Apple store engineer designs hingeless eyewear for Freigeist

Structural engineer James O’Callaghan, whose firm Eckersley O’Callaghan is behind the glass stairs in Apple‘s stores, has designed a collection of men’s eyewear for German brand Freigeist (+ slideshow). 

Apple store engineer designs hingeless eyewear for Freigeist

The EOC range features three styles made from titanium, aluminium and acetate, with minimal finishing applied to retain the natural colour of each material.

The titanium frames have been laser cut from a single thin sheet of the metal, allowing them to be hinge-free. Each of the three styles is available in an edition of 222, and has been individually numbered.

Apple store engineer designs hingeless eyewear for Freigeist

“We have adopted pure essentialism in our design,” said O’Callaghan, who was awarded the 2016 Milne Medal for excellence in structural design. “For example, not using hinges overcomes a design obstacle without limiting functionality.”



“We recognise that most glasses wearers rarely fold their glasses and, as our frame is made from a single piece of titanium, they maintain their shape extremely well.”

Both acetate and aluminium versions have matt angular frames with hinges, and feature restrained design details.

Apple store engineer designs hingeless eyewear for Freigeist

The engineer’s firm, Eckersley O’Callaghan, has been responsible for several high-profile projects, including glass staircases and bridges that have appeared in Apple stores around the world, and the precarious-looking “sky pool” in London.

“The eyewear project with Freigeist may seem tangential to my usual practice as a structural engineer,” added the designer.

Apple store engineer designs hingeless eyewear for Freigeist

“However, the frames are essentially crafted structures for fixing small pieces of glass – something that we usually do on a much larger scale at EOC – so I jumped at the chance to conceive and put a spin on a product that so many of us rely on every day, myself included.”

Japanese studio Nendo has also experimented with hingeless eyewear, replacing the usual screws with magnets that allow users to detach and mix and match arms.

Apple store engineer designs hingeless eyewear for Freigeist
Frame design – click for larger image

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Blackened timber house by Bernardo Bader Architekten stands on the edge of a stream

This tall, gabled house by Bernardo Bader Architekten is covered in lengths of blackened timber and stands on the edge of a small stream in Lochau, Austria (+ slideshow).

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

Deep windows in the facades are framed with lighter toned wood and directed to give occupants views of the stream, but also to a nearby lake and the village.

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

The 200-square-metre building named House Bäumle was designed as a home and a studio by the Dornbirn-based practice.

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

“An elongated rectangular block develops over three stories vertically into the air,” said Bernardo Bader Architekten.

“
Strategically placed openings stage different views to the lake, the river and back to the village,” it added. “The fenestration of the house generates a pleasant pulse of light and darker areas.”

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

While the blackened timber cladding is intended to resonate with traditional rural architecture in Austria, the lighter-toned window frames and corresponding internal finishes lend it a contemporary edge.

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

“Outdoor the facade with its black colouring engages in the immediate vicinity to still prevailing images of sunburned agricultural huts,” said the studio.



“Because of the pushing back of agricultural use in Vorarlberg’s Rhine Valley, too few of these relics have remained.”

Bernardo Bader Architekten also addressed this issue by using traditional techniques to create a picturesque chalet on the slopes of Fontanella and a barn-like home in pastoral Kaltschmieden.

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

The tall and slender House Bäumle has three stories above ground and one below. The studio is placed alongside a garage at ground level, with the kitchen, dining room and bedroom on the floor above.

The lounge occupies the uppermost storey beneath the pitched roof and is heated by a wood-burning stove.

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

Subtly board-marked concrete surfaces are left exposed in the centre of each floor, but these give way to pale timber surfaces towards the windows and an integrated terrace on the first floor.

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

“Towards the windows it becomes continuously wooden – more tender, lighter,” explained the studio.

“The spatial compression of the interior widens softly, with differentiated transitions to the exterior.”

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten

The steepness and narrowness of the site left little room for a garden. But, making use of a small patch of flat land, the architects placed a small gravelled patio at the end of one gable.

Photography is by Adolf Bereuter.


Project credits:

Architecture: Bernardo Bader Architects
Structural engineer: Mader & Flatz

House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten
Site plan – click for larger image
House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten
First floor plan – click for larger image
House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten
Second floor plan – click for larger image
House Bäumle by Bernardo Bader Architekten
Cross section – click for larger image

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