Competition: win an overnight stay at Weymouth Mews in London

In our latest competition, we’ve teamed up with Living Rooms to offer readers the chance to win an overnight stay for two at Weymouth Mews in Marylebone, London.

A short walk from the restaurants and boutique shops of Marylebone High Street, Weymouth Mews is the latest addition to the Living Rooms collection, which offers rooms and suites that emulate private homes, as an alternative to hotels.

Weymouth Mews was shortlisted for the RIBA London Award 2019, recognising excellence in architecture projects completed in the UK capital.

Readers are in with the chance of winning an overnight stay for two in one of the property’s seven apartments, designed by architects Morrow + Lorraine.

Weymouth Mews is the latest addition to the Living Rooms collection

The Grade II-listed property has been renovated to maximise natural light, with many of the apartments also benefitting from outdoor terraces.

Inside, Living Rooms’ founder Tracy Lowy has styled the space with original midcentury furniture, as well as a selection of prints, commissioned pieces and retro record players.

Many of the apartments also benefit from outdoor terraces

Weymouth Mews’ guests enjoy a dedicated 24-hour telephone concierge and access to a local boutique gym.

Living Rooms describes the mews property as “the hotel alternative, providing the seclusion and freedom of a private home, but with all the services and perks of a five-star hotel”.

Tracy Lowy has styled the space with original midcentury furniture

Bicycles are also provided for exploring the local area, as well as an iPad with an edited neighbourhood guide.

On arrival, guests receive a tailored food and beverage welcome pack including their choice of milk, bread, preserves and a bottle of wine.

“It’s about feeling at home,” said Living Rooms. “Enabling guests to live like a Londoner in fashionable surroundings, combining the whatever-you-need spoiling of a hotel with everything needed to make a home-away-from-home.”

Stays at Weymouth Mews can also be booked online with prices starting from £280

Living Rooms is a collection of residences and a hotel by Tracy Lowy, including The Laslett in Notting Hill, No.5 Maddox Street in Mayfair, and Europa House in Little Venice.

Stays at Weymouth Mews can also be booked online with prices ranging from £280-£800 per night excluding VAT.

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Competition closes Tuesday 13 August 2019. One winner will be selected at random and notified by email, and his or her name will be published at the top of this page. Terms and conditions apply. Subject to availability. You must be over 21 to apply and the prize must be redeemed by 13 August 2020.

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A modular spice/mix/oil rack that makes food-prep lightning fast!

I’ve always wondered how those vertically-shot Buzzfeed Tasty-style videos manage to prepare their meals so seamlessly. Everything they need is always at an arm’s length away, in their own convenient glass bowls. While it isn’t really practical to own twenty glass bowls to make your food-prep faster, the Chef Caddy proposes a pretty nifty solution.

Meet the Chef Caddy. It is to a chef what a well-organized CD rack is to a deejay. Designed to be modular, the Chef Caddy holds spices, curry-pastes, pre-mixes, dried herbs, seasonings, and oils in its magnetic body that allows you to snap elements together. Designed by Casey Moulton, a speed-chef in his own right, Chef Caddy uses a system he developed years ago, to make food preparation blitzing-fast by simply organizing your seasoning by cuisine. Clubbing seasonings and oils into cuisines like French, Thai, Mexican, Indian, or Italian, Casey found it was much easier to sift through spices without having to dig around in a cluttered spice rack for that one badly-labeled bottle. Chef Caddy allowed you to group similar seasonings together, to make it easier to locate and access whatever you need. The caddy’s body features four docking stations for seasoning-jars, and a bottle-cozy for storing a bottle of cooking or seasoning oil. Each caddy unit comes with magnetic labels that let you easily organize your mixes and spices, as well as a cheat-sheet on top of the caddy to help group your ingredients together, sorting them by cuisine.

The modular, magnetic spice rack doesn’t just organize your kitchen, it de-clutters it too. Keeping everything in a vertically-standing column of jars, the Chef Caddy occupies lesser space than a messy spice-rack and even keeps things aligned, thanks to the magnets that automatically snap and align individual caddies together. Moreover, for smaller apartments, the Chef Caddy even allows you to mount individual cuisine-caddies on cabinets, keeping your spices organized and counters clear.

Based around popular cuisines, the Chef Caddy allows you to organize your spices in a manner that’s sensible and relevant. A Basic Caddy set comes with the essentials like salt, pepper, onion, garlic, and cooking oil, while other individual caddies club spices together based on how often they’re used simultaneously. Magnetic tags allow you to easily label individual spice jars as well as add cheat-sheet spice-lists to caddy columns (and on oil bottles too), while blank tags let you add your own labels if you’re the kind to use special spices or self-made mixes. To preserve your seasoning for longer, all jars and oil bottles are made from glass, while the caddies are crafted from powder-coated aluminum, allowing them to be light, easy to clean, and keeping them from getting rusted.

The pleasure of owning and using the Chef Caddy goes beyond just having a marvelously organized spice rack. The magnetic, modular feature allows you to easily attach and detach spice-groups to be used at the kitchen, at the dining table, or even outside at the barbecue grill. Chef Caddy lets you choose from 15 different world cuisines to organize your spices (and even make your own bespoke super-secret spice-racks) putting all necessary ingredients right at your fingertips, so you don’t have to dig through a cluttered spice cabinet to find the right condiment, and you can prepare your meals with lightning-speed without investing in a whole bunch of glass bowls like those guys at Buzzfeed Tasty’s studio.

Designer: Casey Moulton

Click Here to Buy Now: $39 $50 (22% off) Hurry, less than 48 hours left. Raised over $100,000.

Powder-coated aluminum shell with glass bottles.

Meal prep better.

BBQ better.

Host better.

Pancake better.

Eat better.

Store it easily.

Here’s their recommended strategy for storing your caddies:

– Caddies containing seasonings used nearly every time you cook should stay out on the counter, as handy as can be.

– Caddies containing cuisine-specific seasonings should be stored in easy to reach locations: on the counter, under cabinets, in a top drawer or an eye-level shelf in a cupboard.

– Bulk and rarely used seasonings don’t need to go in Chef Caddy units and can be stored out of the way in a dry, cool place.

The complete label set comes with:

– 15 cuisine groups, each with four spice cap labels and seasoning list.
– 60 total spice cap labels covering the 60 most common spices.
– 12 bottle collars for the most common oils, vinegars and non-perishable sauces.
– 5 blank label sets to write your own variations.

Click Here to Buy Now: $39 $50 (22% off) Hurry! Only 2 days left!

Alex Israel projects Bat Signal from roof of Le Corbusier's Cite Radieuse

Bat Signal by Alex Israel on roof of Le Corbusier's Cite Radieuse in Marseille

Multimedia artist Alex Israel has installed a Bat Signal at the MAMO Arts Centre on the roof of Le Corbusier‘s brutalist Cité Radieuse apartment block in Marseille, France.

Israel installed the spotlight projecting the outline of a bat as part of his Batman-focused exhibition at the Marseille Modulor (MAMO) Arts Centre, which occupies the rooftop of Cité Radieuse.

Bat Signal by Alex Israel on roof of Le Corbusier's Cité Radieuse in Marseille

The installation is based on Tim Burton’s 1989 film Batman, and the Oscar-winning sets created by production designer Anton Furst.

Israel has reimagined several props that defined the film including the Bat Signal, which was made from a refurbished second world war searchlight for the film and used by Gotham City Police Department to call Batman. 

Bat Signal by Alex Israel on roof of Le Corbusier's Cité Radieuse in Marseille

The Los Angeles-based artist chose to focus on the superhero as both Marseille and the brutalist apartment block designed by Le Corbusier reminded him of Gotham – Batman’s fictional home.

“I was inspired by the myth of Marseille, and that historically it’s been a bit tough, rough and dangerous,” Israel told Dezeen. “And by Le Corbusier’s Cité Radieuse, which is made of concrete, and has a hyper-urban sensibility.”

He added that he hopes people seeing the signal will realise that “childhood dreams can and do come true”.

Bat Signal by Alex Israel on roof of Le Corbusier's Cité Radieuse in Marseille

Israel is the seventh artist to have created an installation at MAMO, which was established in 2013 by Ora Ito and occupies the roof and a theatre on the top floor of the brutalist building.

Alongside the spotlight Israel has installed a sculpture of the Batmobile car that the superhero drives in the film in the theatre space.

Previous installations at MAMO include Swiss artist Felice Varini creating a colourful optical illusion and French artist Daniel Buren installing a display of mirrors and coloured glass.

Ito commissioned Israel to create a distinctly different installation at the art centre than previous artists.

“I was interested in opening up the MAMO to a new direction: this exhibition is more pop, even if still with a strong conceptual statement, but less minimalist then the former ones,” Ito told Dezeen.

Bat Signal by Alex Israel on roof of Le Corbusier's Cité Radieuse in Marseille

“I am fascinated by how Alex Israel managed to transfer the iconic word of Batman in a place that perfectly relates to the initial film set he is referring to, by understand the potential resonance allowed by the current context: a brutalist architecture, a gritty image of the city – be it real or imaginary,” he added.

“He opens up the space of the MAMO to a new dimension, a fictional, cinematographic one.”

Cité Radieuse apartment block is one of the most influential brutalist buildings of the 20th century. Completed in 1952, the 18-storey slab block was the first, and best-known, of Le Corbusier’s Unité d’Habitation.

Within the block apartment 50 has been overhauled by a succession of designers including Normal Studio, students from Swiss university ÉCAL and French designer Pierre Charpin.

Photography is by Stéphane Aboudaram / We Are Content.

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Star Wars Design Furnitures

Le designer Kenneth Cobonpue donne vie à une série de meubles inspirés de Star Wars en collaboration avec Disney. Les personnages et symboles iconiques de la saga sont parfaitement reconnaissables dans cette ligne de mobilier mêlant technologie et design.
La collection a d’abord été lancée en Asie du Sud-Est puis aux États-Unis le mois dernier. Entre un fauteuil Dark Vador et un tabouret Chewbacca, les fans devraient trouver de quoi se régaler ! Plus d’infos sur le site du designer.









Reinvent your closet with this pop art inspired iconic chair made up of hangers

Perhaps the most practical piece of pop-art I’ve seen, the Coat Check Chair is tongue in cheek (try saying that fast), with the way it addresses fashion, function, form, and fun, all in one design! Basically a sturdy metal frame that also doubles as hanger-storage, the Coat Check Chair comes with as many as 40 hangers that eventually form the seat and backrest of the chair!

The sturdy hangers can take the weight of a person sitting or even standing on it, thanks to their thick cross-section, and they deck pretty well on the chair too, sliding in from the top, accumulating to form a surface you can sit on (two rings at the end of the seat prevent the hangers from sliding over). “By bringing the elements of the closet into the foreground of a person’s daily routine, the Coat Check Chair offers a unique design and a gentle encouragement to stay neat,” says Zeledón. “The hangers’ flexible plastic makes the chair surprisingly comfortable, while its impermanent construction lets users customize in terms of hanger color and pattern.”

Zeledón’s Coat Check Chair is truly an avant-garde representation of today’s wardrobe. Consider it a commentary on many things, from the consumerist culture, to a critique on cupboards, to even a reinvention of the mundane hanger into a product that has much more purpose, structurally, visually, and even emotionally. It manages to achieve all this while becoming a popular visual meme too. The Coat Check Chair is a winner of multiple design awards, including the coveted IDEA award and the Spark award. Flipping traditional furniture (and wardrobe) design on its head, the chair comes in a stainless-steel frame and even across different powder-coated color options. You can even choose the color of the hanger, giving you the feeling of choosing your furniture’s upholstery! The hangers can be used as seats, or periodically even in your wardrobe to hang your garments. When you’re done, slide them back into the chair, giving them more meaning, purpose, and visibility than they would get somewhere in a dark corner in your stuffy closet!

Designer: Joey Zeledón

Click Here to Buy Now: $449 $1123 (60% off). Hurry, less than 48 hours left!

Coat Check Chair: Pop Art Meets Practical

This iconic designer chair creates unexpected meaning in mundane objects. Recombining clothes hangers and a steel closet rod, it elevates these pedestrian artifacts into something special.

Your Closet. Reinvented.

By bringing the elements of the closet into the foreground of a person’s daily routine, the Coat Check Chair offers a unique design and a gentle encouragement to stay neat.

The hangers’ flexible plastic makes the chair surprisingly comfortable, while its impermanent construction lets users customize in terms of hanger color and pattern. Timeless and practical, the Coat Check Chair can fit in your studio, home, boutique, hotel or gallery, letting your closet join the party.

Welded Steel Rings

Important Detail

These welded steel rings are what keep the hangers from sliding down the frame. The custom rings intentionally match the diameter of the tubular hangers so they nest together beautifully.

Sit Down or Stand!

It’s true. You can sit on this chair. In fact, you can stand on this chair. Well, Joey can stand on this chair. He weighs 170 lbs. So it’s 170 lbs of his dynamic weight.

Colors

Mix and Match Frame and Hanger Colors to Create Your Own Custom Chair!

7 frame options:

– powder coat: off-white, black, dark pink, dark turquoise, dark yellow, and navy blue
– polished stainless steel

12 hanger colors:

– neutrals: white, off-white, black, grey,
– cools: navy blue, royal blue, turquoise, and purple
– warms: red, pink, orange, yellow

The chair frame is designed and built to work with standard Container Store hangers. We provide a set of hangers with the chair frame, but you can order more hangers in the future from Container Store at any time to make changes to your chair color.

Manufacturing

Joey has partnered with a high quality manufacturer in Pennsylvania. Their innovative powder coating process produces a durable finish with minimal impact on the environment. They don’t use solvents that produce hazardous VOCs. Their pre-treatment system uses rainwater as the source water in the process, does not produce hazardous by-products, and uses an evaporation method to reduce wastewater discharge. Their facilities use energy-efficient infrared heaters to speed curing, reducing carbon footprint. And, they retrieve and reuse powder over spray to minimize waste.

Design Process Zine: The Making of Coat Check Chair

Design Process Zine

This zine showcases the making of Coat Check Chair. It’s a behind-the-scenes look at the raw sketches, prototypes and thinking that led up to this iconic designer chair. The story begins in the furniture design studio course at Rochester Institute of Technology in 2005.

Print 1

Prints

These are vector art prints of the Coat Check Chair. Each print is on enhanced matte paper poster. 8 x 10 size. Signed by the designer.

Print 2

About the Designer

Joey believes good design is like good music. It’s approachable, engaging, and makes you feel. It’s something you want to play on repeat.

Having led successful design projects at industry stalwarts like Steelcase, Smart Design, and Continuum, Joey’s experience is vast. Since 2006, he has been creating iconic design for both young and established brands that make food, furniture, housewares, lighting, spaces, shoes and tech.

His work has garnered over 25 design awards, a dozen patents and has been published by Apartment Therapy, Boston Globe, Core77, Design Milk, Fast Company, Good Housekeeping, Metropolis, New York Times, Real Simple, Taschen, TIME and Wired.

Born and raised in Upstate New York by a Costa Rican immigrant father and Irish American mother, Joey is proud of his mixed heritage and blue collar roots. He is also proud of being a first generation college graduate. He is grateful for what he has, the people who have supported him and believes wholeheartedly in the American dream.

Click Here to Buy Now: $449 $1123 (60% off). Hurry, less than 48 hours left!

Cif ecorefill spray bottles can be refilled with cleaning concentrate

Unilever launches refillable Cif spray bottles

Consumer goods company Unilever has launched Cif ecorefill, a concentrated cleaning product that can be diluted at home within a refillable spray bottle, to reduce plastic use.

The Unilever product comes as a 10-times concentrated formula, which requires much less packaging than the regular size bottle.

Shoppers buy one spray bottle containing a Cif household cleaning product, which they can then refill with the concentrate.

If the trigger spray breaks on the bottle, Unilever will deliver a replacement free of charge.

Cif ecorefill uses 75 per cent less plastic 

Once the original bottle of cleaning product is finished, users can attach the Cif ecorefill to the bottle to release the highly concentrated product into the bottle, which they then fill with water to dilute.

In addition to being made with 75 per cent less plastic than a spray bottle, diluting the product at home amounts to 97 per cent less water being transported, 87 per cent fewer trucks on the road, and therefore a reduction in carbon emissions.

Unilever aims to produce all its ecorefill and spray bottles from 100 per cent recycled plastic by the end of 2020.

Unilever launches refillable Cif spray bottles

“The launch of Cif ecorefills is a game-changer when it comes to reducing plastic waste in the products we use to clean our homes,” said Gemma Cleland, vice president of homecare at Unilever.

“Our research shows that two-thirds of us feel guilty when we throw away plastic and shoppers are looking for easy switches that can have a positive impact on the world around us,” she continued.

“We think there’s no better place to start than in the home,” Cleland added. “By keeping a bottle of Cif and refilling and reusing it over and over again, consumers can reduce their consumption of single use plastic.”

Consumers demanding refillable options

According to research from marketing consultancy firm Edelman cited by Unilever, UK consumers are increasingly demanding more refillable and reusable solutions.

Refillable products are more important to customers than recycling, the company stated.

While trigger sprays are designed to last for 15 uses, which would be an average of five years, instead they are generally thrown away after just one use.

Unilever launches refillable Cif spray bottles

By reusing the bottles, Cif hopes to reduce the amount of trigger sprays being disposed of, which are problematic to recycle as many companies aren’t equipped to deal with them.

The ecorefill itself is 100 per cent recyclable, with the exception of the plastic sleeve.

Refill and reuse central to single-use plastic problem

“Changing how we make, distribute, use and dispose of everyday products is one of the biggest environmental challenges the world is currently facing,” said the company. “It’s also an issue where consumption habits are just as important as business models.”

“For companies like ours – that sell consumer goods – this is particularly challenging,” it continued. “Even more so for household care and cleaning brands, because the safety requirements for these products mean they need sturdy packaging that doesn’t leak.”

“Refill and reuse options are an important part of tackling the issue of single-use, disposable bottles. The challenge has been finding a way to do it that’s viable and easy to use.”

Compact and light, the ecorefill costs less than an ordinary Cif spray bottle, and is currently available to purchase in supermarkets across the UK.

Danish beer brand Carlsberg made a similar move last year when it replaced the plastic ring wrapping used to secure its multipack beers with eco-friendly glue, reducing its plastic waste by up to 76 per cent.

Carlsberg’s focus was on reducing ocean plastic, which amounts to an estimated 12.7 million tonnes per year.

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Into Samir Belhamra’s Magical Montages

« Depuis l’enfance, j’ai toujours été fasciné par l’art et la créativité », révèle Samir Belhamra. Ce graphiste Français a débuté la création artistique par le dessin puis les graffitis et la réalisation de diverses inventions. « Puis Internet, la photographie et des outils tels que Photoshop m’ont ouvert un horizon infini pour voyager dans des univers graphiques. Cela m’a permis de développer mes propres idées et de lancer mon activité ». Avec ses œuvres atypiques situées entre la réalité et l’imaginaire, l’artiste souhaite avant tout « que mes œuvres fassent rêver, voyager et qu’elles puissent changer les perceptions ».

Retrouvez ses montages sur sa page Instagram : @grafixart_photo

 











 

This toaster-inspired space-saving dishwasher pops out clean dishes in a jiffy

The Dishwasher. The must-have kitchen appliance for the time-conscious and lazy home-occupiers alike. However, justifying the loss of valuable space and the increase in water-bill that comes with them is sometimes a little tricky… especially when you live in a place that is on the smaller side! This was the motive that led to the creation of Toasher, the portable dishwasher for limited living spaces.

Toasher utilizes a method of interaction that has been lifted from another kitchen appliance, the toaster. The dirty items are lowered into the stainless steel tank, where an ultrasonic transducer agitates the dirt and separates it from the dishes. Add-ons elevate Toasher’s functionality even further; with the modular peg-board that can be attached to the rear of the unit, to expanding the amount of storage that it can hold and allowing it to be used as an item of furniture as well as just a kitchen appliance!

Designer: Lin Shuo De

Snøhetta designs bench for Nobel Peace Centre that brings people together

The Best Weapon bench at Nobel Peace Centre by Snohetta

A bench designed by architecture firm Snøhetta for the Nobel Peace Centre in Oslo is shaped like a partial circle to encourage people to sit closer together and start conversations.

The project is described as a “peace bench” and is titled The Best Weapon, in reference to Nelson Mandela’s famous quote, “The best weapon is to sit down and talk”.

The six-and-a-half-metre long bench is made from anodised aluminium that was bead blasted and pre-distressed to create a robust surface that will withstand constant use. Nelson Mandela’s inspirational quote is engraved into the metal.

Bench will be unveiled at UN headquarters

Snøhetta collaborated with Norwegian outdoor furniture producer Vestre and aluminium specialist Hydro to develop the installation.

It will be unveiled at the United Nations Headquarters in New York City this Thursday on Nelson Mandela Day, 18 July.

The bench will remain at the Headquarters’ plaza through September before being transferred to its permanent location near Oslo City Hall, where the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded annually.

Design encourages users to start conversations

The form of the bench represents a section of a circle that touches the ground at its lowest point. The gentle curve of the seat encourages users to sit closer together and creates a setting for conversation.

The Best Weapon bench at Nobel Peace Centre by Snohetta

“In today’s digitalised and polarised society, sitting down and speaking together might be the most effective tool that we have to find solutions and common ground,” said Snøhetta founder, Kjetil Trædal Thorsen.

“We believe in using design as a tool to create lasting symbols that foster fruitful communication.”

The installation is intended as a symbol of diplomacy and dialogue that pays tribute to the Nobel Peace Prize laureates and celebrates their efforts to unite people and resolve conflict across the world.

Communicates the value of peace

It balances its function as a piece of public furniture with its mission to communicate the values of the Nobel Peace Center as a symbol for discourse and peace.

“We hope that the bench will encourage people to sit down and talk – to their friends, but also to strangers and adversaries,” claimed executive director of the Nobel Peace Center, Liv Tørres, adding, “Genuine conversations are requirements for peace.”

Snøhetta was founded in 1989 by Norwegian architect Kjetil Trædal Thorsen and American architect Craig Dykers.

The firm is best known for its innovative architecture projects such as an underwater restaurant in a remote Norwegian village and a public library in Calgary, Canada, featuring a dramatic wood-lined atrium.

Snøhetta also regularly works on interiors, furniture and objects, such as the latest Norwegian banknotes and a chair made from recycled plastic and steel taken from fish farms.

Photography is by Lars Tornøe.

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WilkinsonEyre designs biodome complex for Iceland

The Aldin Biodomes by WilkinsonEyre

Two gently undulating greenhouses will form the Aldin Biodomes complex, which WilkinsonEyre has designed for Elliðaárdalur valley in Iceland.

Located on the outskirts of Reykjavik, the greenhouses are being designed by WilkinsonEyre in collaboration with local studio Basalt. The complex is being created to open up the largest green area close to the Icelandic capital to the public, with the aim of boosting wellbeing during the country’s dark winter months.

It will comprise a series of public spaces and two glass biodomes – a man-made, self-sufficient ecosystem that is engineered to imitate nature, which will be filled with exotic plants from other regions.

The Aldin Biodomes by WilkinsonEyre
WilkinsonEyre has designed two biomes in Iceland

“Elliðaárdalur was chosen for its proximity to Reykjavik urban tissue, being off centre enough to be embed in nature but of direct access from the main road arteries,” said director Paul Baker.

“It will provide local people and visitors with a year-round tropical oasis and gathering point, helping to boost wellbeing during the region’s dark winter months,” he told Dezeen.

The two domes in the complex will be linked by an information area, restaurant, shop, market and Farm Lab – an educational environment on local food production.

These will be combined to create a gently undulating form, which WilkinsonEyre modelled on the scale of surrounding residential areas and topography of the site to create “an elegant addition to the city skyline”.

The Aldin Biodomes by WilkinsonEyre
The project is designed to merge into the landscape

“The aim of the scheme is to generate the right space for ecosystems to grow and evolve, and to merge the architecture with the surrounding landscape,” added Baker.

“The vicinity of the residential areas and the topography of the site have informed the shape and scale of the scheme.”

The Aldin Biodomes by WilkinsonEyre
The biomes will stand next to an information area, restaurant and shop

Once built, the Aldin Biodomes will be positioned to maximise views of Iceland’s midnight sunsets in the summer, and the northern lights during the winter.

It will also be designed by WilkinsonEyre as “an exemplar in sustainability”. The greenhouses will be heated using the region’s abundant geothermal energy, and it is hoped the building will become carbon neutral.

WilkinsonEyre is an architecture studio founded by Chris Wilkinson in 1987 with Jim Eyre, which has offices in London and Hong Kong. In 2012, the studio completed the Gardens by the Bay in Singapore, one of the world’s largest climate-controlled glasshouses.

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