1. ArchDaily
  2. Photovoltaic Panels

Photovoltaic Panels: The Latest Architecture and News

Perkins + Will's Prismatic Facade Scheme Wins Competition for York University Building in Toronto

Perkins+Will’s triangulated facade scheme has won an international competition for the design of the new School of Continuing Studies at York University’s Keele campus outside of Toronto, Canada.

Beating out proposals from top firms, including finalists HOK andGow Hastings Architects with Henning Larsen, Perkins+Will’s design twists as it rises, both reacting to solar optimization studies and opening up the building to create a new gateway at the campus’ southeast entrance.

Perkins + Will's Prismatic Facade Scheme Wins Competition for York University Building in Toronto - Featured ImagePerkins + Will's Prismatic Facade Scheme Wins Competition for York University Building in Toronto - Image 1 of 4Perkins + Will's Prismatic Facade Scheme Wins Competition for York University Building in Toronto - Image 2 of 4Perkins + Will's Prismatic Facade Scheme Wins Competition for York University Building in Toronto - Image 3 of 4Perkins + Will's Prismatic Facade Scheme Wins Competition for York University Building in Toronto - More Images

This E-Paper Tile Facade Is Inspired by the WW1 Military Optical Illusion "Razzle Dazzle"

San Diego Airport has unveiled their permanent interactive artwork DAZZLE on the Airport’s Rental Car Centre commissioned by San Diegos County Regional Airport Authority, that features the debut of E Ink's revolutionary prism technology on a large architectural scale. The installation has been designed to manipulate the form of the façade using inspiration from the World War I military technique “razzle dazzle” that camouflaged the outlines of ships. This phenomenon of visually scrambling the shapes to hide from being spotted can be witnessed in nature too, as the stripes on a zebra equally become an optical illusion to disrupt the predator’s perception.

This E-Paper Tile Facade Is Inspired by the WW1 Military Optical Illusion "Razzle Dazzle" - Image 1 of 4This E-Paper Tile Facade Is Inspired by the WW1 Military Optical Illusion "Razzle Dazzle" - Image 2 of 4This E-Paper Tile Facade Is Inspired by the WW1 Military Optical Illusion "Razzle Dazzle" - Image 3 of 4This E-Paper Tile Facade Is Inspired by the WW1 Military Optical Illusion "Razzle Dazzle" - Image 4 of 4This E-Paper Tile Facade Is Inspired by the WW1 Military Optical Illusion Razzle Dazzle - More Images+ 30

This Modular Green Wall System Generates Electricity From Moss

IaaC Student Elena Mitrofanova, working alongside biochemist Paolo Bombelli has created a proposal for a facade system that utilizes the natural electricity-generating power of plants. Consisting of a series of hollow, modular clay "bricks" containing moss, the system takes advantage of new scientific advances in the emerging field of biophotovoltaics (BPV) which Mitrofanova says "would be cheaper to produce, self-repairing, self-replicating, biodegradable and much more sustainable" than standard photovoltaics.

This Modular Green Wall System Generates Electricity From Moss - Image 1 of 4This Modular Green Wall System Generates Electricity From Moss - Image 2 of 4This Modular Green Wall System Generates Electricity From Moss - Image 3 of 4This Modular Green Wall System Generates Electricity From Moss - Image 4 of 4This Modular Green Wall System Generates Electricity From Moss - More Images+ 9

HALO: Swedish Students' Solar Decathlon Entry

Designed and built by 25 students from Chalmers University in Sweden, HALO is a socially sustainable home for four students, running on renewable energy from the sun. HALO was designed using one underlying concept: shared space is double space.

HALO: Swedish Students' Solar Decathlon Entry - Image 1 of 4HALO: Swedish Students' Solar Decathlon Entry - Image 2 of 4HALO: Swedish Students' Solar Decathlon Entry - Image 3 of 4HALO: Swedish Students' Solar Decathlon Entry - Image 4 of 4HALO: Swedish Students' Solar Decathlon Entry - More Images+ 18