Easy sofa by Big-Game for Tiptoe

Easy sofa by Big-Game and Tiptoe

Dezeen Showroom: French brand Tiptoe has worked with design studio Big-Game to create the Easy sofa, aiming to give it a durable and timeless design that could last decades.

Tiptoe describes the Easy sofa with its flat-packed steel frame and foam cushions as easy to assemble and easy to love.

Easy sofa by Big-Game and Tiptoe
The Easy Sofa takes a few minutes to assemble from flatpack

“Its timeless design and high level of comfort make Easy a sofa that you will grow fonder of over the years,” said Tiptoe.

The sofa was designed to be kept for a long time, with fabrics made by Danish company Gabriel that are exceptionally resistant to abrasion and friction. The covers are removable, washable and replaceable.

Easy sofa by Big-Game and Tiptoe
It has a steel frame and recycled fabric cushion covers

Tiptoe also describes the sofa as easy on the planet because the foam and textiles have a high recycled content. The design is entirely made in Europe, which saves on transport emissions.

Its frame is steel, which is infinitely recyclable, and no glue or staples are used in the sofa so that all of the components can be separated for recycling at the end of the product’s life.

Beige Big-Game sofa in front of a pink wall
Generous foam padding creates a comfortable seat

The Easy sofa is available with either a black or grey frame and a choice of six upholstery colours including vintage pink and forest green.

It comes in two-, three- or four-seater models with a corner sofa and ottoman also available.

Product: Easy sofa
Designer: Big-Game
Brand: Tiptoe
Contact: elodie@tiptoe.fr

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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Ten pieces that showcase the "authentic voice" of Zaha Hadid

Pair of Melissa Shoes

A retrospective of architect Zaha Hadid‘s work called ZHA Close Up – Work & Research is currently on display at MAM Shanghai. Its curator Shai Baitel picks 10 items from the exhibition that demonstrate the diversity of her work.

The exhibition at Shanghai’s Modern Art Museum is the first show dedicated to the work of Zaha Hadid Architects to take place in China.

Exhibition “inclusive of just about everything Zaha Hadid”

Containing more than 250 items, the exhibition showcases work created by the studio from the time it was founded by Hadid in 1979 up until her death in 2016 and beyond.

“The exhibition is multifaced and diverse, and inclusive of just about everything Zaha Hadid created throughout her career, with a particular focus on work in China,” explained Baitel.

“However, the exhibition represents not just architecture but also drawings, design and research that relates to her philosophy, art, use of technology and impact on society,” she continued.

“We amassed a collection of over 250 items that are eclectic in their breadth. Most objects in the exhibition were created during Hadid’s lifetime. But others were created after her passing and are firmly based in the DNA and aesthetics she defined during her illustrious career.”

“She gave the world of architecture a new language”

Baitel hopes that the exhibition will demonstrate Hadid’s unique design aesthetic and the role she played in shaping architecture and cities over the past four decades.

“She did the impossible as a female architect and designer navigating a predominantly white male world,” said Baitel. “And while doing so, she stayed true to her authentic voice.”

“She was a radical innovator of an entirely new line of thinking and approach towards design and architecture that emphasized the apparent movement of inanimate structures and objects,” the curator continued.

“She gave the world of architecture and design a new language and changed the field forever. City skylines all over the world have changed because of the singular impact of Zaha Hadid.”

Read on for Baitel’s 10 highlights from ZHA Close Up – Work & Research:


Pair of Melissa Shoes by Zaha Hadid

Melissa shoes

“Shoes define your personality. This pair certainly defines Zaha’s approach to life and design. At a glance, the pair comes across as a sea creature, perhaps an octopus, wrapping its prey in an enveloping manner.

“Yet at the same time, the soft silicone material gives it a warm quality and is visually reminiscent of a repetitive element of design, such as the one included in the monumental One Thousand Museum building in downtown Miami.”


Heydar Alivyev Center, Baku, Azerbaijan

Heydar Aliyev Center, Baku, Azerbaijan

“Hélène Binet’s striking photography is an uncommon way of communicating, in closely cropped, focused shots, the play of light and shadow created by Hadid’s structures. Binet succeeded in decrypting the challenging nature of Hadid’s work and translating the embedded message and hidden poetry of the centre.

“The result creates for viewers a spaceless, dimensionless image. The scale of the building is in the eye of the beholder. As art and design are the communication of ideas, Binet’s photography enables viewers to focus on these and to listen to the story Zaha had to tell.”


The Peak Leisure Club Proposal in Hong Kong

Peak Leisure Club proposal, Hong Kong

“This piece is a clear example of the boldness and bravery in Zaha’s life and work. The Peak Leisure Club proposal is widely known as her breakthrough project, propelling her into international recognition.

“This is a reminder to all architects that sometimes the landscape must be reshaped in a man-made geological intervention. A ‘shelf’ stands out of the edge of the cliff to accommodate the proposed structure, which is set against a sharp inclination combined with shapes and spikes.

“There is no doubt Zaha expressed, in her own way, an avant-garde approach to Hong Kong’s intensity and density with this project.”


Vitra Fire Station, Weil am Rhein, Germany

Vitra Fire Station, Weil am Rhein, Germany

“Light and shadow are sensitive and unstable components of this photograph. They not only present the structure with a majestic aura but also contextualise and ground the building on a single plane. The dramatic peculiarity of the shape is a reminder that architecture is about field and void, object and absence.

“Light – and thus shadow – is the work’s voice, communicating the message of the structure. And even more so in this photograph.”


Bench study model by Zaha Hadid

Bench study model

“Zaha never thought of comfort as a priority. And while appreciating the standard approach – straight – she clearly knew her inclination was toward the ultimate curve.

“This development of her own self, uncompromising and avant-garde, is best exemplified in this model. The material has its own flexibility and elasticity but there are limits to its resistance. However, this notion must be revisited in the case of Zaha.

“She gave freedom to forms and shapes while meticulously continuing to control the direction and extension of each twist and bend.”


Beijing New Airport Terminal, Beijing, China

Beijing New Airport Terminal, Beijing, China

“In many ways, this structure represents the quintessential Zaha structural symbiosis between engineering and architecture, between art and design. It is symmetrical in one part but asymmetrical in another.

“The structure captures one’s attention with the central strong, vibrant yellow shades and then draws the eye towards the perimeter. The shape of the structure is similar to an octopus wrapping its prey, stretching its long extensions in a dramatic gesture but allowing for symmetric shape only in one axis – perfecting imperfection, embracing ambiguity.”


Niche Centrepiece for Alessi by Zaha Hadid

Niche Centrepiece for Alessi

“This piece is personal to me, as Zaha gifted it to me when we first met at her gallery space in London. In a way, it is a summary of Zaha’s life and work. It looks and feels like something that transcends definition yet it embodies an entire world. It has movement and grace, mystery and nobility.

“The object has a certain rise and fall with its many curves and spikes. It is daring yet shy, brave but reserved. Even the use of melamine as the material is sophisticated. Despite its uninviting look, it has a silky-smooth feel.”


Painting of the Interior Project 24 Cathcart Road (2016)

Painting of the interior project 24 Cathcart Road

“This painting includes many images reminiscent of Miró, Calder and Malevic – the latter serving as an inspiration for Zaha to use colour as a tool for her architecture studies. From a bird’s eye view, an aerial observation will reveal that Zaha did not really care about the use of space. Also, and most centrally, she focused on the importance of art and design in our lives.

“Here, she keeps in perspective two sometimes contradicting but in her view complementary elements: nature, including the moon and the outside, and the man-made on the interior.”


Study model for a Metro Station (2021)

Study model for a metro station

“The design is sleek, curvy and seductive. There is a certain warmth to it and an obvious inviting nature. This model, shaped like a clam trio, is an excellent example of Zaha’s perfect asymmetrical approach to design.

“As a woman moving through the male-dominated world of architecture, she was and was required to be uncompromising in expressing her inner voice and vision. And this strong instinct and perseverance allowed for the creation of her innovative architectural use of curves and structural sensuality.”


OPPO Headquarters, Shenzhen, China (2019)

OPPO Headquarters, Shenzhen, China

“A design for a telecommunication business, this building is all about communication. Four interconnected towers become a singular seamless one, with a transparent shell allowing observers to see what’s inside.

“Every floor is an open space, permitting all professionals to work and interact limitlessly and without formalities. There is almost a voyeuristic quality to this piece.

“The building design is in line with a growing approach for community-driven collaboration and openness in workspaces.”


ZHA Close Up – Work & Research takes place until 15 September 2021 at The Museum of Contemporary Art Shanghai. See Dezeen Events Guide for an up-to-date list of architecture and design events taking place around the world.

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NOA transforms 17th-century monastery near Lake Garda into hotel and spa

Monastero Arx Vivendi hotel

Network of Architecture has turned a former monastery in Italy into the Monastero Arx Vivendi hotel by conserving and refreshing the interiors, and inserting a series of glazed spa rooms into its gardens.

Italian studio Network of Architecture (NOA) worked closely with the Trento Office of Cultural Heritage to transform half of the 17th-century complex in Arco, near Lake Garda, into the Monastero Arx Vivendi hotel. A separate church and cloister on the site remain occupied by nuns.

Monastero Arx Vivendi hotel
Half of the walled monastery has been turned into a hotel

Comprised of common areas and 40 guest rooms alongside a newly-constructed wellness area, the retrofit sought to retain and build on as many of the original features as possible, including a seven-metre high wall that surrounds the entire complex.

“The majesty and rigour of the architecture, the long corridors, the vaulted ceilings, all of these features combine to give these spaces a real olde-worlde feel,” said project architect Francesco Padovan.

“Every construction choice, every material and detail has been studied to draw on the majesty of the pre-existing context.”

17th-century monastery in Italy
The 17th-century monastery has been restored

On the ground floor of the monastery are the common areas, including a reception, breakfast room, bar and kitchen, which sit beneath original rib-vault ceilings.

These areas have been restored and covered with a rippled antique-effect plaster, with new concrete floors built atop the old.

Stone, wrought iron and wooden fittings in the reception area, breakfast room and bar aim to echo both the colours and textures of the original building, creating a feeling of “pleasant austerity” and illuminated by minimal hanging light fittings.

Above, the 40 guest rooms are spread across the first floor around a grand central corridor, and the loft, where the large wooden roof beams have been left exposed and topped by a large skylight.

Corridor in Italian hotel
The hotel bedrooms are located on the building’s top two floors

Each bedroom occupies what would have been two monastery cells, with a larger suite occupying the former washroom.

The antique-effect plaster finish has also been used in these spaces, complemented by pale wood floors, black iron furniture and earth-toned fabrics, and the original doors have been restored on their external-facing sides.

Hotel room in Italian monastery
Each hotel room occupies two monastery cells

The Salas per Aquam wellness space is a new development consisting of seven glass and metal volumes built along a stone-wall “spine”.

Relaxation lounges, treatment areas and saunas occupy these rooms, with a central room opening onto an outdoor pool.

Aerial view of Monastero Arx Vivendi
A wellness centre has been built within the monastery walls

“Our aim was to create a dialogue more with the surrounding agricultural landscape than with the monastery,” explained Padovan.

“To do this we used very simple elements with strong structural clarity. The light metal framework, organised in pillars and beams, is inspired by the characteristic lemon houses of rural Lake Garda.”

Glass-walled suites in the wellness centre
Wellness suites have glass walls

The interiors of these new spaces are intended to create a sense of calm and relaxation, with bleached oak panels, pew-like benches, suspended beds and intricate milled panels on the walls and ceilings.

NOA recently completed another hospitality project in Italy, extending a hotel in South Tyrol with a series of gabled “treehouse” suites raised on stilts.

The photography is by Alex Filz.

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San Diego Symphony’s New Outdoor Music Destination, The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park

A permanent, design-forward landmark within the city’s waterfront Embarcadero

The first permanent outdoor venue in the San Diego Symphony‘s illustrious, 100-year history, The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park will welcome guests for the first time tomorrow, 6 August. Situated on 3.7 acres, with 360-degree views of downtown, the marina and the bay, the stunning destination was designed by Greg Mueller, CEO and principal of San Diego-based firm Tucker Sadler Architects, with London’s Soundforms contributing performance shell design. The amphitheater will host more than 100 concerts and events this season, 85% of which will be free to the public, including outdoor classic concerts programmed by Rafael Payare, the San Diego Symphony’s music director.

The amphitheater’s spellbinding design features a 4,800-square-foot stage enveloped within concentric rings that, at their broadest, stretch 57 feet high and 92 feet wide. Australia-based Fabritecture led the technical design, as well as fabrication and installation. Beyond the visual splendors, the performance shell incorporates two advanced acoustical systems (designed by Salter, under the guidance of sound designer Shawn Murphy) and an advanced LED lighting system developed by Horton Lees Brogden Lighting Design.

“The long-awaited moment has come when we welcome San Diego to this magnificent, one-of-a-kind gathering place we have created for the entire community,” says San Diego Symphony CEO, Martha A Gilmer. “Opening a summer season with rich and varied programming, the Symphony’s first notes at The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park will mark the beginning of a wonderful new experience of music and natural beauty in a city like no other.”

The Rady Shell opens with Payare himself conducting the Symphony, in the world premiere of a commissioned work for orchestra and turntable by Mason Bates, along with a diverse range of accompanying performances. The venue includes flexible seating that can accommodate up to 10,000 guests—but outside of the 1.25-acre audience area, the Symphony manages the walkways and pavilions of the entire picturesque Jacobs Park.

Image courtesy of the San Diego Symphony

Portable chargers that are the fast + convenient way to charge everything from your EV to your smartphone!

If you’re anything like me, then your smartphone is probably always low on juice, and threatening to conk off any moment! With our busy schedules, finding the time to sit in one spot, and charge your phone is almost impossible. And this is where portable chargers come to the rescue! These cool gadgets can be carried with you, and allow you to charge your phone on the go. And they’re getting more and more innovative by the day. From a portable electric vehicle charger to a wireless charger that also doubles up as a UV light sanitizer – this collection of portable chargers are the charging solutions you need to ensure your smartphone is always pumped up and ready to go!

Portable EV chargers have caught pace in the last few years, and the A-monite, a concept for a portable electric vehicle fast charger is one fine example of how the intention is altering and is revolutionizing the way people think of electric vehicle ownership. A portable charger like the A-monite removes the question of where, when, and how out of actually charging the electric vehicle. It taps into the lack of charging infrastructure so that a vehicle does not have to be towed to a charging station – if it’s stranded on the highway. Instead, it can be powered up, right there and then with a portable charger in the boot of the car. It is an interesting alternative to the fixed stands installed in the parking lots, buildings, and in outdoors.

Sixty minutes is all that it takes for the SuperTank to power up and be ready for deployment. This 27,000 mAh portable charger with dual USB-C PD (100W + 60W) and dual USB-A ports, has the potential to quickly charge MacBook Pros and many other devices. What this means to people on the go, is that they don’t have to worry about carrying excess wires, multiple power plugs, and compatible sockets, when they are out of home or office. One supercharge, and this battery pack will last you for seven whole days, making you wish that your lover could last that long!

It’s not common knowledge but guess what. That portable charger you carry with you can jump-start your car! It’s essentially a rather powerful battery the size of your palm, and it can be a life-saver when you’re stranded in the middle of nowhere and your car refuses to start. Well, it can charge your phone, so you can call AAA, but why bother when you could just fix your car yourself?! The Car Jump Starter Power Bank comes with a 12V outlet that allows you to hook the portable charger to your car to give it a boost of power. It can also power air compressors so that you can fix a deflated tire. Obviously, it can charge all your gadgets too.

Meet the Nebo, a network of charging drones that bring your backup battery power to you. Think of Nebo like Triple-A, but with wings. Nebo users can request charging drones to fly to their EV and power up their vehicles on the road. Then, drivers can plug in their destination from a dashboard display, and Nebo will find the quickest route and create a charging schedule for the trip, ensuring that EVs are fully charged. Each charging drone contains electromagnetic and ultrasonic sensors to locate and latch onto the roofs of electric vehicles.

Touted as the smallest phone charger in the world, the Chargerito is literally the size of a car key-fob and transforms swiftly and smoothly into two prongs and connectors that you can plug into a socket and charge your phone. The connector comes with a hinge that folds inwards when not in use (as do the prongs) and swivels outwards to turn into a charging stand for your phone as it rests against the wall, making it stable so that it doesn’t fall.

There’s nothing about the Airbox that feels even remotely third-party. Looking at it, I wouldn’t be surprised if Tim Cook announced it at a hardware event and it went live on the Apple Store. Not only does the Airbox fit beautifully into Apple’s ecosystem, it feels like a sensible product that Apple’s users would completely fall in love with. Before I get carried away though, the Airbox by MOMAX is a portable power bank that can wirelessly charge multiple Apple products, along with being able to wire-charge the iPad. It builds on the idea of the AirPower mat but does a FAR better job.

Perfectly tailored for outdoor life – for people who don’t want to be restricted by the battery charging woes, the Bronine AI Volkit Charger is the solution to all your predicaments. It uses free voltage charging technology (ranging from 1V-20V) that automatically detects the current and voltage requirements of the battery, thanks to its smart algorithm. The icing on the cake is the fact that it can juice up your drone batteries, or even Li-ion dry cell batteries. This universal charger is capable of energizing four different camera batteries from different brands simultaneously – be it Canon, Sony, Nikon, Olympus, GoPro, DJI, Fujifilm, Panasonic, or any other battery that falls in the voltage range.

The DROP is all about charging your phone easily while giving you a chance to look away from your screen at the world around you. The puck-shaped portable wireless charger can fit on the back of any Qi-enabled phone and can be carried around with you in your hand or inside your bag – all along recharging your phone while you recharge your senses. The DROP’s design comes with a calming, zen-like quality. A circular aluminum body feels cool to the touch, while an LED ring on the base emits a halo when you place your phone on top of the charging surface. The halo serves as a visual indication that your phone is charging (so you don’t really need to look at your phone for confirmation) while a rubberized surface on top keeps your device in its place, preventing it from misaligning or shifting when accidentally touched or pushed.

Designed to be as portable as the gadgets you carry around with you, Flexo provides juice to all your wirelessly charging smart equipment. Fitting within the Venn-intersection between EDC and Consumer Electronic Accessories, the Flexo comes in three styles and can charge anywhere from one to three separate devices. The smallest Flexo comes with a single-charger setup and is roughly the size of an earpods case. Designed to be pocket-friendly, the small Flexo is perfect for juicing your earpods, watch, or smartphone up for a few hours, extending your battery life and productivity just enough to get you through the day with no problems.

Anker, debuted the second generation of their Nano chargers – and ranging from 30W to 45W and 65W, they’re no bigger than ice-cubes. The new Nano II chargers use what Anker calls its “GaN II” technology, the company’s second-generation version of the gallium nitride-based components. The Nano II offers a 20% increase in working efficiency, which loosely translates to smaller chargers and lesser heat generation. Their compact size is made even more portable and convenient thanks to the folding pins (on the 45W and 65W models), allowing you to chuck the charger in your backpack or even put it in your pocket.

It’s a wireless charger, but it’s better than a wireless charger. Cell by Ampere works as a dock as well as a UV sterilization chamber for your belongings. It’s a weirdly relevant combination of features but believe you me, Cell does a great job of being multifunctional but still being sensible. Every feature and use-case is well thought out, making it just the most conveniently handy accessory to have on you. Here, let me explain. Cell by Ampere comes with a collapsible design that houses 2 wireless charging coils on the top, and UV-C LEDs on the base. Place your phone on top, and it fast-charges without wires, however, collapse the silicon rim around the sides and the base becomes a UV chamber, allowing you to sterilize your phone, watch, earphones, keys, or any EDC in mere minutes.

Very Simple Kitchen by Riccardo Randi

Very Simple Kitchen by Riccardo Randi

Dezeen Showroom: Italian designer Riccardo Randi has launched Very Simple Kitchen, a modular and colourful metal kitchen that can be customised via an online tool.

Very Simple Kitchen consists of freestanding stainless steel modules – including drawers, shelves, sinks, ovens, hobs and dishwashers – that can be tailored to fit any space.

Very Simple Kitchen by Riccardo Randi
The kitchens are made entirely of stainless steel

Minimalist in style, the kitchens can be finished in brushed steel or powder-coated in different colours with a choice of ten standard options or a custom hue.

Worktops are available in natural materials such as marble and quartz alongside acrylic composites like Fenix.

Very Simple Kitchen by Riccardo Randi
The kitchens can be customised in different colours

The modules are durable and can be moved and modified over time to extend the kitchen’s lifespan and the stainless steel can ultimately be recycled.

Randi‘s kitchens are made in Italy using an efficient metal-bending process and joined by bolts.

Product: Very Simple Kitchen
Designer: Riccardo Randi
Contact: hello@verysimplekitchen.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.

The post Very Simple Kitchen by Riccardo Randi appeared first on Dezeen.

Ricemilk Pearl Necklace

Featuring freshwater pearls of different shapes and hues, every Mudd Pearl “ricemilk” necklace is crafted by hand—no two are the same. Available in three lengths (14-15 inches, 16-17 inches, 18-19 inches), the necklace also boasts a sterling silver toggle clasp. The off-kilter take on a the classic string of pearls showcases the natural, stunning shapes and colors of baroque pearls.

UCL accuses Bartlett discrimination whistleblower of causing "undue distress to staff"

The Bartlett

The Bartlett School of Architecture has refused to respond to a barrage of freedom of information requests by a former student investigating alleged racial and sexual discrimination, claiming the requests were “vexatious” and had “little obvious value”.

Emails seen by Dezeen show that University College London (UCL), which the school is part of, denied a series of requests from Eleni Kyriacou seeking details of grades and dropout rates sorted by gender.

Requests placed “significant burden on UCL”

According to UCL, the numerous Freedom of Information (FOI) requests from Kyriacou placed “a significant burden on UCL” and caused “undue distress to staff”.

“Your requests will not be processed further because they are being treated as vexatious under section 14(1) of FOI,” wrote UCL in an email received by Kyriacou on 24 March 2021.

“The reasons are that the above requests are the latest in a series of 19 requests that impose a significant burden on UCL, cause undue distress to staff and have little obvious value in terms of the wider public interest,” it continued.

The final request submitted was to see the breakdown of grading by gender for seven tutors at the Bartlett along with the dropout rates and failure rates for the past 13 years divided by gender.

Kyriacou, who studied at the school from 1998 to 2002, was gathering the data as part of her investigation into claims of racism and sexism at the school, which were first revealed in the Guardian on 31 May.

The allegations from 21 former students include reports of sexual harassment of female students, and non-white students being subjected to racist comments.

A representative of UCL requested to see a copy of the dossier of allegations collected by Kyriacou, who is now a fashion designer most noted for designing the costumes worn during the lighting of the flame at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016, as part of its investigation into the allegations on 7 June.

Issues already “fully considered by UCL”

UCL said it determined that the requests were not legitimate as the information was not in the public interest and the issues she was raising had already been considered.

“We are concerned that the requests appear to be a forum to raise repeat issues which have already been fully considered by UCL,” said the email.

“We believe that your long and frequent series of requests are placing a significant strain on UCL’s resources and these recent requests are contributing to that aggregated burden,” it continued.

“This email therefore serves as a refusal notice.”

The Bartlett confirmed to Dezeen that it had refused the request on the basis that it covered similar ground to previous requests.

“As a public body, UCL receives a substantial number of Freedom of Information requests every year which require significant resourcing by the university,” it said.

“In line with our commitment to transparency, UCL endeavours to answer any request it receives,” it continued. “However, the Information Commissioner’s Office guidance makes clear that public bodies are not required to provide advice and assistance in response to repeated requests on similar issues.”

Ex-students hire lawyer

The allegations first came to light in May when The Guardian published details of a dossier compiled by Kyriakou containing allegations by 21 former students claiming “systemic” problems at the school.

One student reported being told “your work is very sexy and so are you” by a staff member and another student of colour recalled being told she “acted and spoke like a white person”.

The following week, the school announced it was investigating the allegations.

Kyriakou accused the school of running “a pretend investigation, announced only to appease members of the press.” She claimed the school had not contacted her to obtain a copy of her dossier.

However, the school said it had asked the Guardian for a copy of the documents but its request had been declined. It wrote to Kyriakou saying: “If it is appropriate for you to share a copy with us, we will then share it with the investigator to support their review.”

Since the claims were first made public, several more allegations have come to light. In response to a perceived lack of action from the leadership of The Bartlett and UCL, a group of former students have hired a solicitor to further examine the claims.

Named Bartlett United, the group has instructed lawyers to determine if and how the university has breached its code of conduct and its care of duty towards students.

“We spoke with our barrister at length about our experiences and concerns,” said Bartlett United in a statement on Instagram.

“Counsel identified breaches of a serious nature – spanning sex discrimination, race discrimination, breach of contract and negligence in the accounts we have collected.”

The Bartlett School of Architecture describes itself as “one of the most influential, exciting and innovative architecture schools in the world, setting the agenda for what architecture is and could be”.

Based in Bloomsbury, London, within a HawkinsBrown-designed building (pictured), the architecture school forms part of the Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment.

The prestigious architecture school, which has 300 permanent members of staff and 1,600 students has been rated as the UK’s best by the magazine Architects’ Journal for the past 11 years.

It is ranked as the second-best Architecture and the Built Environment department in the world in the QS World University Rankings 2021.

The post UCL accuses Bartlett discrimination whistleblower of causing “undue distress to staff” appeared first on Dezeen.

This EDC utility knife transforms the same blade into a scraper at the push of a button



A utility knife is one essential EDC virtually everyone has used at some point in their life, and this particular everyday carry brings a unique trick to the intended function, each one you will ultimately appreciate.

ToughBuilt’s Scraper Utility Knife on first look seems like any other typical utility knife, but wait till you delve into more of its details. This everyday carry utility tool doubles as a scraper tool knife for getting rid of those hard-to-remove adhesive marks, old paint stains from furniture, labels from windows and mirrors, or anything stubborn that’s getting hard to get rid of off the surfaces.

The switchblade-like form of the utility knife flips the sharp blades in a 90 degrees orientation for a scraper knife function, ideal for workmen and professional handymen. The retractable steel blade of the knife slides seamlessly in and out of the rugged housing (six-inch handle) and can be taken out or replaced when the edges go blunt.

The changeover utility of the EDC comes into effect with the push of a small button hidden in the sliding mechanism of the rugged metal handle. Orientation of the blade is completely changed as it then faces forward – ready to scrap out any undesirable bobs or bits that are driving you crazy for quite some time now.

Apart from these two primary functions, the ToughBuilt Scraper Utility Knife also acts as a can opener. This function can be accessed from the tail end of the EDC’s handle. The carry loop makes it ultra-easy to keep handy at all times, something that outdoorsy people will appreciate.

The Scraper Utility Knife is available now for purchase at a price tag of $18, and it comes with five spare blades to make the swap in a jiffy.

Designer: ToughBit

Click Here to Buy Now!

Thukral and Tagra design Rado watch with 37 hands for different timezones

Over the Abyss watch by Thukral and Tagra for Rado

Dezeen promotion: New Delhi artist duo Thukral and Tagra has designed Over the Abyss, a watch for Rado with an “enchanting firework” of multi-coloured hands at its centre.

Created as part of the brand’s True Square Collection, the automatic watch shows the local time superimposed on a range of time zones around the world.

Over the Abyss watch by Rado
Over the Abyss is a watch by Thukral and Tagra for Rado

“Our inspiration was to feel connected with a lot more time zones and we wanted to bring something unique to the experience of reading time,” Jiten Thukral said in the video filmed by Dezeen at the artists’ studio in New Delhi.

The timepiece has 18 different hour hands and 19-minute hands that signify different timezones.

Over the Abyss watch by Thukral and Tagra for Rado
It features 37 hands for different time zones

Meanwhile, the hands showing the local time are marked out by dots of phosphorescent SuperLuminova paint.

The hands themselves are painted in a gradient of colours ranging from blue to pink, which according to Rado creates the impression of an “enchanting firework in the middle of the dial”.

Over the Abyss watch by Rado
The face is a rounded square and sits in a matt blue ceramic case

The watch face is housed inside a square, matt blue ceramic case with rounded corners and a diametre of 38-millimetres.

This offers a modern update to Rado’s distinctive shape developed in the 1970s, which is the distinctive feature of the True Square Collection.

The back of the watch includes a Thukral and Tagra painting, which resembles a pixellated space invader video game.

“On the back of the watch, we are embedding one of the images from our ongoing series of paintings called Dominus Aeries, which explore the boundaries between civilisation and science fiction,” said Thukral.

Over the Abyss watch by Thukral and Tagra for Rado
An artwork from Thukral and Tagra’s Dominus Aeries series is emblazoned on the back

According to Rado, Over the Abyss reflects Thukral and Tagra’s penchant for socially motivated design, which has previously seen the duo tackle topics from migration to Indian mythology.

“Jiten Thukral and Sumir Tagra’s work focuses on something that is intrinsic to humans but sometimes forgotten in modern societies: the relationship of us individuals to our communities,” the brand explained.

“This is why their work is often described as social design.”

Over the Abyss watch by Rado
The watch is available via Rado’s website

The artist duo previously teased the release of the watch in a live talk streamed on Dezeen as part of Rado Design Week.

Designer Tej Chauhan and Italian studio Formafantasma were among others featured in the event, which took place over a week in November 2020.


Partnership content

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

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