Top-heavy ballet school by Y+M Design Office features an oversized roof

This ballet studio in Japan by Y+M Design Office is topped by a large pointed roof with curving eaves and is lifted above the ground by a small cement-rendered podium (+ slideshow).

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

Kobe-based Y+M Design Office created the ballet school for a house-sized plot in a residential neighbourhood of Tokushima, a city located across the water from the firm’s studio on Japan’s Shikoku island.

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

A glazed dance studio is located on the upper floor, crowned by the irregularly shaped pitched roof, while a smaller ground floor containing changing rooms, showers and offices is hidden beneath the overhang of the level above.

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

From a distance this cement-rendered lower storey is barely visible, making the upper floor appear unsupported.

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

“We tried to make the ballet school approachable,” said the architects. “The design fits with the surrounding residential area and ensures enough height in the studio to be able to practice ballet.”

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

The school’s entrance and parking spaces are sheltered by both the overhanging upper floor and the eaves of the roof, which are slightly curved to emulate hand-drawn lines.



Y+M Design Office buildings are often characterised by their distinctive roofs. Among them is a home located near the ballet school, which is shielded behind pieces of timber hoarding and a family home hidden below a flight of stairs.

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

Panels of exposed timber and blocks of white paintwork on the ceiling of the ballet studio are reflected in the mirrored walls, exaggerating the irregularities of the roof form.

Ballet-School-by-Y-and-M-Design-Office_dezeen_sqb
Photograph by Y+M Design Office

A long window in the roof allows heat to escape from the studio, while a fan equipped with a temperature sensor circulates fresh air.

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

A wide staircase wraps the studio and changing block, allowing students to meander slowly around the building on their way to dance classes. The shallow steps between the studio and the glazing are also designed as a loitering place for parents to observe classes through picture windows.

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

“We designed the approach from the entrance to the studio to be as long as possible to create a good interface between ordinary life and classic ballet school,” said the team. “During the approach, the student can change their mind. It can uplift a student’s mind.”

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

A mosaic-like arrangement of glass panels forms the outer wall of the upper floor, giving views across the neighbourhood to Mount Bizan, a nearby mountain range that is said to look like a gently arching eyebrow.

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office

“The studio is bright and ventilated well through natural sunshine and wind in every season,” said the architects. “It’s a very opening space that students can see the splendour of Mount Bizan through the opening window in the big pointed roof.”

Photography is by Yohei Sasakura unless stated otherwise.

Ballet School by Y+M Design Office
Exploded axonometric diagram – click for larger image
Ballet School by Y+M Design Office
Floor plans – click for larger image

The post Top-heavy ballet school by Y+M Design Office features an oversized roof appeared first on Dezeen.

A Mathematician's Elliptical Pool Table

For nearly 40 years, the Snooker and Pool Table Company of Essex, England has been producing bespoke billiards tables in a variety of styles. But this year they received a commission that must’ve had them scratching their heads: The client wanted a table shaped like an ellipse.

That’s because the client, Alex Bellos, is a somewhat eccentric mathematician who wanted a way to physically experience a basic principle of geometry:

Of course, having a custom table made seems like a lot of trouble to go through, just to confirm something discovered by the Greeks some millennia ago. So Bellos also designed a game that could be played on the table:

The first Loop tournament was held earlier this summer, and Bellos hopes the game will spread. In addition to traveling with the table to “venues, festivals and schools,” Bellos will facilitate with orders for those who wish to buy their own.

Game, Set and Brand Bonanza Match

Link About It: It's Time to Quit Lettuce

It's Time to Quit Lettuce


Calling lettuce “the bottled water of produce,” Gizmodo has snappily outlined a few very pragmatic reasons why it’s time to quit the Iceberg. Not only is it labor-intensive and comes wrapped in a bunch of unnecessary plastic, it also contains a huge……

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Plantation Pineapple Stiggins’ Fancy Rum: A 19th century recipe turned delightfully rich tipple

Plantation Pineapple Stiggins’ Fancy Rum

Once a highly favorable sipping spirit in Dickensian England, pineapple rum faded from fashion and was all but lost until Maison Ferrand proprietor and rum master blender Alexandre Gabriel partnered with spirits historian David Wondrich. In 2014……

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A Swimming Pool Between Two Towers In London

Le promoteur immobilier Ballymore a imaginé le concept de la première piscine suspendue entre deux tours à Londres. La Skypool sera située entre deux bâtiments du quartier de Nine Helms. Elle sera réservée aux résidents de ces immeubles, qui pourront donc assister au spectacle de la rue, tout en effectuant leurs longueurs.

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The Egg Map

Le designer Dénes Sátor a imaginé un plan qui pourrait satisfaire de nombreux touristes. Sa création baptisée Egg Map prend la forme d’un oeuf coloré sur lequel est dessiné le plan de la ville. Une simple pression permet un zoom manuel sur la zone que l’on souhaite explorer. Egg Map est fabriqué en caoutchouc et rempli d’air. Il est résistant à l’eau et indestructible. Il tient dans votre main ou votre poche.

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"These initiatives represent an opportunistic desire to play with extreme conditions"

A+D exhibition opinion Mimi Zeiger

Opinion: architects’ proposals for pre-empting and adapting to the natural crises brought about by climate change aren’t necessarily as superficial and politically correct as they may seem, says Mimi Zeiger.


I couldn’t sleep last night. LA was having another heatwave and rather than lay awake I read a back issue of The New Yorker, catching up on a report that said a Cascadian earthquake was overdue and would knock out much of the Pacific Northwest. A resulting tsunami would break across the West Coast devastating all architecture and infrastructure west of Interstate 5. “Toast,” noted author Kathryn Schulz.

After falling into a fitful slumber, dreaming of higher, more stable ground, I awoke to another blazing day courtesy of climate change. The sky was singed brown at the edges from wildfires taking out homes somewhere more easterly and the sound of helicopters – the vernacular “ghetto birds” – circled overhead. The reason for police action was neither immediately clear nor personally threatening. I made a note – “get earthquake kit” – then brewed coffee. Pending crisis averted.

Over the last decade, especially with the rise of research-oriented design practices, architecture has tried (and struggled) to address crisis. Specific methodologies vary, but two modes dominate: pre- and post-natural disaster. The second we recognise as social-impact design from the likes of Shigeru Ban and others. MacGyver-like, architectures responsive to aftermath are deployable, agile, and cheap. They may even earn you a Pritzker.

The first often combines scientific findings, demographic and economic data, and expert consultants to lay the groundwork for speculative inquiry. Once an area of suitable design interest is identified within the mappings or digital models, the architectural project can commence. One only has to look to MoMA’s 2010 exhibition Rising Currents: Projects for New York’s Waterfronts for an example, or the post-Hurricane Sandy Rebuild By Design competition headed by Dutch water superstar Henk Ovink, supported by a consortium of design and governmental organisations, and mostly funded by the Rockefeller Foundation.

The recently launched, well-intentioned Dry Futures competition seeks “future-focused design responses to California’s drought”. Embracing design fiction as a prompt, the competition sets forth with a dystopian narrative – a fascist, water-scarce state, all cracked earth and brown landscapes. “A dusty glass rattles on the Lucite table and the floorboards shudder. Another earthquake? Beyond the now-transparent walls, you see the prone body of the broken city folding into the hip of the mountains. A shimmer of variegated light hovers somewhere above the intersection of Santa Monica and Highland: just another water-line break.” The language is prolix, begging the question: is crisis a prompt or an excuse for linguistic embellishment?



The exhibition Shelter: Rethinking How We Live in Los Angeles, now on view at the A+D Museum, is essentially an exercise in housing typologies by a number of the city’s emerging and emerged firms. Yet curators Sam Lubell and Danielle Rago can’t help but frame the show’s argument around the economic and environmental crises buffeting the city. Today’s curatorial modes require news hooks.

According to the press release, the exhibition features “creative new residential solutions that respond to the city’s increasing density, decreasing buildable land, new transit offerings, growing diversity, ballooning costs, and intense environmental challenges.”

Unfortunately or predictably, many of the commissioned firms took the prompt as a leitmotif for form-making. The gallery is filled with interesting-looking models and drawings that at best dabble in responsive design on a shoestring budget. Lorcan O’Herlihy Architects’ WATERshed proposes a series of small-scale infrastructural interventions inserted into a generic domestic landscape that “capture, recycle, purify” ground and storm water. An architectural take on reservoirs and rain barrels, these medium-sized storage tanks read as blue biomorphic gestures against a suburban field.

Jimenez Lai, faced with a potentially extreme condition along the Los Angeles River, produced five houses for Shelter, each a take on normal typologies. His proposals are, by his own description, “almost normal” versions of the dingbat, the pool house, the Queen Anne, etc. While it’s refreshing to see Lai move his experimentations from a disciplinary holding tank to a hypothetical urban context, he explores this territory using vintage LA tools: deadpan, pastiche, defamiliarisation, and everyday with a newcomer’s naiveté. It’s nearly impossible not to fall prey to the charms of Ed Ruscha or David Hockney. Artist Ramiro Gomez has made perhaps the best Hockney detournement. By inserting images of gardeners and housekeepers into his homage paintings, he brings back a political narrative into the 1960s works. With Lai’s Normal Houses, any attempt to address the crisis of the single or multi-family home – density, affordability, accessibility – is drowned by playful invention in the shallow end of the pool.

In 1998, Mike Davis’ Ecology of Fear warned us that Los Angeles is an apocalyptic theme park: “toast” by our making. “Paranoia about nature, of course, distracts attention from the obvious fact that Los Angeles has deliberately put itself in harm’s way,” Davis famously wrote. “For generations, market-driven urbanisation has transgressed environmental common sense.” By building along the coast range, in wetlands, and in the arid LA basin, we had set ourselves up for fires, earthquakes, and droughts. Architecture was the cause of crisis, not the solution. No amount of #droughtshaming could fix that.

Hollywood fantasies of the type documented by Davis 17 years ago were on screen this summer in the movie San Andreas, which grossed more than $468 million worldwide, showing a cross-cultural affinity for “natural-disaster porn”. Yet it’s a different crisis – drought, not an earthquake – that’s shaking up the LA design scene.

The bizarre appointment of Frank Gehry as the architect (figurehead) of the LA River Master Plan, which came to light via LA Times reporters, not an official announcement, was retroactively justified as a kind of drought hack. Gehry’s public statements on the issue suggested that hydrology, not design, was at stake. Rather than focusing on restoration and revitalisation, his firm’s use of modelling software might lead to the rescue of river water from its sad fate of flowing into the Pacific Ocean. Pending crisis averted.

But do we really want to avoid the crisis, at least in architectural terms? Writing about the Paris floods of 1955, Roland Barthes called the disaster “actually more of celebration than a catastrophe”. Commenting on the media photographs at the time, he understood the crisis as surreal pleasure – a phenomenon also evidenced in Iwan Baan’s aerial photographs of Manhattan in the hours after Hurricane Sandy. “The rising waters overwhelmed the everyday optic without diverting it toward the fantastic; objects were partially obliterated, not deformed: the spectacle was singular but reasonable,” noted Barthes in his essay Paris Not Flooded. “Any rather ample rupture of the everyday introduces festivity.”

The spate (dare I say epidemic) of architectural initiatives responding to one future disaster after another demonstrates not necessarily a politically correct, do-gooder’s agenda, as one might critique. Instead, if we follow Barthes’ logic of processing crisis through media imagery, they represent an opportunistic desire to play with extreme conditions. The intent isn’t to ensure that normal remains normal – an unsullied morning of coffee and toast – but to exercise an oft-architectural license: make the normal strange.


Mimi Zeiger is a Los Angeles-based journalist and critic. She is the West Coast editor of the Architects Newspaper and has covered art, architecture, urbanism and design for a number of publications including The New York TimesDomusDwell, and Architect.

The post “These initiatives represent an opportunistic desire to play with extreme conditions” appeared first on Dezeen.

Condom packaging based on different vegetable girths to help choose the correct fit

Graduate shows 2015: Taiwan designer Guan-Hao Pan has created a set of condom packages modelled on phallic vegetables, which users can hold to determine the correct girth for their contraceptive sheath (+ slideshow).

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

Pan‘s Love Guide Condoms are packed into tubes that are based on different fruit and vegetables, and correspond to the size of the latex sheaths inside.

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

The five different sizes range from zucchini – the biggest at five centimetres in diameter – down through turnip, banana, carrot, and finally cucumber, measuring three centimetres across.

The designer hopes that by holding the cylinders, users will be able to match one with their penis girth.

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

In each tube, 12 condoms are individually packaged in containers with lids patterned to look like the sliced fruit and vegetables.

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

Made from card, the packaging carries simple graphics including the Love Guide logo and a drawing of the food.

Pan – who studied at the National Taipei University of Technology – designed the condoms to prevent users from picking up the incorrect size, as this can have consequences.

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

“Studies show that more than 60 per cent of users choose a wrong size while shopping for condoms,” he said in his project statement. “In addition to discomfort, wrong size selection increases the risk of slippage and rupture.”

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

“A condom becomes much less effective if it is the wrong size, worn on the wrong side, or its tip is not squeezed when worn,” Pan added. “It may cause pregnancy and/or sexually-transmitted diseases.”



He also identified that condoms are commonly worn inside out, increasing the risk of tearing the latex and of spillages.

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

To prevent mishaps, he added a flap inside each container that pushes up the teat for easier application.

“Each condom comes in a specially designed case with a rising tip, making it easy to pick the condom from the right side while squeezing the tip at the same time,” said Pan, who added that this also aids application in the dark and for the blind.

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

Earlier this year, a group of UK schoolchildren won an award for a conceptual condom design that would change colour when it comes into contact with a sexually transmitted infection.

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan

Designers have come up with a variety of other ideas for improving contraception, including a condom wrapper that can be opened with a simple finger-clicking action and an open-source, intrauterine device made using a one-cent coin.

A condom applicator designed to help AIDS prevention was named the Most Beautiful Object in South Africa in 2007.

Love Guide Condoms by Guan-Hao Pan
Diagram

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Today we like: magnets

Ferrolic by Zelf Koelman

Magnets have long been used as a way of creating temporary connections for products as diverse as flat-pack furniture and bike lights. But now designers are finding increasingly weird and wonderful uses for them, with recent examples including wallpaper, spiky shoes, fluid clocks, and even a hoverboard. See all of our stories about design with magnets »

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