Oliver Wainwright's highlights from Inside North Korea

Guardian architecture and design critic Oliver Wainwright explains seven highlights from his recently published book Inside North Korea to Dezeen.

Wainwright’s book, published by Taschen and released on 22 June 2018, offers a glimpse inside the notoriously secretive nation.

The 200 photos in the book, which are available to purchase, document the strange and colourful architecture of the country and its capital Pyongyang.

Completely rebuilt after the end of the Korean War in 1953, the city is the grand vision of the country’s first leader, Kim Il Sung, and contains many intriguing buildings.

Below Wainwright explains seven of the most interesting he photographed to Dezeen.


Insdie North Korea Oliver Wainwright

Changgwang Health and Recreation Complex, Pyongyang, 1980

A mechanical elevator shuttles swimmers up to the diving boards behind a smoked glass screen in the Changgwang Health and Recreation Complex, a massive leisure centre built in Pyongyang in 1980.

Covering an area of almost 40,000 square metres, with capacity for 16,000 people, it contains a sauna, bathhouse, swimming pools and hair salons – where customers can choose from a range of officially sanctioned haircuts. Attention was lavished on details, from a decorative terrazzo floor in the entrance, to coloured cast glass panels and mosaic floors.


Insdie North Korea Oliver Wainwright

Grand People’s Study House, Pyongyang, 1982

A statue of the country’s founding president, Kim Il Sung, welcomes visitors into the Grand People’s Study House, built in 1982 as the central library of Pyongyang.

Planned as the imposing centrepiece of the city, fronting on to the grand Kim Il Sung Square, the building was designed to echo traditional Korean forms, with green-tiled “giwa” rooftops and octagonal stone columns, recalling the pillars of ancient temples.

Its 600 rooms have capacity for 30 million books and up to 12,000 visitors a day. The statue sits before a mosaic of Mount Paektu, the sacred volcano where Kim Jong Il is said to have been born.


Insdie North Korea Oliver Wainwright

Koryo Hotel, Pyongyang, 1985

The breakfast room of the Koryo Hotel has the surreal quality of a Wes Anderson film set, with a complementary colour palette of orange and blue providing a backdrop for vases of plastic flowers and plates of kimchi and boiled eggs.

Built in 1985, the Koryo Hotel is the premium hotel for foreign visitors, standing as a pair of 45-storey towers connected by a bridge and crowned with a revolving restaurant. With a total of 500 rooms, the hotel also has a bookshop, movie room, banquet and conference rooms, as well as a casino and “wading pool” in the basement.


Insdie North Korea Oliver Wainwright

Arch of Triumph, Pyongyang, 1982

Built in 1982 to celebrate the 70th birthday of Kim Il Sung, the Arch of Triumph is apparently clad with 25,550 slabs of stone, marking the number of days of the leader’s life at that point.

Modelled on the Arc de Triomphe in Paris – except 10 metres taller than its namesake, with the addition of a triple-decker stack of oversized rooftops – it was built on the site where Kim Il Sung entered the city in 1945 to be greeted by cheering Koreans, marking the end of the Japanese occupation and the beginning of socialism.


Insdie North Korea Oliver Wainwright

East Pyongyang Grand Theatre, Pyongyang, 1989

One of three major theatres in the capital, the East Pyongyang Grand Theatre was built in 1989 as an interlocking composition of two buildings, one semicircular, one rectangular, containing a 3,500-seat auditorium along with dozens of rehearsal rooms.

A renovation in 2007 saw the lobby fitted with plaster mouldings, highly polished stone tiles and a huge relief mural on the wall, while the theatre was decorated with scalloped peach-coloured walls, purple-upholstered seats and a bright-blue vinyl floor, in-keeping with the predominant aesthetic of complementary colour schemes.


Insdie North Korea Oliver Wainwright

Rungrado May Day Stadium, Pyongyang, 1989

Built for the 1989 World Festival of Youth and Students (a kind of communist Olympic Games), the May Day Stadium was designed to resemble the unfurling petals of a magnolia flower, or a parachute that has just settled on the ground. It is said to be the largest stadium in the world, with capacity for 114,000 people.

It was used for the Mass Games gymnastic performances for years, and reopened in 2015 after a two-year renovation, which saw a new football pitch and running track installed, along with ancillary rooms for training and press conferences – together with the optimistic addition of the FIFA and Olympic logos.


Insdie North Korea Oliver Wainwright

Pyongyang Metro, Pyongyang, begun 1965

Claimed to be the deepest subway system in the world, at 110 metres below ground, the Pyongyang metro shares the same palatial scale and lavish decoration as the Moscow metro, with platforms adorned with marble columns and crystal chandeliers.

The stations’ great depth also means they can double up as bomb-shelters, a secondary function revealed by the thick steel blast-doors. There are two lines – the Chollima and Hyoksin – with eight stations each, with names like Comrade, Triumph, Victory and Reunification.

Gilded statues of Kim Il Sung greet commuters, along with exquisitely detailed socialist-realist mosaic murals and sculpted reliefs depicting patriotic scenes.

The post Oliver Wainwright’s highlights from Inside North Korea appeared first on Dezeen.

Bates Masi's Georgica Cove residence in East Hampton is modelled after historic farmsteads

American firm Bates Masi Architects took cues from vernacular architecture for this Hamptons home, which consists of sharply gabled forms wrapped in oversized shingles.

Georgica Cove is located on a waterfront property in East Hampton, an affluent village on the southern side of New York‘s Long Island.

Georgica Cove by Bates Masi

It was designed for a couple who wanted a cosy home that was ideally suited for just the two of them, yet could also accommodate visitors. “With their love of entertaining, the house had to grow on busy weekends to accommodate their children, grandchildren and guests,” said local studio Bates Masi Architects in a project description.

Georgica Cove by Bates Masi

To create an intimate yet spacious home, the team turned to vernacular building traditions. For centuries, the area was dominated by farms established by English settlers. A common building typology was the “connected farm”, which consisted of a main residence linked to smaller structures that were added over time. Each volume, while sharing a design vocabulary, had a distinct use.

Georgica Cove by Bates Masi

“The architectural style of the house was applied to subsequent buildings to unify the assembly, but partitions within provided the necessary separation between uses: house to kitchen, kitchen to shop, and shop to barn, for instance,” the team explained. “One volume was often offset or rotated from the next to provide greater access to light, air, and privacy from the other functions.”

Georgica Cove by Bates Masi

The connected farm typology served as a model for the Georgica Cove project. Totalling 6,500 square feet (604 square metres), the residence is composed of several rectilinear volumes topped with pointy roofs.

One contains the master suite and an office, while another encompasses guest rooms. A third volume houses an eat-in kitchen and family room, and a fourth contains a formal living room and dining area.

Georgica Cove by Bates Masi

“The spaces are arranged around a courtyard to create visual and physical connections between them, but those connections can be broken by large sliding doors,” the studio said.

Each structure has its own mechanical system, enabling it to be “shut down” when not in use. “This allows the livability of the house to expand and contract whether the couple is alone, hosting dinner guests, or has a full house of overnight guests,” said Bates Masi.

Georgica Cove by Bates Masi

Similar to connected farms, the home features a limited palette of materials. Inside, rooms feature contemporary decor and earthy colours. Oak floors and wooden cabinetry were used throughout in order to create a sense of unity.

On the exterior, cedar shingles – which are ubiquitous in New England – were scaled up and used to cover walls and roofs.

Georgica Cove by Bates Masi

Cedar was also utilised to create screens that provide privacy and filter light. Ample glazing was incorporated into the western elevation, providing views of the water.

The entire home sits atop a marble plinth filled with sand, which elevates the dwelling above the floodplain while also forming drywells that can handle stormwater runoff.

By using a historic farmstead layout, Bates Masi was able to create a modern dwelling that not only honours the area’s heritage but also meets the homeowners’ shifting needs.

Georgica Cove by Bates Masi

“The design repurposes the historical typology of the connected farm to suit the very timely needs of the site and the family,” the team said. “By acknowledging the area’s history and tradition of building, this home is an evolution of its cultural expression.”

Based in East Hampton, Bates Masi is well known for designing buildings on Long Island that reference vernacular architecture. Its cedar-clad Atlantic dwelling was modelled after a historic lifeguard station, and its Underhill residence features simple forms and materials that were informed by a Quaker settlement.

Photography is by Bates Masi Architects.

The post Bates Masi’s Georgica Cove residence in East Hampton is modelled after historic farmsteads appeared first on Dezeen.

Questions to ask a product design candidate

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Life is often about asking the right questions. Our first impression of a designer is gathered from their portfolio. While their work may appeal to us, it tells us little about the individual’s work ethic and design process. An interview with your applicant is like a blind date, you have matched the ideals on paper and that one meeting will determine whether you should spend your lives together or not. It is truly a terrifying idea!

(P.S. – Yanko Design Job Board will connect your job requirement to the target audience. Post a Job now! )

To walk you through the process of vetting a candidate, we have for you a series of questions devised by Bohdan Kit at Kepler that he uses to judge his potential candidates! Read the questions and their (ideal) answers below:


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Finding the right person for a startup can be hard, but finding the first product designer to strengthen your product in terms of aesthetics and usability may be even harder. From the very beginning, you want someone who is capable of leading the design process. You want someone who will do everything they can to solve the problems of your users and will make the product lovable and easy to use.

We had this hiring challenge recently at Kepler, because we were trying to find a design rockstar for our new product. While we were interviewing a bunch of product designers, I came up with a list of questions that now helps us scan potential hires like an X-Ray.

As Facebook’s Director of Product Design Julie Zhuo once said,

At a startup, you need your first one or two designers to be versatile. Great jacks-of-all-trades! Not only do they need to deeply understand and think through product strategy, they also need to have good interaction chops and decent visual sense, since they’ll be doing everything from designing the UX to thinking about the brand to designing icons, they need to have a diverse skill set

Pro Tip: Always remember that you should judge an artist by their work. Don’t just blindly rely on a simple conversation to reveal their true personality and skillset.

However, the information you’ll get out of asking the below questions will help you understand whether you are interested in seeing this potential hire’s work. Afterwards, some form of test task relating to your product design challenges would be a perfect next step. Here are my favorite questions to ask. I’ll discuss why you want to ask them, and what kinds of information you’d hope to hear in response.

1. In your opinion, what is a product design?
Why you should ask: Product Design is an extremely interdisciplinary domain connecting business, psychology, technical skills, and so on. Not only do you want a potential hire to understand that, but you also want them to explain how they’ve applied this knowledge in their previous work.

What you want to hear: One of the candidates I interviewed delivered a good answer:

Product design is a mix of business needs, visual appearance, and leadership. That’s why it is so hard, because you have to be good at all three things at the same time if you want your product to be successful…

This showed he really knew what he was doing.

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2. Tell us about the newest thing you’ve learned that has improved your design work. What was it? Why did you decide to invest time in it? How did you apply it afterwards?
Why you should ask: Product Design is a constantly evolving field. Learning how to learn is a must for everyone striving for success in this domain. A practical approach is what distinguishes a good product designer from a mediocre one.

You want someone who’s been there and gotten their hands dirty many times before they truly learned how it really works. Moreover, you need a balance. You don’t want someone conducting endless user research without any visible value for the product.

What you want to hear: Try to spot good cause-effect relationships. If a designer has learned something new to excel at their work, has carefully evaluated the time-effort ratio, and then applied this knowledge practically, they’re a rock star of learning.

Here is an example of what I’d consider a major red flag in this area:

Candidate: Recently, I got myself on good terms with [name of software] that helps you create those beautifully designed icons.
Me: Could you show us them?
Candidate: My superior decided that we didn’t need them…

 

3. In your opinion, how should a good design process start? Why?
Why you should ask: As Simon Sinek notes, everything we do should start with “why?” Despite the type of methodology a potential hire uses, design is a human-oriented type of job. Thus, having a decent level of empathy and a willingness to relate to the problems of others are indispensable skills in this creative field.

What you want to hear: Prick up your ears for any signs/behaviors that would help you describe this person as caring about the needs of others. A good answer might include something like this:

I start with the problem of a user first and then frame it as a design challenge. A good challenge is not too broad but leaves you enough ground for a creative approach to solutions…

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4. What’s the most important aspect of your job?
Why you should ask: It’s basically a self-awareness test. Folks must understand why they decided to be designers for life. In my opinion, designers and product designers are problem-solvers who thrive on the balance between what the user wants and what the business needs.

What you want to hear: There’s no one answer fits all. In my hiring experience, one of the candidates responded as follows:

The empowerment of people is what drives me here. Helping them to do their job better, be more productive and happy at the end of the day. It was amazing when users wrote stories how [product name] has helped them get promotion or increase income. That’s something definitely worth working for…

 

5. What should come first?—?product or style-guide?
Why you should ask: It’s one of those chicken and egg problems. In 99% of cases, the answer shows whether a person is capable of defending their point of view. Designers, like entrepreneurs, should have strong convictions, loosely held.

What you want to hear: There’s no correct answer to this one either. Look for a reasonable explanation on both sides.

Generally speaking, if you have some sort of brand already, then a style-guide will definitely help to preserve consistency in its visual communication and image.

On the other hand, if you hire someone to start from a blank page, then trying to standardize visuals is like cleaning your shoes right before getting into the mud.

 

6. Tell us about a time when you simplified a complex situation or problem. What made you seek out a simpler approach?
Why you should ask: I borrowed this one from Dmytro Voloshyn, a good friend of mine. He uses it to test whether a candidate fits his company’s values. And I think it just works perfectly with the whole startup theme.

Good work today is better than a great work tomorrow. So look for any compromises a candidate made for the sake of time and resources. We live in a world of overwhelming uncertainty where time becomes the most expensive currency. Therefore, sometimes making quick mistakes is what makes great products in the long-run.

What you want to hear:

When I started working at [company name], there was a really complex and long user flow requiring a lot of steps from a user to accomplish the task and even more development work to launch the product. I suggested prioritizing one of the customer segments and building a user flow that suited those customers first, realeasing new features for the rest of the segments in cycles afterward. It helped to launch the product faster and avoid high development costs… Finding a simple solution is what design is all about…

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7. Recall a situation in which you were asked to do something you did not like or knew was wrong. How did you react?
Why you should ask: Everybody has disagreements from time to time with colleagues, friends, their spouse, and so on. It’s not about who’s wrong or right, it’s all about the right communication.

What you want to hear: The answer that really stood out to me was something as follows:

I have to understand what is the purpose behind a demand first. Once I get to know it, I can offer the solutions that he or she was not even able to realize before asking [about something I personally did not like/thought was wrong]
8. What is your favorite product in terms of design? What do you like and what don’t you like? How would you improve it?
Why you should ask: Good candidates always get prepared for this one beforehand. And that’s a good thing. Product thinking is a skill that gets mastered with constant and deliberate practice. A good product designer won’t have a problem tackling this one.

What you want to hear:

One of the candidates I interviewed answered that Medium is her favorite product. I dug a little deeper and asked what she thought of the introduction of the clapping mechanism instead of a simple ‘like,’ which lots of folks considered quite controversial. She said every publication or story published here is a performance, and a good performance should be recognized with a million claps. Such a response is a perfect example of someone with a knack for good product thinking.
9. You start working on a new desktop/mobile/web app. What are your first steps?
Why you should ask: It’s sort of a dual check. People get better in everything they do once they have some systems set up. This is your chance to see whether a candidate is able to own and lead the product design process in your team. On the other side of the spectrum, look for questions rather than answers. Good product design folks always ask a lot of questions that help them deal with uncertainty.

What you want to hear:

Who is the user? What is the desired platform? Can those users be found on this platform? An exceptional product designer will definitely ask questions like these.

Once you’ve given some answers, look for a decent explanation of how they’d handle the design process for your type of product. In our case, we’re building a desktop app primarily for mac OS. Thus, being familiar with interface guidelines is a crucial element here.

10. How do you keep up with the latest design trends? What resources do you use to inspire yourself?
Why you should ask: This is a rather simple one. Nonetheless, in my experience a lot of people got knocked out here. Either they don’t follow English-speaking resources (which is a huge miss in today’s globalized world), or they simply won’t be able to call any resources to mind. This would be a red flag.

What you want to hear:

You just want to hear notable names that produce high-quality content (like Nielsen Norman Group, Invision Blog, UX Pin, IDEO and so on). They should also show a desire to experiment.

One candidate showed me the result of the button colors experiment he did after reading an article in one of the aforementioned blogs. Thus, feel free to prompt candidates if they don’t volunteer to show some examples themselves. At the end of the day, discovering a practical mind is always useful.


Our mission at Yanko Design Job Board is to connect you to the best designers in the industry who follow us as we deliver the best content.
 Post your requirement now to find your perfect candidates!

The original write-up by Bohdan Kit can be found here.

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A Fitness Tracker for Athletes

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The use of technology to motivate and encourage people to increase their fitness levels through tracking, personal goals and real-time feedback is extremely popular now, and its presence has increased massively in recent years. But, what about technology that’s tailored towards more advanced athletes who require detailed feedback in specific disciplines?

Well Playr could be just the device for them; composing of three components, a smart pod, a high-performance vest and an app, it accurately tracks the athlete during training or a game. The pebble-shaped smart pod, that features a bold light strip down the centre, attaches neatly to the vest which is designed to be worn either over, or under a top and sits on top the user’s back. The compact pod then communicates with the mobile application which provides the athlete with detailed, personal feedback so they can reflect on their performance!

Designer: Benjamin Hubert of Layer Design for Catapult

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PLAYR comprises a smart pod, a high performance vest, and an app. The pod is inserted into the garment, which is worn underneath or over a football jersey, and sits at the top of the athlete’s back. The pod communicates with GPS networks and the PLAYR app to track the athlete during training or a game, including distance covered, sprint distance, Pitch heat map, and player load.

PLAYR has been designed to seamlessly integrate into both training and match situations, to offer statistics to the players and teams in order to improve their game. The PLAYR pod has smart activation, and activates with magnets located inside the vest when inserted in the pocket. LEDs on the PLAYR pod communicate the GPS signal strength, battery life, and charging. When illuminated, these LEDs reveal a pattern in the reverse of the top surface of the pod to communicate the technological high performance nature of the system. The PLAYR pod is designed to be wirelessly recharged between uses on the induction charging pad.

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The PLAYR garment is a high performance vest, created using advanced high performance textiles. The integrated pocket for the pod is located at the base of the neck – a position chosen due to minimum impact in competitive team sports. The pocket is padded to prevent any impact injury, and the pod is inserted into this pocket from outside the garment for ease of access to the pod.

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The PLAYR app allows an athlete to track their performance, and offers a smart coach to improve the user’s game. It also allows the user to compete against friends and peers, and benchmark themselves against professional players. Providing unique performance insight, the SmartCoach system is a world first. PLAYR has handpicked the best professional football coaches and sports scientists to provide individually tailored advice on preparation, performance and recovery; the pillars for success at professional clubs. With SmartCoach insight, consumers for the first time can benchmark their match and training data against the greatest players in the world, as well as their football peers and community.

The app has been designed for ease of use, with simple, intuitive UI. The high contrast design is ideal for use outside where the app will be predominantly used on the sidelines of a pitch.

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Soap Designs That Are Inspired by Architecture!

I love it when designers relook at things taken for granted. For example, the shape of a soap. It doesn’t need to be brick-shaped or kidney-bean shaped, but somewhere down the line, people just settled for a form that ‘worked’.

Studio Ohk is looking at things differently, trying to turn soap into something of a canvas and a cultural awareness product that captures architectural elements from traditional and urban landscapes of Seoul, and converts them into forms that look simply stunning! The Urban Soap collection is a form-exercise done right. With shapes that are great to look at, wonderful to hold, and easy on the skin, the Urban Soap project is both visually and literally refreshing!

The soaps combine floral elements, structural elements, patterns, joinery details, etc. to create forms that look good, regardless of their application. Turning those forms into molds and then into soaps helps you interact with them in a way that’s not just visual but tactile too. The shapes are great to hold, and come with some beautifully soothing colors. Made in arguably the cosmetic capital of the world, Seoul, the Urban Soap also upholds the highest cosmetic standards, being a soap that’s easy on the eyes and easy on the skin too!

Soap design (if that’s a thing) seems to be stuck in a rut, with the soap form very rarely being expressive, unlike other cosmetic products. The Urban Soap takes inspiration from an unlikely place, architecture… but perhaps it’s the most apt place to look at for uniquely beautiful form inspirations!

Designers: Seung Tae Oh, Meeso Kim & Won Joon Lee

Click here to Buy Now: $12.00. Hurry, only 8 days left!

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Urban Soap is a set of 4 sculptural soaps inspired by urban fragments of Seoul. Their soaps are multi-sensory objects with the intention to deliver urban fragments through sensibilities of sight, smell and touch.

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Urban Soap is useful in the washroom, shower or kitchen.

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Made with a blend of essential oils, their soaps are gentle and effective tool for everyday use.

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Because their soaps smell amazing, we also recommend using them as air fresheners. Urban Soap will provide a gentle natural fragrance in your home. Like all air fresheners, the aroma dwindles with time. The evaporation of fragrance cannot be entirely prevented but it can be slowed by placing them somewhere cool and dry.


The Collection

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#01

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Design – The shape is inspired by a famous Seoul landmark, the Royal Palace. We loved the uneven stone pavements of the main hall and how they reflected sunlight. The slanted design of this soap accentuates the characteristics of the irregular surface of stone grounds.

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Fragrance – Made with transparent base, #01 is fragranced with a blend of bergamot and sandalwood offering a fresh and sweet scent of ground after a spring rain.

#2

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Design – The inspiration comes from different architectural structures of the city. #02 is composed of two soap bases – transparent and opaque. The different components help accentuate the complexity and construction of city’s structures.

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Fragrance – #02 contains natural indigo for soothing qualities. The musky-earthy aroma of patchouli and cedar highlights the firmness of the structures.

#3

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Design – The shape was inspired by the iconic painted patterns of the Royal Palace and the bright colour alludes to the neon signs in the city. We blended opaque and transparent bases to highlight the vivid colour and the softness of the floral shape.

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Fragrance – Its peppery, woody notes blended with warm florals will take you to a walk in the palace at sunset.

#4

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Design – The shape was inspired by the construction of roof tiles of the Royal Palace. The symmetry and continuity of the tiles encouraged us to create this unique design that emphasises the distinctive features of the palace. The colour is inspired by the glaring and reflection of the glass buildings and how light traveled through them.

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Fragrance – #04 is made with transparent soap base blended with natural indigo for soothing qualities. The fresh scent of flower bouquet and a touch of cucumber gives the impression of light and airy clouds in blue sky.


Inspiration

It all started with the insight of how they perceive the urban landscape that surrounds them. They wanted to take a closer look at the city and collect fragments to define a new product that conveys stories and experiences.

Their designs are inspired by Seoul’s distinctive combination of traditional and modern buildings. The shape and colours come from both elements of the region.

Click here to Buy Now: $12.00. Hurry, only 8 days left!

Transforming Wheels and More: DARPA's Experimental Military Vehicle Technologies

Carnegie Mellon University’s National Robotics Engineering Center has, quite literally, reinvented the wheel. They’ve developed a shape-shifting, tracked wheel that works as a conventional tire–until a button is pressed, and it reconfigures itself on-the-fly into a tracked triangle:

The RWT (Reconfigurable Wheel-Track) is one of five fancy tricks rolled out by DARPA’s Ground X-Vehicle Technologies program, which “aims to improve mobility, survivability, safety, and effectiveness of future combat vehicles without piling on armor.” Take a look at the other four nifty technologies they’ve developed:

I’m digging the spider-like vehicle with the super suspension, which has a shocking (see what I did there) six feet of travel–42 inches upwards, 30 inches downwards. However, I would definitely throw up inside that windowless vehicle with the teal and magenta road lines on the screen.

What Does a Refrigerator's Crisper Drawer Actually Do?

This is my final week of living in NYC, and it’s been nonstop packing. Yesterday I cleaned out my ‘fridge, and wondered: What the hell does the crisper drawer actually do? The name would suggest it keeps things crisp, but how does a transparent plastic drawer do that?

I poked around and found foodie website The Takeout, which consulted industry experts to provide the answer:

Carolina Biotti, Whirlpool‘s global food preservation scientist, tells The Takeout that thin-skinned and leafy produce like spinach, strawberries, and lettuce, are best stored in high humidity environments…. So the main goal of the fruit and veggie crisper drawers is to keep certain produce humid and happy.

But refrigerators don’t actually create humidity; they harness it.

“Food already has moisture trapped inside it and releases that into the air. In a crisper drawer, you’re putting the food in an enclosed space where the humidity can’t escape,” says Chris Thornton, senior manager of product training at Samsung.

The entry also points out that tomatoes and onions oughtn’t go in the crisper, as they last longer in dry air. Which means I have been storing tomatoes incorrectly for years. (Yesterday I threw out four of them.)

Another foodie website, Epicurious, offered this advice:

Some fruits and vegetables release a gas called ethylene as they ripen, and many fruits are sensitive to ethylene and ripen further in its presence (bananas are a perfect example of this). As fruits release more and more ethylene in a small space like a crisper drawer, the fruits nearby will begin to rot. And the fruit releasing the ethylene may rot itself.

What they recommend storing in the crisper:

“Ethylene-sensitive fruits and vegetables, like asparagus, broccoli, cauliflower, citrus, cucumbers, eggplant, green beans, greens (like chard and spinach), lettuces, parsley, peppers, raspberries, squash, strawberries, and sweet potatoes.”

What they recommend not leaving in the crisper:

“Ethylene-producing fruits and vegetables, like apples, apricots, avocados, ripe bananas, cantaloupes, figs, honeydew melons, kiwi, nectarines, papayas, peaches, pears, and plums.”

Short-Term Objects: A Power Outlet With Retractable Charging Cables

The thing I love about tools is that they will always be useful. My ratcheting screwdriver will be as handy in ten years as it was when I bought it. On the other end of the utility/sustainability spectrum, we have techno-objects that are useful today, but will be landfill in several years.

An example of this is this Rabbit Charger. You remove an existing dual power outlet’s cover, then plug the Rabbit into it.

It has two retractable cables (your choice of Micro USB or USB-C) that you can use to charge a phone and/or device.

Since we’re rapidly hurtling towards a future of wireless charging, this object isn’t likely to have a long shelf life. But I suspect people will be drawn to the novelty and short-term convenience of it.

Buy: Cindy Sherman Oops Phone Pool Float

Cindy Sherman Oops Phone Pool Float


Artist Cindy Sherman’s motto “I’d rather be swimming,” takes on new meaning with her new collaborative pool float, exclusive to the MoMA Design Store. An inflatable iPhone-shaped design, by Third Drawer Down, features one of Sherman’s modified selfies……

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Test Drive: 2019 Lexus ES: The vehicle turns 30 with many big questions in tow

Test Drive: 2019 Lexus ES


by Andrew Maness

The 2019 ES marks a new chapter for both the stalwart sedan and Lexus overall. While it’s now riding on the same solid GA-K platform that underpins two other dramatically improved models—the Toyota Camry and Avalon—the bigger news……

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