Toyota presents winners of baggage handling competition

Toyota Material Handling Europe Design Center for VDF x Ventura Projects

Toyota is showcasing the winning entries of this year’s Toyota Logistics Design Competition for the VDF x Ventura Projects collaboration.

Exhibitor: Toyota Material Handling Europe Design Center
Project title: Toyota Logistics Design Competition 2020 – Baggage Handling, Can you make it fly?

Toyota Material Handling Europe Design Center is a design team that forms part of the automotive manufacturing company Toyota.

The team has recently concluded this year’s edition of its biennial Toyota Logistics Design Competition, which was entitled Baggage Handling, Can you make it fly?. It invited designers to reimagine the unreliable process of handling luggage at airports.

Toyota is showcasing the 10 finalists of the competition as part of VDF’s collaboration with Ventura Projects, which were chosen from over 2,000 proposals.

The winner designs range from a proposal that aims to “make baggage claim fun” to an autonomous baggage trolley.

Main image is by TMHE.

Website: design.toyota-forklifts.eu
Email: design@toyota-industries.eu


Virtual Design Festival is the world’s first online design festival, taking place from 15 April to 30 June 2020.

Ventura Projects are exhibitions curated by Utrecht- and Milan-based Organisation in Design that cover the latest developments in contemporary design.

As part of VDF, Ventura Projects is presenting the work of 88 international designers, academies and brands. See work from all the VDF x Ventura Projects participants at dezeen.com/vdf/ventura-projects.

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Mesh Labs' Kosmos tableware reimagines dining experience

Kosmos by Mesh Labs for VDF x Ventura Projects

Mesh Labs is launching Kosmos, a collection of ceramic tableware, as part of the VDF x Ventura Projects collaboration.

Exhibitor: Mesh Labs
Project title: Kosmos

Mesh Labs is a Rotterdam design studio that aims to “redesign the aesthetics of dining experiences” to reflect the increasing popularity of plant-based diets.

Its most recent project Kosmos, a collection of ceramic tableware with organic and textured forms, is launching as part of VDF x Ventura Projects.

According to the studio, Kosmos is designed to evoke fertile soil and “provide diners with a microcosmic view of the natural ecosystem from which our food is derived”. It is hoped to bridge the gap between food culture and nature.

“It is well known that experiencing nature, positively effects human well-being,” explained Mesh Labs, “yet many of our modern rituals, eating in this case, is detached to this experience”.

Website: www.instagram.com/mesh_labs
Email: shonalishetty@meshlabs.nl


Virtual Design Festival is the world’s first online design festival, taking place from 15 April to 30 June 2020.

Ventura Projects are exhibitions curated by Utrecht- and Milan-based Organisation in Design that cover the latest developments in contemporary design.

As part of VDF, Ventura Projects is presenting the work of 88 international designers, academies and brands. See work from all the VDF x Ventura Projects participants at dezeen.com/vdf/ventura-projects.

The post Mesh Labs’ Kosmos tableware reimagines dining experience appeared first on Dezeen.

The Blessed Lands collection by Esvednâme celebrates Middle Eastern heritage

The Blessed Lands by Esvednâme for VDF x Ventura Projects

Two brass tables adorned with dried wheat make up The Blessed Lands collection, which Esvednâme is presenting at VDF x Ventura Projects.

Exhibitor: Esvednâme
Project title: The Blessed Lands

Esvednâme is a design studio in Istanbul whose work pays homage to Middle Eastern culture and artisans. This includes The Blessed Lands collection, which it is introducing as part of the VDF x Ventura Projects collaboration.

The Blessed Lands series features two brass tables decorated with dried wheat, as a nod to the “fruitful lands” of southeastern Turkey where the crop was first grown.

Each table is also finished with calligraphy or inlaid art, which the studio describes as “one of the two important elements of Islam and the Middle East culture”. On The Blessing Table, this includes a Hadith engraving, while the Ceremony side-tables are decorated with brass inlays.

Website: www.instagram.com/esvedname/
Email: esvedname@gmail.com


Virtual Design Festival is the world’s first online design festival, taking place from 15 April to 30 June 2020.

Ventura Projects are exhibitions curated by Utrecht- and Milan-based Organisation in Design that cover the latest developments in contemporary design.

As part of VDF, Ventura Projects is presenting the work of 88 international designers, academies and brands. See work from all the VDF x Ventura Projects participants at dezeen.com/vdf/ventura-projects.

The post The Blessed Lands collection by Esvednâme celebrates Middle Eastern heritage appeared first on Dezeen.

Craft-tech celebrates traditional Japanese lacquer craft

Ventura Project: 9+1, craft-tech

Creative collective 9+1 celebrates the Japanese art of Urushi in its Craft-tech series, which it is presenting as part of the VDF x Ventura Projects collaboration.

Exhibitor: 9+1
Project title: Craft-tech

9+1 is a collective of artists, designers and engineers based in Japan. Its work focuses on reinventing traditional Japanese crafts to help them survive the modern world.

As part of VDF x Ventura Projects, the group is exhibiting Craft-tech – a range of installations and art pieces that utilise traditional materials and processes.

The series focuses specifically on the use of Urushi, otherwise known as Japanese lacquer. Urushi is the sap of the urushi or lacquer tree that is native to Japan and has been widely used there since 9000 BC to protect wooden products.

Website: www.craft-tech.org
Email: info@craft-tech.org


Virtual Design Festival is the world’s first online design festival, taking place from 15 April to 30 June 2020.

Ventura Projects are exhibitions curated by Utrecht- and Milan-based Organisation in Design that cover the latest developments in contemporary design.

As part of VDF, Ventura Projects is presenting the work of 88 international designers, academies and brands. See work from all the VDF x Ventura Projects participants at dezeen.com/vdf/ventura-projects.

The post Craft-tech celebrates traditional Japanese lacquer craft appeared first on Dezeen.

Folk reimagines everyday objects as "primitive" sculptures

Sculptural Objects by Folk for VDF x Ventura Projects

Folks is presenting Sculptural Objects, a collection of everyday items that are handcrafted to evoke sculptures, for VDF x Ventura Projects.

Exhibitor: Folks
Project title: Sculptural Objects

Folks is an online store that sells handmade products and crafts by emerging designers. As part of VDF x Ventura Projects, it is exhibiting a collection called Sculptural Objects.

Sculptural Objects is a collection of everyday items that are reimagined as artwork and sculptures.

Each product is complete with an unexpected form and natural finishes to evoke primitive artefacts. Folks’ ambition is to introduce “another dimension to the objects that surround us”.

Website: www.folks-folks.com
Email: marie@folks-folks.com


Virtual Design Festival is the world’s first online design festival, taking place from 15 April to 30 June 2020.

Ventura Projects are exhibitions curated by Utrecht- and Milan-based Organisation in Design that cover the latest developments in contemporary design.

As part of VDF, Ventura Projects is presenting the work of 88 international designers, academies and brands. See work from all the VDF x Ventura Projects participants at dezeen.com/vdf/ventura-projects.

The post Folk reimagines everyday objects as “primitive” sculptures appeared first on Dezeen.

Folds uses single pieces of folded steel to create homeware collection

Folds collection for VDF x Ventura Projects

Slovenian brand Folds is exhibiting a range of products that are made from a single piece of folded steel at VDF x Ventura Projects.

Exhibitor: Folds
Project title: Folds

Folds is brand based in Ljubljana, Slovenia, which specialises in design using steel. Each of its products is made from a single piece of metal that has been folded to form a 3D object.

The brand is presenting a range of its products, also entitled Folds, as part of VDF x Ventura Projects. This includes the curved Rocking Light and zigzagging Chair57.

Folds’ products are deliberately minimal to “allow the material to speak for itself”. This also leads to the products “dematerialising” into stark 2D symbols when viewed from certain angles.

Photography is by Amadej Mravlak.

Website: folds.eu
Email: info@folds.eu


Virtual Design Festival is the world’s first online design festival, taking place from 15 April to 30 June 2020.

Ventura Projects are exhibitions curated by Utrecht- and Milan-based Organisation in Design that cover the latest developments in contemporary design.

As part of VDF, Ventura Projects is presenting the work of 88 international designers, academies and brands. See work from all the VDF x Ventura Projects participants at dezeen.com/vdf/ventura-projects.

The post Folds uses single pieces of folded steel to create homeware collection appeared first on Dezeen.

Award-winning skyscraper designs that aim to protect earth from humanity’s mistakes

Skyscrapers have long been a symbol of status and power. I mean, who wouldn’t want to be quarantined in a skyscraper right now with a beautiful, uninterrupted view of the skies to help them pass time? But eVolo’s Skyscraper Competition aims to give these status symbols a whole new purpose. Established in 2006, the annual Skyscraper Competition is one of the world’s most prestigious awards for high-rise architecture. It recognizes outstanding ideas that redefine skyscraper design through the implementation of novel technologies, materials, programs, aesthetics, and spatial organizations; along with studies on globalization, flexibility, adaptability, and the digital revolution. It is a forum that examines the relationship between the skyscraper and the natural world, the skyscraper and the community, and the skyscraper and the city. With the 2020 winners just released, we picked the best designs from the winners to show how each design is aimed at solving a problem, healing the planet, and creating a better future for all of us.

Designed as an entrant for the 2020 eVolo Skyscraper Competition, the 737 Max Tower turns one of the world’s most controversial aircraft of modern times into housing. The Boeing 737 Max made headlines after its launch in 2016 when it was revealed that the aircraft’s own internal software was causing the plane to malfunction and take nosedive. This malfunction caused two 737 Max planes to fatally crash with passengers on board, throwing the entire line of planes into question. “What about the planes that have already been made though?”, thought designers Victor Hugo Azevedo and Cheryl Lu Xu. The 737 Max Skyscraper leverages the architectural potential of an aircraft, converting it into a series of budget residences for the homeless. The aircrafts are stacked vertically and trimmed to form the basic shape of a literal Jenga-tower of airplanes.

Climate change, global warming, and rising sea levels sound like a certainty given our lifestyle. Granted, COVID-19 has given us a pause, but what happens when we resume life? The Coast Breakwater by Charles Tzu Wei Chiang and Alejandro Moreno Guerrero is a solution for our sea-facing cities that are being threatened by extinction! St. Louis, Senegal, located in the northwest part of the country, near the mouth of The Senegal River, has been home to fishermen for generations. It is a hostile territory where there are constant confrontations with the neighboring countries regarding the established fishing boundaries and territories. In addition to the political and social problems, the region is affected by the rising sea level. Such natural phenomenon has forced the community to move inland, away from the shore. This proposal is based on traditional pillar structures, which are used to prevent erosion. These structures will serve as a foundation for the new vertical housing units. The project is also inspired by Senegal’s traditional wooden architecture that uses a complex arch system with tensile structures. The system allows a high degree of adaptability and extendibility to create a new community by the sea challenging the rising sea level. This idea won them third place in 2020 eVolo Skyscraper Competition.

Imagine a skyscraper without an elevator…Like Thor’s hammer, only those who can reach the top of this skyscraper by walking up the flight of stairs deserves to own this luxurious landscape. The Egalitarian Nature skyscraper by Yutian Tang, Yuntao Xu imagines a new building typology driven by the human urge for nature instead of capital. The traditional skyscraper is reimagined as a mountain range that provides a new way to experience nature within an urban environment. A zigzag-climbing path is developed along with abstract spaces that encourage an unexpected engagement between people and nature. And with no elevators but a 50th-floor high-rise apartment instead, getting groceries will be the new workout!

How many of you are aware of combustible ice? Typically a frozen mixture of water and concentrated natural gas, it can be lit on fire in its frozen state and is believed to comprise one of the world’s most abundant fossil fuels. While we dig into the seas to fuel our consumption, the problem of marine garbage is becoming more and more serious. Because of plastic’s structural characteristics, it will not be easily corroded by the seawater. Therefore, designers Xuejun Bai, Chucheng Pang, Lei Zhai, Yuyang Sun, Dianao Liu came up with the idea of using local materials, turning plastic waste into 3d-printed materials, as our own building materials, and filling cracks in the seabed caused by combustible ice mining to prevent secondary disasters. “In order to solve the energy and environmental problems to the greatest extent, we install the location with the highest coincidence of combustible ice and marine waste as the building site. There are two main moving lines in the building, the downward materials, and the upward energy. Among them, the energy tower transforms the plastic waste on the sea into 3D printing materials, and prints the building and energy tank down along the core cylinder, turning itself into a building with growth. In addition, the energy tower exploits the combustible ice from the seabed and stores it in the energy tank after being pressurized and liquefied, and then transports it to the cargo ship through the equipment such as track and a mechanical arm, and finally brings it back to the city, becoming new clean energy in the city.”

2020 arrived, bringing with it Corona that started in Wuhan and spread across China with the Chinese government building an entire hospital in just 10 days to support the sick. While this battle is ongoing, the future looks scary and solutions are needed to resolve such urgent requests. As global citizens and architects, Ngo Thanh Ha Tien and Dao Duy Tung were thinking of a system of pandemic emergency supply station, whose target is to brave a situation like this of a virus’ outbreak. Its main function will be urgent care service in order to fill in the inadequate hospital resources with a program of diagnosis room, intensive therapy, treatment room, bed-care area with medical equipment… Especially, to meet the emergency requirement, the building has to use modularization technology (kind of like stacking LEGO bricks to quickly build up a tower) in order to be assembled in a very short time. Vertically configured buildings facilitate more efficient infrastructure in the case of metropolises, which also are primary zone in case of a pandemic outbreak. This emergency supply station is capable of adapting to many terrains, especially in areas with poorly prepared for an epidemic, such as Africa, Asia, South America…

The Floating City design by Zijie Nie, Chen Shen, Jian Zheng is based in Kiribati, an island country in the South Pacific. This reef-preserving country is particularly vulnerable to the rising sea level issues, and its territory is thought likely to disappear within the next 60 years. The design proposes to constructs a series of wall-like skyscrapers in the offshore waters and combats the problems caused by rising sea levels in three aspects. First, by studying the erosion of the coast and the direction of the ocean currents, the design of the architectural massing is used to slow down the speed of the ocean currents flowing around the building. With such a method, the sand and mud in the water are able to deposit as sediment and gradually cultivate the new islands over time. Second, with the design of skyscraper, land area submerged by seawater was transferred to the air, and thousands of residential units were built in the air to provide a place for people to live and use, protecting them from natural disasters such as hurricane and flood. Thirdly, while constructing a vertical ecosystem to provide greening for people living in it, it can also become a seed bank for retaining plant diversity in Kiribati and other South Pacific regions. Meanwhile, a large number of artificial components located between underwater structures can be a place for coral reef protection and regeneration.

Tesseract by Bryant Lau Liang Cheng proposes an architecture system that allows residents to participate in not just the design of their own units; but the programs and facilities within the building itself. This process is inserted between the time of purchase for the unit and the total time required to complete construction – a period that is often ignored and neglected. Through this process, residents are allowed to choose their amenities and their communities, enhancing their sense of belonging in the process. Housing units will no longer be stacked in repetition with no relation whatsoever to the residents living in it – a sentimental bond between housing and men results. The architecture system proposed can only be completed and realized by community participatory design; enabling possibilities that go beyond what computational design allows, highlighting the value of human creativity. High rise buildings now become a medium for the individual to express themselves; giving the power back to the residents, instead of being dictated by capitalistic agendas alone. By breaking the conventional centralized sky garden down into smaller components and spreading it throughout the entire vertical height of the building, the ‘invisible’ space caters to expansion in accordance with the lifestyle changes of the residents through time. These conditions allow modular units to expand or subdivide for either rent or sale, providing residents with incentives as time goes by. With this set-up, residents no longer have to move out for better accommodation; a longer duration of stay in their original homes and communities is encouraged, leading to a better sense of ownership and belonging.

NASA developed a concept presenting the creation of an artificial magnetosphere located at the specific site, called Lagrange L1, which is between Mars and the sun. At this specific site, it is necessary to create an object that generates a magnetic field with an intensity between 1-2 teslas that is capable of protecting Mars from cosmic rays. In comes MAGNETIC by Adam Fernandez! This colossal “space-scraper” project will allow us to create an atmosphere for Mars that would make the planet inhabitable. MAGNETIC is a spaceship in the form of an airtight cylinder that is more than one kilometer in length and 650 meters in diameter placed in orbit between the two stars. This spaceship will be self-sufficient and generated by renewable energy by means of panels that can capture solar energy. Part of the solar panels that cover the hull of the spaceship will be responsible for producing enough energy to generate the magnetic field in order to terraform Mars. Another part of the panels will be used to maintain the energy required by the inhabitants of the spaceship and to satisfy their domestic and leisure needs. The MAGNETIC spaceship will welcome a diverse population of about ten thousand people for the future colonization of Mars that will be principally charged with the maintenance of the space center. The heat and light will be transmitted through six gigantic columns in the heart of the island such as the filaments of a bulb. Once on-board the spaceship, the living spaces will be organized between the surface and subsurface.

Focusing on the flood as a global issue, the Mudtrapper by Surush Ameli, Sharareh Faryadi, Laya Rafianezhad, Soroush Attarzade has tried to exploit it naturally. Generally, the destructive and antithesis issue in the flood is the existence of garbage, mud, and the aquatic, which enter the residential areas by the pressure of the water, then after facing the obstacles, start to settle and become a threat to the environment. Removing these destructive ingredients from the flood, this project reduces its destructive power and allows nature to make its way. By placing the tower in the path of the flood, the animals are first rescued, then the garbage in the flood is removed, and finally, the mud enters the tower area with the flood and the exploitation operation begins. Balls made of several layers of sieve separate the mud from the water and enter the processing and store loop. In this loop, the operation of processing the mud, which is now our production material, is formed. Finally, as the balls exit the tower, the storage, and transfer operations take place. The flood, passing through the confines of the tower, is converted to a calm, refined stream which has used its destructive power to produce material and help its process, and then continues on its way.

Algae as energy resources are in their beginnings and are seen as high potential. Extensive research work has dealt with algae as an energy source in recent decades. As a biofuel, they are up to 6 times more efficient than e.g. comparable fuels from corn or rapeseed.The Tubular Bioreactor Algae Skyscraper focuses on the production of microalgae and their distribution using existing pipelines. Designed by Johannes Schlusche, Paul Böhm, Raffael Grimm, the towers are positioned along the transalpine pipeline in a barren mountain landscape. Water is supplied from the surrounding mountain streams and springs, and can also be obtained from the Mediterranean using saltwater. New, empty pipes will be drawn into the existing pipeline. On the one hand, these serve to distribute the sea or mountain water, on the other hand, the microalgae produced can be transported both south to the seacoast and north. The energy for transport is to be obtained from environmentally-friendly hydropower.

The problem of deforestation is publicly known and can be defined as the loss of trees induced by both humans and other causes. Big problems need big solutions, and the Reforestation skyscraper by Thomas Gössler could help to reverse the damage. It recreates forests out of cow grazing areas, soy fields, and destroyed landscapes by centralizing all necessary processes into one structure. At the top, seeds are inserted into an aquaponic system which – once large enough – slowly slide down a winding ramp whilst continuing to grow. After a few weeks, the seedling has grown and gradually slid towards the bottom and can subsequently be planted into the surrounding fields by mechanical arms and drones. The tower also houses a laboratory, a seed stock, water storage, a fire station for forest fires, sleeping cabins for temporary workers, a control center, several farming spaces, technology, and exhibition spaces. Large semi-transparent solar sails make it energy self-sufficient and are slowly moved with an electrical chain drive and mechanical arms. The tower is 70 meters high and its design is biophilic and inspired by nature itself.

Arthur Mamou-Mani seeks game designers to help create virtual version of timber amphitheatre for cancelled Burning Man

Arthur Mamou-Mani's Catharsis

Architect Arthur Mamou-Mani has called for help to turn an installation designed for this year’s Burning Man into a virtual experience after the desert festival was cancelled due to coronavirus.

Sharing the design exclusively with Dezeen, he called on people with expertise of working with gaming engines to help him realise the project in a digital space.

“We would like to create an online experience with the project, using features such as ‘multi-player’ on the game engine Unity to allow people to write or place messages of hope on the structure,” he said.

Arthur Mamou-Mani's Catharsis
The amphitheatre was inspired by a Poincaré Disk, a circle made of circles

“Burning Man has challenged the community to come up with ideas for a virtual version of the event this August,” he added.

“Therefore, similar to Dezeen’s Virtual Design Festival, these are opportunities for us architects and artists to re-invent our relationship to space.”

“Here is an open call to the community”

Mamou-Mani shared a short film sequence created in gaming engine Unity to demonstrate how the project could be realised digitally.

“We have done the test attached and are constantly exploring but this will take us quite a lot of research as we are not game designers, so here is an open call to the community if you are able to help with this project,” he said.

Arthur Mamou-Mani's Catharsis
Mamou-Mani chose timber for the structure for its environmental credentials

The architect began designing the structure, called Catharsis, while he was in Milan assembling his Conifera installation for fashion brand Cos, which was the most Instagrammed installation during Milan design week in 2019.

“We started working on the design of the project around April 2019, whilst we were in Milan assembling Conifera,” Mamou-Mani told Dezeen.

“The project was initiated by Mikolaj Sekutowicz of the Therme Art Programme who experienced Burning Man 2018 and wanted to create a link between the experimentation of Black Rock City and cities around the world.”

Mamou-Mani designed fractal amphitheatre for Burning Man 2020

Mamou-Mani decided to create a project about the city itself and chose to approach the design from a mathematical angle.

“If a city is made of, by and for participants, then what does an amphitheatre even mean?” he said.

“This is the question I asked myself, and then remembered a geometrical figure of a circle made of circles called the Poincaré Disk,” Mamou-Mani added. “The circles would increase as they reached the infinite edge of the hyperbolic plane and would exist in a space where curves are shorter than straight lines.”

The concept inspired him to create a fractal amphitheatre made of smaller amphitheatres that would offer up infinite possibilities to its users.

“The space in between the circles would rise to the sky and offer labyrinthic galleries for people to place art of any size, allowing for more than just one type of performance, encouraging participation and creativity regardless of backgrounds,” he said.

The structure would have been made of wood. “We chose timber for its environmental credentials and because it is so volunteer-friendly, can be adjusted in all kinds of ways on site,” the architect added. “We combine it with laser-cut steel plates for strength.”

Architect ready to start building when Burning Man was cancelled

It was named by journalist Sophia Swire, who made a film Mamou-Mani’s Galaxia temple design for Burning Man 2018.

“Catharsis is the purgation of emotions experienced through art or any extreme change in emotion that results in renewal and restoration,” Mamou-Mani said.

“I think we are all experiencing this now with Covid-19,” he added. “At that moment, Catharsis was the transformative overload of perceptions and experiences that Burning Man offers in one week within an extreme environment, the structure was meant to be like a sponge encouraging creativity.”

Mamou-Mani created a short film to show how the project could be realised digitally


The architect was ready to start building the design when Burning Man was cancelled.

“The biggest challenge for Catharsis was to build a safe structure that could be assembled and disassembled several times,” Mamou-Mani said.

“I love this idea: allowing buildings to have several lives, assembled when needed and stored when not, in the spirit of the circular economy. Our studio is in boat containers, so we understand the value of a flexible and modular approach to architecture.”

Burning Man structures could be reused for homeless

Burning Man structures are usually burned when the festival ends, like Galaxia, which was the festival’s main temple in 2018 and highly commended in our Dezeen Awards 2019.

Mamou-Mani had other plans for Catharsis, which he planned to disassemble and bring to London’s Somerset House after the festival to establish a dialogue between cities.

A comment on Mamou-Mani’s Instagram, about how he could have built homes for the homeless with the supplies for the structure, led the architect to look into the possibility of working with local councils to make use of future modular designs.

Arthur Mamou-Mani's Catharsis
Catharsis was designed to be easily assembled and disassembled

“Reno and SF are shockingly full of homeless, so I can understand the divide that Burning Man can create when knowing the amounts involved in creating a city that disappears instead of investing in our own cities,” he said.

“Saying this, the experimentation that Burning Man allows can help invent and test new kinds of modular structures. Imagine if these were donated to cities after the event? Imagine if this was part of new rituals, reconnecting with the homeless community by building with them,” he continued.

Arthur Mamou-Mani's Catharsis
Mamou-Mani wanted to bring the structure to London’s Somerset House after Burning Man

“I did get in touch with the Tower Hamlets council and am waiting for their reply. We all felt very empowered by fabricating masks for the NHS at our fabrication space FabPub, we all have the power to change things!” Mamou-Mani said.

Some past Burning Man structures include architect John Marx’ five-sided pyramid that reimagined the myth of Andromeda and Finnish studio JKMM’s sauna for the desert.

This year, Colorado architects Renzo Verbeck and artist Sylvia Adrienne Lisse were to create an eight-pointed angular structure to serve as the temple.

The post Arthur Mamou-Mani seeks game designers to help create virtual version of timber amphitheatre for cancelled Burning Man appeared first on Dezeen.

This AI Gym-Set uses motion-tracking cameras to let trainers virtually guide your workout

The idea of a sweaty gym bench seemed icky a year ago… now it just seems like a hazard. Given that it’s going to be a while before you can go to the gym, Tempo Studio brings the gym AND the trainer to you.

The Tempo Studio is a gym-set that comes complete with a display and a motion-tracking camera that actively scans and monitors your exercise in 3D. With built-in exercise routines that are guided by expert trainers performing live exercise sessions, the Tempo is the equivalent of going on a Zoom video call with your gym trainer. Hop onto a personalized live session with a gym trainer of your choice and the trainer on the other side of the screen guides you through your workout. The Tempo Studio comes built-in with a workout mat as well as all the training gear you’d need, and Tempo’s AI-enabled camera module captures and tracks your body’s movement as you work out, allowing the trainer to remotely know where you’re going wrong.

The entire gym set occupies no more than 3 square feet of space in your house (barely the size of a standing mirror), and the vertical 42-inch screen lets you view your trainer as they exercise, while also letting you see your own stats, like your heartbeat, rep-count, and calorie-burn count. On the inside, the AI-enabled gym-set runs on a 10th-generation Intel i5 processor and an NVIDIA graphics card that powers the motion-tracking camera. The entire gym studio incurs a one-time cost of $1995 for the hardware and $55 each month for the personalized training. The barrier for entry does feel like a little on the more premium side, but then again, you’re really paying for equipment, state-of-the-art tech, and an entire roster of high-caliber coaches and trainers, which doesn’t come cheap. Besides, you’re paying for your long-term health too, which you really can’t put a price on, right??

Designer: Tempo

DesignAgenda explores the role of designers in creating a sustainable future

Future Sense by DesignAgenda for VDF x Ventura Projects

DesignAgenda is exploring the role of design in creating a sustainability society as part of Future Sense, which it is exhibiting for VDF x Ventura Projects.

Exhibitor: DesignAgenda by FHNW Academy of Art and Design
Project title: Future Sense

FHNW Academy of Art and Design is a university in Münchenstein, Switzerland with a commitment to sustainable development.

The school has recently launched an initiative called DesignAgenda that explores the relationship between design and sustainability. As part of the VDF x Ventura Project collaboration, DesignAgenda will introduce its Future Sense exhibition.

Future Sense raises awareness of the exploitation of nature, inequalities of pluralistic societies, and investigates the responsibility of design in the discourse on sustainability.

Projects range from investigations into our relationship to nature, materiality, and nutrition, through to studies on the value of waste, consumption cycles, and upcycling.

Main image is by Rafael Kouto, thumbnail is by Nadia Lanfranchi.

Website: fhnw.ch/en/hgk/designagenda
Email: kommunikation.hgk@fhnw.ch


Virtual Design Festival is the world’s first online design festival, taking place from 15 April to 30 June 2020.

Ventura Projects are exhibitions curated by Utrecht- and Milan-based Organisation in Design that cover the latest developments in contemporary design.

As part of VDF, Ventura Projects is presenting the work of 88 international designers, academies and brands. See work from all the VDF x Ventura Projects participants at dezeen.com/vdf/ventura-projects.

The post DesignAgenda explores the role of designers in creating a sustainable future appeared first on Dezeen.