Papier Machine Books to Discover Electronics

Papier Machine est un projet voulant rendre accessible la compréhension des processus électroniques. À travers de livres thématiques, l’idées est de dévoiler ce qui se cache dans les mécanismes des objets électroniques que nous utilisons au quotidien.

Fournissant des expériences didactiques ludiques, les livres élucident les mystères des boîtes noires qui nous entourent rendant notre quotidien plus conscient. Il s’agit aussi d’un voyage esthétique à l’intérieur de circuits invisibles dans lesquels se mélangent le papier, l’électricité, le graphisme et le jeu.

Le premier volume, Papier Machine Vol.0, permet de créer six jouets en papiers à découper et monter. Le premier thème est le son. Le projet a connu un franc succès sur Kickstarter et nous vous en proposons un aperçu ici-bas.







Stunning Award-Winning Photos of the Dakar Rally

Cette année, le Dakar Rally a debuté à Lima, au Pérou, et a traversé la Bolivie et l’Argentine. Cette aventure tout-terrain est un test d’endurance pour ses participants… et un événement passionnant pour ses fans. Depuis 2011, la meilleure photo du rallye reçoit le Prix Emilie Poucan (en hommage à une attachée de presse disparue dans un accident d’avion après avoir couvert le rallye en 2010), et le lauréat de cette année est Eric Vargiolu, dont la photo exceptionnelle capte les premieres voitures au lever du soleil sur des magnifiques dunes de sables.

Regardez les photos gagnantes du Prix Emilie Poucan de ces dernières années.


© ASO Dakar 2018 Credit photo Eric VARGIOLU


© ASO Dakar 2017 Credit photo AFP Franck FIFE


© ASO Dakar 2016 Credit photo ASO @World Andre LAVADINHO


© ASO Dakar 2015 Credit photo Frederic Le Floch – DPPI


© ASO Dakar 2014 Credit photo Marc Van Der Aa Shakedown Team


© ASO Dakar 2013 Credit photo Frederic Le Floch – DPPI


© ASO Dakar 2012 Credit photo Cezaro De Luca Agencia EFE


© ASO Dakar 2012 Credit photo DPPI_Francois FLAMAND








Stunning And Comfy Tree House

Les Ateliers Lavit ont conçu une superbe cabane dans les bois, appelée « Origin ». Cette maison absolument unique est construite autour d’un chêne centenaire, à une dizaine de mètres du sol. Comfortable, elle est équipée d’un spa, et d’une terrasse à 360° permettant de se poser littéralement au centre de la forêt en été. une très belle réalisation, excellemment photographiée par Marco Lavit Nicora. Retrouvez les ateliers Lavit sur Instagram

Photography by Marco Lavit Nicora | General contractors : Nid Perche / créateur d’hébergements insolites
















Buy: Lock Stock & Barrel 18 Year Rye Whiskey

Lock Stock & Barrel 18 Year Rye Whiskey


Two important details of Lock Stock & Barrel’s 18 Year Rye Whiskey battle each other to create a surprisingly smooth profile. First, the proof stands at a whopping 109. Second, its age—the aforementioned 18 years—actually tames that high ABV. In fact……

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Eight upcoming David Adjaye projects to look forward to

With the news that David Adjaye‘s National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC has been named Design of the Year for 2017, here’s a look at some of the other impressive projects the architect has coming up, from a spy museum to a memorial to extinct species.


Ruby City for Linda Pace Foundation, San Antonio, USA, expected 2018

Planned to complete in late 2018, to coincide with the celebrations for San Antonio’s 300th birthday (although the public won’t have access until 2019), this $16 million (£10 million) museum is based on a dream of its patron, philanthropist Linda Pace.

The distinctive facades of the two-storey, 14,000-square-foot (4,267-square-metre) contemporary art museum for the Linda Pace Foundation will be made of crimson precast concrete panels flecked with glass aggregate.

Find out more about Ruby City ›


Spyscape by David Adjaye

Spyscape, New York, USA, expected 2018

One of a large number of US projects currently being designed by Adjaye Associates, this museum dedicated to espionage is set to open in February 2018.

The interactive museum is being built in renovated building just two blocks away from MoMA in Midtown Manhattan. It will feature dimly lit interiors and self-contained exhibitions in weathering-steel drums.

Find out more about Spyscape ›


Mass Extinction Memorial Observatory (MEMO), Isle of Portland, UK, expected 2019

This 30-metre-high stone spiral will be a memorial to extinct species of the present and future. The memorial will house an information on the 860 species identified as extinct since the demise of the dodo in the 17th century.

Although a ceremonial ground breaking ceremony took place in 2014, the building is still fundraising and is now expected to be complete in 2019.

Find out more about MEMO ›


Studio Museum, New York, USA, expected 2019

Another of Adjaye Associates’ American projects, the $175 million (£124 million) Studio Museum in Harlem will replace the 50-year-old museum’s existing 125th Street facility. It is due to open in 2019.

Find out more about Studio Museum ›


Winter Park by David Adjaye

Winter Park Public Library and Events Center, Orlando, USA, expected 2020

Due to complete in 2020, the $30 million (£22.7 million) Winter Park Public Library and Events Center will be a “micro village” of red cultural buildings.

The building’s three pavilions will house a library, events centre and visitor centre.

Find out more about Winter Park Public Library ›


130 William by David Adjaye

130 William Street, New York, USA, expected 2020

Staying in America, the practice’s first New York high-rise will be a 66-storey concrete skyscraper in Downtown Manhattan, which is scheduled to complete in 2020.

Designed with Hill West Architects, the residential tower in the financial district will have a textural hand-cast concrete exterior, designed to complement the materiality of the surrounding historic, brick commercial buildings.

Find out more about 130 William Street ›


Latvian Museum of Contemporary Art, Riga, Latvia, 2021

Located at the edge of Riga‘s Art Nouveau district, this major new €30 million (£24 million) art museum  is due to complete in 2021.

The winner of an international design competition, the building will have an angular roofscape, referencing the traditional wooden houses of domestic Baltic architecture.

Find out more about Latvian Museum of Contemporary Art ›


UK Holocaust Memorial, London, UK, expected 2021

Working with Israeli architect Ron Arad, Adjaye Associates is designing the UK’s National Holocaust Memorial to be built in a park near the Houses of Parliament in London.

The ground-level memorial, which will stand above a subterranean learning centre, is due to be complete in 2021.

Find out more about UK Holocaust Memorial ›

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Mecanoo completes modern Palace of Justice in historic Córdoba

Mecanoo‘s vast law courts in the Spanish city of Córdoba features cut-out courtyards and golden details, in reference to the city’s medieval history.

The Dutch architecture studio collaborated with local engineering firm Ayesa to design the 48,000-square-metre Palace of Justice as a new civic centre for the area.

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

Along with a courthouse containing 26 courtrooms, the six-storey Palace of Justice contains offices, the Forensic Institute, an archive, cafe, room for weddings to be held, prison and a parking garage.

The rectangular building is arranged around a central “spine” with blocks arranged on either side, divided by vertical slots that break up the building and form the courtyards.

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

According to Mecanoo, this “puzzle-like structure hints at its process of formation and emulates the experience of the dense historical centre of Córdoba”, which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

While the urban fabric of the Arroyo del Moro neighbourhood, where the law courts are located, is made up of regimented housing blocks built during the city’s rapid expansion, the city’s historic centre was built up during the middle ages.

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

Originally a Roman settlement, the Andalusian city was colonised during the eighth century and became the capital of the Emirate of Córdoba. Libraries, schools and universities were built, and the city became a centre of learning during what historians regard as a Muslim golden age.

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

Courtyards were a central tenement of Islamic medieval city planning and still proliferate in urban environments in warm countries, as they create shade and allow cool air to circulate. According to the architect, the courtyards in the new Palace of Justice fulfil a similar civic function.

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

“The vertical fractures that are introduced in the building mass create patios, relating the local courtyard typologies. These fractures provide natural light and ventilation in the central zones of the large building,” said Mecanoo.

“One can say that the sustainability of the building is not achieved by expensive technological mechanisms but by an intelligent interpretation of the vernacular architecture.”

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

The Palace of Justice puts a modern spin on the Great Mosque of Córdoba, a historic local landmark. The court’s white exterior walls and courtyard walls overlaid with a veil of golden filigree echo the gilded prayer niches carved into the pale stone edifice of the mosque.

However the geometric patterns formed on the white exterior are more than a decorative element – they provide the courts with a layer of privacy, abstracting the exterior windows through the tessellated shapes.

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

Taking the sensitive nature of the law courts day-to-day business into account, the architecture responds to the varying levels of privacy required by the building’s various functions.

The public courtrooms, marriage registry office and restaurant all occupy the ground floor with its sheltered outdoor courtyards, while the high-security courtrooms and offices occupy the upper levels, with the archives and jail cells located below ground.

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

Privacy has also been heightened by raising the entire structure two metres above street level on a podium, with the three entrances accessible via ramps.

The elevated position provides an additional layer of security to the law courts. According to Mecanoo, it lends the building “symbolic power”.

Palace of Justice in Córdoba by Mecanoo

Podiums are currently proving popular with architects looking to give important public buildings security during a time when terrorism often involves vehicle attacks at street level.

Kieran Timberlake’s new US Embassy in London is on a raised podium that also includes a moat-like water feature.

Meanwhile Renzo Piano Building Workshop’s new Paris courthouse, which is Europe’s largest law complex, is a tiered glass skyscraper. In a recent video interview, architect Renzo Piano said transparent buildings are safer.

Photography is by Fernando Alda.

The post Mecanoo completes modern Palace of Justice in historic Córdoba appeared first on Dezeen.

Vintage Cars in New York

Pour sa dernière exposition chez Polka, Langdon Clay revenait sur le New York des seventies, vu par le prisme d’un objet d’usage quotidien : la voiture. Dans sa série Cars, ils rend hommage à la ville et aux magnifiques voitures qui la parcourent.




Little Ripper drone saves two teenage swimmers in world-first rescue

This captioned movie shows the Little Ripper, a rescue drone belonging to coastguard services in New South Wales in Australia, which saved two teenage swimmers stuck in a rip current by dropping an inflatable rescue pod down to them.

The rescue has been hailed as the first of its kind. The drone’s operators claim that the drone achieved in 70 seconds what would have taken a lifeguard at least six minutes.

More on drones ›

Video is by Westpac Little Ripper

The post Little Ripper drone saves two teenage swimmers in world-first rescue appeared first on Dezeen.

Blade Runner-style photographs capture Tokyo's infrastructure

Australian photographer Tom Blachford waited until night to capture these neon-tinted photographs of Tokyo‘s metabolist buildings, which he says could have been built in a “distant future”.

For his latest series, Blachford was influenced by the futuristic appearance of the country’s post-war modernist architectural movement, metabolism – pioneered by Japanese architect Kenzo Tange.

The Pritzker Prize-winning architect is largely recognised as the founder of the Japanese Metabolism movement, which came about in the 1960s following a period of economic recovery. Tange died in 2005, but his practice Tange Associates continues to operate.

Each of Blanchford’s images features moody, neon-lit backdrops in a reference to film noir, particularly the 1982 sci-fi fantasy movie Blade Runner.

Similar to his Midnight Modern series, which depicts mid-century houses in Palm Springs, Nihon Noir is photographed at night and without the presence of people. This was intended to evoke a sense of mystery.

To create images that look like they could have been taken in a future “cyberpunk metropolis”, Blachford selected metabolist buildings for their industrial, megastructure appearance.

“My goal for the series was to communicate the feeling that struck me the first time I visited Tokyo, that somehow you have been transported to this advanced and amazing parallel universe,” said Blachford.

“I selected a core list of buildings that embodied the Metabolist philosophy which attempted to combine the creation of brutalist megastructures with the principles of organic growth,” he continued.

Among them are the Shizuoka Press and Broadcasting Center and the Fuji TV headquarters, both designed by Tange. Tighter shots of 1990s street vistas also feature in the series.

The Shizuoka Press and Broadcasting Center – completed in the late 1950s – includes a narrow cylindrical core with protruding glass modular office units, while the Fuji TV headquarters – completed in 1996 – features two main tower blocks connected by three pedestrian bridges.

Blanchford also captured Kisho Kurokawa’s Nagakin Capsule, which is composed of 140 prefabricated capsules. Scattered multicoloured lights from the inside apartments illuminate the photograph, along with the stark glow of white street lights.

“Though these buildings are from the past, they appear as if they have appeared from the distant future.  My intention is for the viewer to ask not ‘where’ they were taken but ‘when’,” said the photographer.

Blachford spent six consecutive nights taking photographs of buildings in the Japanese capital between 9pm to 5am, experimenting with a range of vantage points, including a rooftop, stairwell and a road workers crane lift.

“Each building required hours of exploration to find the perfect vantage point whether it be from a rooftop, stairwell or road workers crane lift I commandeered to capture the Nagakin from an otherwise impossible perspective,” he explained.

The post Blade Runner-style photographs capture Tokyo’s infrastructure appeared first on Dezeen.

A Minuscule Drone that Packs a Punch

If you’ve had your head in the clouds for the last few years, then you’re probably unaware that last year, when the DJI released the Spark Drone, it blew all of our minds. At a staggering .6 pounds in weight which was just nuts! Albeit the quality was never anywhere close to the Mavic Pro, sure, but it was hardly a burden to carry an extra .6 pounds around with you right? Well the good guys at DJI have gone another step into the future and provided us with the most dynamic three-axis gimbal assisted drone, the Mavic Air, weighing around 1 pound and has the ability to shoot videos in a stunning 4K.

The pictures of this are insane, its minuscule, how on earth can these be jam-packed full of goodness, capture insanely high-quality images and yet be about the same size as a pea. Not to mention it’s brilliantly smart – there are seven additional cameras on the Mavic Air that sense objects during flight, to the front and the rear of the drone, and work it’s own mapping around this to prevent a collision. Having trouble walking through the house without bumping into a door, it’s a shame I don’t have seven cameras. This little guy has a range of up to 2.5 miles and a 21 minute fly time, with a nifty remote to fit into the back pocket when it’s not being occupied by the Mavic Air.

Designer: DJI

Click here to Buy Now

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