Yih Lee, and your client isn’t interested in the forest outside
The Office Of New Life Stories
D-Associates Architect’s office building in Jakarta is just how principals Gregorius Yolodi and Maria Rosantina want it— green, creative, and nurturing—just as they want their team to be
Stark Beauty
When you’ve got great bones designed by Park + Associates, the structure should be the architecture
Sunday's Best
Willis Kusuma’s multi-functional Mister Sunday elevates the Jakarta café scene with the timelessness and formal honesty of concrete
Brut Force
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Workaholics Finish First
Bangkok’s Architectural Studio of Work-Aholic (ASWA) takes their first stab at WAF and counts on the power of spatial storytelling to take home the prize
People Obssessed With Design
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Firm Follows Feeling
Bangkok-based landscape architecture firm P Landscape emphasizes the human experience and feeling through contemporary integration of art, culture, and ecology
Tried and Tested
WAF and INSIDE multi-awardee Hypothesis’ researchintensive approach produces complete design solutions that are anything but formulaic
Crew's Control
Young Thai studio Creative Crews finds a worldwide audience for three very different projects: a rural homestay, a classroom for the blind, and their own office, all indicative of the practice’s adaptive design solutions