German Aerospace Centre's jet black facades crafted by Rieder

German Aerospace Centre by Chapman Taylor Architects

Dezeen promotion: Chapman Taylor Architects has clad the German Aerospace Centre offices in Godesberger Allee, Bonn, with a copper and black concrete facade from materials developer Rieder.

Completed in 2020 for Munich real estate company Fondara, the building is clad in a glass-fibre-reinforced concrete system developed and manufactured by Rieder.

German Aerospace Centre offices in Godesberger Allee
The German Aerospace Centre’s office is clad in glass-fibre-reinforced concrete

Chapman Taylor Architects designed the -black and copper facade to evoke the appearance of a universe – something that made sense as its main tenant is an aerospace organisation.

“At the German Aerospace Centre’s offices, you can allow yourself to conjure up an association of space and universe,” explained Rieder.

“Coincidentally, the graceful space black of the facade appears to have been tailor-made for the main tenant of the office complex on Godesberger Allee in Bonn.”

“On the other hand, the sharp-edged moulded parts made of glass-fibre-reinforced concrete were individually manufactured for the needs of the building’s architecture,” the company added.

German office office with black and copper cladding
The building features black and copper cladding

The geometrical facade was predominately made using Rieder’s glass-fibre concrete formparts.fab system, coloured liquid black.

These panels were combined with pilasters clad in copper sheets to create a striking contrast.

Copper cladding detail
The copper covers pilasters between the windows

The flexibility of the material enabled Chapman Taylor Architects to design a facade for the German Aerospace Centre around a window arrangement that best suited the office’s interiors.

“With Rieder’s formparts.fab, we found the perfect product for the monolithic facade design with a relief-like structure,” said Hendrik Wirths, project manager in Chapman Taylor Architects Düsseldorf office.

“The wide range of design options combined with the weight-saving, minimal material thickness was decisive here.”

Office in Bonn
Chapman Taylor Architects chose Rieder’s formparts.fab cladding for its monolithic qualities

Each sharp-edged formparts.fab panel is individually manufactured from 13-millimetre-thin glass-fibre-reinforced concrete.

Formparts.fab comes in a variety of colours, surfaces and lengths up to seven metres long.

It can also be combined with flat concrete skin panels, allowing it to be easily implemented for architecturally complex facades.

To find out more, visit Rieder’s website.


Partnership content

This article was written by Dezeen for Rieder as part of a partnership. Find out more about Dezeen partnership content here.

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BAO Kings Cross pays tribute to Asia's Western-style cafes

Cafe Bao by Macaulay Sinclair

The Kings Cross outpost of London restaurant BAO features a wood-panelled interior designed by Macaulay Sinclair based on the Western-style cafes of Taiwan and Japan.

Set within a mixed-use building in Pancras Square, the 188-square-metre space includes a restaurant and bar, a baked goods counter and a workshop as well as a management head office.

Interior of Cafe Bao with wood-panelled mezzanine
The double-height restaurant features a wood-panelled mezzanine

Its menu and interior was informed by Taiwan’s oldest Western-style cafe, Bolero, as well as Japanese kissatens, a type of tearooms that were popular in the middle of the 20th century.

Kissatens serve Yōshoku cuisine, an interpretation of western food seen through an Asian lens. Typical dishes include katsu sandwiches, omurice omelettes – made with fried rice and fried scrambled eggs – and hamburger steak.

Wood serving counter and glossy red floor in London restaurant by Macaulay Sinclair
A pastry counter next to the entrance extends into a bar

“It’s the type of place that is disappearing fast, similar to the pie and mash shops in London,” BAO founder and creative director Erchen Chang told Dezeen.

“But it’s a heritage that is growing a new wave of nostalgia. The restaurant, Bolero, was the first and now oldest Western-style cafe in Taiwan and it’s got such a history to it. It feels as though time has been frozen – in a good way. I love the decor, the old waiters and mostly the old menu.”

Wood counter with coffee machine in Cafe Bao
Bespoke timber and glazed screens provide views into the kitchen

Chang and the team at BAO worked with Nottingham-based Macaulay Sinclair to create an interior that evokes the “nostalgic domesticity” of traditional Taiwanese kitchens, houses and eateries.

“All our restaurants are interpretations of culture in Taiwan,” said Chang, who founded the restaurant chain alongside Shing Tat Chung and Wai Ting Chung.

“We like to use this as a starting point and point of reference for our restaurants and whilst our aim is to create that experience that transports you, it’s not to create a direct copy of the references we take.”

Wood serving counter with display cases in London restaurant by Macaulay Sinclair
Baked goods are displayed near the front of the space

When customers enter the restaurant, they are greeted by a baked goods counter showcasing a range of handmade pastries that they can take away or enjoy in the restaurant.

The counter extends into a bar and overlooks the dining area, which is set with simple square tables and dining chairs by Finnish brand Artek.

Light streams in through large floor-to-ceiling windows and a white-accented staircase takes diners upstairs to a mezzanine level overlooking the double-height restaurant.

On the upper level, guests can learn how to make the steamed buns that give the restaurant its name in classes led by BAO bakers.

Pastry chefs working at Cafe Bao
Diners can watch the chefs at work

The double-height space is wrapped in wood panelling, polished plaster surfaces and bespoke timber screens with glazed panelling.

On the ground floor behind the bar, the screens separate the kitchen from the restaurant, while on the mezzanine level they allow diners to peek into the workshop space.

Solid and veneered iroko wood is used throughout the restaurant, finished with a mix of timber stains and lacquer sheens, while the floor is finished with red epoxy paint in a gloss finish that BAO refers to as “Bauhaus red”.

Dining area with white staircase and paper lanterns at London restaurant by Macaulay Sinclair
Paper lanterns by Isamu Noguchi hang in the dining area

“The bespoke timber and glazed screens are intended to be a playful yet functional barrier between kitchen and restaurant trading space,” said Mike Sinclair, who founded Macauly Sinclair alongside John Macauly in 2003.

“Glazing provides considered sightlines into the theatre kitchen whilst flexible, openable apertures assist operational communication.”

Dining chairs against wood-panelled walls in Cafe Bao
The floor is finished in red epoxy paint

All joinery featured throughout the restaurant and workshop space is bespoke and the paper lanterns that hang above the dining area are by Japanese designer Isamu Noguchi.

A museum-style glass display area under the staircase showcases some of the restaurant’s bao buns and restaurant merchandise.

White staircase and wood-panelled walls in London restaurant by Macaulay Sinclair
A white-lacquered staircase leads up to the mezzanine

Macaulay Sinclair also worked on the nearby Dishoom restaurant in King’s Cross, which is located in a former railway transit shed and channels mid-20th-century Bombay.

Photography is by John Carey.

The post BAO Kings Cross pays tribute to Asia’s Western-style cafes appeared first on Dezeen.

WESN redesigned the classic pocket knife to make it even better for the outdoors


It’s rather easy to make a product better by just adding new features to it… but it’s incredibly difficult to design a better version of a classic product by focusing on the basics and improving on them. Meet the WESN Samla, a product so simple, so good, and so portable, it has all the hallmarks of an icon. Designed to be the one knife you carry with you on outdoor trips, the Samla’s simple design is reinforced by the use of the best materials for the job, and a user experience that will easily make it your favorite pocket knife.

The Samla by WESN falls well within the archetype of your pocket-knife. It comes with a friction hinge and can be deployed by simply pushing on a lever with your thumb to open the blade. The blade itself comes crafted from a high-durability Sandvik 14C28N Stainless Steel with a sheepsfoot design, making it ideal for chopping, slicing, carving, whittling, all the activities you’d find yourself doing in the outdoors. It sits within a handle made from either titanium or rosewood (depending on the variant you pick) with beveled edges, making it comfortable to hold and maneuver around. Opening the Samla is ridiculously simple too. The blade’s tang sticks out of the front, acting as a lever that lets you open the blade when you want. A friction hinge gives the blade just the right amount of resistance as you open it, and the absence of a locking mechanism means you can open and close the blade with just one hand, highlighting the Samla’s simple yet sophisticated user experience.

Measuring a mere 3.25 inches (8.2 cm) when closed and weighing between 1.2 ounces (rosewood variant) and 1.4 ounces (titanium variant), the WESN Samla is perfect for slipping into one of the many pockets on your outdoor jacket or cargo pants when you venture outdoors. The blade length and design is perfect for dicing veggies and prepping meat for your meals, but it’s also capable of easily cutting small branches for firewood, whittling away at twigs or using as a firestarter to spark flint, or even cleanly slicing through paracords. Like all of WESN’s products, the Samla echoes the minimalist ethos of Scandinavian design and is built to absolutely last. Each Samla comes with a lifetime warranty as well as a nifty veggie-tanned leather sheath to carry it along with you wherever you go!

Designer: Billy Chester of WESN

Click Here to Buy Now: $66 $110 (40% off). Hurry, only 2/32 left! Raised over $120,000.

The WESN Samla – A Friction Folding Pocket Knife

The Samla is WESN’s latest addition. It takes all the strength, quality, and craftsmanship you’d expect from a WESN blade – and packs it into their most compact, lightweight knife to date.

Designed to be the perfect food prep companion or precision cutting for hiking the trails, the Samla boasts a Sweden-sourced Sandvik 14C28N stainless steel blade. This top-grade steel gives ultimate hardness and corrosion resistance, with optimized chemistry to minimize microchipping and edge folding.

Features & Benefits

Light as a Feather: Even casual day-explorers know that weight matters. For a hiker’s knife, they knew they needed to make it compact and light as a feather, without compromising on toughness or durability. The titanium or wood scale handle measures a snug 3.25” in length, and just 0.25” in thickness. But this is a knife that punches well above its size – just 5.7” from foot to tip when fully open.

With Your Meals in Mind: Carry the only knife you need in your cook kit. The sharp, precise steel blade measures 2.45” and slices easily through prep work. It’s tough and versatile enough to cope with everyday repair tasks around camp, from slicing rope to cutting canvas.

The Trademark WESN Durability: Outstanding corrosion resistance means you can draw a bright, keen blade every time with minimal maintenance. Each component is treated with care and attention in their design: From the non-locking friction folder for a smooth, steady action to the phosphor bronze washers for long-lasting, corrosion-resistant performance.

Click Here to Buy Now: $66 $110 (40% off). Hurry, only 2/32 left! Raised over $120,000.

A looped bicycle + more designs to help you embrace an eco-friendly, healthy lifestyle!

I’m team bicycle through and through! They are the most eco-friendly means of transportation, and also really fun to ride. They create zero emissions and encourage people to ditch the fossil fuel consuming and pollution causing automobiles. And not to mention, not only are they healthy for the environment but for us as well! They promote good health and ensure you get your daily dose of exercise done, without even hitting the gym. In an attempt to encourage and celebrate bicycles, we’ve curated a collection of unique and innovative bicycle designs that will cater to everyone’s diverse bicycle-riding needs. There’s a cool bike in here for everyone!

City bikes are designed to be intuitive for smooth, easy rides. When coasting between traffic and stoplights, a city bike ride should feel lightweight and nimble. Through a unique approach in designing his city bike, Gaëtan Francq created Loop, a compact city bike whose parts were developed around the bike’s looped frame to deliver a fully-contained, sleek ride. As eye-catching as Loop’s frame might be, the city bike from Gaëtan Francq Studio comes through with a lot more perks. Starting out with Loop’s handlebar, which comes packed with Bluetooth connectivity, the city bike’s simplified GPS is contained here to ensure riders won’t lose their way in new cities or on unfamiliar roads. Just below Loop’s handlebar, a storage compartment fills out the bike’s looped saddle tube, allowing riders to bring items like bottles of water or even wine along with them for the ride. With Loop, there are no more excuses for showing up empty-handed to the party.

Called Prototype 0, this velodrome track racing bicycle imagined for speed heads shines out with its unibody design that’s centered on drag reduction and aerodynamic optimization for maximum acceleration with the minimum effort. The ultra-slim profile of the Prototype helps in achieving the least possible aerodynamic drag which is great for effortless commuting. The bike is a fixie – a single-speed gear bicycle that is tailored for urban riding for extra degree control. Don’t expect it to be as good for steep ascends or rugged terrain, as it’s purely designed to be a racing demon for smooth tarmac surfaces. The presence of a bigger gear shaft means that the control is going to be the ride’s forte.

While on the first impression you might mistake (anyone would) this for a powerful electric bike ready to take on any terrain – it in reality is something more subtle. Yes, this is in reality a pedal-powered electric bicycle dubbed ‘Carbon’, crafted at Moto Parilla, an Italian automotive designer house. Meant to traverse any rough terrain with electric motor-assisted power when needed, the pedal-powered bicycle comes with the reassurance of fat wheels for superior grip. The wheels are perfectly synced with the equally big oversized disc brakes and the hydraulic brakes. The composite carbon fiber and aluminum body further gives the bike a very modern appeal for new-age rider’s delight. Not to mention the toughness, agility, and durability the material brings to the ride.

Crafted from recycled aluminum coffee capsules, RE:CYCLE is the brainchild of Jimmy Östholm, a bike entrepreneur. The aluminum in the coffee capsules is melted down and then used by Vélosophy to create the sturdy and rigid bike. A perfect marriage of sustainability and design, it is an instance of recycling that has been upcycled. RE:CYCLE maintains Vélosophy’s simple and iconic design philosophy, a minimalistic and sleek bike with clear-cut edges. However, there are a few surprising touches! The vibrant purple frame has been inspired by Arpeggio (the famous Nespresso coffee), while the bell has been molded to resemble the shape of the much-loved coffee capsule.

ceramicspeed_bike_drivetrain_1

ceramicspeed_bike_drivetrain_4

CeramicSpeed’s new drivetrain removes the ubiquitous chain that’s synonymous with two-wheelers for a drivetrain that’s mess-free, low on friction, and amazing looking. A rotating shaft replaces the need for a greasy chain, and it works spectacularly well, say the people at CeramicSpeed, reducing friction by as much as 49%. Where chains usually wrap around toothed gears, pulling individually at each tooth, causing sliding friction at each point, the ‘Driven’ chainless drivetrain has just two points of contact, where the pedals interface with the rotating shaft, and where the shaft transfers the rotation to the rear wheel. At these points, CeramicSpeed introduces ceramic ball bearings on the shaft, causing less friction as the bearings push against the teeth of the gears and rotate too, resulting in an extremely smooth movement.

City bicycles are diverse. Some of them are designed to carry heavy loads, others for speed. What if bicyclists want to use their bicycles for more than solely speed performance – but also for logistics. What if they don’t want to be forced, to always wear backpacks, even if they only want to carry a raincoat, EDC, or basic shopping supplies. The AEROCARRIER gives bicycles the additional storage they deserve. Just like most scooters which come with storage below the seat, the AEROCARRIER straps to the back of any cycle seat, giving you 3 liters of fully secure, waterproof storage. Designed to bring the perspective of basic logistics to an otherwise designed-for-performance machine, the AEROCARRIER lets you carry supplies and emergency items like reflective vest, med-kits, or even spares like bike tubes or a repair kit. It brings the practicality needed on city cycles.

Bixie is the best way to get children excited about sustainable, healthy living right from the get-go. Not only does it promote exercise, but its sustainably built wooden construction introduces eco-friendliness in kids from an early age. Bixie is made from locally sourced beech wood from the Alps. Finished with natural oils and waxes, the wood is lightweight, sturdy, weather-proof, yet completely biodegradable, and 100% non-toxic. The bicycle’s frame was designed for children from ages 1.5 to 4, getting them excited about exercise, traveling, and spending time outdoors. The wooden construction makes it biodegradable and eco-friendly while providing the same durability as metal. The bike comes with an adjustable seat and doesn’t use any plastic in its construction, or even glue for that matter.

wingcycle_01

wingcycle_02

This stunning roadster bike looks to the sky for avian inspiration! It’s called the Wing Cycle and its frame veers from the traditional diamond shape, instead of adopting the form of a bird wing structure. This includes a mesmerizing cable wire design that supports the seat. Furthermore, the cable rope system can be adjusted to change the position of the seat for different riding modes. Clad in a beautiful material blend of chrome, leather, and wood, the result is skeletal yet sleek and entirely different than anything out there.

Just when you thought tubeless bike tires are the best thing on the road for your bicycle, the next revolution has arrived. The very technology that NASA uses in its Mars rover and lunar mission, has now made it through to the consumer-oriented arena in the form of METL tire developed by the startup Smart Tire Company, who’ve licensed the technology to bring to the bicycle lanes in the near future. The airless METL bike tires are crafted out of the Shape Memory Alloy Radial Technology (SMART) – made from strong (like titanium), lightweight yet ultra-elastic material (like rubber) known as NiTinol+. This magic material according to Smart Tire Company, “rearranges its molecular structure when you bend it, but instantly goes back to its original shape, perfectly.”

A lot has changed for the Noordung, but it still captures its overall spirit from 2 years ago. The bike’s frame is crafted from carbon fiber, giving the bike its incredibly low weight. In fact, at 20kgs, Noordung is the lightest cruiser e-bicycle in the world. The updated Noordung ditches the Vivax Assist motor for a 250W Keyde motor (embedded right in the rear wheel) with 4 levels of assisted drive and speed assistance of 25km/h. The most iconic bit of the Noordung is still retained within this updated design. The heart, if you will, of the Noordung is its battery pack, a visually iconic mass that turns the bicycle into an electric bicycle.

Watch how this 4.7-inch thick monolithic slab opens up into a comfortable movie theater seat


Designed originally for theaters and cinema halls, this Piet Mondrian-inspired chair is a marvel of design and engineering! Titled the Mono, it exists as a 4.7-inch thick monolithic slab when closed, but unravels into a plush cinema-style seat with armrests when you pull it open. A unique lever mechanism for the seat and armrests makes them rise synchronously by one movement, and its slim, collapsed shape provides extra space and allows more chairs to fit into a given area. The chair comes with a spring-loaded mechanism too, which means it goes back to its monolithic slab shape when you get up. The only thing missing? A place to rest your drinks and popcorn! Watch the chair in action in the video above!

The Mono Chair is a winner of the SIT Furniture Design Award for the year 2021.

Designer: Philip Kronqvist for Hamari Auditorium

Ten Podcasts you should listen to if you’re a Creative or a Designer in 2021

Working from home comes with its perks, but also with its fair share of loneliness. I like being the king of my castle and working in my pajamas, but for most of the time I spend working, I stay alone. I’ve been listening to YouTube videos in the background for a while now, but I only installed my first podcast app in 2018. Over the last two years (primarily 2019), podcasts have been my way of surrounding myself with informative (and sometimes comedic) chitchat. Podcasts are a great way to pass time while you’re sketching, or searching Pinterest for mood-board images, or selecting multiple edges and faces of a solid to apply a complex variable fillet on. I personally love listening to them as I eat, travel, edit images I need to add to my articles, or while tinkering around with design software. These podcasts are a lovely way to fill the silent gaps in your average WFH day, and offer a great alternative to the discourse you’d have at your workplace, be it about design, tech, creativity, self-help, or occasionally, even politics. Here are my 2021 picks for podcasts to listen to if you’re a creative.

1. TheFutur Podcast


Led by TheFutur team and Chris Do (who recently launched a book too), TheFutur Podcast is literally like going to design university for free, which is why we put it on the top of our list this year. Chris Do is one of the most prolific design gurus of our time and offers excellent advice on common design problems, whether it’s what to charge as a designer, to whether you should follow your passion or paycheck. TheFutur Podcast oscillates between insightful debates to meaningful interviews with designers in the industry who share their own tips and tricks to ‘making it’ in the diz-biz (that’s what I’m calling it from now on). They have some great videos on YouTube too.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

2. Solvable


Solvable showcases the world’s most innovative thinkers and their proposed solutions to the world’s most daunting problems. Conducted by Malcolm Gladwell (Revisionist History) and Jacob Weisberg, these interviews explore and acknowledge the complexity of the issues while inspiring hope that the problems are, as the name of the title suggests, solvable. The show tackles broader systemic problems like global hunger, vaccine distribution, destructive agriculture, the tech gender gap, and so on.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

3. Food by Design: an IDEO Podcast


Perhaps one of the biggest systems challenges to ever present itself to us – the way we grow, produce, distribute, and consume our food. From the fine chaps at IDEO, this podcast tackles the various aspects of our complex food chain… from how we grow our plants to how much we tip our waiters. Listen in just to get a sense of how one of the world’s largest creative consultancies thinks and works.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

4. Designed This Way


Designed This Way is the east’s answer to Design Matters with Debbie Millman. Hosted by Kawal Oberoi, a graphic designer and brand consultant from India, Designed This Way lets you be a fly on the wall as Kawal has candid conversations with leading designers from India and even outside the subcontinent. The podcast helps uncover “not just the stories of courage, hard work, and success but also the stories of mistakes, rejections, and doubts.” A great podcast to listen to if you want to know more about a country that is only just discovering the power of design, and more about the people leading the way.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

5. The Honest Designers Show


The Honest Designers Show is one of my most frequently recommended podcasts for designers. Rather than dealing with in-depth interviews, it feels like sitting in the break room with fellow designers and literally talking about design. Hosted by Tom Ross, Ian Barnard, Dustin Lee, and Lisa Glanz (all accomplished designers in their own right), the podcast never fails to tackle relevant topics and deliver some key insights to designers about various things, from working with creative blocks, to using social media to your to propel your portfolio, determining your value as a freelancer, and even working effectively with your clients.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

6. Should This Exist?


A question every designer must ask before creating a product or a solution, ‘Should This Exist?’ tackles the toughest part of being a creative. It questions whether products are solving problems or exacerbating them, and presents you with a perspective that makes you wonder whether the act of creation requires more scrutiny. Give this podcast a listen, it’ll recalibrate your empathy and world-view. The podcast hasn’t released any episodes this year, but every one of its episodes from the past is a gold-mine. Personal favorite episodes – “When your invention becomes a weapon”, and “Tell your troubles to the chatbot”.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

7. This Week In Tech


The last word in tech is the first news of the week. This Week In Tech is hosted every Sunday night, so you begin your week with the freshest news and perspectives on the world of tech. Hosted by Leo Laporte, this one’s special to me because it’s the first podcast I ever listened to. In fact, it’s been running for so long, it used to be called a netcast before the word podcast was in the mainstream. Leo brings his wisdom and humor together along with a panel of the who’s who in tech journalism. Add this to your list if you like a slice of technology news along with your design breakfast every week. The show is available in a video format too, you can use the YouTube button below to view their episodes.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotifyYouTube

8. Creative Confidence Podcast


The podcast follows in the footsteps of the book Creative Confidence by IDEO founders David and Tom Kelly. Think of it as a TED Talk just for creatives – The IDEO U Creative Confidence Podcast hosts candid conversations with some of today’s most inspiring change makers, design thinkers, and creative minds. What’s even more refreshing is that the show meticulously sources and invites guests from incredibly gender and race-diverse backgrounds.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

9. Working


The greatness of design is that its goal lies in helping uplift other industries and fields. Being a designer often means working with (and often looking at the world through the eyes of) people from a wide variety of professions, whether they’re businessmen, scientists, doctors, engineers, celebrities, etc. Working is a podcast that dives into how different professions work and how professionals in these fields go about their day. With over 200 episodes and counting, Working interviews a complete gamut of people, from curators at MoMA, to husbands of influencers, coders at NASA, firefighters, and even a few designers too. A great way to understand how professions work, how systems function, and even to help spot areas of intervention in these systems for creative problem-solving.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

10. Product Hunt Radio


Coming from the popular product discovery site, Product Hunt, this weekly podcast show has Ryan Hoover and Abadesi Osunsade interview founders, investors, journalists, and makers to discuss today’s products and tomorrow’s topics. Whether it’s in the field of design, funding, marketing, or even of podcasts, the show finds out how people found success in their industries, and what lies in the future for them and the world.
WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotify

Five of the best houses near Lake Tahoe in the US

Lookout House in Lake Tahoe

Lake Tahoe sits on the state line between California and Nevada and is a popular destination for outdoor enthusiasts year-round. We have rounded up five houses that make the most of the area’s scenery and sports opportunities.


Lookout House by Faulkner Architects

Lookout House by Faulkner Architects

Sitting at the base of the Lookout Mountain volcano near the town of Truckee, you can ski straight into Lookout House. A ramp connects directly to the ski run next door, so that its occupants can make the most of the snow in winter.

Concrete walls open out onto terraces and balconies at every level, and some of the windows are glazed with red glass to create dramatic vistas and interiors.

Find out more about Lookout House ›


Martis Camp 506 by Blaze Makoid

This holiday home sits in a ski and golf community between Lake Tahoe and Truckee, Nevada. New York architecture firm Blaze Makoid clad the house in blackened cedar to blend in with the landscape in the summer months and stand in stark contrast with the snow in winter.

Floor-to-ceiling glazing in the living areas frames views out over the Carson Range mountains.

Find out more about Martis Camp 506 ›


Faulkner Architects designed the dwelling near Lake Tahoe

Forest House by Faulkner Architects

California practice Faulkner Architects used expanses of board-formed concrete and glass for this house tucked away in an area of woodland on the north shore of Lake Tahoe.

The black steel rainscreen that covers some of the exterior walls is made of slats designed to imitate the bark of a tree.

Find out more about Forest House ›


Alpine Meadows Cabin by Studio Bergtraun

Alpine Meadows Cabin by Studio Bergtraun

Studio Bergtraun built this house in Lake Tahoe for a family of outdoor sports enthusiasts who wanted to be close to the Sierra Nevada mountain range.

Clad in panels of corrugated black metal, the house has a themed interior decor that includes a chandelier made out of ski poles.

Find out more about Alpine Meadows Cabin ›


Burnt Cedar by Faulkner Architects

Burnt Cedar by Faulkner Architects

This house was designed for a family that goes boating in the summer and snowboarding in the winter. Double-height windows frame views of the lake and are shaded by a deep roof overhang.

A six-car garage has room for the occupant’s car collection, which includes a 1974 Volkswagen Thing and a 2016 Tesla X.

Find out more about Burnt Cedar ›

The post Five of the best houses near Lake Tahoe in the US appeared first on Dezeen.

Animals That Rely on Electricity

Roughly 350 species of fish can generate electricity—some up to 860 volts of power (far more than an electric shock from a household outlet, which measures around 120). Of course, there’s the well-known electric eel (which is actually an eel-shaped fish), but sharks and rays use electricity, too. On land, the platypus, echidna and even the bumblebee works with electricity. All of these creatures are categorized as either elecrogenic or electroreceptive, either producing or registering currents (though, some are both) and in many cases the relationship to electricity is as important as any other sense. To learn more about the way various species—dolphins included—rely upon electricity, head over to National Geographic.

Image courtesy of George Grall / Nat Geo Image Collection

Radio-jamming Dis/Connect chandelier prevents people from using their smartphones

Dis/Connect by Eric Forman

Brooklyn-based designer Eric Forman has created a chandelier that blocks wireless signals below it to create “spaces of digital quiet”.

Called Dis/Connect, the light features ten radio-jamming antennae where the candles would traditionally sit.

These interfere with the wireless communication of devices brought within a five-foot (1.5-metre) radius below the chandelier so people are unable to browse the internet or make calls.

Dis/Connect is a smart chandelier
The chandelier was designed by Eric Forman

Forman created Dis/Connect in collaboration with artist Ben Luzzatto and engineer Daniel Gross to help people get off their phones.

“To be wholly present with ourselves and each other, we must design new tools to create spaces of digital quiet in our homes,” Forman told Dezeen.

“It’s not that we can’t turn our phones off, it’s that we don’t – they are too addictive,” he said.

The chandelier takes cues from traditional chandeliers
Dis/Connect has a body of translucent acrylic

Dis/Connect’s design inverts traditional chandeliers. While the antennae that take the place of lighting elements are black, the central column and arms are made of acrylic that illuminates.

“We machined translucent acrylic to give it a modern, slightly sci-fi feeling, something that feels a bit alien but is still welcoming,” said Forman.

The wires that feed the signals to the antennae hang in curves that mimic the ornamentation of a classic chandelier.

The chandelier is designed as a tech-free zone
The chandelier disrupts the signal of devices in the vicinity

Radio jamming works by using a strong radio signal to overpower other frequencies in the vicinity.

“Think about having a reading light so bright that you couldn’t see the pages of your book, but only when sitting below it,” said Forman.

The chandelier is designed to block signals in a limited area. People have the option to step outside of the zone in order to reconnect to the internet or make a call.

The chandelier was designed by Eric Forman
Dis/Connect inverts the form of a traditional chandelier

Dis/Connect is an art piece rather than a commercial project, as signal jamming is currently illegal in most countries including the US and the UK.

However, Forman, Luzzatto and Gross believe that this kind of technology should be made available in both public and private spaces. The team is planning a campaign alongside the artwork.

“We have a petition ready to file with the US Federal Communications Commission,” said Forman. They hope this will open a conversation with the public about domestic signal jammers.

“We want the public comments phase of that to be part of the project,” he added. “Not to say we have the answer, but to open up the debate.”

Dis/Connect is the latest project designed to help people spend less time on their phones. London design studio Special Projects made envelopes that turn smartphones into a calculator, while Light Phone by Joe Hollier and Kaiwei Tang is a device that only allows calls.

Photography is courtesy of Eric Forman.

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17.09 MING + Massena LAB Limited Edition Wristwatch

A honeycombed collaboration with nuanced finishing

More than a comfortably sized automatic timepiece with an elegant honeycomb dial, the 17.09 MING + Massena LAB Limited Edition wristwatch is a collaboration between two great watch industry minds—photographer and watchmaker Ming Thein and collector and creative consultant William Massena. It also marks the first-ever collaboration for Thein’s Kuala Lumpur-designed, Swiss-made horological collective and plays upon the brand’s successful (and sold out) 17.09 style.

Nuanced finishing and unique design language turn an enchanting concept into a watch worth wearing daily. The hexagon patterning nods to mid-century Rolex honeycombs, but the brushed outer circle counterbalances it. The numerals (and tiny brand logos) appear to float above the dial, thanks to a laser etching process on the underside of the sapphire crystal. These touches underscore the fact that Thein and Massena love watches themselves—and they understand what lends design value.

Inside the 38mm stainless steel case, one finds a 300.M1 movement developed by Manufacturer Schwarz-Etienne from Sellita’s SW330-2 calibre. It includes a model-exclusive independent hour-hand adjustment mechanism that makes setting the time easier.

On 20 May (at 10:30AM EST), the 17.09 MING + Massena LAB Limited Edition wristwatch will go on sale and retail between $2,595 (for the black edition, which is limited to 150 pieces) and $2,795 (for the honey-colored edition, which is limited to 50 pieces). Each comes complete with a matching strap from Jean Rousseau Paris. You can sign up on the brand’s site for a launch notification.

Images courtes of Massena LAB