Memento by Wesley Meuris

Narrow slits provide entrances to this circular pavilion by Belgian artist Wesley Meuris outside the Flemish town of Borgloon.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Called Memento, the white structure has a smooth exterior and a tiled interior.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

The square tiles are in relief, creating different textures and shadows as the sun moves across the sky.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

The two slender gaps cast sundial-like shadows around the circle and allow the evening sun to stream in.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Situated on a slope, the pavilion looks out over the central graveyard in the medieval town of Borgloon.

Memento by Wesley Meuri

The project is one in a series of permanent structures for public spaces in the Haspengouw region, instigated by the Z33 gallery. Other completed projects include a doughnut-shaped pavilion and a see-through church.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Photography is by Kristof Vrancken.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Here’s some more information from Z33:


Memento is a sculpture at the Central Burial of Borgloon. The artwork of Wesley Meuris is an anchor point in the sloping landscape and invites visitors to step in.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

The architectural structure of the work provides a special experience of looking and dwelling. The steel built space can be interpreted in many ways by the visitor and challenges the imagination.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Whoever is in the room experiences the intimacy. This reflects the memory of its surroundings.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Initiated by De Nieuwe Opdrachtgevers.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Official opening: May 4th, 2012

Memento by Wesley Meuris

On display: permanent from May 5th, 2012

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Location: Central Burial of Borgloon, Lambertusstraat, Borgloon

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Wesley Meuris
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“The market cannot solve the housing crisis” – Justin McGuirk


Dezeen Wire:
 in an article for Domus magazine, design critic Justin McGuirk examines the social and physical decline of London’s social housing, discussing the part played by luxury real-estate developers and how architects have been held accountable.

Council housing blocks in Hackney, Newham, and Southwark are cited as examples, as McGuirk calls for the British government to accept responsibility for the city’s housing crisis and to work with architects to protect residents from the ruthlessness of the property market.

Read the full article here »

See also: our interview with McGuirk on the future of design criticism.

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– Justin McGuirk
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Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Dezeen Wire: “Software is the most important material we have come across in the last 100 years,” said Matt Jones of London studio BERG at yesterday’s Designed in Hackney Day of talks and discussions with some of the most interesting designers and architects from Dezeen’s local borough, curated in collaboration with Beatrice Galilee.

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Mayor of Hackney Jules Pipe (above) opened the event, saying that while the cutting-edge creative companies Hackney is known for may not make an obvious impact on economic growth individually, “in aggregate, they are a huge business in Hackney, and it is those start-ups and incubator spaces that we are keen on creating.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Digital Poets
“Software is the most important material we have come across in the last 100 years”

The talks kicked off with the theme of Digital Poets. Matt Jones (above) of BERG, Eva Rucki of Troika, Liam Young of Tomorrow’s Thoughts Today and writer and designer James Bridle urged designers not to separate the physical and virtual worlds in their work.

Matt Jones from design consultancy BERG began by getting the audience talking with his mantra for 21st century design: “There is no separate digital world. We must treat software as material.” After showing us projects including a comic that reveals characters’ hidden thoughts under UV light and a smart printer that creates customised mini-newspapers, he concluded: “Software is the most important material we have come across in the last 100 years.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Next, Eva Rucki from design studio Troika explained how she uses technology to engage people. “We try to create immersive experiences that make people consider things differently,” she said, citing the studio’s recent project in Hoxton Square, east London – The Weather Yesterday is a technologically-enabled LED installation that displays the weather from 24 hours ago and encourages participation and conversation in a public space.

James Bridle’s projects further his mission to make the internet “burst out onto the streets”, including animated GIFs on bus stop roofs and an imaginary airship that navigates using data from a London weather station. The audience especially liked Bridle’s assertion that pubs are vital to British design, proving a casual forum where designers can meet up to discuss big ideas.

Finally, Liam Young from Tomorrow’s Thoughts Today wowed us with an in-depth presentation about the intersections between nature and technology, arguing that “nature hasn’t been unspoilt for a long time”. He thinks cities have become “contemporary jungles” containing “a mash-up of nature and technology”, an idea that has inspired his own projects combining science fiction with science fact.

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Imagine: the Science of Design
“You can do things yourself; you can become an expert”

Jane ni Dhulchaointigh’s talk about making her fix-anything rubber moulding product Sugru a reality was the highlight of the Science of Design talks: she found everything she needed in Hackney to create the product she believed would empower people to change their surroundings and continued against financial odds to build her own brand. Her idea was that “when you modify or repair something it begins to mean more to you”, so instead of buying new items she created the air-curing silicone rubber so users can “hack” their belongings to more exactly fit their own needs.

Dhulchaointigh’s business is “a twenty-first century materials company with design and technology networks,” featuring images and videos of the inventive uses customers find for Sugru, such as a drop-proof camera for a three year old. It’s even being used to improve the grip of a Team GB Olympic fencer’s foil. Sugru’s message is one of empowerment: “you can do things yourself; you can become an expert.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

The Next Generation: Young Hackney Architects
“Architecture as software”

After lunch the discussion moved onto architecture, as architects from young Hackney-based practices We Made That, Erect Architecture, Studio Weave and Gort Scott joined Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs on stage to explain how they’ve each reinvented the design process in their projects. The focus of each presentation was on architecture as a form of software rather than hardware; a tool for enabling the narrative of a building or space to develop.

Oliver Goodhall and Holly Lewis of We Made That (above) even made a newspaper rather than a building in response to one brief. The also showed the audience their recent Fantasticology project, for which they gathered nuggets of information and distributed them onto benches around the Olympic Park. The architects used open-source tactics to collect facts from the public and Lewis described how people had tracked down the facts they’d contributed. “We like to start conversations about high streets, neighbourhoods and the public realm,” explained Lewis.

Community engagement was a recurring theme, whether it involves making friends with the makers of projects like Je Ahn and Maria Smith of Studio Weave or getting the public involved in the design, like Susanne Tutsch of Erect Architecture. “We want to create learning opportunities for the people that take part as well as for ourselves,” said Tutsch. “This helps to create the sense of ownership that supports a project after the architect has gone”.

Gort Scott continued this theme and brought attention back to the role of small businesses, reminding us that “60% of all London’s employment goes on around high streets” and they’re crucial to creativity because that’s “where collisions and conflicts between cultures happen.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Pecha Kucha

The next session saw nine presentations in the fast-paced Pecha Kucha format, with designers showing 20 slides for 20 seconds each to give a flavour of their work.

Something & Son (above) stole the show, showing their attempts to bring nature back into the city, adding to the sustainability and self-sufficiency themes that cropped up throughout the day. Their FARM:shop project, which opened last year, transformed an empty shop in Dalston into a farm for growing fish, chickens and vegetables. They also showed Barking Bathhouse with its ‘cucumber ceiling’ and ‘sustainable steam room’, and a project in which they simply cut the roof off a car and filled it with plants.

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Shoemaker Tracey Neuls told us how a design-led approach found her moulding shoes with plasticine. “A childlike mindset helps to open your inspiration,” she said, explaining that her brand avoids trends, focusing instead on producing timeless design.

Designer Dominic Wilcox (above) presented one of his recent projects, a vinyl record called ‘Sounds of Making in East London’. Wilcox recorded 21 segments for his aural document, including bell-ringing, pie-making, beer-brewing and even the sound of packaging Sugru.

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Reflections on Hackney
“It might be better to think of Hackney as a spirit or set of ideas”

The future of Hackney in the face of increasing gentrification was the focus of the closing panel discussion. Should artists and designers, who trade in new ideas, attempt to resist change?

Kieran Long (above), architecture critic at London’s Evening Standard newspaper, slammed the commercialisation of Shoreditch typified by a proposed hotel development on the former site of the Foundry, once a hub for young artists in the area.

“Once you’ve made a scene like this, people start to come and take advantage of it,” he said. “They use the brand of an artistic neighbourhood to build massive great hotels which, to my mind, have little or nothing to do with the architectural character of a conservation area – the Shoreditch triangle – and also have nothing to do with the social context of the artistic and design practice that goes on in Hackney and Shoreditch.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Sarah Ichioka from the Architecture Foundation drew attention to more positive developments up the road, with the Dalston Curve demonstrating a community space in the shadow of large-scale housing developments.

Oliver Basciano from Art Review pointed out that cheap rent and a strong peer network remain the most important factors for any creative, and Hackney’s increasing gentrification is nudging young artists towards cheaper areas like Peckham in south London.

An optimistic rebuttal of the fear of gentrification came from Rob Alderson, editor of art and design blog It’s Nice That: “Hackney has changed over the past few years, and the pace of that change is only going to accelerate after the Olympics,” said. “This edgy eastern Eden has now been completely co-opted by the mainstream.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

But Hackney doesn’t need to be guarded, he argued. It might be better to think of Hackney as a spirit or a set of ideas to be championed beyond the borough. “Creative movements are often rooted to a time and place,” he said, citing Madchester, Silicon Valley and the Bauhaus. “They’ve given the world ideas and principles that have outlived those times and outgrown those places.

“Rather than bemoan change or be scared of change, we can race it and hopefully do something really exciting.”


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.

Taking place at Hackney House in the heart of Shoreditch during the Olympics, Designed in Hackney Day celebrated the incredible diversity of design talent in Dezeen’s home borough as well as providing a platform to discuss both the opportunities and threats to creative businesses in this fast-changing part of London.

We’ve also been publishing buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney all summer – see all our stories about design in Hackney here.

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

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HEINEKEN Ideas Brewery Challenge: Reinvent the Draught Beer Experience

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A month after the winner of HEINEKEN’s first innovation challenge—focused on Sustainability—was announced, the HEINEKEN Ideas Brewery is churning again with their next great design challenge: Reinvent the Draught Beer Experience.

As any red-blooded beer drinker can tell you, there’s something special and refreshing about draught beer. HEINEKEN reinvented the category in 2005 when they introduced the DraughtKeg, a portable draught beer system that was a feat of engineering and design. Fast-forward to today’s Ideas Brewery Challenge and designers have an opportunity to take inspiration from new technological advances in music, entertainment, UX and product design and implement these ideas into a full-service on-premise Draught Beer Experience.

The Ideas Brewery asks designers to take into account the following areas as hotspots for innovation:

(more…)


Eliza Southwood

Illustrations celebrate cycling in an East London cafe

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Teaming up with Hackney GT, architect-turned-illustrator Eliza Southwood has outfitted Wilton Way Café with a host of bicycle-inspired drawings, prints and ephemera for a new exhibition celebrating cycle culture and sport. The London-based artist’s vibrant retro aesthetic sets the tone for a quick look at the history of cycling, which includes old-school posters and an original “Opperman” BSA racing fixie suspended from the ceiling, a model used during the pivotal 1931 race from John O’Groats to Land’s End.

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Fascinated with Major Taylor, an early pioneer of American cycling, Southwood recently created a series depicting the Civil War-era champion in various racing moments, including a notorious one-mile championship in 1899 where he competed against rival Tom Butler.

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Southwood’s cheerful color palette smartly balances such historically intense moments in cycling, but her trained eye for technical drawing keeps each portrait from feeling inappropriately animated.

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Home to London Fields Radio and the maker of one of Hackney’s meanest coffees around (with beans from local roasters like Climpson & Sons), Wilton Way Cafe is an ideal spot take in Southwood’s cycle-inspired illustrations, which will be on view throughout August 2012.

Images by Karen Day and Andrea DiCenzo


Lighting with Balls

The KUGL light transforms the idea of lighting in the form of stationary objects into a mobile system of induction-charged units with an adorably unorthodox globe shape. Each ball features a flat, magnetic surface on it’s lower hemisphere that allows it to be mounted on any metal surface and twisted to achieve the desired directional light. After use, simply throw it on the docking station until it’s needed again. Genius!

Designer: Adrian Gögl


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(Lighting with Balls was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Radian, Affordable Time-lapse Technology

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We love seeing meaningful projects reach their Kickstarter funding goals, and we really love it when those projects involve innovative, high performance technology—like Radian, a motion time-lapse device and smartphone app aimed at bringing pricey photography equipment to a wider audience. Normally a remote timer alone costs around $130, but Radian is set to sell for just $125. As a completely self-contained product you don’t even need a tripod, let alone the cabling. That’s partially because Radian’s inventors have streamlined the manufacturing process, but also because if you use an iPhone or Android you already own the remote timer, no tethering required.

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The device itself is a traditional tripod mount (though it also works alone on a tabletop), but the real genius here is in the app. The easy-to-use interface allows you to program tilt direction and speed; The app will even automatically change the exposure so you can shoot seamlessly from sunrise to sunset. And not only can you exit the app during the time-lapse, you can even turn your phone off without interrupting the process.

“To make things even simpler, our app makes valuable real time calculations – giving you a good feel for what the resulting time-lapse would be based on your settings. This allows you to quickly and easily adjust your settings to get your desired output while simultaneously saving you multiple trips to the calculator app.We have integrated bramping (bulb-ramping for smooth night-day-night transitions, currently only for Canon cameras), speed ramping, and a range of time-delay settings. Our app combined with Radian allows you to take on previously difficult feats, such as day-to-night and sunrise-to-sunset time-lapses.”

(more…)


News: gender-neutral toy department at Harrods

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“Olympics will only take place in non-democratic countries”

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in non-democratic countries”
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Best Made Co. Gear Bag

An all purpose utility bag for the city dwelling outdoor enthusiast

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Making expertly crafted products for city dwelling outdoor enthusiasts, NYC’s own Best Made Co. stands at the forefront of the return to our roots movement. “We operate in NYC,” says lead designer Hunter Craighill, “but we focus on the outdoors and the products that get people outside.” To further encourage this call to nature, Best Made is launching a new product each week for the forseable future. First up is the all purpose Gear Bag, made entirely in NYC of mostly American-made materials. Like all Best Made products, the sturdy carry all is attractive enough for the city but built for the great outdoors.

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“[The bag] represents a direction we’re moving in, towards being a more full outfitter with apparel, gear and bags. It’s our first bag which we’ve made from scratch, which is exciting for us,” said Craighill. The stiff, three layer construction—heavy waxed cotton canvas outer, impermeable waterproof center and canvas lined interior—gives the bag its rigid form, while a ballistic nylon bottom, brass feet and kevlar handles work together to further its indestructible nature. With one full length exterior pocket and two interior pouch pockets, the all purpose bag features little more than one would need for a weekend away or day on the jobsite.

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By using domestically made materials and constructing each piece by hand, Best Made appeals to the conscience consumer looking for something more than just another tote bag. “Part of what we’re doing is trying to produce products that are not disposable, not only because they work well but because you care about them,” said Craighill.

The Gear Bag is available directly from Best Made online for $240. For more information check their site or if you’re in NYC swing by the Best Made workshop friday afternoon’s from noon to six for open house.