Burning Man ‘City Planner’ Rod Garrett Passes Away

Having never been to Burning Man, the temporary city/festival that pops up around this time every year in the middle of the desolate Nevada desert, we’d always assumed that the whole thing had no planning at all, as a sort of “anything goes” mantra seemed like the guiding principle of the whole thing. Oh but how wrong we were, as per usual, there’s always a much more interesting story lying around the corner. The NY Times this week published an obituary for Rod Garrett, a landscape designer who became the event’s city planner, as it were, in 1997. Over the next few years, Garrett had well-honed “Black Rock City,” the name the temporary site is given, into a finely tuned bit of city planning, with things resembling neighborhoods, city centers, and functional roads. It’s a fascinating read, from both a planning-out-of-nothing aspect, and for those of us who likely will never attend (we’re not big on getting dirty) but are wildly curious about. Here’s a bit:

Mr. Garrett made a list of almost 200 planning goals and began trying to find a way to satisfy as many of them as he could. When he sketched a circle, with the Man in the middle and the system of radial roads, things started falling into place. The area closest to the Man would be reserved for art installations, creating a parklike zone that complemented the “residential neighborhoods” in the same way Central Park makes Manhattan livable. City services like an ice dispensary and a medical station would be concentrated under a temporary roof within the inhabited zone. (Each year Mr. Garrett designed the vast, tentlike structure, which is known as Center Camp.)

Unrelated other than tangentially, the San Francisco Chronicle‘s Spud Hilton recently posted this piece, also challenging our “free to do anything” conceptions about the event, about Burning Man’s extremely tight restrictions on photography.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

SUNLAB outdoor design

SUNLAB è un concorso internazionale rivolto ai designer under 35. Il tema del concorso, organizzato dal Salone Internazionale dell’Esterno che si tiene ogni anno in ottobre a Rimini Fiera, è l’outdoor design. L’evento è coordinato dai designer Alessandro D’Angeli e Ivo Caruso e dalle tre edizioni precedenti sono scaturiti prodotti interessanti: degli 80 progetti selezionati, 16 sono stati messi in produzione. Nel seguito dall’articolo pubblico alcuni dei progetti passati: sono proposte fantasiose e divertenti, a volte ingenue, ma si tratta comunque di una vetrina da non trascurare.

Il tema di questa edizione è vivere la città, l’obiettivo è quindi la creazione di arredi per spazi come piazze, parchi, parcheggi o locali pubblici.  Il bando è stato pubblicato ad inizio anno e si è chiuso in maggio; si conoscono i nomi dei vincitori, ma i prototipi dei progetti selezionati saranno mostrati solo durante il SUN, dal 20 al 22 ottobre 2011, a Rimini.

Sono curioso di scoprire le nuove proposte dei giovani designer, che promettano particolare attenzione agli aspetti di ecosostenibilità, sicurezza, comunicazione e mobilità degli spazi urbani contemporanei. Ci sono davvero tante sperimentazioni possibili.

Quello in copertina è un progetto dello stesso Ivo Caruso e si chiama Labiro. Il suo uso è evidente: un pavimento modulare per i parchi cittadini che diventa un labirinto dove i bambini possono giocare con le biglie.

Questi sono i vasi Bulbose di Alberto Caiola.

Balilla è un dissuasore carrabile che può essere usato come porta da calcetto con segnapunti. Progetto di Hey Team.

Seme & bocciolo di Alessandro D’Angeli è un oggetto chiaramente ispirato alle forme di un vegetale che svolge, sia la funzione di innaffiatoio che di irrigatore.

Di SUNLAB si è già parlato molto sul web; in questa pagina del Salone Internazionale dell’Esterno puoi vedere i progetti scelti nel 2010, mentre su Young Designer abbondano gli articoli dedicati ai designer che hanno partecipato alle edizioni precedenti.

Designers Consumed by Lust as Wacom Unveils ‘Inkling’

When was the last time you can remember that Wacom‘s site was so overloaded with traffic that it was difficult to get it to load? We don’t visit the pen tablet for designers’ site often enough to be able to give that a definite answer, but we’re guessing it’s not all that frequent. However, such was the case yesterday (for us anyway) as word spread quickly about the company’s new product, the Inkling, an ink pen-based device that records your drawings as you sketch them out, again in ink, on a physical piece of paper. Even if you aren’t a regular sketcher, or have always used a tablet just fine, or are from the exact opposite direction and get by just fine with a mouse and don’t plan on ever changing your ways, even you will find this cool. And if sites like Gizmodo, which said about the Inkling that it “may become [their] favorite gadget of all time” are any judge, every designer is either going to be buying one or putting it on their wish list immediately when it’s released in the middle of next month. Here’s the promo video:

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Our new home in Kuala Lumpur

Newhome2

What do you think… you like my new living room? I'm super happy, exhausted and excited…. last SUnday the big move to our new place here in KL finally took place. All our furniture and boxes made it safe and sound to their new place. 

I really love the open, bright and spacious feel of the new living room… and yes pinching myself to be so lucky to call this place 'home' for the next couple of years. My mom says we deserve it after working hard for the last 15 years, but I still feel very very lucky! 

The next couple of days I will be busy unpacking, decorating and putting everything in place. So my posts will be there but not on a regular base like normal…. but please come back for more updates of our new place and Tiffany will be posting too! 

Just wondering do you like to move house? I have done it 8 times in the last 11 years and still find it exhasuting but very rewarding and fun… irene xoxo

Newhome

 

Michael Downes and Jeff Sayler: Art & Industry

WATCH IT LIVE, NOW!

(more…)


La Brea

Seven new spots to shop in Hollywood’s up-and-coming retail district

From Japanese selvage denim to modern bohemian tunics, La Brea is quickly becoming one of the most creative shopping destinations in Los Angeles. The neighborhood redevelopment project has helped inspire several new stores to open their doors on the extra-large boulevard, revitalizing the blocks between Beverly Boulevard and 2nd Street. Now with Feal Mor, Don Ville shoes, Black Scale, General Quarters and the brand new Post 42, this retail capital of well-put-together stores is filled with independent designs, vintage finds and handmade accessories.

In an area where And Still, Undefeated, Stussy and Union sit side by side near the wacky giant Hollywood signs, and the kitschy pop culture collections of Nick Metropolis are on the same street as American Rag and phenomenal art exhibits at Merry Karnowsky Gallery, we found seven new favorites.

self-edge-la10.jpg self-edge-la11.jpg
Self Edge

Self Edge is the go-to outfitter for the best selvage denim including Real Japan Blues, Iron Heart and Strike Gold, as well as plaid shirts and jackets. Current stock at the Los Angeles store includes hand dyed Kawatako belts, wallets and bags.

self-edge-la1.jpg

Next up they are launching a line called Stevenson Overall Company made in Japan. It’s an updated classic American style so, according to owner Kiya Babzani, “You don’t look like a railroad worker.”

don-ville1.jpg

Don Ville Shoes

With a brand-new retail space connected to a full-service shoe workshop, the cobblers at Don Ville craft bespoke, made-to-measure and ready-to-wear footwear onsite.

don-ville3.jpg

Peek into the workroom to see projects in various states of development and lust after the perfect leather for bespoke loafers; drool-worthy examples include turquoise patent oxfords and pearl grey ankle boots.

black-scale12.jpg

Black Scale

Founded by Mega and Alfred de Tagle, urban art collective Black Scale fills their minimalist space with graphic black-and-white t-shirts, apparel and accessories with pops of red, along with skulls, pyramids and crucifixes.

black-scale11.jpg

Added into the mix, look for grey jackets, vests with multiple layers of fabric and long charcoal sweaters with metal buttons, sleek black high-tops and collaborative projects.

feal-mor1.jpg

Feal Mor

As a collector of military uniforms, owner JP Plunier designs striped military-inspired sweaters and stocks his store with wetsuits from Amsterdam, as well as short-sleeved button-down oxfords made from super-fine Japanese cotton.

feal-mor3.jpg

Accessories new and vintage line the shop, which also houses surfboards, bicycles, turntables and other treasures. Based on the French ’56 Jump Jacket, look for the noir black or cognac tan Feal Mor Battle Jacket in the La Brea store and online.

goes-around3.jpg

What Goes Around Comes Around

A wonder emporium of classic glamour and style, What Goes Around Comes Around peddles vintage Chanel, Levi’s LVC, The West is Dead, custom Converse high-tops, vintage Louis Vuitton luggage and vintage eyewear. Their own WGACA Collection of ’60s-inspired pieces feature retro prints, embroidered details and fur outerwear.

goes-around1.jpg

Stylist Paige Yingst has the back room set up with special merchandise and is ready to help customers find the perfect look for any special occasion.

general-quarters1.jpg

General Quarters

General Quarters owner Blair Lucio fills his men’s lifestyle store with Americana heritage styles that focus on casual California-inspired designs. Inside you’ll find plaid shirts, soft tees and relaxed denim sitting beside pocket knives, motorcycles, and vintage American bandanas.

general-quarters2.jpg

Lucio’s favorite lines include Gant Rugger, Life After Denim, Kelty Pack, Pail Car Denim, Groceries and CXXVi. New finds include bracelets made from World War II-era camo parachute para-cord with a old good luck fishing lure recast in bronze.

post42-4.jpg

Post 42

Matt Winter erected two Quonset huts in a parking lot at the corner of 1st and La Brea and quietly opened up shop at Post 42. Officially opening in mid-September, reclaimed furniture and objects, along with new and vintage apparel and accessories, will sell from inside the World War II structures.

post42-5.jpg

See more images from the shops in the gallery below.


Flotspotting: Jose Rivera’s "Ice Cream" Concept Bike

Industrial design student Jose Rivera still has one more year to go before he completes his degree at Detroit’s College for Creative Studies. Young though he may be, his work under the moniker Carousel—which, according to Rivera, captures the “playful and simple, qualities I try to put in my work”—was a featured at the FORM Design Show this year, and his work merits a feature on Core as well.

Jose Rivera - Ice Cream Bike

Rivera’s “Ice Cream,” a concept bike project from November 2010, recently caught my eye, both for its unconventional construction and eye-catching colorway. In fact, these were main objectives:

The goal of this project was to design an affordable, practical and stylish bicycle for the urban commuter… The bike is made entirely out of repurposed or salvaged parts and materials, making it both affordable and sustainable.

Jose Rivera - Ice Cream Bike

Jose Rivera - Ice Cream Bike

Well, it’s one thing to salvage old bicycles and reuse the parts, but Rivera is proposing a more radical approach to framebuilding. Most bikes—whether they’re made out of steel or aluminum, carbon fiber or bamboo—are made from tubes, arranged in a diamond shape to form the unmistakable silhouette of a bicycle (though we’ve seen a fair share of exceptions). Rivera’s concept forgoes “traditional tubes and welded joints” for a “flat bolted frame”:

The frame is made from sheets of recycled aluminum that have been cut with a water jet. The seat, front tube, and bottom bracket are then secured to the frame using tamper resistant bolts. This construction method requires a fraction of the time and labor to build compared to a traditional bike.

The absence of any welds on the frame means the bike can be broken down by hand with a screwdriver, making shipping, storing and customizing the bike much easier and efficient for the user.

In other words, Rivera’s bicycle concept combines the build-it-yourself philosophy of IKEA with the sustainable tenet of upcycling raw materials.

Jose Rivera - Ice Cream Bike

(more…)


Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Visitors enter a museum of energy near a nuclear power plant in Spain through a curved wall of light.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Designed by Girona studio Arquitecturia, the museum near Tarragona is wrapped in vertical lengths of black-painted steel and features a tall window framing a central row of double-height rooms.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Two curved terraces dissect the rectangular plan to create the two concave walls, which are clad in translucent polycarbonate.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Lights inside the museum cause these two walls to glow after dark.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

The single-storey museum contains an exhibition hall, lecture room and meeting rooms, all accessedfrom a foyer at the front of the building.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Other buildings on Dezeen that feature translucent glowing walls include a museum of glass in the Netherlands and a business training centre in Italy.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Photography is by Pedro Pegenaute.


Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

This SITE

Desolate land, landscape and industry not related, simply juxtaposed, they coexist without tension.

Here, in this place, the boundary condition is strongly felt.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Uncomfortable, there is no shelter.

Between the Ebro and the topography, between industry and the urban settlement.

The need to anchor this place is strong.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

We start dusting off the GRID

On the blank paper, a square 42 x 42, abstract, perimeter without references.

On the Square, an orthogonal grid, rows interval: A A B A A, columns interval: a b a a b a

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

On the Grid, B divides the square into two, between the receiving space and the space of exhibition, B articulates, B is circulation and transition.

On the Grid, the type, a b a a b a modulate and order, programmatic conditions.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

The TYPE on this SITE

The type on this site, lost purity, now, it emanates a sense of belonging, intertwined abstraction and specificity.

XY are no axes anymore but coordinates, two structural directions.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

East west, landscape, the Ebre river and topography.

North south, artifice, industry and the town of Ascó.

From outside to inside, accidental spaces, subtracted MATTER, emptiness is absence, the interior is revealed.

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

STEEL outside – regular perimeter, dense heavy precise, dark cold rough

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

POLYCARBONATE inside, winding subtraction, ethereal light sinuose, bright smooth soft

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Click above for larger image

Authors: Josep Camps + Olga Felip
Colab: M. Agudo, I. Sola, A. Horta, J. Farres, A. Serrats
Client: ANACNV

Museum of Energy by Arquitecturia

Click above for larger image

Engineery: PROINTEC
Structure: GMKgrup
Constructor: TCSA


See also:

.

Cité de l’Océan et du Surf
by Steven Holl
Roku Museum by NAP
& Hiroshi Nakamura
National Glass Museum
by Bureau SLA

Seeking Interns and Writers

Looking for a few good Cool Hunting contributors

Are you a budding writer or student eager to learn the inner workings of online publishing? If you like what Cool Hunting does and want to be a part of it, we want to hear from you. We’re looking for interns to help with all aspects of publishing the site and for contributors to report stories from around the globe.

Ideal internship candidates will have a combination of skills ranging from exceptional writing, to graphic production, a bit of HTML knowledge and a super-keen eye. Work will be on-site in New York City and a minimum of 20 hours per week.

While intern work includes responsibilities that cross disciplines, we are seeking to fill the following areas:


Editorial: research, copy editing, fact checking and story entry

Graphics: photo editing, basic info graphics and presentation layouts


If you’re interested in applying, please send a brief cover letter, resume and samples of your work (or URL to portfolio) to internship [at] coolhunting.com. We can work around class schedules and provide school credit if applicable.

Contributors should be familiar with Cool Hunting’s style and scope and can send inquiries to jobs [at] coolhunting.com.


Useful, Many-Sized, Modular, and Affordable Small Parts Storage

adafruit

DIY’ers, modelmakers, woodworkers et cetera all come up with solutions to store differently-sized screws, bolts, and small parts. Some of us use egg crates or Dixie cups, others go with those little plastic crafts boxes filled with a grid of uniformly-sized compartments.

adafruit

But uniformly-sized boxes don’t always cut it, like if you need to store tiny machine screws and 3″ carriage bolts in the same kit. That’s why I love the idea of Adafruit’s new Modular Snap Boxes, which let you buy the sizes you need, then snap them together Voltron-style to make your own storage kit. And at US $2.50 for a large box and $5.95 for a ten-pack of tiny-storage boxes, with other prices and sizes in between, it won’t break the small-storage bank.

(more…)