Ora Ïto uses hundreds of wooden slats for snaking oak stair at LVMH offices

French designer Ora Ïto has cut and pieced together over 400 wooden slats to create this staircase, which twists up the Paris offices for one of the world’s largest luxury companies.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

Ïto was tasked to design offices for the media division of LVMH, the parent company of luxury brands including Louis Vuitton and Dior. The department, which encompasses news brands Le Parisien and Les Echos, has its head offices located on 10 Grenelle in Paris’ 15th arrondissement.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

The staircase snakes up the four storeys of the office, comprising 429 wooden battens that cradle the underside of the stair and form the handrails on either side.

Curved edges detail each of the slats, so that when placed side-by-side, they form wave-like indents across the stair.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

“I wanted the staircase to be the centrepiece of the building,” said Ïto. “This creature undulates in the space, shaping and pervading it.”

“This huge half-whale and half-snake chimera, snatches you, swallows you up and spits you out at the right floor,” he added.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

There is also a semi-circular indent on the inner side of the slats that forms a nook for the steel handrail, while LED lights illuminate the undersides of the stair treads.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

A large hidden steel beam supports the slats, which are made of a mix of materials so they are as light as possible. Two layers of medium density fibreboard (MDF) are placed either side of a metal reinforcement and then covered in the French oak veneer to match the oak steps.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

Lit by a huge glass wall and a roof light, the staircase is set to one side of the building, leaving plenty of open space around it.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

Ïto also designed the surrounding areas as part of project, using the wooden slats to form walls of the auditorium on the lowest floor. He also created the reception desk on the entrance level from the timber elements, tapering the shape at the rear to form a tail.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

Minimal finishes including bright white walls and flooring provide the backdrop to the stair. White columns support the upper levels, where curved balconies with glazed balustrades extend towards the staircase.

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

“The offices are intentionally minimalist, calm and functional without extraneous decor,” said the designer. “The refined details are unobtrusive.”

LVMH Media Division by Ora Ito

The staircase adds to a diverse portfolio of work by Ïto, following his tram designs for the Mediterranean city of Nice, a spaceship and a sedan chair for car manufacturer Citroën and a trainer based on the work of Modernist furniture designers Charles and Ray Eames.

Other spectacular staircases recently featured on Dezeen include one made from hundreds of plywood pieces slotted together like a jigsaw and a chunky, concrete spiral stair.

Photography is by We Are Contents.

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Shelly LE/12

Shelly is a one surface chair,, no beginning,, no end,,Cast from a 3D print (bronze/aluminum)

ListenUp: A sexy new song by Fischerspooner, a bop from Shy Luv, an energetic track by Django Django and more

ListenUp


MEI: Steppin
With “Steppin,” London-based singer/songwriter MEI uses sometimes sweet, always compelling vocals to guide listeners through the track’s twists and turns. Jazz-infused and driven by piano and a heavy bassline, the song’s magnificence……

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Wonderful Handmade Soap

Aurelie de Sousa, connue comme Ellie, est une illustratrice qui, dans son temps libre, laisse libre cours à son talent pour créer ces merveilleux savons artisanaux. Colorés, aux formes éclectiques, ils ont un aspect délicieux et un design soigné. Pour en savoir plus.










Our latest Pinterest board features impressive universities

We’ve created a new Pinterest board featuring university buildings of all shapes and sizes, from Thomas Heatherwick’s parsnip-shaped towers in Singapore to Wingårdhs’ leaning auditorium in Stockholm. Follow Dezeen on Pinterest ›

The post Our latest Pinterest board features impressive universities appeared first on Dezeen.

Dima Srouji attempts to revive Palestinian glassblowing with Hollow Forms

Palestinian architect Dima Srouji worked with traditional glassblowers from the small West Bank village of Jaba’ to create this series of unusual vessels, which were on show at Amman Design Week.

Hollow Forms by Dima Srouji at Amman Design Week 2017

Srouji was concerned the ancient craft was dying due to the region’s isolation, so she devised the Hollow Forms project to introduce the glassblowers to contemporary design approaches. The craftsmen worked from her 3D renderings, creating abstract vessels inspired by the Palestinian land.

“The glass blowing industry in Palestine is one of the most beautiful and technically advanced local traditions,” said Srouji. “The tradition has managed to survive for the last seven centuries; however, due to the fragility of the political context and the fragility of the material itself, the exportation of the products has decreased dramatically in recent years.”

“To revive this tradition the concept of this project is to experiment with more contemporary forms and collaborate with the craftsmen in the area to produce a provocative exhibition. The goal is to highlight the cultural heritage while maintaining the current global standard of product design.”

Hollow Forms by Dima Srouji at Amman Design Week 2017

While Srouji was teaching craftsmen Ali and Marwan Twam contemporary design, they imparted their glassblowing techniques on her in exchange. They use a particular method called lampworking, which uses a burner torch to soften and sculpt the glass.

The exposure to the process gave Srouji the opportunity to discover its quirks and allowed her to adapt her designs in collaboration with the glassblowers.

Hollow Forms by Dima Srouji at Amman Design Week 2017

“As I started learning how the process works myself and spent more time hands on, I realised that the fluidity of the material can generate forms that are more aesthetically powerful because of the factor of human intuition,” Srouji told Dezeen.

“For example, one of the pieces has a really long blue neck. The proportions are all identical to the 3D form on the computer, but as we started creating the piece, I realised that it’s more beautiful with the long elegant neck. Allowing ourselves to get lost in the translation is actually where the creativity and collaboration are really at their peak in the process.”

Hollow Forms by Dima Srouji at Amman Design Week 2017

While the finished forms have an animalistic appearance, they are actually driven by Srouji’s architectural studies at Yale University, where she studied under Peter Eisenman and Greg Lynn.

“Like Piranesi’s Campo Marzio, which Tafuri calls ‘the absolute disintegration of formal order’, this experiment looks at what the relationship of these figures are to each other and they can create a heterogeneous field,” said Srouji.

“I’m poking a little bit at formalism by using inspiration from the Palestinian land, the history of the craft, and the people I’m working with. I try to evoke the spirit of the place while giving the forms some agency. Piranesi produced a virtual Rome outside of its real time and space, and with this inspiration, I visualise Palestine as a series of strange hollow forms — a kind of fantasy.”

Hollow Forms by Dima Srouji at Amman Design Week 2017

After living and practicing in London, New Haven and Milan, Srouji is now based in Ramallah. She works for the Riwaq Centre for Architectural Conversation to renovate Palestinian villages — which is what brought her to Jaba’ and to the door of glassblowers Marwan and Ali, for whom she is renovating a new workshop.

The Hollow Forms project was on show at The Hanger, the main exhibition space for Amman Design Week, which ran from 6 to 14 October. Emerging Jordanian designers made a strong showing in the exhibition, alongside works by designers from across the region.

The post Dima Srouji attempts to revive Palestinian glassblowing with Hollow Forms appeared first on Dezeen.

WeWork ventures into health and fitness with first gym in New York

Co-working company WeWork is opening a gym in New York, which includes boxing and yoga studios, grassy flooring and a Roman-inspired salt bathing pool.

Rise by We by WeWork

WeWork, which rents desks and office spaces around the world, has added the Rise by We gym to its FiDi office space at 85 Broad Street, in New York’s Financial District. However, users do not have to be WeWork members for access.

Rise by We by WeWork

Designed in-house and overseen by the company’s head of interiors, Brittney Hart, the gym aims to provide members with a rounded health and fitness experience, including a spa and a cafe serving healthy fare alongside the gymnasium.

The gym forms part of the WeWork’s progressive outlook on creating spaces that suit contemporary lifestyles. While first disrupting the workspace with its shared offices, last year it unveiled a concept for co-living apartments in New York.

In Rise by We, WeWork has divided the fitness space into three areas according to different exercises and the spaces they demand.

Rise by We by WeWork

The first titled Fight is for boxing, kickboxing and mixed martial arts. In the studio, punch bags hang from black steel ceiling beams and are reflected in infinite rows in the mirrored walls. On one half of each bag, a paler material provides offsets the rest of the darkly finished space, which includes black walls and dark flooring.

The second studio, named Flight, designed for cardiovascular activities like running, rowing and functional training. Traditional equipment is arranged on one side of the room, leaving a large open area for gymnastic bands and ropes.

Rise by We by WeWork

Contrasting the other two studios, calmer activities of yoga and meditation will take placed in the third studio, called Mindfulness. Dark wood panels cover the floor and paler wooden boards line the walls, while planting boxes hang from ceiling.

There is also “semi-private” workout facility, featuring a grass-like material on the floor, for those enrolled in the gym’s Turf programme. These members undergo an assessment, including a 3D body scan, before being assigned a tailored programme.

Rise by We by WeWork

A combination of pale stone wall tiles contrast black floors in the Rise by We “superspa”, which features delicate lighting to create a moody atmosphere.

Envisioned as a modern take on the Roman bath, the spa includes a warm pool with mineral salts to reduce muscle soreness and cold showers, as well as a sauna and steam room.

In the reception, a white tiled desk extends to form staggered seating fitted with potted plants, and is reflected in the mirrored ceiling above.

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HASA Architects transforms London apartment into "seamless white box"

HASA Architects has turned a dark and dingy apartment on the second floor of a three-storey Edwardian Terrace in London’s Bankside into an all-white minimalist family home.

Located on a dense urban site in London Bridge, the two-bedroom apartment had previously been served as an office space – giving it a layout described by HASA Architects as “unconventional with dark and unwelcoming rooms”.

To create a brighter interior, the architects removed all the existing partitions and inserted a series of vertical panels. The open-plan layout allows light to infiltrate each room and provides better visual connections across the apartment.

Connected by a central axis, the vertical white-oiled Douglas Fir panels divide up the living and sleeping spaces. Full-height hinged doors fold back into the walls out of sight to allow for varying degrees of privacy.

To complete the all-white scheme, the architects fitted bleached timber flooring, while colourful art and furniture pieces are used to accent the space.

A kitchen island separates the kitchen from the living area, which was conceived as one connected communal space. Located at the front of the property, the kitchen and living area is a social space where the family comes together to cook, eat and relax.

A series of cabinets that back onto the shower enclosure provides additional worktop space and storage in the kitchen. The bathroom is finished in basalt – a dark volcanic stone that sits in contrast to the rest of the apartment.

Facing the rear elevation with doors that lead out onto a small terrace, each of the apartment’s bedrooms comprises built-in beds, storage and wardrobes.

“The precision of the design builds on the small floor plan to create a generous sense of space and allows the users to control areas to suit their needs,” summarised Mark Stevens, director at HASA Architects.

“We chose the materials for their ability to reflect light throughout the apartment and to create a seamless box that the homeowners can make their own.”

The all-white colour scheme has proved to be so popular with architects and designers of late, that earlier this year Dezeen created a round-up of the most popular all-white interiors.

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« Alternative Perspectives » Series by Cristina Coral

Dans « Alternative Perspectives », la photographe italienne Cristina Coral crée une série d’images ludiques mais sombres à la fois. Allongée sur des tapis de couleur pâle ou debout et rigide devant du papier peint kitch, Coral éveille les émotions par son brillant talent de modifier l’utilisation de la perspective pour créer une perception toute différente. Vous en saurez davantage sur son travail ici. Suivez-la sur Instagram par ici.













A-maze-ing Girls by Sofia Bonati

Les femmes sont cryptiques, mystérieuses et parfois incompréhensibles. C’est précisément ce qui les rend uniques. Avant d’être illustratrice, Sofia Bonati est avant tout une femme consciente d’elle-même. À travers une série de dessins réalisés au crayon ainsi qu’au marqueur, elle décrit toute la profondeur d’esprit féminin. Et le résultat est hypnotisant.