Your Brain On MDMA

What does MDMA actually do to your brain?..(Read…)

Carpet Turned Into Sofa

La designer italien Alessandro Isola a imaginé cette étonnante assise, dont la structure est recouverte par un grand tapis. C’est à l’aide de rembourrage que le designer a donné forme à ce sofa et a installé une bibliothèque aux extrémités pour une dimension encore plus fonctionnelle et décorative. À découvrir dans l’article.

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The golden age is over for public buildings in Britain, says Stirling Prize winner

Everyman Theatre, Liverpool by Haworth Tompkins

News: architects in the UK are being “cut to the bone” by bureaucracy says architect Steve Tompkins, whose firm won the RIBA Stirling Prize last night for the Liverpool Everyman Theatre (+ interview).

Haworth Tompkins’ Everyman Theatre was named the best new building in Britain, beating works by leading architects including Zaha Hadid, RIBA Gold Medal winners O’Donnell and Tuomey, and Renzo Piano.



Speaking to Dezeen after the ceremony at the Royal Institute of British Architects last night, Tompkins said that architects in Britain were under pressure to “dumb down” to meet the demands of clients and the “depressing” procurement system in the UK.

Steve Tompkins portrait
Steve Tompkins

“There’s so much pressure to speed up and dumb down in terms of the way architects are being asked to work and we’ve always tried to resist that as a practice. Our practice is very much craft based and time based. We can’t do what we do quickly,” he told Dezeen.

“The whole procurement industry in the UK sometimes feels very depressing. It feels like there’s more and more of a schism between the craft of the architects and the voice of the client.”

Tompkins said the current system for commissioning public buildings in Britain was “unsustainable” and would create a profession of “exhausted and demoralised” architects.

“There’s so many interfaces of bureaucracy and so many hurdles and tasks to half design the building before you get the commission. It feels very exhausting and demoralising to be doing that constantly and also incredibly wasteful of collective resources in the profession.”

Liverpool Everyman Theatre Haworth Tompkins_Stirling Prize 2014_dezeen

“The quality of the work what you can do once you get a commission suffers because you spent all of your resources trying to get the job,” he said. “Anybody that’s trying to do serious thoughtful work is being asked to produce images too quickly and being cut to the bone to an extent one can’t think enough about a job.”

The Everyman in Liverpool was Haworth Tompkins’ first new-build theatre project. The firm has previously completed the refurbishment work for the Young Vic theatre in London’s Waterloo area, and is currently responsible for the ongoing extension and refurbishment of Denys Lasdun’s National Theatre on the Southbank.

Tompkins said he was happy to be developing a reputation as a theatre specialist.

“They are such brilliant projects to work on. You tend to find a calibre of client that is informed, passionate, practical, emotional intelligent, and instinctively collaborative,” Tompkins told Dezeen.

The Everyman Theatre in Liverpool

“Plus the fact that they’re public buildings, they have cache and often they have a budget – all of those things mean that it’s a nice place to be in.”

But he said that the firm had been “lucky” to be building during a period of heavy public spending, and was now having to look further afield for future projects, as funding in the UK dries up.

Among the countries it is currently working in are New Zealand and Lebanon.

“We were so lucky to catch the wave with the Royal Court and through that whole surge of publicly funded theatres,” he said. “We were very much at the right place at the right time and I think there’s less of an appetite now.”

“I hope the cache and the profile from the award will find us other channels for us to do what we want to do. I hope it doesn’t change the way we work.”

Everyman Theatre in Liverpool by Haworth Tompkins

Read the edited transcript from our interview with Steve Tompkins:


Anna Winston: Congratulations.

Steve Tompkins: Thank you, it’s really amazing, really amazing. Unexpected, of course you can never predict with a shortlist like that which way it’s going to go, so. We had no fixed expectation at all but now we’ve won it’s just extraordinary, it’s an extraordinary feeling.

Anna Winston: Did you have any idea that this was a project that was going to win you prizes when you started? Was that an aspiration?

Steve Tompkins: You can never try and predict that stuff but the building has had an incredibly happy trajectory. It’s been one of those projects where every part of the team has reinforced another part and quite quickly you establish, you know, a really strong relationship of trust and candour. That’s infectious on a project. I think it has brought the best out in everybody.

Anna Winston: It very easily could have gone wrong – the original building was very loved.

Steve Tompkins: Yes. There was a lot of jeopardy in the project. But it’s also a spur to take enough risk to bust through it and get to something which feels genuinely new but also has the capacity to evoke the quality of the old building. It’s felt like a difficult thing to pull off. It feels like a balance to strike and I think it’s taken all of our resources to try and make that look easy.

The Everyman Theatre in Liverpool

Anna Winston: You’re getting a bit of a reputation for doing theatre buildings…

Steve Tompkins: We are and I hope it continues because they are such brilliant projects to work on. You tend to find a calibre of client that is informed, passionate, practical, emotional intelligent, and instinctively collaborative. All of those things are a gift to an architect who likes to work in the way we do. Plus the fact that they’re public buildings and they have cache and often they have a budget – all of those things mean that it’s a nice place to be in. Having said that, the Everyman is the first new build we’ve done in that field, which was an easy thing for us to forget, let alone anyone else.

Anna Winston: The National Theatre is an extension, really, isn’t it?

Steve Tompkins: The National is really very much a labour of love but also very much a duty of care, this is a very delicate important building. And like the Everyman, those physical manifestations have to pay honour to the history of the National but also to have the courage, and to an extent the insouciance, to play a little with it, because that’s the only way you’ll move forward, but in a way that one hopes Lasdun would support. If its too slavish, or too deferential it would be pointless.

The National as an artefact is infinitely more important and rightly it has a constituency of protectors and apologists, which again rightly need to be convinced about what’s happening. But that’s just the nature of the beast and as I say you have to go at that with a degree of courage otherwise you’re lost.

Everyman Theatre

Anna Winston: Are you considering any more theatre projects in the UK or are you having to look further afield now?

Steve Tompkins: The latter. We’re definitely having to look further afield. We’re doing some work in Christchurch at the moment at the earthquake centre with the theatre there. We’ve been having some other conversations further afield. I’ve just come back from Jordan where I’ve been to talking to some Arab practitioners often in very vulnerable delicate situations. In a way that’s a social and intellectual pro-bono exercise, rather than looking for the next big project, but I think it all adds up to a body of research which bears fruit in unexpected ways and at unexpected times.

Anna Winston: Do you think the golden age of public building is over for now?

Steve Tompkins: I think that’s probably right. I think certainly with the public National Lottery funding we were so lucky to catch the wave with the Royal Court and through that whole surge of publicly funded theatres. We were very much at the right place at the right time and I think there’s less of an appetite now. That’s partly because the work has been done for this generation, and someone doesn’t want to keep flogging a dead horse with jobs that don’t need doing. But there’s a lot of work that can be extrapolated out of the work we’ve been doing in the UK and I think as a practice we probably feel a level of readiness and maturity to tackle that in a way we probably wouldn’t have done five years ago. Winning the Stirling Prize is probably not unhelpful in that respect.

Anna Winston: Do you think that the win is going to change the kind of clients that approach you?

Steve Tompkins: At the moment, in the heat of the moment, it just feels like the most lovely endorsement of the way that we have been working. There’s so much pressure to speed up and dumb down in terms of the way architects are being asked to work and we’ve always tried to resist that as a practice. Our practice is very much craft based and time based. We can’t do what we do quickly, but what we can do is keep learning. So in a way I hope the cache and the profile from the award will find us other channels for us to do what we want to do. I hope it doesn’t change the way we work.

The Everyman Theatre in Liverpool by Haworth Tompkins

Anna Winston: Where do you think that pressure comes from – to be faster and produce more and more?

Steve Tompkins: The whole procurement industry in the UK sometimes feels very depressing to us. It feels like there’s more and more of a schism between the craft of the architects and the voice of the client that actually will express the need of the building. There’s so many interfaces of bureaucracy and so many hurdles and tasks to half design the building before you get the commission. It feels very exhausting and demoralising to be doing that constantly and also incredibly wasteful of collective resources in the profession. It seems to me like it’s a limited amount of time that that’s sustainable before we all become exhausted and demoralised, and the quality of the work that you can do once you get a commission suffers because you spent all of your resources trying to get the job.

Anna Winston: Have you seen that happen elsewhere?

Steve Tompkins: Well it’s certainly happening to us! So we speak from personal and bitter experience but I’m sure our experiences are by no means unique. Anybody that’s trying to do serious thoughtful work is being asked to produce images too quickly and being cut to the bone to an extent one can’t think enough about a job. That does feel difficult and it feels systematically problematic.

The post The golden age is over for public buildings
in Britain, says Stirling Prize winner
appeared first on Dezeen.

Bibliotheque is ten

To mark its tenth anniversary, design studio Bibliothèque has curated a three-day exhibition including a reading room of the partners’ favourite books, rare print items and an installation which remixes its output to date

Tim Beard, Mason Wells (who had previously worked together at North) and Jonathan Jeffrey (ex-Farrow) formed Bibliothèque in 2004. CR was one of the first to report on their work and ideas for the future with a major feature in our March 2004 issue. For the cover, Bibliothèque rigged up a camera on the ceiling of their studio to create a tiled image of the space

 

Since then, they have gone on to work for clients including Paul Smith, The Design Museum, Nike, Adidas, Google, the V&A and Vitsoe, with whom they have a longstanding relationship.

Some of the work produced for these clients is featured in Reset, described as a installation which reinterprets the studio’s work and celebrating “the past 10 years in anticipation of the next 10”. Visitors to the installation, which is at The Hoxton Arches from October 17 to 19, caninteract with the piece using ‘alarm’ style push buttons mounted on the wall of the gallery

 

Also featured in the show is Bibliothèque’s Bibliothèque, described as “a book shop of the studio’s curated reading list from Artwords, some hard to find publications, and a selection of rarities from the studio’s collection”. Plus, there will be coffee provided by Climpson & Sons.

The event is at Hoxton Arches, Arch 402 Cremer Street, London E2 8HD. More details here

 

 

 

Will you be getting wood at D&AD next year?

D&AD has introduced two new pencils to its awards line-up for 2015: wood and graphite. They will replace the old In Book and Nomination designations

D&AD’s awards system has always been somewhat confusing for the uninitiated. Whereas other systems stick to gold, silver and bronze, D&AD’s silvers were actually yellow and its golds, black.

In addition, work selected for inclusion in the annual (so-called In Book) was itself deemed to be award-winning, as was work which received the further accolade of being nominated for a pencil – whether yellow or black.

In an attempt to make things clearer, for 2015 D&AD is introducing a wood pencill and a graphite one, so if you get in the annual you’ll also receive a trophy.

So, just to be clear, In Book is wood, Nominated is graphite, silver is yellow, gold is black and, er, white is white. And the President’s Awards is gold. Clear? Well, there isn’t a clear… yet.

This Week in Aerial Imagery: Top-Down Typography and Killer Whalewatching

AerialBold-NOAA.jpgL: ABC Dataset Samples; R: Photo credit: NOAA, Vancouver Aquarium.

We’ve long been enamored with the Eames’ Powers of Ten short film, which is as much an introduction to aerial photography as it is to the math behind astronomy and biology. Just as everyone now takes beautiful images (and the retina displays to view them on) for granted, there is also a sense in which we are collectively GPS-enabled: After all, digital cartography is perhaps the most practical application of constant connectivity, and we can thank one company for the ability to zoom out to god’s-(or satellites’-)eye view with a pinch of the fingers.

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Benedikt Groß & Joey Lee take it even further (if not farther) with Aerial Bold, the “first map and typeface of the earth.”

The project is literally about “reading” the earth for letterforms, or alphabet shapes, “written” into the topology of buildings, roads, rivers, trees, and lakes. To do this, we will traverse the entire planet’s worth of satellite imagery and develop the tools and methods necessary to map these features hiding in plain sight.

The entire letterform database will be made available as a “usable” dataset for any of your art/design/science/textual projects and selected letterforms will be made into a truetype/opentype font format that can be imported to your favorite word processor.

(more…)

Pet Vision

Pet cameras make up for candid home videos, and adding to the brigade is the Gori. What makes this one different from the existing lot of devices is that its got a leash integrated into the design. A very wise integration if you ask us. It helps take videos while you walk your pet and when away too. Just place it in its cradle and its ready to use.

Designers: Chan Hong Park, Hyunwoo Jang and Ga-ryeong Seo


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(Pet Vision was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Miniature Wire Bonsai Trees

Avec une extrême précision l’artiste Ken To nous présente une série de bonsaï miniatures réalisés à l’aide de fil de fer uniquement. Un travail de tissage et de torsion, que l’artiste n’hésite pas à combiner avec des fils dorés et rouilles afin de varier l’esthétique de ses sculptures. Plus de détails dans la suite.

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Job of the week: senior design manager at Selfridges

Job of the week: senior design manager at Selfridges

This week’s job of the week on Dezeen Jobs is for a senior design manager at Selfridges, whose flagship store on London’s Oxford Street is pictured. Visit the ad for full details or browse other architecture and design opportunities on Dezeen Jobs.

The post Job of the week: senior design manager
at Selfridges
appeared first on Dezeen.

Wo Hing General Store Identity

Le studio Manual, basé à San Francisco, a pensé tout une identité pour Wo Hing General Store : un restaurant vietnamien situé au milieu du Mission District. Le logo et le visuel représentent des noodles passées au scanner pour produire un effet de monochrome bleu et négatif inspiré des cyanotypes. Le néon du restaurant a été conçu avec de l’encre électroluminescente.

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