Skiing without Snow

Sweetgrass Productions nous invite à découvrir un nouvel extrait de Valhalla, film sur le ski qui a été récompensé à de nombreuses reprises. Cet extrait nous invite à découvrir une session de ski sans neige, filmé au beau milieu d’une forêt verdoyante. Un superbe extrait, à découvrir en vidéo dans la suite.

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Skiing without Snow

Miami Art Week 2013: Beasts and Birds: Captivating works humanize as well as contextualize modern animal art

Miami Art Week 2013: Beasts and Birds


From the earliest noted iterations of art—paintings upon cave walls—to today’s cat-obsessed internet, animals have provided the inspiration behind culture of all kinds. We are awash in imagery of beasts and birds and domesticated pets. But during this most recent Art Week Miami—across…

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Bec Brittain on Moving From Philosophy to Lighting Design, Drawing Inspiration From Her Grandmother, and Why She Likes a Cluttered Workspace

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This is the latest installment of our Core77 Questionnaire. Previously, we talked to the Finnish designer Harri Koskinen.

Name: Bec Brittain

Occupation: Lighting designer

Location: Brooklyn

Current projects: Our latest project is the Twin Vise, which is a new iteration of a light that launched last spring. It’s these two hand-blown glass globes that are held in place with a metal infrastructure. The “twin” bit is that, in turning it from one globe to two, it’s actually sharing an infrastructure and it looks like a twinning crystal or a splitting cell. I’m very excited about it.

Mission: To make things that people would want to keep around for a while. I am very influenced in how I approach objects by my grandmother. She collected a lot of things, and it didn’t quite matter whether they were contemporary or older; she just put them all together in her house and they looked amazing. I think about how happy I am now to have a few of her things, and I’m very aware of how old these objects are but in what good condition they’re in. So I want to create things that are well made enough that they could be passed down to grandchildren, and that are timeless enough that a grandchild would even want them.

BecBrittain-QA-2.jpgThe Vise pendant (above) was released last spring. Brittain recently developed it into a new iteration called Twin Vise (below).

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When did you decide that you wanted to be a designer? I came from a family of makers, and I always knew I was going to be some sort of maker. It went from maybe being a fashion designer to maybe being a product designer to architecture—there was a winding road. It was when I started working in metal for a hardware company that I realized that I really love metal, and that was a guiding force.

Also, working at Lindey Adelman’s was really helpful, to see her business model and experience making things to order. Making small things and being able to concentrate on them—essentially, being able to do product design while side-stepping the mass-production element of it—that’s what led me to doing this, to doing small production in metal and to dealing with light.

Education: I started out at Parsons, but I left there after a couple of years because it wasn’t a good fit. Instead I got a philosophy degree at NYU, and then I got an architecture degree at the Architectural Association in London.

First design job: Well, I worked for an interior designer all through my undergrad years. But my first graduated, adult job was working for the architecture firm Work AC as a project designer. I was on a project for Anthropologie; they wanted a new, crazy concept and were trying to refresh the brand, so that was my project for a year.

Who is your design hero? I’m going to go with the Dutch artist Madelon Vriesendrop. She’s just really great. She doesn’t take it all too seriously, but she’s a smart cookie.

BecBrittain-QA-4.jpgInside Brittain’s Brooklyn studio

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This Game we Play

Voici le nouveau travail de Franck Bohbot, un photographe français vivant à New York. Avec The Game We Play, il s’amuse à recenser les terrains de basket-ball et de street-ball qui se trouvent dans la ville, permettant de dévoiler différentes ambiances. Une belle série à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Victory Gardens: Vancouver’s full-service urban gardening firm takes city-dwellers from seeds to salads on rooftops, balconies and patios

Victory Gardens


Notions and perceptions revolving around food have changed drastically in recent years. As organic options become the norm for many, the origin and social and environmental impact of food continues to become a greater concern—with many consumers seeking a greater role in the…

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Office building by Agence Jouin Manku has dragon-like scales

Curving iridescent structures resembling the scaled bodies of a pair of dragons slump over the top of this new wing created by French studio Agence Jouin Manku at an office campus outside Paris (+ slideshow).

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

Agence Jouin Manku was asked to design a new amenities wing for the headquarters of Société Foncière Lyonnaise, France’s oldest property company, which is housed within a converted 1920s factory building on the banks of the Seine in Boulogne-Billancourt.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

Entitled In/Out, the new wing comprises a curving three-storey building that revolves around a tube-shaped concrete tower. Blocks extend out from both sides of the tower and are both topped with curving structures clad with shimmering stainless-steel shingles.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

“The roof is designed like a shell made of scales,” Aude Planterose of Agence Jouin Manku told Dezeen. “We can’t ignore the reference to an animal; it could be a beetle or a dragon.”

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The iridescent tiles appear green when viewed straight on, but change colour from blue to purple when viewed at an angle.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

“The building changes each time that you look at it,” said Planterose. “These tiles are perfect for facade or roof, and it is actually the same technique used for the slate tiles you find on all Parisian rooftops.”

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

Below the tiles, the glazed exterior walls are screened with vertical timber slats that vary in density depending of the lighting requirements of the rooms behind, which include cafe and restaurant facilities for the offices, as well as new boardrooms and a 200-seat auditorium.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

A staircase connecting the floors of both blocks is contained within the central concrete tower, while a footbridge creates a link between the new and old buildings at first-floor level.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

Agence Jouin Manku also renovated the lobby of the original building, adding new seating areas and a large oval reception deck.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

This space leads through to a courtyard, where the architects have constructed a glazed pavilion supported by a lattice of branch-like wooden beams that meets the ground at only one point.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

Photography is by Thierry Lewenberg-Sturm.

Here’s a project description from Jouin Manku:


IN/OUT by Agence Jouin Manku

An office “campus”, for Société Foncière Lyonnaise, an ambitious architectural project including the transformation of the lobby with the construction of a glass microarchitecture as well as the creation of a new wing.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

80 years of history

Built in 1927 by the architect Adolphe Bocage, this building, a landmark of the golden age of industry, had long been used to produce telephone control units. Located on the banks of the Seine, the site, with nearly 7 acres and a 6-storey building, used to hold the lMT society (le Matériel Téléphonique). The building soon became a symbol of industrial innovation.

The site had been designed in keeping with the great principles of the Modern Movement in architecture using simple geometrical shapes, and reinforced concrete. In 1976, Thomson-CsF took control over lMT, who, at the time, employed 10 000 people.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

In 1988, seventy years after its construction, Thomson Multimedia transformed the factory into offices and set up its headquarters in the building, until 2009. SFL then decided to restructure the building, aiming for it to become a benchmark in the tertiary sector, focusing on innovation as well as on wellbeing at work. It is this ambitious decision that gave birth to the major IN/OUT project.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The site’s new organisation

After our first commission to design a series of spaces for the Mandarin Oriental hotel in Paris, Société Foncière Lyonnaise (SFL), has asked us once again to embark on another adventure. This time, they have commissioned us to design a new amenities wing of their ambitious In/Out office campus, a landmark office project that is re-defining work spaces in France which houses a cafe, restaurant, board rooms, an auditorium as well as various technical spaces and the lobby, with his pavilion, of the historical building.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The IN/OUT project involves an office campus of more than 387 500 square feet. It is located on a former industrial site in Boulogne, at the West of Paris, on the right bank of the Seine River. This factory, which used to manufacture telephone tools in the 1930s, underwent a complete rehabilitation done by DTACC Architecture, such as many industrial sites in Boulogne.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

Visitors enter the historical building and are welcomed into a large vast space similar to a hotel lobby. At the entrance lies a large oval desk that leads visitors to what used to be an exterior courtyard. In the courtyard one discovers a surprising micro-architecture: a glass pavilion that is held up by a series of intertwined and woven wood beams. An ethereal floating lattice which at one point swoops down and gently balances on the floor below on just one point. This new glass canopy in the central courtyard, creates a natural transition between the lobby of the historical building and the amenities wing.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

This new amenities wing is nearly 40 000 sq ft.including the interiors. This building was further developed in collaboration with the engineering office TESS for the structural elements and the skin of the building and with architectural agency DTACC for the technical development and architectural execution.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The amenities wing

Agence Jouin Manku has conceived the new amenities wing (nearly 40 000 sq ft.), as well as the interior design of the wing. The building has been further developed in collaboration with the engineering office TESS and DTACC. The new wing also holds a series of services and amenities, alongside the workspaces within the ‘Bocage’ building (thus completing the IN/OUT campus). The wing holds: a 103 seats cafe, a 462 seats restaurant, a 200 seats auditorium, as well as corporate board rooms, lounges, 2 large terraces and a fitness centre.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

A dynamic shape, symbol of an avant-garde building

How can workspaces in big companies be improved? What is missing? This interrogation has guided the design of the amenities wing. Agence Jouin Manku decided to create a very different atmosphere to complement the ‘Bocage’ building. This gives employees a healthy balance between formal and informal, as well as between work and play, an idea at the heart of the In/Out Campus.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The structure of the ‘Bocage’ building evokes nostalgia, professionalism and rigour. In contrast, the new wing has been conceived as a building of contemporary architecture, designed around the idea of movement and flow. Its shape has been made to create a series of intertwined spaces. The building is organised around the idea of passage: passing of people, light and air. It is also a place which evokes movement, production, action and dynamism.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The concrete heart: the centre of the building

The building is organised around a central tower, made of bush hammered concrete, which holds all vertical circulation. The choice to use concrete for the centre of the building was to create a coherence and dialogue with the neighbouring ‘Bocage’ building, which is made of the same material and clearly shows its original industrial character. Two wings revolve and wrap around the central tower, but they never meet. Their architectural lines are softer and each wing is a curved form, made of curved glass and vertical wood cladding. The spaces between the concrete centre and the wood wings are filled with glass, which allows light to penetrate almost everywhere in the building, vertically or horizontally.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

On the outside, the density of the vertical wood cladding increases and decreases, depending on its position, and which indoor space it corresponds to. The pattern starts out smoothly, then its texture, created by adding chamfers, changes. These edges catch light differently and create a sense of depth on the facade. Inside, the main materials are wood, bush hammered concrete, plaster and curved glass. The curved wood that wraps a large part of the interior adds to the sense of warmth, while the simple use of glass and concrete add a crisp modernity to the project. A footbridge connects the two buildings. This bridge, made of white painted steel and wood, makes access easy between the two buildings, and acts as a symbolic link betweenthe two architectural signatures, and the birth of a common project.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

An architecture inspired By nature: an inside out and outside in design

Inspired by the Saint-Cloud park, the Seine river and the lush nature just close to the site, the amenities pavilion has been designed to allow these elements to penetrate the building, as well as to create spaces that would allow one to enjoy the gardens and terraces, created as an extension of the building. The flowing shapes of the project recall the movements of nature. To underline this idea, the roof of the wing has been designed as a coloured envelope wrapping the building. The coloured stainless steel tiles were chosen for their particular iridescent character. In front view, the tiles are green, but their colour changes as the angle and light move. This gives the building a dynamic and always changing character, echoing the variations in the sky and sunlight.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The insides

The interior design and furniture have been thought out as a continuation of the outside lines of the building. While the central concrete core holds the curved staircase that links the various levels of the building, each level opens out on spaces filled with light: simple yet warm spaces, spaces that open out on terraces and gardens, as well as spaces that invite one to discover the next room. The circulation is therefore fluid, and the connection between each space is harmonious. Employees can thus enjoy each space, and will always be invited to discover the next one.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The transformation of the lobby: a micro architecture at the heart of the ‘Bocage’ building

On the outside, the ‘Bocage’ building still looks like an industrial fortress from the 1930s. Yet inside, gently perched in the space of the old atrium, Agence Jouin Manku has designed a ‘soft’ space, filled with light, which is one of their trademarks.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

Visitors enter the building and are welcomed into a vast space, similar to a hotel lobby. at the entrance lies a large oval desk, which leads visitors to what used to be an indoor atrium. In the newly created courtyard, one discovers a surprising micro-architecture: a glass canopy, held up by a series of intertwined wood beams, an ethereal floating lattice, which at one point swoops down and gently balances above the floor.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

This structural frame was a complex element that required the expertise of TESS, an engineering firm with whom Agence Jouin Manku regularly works.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

This lobby is the new heart of the ‘Bocage’ building. It is a central meeting point between different spaces. It also invites visitors or employees to have a break. Both simple in its design and complex in its realisation, the glass pavilion foretells the bold amenities wing designed by the agence Jouin Manku.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

The vertical circulation spaces

The other major architectural work is the transformation of the office spaces, especially through the vertical circulation spaces and service points, which now stand on the inside corners of the courtyard.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

This has created new circulation spaces around the lobby. In the upper floors, natural light now floods largely into the workspaces. Corridors and stairs are highlighted by a strong yellow colour. This creates a contrast with the rest of the building and encourages one to use the stairs as well as the elevators.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku

Conclusion

IN/OUT is an ambitious architectural project by DTaCC architecture and agence Jouin Manku; together, they created two unique buildings for SFL. The campus offers a new approach to workspace based on the ideas of sharing, wellbeing and collective activities. The renovation and construction have greatly improved the campus’ amenities, for the benefit of the future users. This project also transforms a typical scenery of the Seine river.

Tertiary campus IN/OUT in Boulogne Billancourt by Jouin Manku
Site plan – click for larger image

The post Office building by Agence Jouin Manku
has dragon-like scales
appeared first on Dezeen.

AU 2013 Exhibition Hall: Contour Design’s RollerMouse for Multiple-Monitor CAD Jockeys

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This year’s Autodesk University was the largest we’d attended, with around 10,000 bodies swarming through the enormous Exhibition Hall. But unlike in previous years, where we saw tons of neat physical gizmos—like Zebra Imaging’s crazy holographic prints, the affordable but powerful ShopBot Desktop CNC mill or unusual interface devices like Leonar3Do’s “Bird” 3D mouse—this year the bulk of the Hall was either things we’d previously covered, or software. Better content management software and rendering plug-ins do not a sexy blog post make, so we combed the floor seeking things that we could touch and feel.

Our criteria for finding physically-designed objects meant the pickings in the vast Hall were slim, but we did find the very unusual RollerMouse from Contour Design. Designed specifically for traders and CAD users with multiple-monitor set-ups, the RollerMouse is intended to increase efficiency and speed while reducing or preventing repetitive stress injuries. Have a look:

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Featherlight Pocket Watch

The latest addition to ZIIIRO’s collection of modern timepieces is this sleek pocket watch or stylish pendant accessory, depending on how you use it. Unlike other heavy pocket watches, the aluminum Titan is ultra-lightweight making it easy to carry whether its in your pocket or around your neck!  Time is read from the outer hour ring of 12 segments and inner minute ring of 60 segments. Available in 5 colors of azure, chrome, purple, black and cherry. Get it here!

Designer: ZIIIRO


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!
(Featherlight Pocket Watch was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. The Modern Man’s Pocket Watch
  2. Keychain Pocket Watch by Francisco Cubides
  3. Is that a dinghy in your pocket?


    



The Superior Labor Dog Coin

La giapponese The Superior Labor produce accessori fantastici come questo Dog Coin. Lo trovate sempre e comunque qui.

The Superior Labor Dog Coin

Isaora x Ghostly Insulated Shirt

Sbavo per questa Ghostly Insulated Shirt di Isaora. Made in Italy, 100% water-resistant, pettinatissima.

Isaora x Ghostly Insulated Shirt