Starry Night – Vincent van Dominogh
Posted in: UncategorizedFlippy Cat recreated Vincent van Gogh’s "Starry Night" from just over 7,000 dominos. The s..(Read…)
Flippy Cat recreated Vincent van Gogh’s "Starry Night" from just over 7,000 dominos. The s..(Read…)
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Movie: the third tour we filmed at the Royal College of Art graduate show features work from the Innovation Design Engineering course, including a candyfloss machine for recycling plastic and a bicycle for recycling copper from electrical wires.
Above: Iris by Mimi Zou
Course leader Miles Pennington presents an eye-tracking camera and student Eunhee Jo presents her stereo system with textile controls.
Above: New Tangible Interfaces by Eunhee Jo
The show continues until 1 July and you can see all our stories about the work exhibited here.
Above: Esource by Hal Watts
Watch a tour of the Design Products course with Tord Boontje »
Watch a tour of the Design Interactions course with Tony Dunne »
See all our stories about the Royal College of Art »
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Calling creative businesses in the London borough of Hackney! As part of our Designed in Hackney Day on 1 August, we’re offering twelve FREE stalls at an indoor market at Hackney House on Shoreditch High Street.
Designers, makers, stores, brands and anyone else based in Hackney who has goods for sale, products to demonstrate, performances to perform or any other creative ideas for the market should get in touch (see below for details).
The day-long market will take place alongside Designed in Hackney Day – a FREE event featuring talks, discussions and debate by leading creatives from the borough. The day is being curated by Dezeen and Beatrice Galilee and full details of the line-up, and how to get tickets, will be released soon.
We have a dozen trestle tables (dimensions TBC) to give to people who submit the most interesting and most creative proposals.
If you’re interested, please email a short proposal (including text and images) to us at submissions@dezeen.com with “Designed in Hackney Market” in the subject line by Wednesday 4 July.
See the plan of Hackney House for the layout of the market (tables marked in pink):
I doubt you’ll be able to do 360 kickflips on it, but recent RCA grad Po-Chih Lai’s bad-ass skateboard can do something others can’t: Smoothly descend a staircase.
Fittingly called the Stair Rover, Lai’s design incorporates unusual aluminum trucks that come out of the top of the deck, cantilevering outwards to support Y-shaped arms on either side that in turn each support two wheels.
What’s super cool is that Lai shows you, on his website, the various prototypes that led him to what would be the final design.
Rectilinear blocks of glass and concrete overlap one another at this house in Mexico City by architect Fernanda Canales (+ slideshow).
Glazed walls have been positioned on the longer side elevations rather than at the front and back to screen the interior spaces from neighbouring properties and the adjacent street.
Concrete walls behind the glazed parts of the exterior conceal the kitchen on the ground floor, as well as bathrooms and dressing rooms on the two storeys above.
A three and half storey-high bookshelf stretches down though each of the floors and into the basement, where it is used for storing wine.
Exposed concrete has been popular in a few Mexican houses we’ve featured, including one with a twisted upper floor and one with wonky windows and a glass bridge.
See all our stories about Mexico »
Photography is by Sandra Pereznieto, apart from where otherwise stated.
Here’s some extra information from Canales:
Maruma House
In a city with almost 20 million inhabitants, the project became a way to explore the fiction of individuality as well as to deal with disguised luxury.
Above: photograph is by Luis Gordoa
Located in a residential area in the central part of Mexico City, the house becomes an exercise to achieve simultaneously openness and privacy.
Above: photograph is by Luis Gordoa
Between a strong urban and social complexity and searching for the essence of primitive dwelling, the house deals with spatial continuity alongside with a bold presence.
How is it possible to accomplish spaciousness while surrounded by massive houses on adjacent sites?
Above: photograph is by Luis Gordoa
How is it possible to achieve spatial flexibility under a program based on divided and isolates spaces?
With a system of overlapping boxes the project takes shape allowing fluid space by adding up and connecting different areas, and in other cases, leaving the boxes as independent and closed elements.
Considering the project as an occasion to test unconventional layouts, the house plus garden logic is rejected, allowing dwelling spaces, roof terraces and natural landscape to blen seamlessly together.
Above: photograph is by Luis Gordoa
By continuing the linear condition of the plot, the project takes shape as an elongated and elevated body sitting over a transparent volume opened up onto the garden on the ground level that separates the house from the limits of the site thus emphasizing the independency in relation to the adjacent houses.
Another rectangular volume is placed on the second level and continues the play of overlapped boxes, opening up to a series of terraces.
The house, characterized by the use of natural light, is aligned slightly to its northern limit in order to generate a garden and greater openings that take advantage of daylight.
On the shortest sides of the site, the front and the back of the house are solid faces, while the house opens to both of its longitudinal sides.
Above: photograph is by Luis Gordoa
With the idea to create wide-open spaces and take advantage of the orientations, the ground floor is designed as the most public space, made up by a rectangular volume, with gardens to both of its sides, allowing a flexible space opened entirely to the exterior.
A smaller box –which houses the access, a small living room, the kitchen and a roofed terrace- intersects the transparent volume and holds the rest of the house which seems to float above.
Click above for larger image
The service areas are placed in the basement trying to free as much space for the garden as possible.
Click above for larger image
The volume that contains the living room and main entrance is a compact box that holds a green terrace on top which, along with a series of balconies for each bedroom, tries to set apart the house from the neighbour.
Click above for larger image
The first level, destined to bedrooms and a family room, is designed as an elongated and transparent body at both of its long facades, interrupted only by three small solid boxes which house bathrooms and closets.
By alternating the balconies of the bedrooms with these concrete boxes, the play between solids and voids that characterises the project is accentuated.
The piece that connects the different spaces is a large wooden bookshelf that holds the central staircase and goes all the way from the basement to the top floor.
The stairs, with the bookshelf on one of its sides, generate a wall-furniture which starts at the access door and goes through the living room until it bends and elevates to the next level converted as a bookshelf at the top floor of the house.
This three-story tall bookshelf unfolds into the basement as a wine cellar, generating a wooden body on every level has varying openings depending on the privacy and program of each area.
Towards the street, the house is seen as an anonymous volume. This external solidity is interrupted at the interior with a small patio in the area near the main access that connects with the living room and garden.
By means of the overlapping of solids and void the house is perceived to have larger spaces allowing the landscape to blend into its interior as well as extending the house outwards.
Location: Mexico City
Area: 450m2
Year: 2011
Focus sur Christoffer Relander, ce photographe spécialisé en portraits et paysages, trouvant toujours un angle et une approche originale comme avec cette série « Multiple Exposure Portraits ». Ces photographies en double exposition joue à la perfection entre portraits et matières. Plus d’images dans la suite.
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