Architecture inspires us to look up. In our day-to-day, we often only see what’s right in front of us, following the path ahead. When we think about the many components and elements of architecture, canopies are unique in that they provide functional opportunities and the chance to integrate art and design. Canopies have been made throughout history and around the world to better control daylight and solar heat gain. They create a sense of wonder, inviting us to look up.
A canopy is an overhead roof structure usually made with a fabric or metal covering to provide shade and shelter. Beyond mitigating weather conditions, it’s also an opportunity to create moments of pause and reflection. They are elements that invite exploration and discovery as we look up to the structures above us. The following collection showcases ten awe-inspiring canopy designs through section drawings. While they include a range of sizes and materials, the projects are all made with creative structural systems that draw our gaze up to the sky.
Kendeda Building
By The Miller Hull Partnership and Lord Aeck Sargent, Atlanta, GA, United States
The design of The Kendeda Building is inspired by the vernacular southern porch. The team explains that the project reimagines this regionally ubiquitous architectural device for the civic scale of the campus. The Regenerative Porch performs the traditional tasks of creating a cool microclimate around the building and blurring interior and exterior conditions. The PV canopy generates more than 100% of the building’s energy demand and captures enough rainwater to meet 100% of the water used in the building.
Mission Possible – The ‘UN’ Opportunity Pavilion
By AGi architects, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Jury Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Pavilions
The canopy protects the plaza from direct sun exposure, and the colorful elements overlap, creating layers, playing with transparency, light, shadows and color. A terracotta ‘carpet’ covers the ground and the pavilion’s facades – the first time this type of ceramic material has been used in the UAE in this way. This creates a backdrop that places emphasis on the pavilion’s public spaces and how humans interact within it.
SNF Energy Canopy
By Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Athens, Greece
Apart from its technical and aesthetic characteristics, the Canopy also plays a role in the optimal operation of the SNFCC, and its environmental sustainability. The Energy Canopy was been constructed in such a way that it was made to produce 2GWh of electrical energy per year, thus contributing to fulfilling the energy requirements of the Greek National Opera (GNO) and National Library of Greece (NGL) buildings, while also meeting the objective of minimizing CO2 emissions.
Cineteca Nacional Siglo XXI
By Rojkind Arquitectos, Mexico City, Mexico
The design team first considered the relocation of surface parking, which occupied 40% of the site, to a new structure and the reactivation of the ‘back entrance,’ across the street from the historic town’s cemetery, which had a more pedestrian friendly scale. A new large-scale public plaza sheltered with a hovering canopy now connects the existing complex with the new screening rooms. The sheltered space can accommodate additional program options such as concerts, theater, exhibitions and more.
Auckland Art Gallery
By Archimedia, Auckland, New Zealand
These emblematic forms and canopies give a unique identity and image to the Gallery. While the hovering roof draw on natural forms they are also closely related to the scale, proportions and detail of the architecture of the existing Gallery. A careful study of the relative dimensions, proportions and alignments determined the final form and positioning of the new elements to create a complement with the original and proud turn-of-the century architecture.
Château La Coste Art Gallery
By Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Aix-en-Provence, France
The partly buried building highlights the roof canopy covered with a sail fastened to thin metal arches. These arches echo the layout of the grapevines. Inside, sculpture and photography exhibitions are displayed into a 160 sq. meters gallery benefiting from natural light. The remaining surface is dedicated to wine preservation. Thus, the exhibition space is surrounded by wine cellars whose scale is evidenced by the alcoves at the entrance of the gallery.
VELAA, The Sindhorn Village
By Architects 49, Bangkok, Thailand
Popular Choice Winner, 9th Annual A+Awards, Retail
Velaa Sindhorn Village is the fruition of A49’s award winning design. It weaves Sindhorn’s central Super Green into the urban fabric. The single-story semi-outdoor retail mall merges with this green space underneath a floating roof canopy. It includes cafes, restaurants, shops, services and a below-ground supermarket. Areas dedicated to community use, or “green courts” are interspersed throughout this complex. The perforated canopy roof over the shopping areas and pedestrian walkways is supported by branches of treelike columns to accentuate the experience of strolling in a park.
Bamboo Canopy and Pavilions
By LLLab., Guilin, China
Jury & Popular Choice Winner, 9th Annual A+Awards, Pavilions
The new architecture looked at borrowing the materiality of bamboo, reconfiguring it to form new space. In doing so, this new space means not to contest. Instead it aims to augment, albeit very gently, the surrounding bamboo groves and hills. A continuous stretch of canopy was created amongst clusters of bamboo, providing area to walk sheltered from regular rainfall. In these, the architecture relies on bamboo not only for its composition, but also its constant referral to the parts that constitute the place.
Manetti Shrem Museum of Art
By SO – IL and Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, Davis, CA, United States
The unique form of the canopy draws visitors from a distance. The team notes that the subtle interplay of light and shadow across the public plaza helps blur the boundary between civic and institutional spheres. Inside, a glass-walled lobby invites interaction as the convergence of viewing, learning and making areas. These interconnected interior and exterior spaces create informal opportunities for experiencing art and learning, supporting the museum’s mission to have all visitors become students.
Louvre Abu Dhabi
By Ateliers Jean Nouvel, Davis, CA, United States
Artworks from around the world are showcased at the museum, with stated intent to bridge the gap between Eastern and Western art. The project’s intricate geometric dome is a continuous canopy that stretches over the entire project. The objective was to create a complex filter of the intensely bright desert sun, to create a dancing interplay between light and shadow around the galleries, plazas and reflecting pools. It’s made of nine layers, with four cladding tiers of specially designed and interconnected stars above, as well as below, a 16-foot-deep (5-meter) steel support structure.
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