A Futuristic Potager At The Frontdoor Of A Museum

Du 19 Avril au 4 Novembre 2018 le parvis du Musée d’Art de Nantes se fait la vitrine de l’hybridation entre art contemporain, écologie et technologie. L’artiste Laurent Tixador, adepte des solutions innovantes, a  conçu un potager « urbain » autosuffisant. Pourquoi urbain ? A bien y regarder, il n’est composé que de ces objets que rejette la ville : une baignoire usagée, branches de platanes après élagage, cœur de laitues et radicelles de poireaux destinés à être jetés, etc. Dans la baignoire nagent paisiblement quelques poissons dans l’eau qui arrose ensuite les plants aériens du potager. Ce type de culture en circuit fermé est appelé culture aquaponique, et pourrait bien être l’alternative citadine écologique des années à venir.

       

Oeuvre de Laurent Tixador « Potager » dans le vitrine du Musée d’arts de Nantes

Chantier de construction de l’oeuvre de Laurent Tixador Musée d’arts de Nantes








Cheeky Illustrations of Our Relationship with Social Media

Contrôle-t-on les médias sociaux ou les médias sociaux nous contrôlent-ils ? Scott Martin alias Burnt Toast Creative explore cette question dans ses dernières séries Social Media. La collection d’illustrations numériques colorées jette un regard insolent sur les relations complexes que nous entretenons avec nos écrans. Les téléphones sont décrits comme des pièges à souris ou des drogues illégales ; lorsque nous tombons dans des trous ou des flaques d’eau nous pouvons nous noyer. Martin soulève un problème urgent en empruntant un itinéraire léger, en faisant passer son message à travers des illustrations pleines d’humour et de provocation.





Malgorzata Bany showcases Jesmonite tables and lamps at The New Craftsmen

Furniture maker Malgorzata Bany presents objects made from resin-based material Jesmonite in a London Design Festival exhibition at The New Craftsmen showroom in Mayfair.

Slade-trained maker Bany produces lighting and furniture using Jesmonite, a durable manmade material produced with a mineral base and water-based acrylic resin.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

She is showing three side tables, a low table (she prefers the term to coffee table), a console table and two different types of lamp in two finishes.

These are complemented by a selection of accessories: bowls, platters and vases, in a natural-looking brown that resembles polished wood and plaster-toned beige.

The objects will are displayed throughout the festival as a curated room set, alongside Bany’s pick of items from The New Craftsmen’s collection.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

The designer’s sensuous pieces have a plaster-like finish, but are stronger than works made in plaster and are cool to the touch like stone. The durable material can also be cast to resemble wood, stone or other materials.

Bany began working with jesmonite on the recommendation of her former tutor when a plaster piece broke.

“It looks similar but you can do so many more things with it. You can laminate it, it’s more flexible, it pigments very well. It’s better than plaster for many things,” she told Dezeen.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

Bany’s relationship with The New Craftsmen – a retail space set up six years ago to nurture and promote British craft and its makers – began in 2015 when she first sold a collection of furniture through the Mayfair store.

“She applies the same consideration to simple domestic objects as she does to monumental sculptural furniture and, in doing so, creates moments of ritual and serenity in the everyday,” said Natalie Melton, co-founder of The New Craftsmen.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

The designer has a manufacturer who helps her by making the larger pieces, but she makes the smaller accessories herself, as well as bespoke items.  For these, she carves the shape into rigid foam mould and then sands it and coats it, working into the negative space.

Once it’s cast, the mould is ripped apart to reveal the piece.

“Every piece is always going to be different. Because I’m not sculpting the object but rather the mould, it has to be very intuitive. It’s a bit of guesswork,” she said.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

For this exhibition, she has created a new capsule collection of table lights in two organic shapes that resemble small hillocks, one rounded, the other flatter, which are paired with delicate tall paper shades. Thin metal stems connect the two.

Bany explains that she is most concerned with the volume of the finished object, with its function being a secondary concern that leads her to an interesting creative solution.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

“If you consider that a table needs something flat, or a bowl needs something concave, starting from these principles you can build on top of that. Sometimes thinking this way around is more interesting,” she said.

“What I really care about is the volume, the weight of a thing, and that leads me. It might still end up as a table with four legs but the route is more interesting.”

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

Many makers will present work made in glass during the London Design Festival, including Ron Arad, Studio Sahil and Jana Němcová. The city-wide festival runs from 15 to 23 September, but the exhibition at The New Craftsmen will continue until 14 October.

The post Malgorzata Bany showcases Jesmonite tables and lamps at The New Craftsmen appeared first on Dezeen.

Sella Concept avoids South American cliches in retro-themed London restaurant Piraña

Red-painted timber and metal contrast with jade terrazzo in Piraña, a bar and restaurant in Balham, London, created by design studio Sella Concept.

The venue is owned by brothers Alastair and Nicholas Heathcote, who have set up a number of successful bars and restaurants across the UK capital in the past five years.

Piraña by Sella Concept

Sella Concept designed the space to have a casual and easygoing atmosphere, avoiding cliched references to South American culture.

To do this, studio founders Tatjana von Stein and Gayle Noonan eschewed the soft, warm colours and traditional patterns that are typically associated with the region. They instead opted for a bold, retro theme, with banquette seating and signage reminiscent of a 1950s diner.

Piraña by Sella Concept

Renovating with the shell of a former restaurant, Sella Concept worked directly with the building contractor to subdivide the space into different areas, each with a subtly different mood. However, the designers were careful to ensure that there were no divisions between diners and drinkers.

“We are both fascinated by the psychology of behaviour behind design and the question of how to encourage behaviour through layout, design and materials – what design makes us feel,” said Sella Concept’s Tatjana von Stein.

Piraña by Sella Concept

“Our favourite projects are those that allow us to answer one question: how can we transport an audience?” she continued.

“The design concept began by developing an understanding of how people will use the overall space, incorporating visual shifts and atmospheric transitions to accommodate changing behaviours within the venue.”

Guests arrive in a light and welcoming front room that houses a chef’s table, a curved bar that overlooks the kitchen, a banquette-lined platform and a “secret” snug with a private bar hatch.

Piraña by Sella Concept

In contrast, the back room is darker and more opulent, lined with cosy and intimate private booths, from which customers can call the bar directly.

“These distinct but connected zones allow Piraña customers to use the space as their mood and preference dictates – whether they fancy sociable casual dining and drinking or a more private personal experience,” explained the designers.

Piraña by Sella Concept

The restaurant’s colour and material palettes play with bold contrasting colours and textures. For example, blue and white mosaic tiles are set against red metal window frames on the facade while inside, the bespoke jade terrazzo floor clashes with the earthy red upholstery and the curved timber slats that line the bar.

“Apart from the chairs and lights, every fixture and item of furniture in Piraña has been custom-designed for the space by Sella Concept, including the booths, bar, banquette, tables, stools, floors and bathroom sinks,” said the designers.

Piraña by Sella Concept

In order to create a consistent character and style across all of the restaurant’s brand collateral, Sella Concept was also tasked with creating Piraña’s visual identity, which can be seen across menus, business cards and online.

London-based Sella Concept has recently completed several projects in London, including creative hub De Beauvoir Block, the Mediterranean-hued Omar’s Place restaurant in Pimlico and the pink toned Night Tales bar in Hackney.

Photography is by Nicholas Worley.

The post Sella Concept avoids South American cliches in retro-themed London restaurant Piraña appeared first on Dezeen.

YD Design Storm #14

design_storm_14

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!

B_Mug_by_pawenastudio

B-Mug by Pawena Studio.

sandwhichbikes

Sandwichbike by Basten Leijh and Pieter Janssen.

dreamhouse

Doggy Dreamhouse by Studio Schicketanz.

zoo_collection_01

zoo_collection_02

Cuddle toys from the Zoo Collection by Ionna Vautrin for EO.

Barca_lounge_chair_design_by_Jacob_Joergensen

Barca Lounge chair by Jacob Jøergensen.

M-Coffee_Table_by_Daniel_Boddam

M-Coffee Table by Daniel Boddam.

the_Star_shelf_by_Studio_NADA_DEBS

The Star Shelf by Studio NADA DEBS.

ClickTape_Tape_Dispenser_by_Derk_Reilink

Click Tape Dispenser by Derk Reilink.

desert_house_by_kendledesign

Desert House by Kendle Design.

casa_sabugo_01

casa_sabugo_02

casa_sabugo_03

Casa Sabugo by Tarrago De Miguel.

Malgorzata Bany showcases Jesmonite tables and lamps at The New Craftsmen

Furniture maker Malgorzata Bany presents objects made from resin-based material Jesmonite in a London Design Festival exhibition at The New Craftsmen showroom in Mayfair.

Slade-trained maker Bany produces lighting and furniture using Jesmonite, a durable manmade material produced with a mineral base and water-based acrylic resin.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

She is showing three side tables, a low table (she prefers the term to coffee table), a console table and two different types of lamp in two finishes.

These are complemented by a selection of accessories: bowls, platters and vases, in a natural-looking brown that resembles polished wood and plaster-toned beige.

The objects will are displayed throughout the festival as a curated room set, alongside Bany’s pick of items from The New Craftsmen’s collection.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

The designer’s sensuous pieces have a plaster-like finish, but are stronger than works made in plaster and are cool to the touch like stone. The durable material can also be cast to resemble wood, stone or other materials.

Bany began working with jesmonite on the recommendation of her former tutor when a plaster piece broke.

“It looks similar but you can do so many more things with it. You can laminate it, it’s more flexible, it pigments very well. It’s better than plaster for many things,” she told Dezeen.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

Bany’s relationship with The New Craftsmen – a retail space set up six years ago to nurture and promote British craft and its makers – began in 2015 when she first sold a collection of furniture through the Mayfair store.

“She applies the same consideration to simple domestic objects as she does to monumental sculptural furniture and, in doing so, creates moments of ritual and serenity in the everyday,” said Natalie Melton, co-founder of The New Craftsmen.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

The designer has a manufacturer who helps her by making the larger pieces, but she makes the smaller accessories herself, as well as bespoke items.  For these, she carves the shape into rigid foam mould and then sands it and coats it, working into the negative space.

Once it’s cast, the mould is ripped apart to reveal the piece.

“Every piece is always going to be different. Because I’m not sculpting the object but rather the mould, it has to be very intuitive. It’s a bit of guesswork,” she said.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

For this exhibition, she has created a new capsule collection of table lights in two organic shapes that resemble small hillocks, one rounded, the other flatter, which are paired with delicate tall paper shades. Thin metal stems connect the two.

Bany explains that she is most concerned with the volume of the finished object, with its function being a secondary concern that leads her to an interesting creative solution.

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

“If you consider that a table needs something flat, or a bowl needs something concave, starting from these principles you can build on top of that. Sometimes thinking this way around is more interesting,” she said.

“What I really care about is the volume, the weight of a thing, and that leads me. It might still end up as a table with four legs but the route is more interesting.”

Malgorzata Bany installs jesmonite furniture at The New Craftsmen for LDF exhibition

Many makers will present work made in glass during the London Design Festival, including Ron Arad, Studio Sahil and Jana Němcová. The city-wide festival runs from 15 to 23 September, but the exhibition at The New Craftsmen will continue until 14 October.

The post Malgorzata Bany showcases Jesmonite tables and lamps at The New Craftsmen appeared first on Dezeen.

Wolves football club unveils new visual identity featuring 3D wolf head

The new visual identity for Premier League football team Wolverhampton Wanderers, better known as Wolves, centres around a 3D version of its wolf badge.

Creative studio SomeOne created the new branding for the English football club, which is owned by Chinese organisation Fosun Group, to feature across its physical and online platforms.

As well as the 3D wolf, it features a vibrant yellow and black colour palette, and a typeface with tooth-like details.

Wolves football club

Wolves were promoted to the Premier League last season following a six-year absence, after winning the Championship with a record number of points.

The brief given to SomeOne was to help “extend the brand” to appeal to a global audience, but to also respect the long history of the club, which was a founding member of the English Football League in 1888, and a champion in 1974 and 1980.

Wolves football club

“Wolves are entering a new exciting era, both on and off the pitch – all under the leadership of the Fosun Group. This dynamic, exciting future needed to be re-positioned to fans through our narrative and identity,” said Russell Jones, head of marketing at Wolves.

“Whilst we had an existing brand style in place, we have been working closely with the team at SomeOne to re-define our messaging and produce a set of modern assets that have refreshed our brand,” he explained.

Wolves football club

When designing the new brand identity, SomeOne knew not to touch the club’s “iconic” logo of a wolf’s head on a yellow hexagon with a black border. Instead, the designers used it as inspiration for a new three-dimensional brand property.

Influenced by Wolverhampton’s heritage of steel and ironmongering, the new imagery features a tonal illustration of a wolf’s head with triangular eyes, which looks as if it could be forged from metal.

“The depth of the three-dimensional wolf adds a dynamic, competitive spirit that can’t be reflected in flat vector forms,” said Simon Manchipp, founder of SomeOne.

Wolves football club

Accompanying the imagery are two new sans-serif fonts, Wolves Display Cut and Wolves Display, which feature a “bold and condensed style”. The triangles of the wolf’s eyes were used to apply cuts and angles to the lettering.

The club’s original colour palette of orange and black was tweaked to a brighter shade of yellow. The phrase “wolf pack” is also made prominent throughout the brand identity.

Wolves football club

According to Wolves, the rebrand has been “well received both internally and externally”.

“The strategy, values, and ethos encompass everything the club stands for, from its passion and progression to its consideration for heritage and engagement,” said SomeOne.

“By using the geometric forms of the eyes, we began removing cuts and angles from the letterforms. Moving forward, this allows the club to speak in a distinctive and ownable voice, without relying too heavily on the badge.”

Wolves football club

Also this year, Leeds United Football Club revealed a new logo, only to withdraw it after complaints from fans led to more than 50,000 people signing a petition urging for it not to be used.

Footballer David Beckham has recently also revealed new crest designs for his new Miami football team named Internacional Club de Fútbol Miami, which features a round pink and black badge.

The post Wolves football club unveils new visual identity featuring 3D wolf head appeared first on Dezeen.

YD Design Storm #14

design_storm_14

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!

B_Mug_by_pawenastudio

B-Mug by Pawena Studio.

sandwhichbikes

Sandwichbike by Basten Leijh and Pieter Janssen.

dreamhouse

Doggy Dreamhouse by Studio Schicketanz.

zoo_collection_01

zoo_collection_02

Cuddle toys from the Zoo Collection by Ionna Vautrin for EO.

Barca_lounge_chair_design_by_Jacob_Joergensen

Barca Lounge chair by Jacob Jøergensen.

M-Coffee_Table_by_Daniel_Boddam

M-Coffee Table by Daniel Boddam.

the_Star_shelf_by_Studio_NADA_DEBS

The Star Shelf by Studio NADA DEBS.

ClickTape_Tape_Dispenser_by_Derk_Reilink

Click Tape Dispenser by Derk Reilink.

desert_house_by_kendledesign

Desert House by Kendle Design.

casa_sabugo_01

casa_sabugo_02

casa_sabugo_03

Casa Sabugo by Tarrago De Miguel.

Deborah Berke Partners completes low-slung black residence in Connecticut

This low-slung residence in rural Connecticut, completed by New York firm Deborah Berke Partners, is clad in black siding to blend into the surrounding forest.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

The Sackett Hill House is located in the town of Warren, roughly two hours from New York City by car. The home sits on an expansive property that enjoys distant landscape views, a feature that the architecture studio wanted to highlight.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

A long driveway winds through the wooded site on approach to the residence, arriving at a gravel parking area at the front.

“Visitors walk on a stone path through an opening in a historic stone fence to reach the house, a subtle threshold that heightens awareness of the landscape,” said Deborah Berke Partners in a project description.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

The entrance to the L-shaped home is situated the intersection of its two wings. The longer volume runs from east to west, and contains the home’s communal spaces and entertaining areas.

The shorter volume houses four bedrooms, one of which is separated from the others by a small lounge area for more privacy.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

The interior sides of the “L” shape have generous openings that provide ample views of the property. Multiple doors in the southern facade allow direct access to the back yard from the vestibule, kitchen, and living room.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

In addition to a terrace that extends the living room outside, the architects also included a screen porch at the eastern end of the home, and a private terrace for the master bedroom, which faces south.

“It’s hard to say which moment in the house is more rewarding,” said Deborah Berke, who also serves as the dean of Yale School of Architecture. “It’s fitting that you’re rewarded when you reach each end of the house.”

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

Dark polished concrete was used for the floors throughout the home, bringing a refined feeling to the space and reflecting ambient light. The interior walls feature vertical wooden boards similar to the ones used for the home’s exterior, but painted white.

“The black-stained wood siding was a revelation,” said architect Marc Leff, who led the project. “It almost reduces the house to a pure and simple volume that fits into the trees and unfolding hills.”

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

Deborah Berke Partners works across a variety of scales and typologies, from office towers to the conversion of a historic insane asylum into a hotel. The firm has also completed a number of private residences in the US, including a modernist-influenced home in Indianapolis to a house in the Hamptons with two workout areas.

Project credits:

Architect and interior designer: Deborah Berke Partners
Design team: Marc Leff (project lead), Caroline Wharton Ewing (interiors lead), Noah Biklen, Catherine Bird (landscape) Brandon Dean, Jason Hill, Stephanie Lam, Peter Liao, Shuning Zhao
Structural engineer: Ross Dalland
Lighting design: PHT Lighting
General contractor: Frank Talcott

The post Deborah Berke Partners completes low-slung black residence in Connecticut appeared first on Dezeen.

Deborah Berke Partners completes low-slung black residence in Connecticut

This low-slung residence in rural Connecticut, completed by New York firm Deborah Berke Partners, is clad in black siding to blend into the surrounding forest.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

The Sackett Hill House is located in the town of Warren, roughly two hours from New York City by car. The home sits on an expansive property that enjoys distant landscape views, a feature that the architecture studio wanted to highlight.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

A long driveway winds through the wooded site on approach to the residence, arriving at a gravel parking area at the front.

“Visitors walk on a stone path through an opening in a historic stone fence to reach the house, a subtle threshold that heightens awareness of the landscape,” said Deborah Berke Partners in a project description.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

The entrance to the L-shaped home is situated the intersection of its two wings. The longer volume runs from east to west, and contains the home’s communal spaces and entertaining areas.

The shorter volume houses four bedrooms, one of which is separated from the others by a small lounge area for more privacy.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

The interior sides of the “L” shape have generous openings that provide ample views of the property. Multiple doors in the southern facade allow direct access to the back yard from the vestibule, kitchen, and living room.

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

In addition to a terrace that extends the living room outside, the architects also included a screen porch at the eastern end of the home, and a private terrace for the master bedroom, which faces south.

“It’s hard to say which moment in the house is more rewarding,” said Deborah Berke, who also serves as the dean of Yale School of Architecture. “It’s fitting that you’re rewarded when you reach each end of the house.”

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

Dark polished concrete was used for the floors throughout the home, bringing a refined feeling to the space and reflecting ambient light. The interior walls feature vertical wooden boards similar to the ones used for the home’s exterior, but painted white.

“The black-stained wood siding was a revelation,” said architect Marc Leff, who led the project. “It almost reduces the house to a pure and simple volume that fits into the trees and unfolding hills.”

Sackett Hill House by Deborah Berke and Partners

Deborah Berke Partners works across a variety of scales and typologies, from office towers to the conversion of a historic insane asylum into a hotel. The firm has also completed a number of private residences in the US, including a modernist-influenced home in Indianapolis to a house in the Hamptons with two workout areas.

Project credits:

Architect and interior designer: Deborah Berke Partners
Design team: Marc Leff (project lead), Caroline Wharton Ewing (interiors lead), Noah Biklen, Catherine Bird (landscape) Brandon Dean, Jason Hill, Stephanie Lam, Peter Liao, Shuning Zhao
Structural engineer: Ross Dalland
Lighting design: PHT Lighting
General contractor: Frank Talcott

The post Deborah Berke Partners completes low-slung black residence in Connecticut appeared first on Dezeen.