I've got the power: new energy plants
New power stations around the globe are wielding the rhetorical power of architecture. Confident, sculptural forms, signifying the confident, new world of cleaner technologies.
Januarie 21, 2018 | 11:00 pm CUT

The Värtaverket biomass power plant in Stockholm is one of the largest in the world. Brick-coloured slats allow for variable positioning of openings in the building envelope. Photographer: Robin Hayes




The Greenwich Peninsula Low Carbon Energy Centre will supply heat for almost 16,000 new homes, saving around 20,000 tonnes of carbon emissions annually. Photographer: Mark Hadden




Stanford University’s Central Energy Facility is a functional showpiece of state of the art sustainable technology. Photographers: Steve Proehl (1), Robert Canfield (2, 4), Tim Griffith (3)




Thanks to the abstract nature of the ceramic slats on the facade, the Värtaverket power plant achieves a sublime form of contemporary monumentality in its urban context. Photographers: Gottlieb Paludan Architects (1, 4), Robin Hayes (2), Erik Jarlöv (3)




Featuring smooth corners on the inside as well as on the outside, the SKF Test Centre celebrates the gentle, yet formidable power of the wind with its smooth lines. Photographer: Hans Juergen Landes
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