GOW Nippon Moon by UNStudio

Dutch office UNStudio has developed a concept for a giant Ferris wheel in Japan that could rival the London Eye and the Singapore Flyer.

GOW Nippon Moon by UNStudio

Proposed for an as-yet undisclosed location, UNStudio’s Nippon Moon will combine the familiar design of an observation wheel with a network of virtual interfaces that will allow visitors to create their own augmented realities.

Each of the wheel’s 32 capsules will offer a different theme. After downloading a dedicated app for smartphones and tablets, users will be able to introduce animations and sounds that enhance this theme, or initiate virtual realities within the glazed outer walls.

GOW Nippon Moon by UNStudio

Studio founder Ben van Berkel told Dezeen: “The technology and engineering involved in observation wheels will always at first sight appear similar, however for the Nippon Moon we have not only introduced double-decker capsules for the first time, but have also concentrated on providing heightened engagement levels and a novel user-experience.”

Other functions of the app will include a queuing system, removing the need for visitors to wait in line before boarding, and a communications network that will permit interaction between different capsules. Visitors will also be able to share their images of the experience using a digital “hall of fame”.

GOW Nippon Moon by UNStudio

“The latest technology is incorporated in the capsules to create integrated augmented reality that creates new levels of engagement – both in terms of the surrounding views and through communication and interaction between users,” said Van Berkel. “Through this, the Nippon Moon becomes not just an observation platform, but a platform for heightened observation and the stimulation of the imagination.”

GOW Nippon Moon by UNStudio

UNStudio are working alongside user-experience designers Experientia to develop the interactive aspects of the project, while engineers Arup and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries are collaborating on the technical specifications.

Since the completion of the London Eye in 2000, observation wheels have been proposed for various cities around the world. The Singapore Flyer became the tallest in 2008, taking over from the Star of Nanchang in China, while others are proposed for New York, Dubai and Las Vegas.

GOW Nippon Moon by UNStudio

UNStudio is also currently working on a complex of skyscrapers linked by aerial bridges for Beijing and a 30-storey residential tower for London. See more architecture by UNStudio »

Here’s a project description from UNStudio:


GOW Nippon Moon, Japan

In 2012 UNStudio was invited by Ferris Wheel Investment to formulate a vision for the design of a Giant Observation Wheel in Japan. Due to the popularity of Ferris Wheels in Japanese culture and a potential flow of millions of tourists from South-East Asia, the project was required to have an international impact and differ substantially from all existing wheels of its kind.

Structural constraints defined by Arup and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries – two of the world’s most specialised wheel engineers – left little room for manoeuvre due to the location and the size of the GOW. The challenge for UNStudio however was to find a typical language for the architectural design which would characterise the overall idea behind the function of the Observation Wheel. Essential to this approach was the creation of a coherent design strategy which could capture the full scope of the user-experience offered by the Observation Wheel. In order to individually suit this experience to the visitors, UNStudio partnered with Experientia to research how behaviour could influence user-experience.

GOW Nippon Moon by UNStudio
Proposed elevation – click for larger image

Knowledge wheel

UNStudio’s ‘Nippon Moon’ is a new cultural blockbuster in the broadest sense. It has been designed to create a journey in which learning about the environment, culture and one’s individual part in this is central. Four key elements define the logics of the socio-architectural design; enhancement of the senses, interactivity, experience and romanticism. Through the integration of interactive design elements it was possible to extend the design far beyond both the moment you physically become part of the wheel and long after you disembark. In order to achieve this, a virtual world was created in which the visitor becomes part of the social network which revolves around the GOW. Discovery, the Ride and the Return are three chapters of the design which contribute to attracting visitors and to the stimulation of the imagination.

The journey begins with the optional online purchase of tickets and the downloading of the Nippon Moon app. Visitors can not only chose the time of their ride, but can also choose the theme of their experience, as each of the single and double-decker capsules on the wheel focus on a different theme. Upon entering the visitor centre guests are greeted by the ‘Hall of Fame’, a dynamic installation of digital photographs taken by visitors during their ride. These photographs can be uploaded instantly to the Hall of Fame during the ride and discovered on display in the installation upon leaving. From the ticket pick-up point and cloakroom facilities on the ground floor, the visitor follows a circular ramp, along which retail, food & beverage and exhibition pockets are anchored. Due to a system of ‘Active Queuing’ which notifies the visitor of the time remaining until boarding, standing in line for extended periods of time is eradicated, leaving the visitor free to make use of all the facilities until it is their time to board their pre-selected capsule.

GOW Nippon Moon by UNStudio
Capsule details – click for larger image

The Nippon moon app is designed as a strategy for a user-experience interface that can be installed on smartphones and tablets. During the ride, this accessible software makes it possible to communicate with people in the other capsules, who are otherwise physically and visually separated from you and whose capsule follows a different theme to your own. In addition the possibility to enhance the senses through the incorporation of augmented animations or sounds helps to focus the experience of the visitor. The app also allows the visitor to switch from reality to digitally altered views from the capsules, which are created through augmented reality techniques in the transparent skin of the capsules.

Interactivity is used to develop a greater sense and understanding of the surrounding reality and results in an active rather than a passive visitor. The experience mediates between the real and the virtual, bringing about a significantly different moment in time and creating a memory or ‘after image’.

Upon leaving the wheel, the visitor follows a second circular ramp with further facility pockets, eventually returning to the cloakroom area on the ground floor.

Romanticism is an integral part of the vision to ensure that the design and engineering of the wheel can become embedded in history as a new development in engineering and an integral part of modern Japanese culture. The concept of the observation wheel itself is not new, however the idea to merge the robustly designed and engineered physical wheel with a fully integrated virtual world creates the unique character of the Nippon Moon GOW.

Client: Ferris wheel Investment Co.,Ltd
Location: Japan
Building surface: Terminal and platform 7.200 m2
Building volume: Terminal and platform 90.000 m3
Capsules: 32
Building site: 18.000 m2
Programme: Giant Observation Wheel
Status: design

UNStudio: Ben van Berkel, Gerard Loozekoot with Frans van Vuure, Filippo Lodi and Harlen Miller, Jan Kokol, Wendy van der Knijff, Todd Ebeltoft, Tina Kortmann, Patrik Noome, Jeroen den Hertog, Iain Jamieson

Engineer: Arup Tokyo + Melbourne
Interactive design: Experientia, Italy
Animation: Submarine, Amsterdam
Visualisation: MIR

The post GOW Nippon Moon
by UNStudio
appeared first on Dezeen.

Marbert Rocel – The Temple

Réalisé et animé par Dirk Rauscher, le vidéoclip de Mabert Rocel pour la chanson The Temple, issue de son album Small Hours, est très réussi. Mêlant animations et plans fixes sur la chanteuse allemande, c’est un voyage entre rêve et réalité qui nous est proposé. Une très belle réalisation à découvrir.

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INDEX: Design to Improve Life – 2013 Award Winners

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This is the second of two posts on the INDEX: Design to Improve Life 2013 Awards program. See the previous post on the 59 Finalists here.

This past Thursday, we had the opportunity to attend the announcement of the winners of the INDEX Awards, recognizing “Design to Improve Life.” Once again, the esteemed jury of the INDEX awards selected five winners (from the 59 finalists) to receive prizes of €100,000 each, albeit with a different tack than in previous years. Not only did the organization introduce a new ‘telecast’ format for the fifth edition of the biennial event, but they held the festivities in a handful seaside venues in Elsinore, Denmark, about 45km north of Copenhagen for the first time. Following a VIP cocktail reception at the Kronborg castle, historic site of Shakespeare’s Hamlet (where one speaker attempted an ill-advised riff on “To be or not to be”), attendees took their seats at the adjacent Culture Yard for the live announcement. The massive, hangar-like space was a Siemens factory as recently as three months ago, and the raw space offered a nice contrast to the slick movie set feel of the production itself. All told, the fast-paced and tightly-scripted presentation was a welcome change from the plodding ceremonies of the past, and the threat of rain cleared up for the warm reception afterward.

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The winning entries themselves are stronger than ever, not least for the fact that several of them have already made an appreciable impact in the real world, demonstrating the potential of design to improve life. Drum roll please…


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Copenhagen Adaptation Plan

Along with execs from the INDEX Awards, Lord Mayor Frank Jensen made a few introductory remarks at the press conference, welcoming us to the lovely city of Copenhagen only to return to the stage just a few moments later. accepting one of the top prizes for the Copenhagen Adaptation Plan. Although the city has been considering plans to explore new models of urbanism for over a decade now, the crippling floods of 2011 sparked a renewed effort to create the city of the future.

And while the fact that the city is host to the awards—founded as a private initiative, INDEX now has government support—the Copenhagen Adaptation Plan is impressive both for its scope and the fact that it’s on track to meet ambitious deadlines within the next few years and decades.

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(more…)

    



INDEX: Design to Improve Life – 2013 Finalists

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It’s a common refrain: ambitious designers develop brilliant, potentially world-changing solutions to the large-scale problems… which never leave the poster presentation or PDF precisely because they’re simply too far-reaching. Even when researched and developed to a degree of realizable specificity, few designers have the resources or network to actually execute their vision, and investors are more inclined to support the likes of, say, Rap Genius, as opposed to a water filtration system for the developing world, which may never see any kind of quantitative ROI.

Yet social problems such as lack of food and water beleaguer the everyday lives of billions, and (perhaps more insidiously) environmental issues haunt our existence with no ostensible consequences… until a 100-year storm ravages a city or nation.

The organization also partnered with CNN to produce video ‘vignettes’ on each project

Thus, the INDEX Design Awards represents a new definition of design that is at once broader and more nuanced: moving beyond beautiful objects towards the intent to “improve life.” The very premise of the award is that it might ultimately render itself obsolete—that humankind might eventually prevail over the various humanitarian crises that we face today, that we might achieve ecological homeostasis, that we might reach a point where there is nothing left to improve.

If it seems like a grand vision for what design could or should be, the organization is putting its money where its mouth is, with a total of €500,000 in prize money, as well as new initiatives to connect ‘designpreneurs’ with business training and savvy investors. And if the notion of “improving life” seems like too broad a directive, each of the finalists of the fifth edition of the biennial celebration of design offers a concrete solution to a remarkably broad range of issues.

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The jury team winnowed the field of over 1,000 entrants down to 59 finalists, which can be viewed on the site (we’ll have more on the five winners shortly). We’ve covered several of them before, but the INDEX Awards were a nice occasion to catch up with the likes of Massoud Hassani, who mentioned that his team is working on a new version of his much-lauded Mine Kafon; Dong-Ping Wong and Archie Lee Coates IV are hoping to launch the + Pool test tank in the East River next summer; and Scott Summit of Core77 Design Award-winner Bespoke Innovations, who mentioned that they’d actually started collaborating with another finalist, Ekso Bionics, just before we’d suggested that they work together in our write-up of the latter. We were also glad to see several previously-covered projects in the mix, including hydrogel, the Nest, Rabalder Parken, Skillshare and Wilmington Robotic Exoskeleton.

(more…)

    



Final, and funniest, Heineken Dropped instalment released

Over the last three months Heineken has been releasing its Dropped campaign online, which has seen a series of intrepid travellers thrown into unexpected situations and required to complete a series of challenges. The final instalment launches online today, and proves to be the most amusing of all…

Previous episodes have seen participants dropped in Alaska, Cambodia, Morocco and Poland. Now we journey to a deserted island in the Philippines, and the twist in this set of films is that there are two guys dropped, handcuffed together, and left to work out how to get themselves rescued.

While the scenery here is stunning, and the films feature plenty of good props (including a particularly charming ‘help’ sign), the key to success with these kinds of campaigns lies in the casting. Here Irishman Murray and Jakub from Poland prove particularly entertaining company, both for each other and the audience. We’ll let you watch the films to see how their trip turns out (unsurprisingly, they weren’t left to starve to death):

To watch the rest of the films in the Heineken Dropped campaign, visit youtube.com/heinekendropped.

Credits:
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy Amsterdam
ECDs: Mark Bernath, Eric Quennoy
Creative directors: Thierry Albert, Faustin Claverie
Art director: Philip Brink
Copywriter: Hugo van Woerden
Production company: Wefilm
Director: Roel Welling
Episode directors: Joeri Holsheimer, Lennart Verstegen

The Modern Magazine conference

A strong line-up is taking shape for The Modern Magazine conference, which will take place in London on October 16…

The event marks the publication of Jeremy Leslie’s book of the same name and promises to be “a celebration of the best of current editorial creativity”.

The conference will take place at Central Saint Martins’ state of the art Platform Theatre and will feature the following speakers (with others to be confirmed):

Tyler Brûlé – Editor-in-chief and Chairman, Monocle (London)
Joerg Koch – Editor and Creative director, 032c (Berlin)
Omar Sosa – Co-founder and Art director, Apartamento (Barcelona)
Richard Turley – Creative director, Bloomberg Businessweek, (New York)
Patrick Waterhouse – Editor-in-chief, Colors (Treviso)

According to a post on Leslie’s magCulture site, “there will also be panel discussions including one looking at women’s magazines and a series of presentations about smaller, independent titles.”

There are 200 tickets available, with a reduced rate for students: Day ticket – £140; Student ticket – £90. Additional speakers will be announced on magCulture.

More details on Leslie’s forthcoming book, The Modern Magazine (£28), at laurencking.com.

The September issue of Creative Review is available to buy direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe to make sure that you never miss out on a copy – you’ll save money too. Details here.

Game of Thrones Starring Walter White

Breaking Bad meets Game of Thrones…here’s what it might look like if Walter White had been cast..(Read…)

Gif: dance

dancing on edge..(Read…)

Solar Powered Laptop

We see solar paneled backpacks enjoying much success, so if we push the boundaries of innovative thinking then is the solar powered laptop too much to fathom? I suppose not, the Shadow Axis Solar Powered Laptop is a keen innovation, it hopes to get the lappie charged by including a solar panel on the back cover. I am not sure about the engineering aspect about this project, but it certainly is food for thought.

Designer: Zheng


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Solar Powered Laptop was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Micro Grill

Micro is a portable microwave that doubles up as a grill as well. Hectic lifestyles, unhealthy eating habits and laziness has forced us to rethink how we use our kitchen appliances. A grill on the go is understandable, but have a portable microwave is a good innovation. At least we can have hot meals in the office while buried in work!

Designer: Richard Park


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Micro Grill was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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