Michael Hsu converts 1930s Austin church into spacious design office

Argodesign office

US studio Michael Hsu Office of Architecture has adapted a former church in Austin, Texas into an open office that maintains the original gabled form and materials.

Originally built in 1930, the church was converted into a 19,600-square foot (1,820 metre) flagship studio for Argodesign, a global product design office.

argodesign office in a converted church
Michael Hsu Office of Architecture adapted a former church in Austin

Michael Hsu Office of Architecture preserved the existing L-shaped footprint, roof structure and exterior white brick while opening the facade with steel and glass to provide natural daylighting for the office.

A cantilevered addition juts out from the north side of the building to create a covered entry, and the eaves of the roof have been lifted for continuous clerestory windows that complement the fully glazed gabled ends.

Covered entryway of argodesign office in Texas
A cantilevered addition creates a covered entry

“We thoughtfully designed the office to preserve the church’s character and to give argodesign room to invent,” said founding principal Michael Hsu.

“There are a range of collaborative and private spaces to accommodate different working styles and projects.”

argodesign office by Michael Hsu Office of Architecture
There is a range of collaborative, lounge and workspaces

On the interior, the existing wood trusses have been upgraded to hybrid wood and steel scissor trusses that extend beneath a linear skylight.

“The structure is exposed, and the materials and framework perform while also operating as the finish,” the studio said.

Raw materials in the office interior of argodesign
The interiors are characterised by raw materials

The raw materials – exposed structural steel, pine framing, white oak wall cladding, and acoustic felt surfaces – give the interiors a modest, natural feeling that flows between the three levels.

“The studio is open and varied, based on an atomic theory of design space, with a collection of areas that encourage informal group meetings and interactions, as well as dedicated spaces where teams congregate and collaborate,” the studio said.

argodesign office by Michael Hsu Office of Architecture
A lounge space and a versatile kitchen on the main floor

A large entry courtyard serves as an outdoor living room that connects to the main level and sits above a semi-underground lower level with training spaces, conference rooms and bike storage.

The original church altar still serves as a focal point, but now functions as a stepped presentation platform with a custom, arched steel-framed window.

Previously stained glass circular window
The circular window was originally stained glass

“The circular window was originally a stained glass window,” the studio said. “We chose to preserve that element’s shape as a homage to the previous use.”

The window is on axis with a semi-translucent metal mesh staircase that leads to the top level, which holds open desk space, communal tables and private conference rooms.

A dynamic stacking scrum wall – consisting of three movable whiteboards on a ceiling high track – can be opened for collaboration or stacked to connect both halves of the room.

“We were intent on this studio being as flexible and livable as it is beautiful,” said Sonia Prusaitis, the general manager of Argodesign Austin.

“The movable partitions and minimal private offices allow us to reconfigure the space to suit us as our team grows and our needs change.”

argodesign office by Michael Hsu Office of Architecture
A back courtyard features stone terraces

The interior spaces are oriented outwards, including the cantilevered library lounge that looks towards downtown Austin, a terraced patio with views of South Congress Avenue and a collaborative maker space that opens to the back courtyard with stone terraces.

The office for Argodesign is not the first church conversion Michael Hsu has completed. The studio recently transformed a 1940s brick church into an Asian smokehouse in Houston.

The studio also recently completed an outpost for the restaurant Uchi in Houston.

The photography is by Chase Daniel.

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An Aggressively Designed Wearable for Cyclists

Here’s a wild-looking wearable. This Recon Jet concept, by U.S./Canada-based industrial design consultancy Card79, was intentionally designed with “aggressive styling:”

“The main audience of this product was both athletic as well as curious and open to how new technology could improve their life,” the firm writes.

The product is designed to “create a great Holistic User Experience for cyclists and runners that would enable them to get relevant statistics near to eye without having to look around for the data. Because the market had a very focused set of requirement [sic] , we were inspired to make the Industrial Design more distinctively sporty.”

The Recon Jet never made it to market. But if it had, I wouldn’t have been surprised to see uptake—I think we’ve all seen avid cyclists wear way weirder and aggressively-designed things than this.

The World’s First 3D-Printed Lab-Grown Wood

According to a 2021 survey from Nature, about 54% of the Earth’s tree population is gone and will continue to decline so long as a vast amount of daily products (like furniture, paper and medicine) require cutting down trees for wood. However, a new innovation from researchers at MIT could crucially resolve this. Using cells from the flowering plant known as Zinnia elegans, and treating them with a gel-based medium, researchers were able to bio-print wooden pieces of various shapes and sizes. This lab-grown wood material could prevent deforestation and waste and is currently being further developed using cells of pine trees to 3D-print timber. Learn more about the project at Interesting Engineering.

Image courtesy of Alexei

How Gen Z Job Seekers Can Utilize Social Media

As the years go by and technology continues to advance, many young people are growing up with the internet, cell phones, and social media. While the folks who make up Gen Z have been using social media for the typical practice of connecting with friends and family, many are taking their use of sites like Facebook, TikTok, and LinkedIn up a notch. Now, many members of Gen Z job seekers are utilizing social media to land a gig.

You can use the sites you frequent every day to build your brand, find out about new job opportunities, and connect with employers on a whole new level. Let’s talk about how to use this technology to your advantage to find your dream job.

Why many are moving to social media

If you aren’t using social media to find potential job opportunities yet, then it could be time to jump on the bandwagon. Recent numbers show that 48% of those in Gen Z have already been using social media to find promising employment. Young people who find jobs by utilizing websites like TikTok and LinkedIn are finding that not only is this a unique way to find jobs but employers are using the same tools to find you.

Many companies are using social recruiting, which is the process of finding employees through social media platforms because they generally get a further reach and they can find more qualified customers. By expanding their reach, employers gain access to a more diverse candidate pool, and they may find some hidden gems that they may not have otherwise found while going through a pile of resumes. Plus, the human resources team can reach out to more candidates in a fraction of the time and save money in the process.

As a job seeker, you can use social media to look for job listings, make your own posts that describe your abilities and your desire for a job, and you can talk to family and friends who may know of job opportunities that fit your skill set.

Just keep in mind that while there are many advantages of social media and smartphone usage, you also need to be sure to use these devices in moderation. People post a lot of things on social media, and not everything is helpful or positive, so you need to be cautious of who you befriend. Also, be cautious of the physical ailments associated with smartphone usage, including the strain you can put on your hands and thumbs by constantly swiping and the damage you do to your spine by constantly bending over your phone. When in doubt, unplug or put the phone down, walk away from your screens, and do something else for a while.

Using social media to find jobs

Although many social media apps are different, they all have their perks and tools that you can use to try and find your next job. According to statistics, most young people are using LinkedIn as an integral part of their job search. LinkedIn is essential because that is where employees can post their skills and credentials, and employers can discuss their business and what they desire out of their workforce.

One way that you can use LinkedIn to your advantage is to write out your professional objectives and what you bring to the table. While writing these statements, fit in keywords that match the job position that you are searching for and sprinkle them throughout your profile. You can also build your professional network by joining professional groups on LinkedIn. You can introduce yourself, speak up when you have a question or intriguing thought, and find out about job fairs and openings at companies that fit your expertise.

While LinkedIn is what many people think about when discussing social media in their job search, other networks can also help you along, including Facebook. Many companies also post professional business profiles on Facebook, and you can find them there and follow them to get news and updates about potential employment opportunities. You can also use Facebook to simply update your personal status to say that you are looking for work while describing the skills you possess and your past experience. The friends that see your post may be able to help.

Consider TikTok

When employers are looking for the ideal candidates, they are looking for hard skills and qualifications, but they also want to ensure that you have a personality that fits in with their culture. One way you can show that is through attention-grabbing videos on TikTok. Many people are using this incredibly popular app to post personal clips that show their smiling faces as they describe their skills and why they deserve to be hired. There is even a TikTok resumes feature that is in development, so employers have a place to go to find you.

If you are new to TikTok then know that it is free to join, and it is easy to immediately start connecting with people and employers around the world. Once you complete your profile, all you have to do to create your first TikTok is stand in a well-lit spot and hold the red button to start recording. Just be sure that you know what you want to say beforehand. You can re-record or add multiple scenes until it is perfect. Then, you can add text and captions that describe your skills and highlight the most important aspects of your video.

You can increase your chances of getting noticed by implementing strategies to get more views. One idea is to add hashtags to attract a certain audience. You could even use a hashtag for the name of the company that you are trying to attract. Another idea is to make each second count. Don’t make your TikTok too long, or employers may move on. Instead, describe your best professional attributes, mention when you are available to start, and let your personality shine from beginning to end.

In the end, it is no mystery why so many Gen Z job seekers are using the major social media platforms to show off their skills and find work. Consider the advice and tips described here, and good luck on your job hunt!

Plirts: 100% Plastic Shirts

One of the most comfortable and durable workwear shirts I own comes from Patagonia’s hemp workwear line: The Men’s Farrier’s Shirt. Comfortable, hard-wearing, breathable…and it’s actually nearly half plastic. It’s made of 55% hemp, 45% polyester (albeit recycled).

The writing staff over at SNL has a better idea: Plirts, 100% plastic shirts. (And more.) Lizzo’s a fan:

An Achille-Castiglioni-Designed Menorah

Happy Hanukah! In 1985, Achille Castiglioni participated in a design competition held by the Israel Museum of Jerusalem, which invited both local design students and non-Israeli designers to create a menorah for mass production. Here’s Castiglioni’s submission:

“Castiglioni designs a candelabrum with seven arms, consisting of two identical semicircular pieces in metal sheets pressed in a single die and jointed with rivets. Cup-shaped to accommodate the candleholders, the three samples are prototyped in makralon sheets, but thought to have its final production in similar plastic materials or different metal sheets. The handgrip-foot of the candelabrum is a manufactured rubber handle (similar to the handlebar grips of a motorcycle).”

Photo © The Israel Museum Jerusalem, by Elie Posner

This pair of silver and lavender units is part of the Israel Museum of Jerusalem‘s collection.

Seoul Design Award seeks innovative projects that facilitate "sustainable daily life"

People gathered outside around a model of a building

Promotion: Seoul Design Award is seeking entrants who have designed projects that solve everyday problems in sustainable ways for its annual design prize.

Submissions to this year’s Seoul Design Award, which is free to enter and has a top prize of KRW 50 million (£31,500), are set to open in March 2023.

The awards will be given to designers “whose projects have contributed to a sustainable daily life that aims for a harmonious relationship between people, society and the environment”.

Split image of seaweed from the sea and tiles
The award considers sustainable designs from across the world

Designers can submit any design from the past five years that was built to solve everyday problems – from reducing food waste to conserving energy.

The projects can be submitted by an individual or group and will be judged based on five core values, including sustainability, public and shared, creativity and innovation, participation and cooperation, and inspiration and influence.

Previously known as the Human City Design Award, this year’s Seoul Design Award will be open for entries from 14 March to 28 June 2023. Now in its fourth edition, the 2023 edition of the award will expand to include 25 accolades.

“Over the past three years, design projects that have been awarded the Human City Design Award have addressed everyday problems such as environmental pollution, regional inequality, the gap between the rich and the poor, and discrimination against the socially underprivileged,” said the organisation.

“Ahead of 2023, the Human City Design Award will change its name to the Seoul Design Award in order to pursue the sustainability of daily life beyond the city.”

Split image of the Goyohan Taxi project
One of the projects that received an award in 2021 was the Goyohan Taxi

In 2021, which was the last edition of the award, the top prize in the safety and security category was won by Goyohan Taxi – a taxi service run by hearing-impaired people that was created by South Korean designer Song Min-Pyo to make travelling easier for those with hearing loss.

The project included a mobile device that aims to improve methods of communication between passengers and taxi drivers with a voice-to-text conversation app, which enabled passengers to communicate their destination, preferred drop-off point and choice of payment method.

An honourable mention in the 2021 selection was awarded to Gardens in the Air by Spanish design studio Nomad Gardens.

The project involved recycling water from air conditioning units to irrigate planting on the exterior of a building in Seville, Spain.

Gardens in the Air was designed to reduce Seville’s heat island effect and provide drinking water to the 70 species of birds in the surrounding area.

Plant boxes on the exterior of a white building
Gardens in the Air reuses water from air conditioning units

One of the finalist projects of the 2020 award was Sururu Da Mundaú by Brazilian manufacturer Portobello, a decorative tile made from recycled mussel shells.

According to Portobello, the Sururu Da Mundaú tile makes use of the 300 tonnes of mussel shells produced every month in Mundaú, Brazil, which would otherwise be discarded as waste.

Portobello worked with local artisans on the project, which the Seoul Design Award recognised as demonstrating “the value of cooperation and innovation”.

The project also created a range of new community activities by encouraging local citizens to participate in the tile making.

For more information on the awards or to apply, visit its website.

Partnership content

This article was written by Dezeen for the Seoul Design Award as part of a partnership. Find out more about Dezeen partnership content here.

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Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 brings a no-nonsense powerhouse for hybrid workers

Thanks to a few incidents that rocked our world, a new trend was forced upon both employers and employees. Working from home was never going to last forever, as much as some might have wished, but working at the office like before is no longer ideal either. Hybrid work setups, which saw people dividing their time between the office and any other non-office location, are now an option that some companies and workers have started to embrace. That, however, also meant that they need proper tools that support such an arrangement, particularly a laptop that’s designed exactly for such a scenario. Lenovo’s upcoming generation of ThinkPads is indeed intended to target that market, and the ThinkPad X1 Carbon X11 offers the most powerful and most traditional computing solution among them.

Designer: Lenovo

Even before ownership transferred from IBM to Lenovo, the ThinkPad brand has been one of the most trusted names among laptops designed specifically with productivity in mind. It was often seen as the standard for what specs and features should go into a work laptop, and the newly announced batch of portable computers is no different. For the 30th anniversary of the ThinkPad brand, Lenovo is aiming for the latest trend among computer users in the office, that is, working from the office, at home, or even in a public space like a coffee shop.

Of course, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 has all the basics of a modern laptop powerhouse, starting with the latest Intel Core processors, which would be 13th-gen at this point, alongside up to 64GB of speedy LPDDR5 memory and up to 2TB of SSD storage. The 14-inch screen includes options for different resolutions up to 2.8K, though there is no possibility of adding touch support to that list. The laptop utilizes Intel’s Iris Xe technology for graphics, so using it for gaming might be a little limited.

Lenovo is marketing its new ThinkPads as the perfect hybrid work partner, particularly because of how it can help protect your privacy and security when working out in the open. Its Lenovo View application, in particular, includes features to blur your screen or warn you if an unauthorized onlooker’s face is detected, as well as performance optimizations for video conferencing. It will even warn you when your posture is wrong or if your eyes deserve a break to encourage digital well-being as you spend more time working, even outside the office.

The new Lenovo ThinkPads also represent a step forward in the company’s sustainability commitments. The ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11, for example, uses 90% recycled magnesium in its palm rest, 55% recycled aluminum on its bottom cover, and 100% bamboo and sugarcane fiber for packaging. The Lenovo Commercial Vantage software also provides tips and settings to improve the efficiency of the laptop and help reduce its power consumption or prolong its lifespan. All in all, this new ThinkPad X1 Carbon laptop promises a no-frills hybrid work experience, with no extraneous features and gimmicks to get in the way of your productivity. The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 launches on April 2023 with a starting price of $1,729.

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Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 8 is a powerful convertible for creative professionals

Although paper will never really disappear in our lifetime, our civilization today heavily relies on digital content, from graphics to videos to even documents. These digital artifacts don’t just appear out of thin air, of course, and somebody (or something) has to make them. Creating these assets, especially computer graphics and digital art, is a job in itself, and it requires the proper tools for the best possible output. Normal laptops, no matter how powerful they are, won’t always cut it because they lack both the form and the features to support more creative work. To address that particular market, Lenovo will be launching the new ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 8 with a sturdy 360-degree hinge and garaged stylus to deliver the power that professionals need, no matter their line of work.

Designer: Lenovo

The pen is mightier than the sword, as they say, and it is definitely more usable than the mouse for certain work. The stylus has become the tool of choice for those who need to draw or write in digital form, whether it’s for drawing art or signing documents. Although some laptops do support this kind of pen, most have it as an additional purchase that exists outside the body of the machine. In contrast, the ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 8 makes the pen a core part of its design and purpose to the point that it has its own silo inside the laptop, so you’ll never risk losing it while in transit.

Of course, such a tool would be almost pointless if the laptop didn’t support actually using it comfortably. As the name suggests, the ThinkPad X1 Yoga can bend backward completely, transforming the laptop into a tablet and anything in between. This flexibility in form brings flexibility in function, allowing the same laptop to be used for typing, drawing, watching, and even reading. Even better, the latest generation of this convertible PC has the muscle to support all those use cases and applications you need for work.

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 8 will run on the latest Intel Core processors, which would be the 13th generation at the time of this writing. The 14-inch screen not only supports resolutions of up to WQUXGA 4K but can also have a touch option, turning the laptop into a true tablet when fully folded backward. The laptop is also designed to support hybrid work arrangements, particularly with the Lenovo View suite of features that include privacy guards and alerts that detect unauthorized people looking over your shoulder, as well as auto-framing, background concealment, and video enhancements for stress-free video meetings.

This generation of ThinkPads also represents Lenovo’s continuing commitment to be a responsible company and reduce its negative effects on the environment. While the ThinkPad X1 Yoga itself doesn’t benefit from the use of recycled materials, save for Post Consumer Content plastic in some components, its packaging uses 100% bamboo and sugarcane fibers, and its box is made from plastic-free packaging with 90% recycled or FSC-certified content. The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 8 will be available starting April 2023, with prices expected to start at $1,859.

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Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano Gen 3 is utility laptop for professionals who demand more for less

Business computing has been a breeze with the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano Second Gen thanks to its lightweight body frame, portability, performance and nifty user-centric features.

Now ahead of CES 2023, they’ve launched the new generation of ThinkPad X1 laptops with the conscious use of recycled materials for the chassis. This new series is in line with its target to achieve net zero by 2050 for its lineup of products. The brand is already focused on a sustainable future by gradually increasing the use of recycled materials.

Designer: Lenovo

Along with a slew of other announcements Lenovo is proudly celebrating 30 years of innovation for the ThinkPad series to keep setting benchmarks in durability, productivity, and most of all, user experience. The high-end series this time around comprises the ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11, X1 Yoga Gen 8 and X1 Nano Gen 3 laptops. All of them are crafted out of recycled metal and designed specifically for professionals to seamlessly access their digital content. Be it toggling between email inboxes, presentations, or participating in video conferences. All of this while keeping things ultra-secure and encrypted courtesy of the ThinkShield suite.

The X1 Nano Gen 3 like its bigger brothers has the customary digital wellness feature dubbed Lenovo View to reduce eye strain and the continuous hours of working. There’s the absolutely beautiful Dolby Vision capable 13-inch OLED display (certified by TÜV Rheinland) which helps in this quest. The Dolby suite extends to the video conferencing platform with fully enabled Dolby Atmos and Dolby Voice. Lenovo has mindfully added AI noise cancellation, quad-array 360-degree microphones and IR MIPI Computer Vision camera (FHD resolution) for smooth video conferencing.

ThinkPad X1 Nano is powered by the latest generation Intel Core i7 processor based on the Intel Evo platform. The portable Windows 11 laptop leverages the processing power in conjunction with 16GB LPDDR5 RAM, Intel Iris X Graphics and storage of 2TB Gen 4 PCIe NVMe SSD. All this should reassure professionals of having all the computing power and a seamless experience in a small package.

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano Gen 3 will be available for purchase from April 2023 for an expected price tag of $1649.

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