Philippe Starck's Shower-Toilet for Duravit

I didn’t even know what a “shower-toilet” was, but apparently it’s Duravit’s name for a toilet with a built-in bidet—and it seems they make a lot of them. “We now offer 45 different solutions within the shower-toilet category,” says Tim Schroeder, President and CEO of Duravit North America.”We can truly deliver the highest level of comfort and hygiene to everyone, regardless of style, preference, or budget.”

Presumably their new SensoWash® Starck f is the halo model. (Maybe it’s just me, but when I see “Starck f” my brain autofills another word.)

This toilet comes with a remote control with two programmable user profiles and you can also control it with your smartphone, for chrissakes.

“Users can easily program profile settings for maximum comfort. With additional features including an automatic open and close lid, auto flushing, Comfort-, Lady- and Rear-wash shower-toilet functions, a heated seat, adjustable water temperature, a controllable hot air dryer, and more, the SensoWash® Starck f is designed to provide heightened hygiene and wellness for its users.”

It comes in both wall-hung and floor-mounted versions. At press time the price difference between the two—and indeed, the prices for either—had not been announced.

Salone del Mobile appoints Maria Porro as new president

Maria Porro, Salone del Mobile president

Italian furniture fair Salone del Mobile has named former Assarredo president Maria Porro its new president, making her the first woman appointed to the role.

Since September 2020 Porro has helmed Assarredo, the Italian trade association for furniture manufacturers, where she was the first female president – a distinction that she will repeat in her role at Salone del Mobile.

Porro takes over the reins at Salone del Mobile at a time of change for the design event, which was cancelled in 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic and postponed in April this year.

“I am honoured to take on this role at such a vital and transformative time,” Porro said.

“I and the entire board of directors will be working to ensure that, as a unique and indispensable design showcase, the Salone rises to meet future challenges regarding sustainability, digitalization, research, innovation, creativity and inclusiveness, as ever maintaining the highest quality.”

Salone del Mobile in time of “profound change”

In a statement, Salone del Mobile said it now intends to outline new strategies that will “respond to the upheavals of the present day,” with Porro’s appointment part of a larger plan.

“The decision to invest in a young, driven president is part of a strategy to consolidate the event’s leading international role during a period of profound change,” president of Federlegno Arredo Eventi – the trade body that owns the Salone del Mobile brand – Gianfranco Marinelli said.

“Maria Porro may count on the support of the entire Federlegno Arredo Eventi Board as, with determination, she continues Salone del Mobile Milano’s journey along a pathway of growth and renewal.”

Porro to lead brand in time for Supersalone

Porro succeeds Claudio Luti, who resigned as president in April this year saying his vision for the fair had “failed.”

Together with Federlegno Arredo Eventi’s board members, Porro will now helm the brand as it prepares for a special Supersalone edition in September.

Curated by architect Stefano Boeri, the Supersalone event will be open to the public and visitors will be able to buy discounted products by scanning QR codes.

The trade fair went through a tumultuous period after Luti’s resignation, with Milan mayor Beppe Sala saying the fair was “in the balance” and urging brands to support it.

“Our goal is a strong, united, inclusive, sustainable and creative Salone del Mobile,” Porro said of her vision for the fair.

Porro has previously worked as marketing and communications director of design brand Porro, which was founded by her great-grandfather.

She served on the executive board of Assarredo before being elected president of the trade association in September 2020.

Photography is courtesy of Salone del Mobile.

Salone del Mobile 2021 and parallel fuorisalone events are due to take place in Milan from 5 to 10 September. For an up-to-date list of architecture and design events, visit Dezeen Events Guide.

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44 Stanley corridor carpet by Talk Carpet

44 Stanley by Talk Carpet

Dezeen Showroom: with a bold pattern of lines and colours, the 44 Stanley flooring by Talk Carpet is available in a range of constructions to suit various budgets.

The 44 Stanley carpet is inspired by a wall mural at a boutique urban shopping centre of the same name in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Talk Carpet’s designers wanted to capture the artwork’s playful graphic lines and colours in the 44 Stanley carpet, while giving it a modernist bent.

44 Stanley by Talk Carpet
44 Stanley is intended for corridors of hotels or apartment buildings

The brand envisages the design working well in a modern hotel hallway or multifamily building corridors.

44 Stanley is part of Talk Carpets custom programme, so it can be ordered in a wide array of options.

It is available as a broadloom wall-to-wall carpet or as carpet tiles, with nine different construction options. These range from low pile for those on a tight budget to a luxurious wool/nylon blend.

The Talk Carpets custom programme has one of the lowest minimum-quantity requirements in the industry, and one per cent of its sales revenue is donated to the charity Design Industries Foundation Fighting AIDS.

Product: 44 Stanley
Brand: Talk Carpets
Contact: cpr@talkcarpet.com

About Dezeen Showroom: Dezeen Showroom offers an affordable space for brands to launch new products and showcase their designers and projects to Dezeen’s huge global audience. For more details email showroom@dezeen.com.

Dezeen Showroom is an example of partnership content on Dezeen. Find out more about partnership content here.

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Inholm neighbourhood in Cambridgeshire will feature healthy homes and sociable streets

Town House show home bedroom at Inholm by House by Urban Splash

Dezeen promotion: House by Urban Splash aims to reinvent suburbia, with a Cambridgeshire neighbourhood that is designed for healthy living.

Located eight miles outside of Cambridge, Inholm will form part of Northstowe, one of 10 new towns areas being created under the NHS programme, Healthy New Towns.

It will include 43 homes developed by House by Urban Splash – the housing arm of Manchester-based property developer Urban Splash.

Aerial masterplan visualisation, Inholm by House by Urban Splash
House by Urban Splash is creating a new neighbourhood in Inholm, which is part of new town Northstowe

Architecture firm Proctor and Matthews, which masterplanned the neighbourhood, sees the project as “a radical shift in thinking”. As well as featuring healthy homes, Inholm will include streetscapes designed to promote wellbeing, biodiversity and community spirit.

“For too long, the spaces in between homes have been dedicated to accommodating cars, not people,” said studio co-founder and director Stephen Proctor.

“At Inholm, Northstowe, our new blueprint for healthy living includes sociable streets, green fingers connecting spaces, pocket parks, bike sheds in every single garden, and edible fruit on trees on every corner.”

Town House show home kitchen at Inholm by House by Urban Splash
The development will include 43 of the company’s modular Town Houses

The masterplan centres around the concept of “sociable streets”, which prioritise pedestrians over cars. The aim is to create spaces where neighbours can converse and children can play.

“When we think about suburbia we think of cul-de-sacs and dead ends, road spaces that are uninhabitable, designed for cars, not people,” said Proctor.

“Instead, what we’re delivering with House by Urban Splash is a blueprint for healthy living, with inviting communal spaces and places in which people can convene in the way the old settlements would have done.”

Town House show home living room at Inholm by House by Urban Splash
Two show homes are open for public viewing, showing customers the customisable layout options on offer

In line with the Healthy New Towns ambitions, homes across Northstowe will be low-carbon in construction and operation. For Inholm, House by Urban Splash is achieving this with its Town House model, designed by ShedKM.

These modern, modular homes are built off-site in a factory, which allows for a more sustainable construction process and less waste. They are also fully customisable, so they can be tailored to suit the needs of a broad mix of residents, from young people to families or seniors.

Town House show home bedroom at Inholm by House by Urban Splash
The homes are built off-site in a factory, which allows for a more sustainable construction process

The development will form an area of Inholm known as the Peninsula. Proctor and Matthews planned the layout of this area around the natural landscape, with green spaces and waterways forming a key part of the masterplan.

The design prioritises the creation of circular routes and green corridors, with few dead ends. The aim is to make it easier for residents to walk, run and cycle around the neighbourhood, and to connect with public transport.

“It’s something which helps us deliver the environmental agendas which are strong in Cambridge too, and of course a big part of the House by Urban Splash ethos,” said Proctor.

Urban splash
Proctor and Matthews masterplanned the neighbourhood

The Peninsula will also incorporate an education campus and a new waterpark, which will offer residents a place for recreation, create a haven for wetland and aquatic life and provide water attenuation and flood alleviation.

Inholm is under construction, with the first 27 Town Houses now on sale. Two show homes are open for public viewing, showing customers the different layout options on offer.

More information is available via the House by Urban Splash website

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Design for Disassembly: This Old Idea is the Wave of the Future

The quick and intuitive disassembly of my French press means that I can easy clean it and replace or recycle its parts as needed.

The stats feel tired at this point: the EPA tells us that over 10 million tons of furniture are taken to US landfills each year, and more than 2 thousand tons of major appliances will be tossed onto the heap in 2021 alone. As product designers, this can lead us straight to an existential fever dream, imagining Victor Papanek whispering in our ear: “There are professions more harmful than industrial design, but only a few.”

The reality is that consumption-based capitalism isn’t going anywhere. But we as designers and business leaders have the opportunity and the agency to devise ways to implement healthier making and sourcing methods by rethinking our approaches to design.

How can our products’ life spans be prolonged? How can our designs encourage repair? How can we insist on our work’s participation in a circular economy? I give you, with as much bravado as I may, our solution: Design for Disassembly (DfD).

DfD is the wave of the future, but it is also an old idea. This article will kick off a 3-part series to address the importance of designing for disassembly, acknowledge its traditional roots, and review how designers are implementing it in industries not typically associated with DfD.

A Refresher: Remind Me Again What Design for Disassembly is?

Design for Disassembly (DfD) is the straightforward design method and philosophy that ensures that all elements of a product can be disassembled for repair and for “end of life.” This allows for and encourages repairs, with the result that a product’s life cycle is prolonged; and it allows for a product to be taken apart at the end of its life so that each component can be reclaimed as a technical nutrient (i.e. recycled) or biological nutrient (i.e. composted). Among other shifts in thinking and making, this means minimizing materials, using simple mechanical fasteners instead of adhesives, clearly labeling components with their material type, and ensuring components can be disassembled with everyday tools.

When I broke the glass vessel of my French press this weekend, I ordered a replacement vessel instead of purchasing an entirely new coffee maker. This was only possible because my French press was designed so that it could be easily disassembled. On the other hand, my electric kettle has started to leak. There are no small screws for me to open it – in fact, it’s mostly glued together. This means that when I finally cave and admit that this kettle is broken, I have no way to repair it and no way to recycle its parts. In contrast to the French press, the product was not designed for disassembly. My only option is to throw it out, and to buy a new one.

As mentioned, DfD is not a new concept. (My favorite past Core 77 article espousing its virtues is Alex Denier’s Essential Guide to Design for Disassembly, which still feels like a very handy guide even 10 years later.) DfD is, however, a concept that has been painfully slow to catch on despite its obvious benefits, with plenty of companies backsliding in the opposite direction towards glued, bonded, and overshot parts – if not planned obsolescence.

Green It Like You Mean It

Unlike the nebulous goal of designing a “sustainable” product, designing a product for disassembly is a more concrete, quantifiable approach to ecologically sound making and to consumption. Off the bat, it throws the curtain back on corporate greenwashing. If a company says they’re sustainable, how is the average customer to know what’s really going on behind the scenes? If a company commits to DfD, however, then we can concretely understand their barometer for sustainable production.

Here in the U.S., sustainability goals often hinge on material choices, a common example being the choice of materials from recycled content (or materials that can be recycled). Designing with recyclable materials is great but, at best, it kicks the can down the road, placing the burden onto future generations or users. At worst, it gambles that the customer cares, that they can recognize or are paying attention to a wide variety of materials in the first place, and that they live in a municipality that recycles at all.

Designing with recyclable (or recycled) material, simply put, is the bare minimum that we designers can do. On the other hand, upping our commitment to DfD encourages longevity through a culture of repair. It sets the stage for building a stronger relationship with consumers through a more enduring product-user engagement, and establishes an advantageous association with “premium” and quality design – that is, designs made to last.

Europe Loves to Set the Pace

Outside of the U.S. it can be more common to see a system-based approach to reducing waste and increasing a product’s longevity. The Right to Repair Law, for example, was passed in Europe last Spring. It requires that electronics like washing machines, televisions, and hair dryers sold in the E.U. must be designed to allow for easy repair for at least 10 years after the product comes to market. This legislation intentionally prolongs a product’s durability and repairability while minimizing e-waste. (Additional upcoming legislation in the E.U. focuses on smartphones and laptops, which account for a large portion of global e-waste.) The most straightforward way to fulfill these new requirements is to make sure that DfD is front and center in universal design processes – and, to precede that, in universal design conversations and education, too.

The U.S. is often just a few years behind the E.U. when it comes to sustainability regulations, so this is a likely harbinger of what requirements will soon be instituted more globally. From there, public opinion and consumer behavior soon follow. So to proactively design products for disassembly means that our work as designers can become more universally compliant, while also satisfying more world-wide cultural expectations from the consumer side.

Standardizing DfD is an important step in establishing a more circular economy. It allows us to reclaim product components for future use and reduces costs of goods sold by eliminating materials redundancy; positions us to use safer and more healthful materials that in turn affect conditions in both factory and in end-user settings; and it removes the onus from consumers to figure out how to responsibly dispose of their products. It’s a win-win-win. And these “wins” are

necessary for the future of design, and the future of our planet.

A Beautiful, Elegant, Portable Wireless LED Light

Spain-based industrial designer Patricia Perez created this beautiful and simple Mouro Lamp for Case Furniture.

The lamp is wireless (it recharges via USB, and the port is hidden on the bottom of the disc).

The LED lamp can rotate 360 degrees and has three brightness settings.

The frame is powder-coated steel, and comes in three colors.

The lamp runs £131 (USD $178), and they’re currently having a 15% off sale.

Dezeen Courses is an affordable way to showcase architecture and design courses

Dezeen Courses logo

Launching in September, Dezeen Courses is a new service for architecture and design schools to promote their courses to Dezeen’s huge global audience.

Dezeen Courses will provide details of architecture, interiors and design courses around the world. The new section will be easy to find at www.dezeen.com/courses.

The service will list all types of courses, including foundation, undergraduate, postgraduate, vocational, online and evening programmes. It aims to become the number one destination for people looking to study architecture or design.

It will work alongside Dezeen School Shows, our highly successful graduate showcase that has so far attracted over 700,000 page views.

Dezeen Courses provides affordable new service for schools

The service offers an affordable new way for schools to put their courses in front of Dezeen’s three million monthly readers.

Like all content on Dezeen, the heart of Dezeen Courses will be a constantly updated feed of the latest architecture and design courses, which will be published at www.dezeen.com/courses.

An index will enable visitors to easily find courses by subject, type, school or location, while a highlights carousel at the top of the page will showcase featured courses.

Dezeen Courses posts will also benefit from Dezeen’s incredible SEO, which means that courses are more likely to be found by search engines. Links from Dezeen Courses to schools’ websites will be more valuable than from any other site.

Posts remain on Dezeen for up to one year

Each Dezeen Courses post will feature 100 to 200 words about the course with details about the application deadline, course start date and duration. It will also include a link to the course on the school’s website for prospective students to find out more information and apply.

In addition, posts will feature an image of an exemplary student project to draw prospective students in and give them an idea of the type of projects they can expect to be given on the course. Listings can also include the school’s logo.

Each post will remain live until applications close, up to a maximum of one calendar year.

For an additional cost, schools can gain increased exposure for their courses through enhanced and premium listings, which can be further amplified via other Dezeen services including display banners, social media and editorial promotions.

Book your Dezeen Courses post now!

We are now taking bookings ahead of launching Dezeen Courses in September. Contact us for details and pricing at courses@dezeen.com.

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Recording Artist Yndi’s Playlist for COOL HUNTING

As with her compelling debut album “Noir Brésil,” this 10-track playlist is an emotional excursion

Franco-Brazilian trans artist, composer and producer Yndi (formerly known as Dream Koala, from 2012 to 2020) released a debut LP this May, entitled Noir Brésil, that sets her beautiful, dynamic vocals within transfixing orchestral complexity. To celebrate the ravishing release, Yndi generously assembled a playlist of tracks that have garnered her attention in the way that her powerful album captured ours.

“These tracks are songs that I’m vibing with currently,” she explains of the 10-song voyage. “There are some underrated Brazilian gems from different eras, an anime soundtrack song and the last track is by Gil Scott-Heron. I think they’re all different, but share the same kind of melancholy that feels good to my ear and soul.”

Regarding Noir Brésil, Yndi says that she took inspiration from her Brazilian roots. “Both of my parents are Brazilian so there was always Brazilian music at home when I was growing up,” she says. “Everything about the process of making this album was so intimate; singing in French and Portuguese, playing Afro-Brazilian percussion, imagining the visuals… Since the beginning I knew I wanted the album to feel like its own little world, even visually.” To listen intently to each track, one feels these influences flowing together, creating a universe unto themselves.

“As an artist, I wish to create art that represents who I am,” she continues. “All the different parts of my personality and my imagination.” She accomplishes this wholeheartedly—poetically even.

Her love for music began when she was a child, watching music videos on MTV all day, and continues through to the way she blends diverse inspirations into her own signature sound today. “I was a producer before I began to sing, so the instrumental part of my work is super-important to me,” she says. “I love to build up soundscapes in my tracks, make them feel alive and complex. Milton Nascimento has made one of my favorite album ever, O clube Da Esquina. Then, of course, the work of Kanye West on albums like My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy has been decisive to my understanding of music.”

Her bold, groundbreaking sensorial output does not stop with sound. In fact, Yndi’s visuals are often thought-provoking. For her track “Nuit,” she even developed a corresponding immersive video game, “Nuit: Yndi’s Sanctuary,” available from the Apple and Android app stores. It was created by filmmakers Camille Petit and Mohamed Megdoul, in collaboration with the programmer Ferdinand Dervieux, as well as the production companies Psycho and Immersion.

Images courtesy of François Quillacq

This futuristic superyacht doubles up as a floating seaport for other boats & costs $300 million!



Remember that swan-shaped megayacht that was costing $500,000,000 to make? Well, Lazzarini Design Studio is here to wow us again with this 328-foot long (100-meter) superyacht that also doubles up as a private seaport for smaller boats! Elegantly named ‘Saturnia’, this conceptual superyacht is designed to be made entirely with dry carbon fiber structures that will make it 50% lighter than similar-sized vessels and push the top speed up to 30 knots!

Saturnia’s main body is subdivided into five floors with an additional area at the top for the antennas. The superyacht can be configured into different layouts to host 10-20 guests in suites along with 20 crew members while also serving as a floating seaport. The concept showcases an all-around walkable deck area with openings on both sides that lift up to reveal the private port which makes Saturnia stand out from the competition. Small tenders with up to 1.5 meters of draft can moor inside the private port or be easily loaded while the yacht is navigating making it the perfect cruise vessel with the added expansion.

the upper part of the openings extend into glass-bottomed decks. inside the centrally-located private port, large sliding windows maximize connection to the outside. meanwhile, the side openings can extend from the upper deck into glass-bottomed lounge areas.

designed with hybrid propulsion, the yacht utilizes twin side diesel engines and a central electronic water jet system, which can push the yacht with zero emissions. Lazzarini Design Studio estimates that the saturnia superyacht concept could be built for $300,000,000 USD in about 30 months.

tenders with up to 1.5 meters of draft can moor inside the private port or be easily loaded while the yacht is navigating. the personal port. tenders with up to 1.5 meters of draft can moor inside the private port or be easily loaded while the yacht is navigating

Designer: Lazzarini Design Studio

Materials shortages affecting more than 60 per cent of UK architecture practices

The majority of British architecture practices are experiencing on-site delays caused by difficulties in sourcing construction products according to RIBA’s Future Trends survey.

The latest survey produced by Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), reported that 63 per cent of practices had experienced on-site delays due to building materials shortages.

A quarter of practices have seen site work put on hold due to a lack of materials.

The materials shortage is reportedly due to the impact of Brexit, as well as an increased demand for materials, as construction starts to ramp up again with the easing of coronavirus lockdowns.

“It has been mentioned by practices over the last couple of months, but it’s picked up as one of the main issues over the last few weeks,” head of economic research and analysis at RIBA Adrian Malleson told Dezeen.

The industry is also still feeling the impact of the Suez blockage, RIBA said.

Construction and design stages affected by material shortages

Nearly a fifth of practices, 18 per cent, also reported that the materials shortage was creating delay in the design process.

“Talking to practices, the delays are occurring in the detailed design stages as practices have to spend additional time selecting products that will be delivered within project timescales, where that’s possible,” Malleson said.

RIBA said reports of other significant challenges for architects include labour shortages and the potential effects of the “gathering third wave and the planned lifting of Covid-19 restrictions”.

Brexit is also affecting other areas of the industry.

“The UK is experiencing workforce shortages within important areas, such as distribution (especially HGV drivers) and among builders merchants; though this is also linked to Brexit,” Malleson added.

Majority of practices expecting workloads to remain the same or increase

However, the survey noted optimism in relation to future work, with 38 per cent of practices expecting to have more work in the next months.

Just over half, 58 per cent, expect workloads to stay the same, while the percentage expecting a decrease fell to seven per cent.

This indicates that the recovery is continuing, RIBA said.

“Overall, the June Future Trends findings indicate that the recovery in the architecture market continues,” Malleson said.

A total of 240 practices, based on a representative sample of the range of different practice sizes and geographical locations, took part in the survey in June.

French architects have also reported issues of materials shortage, with wood prices increasing weekly due to a new law that requires public buildings to be 50 per cent wood. The issue is said to mainly concern structural timber.

In Sweden, the construction industry is anticipating a shortfall in concrete as the country’s largest cement factory was stripped of its license on environmental grounds.

The Cementa factory in Gotland could be forced to end production in November, which construction bodies claim could lead to stoppages on three-quarters of all house-building projects.

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