Rozana Montiel designs Mexico City community centre as "recreational cultural oasis"

Rozana Montiel

A series of bridges, walkways and exterior staircases connect the various parts of this community centre in one of the most densely populated neighbourhoods in Mexico City by Rozana Montiel Estudio de Arquitectura.

The building occupies a sharp corner lot, where a plaza forms the entrance to the building. A series of columns mark the entrance to the space, while still leaving the area open.

Community centre
Rozana Montiel Estudio de Arquitectura designed the community centre

The Pedro Vélez community centre was developed by the Mexico City Government as part of their PILARES program, which stands for “Points of Innovation, Freedom, Art, Education and Knowledge”.

This initiative aims to create opportunities for citizens in underserved areas and was shortlisted in the civic building category of Dezeen Awards 2022.

Rozana Montiel courtyard
Walkways and bridges connect parts of the building

“The PILARES are strategically distributed in vulnerable areas of the city that lack cultural infrastructure,” explained Rozana Montiel Estudio de Arquitectura, the studio led by Rozana Montiel.

Its iteration of the PILARES program is located in the Presidentes de México neighbourhood, in the south of the city. According to the studio, it is one of the most densely populated parts of Mexico City.

Rozana Montiel community centre
The centre occupies a sharp corner lot

“Since this area lacks open spaces, sports facilities, parks, plazas and gardens, PILARES Pedro Vélez was designed as a public, inclusive and multifunctional space that replaces the idea of barriers for meeting platforms,” said the studio.

A covered passageway leads into the centre of the building, where a multi-purpose courtyard welcomes the community. This space is slightly sunken, allowing it to be used in a variety of different ways.

“The depression of a patio that functions as a forum also serves as a bench or as a meeting place,” explained Rozana Montiel’s studio.

Multi-purpose courtyard
Various activities take place in the rooms surrounding the courtyard

The rooms surrounding the courtyard contain a variety of usages, including workshops, a computer lab, a gym, a dance studio and meeting spaces.

There are also open-air areas containing vegetable gardens within the centre’s walls.

Rozana Montiel sunken courtyard
The courtyard is slightly sunken

“The architectural program distributes the forums and halls over two floors that are interconnected by a system of platforms, landscaped courtyards, bridges and corridors,” said the studio.

On the ground floor, one of the largest studios fronts the central courtyard, opening out towards it via tall, pivoting glass doors.

“[It] seeks to become a recreational cultural oasis that, despite being located on a very small site and in an area of insecurity, [has an] interior experience that gives the sensation of openness and diversity of spaces,” it added.

Rozana Montiel used a limited range of materials, including concrete and steel painted in a pinkish hue that matches the concrete.

The studio opted to use concrete in a variety of applications, including as a structural material, and as a system of screens that help ventilate the building naturally.

Concrete community centre
Rozana Montiel Estudio de Arquitectura used an abundance of concrete

The Mexico City government recently commissioned Team730 to redesign the entrance to the city’s iconic Chapultepec Zoo.

Rozana Montiel Estudio de Arquitectura has completed another public recreation project in the port of Veracruz that is formed by an oversized roof that covers a variety of sports fields and community spaces.

After the 2017 earthquake that hit the country, the studio took on pro-bono commissions to design homes for families affected by the disaster.

The photography is by Sandra Pereznieto.


Project credits:

Collaborators: Cristóbal Pliego, Adriana Rodríguez, Margherita Vegro, Arlette Plata
Client: Gobierno de la Ciudad de México (Mexico City Government) | Invited by PienZa Sostenible

The post Rozana Montiel designs Mexico City community centre as “recreational cultural oasis” appeared first on Dezeen.

Ridge Vase

Designed by Helsinki-based Studio Kaksikko, Muuto’s aptly named Ridge Vase is a tall, slender vessel wrapped in a refined ridged texture and featuring a subtle accent dent that prevents flowers within from shifting. The functional earthenware vase stands 19 inches tall, allowing it to emphasize blooms in floral presentations.

Link About It: This Week’s Picks

“Gay Christmas,” illuminated drones finishing monuments, a portable record player and more this week

NYC to Require Salary Ranges Be Included in Job Postings

Starting in November, a new NYC law will go into effect that requires companies with at least four employees to include the lowest and highest salaries for any job it posts. These incomes must accurately reflect what the company will be ready to pay prospective hires. Colorado made pay transparency mandatory earlier this year, and California and Washington are slated to follow suit in 2023. As past research—including one study in Denmark where this disclosure law is in effect—has shown, providing the salary for job openings critically helps narrow gender and racial income disparity. Additionally, the transparency will help job-seekers save time and equip them with the resources they need to negotiate for fairer pay. Learn more about the new mandate at The New York Times.

Image courtesy of Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters

Halloween’s Intrinsic Connection to Queerness

Throughout recent history—from the 1940s to the ’70s and ’80s—Halloween has been a vehicle for queer people to embrace who they are. Case in point: Greenwich Village Halloween Parade. In its first year in 1976, the parade drew 160 attendees who were predominately Black trans folk, drag queens and other people in the LGBTQ+ community. As a celebration of all things different and taboo, the holiday made breaking homophobic laws (like not being allowed to dress in drag) not only acceptable but expected. Because of this, Halloween often acted as an awakening for drag queens. The event, writes journalist Abby Moss for i-D, is “often called ‘gay Christmas,’” because it invites liberation with friends and chosen family as opposed to the festive season which could include interacting with homophobic family members. “For people who don’t fit into traditional heteronormative roles, Christmas can [be] exhausting at best; at worst, triggering. Halloween, on the other hand, remains a queer playground,” continues Moss. Read more at i-D.

Image courtesy of Walter Leporati/Getty Images

The Scramble to Purchase Items From Joan Didion’s Estate

Upstate New York’s Stair Galleries has been inundated with inquiries about items from Joan Didion’s upcoming estate auction. “An American Icon: Property From the Collection of Joan Didion” will include furniture, home decor, books, artwork, journals, portraits and all kinds of ephemera from the various Californian homes and Upper East Side apartment she shared with her husband, John Gregory Dunne. The most affordable lots will start at $100, while the most expensive is expected to be a Richard Diebenkorn lithograph, estimated to sell for around $70,000. Lisa Thomas, director of Stair Galleries’ fine arts department says, “Everything in the sale helps to paint the picture of how she lived in her private space.” The auction catalogue was released today, in accordance with an exhibition running from 31 October to 15 November—though the auction itself will take place in Hudson, NY on 4 November. Proceeds from the auction will benefit the Sacramento Historical Society, as well as Parkinson’s research and patient care at Columbia University. Read more at The New York Times.

Image courtesy of Stair Galleries

Dutch Artist Duo Drift Completes Landmarks with Illuminated Drones

Employing a network of illuminated drones, Dutch artist duo DRIFT (aka Lonneke Gordijn and Ralph Nauta) restores—or, sometimes, completes—international architectural landmarks like Barcelona’s Sagrada Familia and Rome’s Colosseum. “To finish them with light emphasizes the potential positive power of our hi-tech developments in relation to the slow but beautiful building methods of the past,” Nauta tells Artnet News. DRIFAT partnered with 64 multi-disciplinary specialists, including some from Drone Stories and Nova Skystories. In developing this artistic expression, they were also able to create a corresponding practice that assists architects in visualizing how their planned buildings will impact a skyline. Read more about this intersection of art and architecture at Artnet News.

Image courtesy of DRIFT

Free Anti-Overdose Kits For NYC Bars and Clubs

The New York City Council recently approved a law that requires the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to create a Nightlife Opioid Antagonist Program. The program will give bars and clubs free access to anti-overdose kits that include the medicine Narcan. In addition, the bill offers free training to teach bartenders and employees how to assist those in need. Already, fentanyl-testing strips and Narcan have been stocked at LES pizzeria Scarr’s and cocktail bar Las’ Lap, Ridgewood’s Nowadays and other locations, thanks to activists who have long been advocating for the inclusion of these life-saving resources. The new bill will help broaden and bolster these efforts to reduce harm. Learn more at Thrillist.

Image courtesy of Marianna Massey/DigitalVision/Getty Images

Australian Agency Solid Lines Will Represent First Nations Creatives

In consultation with First Nations creatives, Australian creative agency Jacky Winter Group is developing a company—called Solid Lines—that will solely represent Aboriginal and Torres Strait artists. Most importantly, Solid Lines will ultimately be Indigenous-owned, helmed and controlled. Artist and business-owner Emrhan Tjapanangka Sultan (who comes from the Western Arrarnta and Luritja people of the Western Desert, as well as the Kokatha in South Australia) is leading the program, which is currently an “incubator project” that’s being supported by the Jacky Winter Group. Sultan says, “Through supportive representation, acknowledgement and protection of Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property and negotiation of appropriate fees for our talent, we aim to generate beneficial partnerships and culturally safe creative opportunities within industries which have often been ignorant of or refused to engage with First Nations ways of working.” Read more at It’s Nice That.

Image courtesy of Solid Lines

Audio-Technica Revives Retro Record Player Design

To celebrate Audio-Technica’s 60th anniversary, the heritage equipment brand is releasing an updated, limited edition version of their portable record player that debuted in 1983, the Mister Disc (though, known as the Sound Burger in some markets). On the re-release, gone is the slot for three C batteries as power now comes by way of an internal USB-C-rechargeable battery. Fortunately, the vinyl player comes equipped with a 3.5mm output jack and Bluetooth, too. Read more at Core77, where you can also scope out photos of the original Sound Burger.

Image courtesy of Audio-Technica

Link About It is our filtered look at the web, shared daily in Link and on social media, and rounded up every Saturday morning. Hero image courtesy of Stair Galleries

Top 10 products to create the ultimate bedroom for homebodies

Our bedroom is our haven, our safe space, to which we rush after a bad day at work, or simply a bad day in general! I love cozying up in my bed, snacking, and watching some Netflix, with my favorite PJs on! So, making my bedroom as comfortable as possible is a major priority for me. And one way of doing this is by filling it up with innovative designs, that just help make our lives easier and more comfortable. Hence, we’ve curated a collection of products that work perfectly for your bedroom! From a smart bed that comes with a 70-inch retractable screen to a ‘cuddle cave’ for you to snuggle into, these designs will add a whole lot of value to your bedroom, and make it whole. You won’t feel like leaving your bedroom at all, once these products enter it.

1. The Air-Shape Lamp

It’s not difficult to deduce the inspiration for this work of art that’s also meant to be a design for an actual lamp. Many of us would have had fond memories of blowing bubbles through circular devices, sometimes screaming in glee as each ephemeral sphere floated and then popped. There is something otherworldly about bubbles as they display the different colors of the rainbow on their translucent surfaces

Why is it noteworthy?

It is this emotion that the Air-Shape concept design tries to capture in an almost ethereal manner. It’s as if the bubble is frozen in time, stuck at the moment of its birth when it wavers and trembles against gentle winds until it takes its final spherical shape.

What we like

  • Has an element of uncertainty and fragility that also sends a message of potential and birthing
  • The Air-Shape lamp can be hung in different ways

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

2. BOOF

To elevate the pleasure of reading to a state when a book itself is the source of light, BOOF deserves a mention! Shaped like a house, the reading lamp basically comes on a metallic disk, but the fun is added when you put a book on top of its roof. BOOF, the lamp lights up, embodying the appearance of a house lit during the night.

Why is it noteworthy?

The subtle light on the window and the ground floor of the house light up when the book is placed on top. Here, the triangular roof serves as a natural bookmark for the book you place on it. The light is soft and inspiring which will allow you to focus on the handwriting you’re flipping through in the pitch-dark ambiance of your room.

What we like

  • Merges with the bedroom decor

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

3. The +CLOCK

Snagging the coveted Red Dot Design Concept Award in the Best of Best category, the +CLOCK is an automatic pill organizer and dispenser that functions like a clock but distributes pills at the time set by the user.

Why is it noteworthy?

The +CLOCK isn’t merely a clock. It’s more of a habit-building device that also happens to tell the time, hence the name +CLOCK for the fact that it’s also a clock. The gizmo sits on any bedside table and comes with an appearance comparable to the Tmall Genie Queen smart mirror. Underneath its large clock face sits a carousel featuring 28 slots for daily meds.

What we like

  • You can input medicines based on days or the time of the day, with the ability to fill up to 28 slots
  • Helps you build a habit to take your medicines

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

4. MAGEPAN

MAGEPAN is a concept for a small box that frees that socket from those limitations. It’s small enough to pack inside your bag or even stashed in your pocket. And while it was designed specifically with the bedside socket in mind, its design lends itself well to other purposes.

Why is it noteworthy?

In a nutshell, it’s a magnetic wireless charger whose body plugs directly into a power socket, removing the middle man of a long cord. While that might not make sense in normal cases where such sockets are far away, hotel rooms are filled with such facilities that don’t get used that much because of their location.

What we like

  • The charger has a handy night light that will keep you from groping in the dark

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

5. The Hariana Tech Smart Ultimate Bed

The Hariana Tech Smart Ultimate Bed has an integrated reclining massage chair with a remote, a built-in Bluetooth speaker, a bookshelf, a reading lamp, an air cleaning system, an area to plug in and charges your devices, a foot-stool that opens up for extra storage, and a pop-up desk for the ultimate WFH setup, Netflix marathon or cozy reading hours. The sound system also features an SD card slot, an auxiliary port, and a USB port. Another interesting detail about the Hariana bed is a password-protected safe box for you to store your most precious belongings – for me, it would be my passport and snacks!

Why is it noteworthy?

You know how we always have to get up to get stuff before we settle into relaxation mode? Well, this bed was designed to have everything you will need to relax within your bed frame. It’s the ultimate bed to unwind after a long day at work!

What we like

  • Features a password-protected safe box
  • Sufficient storage spaces integrated into the bed

What we dislike

  • Hefty price tag
  • Unsuitable for homes with space constraints

6. The Tablecloth Side Table

This side table looks like a modern sculpture that captures the gentle curves and surfaces a tablecloth in the middle of falling into place.

Why is it noteworthy?

Tables are meant to be stable to be useful, but the Tablecloth side table seems to provoke contrasting images of stability and fluidity. While most tables have four legs to have a symmetrical balance, the Tablecloth only has three. Its metallic surface gives it a rigid appearance, but its curved edges almost give the illusion of movement. Even the shape of the legs, which taper sharply to the feet, are ones you’d associate with dynamism or even imbalance.

What we like

  • Depicts a piece of fallen fabric
  • A unique take on an ordinary piece of furniture

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

7. The Bed Hanger Rack

This interesting concept brought to light is the Bed Hanger Rack, which as the name suggests, is an extension of the open cupboard concept. It attaches to the bed and offers space to hang clothes and racks to stuff smartphones, remotes, game consoles, and other accessories you’d want handy while in bed.

Why is it noteworthy?

In addition to the hanging storage and shelving extensions, the hanger rack gets slightly more interesting with its assembly: possible to match the layout of your room. The rack can be installed alongside the shorter front or the longer side of the bed; so that it can attach without having to change the placement of the existing bed. The effective usage of the space above the bed permits you to effortlessly store everyday wear on hangers around the bed; so you skip the trouble of folding and sorting the clothes in a regular cupboard.

What we like

  • Makes the whole process of clothes management efficient and convenient

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

8. Floof

Initially designed for our furred friends, the designer has created two human-sized Floofs for the perfect at-home getaway, even for just a few hours. Simply dive in, alone or with a friend or a snack, and curl up into a hopefully comfortable position while the day is away.

Why is it noteworthy?

Most of us had something like a fortress of solitude when we were kids, whether they were made from stacked boxes, piles of pillows, or sheets held up by ropes. As we grew older, we gave up those sacred places in exchange for a simple blanket and pillow. There is no reason not to have that comfortable and comforting space again, no matter how young or old you are. That’s the very tempting proposition that these “cuddle caves” are making if you don’t mind looking like human inari sushi in the process. Then again, you’re trying to escape from the world’s judging eyes anyway.

What we like

  • Provides a ‘getaway’ within your own home
  • Made to vegan specifications so that it can be used by any and all people

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

9. Amazon Halo Rise

This is the all-new Halo Rise sleep tracker and bedside lamp that comes just at a time when wearable sleep trackers are gaining traction in the wellness market.

Why is it noteworthy?

The USP here is the fact that the Halo Rise tracks your slumber without the need to wear a smartwatch or fitness band. This will pique the interest of insomniacs who don’t like wearing any gadget overnight.

What we like

  • Every micro-movement is detected, along with the patterns in breathing to ascertain the sleep score

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

10. The Moonsetter

Moonsetter

The Moonsetter enters the scene as a ray of sunshine…err, moonlight to your room. It is like having the moonlight coming in through your window or the gaps in the curtains. You do not need too much bright light anyway—just some ambient lighting to set the mood for a good night’s rest.

Why is it noteworthy?

The design of the lamp is timeless with its simple graphic form. This modern metal floor lamp appears like a sculpture or a piece of art. It can easily be the center of attention in any room with a unique configuration. It combines the basic shapes—circle, cylinder, and square. The floor lamp features its own axis where a disc rotates 360 degrees. The disc features a reflective side and white on the other. It gives an illusion of soft and diffused moonlight at times while one side reflects direct light.

What we like

  • Allows you to customize the reflection of the LED source
  • The LED light is submerged in the frame, giving off a beautiful effect

What we dislike

  • No complaints!

The post Top 10 products to create the ultimate bedroom for homebodies first appeared on Yanko Design.

Studio Weave adds wood-lined community space to east London library

Interior of Lea Bridge Library by Studio Weave

Architecture practice Studio Weave has added a wood-lined community centre to Lea Bridge Library in east London, with a red-concrete colonnade that references the original grade II-listed redbrick building.

Built in 1905 in the Edwardian style, Lea Bridge Library in Waltham Forest backs onto a large green space called Friendship Gardens, which the new community wing overlooks through a fully-glazed facade.

Exterior of Lea Bridge Library in London
Studio Weave has created a collonaded community centre in east London

Using the existing garden wall as a spine, London practice Studio Weave inserted the narrow, pavilion-like extension along its western edge.

According to the studio, this was an effort to minimise its impact on the original library building and embrace the garden as part of a new “civic heart” for the area.

Victorian facade of Lea Bridge Library in London
It has been added to the grade II-listed Lea Bridge Library

“We envisaged the extension as a hybridised public space; a new town hall with wider opportunities for citizens to participate more fully in public life,” said Studio Weave’s director Je Ahn.

“Hybridised public spaces combine and maximise collective resources, and are unexpected engine rooms for community connection,” he continued.

Red-hued concrete colonnade
It has a red-concrete colonnade

While accessible through a refurbished entrance and cafe in the existing library, the community centre’s position on the site also allows it to act independently with two entrances created in the garden’s eastern and southern edges.

It has a long wood-lined interior, designed to be adapted for a range of uses, ranging from quiet reading rooms to activity spaces for community groups.

Wood-lined interior of London community centre by Studio Weave
The interior is lined with wood

Supported by the existing garden wall, the building features beams of laminated veneer lumber (LVL) that cantilever out towards the garden, along with large skylights and a fully-glazed eastern wall that “invites the outdoors in”.

Responding to the root systems of the garden’s mature trees, the pavilion steps up and features a semicircular cut-out in its centre. Here, a concealed pivoting timber door allows for the space to be subdivided.

Between the glazed facade and the slim concrete colonnade, Studio Weave has inserted a wooden deck and a small paved patio that provide access around the building and offer space for taking in the garden.

Salvaged wood from trees that have been felled across London lines the interior floors, walls and ceilings, providing a variety of colours and textures. This includes fluted timber joinery on the walls in between areas of built-in seating.

Event at Lea Bridge Library community centre
Skylights sit between beams of laminated veneer lumber

Local furniture maker Sebastian Cox also used waste timber to create the Lea Bridge Library centre’s furniture, including chairs, tables and sofas that echo the interior finishes.

“Since completing the new library extension, as locals we have witnessed firsthand the impact it has had on the community,” said Ahn.

“The extension is always brimming with occupants; children’s parties on weekends, students, mother’s groups, and workshop attendees each week.”

Studio Weave-designed community centre interior
It can be accessed through the refurbished entrance and cafe

Founded in 2006 by Ahn, Studio Weave is a London studio that works on a diverse range of public and private projects.

Its previous works include the addition of a timber artist’s retreat to a home in Devon and an arched greenhouse for the 2020 London Design Festival that drew attention to the UK’s rising temperatures.

The photography is by Jim Stephenson.


Project credits:

Architect: Studio Weave
Client: London Borough of Waltham Forest
Structural engineer: Timberwright
M&E consultant: NPS London
Quantity surveyor: NPS London
Landscape consultant: Studio Weave
Furniture and carpentry: Sebastian Cox

The post Studio Weave adds wood-lined community space to east London library appeared first on Dezeen.

Ten bedrooms with wardrobes that are disguised as walls

Built-in wardrobe wall

This lookbook rounds up 10 bedrooms where architects have designed discreet built-in wardrobes to conceal clothing and clutter, creating the illusion of a seamless wall.

Built-in wardrobe walls are an efficient way to supersize storage and utilise every centimetre of space in a bedroom, unlike freestanding units that often leave dead spaces around their edges.

When finished with a minimalist design, they can also blend into the background, helping to create spacious and serene interiors that are suitable for sleep.

This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring interiors with arched openingsbathrooms with statement sinks and living rooms in Victorian and Georgian-era homes.


Built in wardrobes at Function Walls apartment, designed by Lookofsky Architecture
Photo is by Mattias Hamrén with styling by Hanna Tunemar

Function Walls, Sweden, by Lookofsky Architecture

This wall of storage surrounds the doorway of a bedroom in the Function Walls apartment, which was recently renovated by Lookofsky Architecture in Stockholm.

The pale grey units contain a mix of different-sized cupboards without handles, forming a neutral backdrop to bright yellow bedroom furnishings including a 1970s IKEA floor lamp.

Find out more about Function Walls ›


Wooden wardrobe wall in Matthew Giles Architects London townhouse
Photo is by Lorenzo Zandri

Wakehurst Road, UK, by Matthew Giles Architects

Matthew Giles Architects designed a series of white-oak storage units for the Wakehurst Road house in London, including this pared-back wardrobe wall in one of the bedrooms.

Its deliberately simple design ties in with a calming colour and material palette of stone, concrete and brick that runs through the updated Victorian residence.

Find out more about Wakehurst Road ›


Bedroom of House at the Pond, Austria, by Hammerschmid Pachl Seebacher Architekten

House at the Pond, Austria, by Hammerschmid Pachl Seebacher Architekten

The compact bedroom in House at the Pond is lined with wooden walls – two of which double as storage.

Disguising the wardrobes helps keeps the interior details to a minimum, which in turn retains focus on the large window and prevents the small space from feeling cramped.

Find out more about House at the Pond ›


Minimalist Methodist church bedroom by West Architecture
Photo is by Ben Blossom

Bavaria Road Studio, UK, by West Architecture

Plywood panels are used as fronts for both the tall wardrobes and the doorway of the bedroom at Bavaria Road Studio, helping them to blend in with the rest of the space, which is lined with the same material.

According to designer West Architecture, the goal was for them to “read as a single wall of flush panelling, effectively disappearing and allowing the room to be read as one seamless, minimalist environment”.

Find out more about Bavaria Road Studio ›


Bedroom of Maison Pour Dodo by Studio Merlin
Photo is by Richard Chivers

Maison Pour Dodo, UK, by Studio Merlin

Designed to minimise clutter and visual noise, these understated built-in wardrobes are part of the “spectrum of storage” that Studio Merlin created for this flat in London.

The seven wardrobe doors blend in seamlessly with the grey-hued walls of the main bedroom, while their wooden knobs complement the pale Douglas fir floorboards that run throughout.

Find out more about Maison Pour Dodo ›


Bedroom in Xerolithi house by Sinas Architects
Photo is by Yiorgos Kordakis with styling by Anestis Michalis

Xerolithi, Greece, by Sinas Architects

White grooved doors line the built-in wardrobe wall in this bedroom, which Sinas Architects created at the Xerolithi house on the Greek island of Serifos.

Aligned with a door to an ensuite bathroom, the wardrobes create a unpretentious backdrop to the space, drawing the occupant’s attention to the uninterrupted view of the sea outside.

Find out more about Xerolithi ›


Wardrobes in Narford Road house by Emil Eve Architects
Photo is by Mariell Lind Hansen

Narford Road, UK, by Emil Eve Architects

Emil Eve Architects lined the nook of this monochromatic loft extension in London with bespoke wardrobes, which appear to extend up to meet a skylight overhead.

Finished with wooden handles with brass caps, the units are complemented by a matching window seat with two in-built drawers and pale wood floors that help them blend into the background.

Find out more about Narford Road ›


Bedroom of Mountain View Double Gable Eichler Remodel by Klopf Architecture
Photo is by Mariko Reed

Mountain View Double Gable Eichler Remodel, USA, by Klopf Architecture

A pair of built-in wardrobes have been incorporated within a walnut wall unit in a bedroom of this 1960s residence in Silicon Valley, recently remodelled by Klopf Architecture.

The same wood has been used for the headboard and plinth for the bed, helping them to read as a single piece. The wardrobes are only distinguishable by two subtle leather handles placed on the front of each one.

Find out more about Mountain View Double Gable Eichler Remodel ›


Wardrobe wall in Kennington House loft extension
Photo is by Andy Stagg

Kennington House, UK, by R2 Studio

These bedroom cupboards follow the sloped edge of a giant corner window, introduced to Kennington House in London as part of a renovation and loft extension project.

Designed by R2 Studio as one of many storage facilities for the house, they help residents keep the room clutter free and have white-coloured fronts that are disguised as part of the wall.

Find out more about Kennington House ›


Wellington Street Mixed Use wardrobe wall by Matt Gibson Architecture and Design
Photo is courtesy of Matt Gibson

Wellington St Mixed Use, Australia, by Matt Gibson

Drawers and full-height wardrobes are incorporated into this floor-to-ceiling storage unit, which runs the length of a bedroom in the Wellington St Mixed Use house in Melbourne.

Its design means it doubles as a tactile wooden wall for the room, which forms a part of a large multi-generational home by architect Matt Gibson. The other bedrooms have similar wardrobe layouts, ensuring plenty of storage for inhabitants.

Find out more about Wellington St Mixed Use ›

This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring interiors with arched openingsbathrooms with statement sinks and living rooms in Victorian and Georgian-era homes.

The post Ten bedrooms with wardrobes that are disguised as walls appeared first on Dezeen.

This week we revealed an angular retreat designed by Norman Foster

Foster Retreat

This week on Dezeen, we showcased a wood-and-steel retreat by architect Norman Foster in Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, which he created as a holiday home for his friends and those of the Norman Foster Foundation.

Pritzker Architecture Prize-winner Foster built the mono-pitch-roofed building, called Foster Retreat, opposite his US home. It features a design informed by North American barn structures.

Both angled steel and timber beams were incorporated into the architecture, as well as smooth timber louvres that enclose an outdoor patio space. The architect also dressed the home with furniture he designed for Japanese furniture brand Karimoku.

“Wood was the obvious choice not only for reasons of sustainability but also as a direct reference to the traditional buildings that characterise the island,” explained the architect.

Siza watch
Álvaro Siza designed a watch collection with Cauny

In design news, another Pritzker Architecture-Prize winner, Álvaro Siza, collaborated with Swiss brand Cauny to create a sleek collection of four watches available in two colourways.

The design features super-slim casing and a steel bezel with a sapphire glass watch face and a leather strap. Siza described the project as “a beautiful and stimulating exercise”.

Buffalo Bills stadium
Populous has planned a soccer stadium for American team Buffalo Bills

Also on Dezeen this week, US studio Populous revealed its design for a stadium for the American football team Buffalo Bills, which takes cues from the city of Buffalo’s architecture.

Set to open in 2026, the stadium’s design is informed by existing local venues, including former outdoor soccer stadium the Rockpile and Kleinhans Music Hall.

Populous also completed the Geodis Park stadium in Nashville for the team Nashville SC together with Hastings studio, which the firms have hailed as the USA’s largest soccer stadium to date.

The Line 170-kilometre-long skyscraper in Saudi Arabia
Adam Greenfield criticised Saudi Arabia’s Neom project

Saudi Arabia’s architecture megaproject Neom prompted further discussion amongst commenters after writer Adam Greenfield’s opinion piece addressed to those working on the project, which includes 170-kilometre city The Line.

“[Neom] has already brought death, and in carving a line through a living, breathing community, all of those complicit in its design and construction are already destroyers of worlds,” warned Greenfield.

COP27 calculator
Priti Parikh worked with her team to develop the calculator

In other news, Bartlett professor Priti Parikh has worked with a team of University College London researchers to develop an open-source carbon calculator ahead of climate conference COP27, which starts this Sunday.

A free and accessible spreadsheet, the calculator is designed to help those travelling from the UK to Egypt, the location of this year’s conference, to assess, reduce and offset the carbon footprint of their journey.

Photograph of cabin in snow
Mjölk Architekti has renovated an 130-year-old cabin in the Czech Republic

This week, popular project stories on Dezeen included Mjölk Architekti’s renovation of a 130-year-old cabin in the Czech Republic with a “glittering glass extension”, the transformation of a former call centre into a factory and headquarters for lighting company RBW and an exhibition of experimental housing prototypes at Arkansas’ Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.

Our most recent lookbooks showcased bathrooms with statement sinks and contemporary living rooms in Georgian and Victorian homes.

This week on Dezeen

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The post This week we revealed an angular retreat designed by Norman Foster appeared first on Dezeen.

Mobile office spaces in Japan to integrate with surroundings

When you think of co-working spaces, you see either stark, minimalist interiors or more Google-like fun spaces if you’re more into having creative energy around you. But what if you could work in a space that is actually connected to your community and environment and brings nature to you (if that’s what actually surrounds you). And what if it’s the kind of office that you don’t mind actually temporarily living comfortably in that space?

Designer: Kengo Kuma

The Kuma Mobile Offices or KuMo Offices are satellite co-working spaces to be built around various places in Japan. These are not just for the employees of the architectural firm Kengo Kuma but can also be used by other people looking for temporary workspaces if they apply for membership. The first satellite office that they created is in Higashikawa, a city in the Hokkaido area. The place is known for wood production and has several furniture factories, some of which they collaborated with to create these offices.

What makes them different is that these are wooden workspaces in keeping with the environment where they are standing. The materials that they used to build the cluster of three units are wood from Hokkaido, including the exterior walls and some of the interior elements. Each unit has a kitchen, restrooms, living area, and of course since this is an office, a meeting room. Each building can fit around 12 people and it is connected to the existing city street. The offices will of course be interconnected as well.

One of the pieces of furniture they built in the office serves as a shelf and a work area and it is actually integrated into the building. This is part of how they designed the workspaces to be integrated into their environment, seamlessly blending into the wooded surroundings of the city. The KuMo Offices are also connected to the municipal library adjacent to it. They are planning to create more spaces like this in other places in Japan so we’ll see how they can integrate it into their respective environments as well.

The post Mobile office spaces in Japan to integrate with surroundings first appeared on Yanko Design.

haoshi’s Crinkle Clock is a minimalist wall-clock that tells the time through light, shadow, and texture

With no markings and with hands that are exactly the same color as the clock’s body, the only way the Crinkle Paper X CLOCK tells the time is by using dramatic lighting. The timepiece comes with an aggressively textured body looking almost like crushed paper, atop which sit pristine, flat-surface hands. To tell the time, all you have to do is look for the flat surface against the crinkled crushed one. Boasting of an experience unlike any other, the Crinkle Paper X CLOCK is best kept in a place that receives dramatic light, for the most rewarding time-telling experience!

Designer: haoshi design

There’s an elegance to the Crinkle Paper X CLOCK’s design that makes it almost unintuitive to use. Most clocks try to present the time in a way that’s easier to read, but the Crinkle Paper X CLOCK does no such thing. Instead, it actively makes you spend more time trying to figure out the time. You’re forced to stare at the clock for a little longer than necessary, and as a result, you end up admiring its details, appreciating the texture, and the contrast the texture brings.

The clock’s white-on-white design is minimalism at its best, although this is the kind of minimalism that directly clashes with utility. It isn’t possible to read the time under quite a few scenarios, and chances are you’ll find yourself walking over to the clock to get a clearer view… but therein lies the Crinkle Paper X Clock’s beauty. It forces you to stop and take stock of your life, to take an extra few seconds and breathe instead of rushing through the day.

The wall clock comes with a body crafted from resin and paper pulp. This combination of materials is what gives the Crinkle Paper X Clock its unique translucency that feels extremely paper-like. Two flat-cut plastic hands sit on top, rotating to tell the time against the highly textured background.

This isn’t Taiwan-based haoshi design‘s first foray into the timepiece area. Known for its quirky designs that make use of animals, haoshi’s worked on wonderful wall clocks that incorporate birds into them, and even goldfish!

The post haoshi’s Crinkle Clock is a minimalist wall-clock that tells the time through light, shadow, and texture first appeared on Yanko Design.

Halfgrid transport concept to use suspended pods and artificial intelligence

I live in a place where road traffic congestion has gotten so bad that you have to leave hours early to get to an appointment that is just in the next town or city. I sometimes suspect the government has given up on finding solutions to mobility and so we will eventually have to depend on private companies that will come up with experimental solutions to getting people and goods around the city more easily.

Designer: Half Company

The Bulgaria-based designers for the transport design studio is proposing a city-wide transport system called Halfgrid. It involves individual person-sized capsules moving around the city through suspended cables and powered by artificial intelligence. Basically, you can get a person and whatever goods you want to be transported to your destination on a separate layer above ground in order to not add to the continuous road congestion on the ground.

The system uses static cables and the pods are the ones that will be moving along the tensioned steel ropeways. This also means that each of the capsule units can travel to different destinations unlike with the traditional cable car system where everyone still has to get into a vehicle together. Each pod will be able to hold just one person or a certain-sized package and can be programmed to get to where they need to get to.

Passengers will be able to program everything through the app and choose a pickup point and a destination. Basically, it’s like booking an Uber except you’ll be traveling in a capsule above ground. The same system can be used for goods deliveries. The entire system is also designed to be “practically silent” so it will not add to the noise pollution that usually comes with road congestion.

I’m not that fond of heights so this is something that might not work for someone like me. But it would really be interesting to see how such a system can work in a city like where I live in. Now the next step is to create a prototype and find a partner and a pilot city that would be willing to try the Halfgrid out.

The post Halfgrid transport concept to use suspended pods and artificial intelligence first appeared on Yanko Design.