Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

Architect Jean-Baptiste Bouvet has completed a hillside swimming pool that steps down to a terrace overlooking the scenic French landscape.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

Rectangular openings create framed views through the structure, which has four descending levels.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

A ramp connecting each level leads back up to the clients house.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

The pool occupies the second level down, as does a drinking fountain.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

On the third level down is a planted garden, while two trees grow in the terrace at the lowest level.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

Other swimming pools featured on Dezeen include the London Aquatics Centre by Zaha Hadid and a conceptual floating pool that would filter river water through its wallssee all our stories about swimming pools here.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

Here are a few words from Bouvet:


Pool on the slope – Jean Bapiste Bouvet Architecture

This project consist to create a pool in a small space and extremely steep.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

The aim was to treat the topography through the project, which plays on the duality of two major space.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

The basin, which is interiorized and that of the lower terrace, which opens onto the landscape.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

A ramp allows connecting these two spaces. A series of framings are set up through the sequence of the project.

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

Location: Le Paradou  (13) – FRANCE
Program: Construction of a swimming pool and courtyard garden
Client: Private

Pool on the slope by Jean-Baptiste Bouvet

Budget: € 35 000 HT
Surface: 150 m2
Date: 2007/2011


See also:

.

House on Paros Island
by React Architects
House in Andros by
KLab architects
Villa Paya-Paya by
Aboday architects

Ryan Heywood

Scatti analogici del surfista Ryan Heywood.

Ryan Heywood

Nice Kicks x Adidas Originals Campus 80s

Nice Kicks collabora con Adidas Originals per la release di questa versione della Campus 80s. Tomaia arancio e strips marroni. combo vincente.
{Via}

Nice Kicks x Adidas Originals Campus 80s

Magic Numpad

Magic Numpad trasforma l’Apple Magic Trackpad in una mini tastiera. Basta applicare la pellicola adesiva in dotazione e installare il free software in dotazione.
{Via}

Magic Numpad

Link About It: Société Perrier

The DJ’s DJ, behind the scenes of Studio 54 and more from an online destination for global nightlife and culture
societe_perrier2.jpg

Unlike gimmicky social clubs, entrance into
Société Perrier
requires little more than being “the best in nightlife, art, music, fashion, travel, mixology and cocktail culture.” To learn more about a few of the fashion designers, DJs and drinks that have what it takes, check out our favorite picks from the site below.

perrier-lab1.jpg

1. Nervo

Australian twin sisters and former models Liv and Mim Nervo have already cut their teeth in the music industry writing pop hits for Ke$ha and Kylie Minogue, but their newest endeavor includes tag-teaming as DJs, while also producing a record of their own. Their single “We’re All No One,” featuring Steve Aoki and Afrojack debuts 6 September 2011. Having opened for Britney Spears on her Femme Fatale tour, the two are already well on their way to being a double threat.

2. Recalling Studio 54

Those of us that never got the chance to experience New York’s Studio 54 in the glamorous, hedonistic glory of its disco days can hear vivid recollections from two former staff members on SiriusXM. The Marc and Myra show recounts first-hand tales of the legendary club and its famous patrons, including Andy Warhol and both Jaggers.

3. Captains of Industry

All kidding aside, Stonerokk and Graham Funke, aka the Captains of Industry, are seriously legit DJs, as exemplified by their strict, records-only policy. Here, they recall a few celebrity encounters and the one song they refuse to play.

perrier-lab2.jpg

4. Catherine Malandrino

A world traveler and bon vivant, fashion designer Catherine Malandrino is an enthusiastic advocate of new media and its facilitation of the globalization of fashion. Adding to her roster of collaborations with fashionable pop stars such as Madonna and Beyonce, Malandrino hints at a unpcoming project with Lady Gaga.

5. Morning-After Mixology at the Standard Spa in Miami Beach

An impressive demonstration of morning-after caregiving, the Standard Spa in Miami offers hangover-plagued guests a menu of restorative elixirs containing ingredients like coconut water, honey, ginger—some with booze, some without. Those suffering from at home will benefit from this quick video course in morning-after mixology.

6. Grand Opening New York: LES Runway

In its latest incarnation, the ever-morphing downtown gallery space Grand Opening offers up fashion two-ways: after dark, the space hosts runway shows by emerging and independent designers such as New Form Perspective, Pip-Squeak Chapeau and Gemma Redux, while daytime hours reveal a pop-up shop selling the previously-showcased wares.


Nixon Time Teller P Black/Teal

Nuova colorazione Black/Teal per il Time Teller.
{Via}

Nixon Time Teller P Black/Teal

Alex Westgate

Lui è Alex Westgate.
{Via}

Alex Westgate

Device Design Day 2011: Creating Meaningful Product Experiences

Welcome

For the second year running, Kicker Studio’s wonderfully alliterative Device Design Day managed to be a great advert for small, compact and focussed conferences. Taking place over a day in the beautiful surroundings of the San Francisco Art Institute campus, the conference aimed to unite interaction and industrial designers in a conversation around the crafting of physical products. The overall theme emerging from the various presentations was an exploration of how meaning is truly created in product experiences, whether through mediums such as aesthetics, touch and gesture, intelligence and emotional cognition, audio design or by fundamentally rethinking the relationship between people and objects themselves.

Ammunition’s Robert Brunner opened proceedings with a presentation that explored this world of meaning surrounding a product and how that ultimately adds to the importance that people imbue in it. He looked at how stories are woven both in the world of branding and marketing of a product as well as in the physical and software interaction design itself, using a couple of Ammunition’s more well-known projects to illustrate this point, the most relevant being Beats by Dre. This turns out to be a really good example of how much more impactful a product can become once we understand the story behind its development—how a piece of the artist we might aspire to be (in this case, Dre’s preferred sound profile) can become embedded in the devices we buy.

After Liz Bacon of Devise braved no less than two fire drills to deliver an overview of considerations and opportunities within the burgeoning field of medical device design, it was NASA’s Cori Schauer who provided the first real geek tickle of the day with a look at how the environment and technology at Mission Control at Johnson Space Center has evolved over the years—think lots of screens, blinking lights and big tactile clicky buttons, all surrounded by charts and graphs that are decipherable to a select few.

Cori Schauer 5

Aside from the sheer general awesomeness of gaining even a tiny insight into a cloistered environment such as this and the requirements and considerations for designing to support situations where there is zero margin for error (and where such error leads to, in a best case, a very expensive loss of equipment), there were just a whole slew of interesting anecdotes and photographs of tools that remain in use even when supposedly better, more modern tools have been introduced. Hearing Schauer’s observations and her thoughts around how to introduce change into an environment with high emotions at play—”it’s our friends up there”—was truly fascinating.

(more…)


I Hate Carotte Bib

La pizza è ok per lo svezzamento?
{Via}

I Hate Carotte Bib

CleverWraps for Mobile Phones

Ci potrete proteggere un panino o un telefonino. La trovate qui.
{Via}