New look for the RIBA Journal

Covers of the first two issues of the redesigned RIBA Journal

Matt Willey’s redesign of the RIBA Journal is a complete overhaul of the 120 year-old architecture title; from cover to typefaces via a new logo and format. The designer and editor Hugh Pearman talk us through the project…

Established in 1893 by the Royal Institute of British Architects, the RIBA Journal has the largest circulation of any architectural magazine in the UK and prints around 30,000 copies each month.

Cover tests looking at various colour combinations, and how the new design will work over a series (option to run portrait images shown, bottom right)

For its redesign the journal’s editorial team, led by RIBA Enterprises head of media Jonathan Stock, wanted to offer its designer a clean slate. “We did a complete rethink of the magazine’s content and structure,” says Pearman, “so that it worked from the inside out: content strategy first and only then the design”.

Willey appealed to the RIBA team because of his ideas and attention to detail, Pearman says, and the fact that he had seen through the launch of his own magazine, in the shape of Port.

“It was also in his favour that although an enthusiast for design and architecture, he had not previously designed an architecture title,” says Pearman. “We were clear that we did not wish the new RIBA Journal to resemble any other title in our sector.”

Extensive reader research revealed that print was still valued very highly by RIBA members and the “feel” of the journal was something that needed to be addressed. “Everything changed with this relaunch,” says Pearman, “including repro house, paper sourcing, and printer.”

Even the format has changed, slighty – the journal remains the same height but is a little wider, allowing for better use of the imagery across inside pages. The job also ran to redesigning the PIP supplement and to designing a letterhead, business cards and postcards, the latter in place of comp slips (below) .

“We improved the printing and changed the stock to a very good uncoated stock, the same as Port’s,” says Willey. “Making the format wider was to do with various things – not least to do with getting space and breathing-room in to the spreads, but it also makes the magazine fold open nicely, it lies flat.”

There is also a fairly radical approach to the design of the cover, which adopts a graphic approach instead of, what Pearman considers to be an industry-norm, the full bleed image of a building.

According to Willey, the RIBA Journal covers from the mid-1960s and early 1970s were “graphically more interesting and successful when restricted by the printing limitations.”

RIBA July 1970, on left, and July 1965 covers

For the contemporary redesign, he says he “wanted to set up a cover template that didn’t depend entirely on an ‘astonishing’ ‘cover-worthy’ architectural image, which is a difficult thing to achieve month in month out. Actually I think it’s part of the problem with many architecture magazine covers; an over-dependency on a stand-alone cover image.”

“I wanted this to work in a more graphic way,” he continues. “The images still need to be good, and better than before, but the success of the cover depends on other things as well now – the crop, the use of colour – and that’s a huge help.”

“The cover ‘is’ the logo for the magazine,” he adds. “The masthead, and a box and keyline that are the exact same dimensions as the magazine, so the business card for example is like a mini-magazine.”

Cleverly, the ‘two halves’ approach will enable the journal to also use full bleed imagery beneath the logo if a portrait image is used (retaining a colour tint), and allows a landscape format picture to be used – a staple of architectural photography, Pearman adds.

The journal also boasts a new bespoke font, RIBAJ Condensed, created in collaboration with Henrik Kubel of A2/SW/HK.

“It’s a condensed Grot typeface to compliment Henrik’s Grot 10 that I’m using in the magazine,” says Willey.

“Grot 10 is not dissimilar to a typeface that was being used in the RIBA Journal in the 1970s, and whilst it was interesting looking through the archive of journals, I wasn’t interested in this design ‘reflecting’ old issues too much – this needed to feel distinct and modern, but not ‘of the moment’. I wanted it to feel like it’s something that has been around a long time; authoritative and confident.”

RIBAJ Condensed is used for small text as well as a headline tyepface, while other typefaces used include FM for body text and standfirsts; and PIP has a different family of typefaces, Typewriter and Outsiders, each of which is designed by Kubel.

Cover and spread of the PIP supplement

“One of the joys of working with Henrik was being able to tweak things like the Grot 10 typeface,” says Willey. “The type is often locking-up tightly to a rule and so he did a version of Grot 10 for me where the ascenders and descenders are the same – so you get nice clean lines when the type sits close to a rule.”

The new issue also features a series of new icons for the ‘core curriculum areas’ in the Intelligence section of the magazine drawn by La Tigre (above), byline portraits by Holly Exley (editor Hugh Pearman, below) and photography by Carol Sachs, whose work has appeared in Port and YCN.

For the first two issues of the Journal, September and October 2013, Willey has worked alongside RIBA Journal art director, Patrick Myles.

“This was a hugely exciting project for me,” says Willey, “because it wasn’t simply dressing up what had already existed and choosing a few new typefaces, there was an opportunity to address everything – how it behaved editorially and how the content was structured, word counts and ‘breathing room’ on the pages.”

“This is less of a redesign,” adds Pearman, “more of a completely new magazine.”

The October issue of the RIBA Journal is out soon. More details at ribajournal.com and more of Willey’s work can be seen at mattwilley.co.uk.

Nike Sunar – Just Do It

La marque Nike a encore frappé en produisant une nouvelle campagne virale en Turquie où les athlètes professionnels Birsel Vardali, Naz Aydemir ou Didier Drogba, créent par leur mouvement des affiches de la marque, devenant un élément essentiel de la chaîne. Le spot est à découvrir en images et en vidéo.

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“Kanye wants me to do a YSL” – Peter Saville

At the Global Design Forum on Monday night, graphic designer Peter Saville revealed that he’s working on a logo for musician Kanye West. In this transcript of the conversation Saville had with journalist Paul Morley, he discusses the project and what it’s like to work with the rap star.

Saville spoke at the V&A Museum on Monday for the forum, which is part of the London Design Festival. Saville was yesterday officially awarded the London Design Medal.

Earlier last year Kanye West announced via his Twitter feed that he is to launch a design company named DONDA and claimed to be assembling a team that will include architects, designers and directors. We’ve previously published Kanye West’s Claudio Silvestrin-designed apartment and a seven-screen pyramidal cinema designed by OMA to show his first short film at Cannes Film Festival last year.

See all our stories about Peter Saville »
See all our stories about Kanye West »

Here’s the transcript of the interview:


Paul Morley: I must just ask a question I think puts us in two degree of separation with Kanye West because Peter’s last engagement [before coming here tonight] was with Kanye West. I love that idea that you’ve gone on to do the Manchester thing [Saville has been working as creative director for his home city], gone off to do grown up things but that there are still loads quite high up in the pop culture world that are still chasing you for your imprint. What exactly are they chasing you for?

Peter Saville: He’s charming, he nearly came [here tonight]. I said I’ve got to go, I’ve got a gig at 5. He said where and I said somewhere called the Victoria and Albert museum. He said he’s doing [TV show] Jools [Holland] tonight. He would have come.

Paul Morley: So he’s your new mate.

Peter Saville: He’s not my mate. One thing that you learn, in music I learnt this, just because you’ve been to see somebody, doesn’t mean that they’re your mate. So when you get called to meet Paul McCartney or I got to do Roxy [Music] covers, I got to meet Brian [Ferry] who I’d spent my teens trying to be like or look like, but you’re not friends and don’t call us, we’ll call you. Some of the younger ones, the dynamic changes when you’re older than them, Kanye is kind of weird, he…

Paul Morley: I guess he’s interested in you doing design for him, he wants you to be a graphic designer.

Peter Saville: He wants me to be Cassandre. Today I told him all about Cassandre and Cassandre did the Yves Saint Laurent logo. Cassandre, France’s greatest graphic artist in a way of the early 20th century. Cassandre was friends with Christian Dior, I guess they were contemporaries and pals and young Yves worked for Dior as an assistant and when Yves was leaving to set up his own label, it’s quite sweet isn’t it? He asked Cassandre to do the logo for him and Cassandre just rattled off YSL, which was pretty good.

And Kanye said to me, you’re Cassandre, thats what I want. Kanye wants me to do a YSL. And he’s collecting people. He said today he likes great people and wants to put them together and get them to do some great things and get some great people to check the things by these great people and really end up with some great things.

Paul Morley: The other side of the membrane, does this still have value in the world that we’re going into? That is now being shattered into so many surfaces, does a logo or image like that have a value? Does it join the glut? Join the status quo itself no matter how stylish it might be?

Peter Saville: I think I can sometimes say I don’t know. I get asked things and I feel obliged to know something or have an opinion and actually some things I don’t know. It’s sort of significant. Depends how you work. Some people just do stuff and it’s cool. A lot of people just do cool stuff. Then there’s other people that are doing something but that’s how they do it. That’s how they work. They’re trying to achieve something. That’s the pathway by which they make something happen.

I tend to – this old-fashioned slightly analogue idea, there is a way a problem to solve and the problem to solve is as much the context of the now as the thing itself. What is a logo now, what might a logo be for Kanye in a particular context?

I mean I like him, I didn’t expect to like him. I didn’t meet him to do work. Someone said to me that he would like to meet you so I thought it would be rude to say I’m not available. So we met six months ago and had a cup of coffee and that was it. I didn’t know his music and I still don’t know his music. I met him as a person, who wanted to meet me and he was nice and intelligent and an astonishing energy and astonishing intelligence.

I mean he is alive, he’s super live and he has talents. Sometimes you meet people who are talented and they don’t have energy and you meet people with energy but no talent. Every so often you meet a talent who has energy. And Kanye without a doubt is a talent with energy. At the moment he said can I help him with something, and I said ‘I don’t know, I’ll try’.

See all our stories about London Design Festival 2013 »
See Dezeen’s map and guide to London Design Festival 2013 »

The post “Kanye wants me to do a YSL”
– Peter Saville
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Henning Larsen Architects to design town hall for a relocated city

News: Danish firm Henning Larsen Architects has won a competition to design the replacement city hall for a Swedish city that’s set to be relocated after mining caused huge underground cracks in the area.

The move has been planned for nearly a decade, after the state mining company warned city officials in 2004 that excavating more iron ore would destabilise the ground beneath the city of Kiruna, northern Sweden.

Henning Larsen Architects to design town hall for a relocated city

Around 2500 flats and a total of 200,000 square metres of shops, offices, schools and healthcare buildings will be rebuilt over the next 20 years on a new site two miles east, and the city hall is the first public building to be affected.

Henning Larsen Architects’ competition-winning proposal features a circular building with a crystal-shaped inner structure that is intended to resemble iron ore deposits.

Henning Larsen Architects to design town hall for a relocated city

Parts of the 1950s hall will be recycled where possible, including an original bell tower that will be reinstalled in the public square surrounding the new building.

The circular plan is designed to bring as much light as possible into the interior spaces, which will be arranged with offices around the perimeter and public facilities in the centre.

Henning Larsen Architects to design town hall for a relocated city

“Kiruna’s new city hall is a democratic building, open to everybody,” said studio director Peer T. Jeppesen. “Inside the building, the democratic process is supported by the interplay between offices at the periphery and public functions at the heart of the building.”

Completion is scheduled for 2016.

Henning Larsen Architects to design town hall for a relocated city

Henning Larsen Architects recently won the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture for the Harpa Concert Hall and Conference Centre in Reykjavik, Iceland and are currently working on the new Copenhagen headquarters for Microsoft. See more architecture by Henning Larsen Architects »

Henning Larsen Architects to design town hall for a relocated city

Here’s some more information from Henning Larsen Architects:


New city hall in Kiruna designed by Danish architects

Henning Larsen Architects in collaboration with Tema Landscape Architects Sweden, WSP Engineers Sweden and UiWE Cultural Designers have won the competition for a new city hall in Kiruna in Northern Sweden. The city hall will mark the beginning of the development of an entirely new city centre in Kiruna.

The city hall consists of two building volumes. The inner building is shaped like a crystal inspired by the great deposits of iron ore in the area’s underground. The outer building floats like a ring around the crystal, protecting it against the rough weather conditions of the region.

“It has been important for us to get the best out of the rough weather and wind conditions and allow as much daylight into the building as possible”, says Peer T. Jeppesen, Director and Partner at Henning Larsen Architects. “Kiruna’s new city hall is a democratic building, open to everybody. Inside the building, the democratic process is supported by the interplay between offices at the periphery and public functions at the heart of the building.”

The round shape of the new city hall creates a better microclimate both inside and outside. The shape allows 17% more daylight to pour into the volume. The city hall has already been named The Crystal. It is inspired by the city’s special character, culture and history. Kiruna’s existing city hall is a unique piece of architecture from 1958, which was designed by Artur von Schmalensee. The new city hall refers to the old one in several ways. The bell tower from the listed city hall will be re-used in the square, just as materials and building parts will be re-used to the extent possible.

“The Crystal is a city hall that we can be proud of, and we are delighted to present this particular proposal as winner today. In the assessment, we have sought help from several experts and various reports. We have also had many comments from the public, and naturally, we have considered these in the jury work, too”, says Lisbeth Nilsson, Chairman of the Jury.

Kiruna Municipality is moving the existing city hall and surrounding buildings, because of the effect of the excavations on the city’s underground. A total of 2,500 flats and 200,000 m2 of commercial, office, school and healthcare buildings will have to be moved by 2035. The city hall is the first large building to be affected by the excavations. Thus, the new city hall becomes the starting signal for the new city centre in Kiruna. According to plans, it is to be inaugurated in 2016.

The post Henning Larsen Architects to design
town hall for a relocated city
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Pawel Jonca Illustrations

L’artiste polonais Pawel Jońca a un style bien à lui : des illustrations aux messages subliminaux, parfois poétiques mais toujours plein de finesse. Il gagne de nombreux prix, et travaille pour la presse polonaise et internationale. Une très belle carrière et des illustrations sublimes à découvrir dans la suite.

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Pressy Kickstarter project raises over $500,000

The next big project from crowd-funded website Kickstarter is Pressy. This is a button that fits..(Read…)

Medusa, Chinita and Bellota wicker lamps by Claesson Koivisto Rune

London Design Festival 2013: Swedish studio Claesson Koivisto Rune launches a collection of wicker lighting at designjunction this week.

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

Claesson Koivisto Rune designed the wicker lamp shades for Chilean brand Made in Mimbre by The Andes House.

Named Medusa, Chinita and Bellota, the three designs are meant to resemble jellyfish, ladybirds and acorns.

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

The small and large jellyfish lamps feature woven shades with long wicker tentacles left dangling below to disguise three thin metal legs.

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

The designers also created small, medium and large rounded floor lamps with four legs teased out from the corners of each one, which they liken to ladybirds.

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

The third product in the range is an acorn-shaped pendant, which is available in three sizes.

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

The wicker lamps will be presented at design show designjunction at The Sorting Office, 21-31 New Oxford Street, WC1A 1BA until 22 September as part of London Design Festival.

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

Other projects by Claesson Koivisto Rune featured on Dezeen include a stove for the developing world that uses two-thirds less wood than a traditional cooking fire.

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

See all our features about Claesson Koivisto Rune »

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

See all our stories about London Design Festival 2013 »
See Dezeen’s map and guide to London Design Festival 2013 »

Made in Mimbre by Claesson Koivisto Rune

Photographs are courtesy of the designers.

Here’s some more information from Claesson Koivisto Rune:


We are impressed by the achievements of the young team at Made in Mimbre. They have succeeded in creating and manufacturing their beautiful lighting collection locally. Not only that, their whole ethos of employing local artisans to create contemporary objects in a professional context and in so doing preserve their wicker weaving techniques makes us profoundly happy to be a part of.

Not only do we see great potential and intrinsic value in the handicraft of their products, the quality of the light from within their lamps is fantastically warm and atmospheric. Collaborating with Made in Mimbre on our first collection has been a pleasure and a joy!

In honour of the origins of the manufacturer we have chosen to give the lamp designs Spanish names: Medusa, Chinita and Bellota.

The Medusa lamps, with their oval-shaped lampshades, appear to balance on numerous thin, spindly supports. Rather than trimming the excess lengths of wicker, as is usually done, we have kept them and hidden three, thin metal legs amongst them. The resulting designs reminded us of jellyfish, floating, with their many trailing tendrils.

Almost as if they have been nipped and then pulled, four ‘feet’ appear to have been stretched from the bottom edge of the Chinita lamps. We think that the gesture results in a series of lamps with a cute, creature-like character. Like small, friendly bugs. Like ladybird bugs, for example.

The Bellota suspension lamps are two, similar forms combined to make a whole. Yet there is a clear division between the two. In keeping with the nature theme, the inspiration for the BELLOTA design is derived from the distinctive form of the acorn, where one form can be seen to partially ‘cover’ the other.

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lamps by Claesson Koivisto Rune
appeared first on Dezeen.

These Creepy Plushies With Fake Human Teeth

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A Day in the Life of a Bench by Max Degtyarev

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W Eyewear e Teleport

W Eyewear, brand italiano di eyewear che trae ispirazione da esploratori e aviazione, ha lanciato dal 16 settembre il concorso Teleport, che mette in palio 42 occhiali in 4 montature: Fleeter, Ketch, Fahlu, Calayan.
Per vincere è necessario accedere con un account Facebook. Una volta scelto uno dei quattro quadranti del mondo sui quali giocare, i concorrenti potranno rispondere a tre domande. Più risposte corrette verranno date, più sarà facile scoprire dove si nasconde uno dei 3 occhiali in palio quel giorno.
Rispondere è abbastanza facile, ma la rete può dare una grossa mano anche ai più pigri…