NY Design Week 2011: C4 at Wanted Design

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We’ll admit—the first thing that caught our eye at Wanted Design NYC was the sight of a delicious-looking spread.

Wanted Design launched their first edition during this year’s NY Design Week, featuring an inspiring selection of designers and panel conversations. Offering an alternative to the frenetic crowds at the Javits Center, Wanted Design was held in the La.Venue warehouse in West Chelsea, with lower ceilings, nooks and crannies to explore, and overall a more tranquil, meandering experience.

Designers Christiane Büssgen of C4 and Jesús Alonso of 4lonso combined their passions for food and natural materials to create Project Avolution. Christiane, currently the creative director of WOKA, and Jesús, a furniture designer in Mexico, realized that their collaboration could bear fruit upon the dinner table. Jesús designed a set of tactile wooden bowls and a matching cutlery set, while Christiane re-envisioned her favorite fruit, the avocado, into a set of poetic porcelain pieces.

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Lenticular Flooring Designed to Make You Move to the Right

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The marks of someone new to New York are manifold, and usually just marginally annoying: The hipster who cannot make the distinction between the East Village and the Lower East Side, the tourist who cannot accurately swipe a Metrocard when the train is arriving and you’re behind him on line. But nothing drives me crazier than the group of slow-moving tourists walking four abreast on the sidewalk, carrying on an oblivious conversation and preventing those in a hurry from passing.

I doubt that they were prompted by this particular problem, but researchers at Japan’s University of Electro-Communications have created a flooring system designed to encourage pedestrians to move to the right. Flooring tiles printed with lenticular lenses—you know, those striated surfaces that look different from different angles—created the illusion of a pattern that moves to the right when you move across them, and supposedly, “Since people have a tendency to give priority to their visual sense to maintain their balance when they walk, their eyes will be attracted in that direction” and their feet would follow suit.

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Portal del Priorat

Architect Alfredo Arribas’ ambitious Spanish winemaking projects
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What happens when an architect turns vintner? In the case of Spanish architect Alfredo Arribas, the move spawned not just one winery but two—both infused with artistry from the wine itself down to illustrated labels, and of course the beautifully modern buildings housing them too. Based in the emerging wine-making regions of Priorat and the neighboring Montsant, Arribas’ project has been quietly breathing new life into the region starting in 2001 when he established Portal del Priorat.

After restoring the neglected terraced plots called closters, they were planted with clones of traditional grapes (Grenache, Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah), as well as a few experimental varieties, which are all grown organically. Methods include densely planting the vines according the soil’s composition (mostly slate) and the topography The resulting wines bear witness to their creator’s ingenuity, winning praise from oenophiles for their lightness while still rich with complex flavor notes.

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When I had the privilege of tasting some of the wines with Arribas himself (thanks to the design organization Red) recently at one fo Barcelona’s newest wine bars Monvinic, he explained that the taste of his wines is no accident but (of course) by design. His concept loosely revolves around adding what can only be described as the Arribas twist to reinvent both traditional winemaking but perceptions of Spanish wine.

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Negre De Negres accomplishes the feat most dramatically with a blend of grapes that results in a mix of minerals, herbs and fruits, balanced by a freshness as well as a dense warmth on the palate. The inspiration for it, Arribas explained, was the experience of drinking young Greek wines but wanting to add something a little more complex to the profile. Somni, on the other hand, is more robust with oaks and tannins following a lightness that comes from black fruits.

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While the wines from Portal del Priorat are all reds, more recently Arribas introduced Tossos, a red and a white wine resulting from expanding into the neighboring land of Montsant. Those along with an olive oil suggests there might be much more to look forward to from the burgeoning label.


Creatives Unite for Japan

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THIS IS NOT A CALL FOR ENTRIES.

The Art Directors Club and One Club have joined forces to encourage the entire creative community to donate. By creating an easy and direct way for creatives to donate funds, they are hoping to “make a difference in the lives of the youngest victims of these tragic events,” explains Olga Grisaitis, director, ADC. 100% of funds go to the Ashinaga Foundation, an organization that provides financial, educational and emotional support to children who have lost their parents in the disaster.

DONATE NOW!

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Gesture-Based Interface Design Development: Hasso Plattner Institute’s "Imaginary Phone"

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Comp Sci professor Patrick Baudisch, leading a team of researchers at Germany’s Hasso Plattner Institute, has developed a gesture-based interface that allows users to use their palm as an input device. A wearable camera tracks the position of your fingers in space, and you basically tap out commands on your palm as if it were the surface of, say, your iPhone:

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The US Army Guide to Design

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The United States Army Accessions Command—Strategic Communications, Marketing and Operations produces graphic design guides for the Army Strong brand. The guides are a wealth of information about logo usage, photo cropping style, and digital camouflage patterns. There are also downloads of the Army Strong Theme! (Remix, anyone?)

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We Adore Alice + Olivia Dresses!

imageEver since it was launched back in 2002, the Alice + Olivia brand became the buzz of the fashion world.


Born out of the desire of its famous fashion designer, Stacey Bendet, to come up with the perfect pair of pants, Alice + Olivia is now a clothing line that encompasses men’s wear and childrenwear as well.


Celebrated as a real fashion style setter, Alice + Olivia is a brand that reinvents itself every season. With a growing fan following that is now touching celebrities like Angelina Jolie, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jennifer Lopez and Dakota Fanning, Alice + Olivia has everything for every occasion and every woman. The dresses of Alice + Olivia are simply breathtaking. These are just a couple of my favorites.



Read more by clicking over to our friends at Couture in the City!

Treetable

You have to grow a tree to use this table. The treetable is a green product, made in different kind of materials: PE, Polyester, porcelain, wood, card..

Josephine Baker schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This group of schools outside Paris by French architects Dominique Coulon & Associés has walls, ceilings and details picked out in bright orange.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The Josephine Baker schools include a primary school on the west of the site and a nursery school to the east.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Classrooms in the nursery are located on a floor that cantilevers across the building’s entrance.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The project includes playgrounds for both older and younger children, a canteen and a library, as well as a sports ground on the library roof.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Internally, brightly coloured hooks fill the walls outside of the classrooms, giving children a place to hang their coats.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

More stories about educational buildings on Dezeen »

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

More stories about projects in France on Dezeen »

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

Photography is by Eugeni Pons apart from where stated.

Here are some further details from the architects:


The ‘Josephine Baker’ group of schools recently completed by Dominique Coulon in La Courneuve manages to fit into the difficult context of the ‘Cité des 4000’ neighbourhood, on a site marked by the painful memory of the demolition of the ‘Ravel’ and ‘Presov’ longitudinal blocks of flats. However, it is also capable of opening up inside itself, creating a different landscape, a different place, a utopia.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

The project is part of the very subtle town planning scheme adopted by Bernard Paurd, in an attempt to pull together the different signs and traces that are superposed on the site like the various writings on a palimpsest.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The scheme reorganises the neighbourhood on the basis of the right-angled intersection of two historic axes, one leading from Paris – from the Saint-Michel fountain – to St Denis’ Cathedral, the other starting from the cathedral and heading towards St Lucien’s church.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This crossing of X and Y axes highlights the surfacing of various traces – ruins of a Gallo-Roman necropolis stand where the scarred landscape bears witness to the demolition of the ‘Ravel’ and ‘Presov’ blocks of flats, dynamited on 23 June 2004. As if the map had marked the territory with a tattoo.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Delphine George

The group of schools occupies a trapezoid-shaped plot of land obliterated by the non-aedificandi area corresponding to the location of one of the two buildings that were demolished.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Dominique Coulon stays in line with the scheme and the intentions of Bernard Paurd, but seems to consider this scar as the substratum for an act of resilience – a psychological process analysed by Boris Cyrulnik that makes it possible to overcome traumatic situations – rather than the stigma of an irreversible situation. He thus returns spontaneously to his work on twisting shapes, a theme that recurs constantly in his projects.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The requirement to refrain from constructing closed volumes based on the rectangle that is a feature of the plot of land, combined with the constraints in terms of density and height, has enabled him to question the separation of the primary and nursery schools in the brief.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

His proposal therefore sketches out a unitary organisation, deployed with virtuoso skill in the three dimensions of the space between two poles linked by a system of ramps. Thus the nursery school classrooms are pushed to the east, on a floor cantilevered above the entrance, and the primary school classrooms occupy areas to the west overlooking interstitial gardens.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The older children’s playground merges into the area reserved for the younger children, which already contains the shared canteen, while the sports areas have been placed on the roof of the other block, which contains the library shared by the two schools.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Despite its sliding volumes, folds and asymmetry, the building gives a first impression of an enclosed shape with few openings. The primary school classrooms, superposed on the site, only opens up to any real extent to their gardens at the side. Although on the outside the verticality is dominant as a result of the many indentations that break up the façades, it is paradoxically the horizontal aspect that is more evident once through the entrance.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

As if an infinite universe was opening up inside a strictly defined area, welcoming a heterotopia reserved for the children. An initiatory place where the pupils can be cut off from the adult world, so that they can adopt the necessary distance and momentum the better to dive into it in due course.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Particular attention seems to have been paid to passages from one space to another, to thresholds: entering the school, taking off your coat and hanging it up before going through the door into the classroom and sitting down in front of the teacher; laughing as you leave the classroom, and shouting out in the playground at playtime. That is how the building works, from the entrance onwards, in a subtle two-fold movement of advance and retreat.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

An arrangement that recalls the curves and counter-curves of the façade of the St-Charles-aux-Quatre-Fontaines church completed in 1667 by Francesco Borromini. In a protective gesture, the upper floor projects forwards to welcome the children, while the glazed ground floor withdraws and digs in to defuse the drama of separating the child from its parents.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The corridors change shape and expand in front of the classroom doors and receive abundant natural light from the zenith, as if the better to define themselves as areas for decompression before taking a deep breath and plunging into the work areas. Lastly, the canopy of the playground thrusts out well beyond the ramp that leads up to the rooftop sport areas.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This play of compression and expansion, giving an organic feel to the concrete structure, is further accentuated by use of the colour orange. It covers the floors and occasionally spills over onto the walls and ceilings, rendering the slightest ray of sunshine incandescent and lighting up the roof area.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This has the appearance of an open hand beneath the complementary blue of the sky, revealed in all its power. All too frequently, as in Jules Ferry’s time, schools seem to be designed as areas for adults reduced to the scale of children. The sequences of traffic paths and classrooms are witness here to a different relationship between the child’s body and space, one that is all the more fused together in that is it not yet totally mediatised by language.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The classrooms, corridors and playgrounds of the ‘Josephine Baker’ schools stretch out and break up around an indefinite body, a body in perpetual transformation, a body of feelings ready to be touched by the slightest ray of sunshine and to perceive a thousand opportunities for play in the slightest variation in the weather.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The use of natural products – such as linoleum on the floors, and wood for the door and window frames – and the attention paid even to the smallest details contribute to making the building an almost luxurious place, a place hailed enthusiastically at its inauguration by a population of parents and pupils who are keen to turn the page of the demolitions and look resolutely to the future.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Type of project: Group of schools (nursery + primary)
Client: City of La Courneuve
Team: Dominique Coulon & Associés, Architectes
Dominique Coulon, Olivier Nicollas, Architectes
Sarah Brebbia, Benjamin Rocchi, Arnaud Eloudyi, Florence Haenel, Architects assistants

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Batiserf: Structural Engineer: Philippe Clement, Cécile Plumier, Frédéric Blanc
G. Jost, Mechanical Engineer : Marc Damant, Annie Pikard
E3 Economie : Cost calculation
Bruno Kubler : Paysagiste

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Program: Lecture room, auditorium, administration
Primary school – 10 classrooms
Nursery – 6 classrooms
Leisure center – 6 classrooms
Restaurant
Office for the academy

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

Surface Area: 4500 m2 SHON, 6500 m2 SHOB
Cost: 8 000 000 euros H.T

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés


See also:

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Médiathèque d’Anzin
by Dominique Coulon
Tellus Nursery School
by Tham & Videgård
Azahar School
by Julio Barreno

TOTAL sleeve by Peter Saville and ParrisWakefield

Peter Saville and and Howard Wakefield of design studio ParrisWakefield have collaborated on the artwork of a new compilation of music by Joy Division and New Order called TOTAL, due for release on June 6 from Rhino

Endeavouring to capture the essence of both Joy Division and New Order, Saville and Wakefield agreed that the Helvetica Heavy Italic used on the cover of New Order’s Technique album, perfectly conveyed the band’s graphic look, and also that, typographically speaking, Joy Division was predominantly uppercase. So for the cover of this new compilation, the pair decided to merge the two and set the word TOTAL in italicised upper case Helvetica Heavy.

Originally the word TOTAL, as below, was set to appear as large as possible so it fitted on the front cover. However the band decided there was too much white space.

“The ‘O’ was the sexiest letter,” says Wakefield, “with the overlapping letter-forms alluding to the sleeve of New Order’s Technique album and also to the band’s 1989 single, Run 2. Funnily enough ‘O’ is also the only letter to appear in New Order, Joy Division and TOTAL.” Wakefield decided to zoom in the ‘O’ and let the other letters wrap around the fold out CD insert. The letters also appear to wrap around from the back cover and the jewel case spine too:

 

Art direction: Peter Saville. Design: Howard Wakefield. TOTAL will be released on June 6. See rhino.co.uk