Neil Logan revamps a 1970s stone-clad dwelling in the Hamptons

Heller Lane by Neil Lorgan Architect

New York studio Neil Logan Architect has added glazing and completely renovated the interior of a beach house on Long Island originally designed by architect Norman Jaffe.

The project, called Heller Lane, is located on a coastal site in East Hampton. Designed by Manhattan-based Neil Logan Architect, the project involved an interior revamp of a two-storey house dating to 1978.

Stone-clad dwelling
Neil Logan Architect renovated the house, which was originally designed by Norman Jaffe

Featuring a massive roof with cedar shingles, the house was originally designed by Norman Jaffe, an American architect who created many sculptural dwellings on Long Island.

Known as the Gruss House, the residence is an example of the architect’s self-described Zeus style.

Swimming pool
A swimming pool and a guest house are located next to the main dwelling

“Referencing the mythological god of the sky, Jaffe found formal inspiration in the sky, clouds, and coastal dunes of eastern Long Island,” said Logan.

U-shaped in plan, the 6,250-square-foot (581-square-metre) home consists of rooms organised around a central courtyard. Next to the main dwelling are a swimming pool and guest house.

Sandstone and cedar facades
Facades are clad in Tennessee sandstone and cedar

Facades are clad in Tennessee sandstone and cedar. The home’s large, pyramid-shaped roof is cut away in several areas to form openings and balconies.

The interior underwent several renovations over the years. For the recent update, Logan and his team sought to create more space and an enhanced feeling of openness.

Heller Lane beach house
Entrance to the home is via a courtyard

Limited changes were made to the exterior. The windowless, front facade, which looks north, was preserved. On the south, however, large stretches of glass were introduced, providing views of the ocean and a stronger connection to the landscape.

The home is entered from the inner courtyard, which features heat-treated ash decking and a Japanese maple tree. One steps into a home with a fluid layout, earthy finishes and ample natural light.

Interior columns
Neil Logan Architect installed columns inside for extra support

The team removed a staircase, along with a large, masonry fireplace, which freed up space on both floors. New columns were installed to provide structural support.

“Due to the removal of the enormous fireplace and the uninterrupted expanses of perimeter glass, the house was reframed with steel,” the architect said.

Slender fireplace
A slender fireplace was added to the study

The ground level encompasses a kitchen, dining room, living room, study and two bedrooms.

The kitchen features an elongated island made of Caesarstone and streamlined cabinets made of European oak. Oak was also used for flooring and wall panels throughout the dwelling.

In the dining area, an existing stone-clad fireplace was kept in place. A slender, wood-burning fireplace was placed in the study, where a projector and screen are concealed in the ceiling.

Upstairs, one finds a main suite and three new bedrooms, which were made possible by the removal of the fireplace. Skylights were added to the new sleeping areas.

Wood and stone kitchen
Views of the ocean can be enjoyed from inside

“With the removal of the fireplace and additional stair, the second-floor space below the enormous roof was transformed,” the team said.

In the main suite, the team created a separate bathroom with a sauna, steam shower and freestanding marble bathtub, along with a new shower, vanity and water closet.

Marble bathtub
The main suite features a freestanding marble bathtub

Beyond the main dwelling, updates were also made to the guesthouse. The team added windows, installed a kitchen and refurbished the bathroom. Moreover, the ceiling was clad in European oak.

Other projects by Neil Logan Architect include the conversion of a Brooklyn warehouse into a store with a freestanding skate bowl for streetwear brand Supreme.

The photography is by Christopher Sturman.


Project credits:

Architect: Neil Logan
Project architect: Max Golden
Project assistant: Helga Hansen
Landscape architect: Farm Landscape Design, Edwina von Gal
Construction: Trunzo Building Contractors

The post Neil Logan revamps a 1970s stone-clad dwelling in the Hamptons appeared first on Dezeen.

Rossana Hu named chair of the department of architecture at Tongji University

Rossana Hu's headshot

Rossana Hu of ​​Neri&Hu has been appointed chair of the department of architecture at Tongji University in Shanghai, becoming the first woman to hold the position.

The architect and founding partner of design studio Neri&Hu was appointed to the position at Tongi University’s College of Architecture and Urban Planning (CAUP) on 21 December.

“I am extremely honoured to be appointed to this position,” said Hu. “Not just because it is an amazing opportunity to be teaching in this top institution, but also the close proximity I will have with the best thinkers and doers in China’s architecture realm.”

Hu is the first woman to chair the department of architecture at CAUP and is also the first architect to hold the position who has not previously studied at the university. Previously, all chairs of the department of architecture at CAUP were Tongji Univesity graduates.

Neri&Hu's Chuan Malt Whiskey Distillery
Top: Rossana Hu is the first woman to chair the department of architecture at Tongji University. Above: Neri&Hu recently completed a whiskey distillery in China. Photo by Chen Hao

The appointment is part of CAUP dean Li Xiangning’s ambition to make the institution, which is one of China’s top architecture schools, a global name.

“As Hu brings a diverse and global perspective to the school, more channels of international communication are sure to open up for architectural research and teaching at Tongji,” said Li.

“Today, all landmark buildings in Shanghai are connected to Tongji” said Hu. “Will we create groundbreaking works and leave Tongji marks all over the world one day?”

Founded in 1952, Tongi University’s CAUP comprises three departments: the Department of Architecture, the Department of Urban Planning and the Department of Landscape Architecture, with 222 full-time faculty members and researchers.

Hu has previously collaborated with CAUP on a series of lectures and exhibitions between 2014 and 2017. This year, Neri&Hu’s solo exhibition Works in Permanent Evolution was also presented at CAUP.

Other academic positions held by Hu include John C. Portman Design Critic in Architecture at Harvard University, Norman R. Foster Visiting Professor at Yale University and Visiting Professor at The University of Hong Kong.

An exhibition by Rossana Hu
Neri&Hu’s Works in Permanent Evolution exhibition was presented at Tongji University this year

Hu received her master of architecture and urban planning from Princeton University and a bachelor of arts in architecture and music from the University of California at Berkeley.

She worked for Michael Graves & Associates in Princeton and The Architects Collaborative (TAC) in San Francisco, among others, before cofounding Neri&Hu Design and Research Office in Shanghai with Lyndon Neri in 2004.

Neri&Hu was named architecture studio of the year at this year’s Dezeen Awards.

“Neri&Hu is a practice that has been steadfast in navigating their close knowledge and precise skill for design from furniture and interiors through to city scale, moving the discipline, practice, craft and education of architecture and architects across East and west seamlessly,” Dezeen Awards judges’ commented.

Neri&Hu is based in a former staff dormitory building in Shanghai, which the studio converted into its own offices last year.

Other recent projects by the studio include a campus for elevator manufacturer Schindler in Shanghai and a stone-clad whiskey distillery for Pernod Ricard in China‘s Sichuan province.

The post Rossana Hu named chair of the department of architecture at Tongji University appeared first on Dezeen.

52 Outside-of-the-Box Design Solutions Spotted in 2021

It’s been an absolute crap year for many of us. So I’m ending it with a roundup of 52 unexpected, surprising or clever design solutions I saw this year, the ones that really made me smile. Well, and at least two that made me cringe, take a guess. Enjoy!

Clever Bridge Design Lets Horses Pulling a Barge Cross the Canal Without Untying Them

“Anti-Gluttony Door” Sized to Prevent Monks From Eating Too Much

Image: Inazumaryoku

“Endlessly Clever” Design for a Garbage Can With an Endless Bag

A Clever German Toymaking Method of Using a Lathe to Make Non-Circular Objects

A Freestanding Spreading Knife that Suspends the Mess

A Liquid-Based Display That Uses Bubbles for Pixels

A Retractable Rolling Shower Screen

A Small Design Change Yields Better UX for the Cardboard File Box

A Styrofoam Substitute Made from Popcorn

An Innovative Game Controller with Swappable Physical Interfaces

Better UX for Cremation: Turning Ash Remains Into Smooth Pebbles

A Dual-Swing Refrigerator Door

Clever Construction System: Build the Roof on the Ground, Then Lift It

A Canoe Paddle With a Built-In Bilge Pump

Cool Intermodal Transportation System from France, Circa 1844

Image: Mattes. “Stagecoach being transferred to a railway car with a simple Portainer. This is an example of early Intermodal freight transport by the French Mail 1844. The picture is exhibited in Deutsches Museum Verkehrszentrum, Munich, Germany.”

Dekay King’s Innovative Shop Furniture

Designey Ceramic Alternatives to Wood Stoves and Fireplaces

Designey Toilets from France

DoCoMo’s Silent, Safe Balloon-Based Camera Drones

Ex-Toy-Designer of Transforming Robots Creates Electric Scooter That Transforms for Easy Storage

Expensive Solution for Short Driveway on Busy Road: Install a Turntable

Fantastic Industrial Design Thesis Project: The Cercle Bicycle Camper

From Spain, a Creative and Eco-Friendly Way to Beat the Heat

German Robotics Enthusiast’s Solution to a Broken Clock

Improvised Design from a Prison Cell: Illustrated “Prisoners’ Inventions” Book

Improvised Objects and Solutions, from Redneck Engineering

Japanese Company Purposely Designs Dull, Boring Toys

Kid Imagines Rubik’s Cube Made From Tiny Screens. Dad Invents it

Making Knobs from Plastic Bottles, a Random Object and Some Heat

Pencils That Visually Indicate Their Line Weight

Pop-Up Prison Design with Open Cubicles and Touchscreens

Products Designed for Shabbat Let You Perform Certain Tasks Without Technically Performing Them

Qarnot’s “Computing Heater” Uses Cloud Computing to Heat Individual Spaces

Rony: A Dual-Headed Flashlight Provides Better UX, for Bike or Hikes

Silicone Straws that “Unzip” for Easy Cleaning

Smart Design for a Gate That Automatically Opens and Closes, No Power Needed

Sony’s Tetris-Like Packaging Solves a Shipping Dilemma

Swiss Mile’s Incredible Four-Legged/Wheeled Robot Can Do it All

The Bora X Pure Downward-Extracting Induction Cookto

The Landscaper’s Equivalent of a Standing Desk

The Luno Front Cab Air Mattress Fills the Ga

The Pocket Piano: A Full-Size Keyboard Made from Magnetically-Connecting Segments

The Trailerduck: A Self-Powered, Auto-Following Bike Trailer

There are Sinks Designed Just for Vomiting Into

These German Swarm ‘Bots Unload Packages by Intentionally Crashing Into the Loading Platforms

Transforming Unrecyclable Potato Chip Bags Into Sleeping Bags for the Homeless

Vintage Radiators with Built-In Plate Warmers

What the Amish Use as a Light Switch

Wheelchair of the Future? The Ascento Pro, an Amazing Two-Wheeled Robot

Who Knew? They Make Silent Tape Guns

Wife Complains of the Views, so Husband Builds Rotating House

Window-Based Clotheslines That Slide In and Out on a Track

That’s it for me, folks. Have a great New Year’s!

A Series Showing the Ancient Gods as Digital Artworks

Basé en Mécédoine, en Grèce, Olivier Marinkoski est un artiste digital qui a créé une série originale et majestueuse. « Je me suis demandé ce que cela donnerait si les anciens dieux slaves étaient représentés dans des sculptures de style romain. J’ai donc créé ces modèles 3D, puis j’ai ajouté quelques attributs modernes à leurs capacités surnaturelles (le dieu et la déesse du tonnerre ont reçu un boomstick). J’ai ensuite continué à créer leurs homologues romains et helléniques, et les anciens dieux égyptiens étaient les suivants ! », explique-t-il. Pour lui, la meilleure façon d’avoir de bonnes idées est de s’abstenir de toute forme d’expressions visuelle pendant un certain temps, puis de regarder de grandes œuvres d’art.

Pour découvrir ses œuvres, rendez-vous sur son compte Instagram.






LEXUS NX 450h+ Plug-in Hybrid Review

The all-new NX450h+ joins the Lexus lineup by making some pretty big claims. Firstly, and most critically, this flagship model of the new NX range is the luxury brand’s first-ever plug-in hybrid vehicle (PHEV) which is surprising given that Lexus has offered electrification through hybrids for so long. It also gets Lexus’ first-ever interface boasting a huge 14-inch touchscreen that totally dominates the dashboard. According to Lexus, this electrified SUV also just happens to be the first of 20 new products slated to appear in the range over the next four years.

The model we’re testing today is the 450h+ F Sport all-wheel-drive which is the top-of-the-range model and is new from top to bottom.

According to Lexus, this second-generation NX is the most comprehensive redesign in their 32-year history. And it needs to be after the brand was caught napping in the electrification and tech arenas. While rival brands such as Mercedes Benz, BMW, and Audi forged ahead with PHEVs, Lexus was content just to offer basic hybrids. Now, however, as we will see, it offers one of the best in its class.

New NX gets more mature, subtle refined look

The NX’s exterior design is a result of an evolutionary process but you will find new parts wherever you look. Firstly I do like the beautifully styled optional triple beam LED headlights with the integrated daytime running lamps which kind of remind you of a Nike swoosh. I retain the same positive feedback for that humungous signature ‘spindle grille,’ a shape that often has me grimacing. The reason? I’m not normally a huge fan of that grille shape, but I do think the stylists did a great job in finishing it with a gloss black treatment which tones down the impact of the grille and gives it a more subtle, mature and refined look.

After all this time, it would seem as though Lexus designers have finally found a happy medium between seeking a strong identity—through that grille—while giving it the subtlety it desperately needed. I also give the thumbs up to the brake ducts, once again finished in gloss black, which are functional and actually work to suck air in and cool the brake assemblies. The LED fog lamps and the silver front splitter work superbly to contrast with the black accents on the front of the vehicles.

The gloss black treatment on the 20-inch wheels is chic, especially when set off nicely by those bright orange brake calipers. And one design feature I especially like is the reluctance of designers to use black wheel arch surrounds that seem too common on many SUVs today. On our test car, the wheel arch surrounds are a deep blue, the same color as the rest of the body. This feature, in my opinion, makes the NX look classier and more luxurious.

Between the A and C pillars Lexus has fitted some subtle dark chrome finished window surrounds and gloss black-capped door mirrors that employ new 360 degree full surround camera technology. As for the door handles, they too are totally new. On the second generation NX, you do not pull on the door handles to open the door. Instead, you insert your fingers inside the handle and push the switch on the inside to open the doors. Along the side of the SUV, you have a character line that flows from just below the A-pillar backwards through the front door handles and then, from around the middle of the rear doors, heads north towards the angled C-pillar.

At the rear of the car, you have some very stylish lines that match the front end. The wrap-around brake light assemblies stretch from just aft of the fuel filler caps to one-third of the way across the rear door, connected by a full-width red LED bar that gives the NX a futuristic look. It’s just a shame that stylists did not hide the rear wiper under the roof spoiler as it would have cleaned up the tail end look no end.

Below the wiper, designers have done away with the Lexus logo and replaced it with the new Lexus font. And below that you have the model badging — NX450h+ AWD, which is what every 450h+ offers. Then at the lower extremity of the rear bumper you have a silver accent on the bumper flanked on either side with fake exhaust outlets, just for show.

The new 14-inch touchscreen redefines Lexus interiors

Inside the car is as innovative as it is on the outside and under the hood. The dashboard is luxurious and futuristic, highlighted by a massive 14-inch infotainment touchscreen. Gone is the fiddly touchpad, replaced by an easy to use screen that offers wireless updates, and wireless Apple and Android compatibility. It also boasts Lexus’ new ‘Hey Lexus’ voice activated feature that allows you to do everything from asking your car—while not taking your hands off the steering wheel— to turn on the wipers, change radio stations, switch on seat heaters and turn the air-con up.

Notably, this system is intuitive and as smart and responsive if not smarter than most of its rivals. I also like the way that designers have decluttered the dash and halved the number of switches and dials making the interior look more luxurious and classier. The Mark Levinson audio system is also specially designed and fitted for Lexus and delivers a truly excellent sound experience.

Before you take off, you can also push a button on the dash that will give you a quick 360-degree scan of the environment around your vehicle, to allow you to check for any stray kids or pets or obstacles that might be lurking just out of view. And of course, when you select reverse, your rear view appears on the monitor in full HD quality with trajectory lines that allow easy reversing.

Just below the touchscreen, the NX offers a USB port, a USB-C port, and a wireless charging tray that is actually a lid hiding a secret compartment. Around the gear shifter, you will also find some luxurious gloss black treatment with aluminum accents around the two centrally located cupholders.

The two-toned seats offer excellent lumbar and back support and are artistically contoured and sexy, featuring some subtle F Sport badging. Drivers also have a choice of using the standard rearview mirror or a newly fitted digital mirror, which is high definition and clear but does take some getting used to. What is pleasing to the eye and to the touch however are the stitched dual leather steering wheel, full digital display, and aluminum paddle shifters and pedals. I really liked the super clean graphics inside the driver’s instrumentation showing power readout, digital speedometer, fuel and battery gauges, and level of charge. It also offers different gauges depending on what mode you use.

In the back, you have plenty of headroom and legroom and the seats are supportive and comfortable. The floor is flat meaning that three people can enter and exit easily while rear seat passengers get their own air-con vents as well as two USB-C ports for charging smartphones. In the luggage area, you have 22.7 cubic feet of space with the rear seats up. Fold them down, and you’ll create 46.9 cubic feet which is comparable with German rivals.

In keeping with the vehicle’s innovative underpinnings and features, the new NX now gets bespoke door handles that require finger pressure to open them. On the inside, you have a choice of either pushing a button that automatically opens the door or if you need to get out quickly or your battery fails you can open the door manually with a handle as well.

The exterior might get a choice of 11 colors, including the heat blue contrast on our test vehicle, but inside buyers will have a choice of no less than seven trim color combinations. These include the ‘F Sport bespoke white’ and black trim on our test car in addition to an F Sport flair red, a hazel, black and rich cream, dark rose, and a black. I also liked the contrasting white stitching on black leather and the soft materials throughout the cockpit. This NX is also fitted with the Lexus’ new safety system 3.0 which offers features such as automatic steering corrections when needed and emergency braking.

The Driving Experience

So the 450h+ might be the brand’s first PHEV, but it actually shares its TNGA-platform with the Toyota RAV4 as well as its 2.5-liter four-cylinder gasoline engine and CVT. The 450h+ gets two electric motors, an 18.1kWh battery pack, and up to 40 miles or EV driving range. One feature the NX450h+ does not have is a quick charging port. Lexus explains that its strategists decided that this PHEV did not need a quick charging port and that a standard 200V port would suffice. I beg to differ as many owners, I’m sure, would like to have the option to quick charge their car when a quick charger is available.

Boasting a total power output of 302hp, the 450h+ can jump from zero to 60mph in just 6.0 seconds which is more than quick enough in this segment. Given that the NX is based on the RAV4’s underpinnings, the throttle response and steering feel are almost identical, which is no bad thing given the RAV4 has sharper steering than many rivals. But, as expected of a Lexus, the NX is more refined, comfortable, and rides better and quieter without sacrificing body control. It will easily cruise on the electric motor only up to 83mph for zero-emissions driving. In hybrid mode, the NX delivers strong battery-assisted driving as it works hard to manage how the battery is efficiently deployed.

The 450h+ is fitted with the F Sport suspension set-up that adds performance damping and a two-step variable adaptive suspension system to the MacPherson strut front-end and double-wishbone rear, and the resulting high levels of grip and comfort are what you expect from Lexus. It also uses a different braking system, with the traditional booster set-up replaced in our test car for an electrically-boosted system, complete with larger orange front brake calipers offering 340x38mm front discs in contrast to the 328x34mm rotors in the non-plug-in hybrid.

Of course, below the 450h+ you have the 350h model which employs a hybrid system in contrast to the more hi-tech, more efficient, heavier PHEV system. The 450h+ raises the weight of the car from the 350h’s 1790kg to 1990kgs, which comes from the larger battery pack, power electronics, and cooling system for the batteries. On the road, the NX is smooth and quiet and handles surprisingly well for a heavy SUV. The ride quality is far better and organized than its predecessor, but the biggest improvement is that the electrical power running through the e-motors means the 2.5-liter engine can rest more often, and exert itself less whenever it’s forced to stir into action.

Flick the drive mode switch on the dash from S to S-sharp and you will notice your instrumentation changing instantly as your dampers stiffen, your throttle response quickens and your steering gets sharper. While the NX tries to stay in EV mode as much as possible, once in S-sharp, you are needing more responsiveness from your powertrain so the engine will cut in more often with a slight buzz from the engine bay to let you know that you are running with the engine and motor together.

Price and Options

Starting at around $55,900, the 450h+ F Sport qualifies for the $7,500 tax credit which means that you can purchase the car for under $50,000, making this SUV a very desirable car.

Compared to its main rivals in the BMW X3, the Audi Q5, and the Volvo XC60, we feel the new NX is a more current and better-looking SUV overall with higher levels of interior quality and stronger street cred. Meanwhile, in terms of PHEV credentials, we also think this particular NX outperforms the Range Rover Evoque PHEV, BMW X1, and the Volvo XC40 Recharge and delivers quieter, smoother running in EV mode and even when the gasoline engine fires up to charge the batteries. Potential buyers will have the option of the lower-spec (9.8-inch touchscreen) and cheaper 350h priced at $41,000. But we feel that the 450h+ driven here, given its performance, luxury levels,
interior features and that huge 14-inch touchscreen, plus the 450h+’s prestige value and $7,500 tax credit, make the 450h+ F Sport the better buy.

Lexus successfully identified where the new NX needed to improve and in what areas it had to catch up to its rivals. The NX450h+ is efficient, quick when it needs to be, comfortable, practical, refined, and relaxing to drive in EV mode or not. It will redefine the Lexus brand and give it that much needed plug-in hybrid status.

The post LEXUS NX 450h+ Plug-in Hybrid Review first appeared on Yanko Design.

Best Product and Industrial Design Student Work Spotted in 2021

Given the importance of in-person studio time, product and industrial design students must have found lockdown difficult. But you wouldn’t know it by looking at some of the standout projects we saw this year.

Out of the dozens of student projects we covered in 2021, these seven below really stood out. The students tackled real-world problems, and asked the right questions. They didn’t rely on magical hypothetical apps in their designs, but instead manipulated physical materials to enable their objects to achieve the desired outcomes. None of these projects are designed for Instagram.

Most of the projects considered the overall system they would operate within, and most of the projects really showed their research and developmental work; click on the links below for more details.

The Roadfix Device by Luca Grosso, Silvana Migliozzi, Alessio Puleo, Zöe Schnegg and Xueyan Niu

Politecnico di Milan Concept Design Laboratory, Italy

The students thought through the physical UX of a pothole-fixing device, as well as the economic system that would allow municipalities to sustain it.

Peter Morgan’s 6:1 Toaster Concept

National College of Art and Design, Ireland

Morgan asked “How much of our appliances are actually essential?” and designed a toaster with “a distributed feature set: where the features of the design are completed by other objects the user possesses.”

Karen Kong’s Adjustable Sesura Chair

University of New South Wales, Australia

Kong’s elegant seating designed for orchestra members has improved adjustment mechanisms to suit a variety of instrument-based seating postures. It also stacks to take up less space than the incumbent design.

Mina Kasirifar’s FLIP Furniture

San Francisco State University

Kasirifar’s chair designed to seat, stimulate and engage children can be flipped into a variety of configurations, “merging the concept of toy and furniture.”

Sophie Williamson’s Beta Guard for Vineyard Protection

University of Canterbury, New Zealand

Williamson designed a less expensive, more sustainable way of protecting vineyards from pests than the incumbent system.

Wang Yuwei and Wu Xuanqi’s “Rotate” Ergonomic Restaurant Cart

National Kaohsiung University of Science and Technology, Taiwan

Wang and Wu’s clean-up cart makes things easier on the body for the worker with improved ergonomics and a transforming configuration that offers better maneuverability in tight spaces.

Jade Echard Transforms Oyster Shells Into Durable Material

Central Saint Martins, UK

By developing a practical method to transform a food waste material into something useful, Echard came up with a system that considers the environment, the supply chain and the economy.

Top 10 sustainable cabin designs of 2021

Living a sustainable and eco-conscious life in today’s crumbling world has become imperative! And, architects are trying their level best to create structures that reduce their carbon footprint and encourage a sustainable and clean lifestyle. Homes, offices, hotels – almost every type of structure is being pushed down the sustainable route. And, why shouldn’t cabins be included in this mix? We all enjoy a peaceful cabin retreat every now and then, and if we can do it in a sustainable style, then why not?! And, we’ve curated some of our favorite sustainable cabin designs that not only take care of Mother Earth but also take our breath away! From a net-zero energy cabin that brings the wilderness experience to city living to a 40sqm sustainable cabin built from repurposed materials – these sustainable cabins will have you vacationing in the most eco-friendly manner possible!

1. Weekend House Nové Hamry

The architectural CMF for the cabin has been inspired by the spruce trees that surround it, so there are a lot of shades of gray and dark green. Weekend House Nové Hamry features connection points for solar panels and vertical wind turbines to make it energy self-sufficient. The roof and most of the exterior are covered in the durable, anthracite-colored aluminum cladding. This resembles oiled black wood and adds to the minimal, modern, elegant aesthetic of the cabin. The area gets a lot of heavy snow so to manage the load, the angular design also features a steeply sloped roof. The structure is constructed from cross-laminated timber panels.

2. Hüga

Developed from the Danish word Hyggee, Hüga was conceptualized, designed, and built over a span of 24 months, during which Grandio’s team of designers were able to produce a 45 m2 residence with space for a bedroom, living room, bathroom, kitchen, and dining area. The final results are these hüga units that are built with reinforced concrete and designed for minimal maintenance as well as reducing your energy costs. These compact homes can withstand all climates and adverse conditions, including earthquakes, wildfires, and hurricanes. Hüga homes are also mobile and modular so much so that you can extend your house in plan in just one day. Weighing about 55-Tn, Hüga requires a team and machinery for transportation but can be placed according to the prospective resident’s preference.

3. System 00

Each cabin ‘system,’ comes prefabricated in a flat-pack layout that can be assembled either by amateur or professional builders depending on the model. System 00 is described as Backcountry’s “essentialist A-frame shelter.” Stocked with only the essentials, System 00 measures 10’x10’ and was designed to welcome living spaces such as a single bedroom with room for one sleeping bunk, a meditation studio for yoga, or an open space for working on art. Backcountry’s smallest cabin, System 00 was designed to be self-assembled by a team of four to five builders within a week. Requiring no heavy machinery, System 00 is the only cabin from Backcountry’s catalog that does not require a construction permit.

4. Gawthorne’s Hut

Gawthorne’s Hut is stationed on an expansive plot of Wilgowrah’s farmland, right beside a small, quaint pond. The tiny home was born out of Wilgowrah’s desire to introduce the possibilities of alternative income sources for farmworkers. Designed in a similar form to other farmland structures like hay sheds and outbuildings, Gawthorne’s Hut’s 30-degree roof hosts an array of north-facing solar panels to provide the farmhouse with internal and external power.

5. Hemmelig Room

Calling the bookworm’s oasis Hemmelig Room, or ‘secret room’ in Norwegian, Studio Padron built the entire tiny cabin from disused mature oak trees that were felled during the main home’s construction. From the outside, Hemmelig Room finds a geometric structure clad in blackened timber. Following the main home’s construction process, the felled oak trees were cut into large, rectangular log sections that were left to dry over several years before building Hemmelig Room.

6. City Cabin

Situated in one of Seattle’s most established residential areas is the ‘City Cabin’. Jim Olson, the co-founder of the acclaimed architecture studio Olson Kundig, designed this urban retreat for a longtime friend who absolutely adored his cabin in Puget Sound. Jim had been working on this cabin since he was 18 years old, and she insisted that it should be the inspiration behind her upcoming home. She also wanted to capture the unfettered and gorgeous forested feel that lingered within and around the home.”The client wanted to feel like she was living in the wilderness when, in fact, her home is on a regular-size urban neighborhood lot,” Jim said. And, City Cabin is a true reflection of that!

7. Canton House

Careful not to disrupt the area’s wooded landscape and to maintain the cabin’s initial off-grid aspirations, Marc Thorpe equipped each cabin hotel with a solar kit and roof to ensure the cabin has plenty of renewable energy available for power. Each solar kit comes with a 1800W solar generator to provide backup power for the four 100W 12V mono solar panels that line the cabins’ roofs. Inside, guests enjoy a minimal interior that’s lined and finished in plywood. Built as supplementary retreats for guests of the area’s main hotel, Tara Luanei, Canton House offers a respite in nature that’s unique to the Carpathian Mountains.

8. Ohariu

Ohariu was built by First Light Studio and Build Tiny from a client’s brief calling for, “a refined tramping lodge on wheels.” That’s code for hiking, for all us Americans. Since the tiny home would primarily be used for hiking trips and traveling throughout the outdoors, Ohariu was built to be adaptable and versatile above all else. Inside, the living spaces are described by the architects at First Light Studio as being, “more a large and very detailed piece of furniture than a traditional house build, the fit-out [focusing] on the things that are important and necessary.” Catering to the necessities and casual family pastimes, the tiny home is doused in modular and multifunctional design that’s surrounded by creamy poplar plywood walls and silvery fittings that add a touch of refinement to an otherwise bare interior.

9. The Nook

Brimming with artisanal goods and artwork of local craftsmen and artists, The Nook was designed to bring the handcrafted touch of the old world into the modern era. Described as a “collection of stories,” Belleme designed The Nook to link his personal history to the surrounding forest and architecture of the cabin. The tiny cabin is constructed from a collection of locally felled trees that Belleme memorized during a five-year stint spent in the Appalachian woods, during which he learned primitive building skills like creating a path of hand-split logs that leads to The Nook’s front entrance.

10. Kynttilä

This cabin is built on Lake Saimaa and is right on the border of lush woods and endless serene water. The prefabricated cabin only takes one day to be assembled. Helsinki-based architecture firm constructed Kynttilä from cross-laminated timber (CLT) with the exteriors featuring larch board cladding. CLT is a wonderfully eco-friendly construction material that offers high strength and structural simplicity for cost-effective buildings. It has a much lighter environmental footprint than concrete or steel. CLT is also quicker to install, reduces construction waste on-site, improves thermal performance, with light handling duties making it better for health and safety, and is versatile enough to be molded according to different designs.

The post Top 10 sustainable cabin designs of 2021 first appeared on Yanko Design.

6a Architects adds "glowing etched lantern" to community centre in Bloomsbury

Holborn House is a community centre in London by 6a Architects

UK studio 6a Architects has extended a gymnasium and multigenerational community centre in Bloomsbury, London, into a block called Holborn House that has a facade designed by artist Caragh Thuring.

Created for the Holborn Community Association (HCA), the new structure extends an existing basement gym with a bright two-storey space that provides additional community spaces and greater street presence for the organistaion.

Holborn House is located on a narrow alley
6a Architects designed the Holborn House community centre in London

“HCA has an extraordinary 100-year-old history,” said 6a Architects director Stephanie Macdonald.

“The club was a much-loved, word-of-mouth resource but invisible outside of the people who used it, hidden away in its basement gym off a narrow and unloved alleyway,” she told Dezeen.

“Our mission was for the new Holborn House to bring this quietly brilliant neighbourhood organisation into the public realm. It is visible for the first time, identifiable as an important and central part of the neighbourhood.”

The facade artwork was designed by artist Caragh Thuring
It is located on a narrow street

Responding to the narrow site, 6a Architects opened up the building’s frontage with a glass facade that reveals the exposed, steel and blockwork structure within, and reflects the brickwork opposite.

Etched onto the surface of this facade is a work by Thuring called Great Things Lie Ahead. It is comprised of a brick mortar line pattern filled with fragments of text drawn from stories and materials in HCA’s archives.

Stairwell at Holborn House
An artwork by Caragh Thuring covers the glass frontage of the building

“The facade evolved into a sort of glowing etched lantern, airy and transparent,” said Thuring.

“Emerald Street is such a narrow alleyway that you can’t step back to look at the building, so it became a sort of breathing physical entity rather than a flat surface with an image on it.”

The facade artwork was designed by artist Caragh Thuring
Floor-to-ceiling windows were added to the community centre

Behind this facade, the new two-storey structure contains studios, clubrooms, workspaces and a kitchen as well as changing rooms for the basement gymnasium.

All of the spaces have been designed with flexibility in mind, suitable “for a wedding as much as for two-year-olds soft play or a bunch of teenagers dancing or pensioners doing yoga,” explained Macdonald.

An area of the existing concrete ground slab was cut to insert an entrance ramp, and a new lift was inserted into the structure to make all of its floors fully accessible.

Focusing on creating a sense of “material legibility and spatial construction”, the new spaces were constructed using white steel ceiling trusses and white-painted blockwork.

Basement gymnasium at Holborn House
A large gymnasium is located on the basement level

“Material choices are a mix of practicality and transparent – what can be easily constructed and transported down a narrow Georgian alleyway,” Macdonald told Dezeen.

“It was important to leave the structure visible, as it is simply constructed and understandable to children to see how materials stack onto each other to make the spaces,” she continued.

Interior image of a corridor at Holborn House
Skylights were installed above the gymnasium

In the gym, a “lantern-like” roof of trusses and skylights sits above a frieze of fabric designed by Thuring that wraps around the space, woven with a brickwork pattern.

The colour scheme, also developed by Thurning, ties together the building, with the green colour used to highlight the staircase, lift doors and railings informed by Holborn’s history as a forest.

To further increase the visibility of the building on the narrow site, planters and a tree have been added outside creating a space for visitors to meet as well as gaze up at the glass facade.

London community centre
The interiors have a neutral palette

6a Architects was founded by Stephanie Macdonald and Tom Emerson in 2001.

Other recently completed projects include the revamp of a coastal house in Devon and a geometric silver extension to the MK Gallery in Milton Keynes.

The Photography is by Johan Dehlin.

The post 6a Architects adds “glowing etched lantern” to community centre in Bloomsbury appeared first on Dezeen.

The best Dezeen comments of 2021

Elon Musk unveils an updated masterplan for car brand Tesla

Plenty of design and architecture news got people talking in 2021. For our review of year, digital and engagement editor Karen Anderson picks out 10 stories where comments from Dezeen readers caught the eye.


Elon Musk
Photo is by Duncan Hull

Elon Musk is “the biggest architect of our time” says Jan Boelen

Design curator and educator Jan Boelen sparked debate by calling Tesla and SpaceX entrepreneur Elon Musk the world’s greatest living architect.

Boelen argued that the South African-born billionaire is thinking on a more ambitious scale than any other living figure and is reshaping the world through his businesses.

“Or maybe he’s a cook as he’s cooking up all these great ideas?” commented Zea Newland. “Or a composer since he’s bringing us the symphonies of the future? Musk is a brilliant entrepreneur and he pushes people to accomplish great things, which is awesome. Let’s just leave it at that and stop creating these cults around mortals.”

“Musk is a patron of the profession,” added JZ. “Of many professions. He’s leveraged amazing amounts of resources to see his vision through. And by recruiting good people. He’s not a Tesla or an Einstein or an Edison let alone a Corb, Mies or Wright. They knew how to roll up their shirt sleeves and get it done.”

Find out more about Boelen’s thoughts on Musk ›


Aerial view of forest

Planting trees “doesn’t make any sense” in the fight against climate change due to permanence concerns, say experts

Our story quoting experts who said planting trees “doesn’t make any sense” in the fight against climate change” triggered a furious reaction from readers.

Many of the specialists quoted claim afforestation is not a reliable enough method of long-term carbon sequestration since the trees need to be left growing for decades.

“Absolute garbage,” Rory wrote. “Trees have a massive potential for capturing carbon.”

Michael Wigle was more sympathetic: “Saying you are offsetting carbon by planting a tree is nonsense. That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t invest more time and effort into re-establishing true old-growth forests and greater biodiversity.”

Find out more about planting trees in the fight against climate change ›


Capitol Castle by Opposite Office

Opposite Office proposes turning US Capitol into “fortress to protect democracy”

Architecture studio Opposite Office caused controversy with a proposal for fortifying the US Capitol building in Washington DC.

Named Capitol Castle, the concept was created in reaction to the invasion of the building by Donald Trump supporters back in January following his defeat in the 2020 presidential election.

Readers weren’t keen. “A fortress around the Capitol is the exact opposite of democracy,” said S.P. “Terrible idea.”

Alfred Hitchcock agreed: “Ironic? If so, it’s really unfunny. Five people needlessly died there. It’s just self-promotional idiocy. It will probably have the opposite effect and create a backlash.”

Find out more about Capitol Castle ›


Police raid Antepavilion office in London
Image courtesy of Antepavilion

Footage of “sinister” police raid on Antepavilion building triggers anger ahead of tensegrity structure unveiling

Readers were horrified by footage showing more than 40 police officers storming an arts building and arresting the organisers of the annual Antepavilion architecture charity competition.

It is thought that police believed the canalside Hoxton Docks art building in east London was being used by environmental protest group Extinction Rebellion to prepare for protests.

“I didn’t realise architecture was so dangerous,” said Jolalala. “Perhaps it should be outlawed altogether? It is strange that they needed 52 officers to arrest one unarmed arts producer. They must be very afraid of us creative folk.”

Heywood Floyd was also annoyed: “Meanwhile stereotypical football hooligans overrun the gates at Wembley for the Euro final”.

Find out more about the police raid ›


Corten house by Barefoot Architects
Photo is by Anthony Coleman

Barefoot Architects tucks weathering steel house and courtyard behind old brick wall

Barefoot Architects built a Corten steel-clad house behind an existing brick wall in Bristol, England, sparking debate amongst commenters. The wall features graffiti and a rare built-in Edwardian post box.

“Amazed at the negative comments,” said JZ. “Highly urban, highly contextual, and constantly in flux if the owners continue to allow people to express themselves. Graffiti is an art form folks. As far as I’m concerned, these owners are patrons.”

Apsco Radiales disagreed: “Graffiti is vulgar and it’s vandalism. Why don’t you let some ‘artists’ deface the walls of your house if you think it gives it ‘character’?”

Find out more about the graffiti-covered house ›


Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal
Photo is by Laurent Chalet

Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal win Pritzker Architecture Prize 2021

When social housing architects Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal were named the 2021 winners of the Pritzker Architecture Prize, it catalysed conversation.

The founders of Lacaton & Vassal were awarded for their body of work that “reflects architecture’s democratic spirit” and their “commitment to a restorative architecture”.

Koba was pleased: “Excellent choice, an outstanding architectural team.”

Archi agreed: “I’m glad that the jury is moving away from high profile starchitects towards a statement that the deserving designers are those who are making a deep regional impact at a variety of scales, typologies, and budgets. Designers that elevate the ‘everyday’ are far more important than those only working on silver platter commissions.”

Find out more about the Pritzker Architecture Prize 2021 ›


O-Tower, infinity loop skyscraper by BIG in Hangzhou

BIG designs “infinity loop” skyscraper for OPPO in Hangzhou

Commenters were amused by Danish architecture studio BIG’s design for a research and development building in Hangzhou named the O-Tower.

Described by BIG as being infinity-loop shaped, the skyscraper, for Chinese smartphone manufacturer OPPO, was designed to “connect ground to sky in a continuous loop of collaboration”.

“Finally a women-inspired building,” said Indrė Butkutė. “Great!”

“It’s definitely not phallic,” added Sigmund. “Quite the opposite, actually.”

“I just love it! ” concluded Hotte. “First we had all the dildo towers, now we get vulvas! Equality is coming!”

Find out more about the O-Tower ›


The Line Saudi Arabia
Image courtesy of Neom

Saudi Arabia announces plans for a 100-mile, car-free linear city called The Line

Readers weren’t convinced by the crown prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman’s plans to build a 100-mile belt of zero-energy communities for a million people.

The linear city in Saudi Arabia would have no cars or streets and residents would live within a five-minute walk of essential facilities.

“Only a train would think that’s a cool city layout,” said Zea Newland.

“The idiotic idea of linear cities comes up probably every decade,” added Gudjon Thor Erlendsson. “It needs to be reiterated that this is a terrible idea. The transport length is extremely inefficient and this can be proven with simple modelling or mathematics. It looks cool from 10,000 feet up but it’s all form, no function.”

Find out more about The Line ›


Coso male contraceptive device by Rebecca Weiss

Rebecca Weiss designs ultrasound-powered male contraceptive device

Few stories divided readers more than German graduate Rebecca Weiss’ design for a male contraceptive device called Coso, which won a James Dyson Award.

Weiss’s device uses ultrasound waves to temporarily halt sperm regeneration. To use it, a person would fill the device with water up to the indicated mark, turn it on so it heats to operating temperature, and sit for a few minutes with their testicles dipped into it.

“It sounds to me like it requires men to put their balls in the microwave,” said Sim. “Not sure that doesn’t have long-term consequences for their health.”

“Yet we have been totally cool for women to have literal mechanical devices inserted into them, take hormone-manipulating drugs, have implants, or even in some cases injections…” replied Nimdoorquoi.

Find out more about Coso ›


Affirmation Tower by Adjaye Associates
Image courtesy of the Peebles Corporation

Adjaye Associates proposes inverted supertall skyscraper for New York

Our story about Adjaye Associates’ design for a supertall skyscraper in New York, which has a series of cantilevers to give it a dramatic form, attracted nearly 100 reader comments.

Named Affirmation Tower, the skyscraper was designed for a 1.2-acre vacant plot of land at 418 11th Avenue in Manhattan.

“Next step: horizontal skyscrapers,” remarked Stefano Parodi.

“This proposal appears greedy and its irrational structural approach is wilfully discombobulating and perturbing – top-heavy and as if about to topple,” wrote Ralph Kent. “People will naturally start to question if it’s client greed or the architect’s attention-seeking character that is the driving force.”

Find out more about Affirmation Tower ›


Read more Dezeen comments

Dezeen is the world’s most commented architecture and design magazine, receiving thousands of comments each month from readers. Keep up to date on the latest discussions on our comments page.

The post The best Dezeen comments of 2021 appeared first on Dezeen.

Claywood by Ayre Chamberlain Gaunt is a wheelchair-friendly house in disguise

Cantilevered first floor of Claywood house for a wheelchair user by Ayre Chamberlin Gaunt

British architecture studio Ayre Chamberlain Gaunt has completed a Hampshire house that aims to makes life easier for a wheelchair user, while not compromising on design quality.

Every room in Claywood is designed to be both accessible and functional for retiree Jo Wright, who became a wheelchair user after suffering a spinal cord injury.

Rather than creating a building that looks like a disabled person’s home, Ayre Chamberlain Gaunt has produced a family home that embraces contemporary architecture.

Cantilevered first floor of Claywood house for a wheelchair user by Ayre Chamberlin Gaunt
The two-storey house is located in Hampshire, England

The building has a sculptural form consisting of two volumes: a textural ground floor with pale walls of textured brick and a black timber-clad first floor that cantilevers over the ends of the block below.

“A key part of the brief was for us to design a house that didn’t appear to be obviously designed for wheelchairs,” studio co-founder Dominic Gaunt told Dezeen.

Claywood is home to Jo and husband David Wright, and also accommodates their three grown-up children.

Exterior of Claywood house for a wheelchair user by Ayre Chamberlin Gaunt
The house was built in the grounds of the owners’ previous home

The couple decided to build the house after realising their previous home couldn’t be adapted to meet their needs – there would always be areas out of bounds to Jo – and failing to find an appropriate property for sale.

Instead, they sectioned off a portion of their former home’s extensive grounds to create a new plot.

Brickwork and timber cladding of Claywood house for a wheelchair user by Ayre Chamberlin Gaunt
The house has a brick base and a timber-clad first floor

“Jo was adamant that she had to sleep upstairs on the same floor as her family,” Gaunt told Dezeen.

“It had pained her to be unable to see her children’s bedrooms for eight years, unable to go to them when they were unwell.”

Living spaces of Claywood house for a wheelchair user by Ayre Chamberlin Gaunt
The kitchen features two surface heights and a bespoke dining table

Organised over two storeys, the building’s layout is loosely organised into three zones.

On the ground floor, living spaces are clustered together at the south end of the building, with a glazed wall that allows dining to extend outside.

The north end accommodates specialist facilities including a swimming pool and a therapy room.

Hallway of Claywood house for a wheelchair user by Ayre Chamberlin Gaunt
Level thresholds feature throughout the house

The first floor is mainly for bedrooms; there are five in total, plus a small home office.

There’s also a separate annex located at the site’s entrance, which could be used by a carer in the future.

Bedroom in Claywood house for a wheelchair user by Ayre Chamberlin Gaunt
At times when Jo is bed-bound, she can still enjoy panoramic views of the landscape

Throughout, the house carefully integrates a number of accessible features such as level thresholds, extra-wide corridors, lift access and specialist furniture.

Much of the architecture is planned to work for both seated and standing positions.

Glazing throughout the house includes floor-to-ceiling and low windows, while the cantilevered main bedroom is designed to give Jo an uninterrupted view of the landscape at times when she is bed-bound.

“The master bedroom almost touches the tree canopy of the woodland beyond and gives a feeling of suspension, particularly when the sliding doors are opened,” said Gaunt.

Bathroom in Claywood house for a wheelchair user by Ayre Chamberlin Gaunt
Most accessible fittings blend into the design, although some specialist equipment was necessary

The same approach extends to furnishings and fittings, which were designed with help from an accessibility consultant.

The oven and washing machine are elevated so Jo can reach them, worktops are set at two different heights, a clothes drying rack is attached to a pulley system, and the dining table was custom designed at a non-standard height.

“Whilst the house incorporates a lot of specialist items and automation, much of the design was simply about ensuring things are in the right places and set at appropriate heights,” explained Gaunt.

Swimming pool with brick walls, blue tiles and a low window
The house includes a swimming pool with distinctive blue tiles

To help the architects understand the level of details required, Jo lent Ayre Chamberlain Gaunt one of her wheelchairs in the early stages of the project, which helped them to understand some of her daily frustrations.

According to Gaunt, the experience proved so eye-opening that the firm plans to take a more accessible approach to other projects in future.

Night view
The first-floor cantilevers out at both ends

“It’s been a really useful experience for us and we’re far more conscious of inclusive design than we used to be across our all work, irrespective of typology,” he said.

“It’s now very much at the forefront of our work and informs early design decisions.”

Other recent homes designed for accessibility include a House for Theo and Oskar in nearby Surrey, Gap Cove House in Massachusetts, USA, and Glass Trefoil House in Vermont, USA.

The photography is by Jim Stephenson.

The post Claywood by Ayre Chamberlain Gaunt is a wheelchair-friendly house in disguise appeared first on Dezeen.