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  1. 29 de ene. de 2015 · These Californian ideas formed into Nest we Grow, which grew from a shared interest in the materials that make up our build environment with a focus on renewable materials.

  2. 5 de feb. de 2015 · Nest We Grow” ganó la cuarta versión del concurso de diseño y construcción internacional anual, LIXIL en 2014; a diferencia de las estructuras construidas en los primeros años de la competencia, la propuesta era una estructura abierta y pública.

  3. 26 de may. de 2015 · On Nest We Grow’s first and second floor levels, cross-bracing members bolt into tabs of the sandwiched steel plates. This cross-bracing combined with the moment connections and catwalks at the third- and fourth-floor levels provide the necessary lateral resistance against seismic and wind forces.

  4. 2 de mar. de 2020 · Details of Nest We Grow / Kengo Kuma & Associates + College of Environmental Design UC Berkeley. Photo: © Shinkenchiku Sha. Written by Victor Delaqua | Translated by Maria Erman....

  5. Pabellón Nest We Grow. Kengo Kuma. Tipología Arquitectura efímera Pabellón. Material Madera Policarbonato. Fecha 2014. Ciudad Hokkaido. País Japón. Fotógrafo Shinkenchiku Sha. Este singular pabellón dedicado a la gastronomía es fruto de un concurso en el que el arquitecto participó junto a un equipo de estudiantes.

  6. Nest We Grow won the 4th Annual LIXIL International design-build competition in 2014, and unlike structures built in the first years of the competition, it is an open, public structure. Its main intent is to bring people in the community together to store, prepare and enjoy local foods in the setting of Hokkaido, Japan.

  7. Nest We Grow (in collaboration with College of Environmental Design UC Berkeley), Takinoue, Japan. In response to an international design-build competition, Kengo Kuma & Associates proposed a “quintessentially Californian approach” embracing many ideas still new to Asia.