Haworth Tompkins transforms an old brick building for the Donmar Warehouse

Stirling Prize-winner Haworth Tompkins has revamped a former warehouse to create rehearsal and office spaces for one of London’s most important theatre companies (+ slideshow).

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins
Photograph by Valerie Bennett

Haworth Tompkins – which was awarded the UK’s most important architecture prize for its redesign of the Liverpool Everyman theatre – was approached by the Donmar Warehouse to create a new facility for rehearsals, education and admin.



The not-for-profit contemporary theatre company had acquired a former warehouse on Dryden Street, close to its original theatre in Covent Garden. Piecemeal development over the years had left behind a complicated structure, but the architects were given free rein to remove walls and floors where necessary.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

“The challenge was to design a convivial and creative professional working environment within the constraints of a limited budget and a tightly enclosed site,” said the firm.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

The renovation hinges around a brightly coloured staircase that jerks up through the centre of the four-storey-high building, and also down into a sizeable basement.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

Described by Haworth Tompkins as “the warm heart of the building”, the wooden staircase has been hand painted in vivid shades of red, blue and purple by artist Antoni Malinowski – who previously collaborated with the firm on the Everyman, as well as for the renovation of the Chichester Festival Theatre.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

The rest of the interior was kept as raw as possible. The old brickwork and its various infills are left exposed throughout, while visible ceiling beams present their original now-peeling paintwork.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

“The personality of the historic architecture has been allowed to set the tone, with a provisional, loose-fit language of new additions setting up a fluid, adaptable relationship of new and old,” said the firm.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

“Materials added have been simple and straightforward – whitewashed plywood, painted timber beams and wall coverings, waxed mild steel – to complement the richly patinated texture of the found surfaces. The aim is very much for a benign occupation rather than an obliteration of the original fabric,” it added.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

The largest intervention was the addition of a double-height rehearsal space in the basement, of a similar size to the main stage at the Donmar. This was achieved by carving a void through the ground floor.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

The resulting space benefits from natural light, as a set of ground floor windows now functions as clerestory glazing.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

Most of the remaining ground floor was refurbished to create a green room facing out onto the street, as well as a practice room for musicians.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

The first floor became offices, while an education studio was created beneath the roof rafters on the second floor. The architects also found room to slot in an apartment for visiting artists in the attic.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

For furnishings, Haworth Tompkins worked with scenographer Lucy Osborne to create an interior intended to be reminiscent of a stage set.

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins

Photography is by Philip Vile, apart from where otherwise indicated.


Project credits:

Architect: Haworth Tompkins
Client: Donmar Warehouse
Contractor: 8Build
Structural engineer: Price & Myers
Services engineer: Skelly & Couch
Acoustic consultants: Gillieron Scott Acoustic Design
Quantity surveyor: Gardiner & Theobald and Jackson Coles
Theatre consultant: Charcoalblue
CDM coordinator: PFB Construction Management
Planning consultants: DP9
Artist: Antoni Malinowski
Scenographer: Lucy Osborne

Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins
Basement floor plan – click for larger image
Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins
First floor plan – click for larger image
Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins
Second floor plan – click for larger image
Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins
Third floor plan – click for larger image
Donmar Dryden Street by Haworth Tompkins
Section – click for larger image

The post Haworth Tompkins transforms an old brick
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K Studio

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{ 1. Houses pillow ; 2. Plants pillow ; 3. Triangles clutch ; 4. Balloons wall art ; 5. Scribbles pillow ; 6. Scribbles clutch }

Founded by mother/daughter team Shelly and Mary Klein, K Studio, sells beautiful products spanning from accessories to pillows, toys and even ceramics that features Shelly’s delicate line art. Her play with lines and patterns in her work is phenomenal and we especially love the richly evocative characters in her pieces. 

.. K Studio

Avengers – Age of Ultron Trailer [Kids Lip Dub] ( Video )

Marvel’s Third Trailer for ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’ with sounds effects made by..(Read…)

This Vacuum Sucks!

In the best way! As you might’ve guessed from the name, Not Only Dust is a handheld vacuum solution for picking up more than fine particles. Most mini-vacs get larger debris stuck in the mouth opening, but this features a dual compartment design that collects and stores big and small fragments separately without obstructing air-flow. Better yet, it’s reversible and can be used as a dustpan for even larger debris.

Designer: Sung Hwan Cho


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!
(This Vacuum Sucks! was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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  1. This Vacuum Sucks… in a Good Way!
  2. This sucks in the best way…
  3. This pen sucks…



Make No Mistake

Nobody’s perfect… unless they have a Modi-Roller! This cleverly designed white-out pen is a step above the rest with its variable width applicator. No matter your text or handwriting size, it will cover up your flubs with precision each time. Simply slide the sizing mechanism, cover-up, and pretend like it never happened!

Designer: Younghoo Kim


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!
(Make No Mistake was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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The Japanese Cat Island

Sur l’île japonaise d’Aoshima, plus d’une centaine de félins ont trouvé refuge dans les maisons abandonnées du village de pêcheurs. Ces chats, six fois plus nombreux que les humains, attirent beaucoup de touriste qui ont, logiquement, baptisé ce lieu, « L’île aux chats ».

A cat struts along an alley on Aoshima Island in the Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
A cat jumps off a piano in the music room of a derelict school on Aoshima Island in the Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
A cat leaps at the photographer to snatch his lunch snack on Aoshima Island in the Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
A local woman shoos away cats as she leaves her house on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
Cats walk along the embankment as a man fishes on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
A cat carries a fish on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
Cats surround a local woman on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
Cats beg for food on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
Village nurse and Ozu city official Atsuko Ogata holds a cat on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
Cats beg for food on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
Cats surround people as they get off a boat at the harbour on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
Cats sit on a wall overlooking the sea on Aoshima Island in Ehime prefecture in southern Japan
Cats crowd the harbour on Aoshima Island in the Ehime prefecture in southern Japan

Treasures of Zakynthos – A Timelapse Film

Réalisé par le vidéaste polonais Maciej Tomków, « Treasures of Zakynthos » est un film achevé en intégralité en utilisant la technique du timelapse dans les plus belles régions de l’île grecque Zakynthos. 1220 heures de travail, 2000kms parcourus sur l’île et 28 jours de tournage ont été nécessaires à sa réalisation.

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Arik Levy's colourful chairs for TON have legs that split in two

Paris-based designer Arik Levy will present a seating range supported by split wooden legs in Milan next month (+ slideshow).

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Levy has used Czech furniture brand TON‘s wood-bending technology to create a chair, a barstool, an armchair and a lounge chair.



Each of the items in his Split collection feature sections of wood that are divided in two and then bent in different directions – a new development for TON.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

“All the products from this family were born from just one idea, the idea of bending – not in the way it is usually used, but to give it a new shape,” said Levy. “In this case, the wood is divided into two parts and each part is bent in a different direction.”

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

Levy’s chairs are split at the top of each leg. At the back, the outer half extends up to support the backrest while the inner portion curves under the seat.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

The front legs also help to carry the seat in the same way, though their forward-facing verticals stop under the horizontal surface.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

Levy also added coloured gradients to the standard versions of his chairs, which become lighter towards the centre and are applied by spraying a stain onto the furniture pieces.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

He chose a palette influenced by gradients found in nature, such as sunrise, sunset, leaves and the sea.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

“I wondered about what I could give to a chair apart from its shape,” said the designer. “Therefore I chose to highlight the gradient colour.”

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

To bend the sections of beech or ash, squared lengths are steamed in special vats for several hours.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

The softened wood is then placed into metal forms and a flange is attached, placing pressure on the wood so it takes the shape of the mould while it cools.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

Bent sections are dried and air-conditioned for several weeks, then finished with oil, stain or lacquer.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

This technique was developed in 1856 by Michael Thonet, who used it to create the No 14 chair – still a staple in cafes worldwide.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

Three of Thonet’s factories in the Czech Republic still produce furniture using similar methods today.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

The facility at Bystřice pod Hostýnem became a national enterprise after the second world war and changed its name in 1994 to TON – an abbreviation of Továrna na Ohýbaný Nábytek (Factory of Bent Furniture).

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

The Split collection will be presented at this year’s Salone del Mobile furniture fair in Milan, Hall 12 Stand C05, from 14 to 19 April.

Split furniture collection by Arik Levy

Japanese studio Nendo also designed a collection of furniture with components that look like they’re peeled away from wooden stems.

The post Arik Levy’s colourful chairs for TON
have legs that split in two
appeared first on Dezeen.

Jerry Springer, Harold Ford Jr. and the Designer Who Dressed Bryant Gumbel

lunch at michaelsWe missed Sigourney Weaver by a day. Oh well. As much as we felt like heading to the beach today, the siren’s call of Michael’s beckoned, so we made our way to 55th and Fifth for our weekly Wednesday lunch. The scene was bustling with a smattering of famous faces (Jerry Springer and Harold Ford Jr.) among the media mavens and everything was decidedly more upbeat than it’s been all winter. It turns out spring may actually happen after all.

Diane Clehane and Joseph Abboud

Diane Clehane and Joseph Abboud

I was joined today by legendary menswear designer Joseph Abboud, who I first met several years ago when I was a fledgling reporter at People. I had been given, as my first assignment, the then-impossible task of landing an interview with Bryant Gumbel, who was not exactly feeling warm and fuzzy towards reporters at the time. After not having much success getting Bryant on the phone, I turned to calling his friends, Joseph among them. I had pretty much resigned myself to having to turn in a write-around when Joseph came to the rescue. After our chat, he told me he’d suggest that Bryant talk to me. And voilà ! I got the story.

When our mutual friend Judy Twersky suggested we all get together for lunch, I jumped at the chance, since it’s been years since I’ve seen Joseph. He arrived at the stroke of noon, looking as dapper as ever in a suit of his own design (gorgeous grey Italian cashmere) and it was as if we’d just spoken last week. “Italians do everything beautifully,” he said when I complimented him. “Their country is beautiful, the people are beautiful, the food is a amazing, but God wanted to prove they’re not divine, so they can’t sew on a button,” he told me with a laugh. “With our Italian partners we had a big problem with the buttons.” I knew we’d have plenty to talk about.

Joseph has always been incredibly warm and approachable — not exactly the qualities you find in abundance in the fashion business. A true gentleman, he’s a great supporter of fashion and the industry has returned the favor in kind. He was the first to be named Menswear Designer of the Year for two consecutive years by the Council of Fashion Designers (CFDA). On March 27, he’ll unveil his new flagship store on Madison Avenue, which will feature the Joseph Abboud Collection, as well as custom clothing in Zegna and Loro Piana fabrics, which will be made in his own factory in New Bedford, Massachusetts. “It’s an American Savile Row,” he told me. “This one of the most exciting times ever to be in the fashion industry.” It certainly is for Joseph. Having had his brand go through several incarnations (“In our world, survival is success”), he is now happily part of Men’s Wearhouse and couldn’t be happier. “A public company with a strategic vision for the future is the best place for a brand instead of with investment bankers who use you as a stock to trade.”

I was fascinated to learn that the menswear business is experiencing something of a renaissance, thanks to twentysomethings who’ve watched their fathers constantly underdress. “These guys are dressing up not because they need to, but because they want to.” With his decades in the business, Joseph says, “It’s about credibility and young thinking, but not about being young. The 25-year-old and the 55-year-old both need to know the same things about fashion.” When it comes to tapping into what the younger customers want, he laughingly told me that his two twentysomething daughters and their boyfriends provide an in-house focus group for any and all things related to millennials. “I get instant feedback. They’re plugged into everything!”

The company is relying heavily on television commercials (there’s also a social media campaign and blog) to promote the Joseph Abboud brand featuring Joseph, but he dismisses the notion that he’s a celebrity to the customer. In fact, he believes the whole concept of dressing celebrities has become “so diffuse” and, in menswear at least, doesn’t have the same impact it once did. He should know. Joseph was first introduced to a mass audience when he dressed Bryant Gumbel for the Olympics in 1988. (He dressed him for many years after that and for the record, thinks the BMW commercial Bryant did with his former “Today” show co-host Katie Couric, lampooning their cluelessness about the Internet in 1994, was very well done. “They both look great!”) Then Joseph went on to dress virtually every NFL sportscaster, including Bob Costas for fourteen years which, in turn, helped make him the go-to label for well-dressed men all over the country. He rightly believes it takes a lot more to earn customer loyalty these days. “There’s still a lot of nineties thinking around, but things have changed. The customer is very smart and wants to be treated with respect. It’s more about great service and a great product now.”

So perhaps there’s no better messenger than the designer himself to spread the word on his television show. Having done a few pilots for PBS year ago, Joseph told me he’s more focused on his brand, but he might be interested in doing a show for “real guys with information that applies to their real life,” if the right opportunity were to come along. He understands that the show would have to appeal to women, too. “Because women have a big influence on the way the men in their lives dress.” See, I told you he was a very smart man.

Here’s the rundown on today’s crowd:

1. Producer Freddie Gershon

2. PR maven Maury Rogoff (sporting her signature stilettos) and fashionista Mickey Ateyeh

3. Casting director extraordinaire Bonnie Timmerman

4. Discovery ID’s Henry Schleiff and my Greenwich neighbor Jerry Springer

5. The early show: Harold Ford; Second seating: agent Wayne Kabak

6. Harold Holzer and Spencer Sharp

7. Marilyn Crawford

8. Producer John Hart

9. Michael Peterson (brother of Holly) and Michael Carlisle

11.  Author Pamela Keogh (long time no see!) and Adam Pincus enjoying their burgers

12. Moira Forbes

14. Brett Schenck of Hart Schaffner Marx, who stopped by our table to say hello to Joseph

15. Peter Price

16. Neil Lasher

17. Scott Singer

18. LAK PR CEO’s Lisa Linden and political consultant Eldin Villafane

20. Producer Joan Gelman

22. Aliya Sahari

23. Attorney Larry Meyer

24. Beverly Camhe

25. Noble Smith — What a great name!

27. Joseph Abboud, Judy Twersky and yours truly

81. Vogue‘s Ashley McDermott

Diane Clehane is a FishbowlNY contributor. Follow her on Twitter @DianeClehane. Send comments and corrections on this column to LUNCH at MEDIABISTRO dot COM.

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Spiral Staircase Above a Pool in a Singaporean Home

HYLA Architects a rénové l’intérieur d’une maison de 3 étages située à Singapour. Ils ont placé un magnifique escalier en colimaçon au-dessus d’une piscine dans un patio rempli de plantes vertes et relié par un pont aux pièces d’à côté. Pour le reste de la maison, ils ont cherché à optimiser l’espace par la lumière et à apporter des touches de bois.

Photos by Derek Swalwell.

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