Ozzy Man's Commentary on Drunk Guy vs. Truck

“Here’s me running commentary on a man who overcomes obstacles to get into his car. Amazing scenes. “..(Read…)

Guy Censors Himself With A Swinging Pendulum!

This is a short video of a Japanese man wearing nothing but a clown bow tie and a smile censoring himself with a swinging pendulum. Haha!..(Read…)

Dreamy Images of Island Life

La photographe belge Flore Diamant a voyagé autour de Nosy Be, de Maurice et de la Reunion. Ses images douces et poétiques illustrent la beauté et la simplicité d’une évasion, loin de l’hiver et des tourmentes des grandes villes. Capturant des paysages luxuriants, des ciels bleus, des hamacs et des plages avec un appareil photo argentique, elle nous montre les joies de la vie en pleine nature : pleine de vie, de lumière et de nouveautés pour qui s’aventure pour la première fois sur ces terres. Les images de la jeune photographe sont également marquées par l’omniprésence de l’océan, partout l’immensité bleue du grand large.
Suivez son travail ici et sur Instagram.












This week, Grenfell Tower developments dominated headlines

This week on Dezeen, Grenfell Tower became a major talking point once again.

Independent spatial research group Forensic Architecture announced plans to create a 3D video of the fatal fire to build a better understanding of how the disaster unfolded.

It was also revealed that six architecture firms, including Adjaye Associates and Cullinan Studio, are working on ideas for the refurbishment of the London estate where Grenfell Tower is located.

UK’s post-Brexit passports set to be made abroad

Brexit was more ever-present than usual this week, as news broke that the UK’s post-Brexit passports will be made by a French-Dutch firm.

Creative agency Superimpose Studio also launched a series of anti-Brexit billboards across the UK, which tell onlookers that “It’s not too late to fix Brexit”.

IKEA research lab Space10 develops burgers and hot dogs of the future

The food and drink of the future was one of the most talked about topics of the week, as IKEA’s research lab Space10 unveiled futuristic foods, including a hot dog made from algae.

Brooklyn creative space A/D/O also announced an initiative to imagine the future of drinking water. Architects and designers were invited to submit proposals about how they would tackle issues facing urban drinking water.

Es Devlin creates blue-hued set for Girls & Boys play starring Carey Mulligan

Blue-hued interiors proved popular this week, as designer Es Devlin created an all-blue set for Carey Mulligan’s new play Girls & Boys.

Chinese architecture studio Wutopia Lab also created this blue house with matching interiors, alongside a pink version, to explore constructs around gender.

Uber taxi kills woman in first fatal accident between a pedestrian and a self-driving car

In tech news, a woman was killed in the first fatal collision between a pedestrian and self-driving car. The victim was struck by an autonomous Uber taxi and later died in hospital.

Autonomous bees took set to become a reality, as US supermarket giant Walmart announced plans to patent technology that would see bee-like drones pollinating crops.

Drones were also a hot topic this week, as Dezeen launched a trailer for ELEVATION, a forthcoming film exploring how transport, deliveries, construction and architecture will be transformed by drones.

Thomas Heatherwick and Ilse Crawford added to Dezeen Awards judging panel

Thomas HeatherwickIlse CrawfordTatiana Bilbao and André Fu were among the leading industry figures that were added to the judging panel for the inaugural Dezeen Awards.

Hublot’s first smartwatch to be used by referees at World Cup 2018

Popular projects on Dezeen this week included Philippe Starck’s “phantasmagoric” hotel topped with a house of MetzHerzog & de Meuron’s plans for “horizontal skyscrapers” in Moscow and Hublot’s first smartwatch to be used by referees at the 2018 World Cup.

The post This week, Grenfell Tower developments dominated headlines appeared first on Dezeen.

Philippe Starck restores time-worn interiors of the Quadri restaurant in Venice

French designer Philippe Starck has worked alongside Venetian artisans to restore this 18th-century restaurant, refreshing its upholstered walls, chandeliers and decadent furnishings.

Quadri by Philippe Starck

Quadri is situated on the northern end of Venice’s Piazza San Marco, set behind the arched openings of the square’s arcade. The cafe, which has been open since 1775, is now owned by the Alajmo family.

After noticing the restaurant had fallen into a state of disrepair, brothers Massimiliano and Raffaele Alajmo approached French designer Philippe Starck to “bring back the original splendour of the space in a contemporary context”.

Quadri by Philippe Starck

The pair had first met the designer a decade ago and already worked together on the creation of two other opulent dining spaces in Venice and Paris. Starck has also recently been charged with designing the interiors for Jean Nouvel’s luxury plant-covered hotel in Sāo Paulo.

“Quadri was extraordinary, except it was a little sleepy. Out of respect, love and intelligence, we didn’t want to change such a powerful concentration of mystery, beauty, oddity and poetry,” said Starck.

Quadri by Philippe Starck

A key challenge of the project was considering how to prepare the restaurant’s interiors for acqua alta, a natural phenomena where high tides in the Adriatic Sea cause the temporary flooding of several areas of Venice.

Rather than finding a way to conceal potential water damage, Starck instead decided to craft all table legs and other floor fixtures from unvarnished brass, intended to naturally oxidise and change colour over time.

Quadri by Philippe Starck

Venice’s changeable water levels also informed the redesign of Quadri’s signage, which was completed by London-based design agency GBH and Valese, the city’s last remaining foundry.

Half of the brass lettering above the restaurant’s entrance has been left gold, while the other has been oxidised to reflect the typical affects of the flooding.

Quadri by Philippe Starck

For the pastel-hued café and bistro on Quadri’s ground floor, Starck called on the help of local art restorers Anna de Spirt and Adriana Spagnol to strip back any existing paint and expose the 19th-century stucco underneath.

Upstairs, Starck has upholstered the formerly crimson-red walls of the formal restaurant with a rich brown fabric designed by Venetian textile maker Tessitura Bevilacqua.

The fabric – which is based on a pattern from the 1550s – has been updated to feature portraits of the Alajmo brothers, as well as space-themed imagery like satellites and astronauts.

Quadri by Philippe Starck

Decoration is provided by a restored 1930s chandelier made from Murano glass, large oval-shaped mirrors that have been lined with vintage photographs and taxidermied animals.

A handful of other notable eateries have also undergone makeovers this year. Snøhetta revamped Napa Valley’s Michelin-star venue French Laundry with a fritted glass extension, while Note Design Studio used teak walls and teal carpets to update the historic Hotel Palace restaurant in Helsinki.

Photography is by Marie-Pierre Morel.

The post Philippe Starck restores time-worn interiors of the Quadri restaurant in Venice appeared first on Dezeen.

It’s knife to meat you!

blanka_cleaver_1

The Blanka was designed to be a miniature cleaver. Its design follows the cleaver’s big blade form, but the entire knife just about fits in your palm, making it look cute, but incredibly capable. The Blanka has a blade made out of VG-10 Japanese steel, along with a handle cut in a glass-reinforced resin material. The blade has two cutting edges, along with a Japanese-style tanto tip, allowing you to use the front edge of the blade as a cutting edge as well. This makes the Blanka extremely versatile as you can grip it in any fashion, exerting a downward, upward, or even forward motion. The semi-circular cut permeates both the blade and the grip, giving you a nice place to rest your index finger as you work the blade.

The knife comes with its own lanyard hole as well as a leather sheath that you can suspend from your belt hoop or even slip into your pocket. With a blade that is sharp on all edges, the Blanka is perfect for cutting, chopping, slicing, and piercing. So don’t really go by its toyish size!

Designer: JHO Knives

Click Here to Buy Now

blanka_cleaver_2

blanka_cleaver_3

blanka_cleaver_4

blanka_cleaver_5

blanka_cleaver_6

blanka_cleaver_7

blanka_cleaver_8

Click Here to Buy Now

A Play of Colors on Architectures

La photographe et graphiste Emilie Möri a profité d’un samedi ensoleillé dans le sud de la France pour réaliser sa série Architectures. « Les ombres tracent des graphismes purs » auxquels l’artiste ajoute un spectre de couleurs pour un résultat à la fois minimaliste et conceptuel.



















Interview: Genesis Global Brand Chief Manfred Fitzgerald on Developing a Luxury Brand: From celebrating the Oscars to culture at large, how the brand is building awareness

Interview: Genesis Global Brand Chief Manfred Fitzgerald on Developing a Luxury Brand

We’ve had our eye on Genesis as they make progress in their quest to become a luxury car manufacturer that people are aware of and have respect for. This is accomplished both by building solid cars—which they have—as well as making a statement……

Continue Reading…

Former car factory to be transformed into Pompidou Centre Brussels

Brussels‘ €125 million (£109 million) Centre Pompidou is to be designed by noAarchitecten, EM2N and Sergison Bates architects.

The international team’s proposal, called ‘A Stage for Brussels’, won a competition against 92 other entries to reshape a former Citroën factory into the KANAL – Centre Pompidou. Swiss architect Roger Diener led the jury.

KANAL - Centre Pompidou

As a cultural hub for Belgium, KANAL – Centre Pompidou will be home to a Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art and architecture centre the CIVA Foundation, as well as a series of public art spaces.

Last year the Parisian gallery announced it would also be opening a Shanghai outpost, located in the David Chipperfield-design West Bund Art Museum.

KANAL - Centre Pompidou

Brussels-based noAarchitecten, EM2N from Zurich, and the London office of Sergison Bates architects collaborated on their plan to strip out the 1930s industrial building and insert three volumes for the museum.

“Rather than a spectacular gesture, our proposal offers an attitude of Radical Optimism: critical, receptive, dedicated, precise,” the architecture team said in their statement.

“We want to radically engage with and trust what is there.”

With it’s wrap-around glazing the old car showroom will become a “display window” for the centre.

Next door, a electronic display will wrap around the top of the former Citroën workshop, to display information or be integrated into art projects. An old office block is to be demolished to make room for an extension.

KANAL - Centre Pompidou

Inside, the glass-roofed workshop will be stripped out and three “boxes within boxes” built to house the art museum, architecture centre and a 400-seat auditorium.

An indoor “street” will traverse the ground floor of the 35,000 square metre site. Ramps and bridges connecting the four original levels of varying heights will be retained and used as additional art display and installation sites.

KANAL - Centre Pompidou

The use of new materials in the conversion of the factory to art gallery has been limited as part of a drive towards sustainability.

Rather than heat and cool the vast factory spaces and the galleries as one, the boxes will have their own localised controllable climates. Energy saving apparatus will be retrofitted to use the rooftop, ground and canal for sustainable heating and cooling.

KANAL - Centre Pompidou

“This rich and layered project for KANAL is really a building for Brussels, a city where the future European urbanity is emerging in all its complexity. The Brussels urban landscape is now richer of a Brussel’s building,” said Kristiaan Borret, chief architect of the Brussels-Capital Region.

Work is due to start on the project in the autumn of 2019, with the museum due to open in late 2022.

For the 13 months before the work starts a programme of art and architecture exhibitions will be held, allowing the public to experience the site in its “raw state”.

In the United States, American architecture firm Bruner/Cott has turned a former textile factory into the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. In New York, the former Domino Sugar Factory is being turned into a public park by landscape architecture firm James Corner Field Operations.

The post Former car factory to be transformed into Pompidou Centre Brussels appeared first on Dezeen.

Naturehumaine enlivens mid-century Montreal house with plant-covered wall

A sliding screen offers glimpses to the living room beneath this plant-filled wall, which architecture firm Nauturehumaine has added to a 1940s house in Montreal.

The local studio renovated the mid-century property in the Canadian city’s residential Outremont borough for a couple and their two children.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

At the request of the wife, who works in the environmental and health field and has a keen interest in wellbeing, a green wall was created as the centrepiece of the home.

Measuring 2.8 by five metres, the planted screen divides a pair of split-level living areas.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

To accommodate the feature, the firm extended the upper lounge – which is raised above a garage beneath –into the attic, forming a double-height space for the foliage to grow up.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

Encased in a white frame, the greenery is elevated above the ground floor to provide a gap for a window beneath, which offers views between the two living areas. A white steel screen perforated with a “wavy motif” slides in front of the opening to provide privacy when necessary.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

“We decided to create a visual link between the two spaces by introducing an opening animated by a steel laser-cut sliding panel that could bring intimacy to the living room when needed,” Nauturehumaine architect Stéphane Rasselet told Dezeen.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

The firm reconfigured the rest of Courcelette Residence to create plenty of light and few divisions between different spaces. An open-plan kitchen and dining room accompanies the lounges on the ground floor, while two children’s bedrooms, a master bedroom, two bathrooms and a study occupy the first floor.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

A new staircase connects the three levels, transitioning from wooden steps from the lower living room into cantilevered treads at the top. The stairs comprise steel plates covered with solid white oak.

Matching wood boards cover the floors across the residence and complement white-painted walls as part of a simple and neutral material palette. This can also be seen in the bathrooms, which are lined with grey tiles.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

Contrasting these muted tones, a series of boxes clad in blue-painted fibreboard panels are used to hide rooms and reduce clutter. A large volume on the ground floor conceals the entrance and washroom with bookshelves on the exterior, while a smaller box contains shelving on the first floor.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

“To give the illusion of lightness to the spaces we concealed certain loadbearing elements into a number of box-like modules identified by a specific colour,” said Rasselet.

For the kitchen, the firm chose to cover the Russian plywood cabinets in grey and white laminate. A glass splashback runs along the countertop is imprinted with a musical piece chosen by the clients.

The residents can dine at either an angular white quartz top, which wraps over the kitchen island to form a breakfast bar, or a wooden dining table.

On the exterior, Naturehumaine restored the existing brickwork of the mid-century property and made few changes to the exterior openings. The main intervention is a 26-foot-long (eight-metre) set of sliding glass doors that open from the kitchen and the back garden.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

The architects removed part of the rear masonry wall and added a steel beam for support. The metalwork now forms a canopy above the terrace lined in red cedar.

Above the large opening, the two existing windows into the each of the children’s bedrooms on the first floor were also replaced with one window. The architects describe the arrangement of the openings as having a “face-like appearance”.

Courcelette Residence by Naturehumaine

Courcelette Residence joins a host of renovation projects in Montreal completed by Naturehumaine, which recently updated mid-century Prairie House with minimalist interiors.

A grey-and-black extension to a 1920s brick house, an angular two-storey addition on a 1860s light stone dwelling, and a white rooftop unit built onto a 1920s brick apartment building are also among the studio’s portofolio.

Photography is by Adrien Williams. Video is by David Dworkind.

The post Naturehumaine enlivens mid-century Montreal house with plant-covered wall appeared first on Dezeen.