A Truck Sculpture Made of Reflective Steel Disks

« Transit » est une sculpture de l’artiste Valay Shende, basé à Mumbai, qui a représenté un camion grandeur nature entièrement fait de billes en inox et qui transporte 22 personnes. Il a fallu 18 mois pour rassembler des milliers de billes entre elles et qui sont là pour symboliser un hommage aux drames des suicides dans les fermes indiennes, durant la dernière décennie. Un travail exposé au Mumbai City Museum ce mois-ci.

Images courtesy Sakshi Gallery.
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Curved Chapel On Lake

Un concours visant à développer l’architecture autour du lac Weerwater au coeur de la ville d’Almere, sur les bords d’Amsterdam, a récemment été lancé. René van Zuuk, l’un des lauréats, a conçu une structure incurvée appelé « Weerwater Chapel » qui se trouve sur la surface du lac, accessible via une longue promenade sur l’eau.

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David Adjaye to turn Johannesburg high-rise into plant-covered apartment block

Adjaye Associates has unveiled a proposal to transform a 1970s industrial building in Johannesburg into luxury apartments and a hotel, with balconies covered in plants (+ slideshow).

David Adjaye‘s firm – which has also just revealed a £600 million scheme for London’s Piccadilly – will overhaul the 17-storey building known as Hallmark House, in the South African city’s fast-developing Maboneng district.

David Adjaye to transform Johannesburg high-rise Hallmark House into luxury apartments

The 66-metre-high building was completed in the 1970s to house a growing diamond polishing industry. It will now accommodate apartments, as well as a hotel, shops and unspecified cultural facilities.

According to the firm, the modular structure of the building makes it flexible enough for a redesign that will make it fit for residential use. Visualisations show plants and trees added to most of its floors.



The Tanzanian-born British architect is currently working on several designs for the continent, including an office campus in Uganda. But Adjaye described the Hallmark House development as his “first big project in Southern Africa”.

“I think it will be a double take with a lot of people, because you will look at this building and think that it is in some other city, and then you will realise its in Johannesburg; it’s in Africa,” he said.

David Adjaye to transform Johannesburg high-rise Hallmark House into luxury apartments

The aim is to “combine an African aesthetic with a contemporary vision”.

“The transformation of Hallmark House is an opportunity to apply fresh thinking to urban community and to address changing lifestyles with a more fluid approach to the way we inhabit cities,” said Adjaye.



Set to complete in May 2016, the Hallmark House redevelopment is the first in a series of projects planned by property developer Propertuity for Maboneng – a developing industrial area on the eastern fringe of Johannesburg’s inner city.

The area, which became a suburb of Johannesburg in the early 1880s, is now home to art and design studios, galleries, shops and restaurants.

David Adjaye to transform Johannesburg high-rise Hallmark House into luxury apartments

Propertuity founder Jonathan Liebmann said the building’s former owner only agreed to sell after seeing Adjaye’s proposal, and claims that he will move into the building once it finished.

“I really believe in this project, I am truly going to to live there,” he said.

The post David Adjaye to turn Johannesburg high-rise
into plant-covered apartment block
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Bright Idea: Oak & Morrow on the Making of Its Light-Socket Projector

“What if we could make a projector that you could screw into a light socket?” That was the question posed during one of Oak & Morrow’s brainstorming sessions back in March 2014. Now, exactly one year later, the Netherlands-based design studio is funding the device, called Beam, on Kickstarter—and as of press time, had surpassed its $200,000 goal by more than $450,000, with eight days still to go.

The studio knew it had a good idea on its hands at that very first brainstorming session. “Everybody started sharing ideas on where they would place Beam in their house, and almost all of them were for a different location,” says Jeroen van Geel, Oak & Morrow’s cofounder and creative director. Not only that, but team members quickly dreamed up a variety of scenarios for using the device. “I, for example, wanted to use it in my bedroom as a smart projector and wake up with the weather forecast and latest news,” Van Geel says. “Someone else wanted it to project multiplayer games controlled with smartphones on his dining table. And so on. That’s when we decided that we needed a small computer and if-this-then-that rules.”

Controlled through an Apple or Android application, Beam is essentially an “Internet of things” device, working over WiFi or Bluetooth to make any surface interactive. The if-this-then-that rules allow users to mix and match conditions to result in a variety of actions, from playing personal video messages when a user walks into the room to waking up with the daily weather forecast.

Before developing that functionality, however, the Beam team first had to prove the idea’s technical validity, building out an initial prototype to operate with any e26 or e27 light socket—and making sure it would also work with a range of other light fittings via adapters. For the physical design of the product, the team strived for simplicity. “We immediately understood that if we want to create a new kind of projector that would be placed permanently in a prominent spot in your house, then it should look like a beautiful object, not a tech-thing,” Van Geel says. Indeed, having team members take the prototype device home and play with it proved a key part of the development process.

In its final form, Beam looks a bit like a lampshade, particularly when hanging from its fabric cable. Beyond aesthetic considerations , the team had to balance the need for space for internal components (including an LED Pico projector, LED lights, two speakers, an Android computer, a 1.3-GHZ dual-core processor, and 8GB of storage) as well as provide sufficient ventilation—goals accomplished through a widening head and a series of perforations around its circumference. “We decided to turn the ventilation into a design element as well,” Van Geel says. And since Beam screws into any light socket, essentially replacing an existing light fixture (if you’re not using its cotton cord), Oak & Morrow also added 12 LED lights to allow users to choose between projection or illumination, so that no functionality would be lost.

Early sketches of the projector
The Beam prototype

Another small but crucial detail was creating a slight flatness on one side of the projector, so that it could also be used on a desk or table. “When you put the element on a table it needs to project a good image on the wall, so the angle needed to be perfect,” Van Geel says.

On Kickstarter, the Founder and Early Bird reward levels are already sold out, but backers can still get their very own Beam projector before it hits shelves for $399—and help the Beam team hit their reach goals, where they promise to introduce additional storage, colorful cables, new housing colors and even colored LEDs. Add another $51 and you can get a hoodie, too. Pretty soon, it seems, we’ll all be able to project anywhere, limited only by the length of our power cords—and the thickness of our wallets.

This is the latest installment of In the Details, our weekly deep-dive into the making of a new product or project. Last week, we deconstructed Brendan Keim’s LED torch.

Bill Nye the Secular Guy

For the April issue of Men’s Journal, contributing editor Sean Woods spoke with Bill Nye.

The always cheerful TV personality recalled being inspired as a boy by the 1965 World’s Fair in New York. And when Woods asked if religion plays a role in the 59-year-old’s life, Nye answered:

“Not anymore. I was brought up Episcopal and I gave it a shot. I read the Bible twice when I was in my twenties. Then I realized the people who wrote it knew nothing of people in China. They knew nothing of first Americans. They were just playing the hand they were dealt. Also, women are not treated very well in the Bible. It made me skeptical of the whole thing. I gave it a shot, I really did. I’m pretty confident that humans made the whole thing up.”

“Seriously. But when it comes to “Is there a God or not?” I’m the first to point out you can’t know. I’m agnostic. You can’t prove there’s a God or not. I accept that. Some people find that very troubling. I find it empowering and cool.”

Via another Men’s Journal Q&A by Woods in 2012, Barney Frank started out by revealing the man who changed his life: Pope John Paul II.
 
[Photo of Nye backstage at Late Night with Seth Meyers via: billnye.com]

LGBT NBC Employees Set to Make St. Patrick’s Day History

OUTNBCUniversalThe group is known officially as OUT@NBCUniversal. And tomorrow, its members will be proudly sharing some history-marking photos on Facebook and Twitter.

That’s because OUT@ is the first openly LGBT group to march in New York’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Per a report by Religion News Service, not all are happy about this sanctioned development:

“Now there can be no doubt – Timothy Cardinal Dolan has been played for a sucker by the organizers of the 2015 New York City St. Patrick’s Day parade. He must step down as Grand Marshal,” Matthew Hennessey wrote at the website of Crisis magazine, a conservative Catholic media outlet.

“By personally leading the procession, he blesses the whole shameful affair,” he concluded.

This time last year, the Southern California arm of OUT@NBCUniversal was 10th anniversary at The Abbey in West Hollywood. The New York parade was first convened in March of 1762, or fourteen years before the U.S. Declaration of Independence.

[Image via: Facebook]

Buy: Glazed Apple Plate

Glazed Apple Plate


NYC-based artist and designer John Derian, best known for his nature and vintage-inspired découpage pieces, has collaborated with Parisian ceramics brand Astier de Villatte for a match made in heaven, as they both draw inspiration from “things forgotten……

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K0 Northern Lights by Sarpaneva Watches: Launched at Baselworld 2015, the glowing watch shows the phases of the moon

K0 Northern Lights by Sarpaneva Watches

Finnish folklore holds that the Northern Lights are caused by a fox sweeping its tail on the snowy slopes of the mountains. While of course now we know it not to be true, the allure of that mystical glow remains ethereal. Premiering at Baselworld……

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Link About It: Google Feud

Google Feud


A simple browser-based game is taking advantage of those unpredictable (or predictable, depending on what you search) Google search suggestions. The Family Feud-style game is pretty straightforward: you earn points by accurately guessing terms that……

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Gif: What's fxxx!

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