Janson Goldstein creates "bicoastal" atmosphere at ALC boutique in New York

Wide archways, vintage furniture and tropical plants feature in the first bricks-and-mortar shop for women’s fashion brand ALC, designed by American architecture firm Janson Goldstein.

The ALC Soho store is located along Greene Street, alongside many other high-end clothing and design boutiques. Encompassing 3,000 square feet (278 square metres), the boutique is the first physical retail space for ALC – a ready-to-wear fashion label that was started in 2009 by Los Angeles-based designer Andrea Lieberman.

ALC NYC by Janson Goldstein

Lieberman was born in New York City and studied at Parsons School of Design. The designer travelled extensively and worked as a celebrity stylist prior to launching her own clothing company.

The new shop, along with two others slated to open this year, represent her “ultimate vision” for ALC and enable her company to connect with its customers in person. All three stores are being designed by Janson Goldstein, a New York architecture studio.

ALC NYC by Janson Goldstein

“Each store is designed to draw from different parts of the brand’s heritage, playing into the designer’s bicoastal roots and world travels,” the architects said in a project description. “Understanding that the materiality and colour of the store were preeminent, we began by assembling a range of materials that ‘lived in the world’ she was looking to create.”

The Soho boutique serves as the brand’s flagship location. The project was completed in four months, from the initial brief to opening day in April 2018.

For the narrow and deep space, the team created three distinct rooms, with the central space envisioned as a “more formal square”. The rooms are separated by wide, rounded archways that align with one another, providing a clear view from the front of the shop to the rear. Display areas carved into walls also feature an arched form.

“By breaking up the space this way, ALC is able to tell different stories within their collection, and the customer is easily moved through a series of intimately proportioned spaces,” said architect Steve Scuro, a partner at Janson Goldstein.

ALC NYC by Janson Goldstein

To capture the fashion designer’s New York roots, the architects preserved certain elements found in the “classic Soho storefront”, such as cast-iron columns and a large skylight. Dark grey concrete tile flooring and vintage furniture that came from local shops are also meant to exude an East Coast feel.

In contrast, light-toned finishes and decor are intended to denote the brand’s connection to the West Coast. Pink drapery was hung in the fitting room, and “off-green” wool rugs were placed on the sales floor. The space is also decorated with a range of potted tropical plants.

ALC NYC by Janson Goldstein

“California is represented by the softness of the forms, the lightness of the wall finish and the large travertine tables that ground the centre of the front room, which were fabricated in LA,” the team said.

The two additional ALC shops will be located in New York and California. One boutique will be housed within a Bloomingdale’s department store on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, and the other will be located in the Pacific Palisades neighbourhood in Los Angeles.

ALC NYC by Janson Goldstein

Soho is a busy shopping destination, as many furniture and fashion brands have stores and showrooms in the area. Among the names to recently open there are Tom Dixon, Everlane, Menu and Casper.

Photography is by Daniel Salemi.

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Competition: win a Bigger Carry-On suitcase from Away

In the latest Dezeen competition, we have teamed up with travel luggage brand Away to offer readers the chance win one of two Bigger Carry-On suitcases in navy blue.

This larger version of Away’s regular carry-on suitcase is designed for those who struggle to pack light, are travelling for a long period or have the benefit of flying on a larger plane.

According to Away, it is “the perfect carry on, sized up. Unbreakable, thoughtfully designed, and guaranteed for life.”

The Bigger Carry-On is designed for those who struggle to pack light, are travelling for a long period or have the benefit of flying on a larger plane
The Bigger Carry-On is designed for those who struggle to pack light, are travelling for a long period or have the benefit of flying on a larger plane

Each suitcase features a solid polycarbonate shell, combination lock, 360 degree Hinomoto wheels, and an ejectable battery that charges your phone.

The luggage also includes an interior suppression system and hidden laundry bag, so you can organise your clothes in style.

Each suitcase includes an interior suppression system and hidden laundry bag

“What you take with you matters,” said Away.

Your luggage should pull more than its weight. It should be your home between homes, your closet between closets, your outlet between outlets.”

“Because if you’re looking down at your dying phone and your broken bag, you can’t see up, out and ahead to the world in front of you,” continued the brand.

Away was founded in 2016 by New Yorkers Steph Korey and Jen Rubio, after they became frustrated at the lack of chic, affordable and easy carry on luggage available to travellers. Rapper Jay Z is also one of the brand’s investors.

Two winners will each win one Bigger Carry-On in navy. The suitcase is also available to purchase in eight other colours including: black, green, sand, brick, white, asphalt, blush and sky.

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Competition closes 22 August 2018. Two winners will be selected at random and notified by email, and his or her names will be published at the top of this page.

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J Meejin Yoon to become first female dean of Cornell architecture school

New York’s Cornell University has appointed alumnus J Meejin Yoon as the head of its College of Architecture, Art and Planning.

The Korean-American architect will become the college’s first female dean since it was founded in 1896. She will begin her five-year term at the school in Ithaca, New York, on 1 January 2019, succeeding current dean Kent Kleinman who has held the position since 2008.

The architect currently serves as the head of the architecture department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology‘s School of Architecture and Planning, where she was also the first women to hold the position.

At Cornell, which has one of the country’s top-ranking undergraduate architecture courses, Yoon will oversee 51 faculty members and 783 students.

She gained her own Bachelor of Architecture from the college in 1995, before completing her masters degree at Harvard Graduate School of Design in 1997.

Along with teaching, Yoon also runs her firm Höweler + Yoon with partner Eric Höweler. The pair met at Cornell, and set up their studio in Boston in 2001. Their past projects range from a residence in Virginia and a folded metal canopy in Phoenix, to a conceptual structure made from algae-growing pods and a glow-in-the-dark swing set.

“Meejin Yoon is an exemplary alumna of Cornell’s architecture programme,” said Kotlikoff in a statement. “Her time as a student at Cornell was formative, and continues to inform her work as an architect and an academic.”

“She has led key academic initiatives and contributed to the transformation of the department of architecture at MIT, and leads an award-winning design practice,” he continued. “I am pleased to welcome her back to the College of Architecture, Art and Planning and to Cornell.”

Höweler + Yoon will remain in Boston, where the firm currently employs over 20 staff and Höweler teaches at Harvard GSD.

In a statement, Yoon credited Cornell’s diverse programme with helping to shape her career.

“I am deeply indebted to my education at Cornell,” she said. “It was an empowering experience. From taking courses in sculpture in the Foundry, to environmental law studies, to architecture studios in Rand, as a student I felt like there were no boundaries and no limits to my education.”

“The faculty who taught me were truly exceptional teachers and enabled students to challenge conventions and expectations around design and the built environment,” Yoon added.

Yoon has taught at MIT since 2001, when she joined as an assistant professor in architecture. She was named director of the undergraduate architecture programme in 2010, then became head of the department in 2014. Her successor in that role is yet to be announced.

Some of the top positions at the most prestigious architecture schools across the US are currently held by women. Deborah Berke serves as dean at Yale, while Monica Ponce de Leon heads up Princeton’s department. Elsewhere, Eva Franch i Gilabert was also recently elected director of London’s Architectural Association, making her the first woman to hold the post.

Earlier this year, Cornell’s architecture school severed ties with alumnus Richard Meier, and abandoned plans to name the department chair in his honour, after sexual harassment claims against the architect emerged.

The university recently opened a new technology campus on New York City’s Roosevelt Island, which includes buildings by SOM and Morphosis.

Photograph is by Andy Ryan.

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Unitasker Wednesday: Canadian Breath Spray

All Unitasker Wednesday posts are jokes — we don’t want you to buy these items, we want you to laugh at their ridiculousness. Enjoy!

G’day eh? I sees this ‘ere product, Canadian Breath Spray, and I wonders if it’ll make anyone sound Canadian if they use it, eh? Lard tunderin’ if it did b’y we’d have youse all pronouncing Newfoundland (noo-fn-LAND) correctly.

I’d bet you a Loonie or a Toonie that you’d be drinking double-doubles at Timmies while wearing toques. Of course, you could stay at the cottage and mix your mickey with pop while sitting on the chesterfield eating ketchup chips.

We know the keeners will give’er by calling the last letter of the alphabet ZED. Any Americans using this product will put the letter U in words like favour, colour, and labour while the British will have to spell words like organize, patronize, and itemize with a Z not an S.

Nous avons deux langues officielles au Canada. C’est possible, en utilisant ce produit vous parlerez français.

There is no need to put on your runners and queue up for this product. It doesn’t really work — SORRY!

Post written by Jacki Hollywood Brown

YD Design Storm #3

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The YD Design Storm takes a look at products, services, and spaces that are storming the internet. The idea? To turn internet-storming material into brainstorming material! Scroll down for our collection of handpicked works from design websites, portfolios, and social media. Get inspired, save projects, pin images, or share links with fellow design enthusiasts!

Watch this space for your digest of design brain-fodder… and an ever-evolving map of design trends!

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By Brum Brum.

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By KHBT Architects.

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By Igor Sirotov.

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By Kamina & C.

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By Mara Paris.

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By Otília Erdélyi.

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By Dimitar Palanski.

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By Schwarzmann.

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By Guilherme Wentz.

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By Arqmov Workshop.

The Natural Evolution of Motorbike Dashboard Displays

Look at any dashboard on a motorbike and you’ll see a few key elements that haven’t really changed for decades. Occupying the most amount of space is undoubtedly the speedometer, followed by the fuel gauge… but ask yourself this. How often do you need to look at the speedometer to see exactly which speed you’re going at? Chances are, if you’ve got a mobile phone mounted on your dashboard, you’re MUCH more likely to look at navigation rather than at your speed… so why haven’t dashboards evolved to accommodate for information we’re more likely to need?

Until motorcycles DO change their legacy dashboards to include a navigation system, we’ve got the Beeline Moto, a product that follows the line of necessity being the mother of invention. A slick, circular display on a hockey-puck shaped device that secures beautifully to your bike’s existing dashboard, the Beeline Moto acts as a navigation unit, giving you directions to your destination in a manner so natural, it guides you without distracting you from your driving.

The way the Beeline Moto delivers information to you is worth appreciating. Rather than the complicated bird’s eye view of roadways with a blue dot or arrow that moves along the line of the route, the Beeline Moto keeps things basic by just simply telling you where to go. Built with an E-Ink display that’s high-contrast in the daylight, and backlit at night, the Beeline UI is just a rotating arrow that points at where you need to be headed. No complicated road maps, or voice instructions that announce names of roads, often confusing you rather than guiding you, all the Beeline Moto does is point you in the right direction.

The Beeline Moto pairs with your smartphone, allowing you to set your end-destination on your mobile, while the Beeline app does the rest. Once you’ve done that, the Beeline Moto guides you using route set by the app, without needing to rely on a network connection. The Beeline Moto works in two modes. A route mode plots a route for you to follow, and the arrow on the UI guides you through it, while a compass mode simply points at your end-destination, allowing you to pick which routes you want to take (ideal if you’re familiar with roads, or if you just want to explore new routes).

Designed much like the original Beeline for bicycles, the Beeline Moto comes with a waterproof, shockproof housing that elegantly yet securely straps to all bikes with a twist-lock mount. Built with a 30-hour battery life (rechargeable via USB) and the ability to be used on all motorbikes and scooters, the Beeline Moto is the motorbike dashboard’s much-needed upgrade.

Designer: Sam Lucas

Click here to Buy Now: $129.00 $199.00 (35% off). Hurry, less than 24 hours left and over $600,000 raised!

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Beeline Moto is the antidote to navigation frustration. Everything about it has been built with elegant simplicity in mind. From the clean navigation interface and fast setup with your smartphone, through to the super long battery life and the award winning rugged design, they have put your needs first throughout.

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Simple, Safe Navigation

Beeline Moto’s interface guides you in the clearest manner possible with one big arrow pointing in the direction you need to be heading right now. Simple! No complex instructions, no detailed maps. It’s stripped back to the essential information you need in the moment, leaving you to focus on what’s important – the road or trail ahead of you.

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Whether that’s guiding you precisely along a set route along the coast, or from point to point off the beaten track, it’s wonderfully intuitive. You don’t navigate, you flow.

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Easy Route Planning & GPX Upload

The Beeline app (iOS & Android) makes planning routes a breeze: quick location search; save favourite places; drag and drop pins to create your perfect route; save routes and share with friends. No PC connection required!

Want to try something new? There’s a wealth of great routes out there created by adventurers who’ve gone before us. Take advantage of it by following their routes. Import GPX files into Beeline in seconds.

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Global Coverage Out of the Box

In this day and age it shouldn’t be the norm to pay for and update maps every time you go to a new place. Beeline maps have global coverage from day 1 and always stay up to date, giving you one less thing to worry about.

Once you’ve set up your route, no data connection is required meaning you can ride off the grid. Also great for saving on data costs when travelling abroad.

N.B. Due to local regulation, we can’t currently guarantee functionality in mainland China

Extraordinary Battery Life

Super low power screen technology means Beeline Moto’s 350mAh battery lasts for 30 hours of use between charges. To put that into context, a Garmin Zumo lasts for 4 hours, a TomTom Rider lasts for 6.

GPS and data optimization means your phone can last all day too.

Waterproof. Shockproff. Adventure-proof.

Fully waterproof, shockproof and a rock solid attachment mechanism mean Beeline Moto is ready for whatever you can throw at it. The transflective memory-in-pixel display is visible in the brightest sunlight and a built in backlight automatically turns on at dusk.

Twist Lock Mount To Fit Any Bike

Beeline Moto’s twist lock fitting holds it on your bike securely, snapping on and off in a moment. A range of bar and tank mounts attach it to any motorcycle or scooter. When off the bike, the compact size slips into a pocket easily.

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Click here to Buy Now: $129.00 $199.00 (35% off). Hurry, less than 24 hours left and over $600,000 raised!

Design Job: Get It Together! Staples Is Seeking a Product Design Manager

The Manager role within the Design and Innovation Team supports the development of Staples products across the own brand portfolio. You will build our brands by creating design standards and delivering designs that meet business

View the full design job here

Word of Mouth: Pittsburgh: A city changing from industrial icon to a culinary and cultural hub, much to the delight of locals and visitors alike

Word of Mouth: Pittsburgh


Pittsburgh, moated off from its suburbs by the ribboning of three rivers (the Allegheny and Monongahela and Ohio) finds itself in the midst of a revolution. On the banks lie—vacant and, in many people’s eyes, obtrusive—the remnants of a fruitful industrial……

Continue Reading…

Vibrant street furniture creates sociable square in south London

Central Saint Martins graduates Fiona Hartley and Ellie Fox Johnson have introduced blocky, brightly-hued outdoor furnishings to a public square in Croydon to foster interaction among locals.

The project titled College Square, was developed by Hartley and Johnson while completing the final year of their architecture degrees at Central Saint Martins (CSM), during their Spatial Practices programme.

They proposed creating a variety of reconfigurable outdoor furniture for an area of Croydon, south London, which could be used by members of the public as a spot for socialising and recreational activities.

“The main inspiration for the project came from the different groups of people we envisioned using the space,” Hartley told Dezeen.

“We developed the project as a ‘kit of parts’ in a language that could be adapted and implemented into different sites, as a response to the increasing number of vacant spaces in the borough.”

The pair were invited to fully realise their proposal by Meanwhile Croydon, a scheme that employs public installations and cultural events to revitalise neglected areas of the borough.

With the help of fellow CSM graduates Mina Fouladi and Olivia Sutherill, Hartley and Johnson set about erecting the project in a small square in front of Croydon College.

A couple of freestanding steel-frame archways bookend the site, which are topped by the project’s name in red block lettering.

These were loosely informed by the shape of Arnhem gate, an old brutalist gateway near to the college where Hartley and Johnson initially considered situating their design.

Dotted in between are a selection of chunky, wood-clad furnishings painted bright green or baby pink that can perform a variety of functions.

The boxy volumes can be reconfigured to create performance stages or tiered blocks where visitors can sit and gather and have steep ramps that can be slid down by skateboarders.

“Each of the blocks can be configured and used in a multitude of ways, meaning the space can evolve and change along side the events that take place there,” explained Hartley.

In 2017 design studio Raw Edges created a collection of oversized concrete armchairs for London’s Greenwich Peninsula. Coming as part of the area’s redevelopment scheme, the seats can be rearranged so that passers-by can sit, lay down, or climb over them.

Photography is by Ruth Ward.


Project credits:

Designers: Fiona Hartley, Ellie Fox Johnson
Supported by: Mina Fouladi, Olivia Sutherill
Detailed design: Croydon Council Placemaking Team
Fabricators: SetWorks

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Kei Ninomiya uses Moncler's down jacket as basis for all-black collection

Fashion brand Moncler has released an all-black collection designed by Kei Ninomiya, which was inspired by the Italian brand’s classic down jacket.

Launched this week, the 6 Moncler Kei Ninomiya Noir collection includes voluminous jumpers knitted from Nylon tubes, round skirts, stoles, cropped jackets, long coats and sturdy boots.

The collection was created as part of the brand’s Moncler Genius series, which was unveiled at Milan Fashion Week earlier this year.

Kei Ninomiya uses Moncler's down jacket as basis for all-black collection

Moncler Genius is a year-long project that has seen eight emerging designers create eight capsule collections for the brand, all inspired by the classic Moncler down jacket.

Described by the brand as “wearable geometry”, Ninomiya’s collection pair techniques like knitting and embroidery with unexpected materials like shiny nylon and leather.

Modular elements, such as leather flowers, are made using techniques such as intarsia, quilting, stitching, applique and ruffling. These elements are then multiplied and assembled to create complete forms.

After being unveiled during Milan Fashion Week, Ninomiya’s Noir collection is the second collection in the series to be launched in stores.

Ninomiya – a protégé of Rei Kawakubo – heads up his own brand, Noir Kei Ninomiya, under the Comme des Garçons umbrella. He is known for creating garments in a restrained palette of black, using white or red as occasional highlights.

The Japanese designer told Dezeen that his all-black collection for Moncler carefully blends his own aesthetic with the 66-year-old Italian brand’s DNA.

“We use many very unusual processes to make clothes, such as connecting small modular parts,” he said. “The biggest challenge was to find a way to adapt the down material to our style of creation.”

“They have deep respect for creation and were very open and flexible to our (noir’s) style of making things. It was really an interesting experience to work with them,” continued Ninomiya.

“Moncler Genius is a challenge of innovation, and a progressive project in every respect. It allowed me the opportunity to develop new techniques of down. Progress always stems from the way things are made.”

Remo Ruffini, Chairman and CEO of Moncler, told Dezeen: “Kei represents the quintessence of craftsmanship and his sense of experimentalism is really outstanding. Moreover each designer worked on a specific collection to target the different Moncler audiences.”

“It was surprising to see the way Kei was able to create something new, developing new possibilities and shapes of down- wear never explored before,” he continued.

Kei Ninomiya uses Moncler's down jacket as basis for all-black collection

Other Moncler Genius designers include Hiroshi Fujiwara, who runs the Japan-based label Fragment. His Moncler Fragment collection was the first to launch last month.

British designer Craig Green’s collection is next up, followed by stylist Karl Templer, who curated Moncler 1952, and Irish designer Simone Rocha, whose Genius collection launches in September.

Founder of skate-inspired label Palm Angels Francesco Ragazzi will launch his Moncler Palm Angels collection in October, the same month as Valentino’s creative director Pierpaolo Piccioli’s.

The eighth Genius collection to hit stores will be Sandro Mandrino’s, who has curated the Moncler Grenoble collection – Moncler’s long-standing technical skiwear line.

Kei Ninomiya uses Moncler's down jacket as basis for all-black collection

As the Genius collection’s land in stores over the next four months, Moncler will continue to stock its mainline collections, but the Italian brand said that the Genius collections will be its main communication focus.

“Due to the natural evolution of the brand, inherent to its DNA, in February we launched a new strategy aimed at disrupting the traditional twice-yearly rhythm of the fashion shows, by rolling out collections once a month,” said Ruffini of the brand’s Genius series.

Kei Ninomiya uses Moncler's down jacket as basis for all-black collection

“The world is changing as fast as ever and the digital era has changed the consumer’s attitude in a season-less perspective,” he continued.

“Moncler’s new direction aims to establish a constant dialogue with the consumers through monthly projects, talking to different audiences and remaining always relevant, while being able to evolve.”

The 6 Moncler Noir Kei Ninomiya collection was launched at Dover Street Market in Ginza on July 24th, 2018 at an event inspired by the garments’ shiny black palette.

Other fashion launches this year have included a series of dresses by Iris van Herpen that replicate feathers, and John Galliano’s Artisanal AW 2018 women’s collection for Maison Margiela, which features layers of sorbet-coloured garments worn back to front and iPhones clamped to model’s calves.

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