Daily Obsesh – Table Saw Cake Cutter

imageWith the holidays just around the corner, you are probably attending a Thanksgiving gathering or throwing one yourself. Either way, the Table Saw Cake Cutter is the greatest kitchen gadget for the occasion. This white plastic, foot long saw easily cuts into anything soft like cakes and pies and even lettuce and warm bread just out of the oven!


Make a dramatic statement at the table as guests gather ’round to watch you saw into a delicious homemade pumpkin pie with this knifty knife. It’s also a fun gift idea to present to the host or hostess for any holiday party this festive season!



Where to BuyFred Flare



Price – $11.00



Who Melimeli was the first to add the ‘Table Saw Cake Cutter‘ to the Hive.

Meet Furni ver.III is coming…

Un nuovo membro si aggiungerà alla family.

Meet Furni Ver.III is coming...

Some nice illustrated print projects

I’ve sifted through recently arrived publications to pick out a handful of projects that each make smashing use of illustration. First up is illustrator Mark Long‘s Who Ate All The Pies? – a 28 page, A5 book which features a selection of football chants and illustrations…

Who Ate All The Pies? was printed in an edition of 1000. £3.50 from marklongillustration.co.uk

Belin-based artist Atak, has based his book, Ada (published in an edition of 3000 by Nobrow, £11) on Gertrude Stein’s first “word portrait”, written in 1908. Atak has hand written the story and illustrated it. Quite what the story is about is slightly baffling, though I did enjoy reading it. The book itself is really beatuiful and was produced in four colours using a method similar to chromolithography: each print layer is created by painting directly onto film. Here are some spreads and a shot of the unfolded 38 x 52cm poster that comes with each copy.

Illustrator Damien Weighill sent us a selection of illustrated greeting cards which he’s just produced to sell via his online shop at libraryshop.bigcartel.com. I particularly like the Lion who wants to give a zebra a birthday present…

Bela Lugosi is a 16 page screenprinted book by illustrator Paul Paetzel of Biografiktion – a trio of talented illustrators from Berlin. The book is the first in a series of UK editions published by Nobrow of Biografiktion comics and zines, and it tells the life story of actor Bela Lugosi whose career spanned 40 years and 110 movies – in which he played dozens of characters including Dracula, Frankenstein and The Wolfman. Shown above is the cover and the folded screenprinted poster that came with our copy. Here are some spreads and the poster unfolded:

 

Also from Nobrow is this eye-busting A4, 18 page book by Jim Stoten, Inside The Purple Palm Tree (cover shown above). It’s a psychedelic trip to a place where the music is jazzy and someone’s definitely put something in your drink. The book has been produced in an edition of just 50 copies and each page was hand screenprinted…

Inside The Purple Palm Tree is £38 from Nobrow’s HQ in London’s Shoreditch. Full details at nobrow.net

And finally, Manzine issue 4 arrived this week (cover shown above). I haven’t had a chance to peruse its content fully yet – BUT, I have noticed that there’s a rather splendid DPS ad for Manchester clothing shop Oipolloi which features great illustrations of products available from the store by Ben Lamb.

 

Masdar Institute campus by Foster + Partners

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners have completed the first of a cluster of buildings entirely powered by solar energy at Masdar City, a sustainable urban quarter in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

The Masdar Institute, a facility devoted to sustainable research, is the first of four buildings planned for the site, and will generate more solar energy than it consumes.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

The building features a perforated façade made of glass-reinforced concrete coloured with local sand and detailed with patterns commonly found in traditional Islamic architecture.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

The development borrows from traditional Arabian urban design, with shaded courtyards and narrow, pedestrian streets.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

Announced in 2007, the project was initially billed as the world’s first “zero carbon, zero waste” city, but plans have been scaled back since then. See our story on the announcement of the project.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

A solar field within the masterplan provides energy for the building and feeds back what is left to the Abu Dhabi grid.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

The following information is from the architects:


Official opening of the Masdar Institute campus, first solar powered building at Masdar City

Under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, His Highness Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Presidential Affairs officially inaugurated the Masdar Institute today, at which the architect Lord Foster was present. The Masdar Institute, devoted to researching sustainability, is the first building to be fully operational within Masdar City.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

The masterplan, by Foster + Partners, incorporates lessons which have evolved over centuries of traditional Arabian architecture. The Masdar Institute is the first building of its kind to be powered entirely by renewable solar energy. It will be used as a pilot test bed for the sustainable technologies that will be explored for implementation in future Masdar City buildings. The post graduate students are Masdar City’s first resident community.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

A 10 megawatt solar field within the masterplan site provides 60% more energy than is consumed by the Masdar Institute, the remaining energy is fed back to the Abu Dhabi grid. The campus, which consists of a main building, a knowledge centre and students’ quarters, will use significantly less energy and water than average buildings in the UAE.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

In particular, the Institute and its facilities use 54 percent less potable water, 51 percent less electricity and are fully powered by solar energy. These reductions are based on comparisons to UAE standard baselines for buildings of similar size and specifications. Around 30 percent of the campus’s energy will be covered by solar panels on the roof, with 75 percent of hot water also being heated by the sun.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

The Institute demonstrates the sustainable principles underpinning the overall masterplan. The buildings have self-shading facades and are orientated to provide maximum shade as well as sheltering adjacent buildings and the pedestrian streets below. Over 5,000 square metres of roof mounted photovoltaic installations provide power and additional shading at street level.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

Windows in the residential buildings are protected by a contemporary reinterpretation of mashrabiya, a type of latticed projecting oriel window, constructed with sustainably developed, glass-reinforced concrete, coloured with local sand to integrate with its desert context and to minimise maintenance. The perforations for light and shade are based on the patterns found in the traditional architecture of Islam.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

The laboratories are unusually flexible for change with ‘plug and play’ services to encourage interdisciplinary research. Horizontal and vertical fins and brise soleil shade the laboratories. These are highly insulated by facades of inflatable cushions, which remain cool to the touch under the most intense desert sun.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

Cooling air currents are channelled through the public spaces using a contemporary interpretation of the region’s traditional windtowers. The public spaces are further cooled by green landscaping and water to provide evaporative cooling. Thermal camera tests on-site by Fosters’ research team have already confirmed substantial drops in radiant or ‘felt’ temperatures on campus compared with current practice in central Abu Dhabi.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

The laboratories and residential accommodation are supported by a variety of social spaces, including a gymnasium, canteen, café, knowledge centre, majlis – or meeting place – and landscaped areas that extend the civic realm and help to create a new destination within the city. One, two and three-bedroom apartments are housed in low-rise, high-density blocks, which act as a social counterpoint to the educational laboratory environment.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

This building is the first of four planned phases that will bring the eventual student population to 600-800. Four residential blocks surround a central laboratory and the Knowledge Centre, the first in a series of additional campus buildings, which will include a mosque, conference hall and sports complex. The second phase is due to start on site by the end of the year to include further laboratories and apartments. The Masdar Institute is accessed by 10 personal rapid transit (PRT) cars that are being run as a pilot project from the City perimeter to the undercroft below the building.

This project signals Abu Dhabi’s commitment to creating an international centre to pioneer sustainable technologies within an environment which is itself carbon neutral.

Masdar Institute by Foster + Partners

Lord Foster, said:
“Many have dreamed of a utopian project that would be solar powered. Today’s official opening of the initial stage of the Masdar Institute campus at Masdar City is a first realisation of that quest. Its student community is already active, living and working in their quarters. This community, independent of any power grid, develops a surplus of 60 percent of its own energy needs, processes its waste water on-site which is recycled and pioneers many energy saving concepts. It is a bold experiment which will change and evolve over time – already it houses twelve separate research projects with potential world-wide applications.”


See also:

.

Zero-carbon city by
Foster + Partners
Masdar City Centre by
LAVA
More stories on
Foster + Partners

While Armchair by Marco Goffi

La While Armchair disegnata dal nostro Marco Goffi per Caprotti ha appena vinto il Red Dot 2010 design award. La sedia è destinata perlopiù al mercato del contract anche se non mi dispiacerebbe averne una copia in studio.
[Via]

While Armchair by Marco Goffi

While Armchair by Marco Goffi

While Armchair by Marco Goffi

News+ Concept

Après le développement du prototype Mag+, le groupe Bonnier vient de lancer News+ qui se veut une norme pour les magazines. L’enjeu : la création d’un nouveau format numérique pour les journaux d’aujourd’hui et de demain. La profondeur éditoriale mêlée avec les possibilités du web.



newsplus1

newsplus2

Previously on Fubiz

Ukoonto Building Blocks

Ci passerei le ore…li trovate qui.
[Via]

Bad Design Sucks

Siamo tutti d’accordo che il cattivo design ci rattrista l’umore. Lo studio Blossom ha stilato un report formato infografica per manifestare il proprio pensiero verso questa tematica che sta tanto a cuore a noi creativi de milan.

20 Things I learned

Google ci insegna attraverso questo book illustrato online le 20 cose che ha imparato dalla propria esperienza con il web. Tutto il sito è stato realizzato in html 5. Ciao!
Grazie a Fabio per la segnalazione.

20 Things I learned

Richard Wilkinson’s Process Gifs

Richard Wilkinson ha salvato i livelli durante il processo di realizzazione della sua illustrazione. La gif pesa un po’ ma la resa è grandiosa!
[Via]

Richard Wilkinson's Process Gifs