What’s on your summer to do list? Organizing your car

The summer months are a good time to tackle many projects, including organizing your garage and closets. Today, we’re sharing tips on how to shape up your car. Though some may walk, ride a bike or scooter, or take public transportation to get about town, many people (raising my hand) travel by car. For some, it’s a second home or main “office.” When you spend a lot of time in your vehicle, keeping it organized is a necessity as you’ll need to not only feel comfortable, but also find what you need with relative ease.

To begin a car uncluttering and organizing project, take everything that doesn’t belong in your car out of the car (check under your seats), looking for things that are obviously trash (empty water bottles, food wrappers). Next, categorize the remaining items (chargers with chargers, first aid supplies with first aid supplies). Then …

Be selective about what you need to keep

Depending on your lifestyle, you could have a variety of things you need to regularly keep in your car. If you’re a mobile entrepreneur, you may need office supplies, brochures, or client forms. If you’re a parent, toys, books, or hand sanitizer may be more important things to keep in the car. For people who do a fair amount of long-distance driving, street maps, money for tolls, or audio books are the likely must-have items. Think through all the things you need to have with you on a regular basis so that you can …

Decide what will live inside your car and trunk

You will want to store some things inside your car (e.g. in the glove compartment, center console, pockets on the backs of each seat, side door pockets) and other items inside your trunk. Use frequency of use as a benchmark along with size and volume of specific items. For things you use often, store them inside your car and think of your trunk as archival or large item storage. And, if you live in an area where there are seasonal extremes, you may also want weather appropriate items (ice melt, gloves, sun shades).

Based on the size and features of your car (or truck or SUV or minivan), place things in the locations that make sense to you — like in a kitchen, store things where you use them. And, consider keeping a container inside your car to collect garbage. Here are suggestions on where to keep some things:

Glove compartment

  • Registration, insurance card, and emergency numbers
  • Car manuals
  • Collision kit
  • First aid kit
  • Cell phone charger (this can also be kept in the center console along with a tire gauge)

Door pockets

  • Maps
  • Container or resealable bag of coins (for tolls or parking)
  • Coupons and gift cards
  • Trash bags

Trunk

Choose your containers

Containers help you keep everything in its place and easily accessible. They also can help keep loose items from shifting and flying about if you have to stop suddenly or in the event of an accident.

Here are a few to consider:

  • Milk crate. A crate is great for keeping sports equipment, toys, and things that you need to do something with (packages to mail, things to return). Consider putting a milk crate (or laundry basket) in your trunk.
  • Trunk organizer. The compartments in a trunk organizer make it easy to keep similar items together and separate them from others. They can hold many things (like groceries and car care supplies) and have outer pockets for papers or maps.
  • Mobile office organizer. Use this mobile unit on the passenger seat to hold hanging file folders and to keep pens and note pads close by if you often work from your car. Some organizers have lids to keep items from slipping out and others forgo file storage and give you enough space for keeping CD’s, tissues, and other items.
  • Plastic envelope. Plastic envelopes are great for keeping coupons and receipts and can easily be stored in door pockets or behind-the-seat pockets. Or, put your registration and insurance card in an envelope in your glove compartment.

Create a maintenance routine

Once everything is arranged in the way that works for you, make a plan to keep your vehicle organized and road-trip ready. A simple way to stop the build up of trash is to empty your garbage container each time you fill up your tank. Because you refuel on a regular basis, combining these tasks will almost guarantee that your ride will be clutter free. What about all those supplies that you need to have all the time? To be sure you don’t run out, check your stash once a week (or once every two weeks) to make sure you have all you need and can restock if you don’t.

As with any maintenance routine, keep it simple. The more complex the steps, the more difficult it will be to maintain. Don’t wait until you get your car detailed to focus on keeping it clean and orderly. Do a little bit each week and you’ll be pleasantly surprised by how much easier it is to keep everything in its place.

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


Dining Table | FORTUNA Limited Edition

A fresh contemporary dining table and a shimmering statement from Boca do Lobo. Fortuna represents the materialization of luck and fortune, a symbol o..

Sigur Ros – Eg anda

Après Fjogur Piano, voici le nouveau film expérimental du groupe Sigur Rós, appelé « Ég anda ». Réalisé par Ramin Bahrani, cette vidéo très réussie présente avec des images en slow motion oscillant entre nature, et milieu urbain. Un rendu très intéressant à découvrir dans la suite de l’article en vidéo.

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House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki Architects

There are huge rectangular holes in the walls and floors of this Tokyo house by Japanese studio Hiroyuki Shinozaki Architects.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Wooden ladders connect each of the four split-level storeys and a staircase with built-in storage leads up from the ground floor studio to the dining room and kitchen on the staggered floor above.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

One ladder travels up from the dining room to the living room, which then steps down to the bedroom through the wide hole in the wall.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Another ladder connects the living room with the skeletal top level, where four holes in the floor give the room a cross-shaped layout.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

A small study area is sunken into one of these holes and residents use the floor above it as a desk.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Lamps of different lengths also hang through the holes and a final ladder leads up to a terrace on the roof.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Similar Japanese houses we’ve featured include a split-level residence with a narrow lightwell and another house with holes in the walls.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

See all our stories about Japanese houses »

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Photography is by Hiroyasu Sakaguchi.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Here’s some information from the architects:


House T is a residence and atelier for a couple in the centre of Tokyo. Floors like bookshelves are placed at the different level in the shifted box.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Furniture is put on each floor to create living room, dining room, kitchen and bedroom.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

The floors are only hooked by columns which are three-dimensionally intersected at the middle of the box.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

This simple structure gives latitude for space composition.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

In the massive volume of the box, each different activity of daily living takes place at each floor with open view.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Lighting hangs from top of the box to each floor to illuminate them like a floating stage.

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Client: A couple

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Location: Tokyo, Japan

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Built area: 75.62 sq m (total)

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Completion date: May 2012

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

Structure: Wood Flame, two-storey

House T by Hiroyuki Shinozaki

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Hiroyuki Shinozaki Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Storage Footstools

irregular and asymmetric footstools with a storage box inside; top covered by hand-made wool or cotton fabric; base covered by matching colour fabric;..

New Pinterest board: gold

As gold medals are being awarded to athletes at the Olympic games, we’ve made a new Pinterest board featuring all the golden design and architecture from the pages of Dezeen. Over 22,000 people now follow us on Pinterest – join them here.

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See more Golden stories on Dezeen »

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“Flames of fame for Olympic cauldron designer” – The Independent


Dezeen Wire:
London 2012 Olympic cauldron designer Thomas Heatherwick has revealed that he has been inundated with messages of support from people “moved by his spectacular creation”. Speaking to the Independent, Heatherwick also says he ignored advice to avoid having moving parts in the cauldron, which features around 1,000 moving components. “ ”It’s probably more complex than a Swiss watch,” Heatherwick says – read the article in the Independent.

See all our stories about the London 2012 Olympics | See all our stories about Thomas Heatherwick

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Layers wallpaper by Richard Hutten at the Design Museum

Layers wallpaper by Richard Hutten

Visitors are invited to make their mark on the cafe walls of London’s Design Museum by ticking boxes on this stripy wallpaper by Dutch designer Richard Hutten.

Layers wallpaper by Richard Hutten

The design of the Layers wallpaper is based on the brightly coloured tape used to seal boxes, with some strips labelled ‘fragile’, while others feature the yellow and black stripes of hazard tape.

Layers wallpaper by Richard Hutten

A few of the strips read ‘I’m Here 2:’ alongside the selection of tick boxes that offer responses like ‘play’, ‘forget’ and ‘destroy’.

Layers wallpaper by Richard Hutten

See more stories about wallpaper on Dezeen here, including some that changes under different lighting conditions.

See more projects by Richard Hutten »

Photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Here’s some more information from Designwall:


‘Layers’ by Richard Hutten in Design Museum London

The Design Museum in London decorated its cafe with the Layers wallpaper by Richard Hutten for Designwall. The Layers wallpaper is based on the everyday tapes that you would use to seal a cardboard box. Using a series of existing tape designs and the development of new patterns, Hutten transformed the idea into a wallpaper. The wallpaper is not to be seen as a finished piece, but as a wallpaper which invites you to draw or write on it. On one tape you can even leave your mark expressing your feelings or needs, in order to make it personal and unique.

Layers is a continuation from Hutten’s Layers Furniture (Milan Design Week 2008), originally designed for a room in the Llayers Lloyd Hotel in Tokyo. Layers is one of the unique wallpapers of Designwall. Designwall is a initiative of Ontwerpwerk, The Hague.

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at the Design Museum
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Funny Facial Expressions of Table Tennis

Funny facial expressions captured by photographers from London 2012…(Read…)

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

A chunky bay window protrudes from this timber-clad addition to a house in Ontario by Canadian studio The Practice of Everyday Design (+ slideshow).

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

The studio collaborated with architect Melanie Moore to replace the building’s existing upper floor bedroom with another that provides more space.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

The timber cladding and black window trim contrast with the dark brick and white frames of the original bungalow.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Above: photograph is by the architects

Accessed by a staircase hidden behind doors in the dining room, the annex is kept private and separate from the rest of the house.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Screens surround a dressing area on one side of the large bedroom, while the gabled rear wall is covered with shelving.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

The bathroom is organised to create privacy, with a sink exposed to the bedroom, a bath that faces only the dressing area and a toilet that is completely concealed.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Above: photograph is by the architects

The low pitch of the roof increases head height in the space and blue handrails and taps add splashes of colour.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Above: photograph is by the architects

See all our stories about Canada »

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Photography is by Chris Shepherd, apart from where otherwise stated.

Here is some more information from the architects:


When they first approached us, our clients had owned their house for 30 years. They were committed to their house, their neighbourhood and their lifestyle but also desperately needed more room and a better living space. They wanted to maintain the charming proportions of their bungalow rather than build a large addition like many of their neighbours had done.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

The original second floor above the garage was 550 square feet, had a seven foot high flat ceiling and was divided into four tiny rooms. One of these rooms had the best view in the house, overlooking the backyard, but was being used as a storage closet.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

We conceived the addition as a container for the start and end of the clients’ day. Rebuilding the entire second floor from scratch freed us from the constraints of the previous design and allowed us to make a strong distinction between the addition and the more traditional first floor.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Above: photograph is by the architects

The new stairs, hidden behind two small doors in the dining room, allow the clients to keep this refuge completely separate from other aspects of daily living.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

First floor plan – click above for larger image

A large bay window with built in seating cantilevers over the garden, which the owners enjoy when they wake up in the morning or retire to their loft in the evening to relax. By arranging small windows at different heights across the front face of the addition, we created a series of portraits of their suburban neighborhood while maintaining a sense of privacy and intimacy.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Click above for larger image

The windows on either side of the bed are set to the clients’ head heights, while a window on the floor frames a portion of lawn that can be seen from the couch.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Click above for larger image

By opening up the room and maximizing the storage we created a clutter free and inviting living space. We pitched the roof from six feet at the front and back walls to ten feet in the middle of the room. This allowed us to assemble a variety of programs and moods into one space, making the room feel spacious and airy while maintaining a sense of intimacy where needed: in the bedroom, the reading nook and the bathroom.

Eden House by The Practice of Everyday Design

Click above for larger image

Location: Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
Size: 550 Square Feet
Type: Addition
Design Team: Antoine Morris, David Long, and Melanie Morris

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The Practice of Everyday Design
appeared first on Dezeen.