Malaria; a word that quite literally fills dread through our veins. In 2017 approximately 660,000 people died due to it, and even today 40% of the world’s population is at the risk of it. Developing nations especially Sub-Saharan Africa are Malaria’s most affected victims, and these countries are the most ill-equipped to deal with it. The tests currently available to detect malaria are highly limited and not at all economical. Specialized testing instruments and highly trained medical staff are required to actually handle and judge blood samples. Unable to meet these requirements for the detection of Malaria, developing nations are rampant with it. Hence Detroit based product designer Minwoo Lee designed ‘Aria’.
Aria is a portable medical product created with the sole purpose of detecting malaria utilizing Infrared Light. Aria eradicates the need for medical specialists, expensive equipment and highly trained staff. It performs the functions of all. Lee chose infrared light as the hero of the day, because it can be used to detect the presence of Malaria causing parasites in the blood, and can even ascertain the number of parasites present. ‘Attenuated Total Reflection-Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy’ is a test that harnesses infrared light to detect parasites through the molecular vibrations they create. The light increases the amount of oxygen in the blood, in turn killing the viral, bacterial and fungal toxins in the blood.
Shaped like a capsule, Aria contains a smaller plastic capsule or a mini Aria that is used for the collection of blood. Simply smear the blood sample onto mini Aria and insert it into the larger capsule. The infrared light activates and a digital microscope examines the blood. The microscope provides details and observations, and this final result is then displayed on the screen. The images of the blood cells on the screen will help to determine whether they have been infected by Malaria or not.
The actual benefit and functionality of Aria are unparalleled. It is a game-changer for the medical field, enabling the quick and efficient detection of Malaria, allowing it to be treated in its early stage, and thereby saving the lives of millions. This is a concept that needs to be transformed into a tangible product pronto! Aria is not just a design concept, it’s a future lifesaver.
Mexican architect Tatiana Bilbao refuses to produce computer visualisations of designs still in progress. She says that making collages helps her to develop more exciting buildings.
The architect doesn’t like finalised images as they can become obstacles in the creative process. She prefers collage as she believes it fosters a more collaborative approach to design.
“I want my architecture to be a platform for anyone to create their own way of living,” she told Dezeen. “I think a collage accepts all of those personalities, diversities and complexities that are not only my ideas.”
“A collage also accepts processes, it accepts mistakes,” she continued. “I like to think that our buildings are the same.”
Renders “dangerous and damaging”
Bilbao, 47, vowed to stop producing renderings for clients following her first residential project. Her client had been surprised by the result, because he had a fixed idea in his mind based on an early rendering.
“He stopped following the process because he fixed an image into his mind,” she explained. “I thought, this could be very dangerous and damaging to the creative process.”
“I totally believe that the process is a dialogue,” she continued, “and obviously in that case it became only a monologue, because my mind evolved and his mind stayed with that image.”
“After that we banned renders from our process, until the very end,” she said.
Collages were “a revelation”
Collages that feature in the Louisiana exhibition include a conceptual floor plan of the Mazatlán Aquarium, which is currently under construction, and a visual of the Culiacan Botanical Garden.
The idea to start using collage came to Bilbao by chance, while working on a proposal for one of her best-known projects, Casa Ventura.
Ahead of a meeting with the client, there wasn’t enough time to complete a proper model, so her team improvised. They created a quick foam model, cut it in half, then used Photoshop to turn it into a composite image.
“It was the first collage we made for a client and for me it was a revelation,” she said. “Collage became an incredible tool for design with a lot of meanings for us.”
Collaboration is key
This collaborative technique epitomises Bilbao’s entire approach to architecture. She often likes to involve other creative minds, rather than taking on everything herself.
A key example of this is the Ruta del Peregrino, a project to create architectural interventions along a 72-mile pilgrimage route in Jalisco, on the Pacific Coast of Mexico. Bilbao invited respected names, from artist Ai Weiwei to Chilean architecture practice Elemental, to design different sections.
Collaboration is “not just important to me, it’s the only way I do architecture”, she explained.
“I really can’t believe anyone that says they can do useful architecture for a lot of people from one single mind.”
Architecture has power to change lives
Bilbao has worked on a variety of different types of projects, but housing is her biggest passion. As well as building luxury homes for rich clients, she has also worked on several prototypes for affordable, mass housing.
The big-budget projects inspire her when she is working on a more restricted scale and budget, she explains.
“I always think that, when you start out thinking on the maximum, you can arrive at incredible places, but when you start with a restriction you arrive at a restricted space,” she suggested.
It is Bilbao’s firm belief that every citizen has the right to a “dignified and enjoyable house” and, if the government is unable to provide that, then it’s down to her as an architect to make a difference.
“I think architecture has the power to impact the lives of others,” she said. “I take that very seriously.”
Read on for an edited transcript of the interview:
Amy Frearson: Congratulations on the exhibition. I understand you’ve been working on it for the past two years. What did you want it to say about you and your work?
Tatiana Bilbao: We wanted to create these three environments which are: the mind, the process and the experience of our architecture. That’s how I see it.
I really wanted to transmit the message about how we think, how we operate, how we create projects, and our resources for doing them. I hope people get that the process is very complex and it’s very different from project to project. We really focus on each project’s challenges, context, situation and people. Every project has its own process, its own mind and its own experience. We worry about trying to understand a lot of things, but also about creating an experience that’s unique.
Amy Frearson: Can you tell me a bit more about your process? Your residential projects vary between luxury villas and affordable housing. Are you consistent in the way you approach these types of projects?
Tatiana Bilbao: Every design we do is created specifically for the person, for them to develop their own possibilities. My hope is that our architecture brings a certain platform to people’s lives, as a source of inspiration to enhance their lives in many ways, whether it’s a living space, a public space, an educational space or whatever. It’s to allow them to create their own way of living. That is what we’re wishing for. That is why every project is completely different to the next, and every project has its own very strange and different process. And we try to to integrate those different ways into the results.
Amy Frearson: The exhibition features a lot of collages. Why do you make these images, rather than renders?
Tatiana Bilbao: It’s been a long history in the office and it really is part of the process of our office.
One of the most important phrases I remember from when I was studying was something I read from Rafael Moneo about the understanding of what a piece of architecture does to a city. It stuck in my mind. Every piece of architecture comes into context as part of a collage. Sometimes it becomes the detonator of many things, sometimes it’s just one addition, sometimes it gets lost in that complexity, and sometimes it becomes the icon, the new point of reference for that context. I have always thought that my architecture comes to any context, that it adds something to the collage. I have always thought of my work in that way.
Every piece of architecture comes into context as part of a collage
Then, in the beginning, we were having difficulty understanding why we didn’t like renders and realistic images. One day, it became very clear. When we finished the first house we built – it was not completely finished but it was almost there – the client said to me, “Tatiana this is not what I thought it was going to be”. I asked him why and he started describing the second render he saw of the house during the conceptual process. I realised that he stopped imagining how the house was going to be after that. He stopped following the process because he fixed an image into his mind, as if it was a finished product. And, for sure it had changed completely because that was just a concept.
I started realising why he had never questioned things, he never realised the whole process of the evolution of the design. I thought, this could be very dangerous and damaging to the creative process. I totally believe that the process is a dialogue and obviously in that case it became only a monologue, because my mind evolved and his mind stayed with that image. After that we banned renders from our process until the very end, even though clients would ask to see renders. I would say no, there’s models, there’s drawings and that’s it.
Then we made a discovery, almost by chance. For Casa Ventura, we were in a hurry and we wanted to do a big model but we didn’t have the time. So we did a quick foam model that we cut, and then we photoshopped the section model with a photograph. It was the first collage we made for a client and for me it was a revelation. I understood how good it was. So we started really getting into it.
Amy Frearson: So for you, these images really capture the spirit of your design process?
Tatiana Bilbao: As I said, I want my architecture to be a platform for anyone to create their own way of living. I think a collage accepts all of those personalities, diversities and complexities that are not only my ideas. A collage also accepts processes, it accepts mistakes. I like to think that our buildings are the same, so it became very clear that collages were a very good way of representing our buildings.
We presented our first collage for a competition around five years ago. They only asked for one image and it was supposed to be a render, but it was a conceptual idea that they wanted. So we did a beautiful collage. We didn’t win the competition – maybe because they didn’t like our collage, or maybe our idea was too radical – but what I was really sure was that it was an incredible technique for showing that conceptual idea, and that it proved to be very helpful.
A collage allows a lot of voices to be in one place
Then we were asked to do a house we called Ways of Life. The brief called for a house that would respond to new ways of living, which it described as working and living in the same space. That for me was very strange because we have been working and living in the same spaces for centuries. We only decided after the Industrial Revolution that it was a good idea to divide them. For me, it was more about how the house can allow different ways of life.
We didn’t have a client, it was just a proposal. So we decided to think about how we could create this platform for many ways of life, not only our idea of living and not only the general described idea of living. We started creating a chart of emotions and activities that we wanted to do. We were thinking about how space can represent communion between the inhabitants of a house. We started pulling out images and, little by little, more naturally, it started to become this collage. Then we decided to deliberately collage six moments of the house, with images that we found everywhere. When we had the six collages, we collaged them all together, and we started sketching on top of them.
Collage became an incredible tool for design with a lot of meanings for us. A collage allows a lot of voices to be in one place. That has allowed us to develop theories around possibilities of a project but also ways of representing projects.
Amy Frearson: You’ve worked on several collaborative projects in the past, like the Ruta del Peregrino and the Jardín Botánico. Do you think it’s important to be collaborative in architecture?
Tatiana Bilbao: I really can’t believe anyone that says they can do useful architecture for a lot of people from one single mind. I can’t believe someone could say they understand everything, that they have all the tools to design something for someone else. I believe it is really hard to do that translation and I don’t believe that you can have all the inputs that you need.
I think that every mind sees things in different ways and that really helps to create incredible input to a project where you’re responding to someone else’s way of life. It’s not just important to me, it’s the only way I do architecture. The times when I don’t have the chance to collaborate with someone else for any reason, at least it’s always a collaboration here in this office, it’s a very horizontal way of working.
Amy Frearson: Tell me about some of the affordable housing projects you’ve worked on. What led you to work in this area?
Tatiana Bilbao: I think architecture has the power to impact the lives of others. I take that very seriously. And if it has that power, why don’t we use it? I’m always thinking about why architects are not relevant to society, at least in my society, architects are truly not relevant at all. If you ask someone in the street what an architect is for they might say to fix the plumbing problem in my bathroom or to choose colours in houses. I’ve heard that before.
I’m always thinking about why architects are not relevant to society
We are very relevant for society in general, because that’s how society is able to represent itself in a more general way, in terms of representing a time’s history through architecture. But if you speak to an individual, they don’t get why it is relevant directly for them. I think it’s because we architects have failed to understand that we are able to provide that second most important necessity for a human being, which is living space.
The first most important necessity we have is our health. But the second is to have a refuge. We are not animals that can be living in the wilderness, we wouldn’t survive. We have proven, as humanity, that caves are not enough for us. We need a space that is not only a refuge but that is able to allow for and inspire our lives. This is what architecture should be but I think we have forgotten that.
I wanted to be thinking about that all the time, so I decided to work very much in domesticity. And obviously a huge thing in my country is that not everyone has housing. And in my country, housing is one of the constitutional rights, every citizen has the right to a dignified and enjoyable house. Therefore the government has a mandate to provide housing for the people and it’s not happening. At least not with the those words, dignified and enjoyable.
I decided to really tackle those issues and started doing research and then a kind of a political activism to change that. It was through by work but also through doing.
Amy Frearson: The exhibition curator, Kjeld Kjeldsen, describes you as a Robin Hood character, robbing the rich to feed the poor, in the way that you use the profits from designing luxury, one-off houses to fund socially driven projects. What you do think about that?
Tatiana Bilbao: It’s not my intention to be a Robin Hood. What I can say is that I have had the opportunity of exploring many possibilities when I have had a lot of budget, which has allowed me to understand where the basic ideas are when I don’t have budget.
I always think that, when you start out thinking on the maximum, you can arrive at incredible places, but when you start with a restriction you arrive at a restricted space. That’s my way of thinking. For me, being able to not just do projects where I need to meet a budget in 43 square-metres of space has allowed me to understand what the most important necessities are in a domestic space. I understand what the most basic things are needed for an inspired way of life, by doing them in places where I don’t have a restriction.
I see it as opening possibilities in my mind and for others that maybe they don’t have that opportunity of seeing them.
Amy Frearson: So in a way, you take the ideas you develop in high-end commissions and rework them for the masses?
Tatiana Bilbao: I’ve been trying to do that, as I said, for many years, all my life I think. You would probably call someone an innocent or naive person for thinking that architecture has power, but I do, I do truly believe in it. I do believe that architecture can be a platform for many, many things. And I will not give up.
Amy Frearson: Do you find other architects are receptive to your ideas about collaboration and activism?
Tatiana Bilbao: Well, no. Collaboration is not something that everybody would do. I think there’s been so much history of competition. I really find that in the US, where competition is a basic survival tool. Because in the US, not being a welfare state, everything needs to be done by you. So in the end, you really have to compete with everyone to be able to protect your life. Even for your health services, you have to fight. That has been also the basis of capitalism and this is how society shapes us nowadays.
For me, architecture is a way of communicating with others
So I think that when it comes to collaboration, I have found that for some people it’s very difficult. They don’t understand the basic understanding of collaboration, which is respect and openness to the other one. That is probably the most interesting challenge that I’ve had in the way I’ve worked with some people. And with some others it’s been very successful.
Amy Frearson: You often use materials in unusual ways. Can you tell me how you choose the materials for your designs?
Tatiana Bilbao: For me, architecture is a way of communicating with others. It’s me who starts the first sentence or the first paragraph in the conversation, but then it needs to become a dialogue. I believe the only way that can happen successfully is if that conversation is very honest. So I think that the material needs to also be honest.
We have a very intense process of researching possibilities for each project, of understanding what material is going to allow us to do a building and what it is going to say about it. How does it really communicate our idea? How is it lived and seen?
It is also very important for us to think about where we are and where the material comes from, how can we get it and how we can build with it. That is a very big part of the process as well.
Amy Frearson: Can you give me some examples of how you’ve chosen materials for some projects?
Tatiana Bilbao: In the botanical garden, for example, it was very clear to us that we needed to use a material that would reflect the spaces, becoming this architecture that is imposed on this very beautiful nature that is in the garden. Through this imposition is the possibility for people to do activities that they cannot do in the exterior. We as human beings need diversity, but also to some point become part of this by dialogue with nature. So we decided to use concrete, as a material that could be everything, the structure, the aesthetic definition, the installation, the acoustic protection, etc. And that would allow us to create these beautiful spaces in one gesture.
We were then asked to create another set of buildings that would not use concrete because it became very expensive to build with. So we decided to use concrete blocks. We used concrete blocks in the same way, to do everything. And we challenged the material to do that.
We as human beings need diversity
In the Ajijic house, we needed to find a material that would allow us to build a very big house, or very big for the budget.
We had to find a material that would allow us to do that. After discarding a lot of them, we looked at what was there in the place. The answer was earth. I had seen another project done with rammed earth so I started researching it and we found a really good way of using this material, when you understand the possibilities of the material. That material allowed us to build this house in the way we wanted.
Amy Frearson: Can you tell me about some of the new projects you have coming up?
Tatiana Bilbao: The aquarium is being built and that’s very exciting. Foundations take a long time, but now we are out of the ground rising up, which is a very beautiful moment in construction.
We are working on a church in Monterrey, which is also an incredible project, and we are working on a monastery in in Germany for Cistercian monks, which is a beautiful project. The museum project in Spain is evolving, which is not a museum but more a new model of what a museum could be in the future. We’re doing a big residential project in Monterrey which is starting construction really soon, and we’re doing a project in St Louis, Missouri, of individual houses.
We are also doing a lot of proposals for a new law that the government wants to pass on creating these quotas for social housing, in the middle of the city. So we’re working with them and those proposals. We recently won three competitions and that’s very exciting. I’m happy that they haven’t started because we have so much work!
The brick-clad Nithurst Farm contains grand concrete rooms that are modelled on the Soviet science-fiction film, Stalker.
British architect Adam Richards designed the house, which replaced an old farmworker’s cottage in the countryside near the town of Haslemere, England, as his own home.
It is intended to evoke the ruin of a Roman villa and contains unexpectedly contemporary interiors characterised by the building’s exposed concrete structure.
The ground floor of Nithurst Farm has a tapered plan that moves from a giant, hall-like kitchen and dining room into a bright sitting room.
This layout is modelled on the story of post-apocalyptic film Stalker by Russian filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky. The film follows the expedition of three men through The Zone in search for The Room – a mythical place where a person’s deepest desires are rumoured to come true.
“My take on the character of The Zone in the film is that it’s structured like a religious space like a church or a chapel, and it has this concrete blocks down the side and this great wash of light at the end,” Richards told Dezeen.
“So there’s a sense that progressing through the space is this is a sort of journey to a sort of more spiritual place,” he explained.
As in the film, the layout of the ground floor is designed to take visitors on a journey, beginning in the hall – a kitchen and dining room with a grand 4.5-metre-high ceiling that is symbolic of The Zone.
Around its edges, the hall has six internal concrete towers that each containing a secondary room such as the cloakroom, study and larder. The symmetry alludes to the layout of a church.
The kitchen leads out into a dark vestibule, which opens onto a bright south-facing sitting room facing out onto the garden. Referred to by Richards as “the final destination”, this represents The Room.
A subtle taper along the north-south axis of the house’s footprint towards the living room is designed to heighten the sense of the journey.
“The idea is that the sitting room is our version of the room where all your wishes come true. This kitchen is the antechamber and sets the scene for it,” continued Richards.
“I suppose it just seemed to make sense that a film abou a journey to a ruin where your deepest wishes come true is a bit like building your own house and your own place in the world.”
Externally, the concept of a journey to a destination is evident in the staggered form of the house, which steps up from a single-storey entrance on the north elevation to become three-storeys high.
Additionally, large arched windows with deep reveals along its long elevations are adorned with blackened bricks along one edge, designed by Richards to evoke motion lines seen in cartoons.
Inside, Nithurst Farm has two children’s bedrooms and three guest rooms on the first floor. The master bedroom occupies the top floor of the house.
The master bedroom is split into two halves – with two mirror image beds and dressing rooms that lead into a shared bathroom looking north across the countryside.
The top-storey bedroom is accessed through double doors on the first floor that open to reveal a long central staircase that ends facing a full-height window.
The stair is based on the “stairway to heaven” in the film A Matter of Life and Death, which is about a pilot who is granted a second chance to live after a crash.
It is designed by Richards as a nod to his late father, a pilot that also lost his life and passed away in an air accident.
“I was always fascinated by this film, as my father was a pilot and he died in a crash when I was a baby. I wanted to somehow register that in the house, it’s a memorial to him,” Richards explained.
Throughout Nithurst Farm, the concrete structure is exposed, with walls and ceilings left as they came out of the formwork. This includes a swirl in the concrete on one of the towers in the kitchen caused by a jammed pump.
Richards has aimed to soften the look of the concrete by combining it with white oiled pine floorboards, sisal carpets and brass fittings, alongside an array colourful furniture, tapestries and ceramics.
While allowing Richards to evoke the religious-like spaces in the film, Richards also chose concrete to build a structure to last “at least 500 years”.
He worked with Structure Workshop to develop the structure, and in a bid to reduce its carbon footprint, made the concrete using 50 per cent recycled material in replacement of cement.
Richards founded his eponymously named studio in 2002 and has offices in both London and Sussex.
Swiss designer Céline Arnould has cast a series of ceramic vessels from the hair of her friends and family, as a contemporary take on the locks that Victorians used to keep as tokens of love or loss.
Arnould – who trained as a hairdresser and still cuts the hair of those closest to her – has been collecting the strands for almost a year to use as the basis for the 13 different bowls.
Each is dedicated to, and named after, one of these people and uses their hair mixed with offcuts from hairdressers that would otherwise go to waste.
“The hair is representative of a person, so it is important to me to know where it comes from and that it is processed with much effort and care,” she told Dezeen.
“Hair raises a lot of questions when used in an object. How is the identity of an object constructed? What if a human becomes a source of material? Due to this strong connection between humans and their hair, the objects trigger a lot of emotions.”
For the Liaison collection, Arnould let the natural properties and textures of the material guide the objects’ ultimate form.
Draping the hair over inflatable, ring-shaped mouldsgives it back its natural volume, for a result reminiscent of the tightly wound bun of a ballerina.
“For curls and braids, I just dip them into the porcelain mass and place them on to the mould to dry,” explained the designer.
“If I want to have an object with straight hair, I arrange it on the form first and then paint porcelain mass over it. I do all of this layer by layer so this part of the process can take four to six hours.”
Beyond aesthetics, the hair serves the practical purpose of drawing moisture from the porcelain to help it set quicker, which is usually achieved by drying it in plaster moulds or plates.
It also acts as a sort of scaffold for the porcelain, helping the piece hold its form until the hair is burned away in the kiln leaving behind only impressions of what once was.
Finally, each bowl is tinted in soft, gradient colours like butter yellow or mint green.
“I apply a coloured glaze with an airbrush, mimicking how hair naturally reflects the sun,” said Arnould. “Then I soften the colour transitions by taking away a small part of the glaze with a brush before applying the shiny transparent glaze.”
With Liaison, she hopes to raise questions around the contradictory, guttural reactions that hair can evoke.
“The hair can, if it is still connected to the head, stand for health and beauty, but once it is separated from the body you quickly associate it with disgust like when you see hair in a sink,” she explained.
“That’s why I decided to combine it with porcelain, a pore-free material that’s associated with being fine and valuable, to contrast it with the rather disgusting connotations of cut hair.”
The factory for the furniture company was one of many high-tech buildings, including the Park Road Apartments completed by Farrell Grimshaw Partnership six years earlier, which was designed to have flexible interiors.
The flexibility of the interiors was matched with the pale-yellow panelled exterior cladding, which is demountable, interchangeable and reconfigurable.
The open-plan layout within the factory was designed to reflect the office furniture Herman Miller was producing and to be flexible to suit future manufacturing demands.
Grimshaw was influenced by the modular design of the company’s furniture and wanted to name the building Action Factory – after the brand’s Action Office furniture – as the flexibility of its mobile elements were vital to the architectural design.
“We wanted a level of flexibility that wasn’t available in contemporary buildings at the time,” said Bob Wood, vice president for research, design and development at Herman Miller. “I think that’s what made it revolutionary.”
The Farrell Grimshaw Partnership was selected to design the manufacturing facility from a shortlist of architects, which included fellow high-tech architect Norman Foster and James Stirling. Max de Pree, son of Herman Miller founder DJ de Pree, wanted a factory that would “change with grace, be flexible and non monumental”.
“Herman Miller’s brief looked for a building that they could change and alter. The building would look after them,” added Grimshaw in a video about the project.
“In that sense, the building and the furniture was to support human activity, and not the other way round. And that appealed to us a lot.”
Located by the River Avon, the factory has a rectangular plan. Its structure uses primary beams intersecting at columns, with thinner, secondary beams laid perpendicular in between the primary ones at frequent intervals.
This structure, called a primary and secondary beam system, is laid on a 10-by-20-metre grid with only two rows of nine columns running through the open interior.
Like its high-tech predecessor the Reliance Controls Factory, the structure and services were visible from the factory floor.
The factory’s services ran along the perimeter, fitted around courtyard indentations where employees could sit outside in sheltered hubs. These break areas were eventually removed so newer, larger machines could run along the sides of the building.
Standing almost six metres high, the building’s ceiling space allowed for tall manufacturing equipment and could be used to store pallets. The tall room height also contained factory utilities, accessed via hanging walkways.
The flexible structure is covered with an equally flexible exterior. It is clad with a plastic, modular skin that was designed to accommodate future changes.
Grimshaw and Farrell developed the modular system of insulated panels to be completely demountable. The system has interchangeable pieces of fibreglass, louvre shutters and glazing that could easily be rearranged as it was separate from the building’s structure.
Herman Miller employees could switch the panels based on the internal arrangement, without having to employ skilled labourers. An easy-to-use, neoprene top-hat-like cap fixed between two panels when mounted.
At the time, windows were an uncommon feature in conventional factory design. By implementing optional windows into the cladding system, Herman Miller Factory staff could enjoy daylight and views to the riverbank from the factory floor.
Herman Miller occupied the factory for 15 years, during which the exterior and interior was rearranged a total of five times.
The building was granted a Grade II listing in 2013, recognised for its impact on industrial workplace design and its high-tech architecture features.
Known to have formed a relationship with Herman Miller, which is still prevalent today, Grimshaw has designed several consequent factories. His third for the company located in Melksham opened in 2015, almost 40 years after the first in Bath.
Emerging in Britain during the late 1960s, high-tech architecture was the last major style of the 20th century and one of its most influential. Characterised by buildings that combined the potential of structure and industrial technology, the movement was pioneered by architects Norman Foster, Richard Rogers, Grimshaw, Michael and Patty Hopkins and Renzo Piano.
Jonas Wood’s gloriously lush paintings have garnered him plenty of praise throughout the years, but this paperback is the first monograph dedicated to the LA-based artist. With 200+ photos and illustrations, ranging from family photos to baseball cards and other artists’ work (including his wife, Shio Kusaka), the book offers insight into his many influences, inspirations and nuances. With contributions from curator and writer Helen Molesworth, curator Ian Alteveer, and a conversation between Wood and fellow artist Mark Grotjahn, this book is a delight both visually and mentally.
Some of our favorite equipment, apparel and more for active people
As we all seem to spend more and more time at our desks and on our phones, the importance of getting outdoors and moving our bodies cannot be understated. From swimsuits to boxing gloves and skateboards, there are plenty of practical pieces available in our Sportsball Gift Guide. But we have included many other items, from notecards to magazines and books, to provide some (oftentimes necessary) motivation and inspiration too. Take a look at the full Sportsball Gift Guide, and for plenty of other presents, make sure to peruse our full Buy Guide, which is updated daily.
L’augmentation rapide de la population signifie que l’immobilier est, et sera pour toujours, un produit prisé. Chongquing, en chine est l’une des villes les plus peuplées au monde et à la croissance la plus rapide lutte contre cela avec un nouveau projet.
L’ouverture du «Crystal» – un gratte-ciel horizontal de 300 mètres de long situé à près de 250 mètres du sol – constitue un nouveau type d’architecture jamais vu auparavant à ce type d’échelle. Le chef-d’œuvre architectural récemment ouvert comprend de magnifiques jardins, un espace événementiel ouvert, un bar, plusieurs restaurants, un club-house résidentiel et une piscine à débordement. Le projet a été réalisé par Safdie Architect Group.
I love settling in with my headphones and my beloved music playlist. It’s the perfect end to a tediously hectic day. So I’m always on the lookout for new and improved audio products to enhance my end of the day music sessions, and I think I might have chanced upon the most innovative one yet! Product designer Yang Dong Wook understands that you need different audio devices for different situations. Want some alone time? Plug your headphones in! Want to have a rocking party? Blare out some contemporary hits from your speakers! However what if one product met with all your needs irrespective of the context and situation?
Well here’s where Wook’s ‘Pats Speaker’ swoops in. Pats is quite simply a speaker and headset combined in one. Created to make your life simpler and to un-cramp your already cramped up desk, Pats features a cylindrical speaker that serves as the main body. The headset carefully meets the speaker at both its ends, merging to form one wholesome structure that looks a little like a handbag! You place the headphones on the speaker, as you would place them over your own ears. Melding in perfectly with the ends of the speaker, the headset plus speaker duo sit upon a metallic tray. However this is no ordinary tray, the tray also functions as a charging pad, charging both the speaker and the headphones simultaneously.
Five little LED circles in the middle of the headset, right at the center of its arc, keep you updated about the battery life of Pats. You can also connect Pats to your smartphone using an accompanying app. The app helps you connect with either the speaker or the headphone or both, and allows you to control them with ease. Wook’s Pats Speaker combines all your audio needs into one. No more scrounging around for your headphones and speaker when you could find them both in one product! Space-saving, convenient, and multifunctional, Pats is surely the future of audio products, and the only way I’m interested in listening to my music!
Pan-Projects and Mok Architects drew upon Nordic and Japanese aesthetics to design this restaurant in Copenhagen, which features oak surfaces, translucent screens and paper lanterns.
Izumi is a Danish restaurant chain, which serves Japanese food with Nordic influences. Its latest outlet occupies a busy street corner in Copenhagen’s northern suburb of Charlottenlund.
The 120-square-metre restaurant has an L-shaped plan with windows that wrap around two sides.
An open kitchen and small dining area occupy one side of the restaurant, while a larger dining room, customer toilets and a small backyard for parking occupies the other.
Copenhagen-based architecture studio Pan- Projects was invited by Izumi, along with Mok Architects, to create a new spatial identity for the chain.
Izumi’s owners wanted the restaurant’s interior to reflect its Nordic-Japanese menu.
“Japan and the Nordic countries have a rich history of cultural interactions,” explained Pan-Projects’ founders Yurioko Yaga and Kazumasa Takada.
“Especially in the field of design, there are many examples that are rooted originally in Japanese culture yet developed uniquely in the land of the Nordic region.”
In the restaurant, this is reflected in features such as the curved Scandinavian oak panels that surround the open kitchen.
According to the architects, the modular panels adhere to a traditional Japanese dimension system used to make Japanese tatami mats.
The panels’ slight curve is inspired by steam-bent Scandinavian furniture.
“As a design strategy, we adopted Japanese spatial characters to the Scandinavian context, aiming to fabricate a new standard of Japan-Scandinavian design interactions,” Yaga and Takada said.
A series of translucent screens made from multiple layers of sanded polycarbonate sheets are a contemporary riff on traditional Japanese paper sliding doors.
Isamu Noguchi, who was a New York-based Japanese sculptor, designed the Akari lanterns that hang above the tables, while the dining chairs are designed by London-based Japanese design studio Mentsen.
This is the third Izumi branch that Pan-Projects has completed, joining two other outposts in Copenhagen’s Frederiksberg and Allerød neighbourhoods. Construction is scheduled to start on another location in Vesterbrogade in 2020.
The restaurant is the latest in a string of eateries that blend Danish and Japanese design sensibilities.
In Tokyo, OEO Studio referenced Danish cabinetry and Japanese gardens for the design of restaurant Inua, while Norm Architects designed a sushi restaurant in London that features gong-like Japanese lamps and wide-plank Danish flooring.
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