THINKK Studio and Studio 248at Ventura Lambrate

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Bangkok designers THINKK Studio and Studio 248 will team up to present furniture and lighting at Ventura Lambrate in Milan next month, including this adjustable lamp that’s held together by a single cord slotted through the components.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Other exhibits will include a chair with a double back for different sitting positions, a wardrobe designed for picking out and displaying seven outfits for the week and a set of vases that won’t stand up straight.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Vases with concrete bases in wire frames by Decha Archjananun of THINKK Studio were featured on Dezeen last summer – take a look at them here.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

The third edition of Ventura Lambrate design district in the north east of Milan will be open from 17 to 22 April 2012.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Here are some more details from the designers:


Observing specific details in the simplest everyday actions resulted in this collaborative project by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 that explores specific gestures unmet by conventional furniture: “ARMS chair”, a multi-armrest chair for various sitting gestures, and “7-day-closet” for personalising outfit selections for the week.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

This collaboration also features works with hidden twists such as “Merging Top”: stackable tilted vase set that puts the fun back into flower arranging, and “Crane Lamp”: simple at first glance, but its flexible joints can transform it into many different shapes and positions.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Our collaborative project will be exhibited at Ventura Lambrate (Ventura LAB), Via Massimiano 6, Milan during 17th -22nd April 2012.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

ARMS chair
Designed byTHINKK Studio

Nowadays, many chair designs are focused on creating unique forms and materials, but very few of them consider the functions that we often overlook. Having carefully observed the way people sit on chairs, we found that the armrest is in fact, an interesting object; it can be used in so many ways, positions and at so many different heights, representing formal or informal expressions. “ARMS chair” offers additional armrests to answer to different sitting gestures, making it unique to each user despite its simple form.

Materials : Ash wood/ Fabric
Dimensions : 49 x 60 H 75

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

7-day-closet
Designed by Studio 248

We often find our closets overcrowded with clothes we rarely wear. And of course, more than often, we find ourselves spending ages to find that favourite item we wear all the time. This “7-day-closet” will help you set out what to wear week by week, featuring your favourite outfits, for your working day, holiday, or for whatever occasion that suits your mood. The design is versatile to suit each person’s unique style: the pole can be rotated outwards, making room for longer dresses or pants. The drawers are designed for more casual outfits that can be folded on top of each other, so you could simply pull out your favourite design from the stack. Everyone plans ahead what to do week by week, so why can’t we do the same with clothes?

Materials : Ash wood
Dimensions : 40 x 70 H 155

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Merging Top
Designed by THINKK Studio

Inspired from a classic toy known as the Spinning Top, “Merging Top” comes with 2 different vases, of different shapes, sizes, and degrees of tilt, to create new styles of flower arrangements. The small vase can be stacked on top of the large vase, transforming into a sculpture-like form that combines two contrasting materials which complement each other. With this Merging Top, flower arranging takes on another level of fun.

Materials : Marble / Ash wood / Ceramic
Dimensions : 12 (diameter) H 16 / 22 (diameter) H 10

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Crane Lamp
Designed by Studio 248

“Crane Lamp” is inspired from the shape of the crane used in construction sites, which can transform into different formations. Likewise, this lamp is able to twist and turn according to the user’s desire, through the simplest and most seamless joints. The craftsmanship of this Ash-wood creation makes it appear like an unsuspecting piece of sculpture, ready to transform into a lamp at any time.

Materials : Ash wood
Dimensions : 15 x 15 H 40

Designers:

Decha Archjananun and Ploypan Theerachai from THINKK Studio
Jakkapun Charinrattana from Studio 248

Designed in Hackney: Uniform Wares

Designed in Hackney: Uniform Wares

Designed in Hackney: Uniform Wares is one of the best-selling brands on Dezeen Watch Store and happens to be based in the London borough of Hackney

Designed in Hackney: Uniform Wares

Designers Patrick Bek and Oliver Fowles launched Uniform Wares in 2009 with the 100 Series (above) a colourful range of simplified timepieces based on British industrial wall clocks.

Designed in Hackney: Uniform Wares

They’ve since expanded the collection to include calendar and  chronograph models, plus new designs based on the classic dress watch.

Designed in Hackney: Uniform Wares

You can order Uniform Wares watches from Dezeen Watch Store online or over the phone on +44 20 7503 7319.

Designed in Hackney: Uniform Wares

Uniform Wares are located on Broadway Market Mews, close to the Regent’s Canal that cuts through the lower part of the borough.

Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

The Galileo, a Remote-Controlled iDevice Mount, Does Tripods One Better

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Josh Guyot, co-creator of the Gorillapod line of flexible mini-tripods, has devised yet another brilliant way to support an iDevice for video: The Galileo. The attractive, cylindrical base—which doubles as a charging point—can actually be controlled by the viewer, allowing them to pan and tilt. If at first the benefits don’t seem obvious, check out the video:

Galileo Kickstarter Video 03012012 from Josh Guyot on Vimeo.

Guyot’s Galileo has already been successfully Kickstarted, pulling in 150% of its target and still with 24 days to go. The projected retail price will be $130, but you’ve still got a little under a month to score one for an $85 pledge.

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Unitasker Wednesday: Waterproof Pool Table

All Unitasker Wednesday posts are jokes — we don’t want you to buy these items, we want you to laugh at their ridiculousness. Enjoy!

When I go swimming, I refuse to go anywhere without a Waterproof Pool Table:

It’s just not swimming if I can’t work in a few laps and then hustle some kids out of their allowances when I run a table in Eight Ball. Swimming and billiards are such obvious companions.

And with a price tag of $6,500.00, I can’t believe there are swimming pools without Waterproof Pool Tables. Shocked! Shocked, I tell you.

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.


Can the Smith Center Revive Downtown Las Vegas? Inside the $470 Million Cultural Center

In Las Vegas, when people refer to “culture,” it usually involves French-Canadian acrobat savants, ersatz monuments, or dancing fountains, but change is afoot. This month, Sin City welcomed the Smith Center for the Performing Arts, a megaproject that was set into motion during headier, pre-recession days. We dispatched writer Doug McClemont to try his luck at getting an inside look at the newly opened cultural complex, and he came up trumps.


Photos: Steve Hall/HedrichBlessing

Most narratives of current state of things in Las Vegas include “overbuilt” or “downturn” in the very first sentence. Indeed, since roughly 2006 the fortunes of the legendary desert oasis have changed for the worse. Visitor spending in the destination city is on the decline, the housing market remains troubled, and MGM’s shining new star City Center, a 72-acre sprawling complex of hotels, gaming, condos, and high-end retail at the heart of the Strip, posted an operating loss of $45 million in the fourth quarter of last year. So this might seem a strange moment to be celebrating the construction of a new $470 million cultural center on the outskirts of the (still more beleaguered) downtown area. But then again Las Vegas&#8212that ultimate paean to pastiche and panache&#8212is not known for its introverted ways.

The Smith Center for the Performing Arts, a lavish art deco-influenced, multi-purpose complex that features music, visual art, theater, and education opened earlier this month. It dominates a 61-acre site in a former rail yard that is now called Symphony Park. “All of the budgeting was done in the old economy,” according to architect David M. Schwarz, “the Center was built in the new.” As a result, the architects were able to utilize high-end materials and avoid troublesome cost-cutting concerns when creating Las Vegas’s newest addition. A 170-foot tall bell tower with 47 imported bronze bells is just one opulent feature of the inviting collection of buildings.
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Design Museum Collection App:driving movies

The Design Museum in London launches its Design Museum Collection iPad app today that features 59 objects from their collection, including interviews with museum director Deyan Sudjic filmed by Dezeen. Download it free from the app store here.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

In this first movie in a series taken from the app, we’ve compiled entries about classic design for driving. Pieces discussed include the Vespa Clubman scooter, British traffic lights, Mobil Oil petrol pump and a model car built from a sketch by Le Corbusier. You can also watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

iPhone and Android versions will be launched in the next few months.

Download the Design Museum Collection App here.

Here are some more details about the app from the Design Museum, followed by text excerpts from the app:


Design Museum launches Collection App

The Design Museum launches its first iPad Collection App featuring 59 objects from the Design Museum’s collection. The App is a free download which explores key moments in design history through the extensive Design Museum Collection. Classic pieces featured include: the Angelpoise lamp, the Dyson vacuum, the Thonet chair mould, the Face magazine, the British telephone box, the Vespa and the Kindle, a recent addition to the Collection.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

The App includes video interviews with Deyan Sudjic, Design Museum director, and Helen Charmen, Design Museum head of learning. Stephen Bayley, Design Museum founding director, has contributed additional commentary. The App enables users to explore each design by material, date, manufacturer, designer and colour.

The Design Museum has showcased and celebrated design innovation for 22 years and this App, supported in part by donations from visitors, is a new way to explore the museum’s collection. With a global digital audience in excess of three million visitors a year including over 500,000 Twitter followers and 150,000 Facebook fans, the museum is offering new ways to engage its global audience with design.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

The Design Museum is building its collection ahead of its move to new premises at the former Commonwealth Institute in west London in 2014. The App will develop in line with the collection and build to become a unique design resource.

iPad launch date: 28 March 2012
iPhone launch date: 3 May 2012
Android launch date: 5 June 2012

The Design Museum would like to thank the developers twentysix, film makers Dezeen and Alice Masters, author Stephen Bayley and all those who made contributions to the app. The Design Museum would also like to thank the Heritage Lottery Fund for their initial support.

Commissioned by the Design Museum
Development by twentysix
Films by Dezeen

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

The Design Museum Collection

The Design Museum Collection is made up by over 2000 objects that range from the early Modernism of the 1900s to the cutting edge of contemporary design. The Collection tells the history of design in mass production and includes furniture, lighting, domestic appliances and communications technology. The Collection is an important record of the key designs which have shaped the modern world.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

Model of the Voiture Minimum

It is hardly surprising that Le Corbusier, the architect who conceived of houses as ‘machines for living in’, should attempt to design a car. The Swiss architect was famously obsessed with the potential of technology to transform everyday life. To him, and many progressive thinkers of the time, the automobile was a symbol of modernity and a focal point in his visions for futuristic utopias. The car was designed in response to a competition by France’s Société des Ingénieurs de l’Automobile (SIA), which called for proposals for a small, practical and economical car that cost no more than 8,000 francs. Le Corbusier answered the challenge with his cousin, and business partner, Pierre Jeanneret, and in 1936 they submitted proposals for the Voiture Minimum. Sadly, the car never actually made it into production, nonetheless, its striking form had a lasting impact. As Italian car designer Giorgetto Giugiaro wrote in 1987, the Voiture Minimum ‘is so full of inventive touches that even nowadays they are among the most advanced proposals’, pointing out that it was ‘following the principles of aerodynamics that were sensed long before prototypes were placed in wind tunnels.’

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

Vespa Clubman

Launched at the Rome Golf Club in 1946, the Vespa was the birthchild of Enrico Piaggio. After the Second World War, a time when most Italians lacked modes of transport or the means to acquire them, the aeroplane manufacturer hit upon the idea of developing a scooter to kick-start Italy’s economic reconstruction. He approached the aeronautical engineer Corradino D’Ascanio to design a new motorcycle. D’Ascanio famously did not like motorcycles, finding them uncomfortable and bulky, dirty and difficult to maintain. Drawing on his experience in aeronautical engineering, D’Ascanio completely re-designed the scooter. The riding position of the Vespa was designed to let you sit comfortably and safely, rather than perched dangerously on top. The front body protected the rider from getting dirty and the wheels are supported by arms similar to those found on aircraft carriages to make changing tyres easier.

Just four years after its debut, companies across Europe clamoured for the right to build the motorcycle. In the UK, a licence was granted to Douglas of Bristol, who marketed the Vespa with the name ‘Clubman’. By the 1960s, the Vespa Clubman had become the scooter of choice for the fashion-conscious mods, who liked its stylish Italian associations and its potential for modification. They would add lights, accessories, various racks, mascots and crash bars, and attended scooter rallies across the country. A cultural icon both in Italy and in the UK, the Vespa scooter was one of the great transport phenomena of the twentieth century.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

Traffic light

During the 1960s, thousands of miles of new roads and motorways were built in Britain. Following the introduction of the new signage system by Jock Kinneir and Margaret Calvert, the Ministry of Transport approached David Mellor to design a new traffic control system. Over 4,500 sets were to be gradually replaced by a new version, which used a new light which was brighter during the day and softer at night. Mellor’s main concern was to simplify a system that had been cluttered up with various additions over the years, developing a new system which was adaptable to include additional signs such as ‘no left turn’ and traffic filter arrows when required. It was of prime importance that the message should come across with total clarity. The new signals were made from polypropylene plastic, which needed no repainting. Mellor’s traffic lights are still in use today.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

Road sign (Scarborough, York, Pickering, A64, A169)

Britain’s first motorway, the Preston By-pass, was an endeavour to alleviate congestion on the roads by increasing both capacity and the speed that cars could travel. In response to this, a government advisory committee was established in 1957 to investigate the effectiveness of current signage and align it with continental practices.

Graphic designer Jock Kinneir and his assistant Margaret Calvert were then asked to research the requirements of a new signage system. After introducing successful signs to the new M1 motorway, Kinneir and Calvert redesigned and unified the entire road sign system. Although modified over the years to include extra information, such as junction numbers and speed cameras, the purity of their original system remains and is integral to the identity of British roads.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

Petrol pump for Mobil Oil

One of the most recognisable petroleum brands in the world, the Mobil logo has remained more or less the same since it was designed in 1964 by Tom Geismar of Chermayeff & Geismar. Commissioned by architect Eliot Noyes to develop a strong and coherent graphic identity for the new company, Geismar’s initial concern was that their name would be mispronounced as ‘Mo-bile’, rather than ‘Mo-bil’. His solution was to stress, visually, the letter ‘o’. By reproducing the letter in red, it is distinguished from the rest of the name and suggests the correct pronunciation. This also added a very memorable and distinctive element to an otherwise straightforward identity.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

S-Cargo

Launched at the Tokyo Motor Show in 1989, the tall curved roof and circular rear windows of the Nissan S-Cargo attracted a great deal of attention. The commercial van’s name is a affectionate play on words meaning both ‘Small Cargo’ and ‘Escargot’, the French word for snail. Despite the whimsical name, the snail-like appearance of the S-Cargo belies serious design considerations. Large side doors make it simple for the driver and passenger to get in and out, while a top hinged rear door with a low payload floor allow for easy loading and unloading of large items, made simple by the tall roof and foldaway rear seat. Clear, easy-to-read gauges and a generous windscreen were developed with the driver in mind and a flat dashboard makes an ideal desk away from the office.

Although the van won widespread appeal for its appearance and versatility, it was only ever intended to be a limited edition production. Built by Nissan’s special projects group The Pike Factory (also responsible for cars such as the iconic Figaro and the Pao), a total of 12,000 vans were made between 1989 and 1992.

Design Museum Collection app: driving movies

Moulton AM2

James Dyson, industrial designer and founder of Dyson describes the 1983 bike’s success as follows: ‘Designed by west of England designer, Alex Moulton, this bike is extraordinarily engineered. It has very small wheels, but is able to tear along at the speed of a racing bike. Small wheels grip the road surface, and good suspension gives the robust frame comfort.’

Dezeen Music Project: End of the Day by Yair Kass

Here’s a mid-week dose of lo-fi goodness from Israeli musician and producer Yair Kass.

With 70s synths pulsing underneath a summery, lazy vocal hook, End of the Day provides a great laid-back groove to help you through the busy week.

About Dezeen Music Project | More tracks | Submit your track

Core77 Design Awards 2012: Interview with Peter Hall on Design Writing

Peter_Hall(468).jpgPhoto credit: Raquel Breternitz

This is the second post in a series of short interviews with renowned writers about the field of Writing & Commentary, a new category in the Core77 Design Awards. Peter Hall is a design writer, author and senior lecturer at Griffith University Queensland College of Art who has been a contributing writer for Metropolis since 2000 and has written widely about design for publications including Print, I.D., The New York Times and The Guardian.

Core77: How important or valuable is it to honor design writing and criticism with an awards program?

Peter Hall: It’s a good way to try to stimulate discussion and better writing, though I do think more needs to be done to raise the standard and stakes of design writing and criticism. More design criticism, theory, history or design studies programs at universities and art colleges, and a representation at high schools would help. Awards can sometimes seem a little self-aggrandizing, but if they’re part of a larger educational stimulus package, they’re great.

Which qualities do you most appreciate in writing about design and architecture and what kinds of writing do you hope will surface from this call for entries?

I appreciate thorough research and reporting that reveals legwork as opposed to armchair criticism. I’d like to see a lot surface from this call for entries, particularly evidence that people are moving beyond the burden of influence from art history and art criticism. I think it’s increasingly problematic when people write about design like it’s a fixed, finished artifact, or in terms of style movements, rather than taking its entire lifespan into account—who made it and why, how did it come into being, where is it going, etc, the whole production-consumption-disposal lifespan. Also I’d like to see us shake off the feeling that design writing exists to constantly promote professional design practice.

Name two writers, perhaps one historical and one contemporary, that you are influenced or challenged by.

Charles Dickens and Bruno Latour.

Tell us about a publication that features writing about visual culture, design, or architecture, that you’re enjoying reading right now.

Makeshift.

Core77 Design Awards 2012 – Design Writing Interviews
» Rick Poynor
» Peter Hall
» Alexandra Lange

Visit the Writing & Commentary on the C77DA site to learn more about the category and jury. Entries for the Core77 Design Awards close April 10. Core77 recognizes that many design writers work freelance and if you feel you qualify for special consideration pricing for your entry, contact us at awards@core77.com and let us know.

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Technology Development Center is seeking a Director, Human-Centered Design Group in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

coroflot-joboftheday.jpg

Director, Human-Centered Design Group
Technology Development Center

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

The Technology Development Center (TDC) at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center is currently seeking leadership candidates for a full-time Director, Human-Centered Design Group at our Bakery Square location.

The Director, Human-Centered Design Group directs the TDC’s business analysts and designers and is responsible for the ongoing development of a world-class human-centered design discipline, which is an integral part of our innovative solutions and a critical factor in our success. This group covers a number of traditional and emerging creative disciplines including multi-modal experience design, visual design, industrial design, architecture, filmmaking, and information design.

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The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

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