Yes Plz’s Coffee and Print Magazine Subscription Service

A double-delivery that encapsulates zine culture of the ’90s

LA-based Yes Plz, a coffee start-up, channels early morning energy into their subscription model: delivering a bag of freshly roasted coffee beans and a print zine every week (or two weeks, or month, depending on your subscription frequency). The inclusion of a publication was crucial to co-founder Tony “Tonx” Konecny’s vision. With a professional background in coffee, Konecny’s passion for print media stems from an early obsession with skateboard and surf magazines. “Growing up in Indiana, there weren’t any local skateparks and we definitely didn’t have access to surf,” Konecny shares. “But I thought of these magazines as sources of culture.”

I wanted to recreate that cracker-jack-prize-in-the-mailbox feel

When he decided to launch Yes Plz with co-founder and head roaster Sumi Ali, he knew the project needed to capture the intimacy of print journalism. “In the ’90s, mail-order zine culture was this thing,” he recalls. “You’d see a confidential saying to send a self-addressed stamp to a PO box. Eight weeks later some weirdo from Louisville, KY would send you an envelope with zines and stickers. I wanted to recreate that cracker-jack-prize-in-the-mailbox feel.”

Ali manages Yes Plz’s coffee program with a deft hand, but what sets the company apart from so many other coffee subscription services is its self-awareness. Yes Plz is egalitarian—and Konecny intended it to be. “The model for coffee connoisseurship was about being able to deconstruct a cup of coffee with all these elaborate descriptors,” he—who himself has been a member of the coffee “elite”—says. Before co-founding Yes Plz, Konecny was head roaster at Victrola Coffee and, after working with Intelligentsia in LA, launched Tonx Coffee, which was subsequently acquired by Blue Bottle. “In reality, two different cups of coffee can produce vastly different experiences. Your beans could be three days off a roast and mine could be 13 days off a roast. There are all these factors making it so there isn’t a shared ontology.”

While there’s room for highbrow appreciation of coffee, Konecny prefers a different, intimate and accessible approach. “Coffee is like a magazine,” he shares. “You pick it up when it’s fresh and it feels immediate and relevant. But the three-month-old edition of Time in the doctor’s waiting room is ancient history.” Yes Plz captures that immediacy in each bag of beans and zine. “I’ve always been obsessed with magazines and print ephemera,” Konecny adds. “Embracing the ephemerality is the essential thing to soak in about coffee. You fall in love with coffee and it’s very fleeting.”

Yes Plz initially launched as a weekly zine, printed at the same press as the Los Angeles localized edition of the New York Times. “We were coming in when The New York Times travel section came off the press,” Konecny explains. “Working on newsprint and these big open web presses was just so cool. It’s this old technology that really feels like print. And no digital edition of Yes Plz can replace that.”

Following the purchase of LA Weekly, Konecny felt that there was a potential alt-weekly, independent void in Los Angeles that Yes Plz could fill. “We ship everywhere in the US but we’re all here in Los Angeles,” says Konecny. “Many of our friends and artists that we work with are here too. We wondered if it would be too LA specific and maybe we should branch out. But we realized we could just lean into this.”

The topics found in the pages of Yes Plz are accessible to subscribers all over the country, but the flavor of Los Angeles is felt. Music, food, and art are frequent themes, and readers will always find a brief comic; a curated playlist; and often a movie, record, or product review. But, as Konecny explains, “Our interest is really in people, optimism in people. One of the most valuable things you can do in print journalism is give someone who deserves it a voice.” The magazine dedicates significant space to creative, artistic people of all professions—like chef and restaurateur Jessica Koslow of LA’s Sqirl, San Francisco-based artist Katie Benn, and indie band Big Thief. There’s an entire issue guest-edited by Sasami. Clay Hickson, another expert curator of print ephemera, graces the cover of an issue.

The current pandemic has forced the Yes Plz team to take a hiatus on the print magazine, monthly or otherwise. Konecny has considered returning to an even more stripped-down version of the weekly (“literally something we could print in my living room,” he says) or opting for a perfect-bound quarterly. Either way, a digital magazine or newsletter is not a replacement Konecny is considering. “It’s easy enough to do time-sensitive content online, but there’s something about the tactile nature of it. Looking at a physical magazine feels more intimate.”

Whether featuring articles about amateur blacksmithing (Issue 47) or devoting an entire issue to a Lucky Peach/impeachment pun (Issue 49), Yes Plz exists between those weirdo mail-order zines and sophisticated, niche journals. It’s a conversation between the collectors of arcana and coffee drinkers.

Back issues of Yes Plz are available to purchase online for now. We look forward to their return.

Images courtesy of Yes Plz

Max Siedentopf creates survival guide for living in lockdown

Home Alone - A Survival Guide, coronavirus lockdown challenges, by Max Siedentopf

Artist Max Siedentopf has created a series of art works, called Home Alone – A Survival Guide, that depict challenges that can be taken on at home during coronavirus lockdown.

Namibian-German artist Siedentopf, who is based in London, created the series earlier this month after the UK government decided to restrict movement and encourage social distancing to limit the spread of the virus.

Home Alone - A Survival Guide, coronavirus lockdown challenges, by Max Siedentopf

“Home Alone – A Survival Guide was created right at the start of the lockdown in the UK and was born out of the need to stay confined in self-isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic,” Siedentopf told Dezeen.

“Everyone I spoke to had their video and photoshoots cancelled and was stuck at home with nothing to do and so I decided to turn my apartment upside down and capture the results: piling up cans as sculptures, tinkering with haute couture costumes, turning vacuum cleaners into robots, building traps, and inventing bizarre alternatives to toilet paper.”

Home Alone - A Survival Guide, coronavirus lockdown challenges, by Max Siedentopf

Each artwork depicts a satirical response to one of a hundred self-isolation challenges that were created by Siedentopf, who caused outrage earlier this year with his photographs of models wearing household items as coronavirus masks.

The tasks include making an artwork from pasta, building a sculpture with sausages, creating a horror scene using ketchup and using your microwave as a PC.

“The handy survival guide consists of various chapters that ironically illuminate survival in self-chosen or prescribed isolation at home,” said Siedentopf.

Home Alone - A Survival Guide, coronavirus lockdown challenges, by Max Siedentopf

Siedentopf shared each of the challenges on his Instagram and invited his followers to respond to the tasks.

“Most importantly I decided to publish all actions as a series of instructions on social media, each day around 5-10 different ones, and invited followers worldwide to reenact the respective mottos,” he explained.

“Over two weeks of confinement over 1,000 photos were made by people all around the world.”

Home Alone - A Survival Guide, coronavirus lockdown challenges, by Max Siedentopf

The tasks became more intense as the series continued, with Siedentopf’s followers responding to the increasingly bizarre challenges.

“Each day I wanted to take the instructions a step further and see how far people would be willing to go and I think this really paid off,” said Siedentopf.

“People gave their dogs manicures, went fishing from their balcony and turned their vacuum cleaners into killer robots.”

Home Alone - A Survival Guide, coronavirus lockdown challenges, by Max Siedentopf

Siedentopf hopes that the series will encourage people to be positive during the coronavirus pandemic.

“First and foremost I think it’s always important to keep a positive mindset, no matter how challenging the situation,” he explained.

“In many ways, you can use this challenging time as an advantage how you can find new and often more interesting ways to work that were not possible before,” he continued.

“I think being stuck at home doesn’t mean you need to be stuck, the series should show that there are literally endless possibilities how you can make interesting work and these instructions should help as a guide to kickstart this.”

Home Alone - A Survival Guide, coronavirus lockdown challenges, by Max Siedentopf

The results of Home Alone – A Survival Guide have been turned into a book.

The project is the latest in a series of provocative artworks created by Siedentopf. He previously created a photo series showing people using everyday items as face masks and installed binoculars at Tate Modern to allow visitors to the museum to look into the neighbouring flats.

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Animal psychology governs the design of this smart pet water dispenser

Have you ever walked into someone’s house or office and they have this cool showpiece with a water fountain? I am talking about those mini zen gardens or crazy shapes that have constant flowing water – it always catches your attention if you see it. That same behavior works for pets too actually, they are more attracted to flowing water than a stagnant water bowl and this award-winning smart pet water dispenser does exactly that!

The PetX smart pet water dispenser designed by Beijing Kitten&Puppy Technology Co. was one of the iF Design Awards 2020 winners and rightfully so – they used the simplest animal behavioral psychology pattern and applied it to a product that worked for pets. Instead of a regular water bowl, this smart water dispenser provides clean running water for pets anytime. Flowing water is better for your pet’s health as still water has a higher chance of becoming contaminated and leading to things like urinary tract infections. Your pets are likely to drink more water due to the innovative and inviting mechanism.

The brand has a patented water flow structure designed for keeping the water clean by filtering impurities and keeping the volume below 30dB. The form of the product has a 7° slope which works universally i.e. pets with different face shapes will be able to comfortably drink water and you won’t have to buy separate bowls for multiple pets. The PetX water dispenser offers access to the IoT and has a voice control feature as well. The water frequency can be automatically switched for day and nighttime use and in case of a power failure, the water tray will still store 100 ml so your pets can remain hydrated. You’ve reached the end of this article and this is a reminder for you and your pet to drink some water.

The PetX smart water dispenser is a winner of the iF Design Award for the year 2020.

Designer: Beijing Kitten&Puppy Technology Co.

Bike Ride Necktie

The unique process behind Title of Work’s 1″ Raw Edge Stripe / Bike Ride Necktie incorporates the photo-transfer of a 1920s cycling image onto imported cotton linen with silk overlay. Once again, the Lower East Side atelier brings meticulous crafting and premium materials to their out-of-the-ordinary accessories, all of which are individually made by hand in NYC. For the month of April, 20% of the proceeds from each sale at Title of Work will go to No Kid Hungry.

 

SODA creates contemporary MYO offices inside 1970s London building

MYO office in 123 Victoria Street, designed by by Soda

The gridded facade of this office in central London informed the arrangement of its interiors, where SODA has built a series of flexible workspaces that can be adjusted to suit different occupants.

The 3,716-square-metre MYO offices take over the second and third floors of 123 Victoria Street, a mixed-use building that lies just a short walk from the major transport hub of Victoria station.

Originally constructed in 1977 by EPR Architects, the building features rows of windows that angle outwards to form transparent, box-like forms across the facade.

MYO office in 123 Victoria Street, designed by by Soda

This became a key point of reference for architecture studio SODA, which was tasked with developing the interiors of MYO.

The studio wanted to mimic the “cellular language” of the building’s exterior by creating an internal grid of workspaces that can be subtly reconfigured or opened up to suit companies of different sizes.

MYO office in 123 Victoria Street, designed by by Soda

“We wanted to push back against the idea of private, shut-off office units,” Eleni Karabouikis, senior architect at the studio, told Dezeen.

“The client wanted an open and friendly environment, with each company having their own ‘shop front’ that addresses the communal spaces and draws people out of their own plot,” she continued.

MYO office in 123 Victoria Street, designed by by Soda

“The new workspaces offer an adaptable framework for tenants rather than a prescriptive layout, which has become commonplace in contemporary office design,” added the studio.

MYO has been completed with a series of meeting rooms that can accommodate anywhere between two and 22 people, each with adjustable tables and blinds that can be drawn across for privacy.

MYO office in 123 Victoria Street, designed by by Soda

Bigger rooms can be subdivided by temporary partitions or pastel-hued curtains by Danish brand Kvadrat that have been set on tracks on the ceiling.

Soft furnishings that dress the rest of the space are in complementary shades of teal blue, baby pink and mustard yellow.

MYO office in 123 Victoria Street, designed by by Soda

“We tried to anticipate a variety of different tenants occupying the building which meant that we needed to keep the base palette as neutral as possible,” Karabouikis explained.

“But that doesn’t mean that such fit-outs shouldn’t be warm and inviting.”

Outside of the meeting rooms there are also a number of group tables, as well as booths and window-side armchairs where visitors can work on their own.

MYO office in 123 Victoria Street, designed by by Soda

At the centre of the plan is an atrium that can serve as a lounge or a large-scale event space. The kitchen here can also be turned into a drinks bar.

Upper floors of the office are accessed via a suspended staircase that has slim black treads and a wire balustrade.

“This lightweight, sculptural object hangs amidst more solid exposed concrete columns and creates a clearly defined contrast between new and original architectural elements,” said the studio.

MYO office in 123 Victoria Street, designed by by Soda

Just a stone’s throw from the MYO offices is Thomas House, a co-working space that SODA designed back in 2018.

The venue includes a roof terrace, gym and bar, as well as a number of workrooms decked out in period colours inspired by the Regency era.

Photography is by Ed Reeve.

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This portable dry room keeps your home and pets hygienic during quarantine

Quarantining with pets has its pros and cons, it is emotionally comforting to have your pet around during these hard times but it is also a task to switch their entire routine indoors especially if you have a dog. The isolation is an adjustment for every living being and we all have to find hacks around what used to be ‘normal life’. I have a dog and every time I gave him a bath, I would take him out for a quick walk so the sun would dry his coat and warm him up. Being under lockdown means I cannot step out often but I still have to bathe and dry my dog and would prefer if my apartment didn’t end up smelling like wet fur…you know what I mean! Enter – Cozypet Dryroom and by the end of this, you are going to want one in a human size, trust me.

If you have a small to medium pet (yes, even a Malamute is a puppy but let’s be real for a second), then Cozypet Dryroom is exactly what you need for rainy days and quarantine days. It is a quick and efficient way to dry your pet after bath time. The appliance has a cylindrical design which lets the air from the twin fans flow effectively and evenly. Most of us believe that letting our pets air-dry indoors is not an issue, but in fact, it is not healthy for you or your pet. Keeping the fan or air conditioning on when your pets’ coats are still damp can make them fall sick and also leave an unpleasant smell in the house. The Cozypet Dryroom solves these issues by 1) being fast 2) maintaining hygiene and 3) being gentle when compared to a using a blow dryer (I know some of you geniuses must have thought of that alternative).

Usually, at pet care centers, the dry rooms are larger but if you are living in an apartment or do not use pet care centers all the time, then having this compact device will save you a lot of personal resources especially if you have multiple pets to care for (time, energy, money, and space to be exact). The design is sleek and minimal so it can fit with any interior style and won’t take up more than a small corner. Unlike traditional boxy pet dry rooms, the Cozypet brings a refreshing new shape to your home. Its form is like a stool so it doesn’t stick out in your space and blends with the furniture. With the clear door, it almost looks like your furry friend’s personal sauna room. To me, it looks like a cozy nook that gets your pet all warm and ready to cuddle – I truly wish they make one for people too!

Designer: Ryan Kim, Yeaji Hong, and Ffon Creatives.

Geothermal Activity Highlighted by Zac Henderson

Photographe et vidéaste itinérant à travers les Etats-Unis, Zac Henderson est fasciné par la science et le prouve à travers ses images. Dans sa série “Strange Beauty”, il se concentre sur la beauté des phénomènes naturels observables à la surface de la Terre. Ses images, où textures, couleurs et matières organiques se confondent, rendent un hommage photographique à la nature et mettent en lumière les “marqueurs de l’activité géothermique”, selon les mots de l’artiste. 

Images : © Zac Henderson








Kiran Zhu's portable sanitation kit aims to improve public hygiene

Kiran Zhu's portable Handy Capsule aims to improve public hygiene

Chinese designer Kiran Zhu has created the Handy Capsule sanitation kit in a bid to encourage better public health habits in light of the coronavirus pandemic.

The compact sanitation kit, called the Handy Capsule, contains four types of health supplies: a disposable mask, hand sanitiser, temperature stickers and alcohol wipes.

The soft pebble-shaped case is made from aluminium sheets that have been stamped to take the form of each of the items included inside.

Kiran Zhu's portable Handy Capsule aims to improve public hygiene

“Through this product, we hope to establish a new language for communication with the public, which is gentle and easy to understand,” Zhu told Dezeen. “It’s very important to find the daily ‘connection point’ with the public.”

“The cobblestone, or so-called ‘capsule’, shape of the design is easy to associate with some fashion supplies, such as beauty makeup,” he added. “It also offers this product more possibilities for role changes.”

As Zhu explained, public health products are usually presented as professional and serious, and this format limits its integration into daily life.

Kiran Zhu's portable Handy Capsule aims to improve public hygiene

Zhu, who is founder of Shanghai-based design brand Ziinlife, hopes that the modern and sleek design of his Handy Capsule will help such products get the widespread attention they need to encourage better public health habits.

“When medical supplies become more fashionable and beautiful as daily necessities, the language of delivery will be more relatable,” said the designer.

“People will be willing to pay for them, and they can use them spontaneously and voluntarily,” he added. “We wish to turn a good public health habit into a trend.”

Designed for daily use and portability, the kit measures 12.5 centimetres long and 9 centimetres wide, with a thickness of just 2.5 centimetres.

It has an embedded magnetic clasp to make it easy to open and close, and has a belt-like attachment on its side to enable the user to hang it from their arm or loop it around their bag.

Kiran Zhu's portable Handy Capsule aims to improve public hygiene

Zhu co-founded Ziinlife together with fellow designer Yang Xili in 2013 in a bid to share “the value of design” with the public.

Zhu’s Handy Capsule was recently added to a collection of conceptual products that aim to improve public health in the wake of Covid-19, which are collected under the title of the Create Cures project.

This project also saw Chinese architect Sun Dayong create a mobile body shield that would protect a wearer during a viral outbreak by using UV light to sterilise itself.

Other designs in the Create Cures collection include a sterilising lamp that combines an ultraviolet (UV) light with a tray and a cubic “capsule” that people can assemble themselves to use while working.

The post Kiran Zhu’s portable sanitation kit aims to improve public hygiene appeared first on Dezeen.

Emergency product designs get a humorous twist to meet our quarantine cravings!

One thing that has shone through this lockdown is the indomitable human spirit. People singing/ playing instruments and getting into an impromptu song from their balconies in Italy, companies reusing their production lines to provide PPE and even individual students/designers trying to save the planet, everyone is coping and helping the world in their little way. Now if only I could get some pizza, the world would be perfect! This is the idea that has been brought to life by designer Ben Fearnley with his ‘In Case of Emergency’ series! Using humor and human cravings, Ben repurposes the existing form to deliver a tongue in cheek view of an object that is usually a serious subject. With the weekend almost here, let’s get it started with some humor and wishful thinking to keep you upbeat in these quarantined times! Now to go and find an easy yummy cheesy pizza recipe…

Pizza! It is safe to say that this food is almost universal now. Crispy buttery crust, spiced and balanced sauce, and that molten cheese, there are few things on this planet that pizza can’t fix. So, it does make sense to have this slice readily available for anyone who’s having a bad day.

The beautifully detailed render aside, this wine extinguisher comes with specific real-life scenarios or criteria that are the precursors for breaking open this wine canister! So when the day feels like no end is in sight, this emergency brew is here to cure your blues!

To do or doughnut, there is no try. Quoting Yoda aside, sugar is the best pick me up in the world once you ignore all the dire warnings of processed sugar. Looking at that sprinkled goodness, you know having a case full of these is a solution for your woes.

While growing up in India, I would hear about that elusive fried chicken and the KFC goodness, so much that it made the news when a traveling artist had them ordered from the USA to India as this was his comfort food. So when KFC opened up in Bombay, it was a momentous occasion to step into that beckoning red outlet and get my first bucket. Whether or not it became my comfort food, you do know that the salt, fat, acid, heat and crunch of these golden bites gives an uplift to your day!

While we have our cravings sorted, life is incomplete without that morning boost of caffeine. Hence it is apt to have a rocket-shaped coffee maker to fuel you up for good!

I don’t care what people say about sitting in their filth (take a bath beforehand if needed) but a hot tub soothes your soul! Given how 2020 has kicked us right where it hurts, I think we all could do with a warm hug and a time machine to zoom into the future and get a sneak peek on how this pandemic ends. Also, it surely would be a good way to show some world leaders the effects of their actions, or their lack of actions to save ourselves from the destruction we are bringing our way.

Nature has shown us already, that if we give it a chance, let Earth breathe, it will forgive and reverse the damage we have done. So let’s be aware and let 2020 be the year humanity evolved into better, conscious humanity 2.0!

10 significant concrete buildings featured in Chinese Brutalism Today

Gymnasium of New Campus of Tianjin University by Atelier Li Xinggang

Alberto Bologna spotlights 10 key buildings from his book Chinese Brutalism Today, which examines the enduring trend of concrete architecture in China.

Chinese Brutalism Today was curated by architect Bologna to offer a snapshot of the last two decades of architecture in the country, during which it has become the world’s largest concrete consumer.

The book identifies the reasons, cultures and attitudes behind the concrete architecture trend, through the analysis of buildings by notable Chinese architects, such as Amateur Architecture Studio.

According to Bologna, who is also an assistant professor at Politecnico di Torino in Italy, the intention is to document the trend because he believes its longevity is so unusual.

Ningbo History Museum by Amateur Architecture Studio from Chinese Brutalism Today
Ningbo History Museum by Amateur Architecture Studio features in the book

“When I started the book I already had a deep interest in concrete architecture,” he told Dezeen. “I started to take a look at Chinese architecture and discovered that there was an interesting way of using concrete by contemporary Chinese architects.”

“However concrete architecture in China is a very singular phenomena,” he explained. “Phenomena in China normally come and go very fast. My book is a snapshot of the current architectural situation.”

Chinese Brutalism Today, published by ORO Editions, is divided into three chapters that explore use of concrete from the design process through to a finished structure. This is conducted through the analysis of a small selection of concrete buildings he deems to be the most pertinent.

It was developed from research carried out by Bologna through photographic surveys and interviews with Chinese architecture studios while he was living and working in the country.

“I only analysed the apex of a pyramid, I analysed a very few chosen buildings,” Bologna explained.

“I choose the case studies that are representative and interesting. The aim wasn’t to do a comprehensive catalogue, but the aim was to give a critical reading and to extract some design tools from this architecture.”

Bologna’s main discovery from carrying out the research was that concrete is predominantly used for ornamental purposes in Chinese architecture, and helps architects to articulate their own distinctive cultural identity.

He describes this as a “regional evolution”, noting that ornament and concrete finishes that distinguish many Chinese buildings develop in relation to the skills of local construction workers.

“There is a strong identity intention throughout this architecture,” Bologna explained. “This is something that is not so clear when you just take a look at pictures.”

“Chinese architects now are talking to the world through their architecture.”

Read on for Bologna’s pick of the most significant buildings in Chinese Brutalism Today:


Gymnasium of New Campus of Tianjin University by Atelier Li Xing from Chinese Brutalism Todaygang

Gymnasium of New Campus of Tianjin University by Atelier Li Xinggang

“If you look at this building, you can see shapes that are obtained through use of a wooden formwork. Wooden formwork costs a lot everywhere in the world because of labour required to assemble it.

“Therefore the westernised world has lost a lot of architectural shapes and structural systems, because they can only be generated by the use of this particular formwork. In China, it’s something that will disappear in a few years too. Wooden formwork made it possible to obtain such a building.”


Ningbo History Museum by Amateur Architecture Studio from Chinese Brutalism Today

Ningbo History Museum by Amateur Architecture Studio

“The Ningbo History Museum is a masterpiece in terms of ornament. The protagonist is this joint in this photo, which I describe in the book.

“The joint is a tectonic and drawing exercise at the same time – the surfaces combine concrete and a type of masonry called wapan that uses recycled building materials.”


Luyeyuan Ston Sculpture Art Museum by Jiakun Architects from Chinese Brutalism Today

Luyeyuan Ston Sculpture Art Museum by Jiakun Architects

“The Luyeyuan Ston Sculpture Art Museum is a real milestone because Jiakun Architects used concrete specifically on the surface. The structure is in masonry, covered by a layer of concrete.

“In this way, [the studio] hasn’t had to use spacers inside the formwork. Instead it focuses on the surface and on the spiritual quality of this space generated by the light.”


Memorial Hall of Long March of the Red Army by Atelier FCJZ from Chinese Brutalism Today

Memorial Hall of Long March of the Red Army by Atelier FCJZ

“The Memorial Hall of Long March of the Red Army in Sichuan is very interesting because of the architectural shape of some of its elements.

“This mainly includes the columns on the ground floor, and also some of the surfaces which used particular formwork done by bamboo canes.”


Seashore Library by Vector Architects from Chinese Brutalism Today

Seashore Library by Vector Architects

“Seashore Library is a well known building in the West. It is fundamental to understand why it was built like this in terms of space and relationship with light and the surfaces.

“I have published, for the first time, photos of the building site that revealed the attention on the building’s formwork that enhanced its imperfect surfaces. [The studio] knew that it was impossible to obtain a perfect surface.”


Shui Cultural Center by Westline Studio

Shui Cultural Center by Westline Studio

“I chose West line studio Shui Cultural Centre in San Diego County for the same reason as Seashore Library.

“It has a very deliberately rough surface, and it also reveals the complexity of its formwork. The local construction workers were very, very good to produce this type of wooden formwork.”


Taizhou Contemporary Art Museum by Atelier Deshaus

Taizhou Contemporary Art Museum by Atelier Deshaus

“Atelier Deshaus took confidence in the fact it was impossible to obtain a perfect surface in the area.

“Atelier Deshaus chose to work with deliberately rough surfaces and – even if though they are very rough and uncontrolled surfaces – the results is much better than its Long Museum in which it tried to create a smooth polished surface that was not possible with the capabilities of the local construction industry.”


Peachblossom Valley Tourist Center by Land Based Rationalism Design & Research Center of China Architecture Design Group

Peachblossom Valley Tourist Center by Land Based Rationalism Design & Research Center of China Architecture Design Group

“Peachblossom Valley Tourist Center is important because it uses the bush hammered technique to correct some mistakes in its surface.

“Bush hammering has become a real ornamental tool in Chinese architecture to correct some mistakes and some casting mistakes.”


Mu Xin Art Museum by OLI Architecture PLLC

Mu Xin Art Museum by OLI Architecture PLLC

“Mu Xin Art Museum – the concrete there is perfect. It is the perfect example of what is possible to obtain in China in terms of the execution with a Chinese construction company, thanks to the ability of the designer.”

“In my opinion it is a masterpiece in terms of the conception of the space and also how it obtains these very peculiar surfaces.”


Aranya Qixing Youth Camp by Atelier TeamMinus

Aranya Qixing Youth Camp by Atelier TeamMinus

“This building reveals brilliant design in layout of a space, shaped by the use of exposed concrete.

“The particular shape of the building, the result of a careful layout of the various functions, creates spaces with quality and perception that does not seem to be influenced by a poorly controlled finish of the exposed-concrete surfaces.”

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