Ceto Circlet chandelier by Ross Gardam

Ceto Circlet chandelier by Ross Gardam in an open living space with a green sofa

Dezeen Showroom: Australian furniture and lighting brand Ross Gardam has created a chandelier named Ceto Circlet, which features glass shades arranged in a circle.

Designed to be sculptural and captivating, the Ceto Circlet light includes a series of lamps fixed to a circular aluminium band that is suspended horizontally.

Ceto Circlet chandelier by Ross Gardam in an open living space with a green sofa
The glass shades are available in different colours

Surrounding each lamp is a mouth-blown glass shade with a dappled surface, which Ross Gardam designed in reference to the ocean.

“Ceto Circlet captures the variation and rippling of the surface of the ocean,” said the studio.

Ceto Circlet chandelier by Ross Gardam
The glass shades create a rippled effect

“Each piece is mouth blown, reflecting a distinct pattern that emits a delicate luminosity, evoking the presence of the sea and its undulating movements,” Ross Gardam continued.

The glass shades are available in different colour options and the aluminium frame comes in black and champagne anodised finishes.

Product: Ceto Circlet
Brand: Ross Gardam
Contact: sales@rossgardam.com.au

Dezeen Showroom

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

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

The post Ceto Circlet chandelier by Ross Gardam appeared first on Dezeen.

Atrio Private Collection shower by Grohe

Atrio Private Collection shower by Grohe

Dezeen Showroom: minimalist circular and cylindrical forms characterise the Atrio Private Collection shower by Grohe, which features customisable taps and mixers designed to create bathroom interiors with a bespoke feel.

Comprised of clean cylinder shapes and arching lines, the Atrio Private Collection aims to bring a timeless, high-end feeling to any bathroom.

Atrio Private Collection shower by Grohe in a white bathroom
The Atrio Private Collection shower includes a generous rain shower head

The collection includes a generous rain shower head and the Aquastick hand shower, which has a slimline design that sits almost flat against the wall.

The shower incorporates Grohe‘s DreamSpray optimised spray pattern, a long-life finish and the SpeedClean anti-limescale system.

Atrio Private Collection shower by Grohe on a black marble wall
The Aquastick handheld shower is designed to be slimline yet striking

The Atrio Private Collection also includes complementing tapware that can be customised with various finishes and handles. Stone inlays can be added to the taps to create a unique design.

The collection is available in a range of metallic finishes, including two rose-gold tints named Warm Sunset and Brushed Gold Sunset.

Product: Atrio Private Collection shower
Brand: Grohe
Contact: media@grohe.com

Dezeen Showroom

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

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

The post Atrio Private Collection shower by Grohe appeared first on Dezeen.

New Bike Path Lighting System: A Drone with LEDs Follows Your Bike at Night

The Swedish towns of Ardala, Skara, Axvall and Varnhem are connected by a 20km bike path. It’s fine to ride during the daytime. However, long stretches of it are unlit and pitch black at night.

The Skara municipal government calculated a cost of 8 million SEK (USD $771,356) to install lighting on a 10km stretch. That’s outside their budget, so an alternative solution was needed. Incredibly, what they came up with is a system of drones each boasting two LED lamps that put out 32 watts total. You summon one of these lighting drones via an app, then they find you, and follow you as you cycle!

The difference between having your own bicycle headlight, versus the path being lit by a drone, is stark:

The drones are autonomous, but laws have yet to catch up. “Everything already works automatically today,” Sweden’s SVT News reports, “but the law still requires that there are drone pilots on site who supervise the drones. In the long term, the researchers expect this legislation to change.”

The innovative initiative was created in collaboration between the municipality of Skara, Swedish research institute RISE, the University of Skövde and Jönköping University.

You can see a video of the news report here.

Watches and Wonders 2023: Chronographs of the Future

Eight timepieces and their take on the historic function

In 1816, watchmaker Louis Moinet invented the first chronograph—a mechanical stopwatch originally used for astronomical measurement at sea—unaware that one century later it would become a sought-after function within wristwatches (initially, thanks to Longines). This past week in Geneva, at the headline-making 2023 Watches and Wonders trade show, dozens of the novelties (an industry term to mean new watch releases) were chronographs—and some, for either technical or aesthetic reasons, represented a high-watermark for the complication (a term that encompasses any function beyond traditional time-telling). The following eight watches, which we saw at the prestigious event (and tried on), not only captured our attention but will continue to inspire as they’re released throughout the year.

<img data-attachment-id="308986" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/watches-and-wonders-2023-chronographs/attachment/detail-view-of-the-odysseus-chronograph-reference-463-178/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/coolhunting.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/ALS_463_178_SL1_Odysseus_Chronograph_2023_2434636.jpg-HD-scaled.jpeg?fit=2560%2C1920&ssl=1" data-orig-size="2560,1920" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"u00a9 Lange Uhren GmbH","camera":"","caption":"Detail view of the ODYSSEUS CHRONOGRAPH, reference 463.178.","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"Detail view of the ODYSSEUS CHRONOGRAPH, reference 463.178.","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="Detail view of the ODYSSEUS CHRONOGRAPH, reference 463.178." data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Detail view of the ODYSSEUS CHRONOGRAPH, reference 463.178, courtesy of A. Lange & Söhne

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Detail view of the ODYSSEUS CHRONOGRAPH, reference 463.178, courtesy of A. Lange & Söhne

A. Lange & Söhne ODYSSEUS Automatic Chronograph

A technical masterpiece with impeccably designed elegance, the ODYSSEUS Automatic Chronograph from A. Lange & Söhne features the German manufacture’s first self-winding chronograph movement, the L156.1 DATOMATIC calibre. The latest to premiere within the highly coveted brand’s ODYSSEUS range, which launched in 2019, the wristwatch sets a nuanced dial with various premium finishes inside a reasonably sized 42.5mm stainless steel case. Regarding functionality, a scale for fractions of a second rests on the outer circumference; a scale for minutes and seconds sits further inside. The chronograph hand is a vibrant red, increasing legibility. The exquisite piece will be limited in production to 100 pieces.

<img data-attachment-id="308987" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/watches-and-wonders-2023-chronographs/attachment/high-quality-jpg-noire_profil_1-1-jpg-hd/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/coolhunting.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/High-Quality-JPG-Noire_Profil_1-1.jpg-HD.jpeg?fit=2267%2C2267&ssl=1" data-orig-size="2267,2267" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="High Quality JPG-Noire_Profil_1-1.jpg – HD" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Courtesy of TAG Heuer

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Courtesy of TAG Heuer

TAG Heuer Carrera Chronograph “Glassbox”

An undeniable icon of the watch world, TAG Heuer’s Carrera celebrates its 60th anniversary this year with several eye-catching releases—including this 39mm steel TAG Heuer Carrera Chronograph “Glassbox” with a new in-house calibre TH20-00 automatic movement. The chronograph feature tracks quarter-seconds, as well as 30-minute and 12-hour intervals. A domed sapphire crystal magnifies the Carrera’s magnificent reverse Tricompax dial design. An open caseback offers a glimpse at the horological wonder working within. Though we were drawn to the black and white version, there’s also one in TAG Heuer’s signature blue.

<img data-attachment-id="308988" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/watches-and-wonders-2023-chronographs/attachment/tonda-ps-split-seconds-chronograph-detail_gold_20230314-jpg-hd/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/coolhunting.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/TONDA-PS-SPLIT-SECONDS-CHRONOGRAPH-DETAIL_GOLD_20230314.jpg-HD-scaled.jpeg?fit=2560%2C2033&ssl=1" data-orig-size="2560,2033" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="TONDA PS SPLIT SECONDS CHRONOGRAPH-DETAIL_GOLD_20230314.jpg – HD" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Courtesy of Parmigiani Fleurier

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Courtesy of Parmigiani Fleurier

Parmigiani Fleurier TONDA PF Split Seconds Chronographe

Another outright masterpiece, premier Swiss watchmaker Parmigiani Fleurier’s TONDA PF Split Seconds Chronographe is more than a 42mm vision in 18K rose gold with a sandblasted platinum dial and skeletonized, delta-shaped hands. This is a technical wonder built around the luxury manufacture’s in-house, manual-winding movement, the PF361. This immaculately decorated and meticulously engineered mechanism is made up of 309 components. It acts as the engine for the timepiece as well as its split-seconds chronograph function, which features two superimposed hands. When one pusher is pressed down, one sweeping chronograph hand stops. A second push pauses the other hand. Only 30 will be produced.

<img data-attachment-id="308989" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/watches-and-wonders-2023-chronographs/attachment/pilots-watch-chronograph-41-top-gun-oceana-ref-iw389404-hd/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/coolhunting.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/PILOTS-WATCH-CHRONOGRAPH-41-TOP-GUN-22OCEANA22-REF.-IW389404-HD-scaled.jpeg?fit=2560%2C2560&ssl=1" data-orig-size="2560,2560" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"13","credit":"admin","camera":"Hasselblad H6D-50c","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1607081814","copyright":"","focal_length":"120","iso":"100","shutter_speed":"0.004","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="PILOT’S WATCH CHRONOGRAPH 41 TOP GUN OCEANA REF. IW389404 – HD" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Courtesy of IWC

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Courtesy of IWC

IWC Pilot’s Watch Chronograph 41 Top Gun Oceana

This is a striking new entry from Swiss watchmaker IWC’s official partnership with the United States Navy Strike Fighter Tactics Instructor program, otherwise known (in real life) as Top Gun. With a nod to the navy colorway of pilot overalls, the new Pilot’s Watch Chronograph 41 Top Gun Oceana complements a 41.9mm colored ceramic case and rubber strap with the brand’s 69380 calibre automatic movement. The precise, legible chronograph covers seconds, minutes and hours.

<img data-attachment-id="308990" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/watches-and-wonders-2023-chronographs/attachment/130811-1-jpg-hd/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/coolhunting.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/130811-1.jpg-HD-scaled.jpeg?fit=2560%2C1920&ssl=1" data-orig-size="2560,1920" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"11","credit":"","camera":"IQ4 150MP","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1668556697","copyright":"","focal_length":"120","iso":"100","shutter_speed":"0.008","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="130811 1.jpg – HD" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Courtesy of Montblanc

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Courtesy of Montblanc

Montblanc 1858 Geosphere Chronograph 0 Oxygen The 8000

Ideal for explorers and mountaineers, the 1858 Geosphere Chronograph 0 Oxygen The 8000 from Montblanc features a 44mm titanium case that is entirely devoid of oxygen. This technical attribute prevents oxidation and fogging and maintains precision under harsh conditions. It’s a noble complication for a limited edition timepiece designed as a tribute to the world’s 14 highest peaks (known as the 8000s) which happen to be laser-engraved on the caseback. The dial offers further aesthetic stimulation thanks to a unique Sfumato dark gray glacier pattern, with white luminescent black rhodium-coated Arabic numerals and indexes, and a white chronograph hand.

<img data-attachment-id="308991" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/watches-and-wonders-2023-chronographs/attachment/hermes-h08-chronograph_ambiance_cjoel-von-allmen-jpg-hd/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/coolhunting.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Hermes-H08-Chronograph_Ambiance_cJoel-von-Allmen.jpg-HD-scaled.jpeg?fit=2560%2C1920&ssl=1" data-orig-size="2560,1920" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"11","credit":"","camera":"IQ4 150MP","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1668130743","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"50","shutter_speed":"0.008","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="Hermès-H08-Chronograph_Ambiance_(c)Joel-von-Allmen.jpg – HD" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Courtesy of Hermès

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Courtesy of Hermès

Hermès Chronograph H08

Aesthetically, the new Hermès Chronograph H08 pairs an elegantly outspoken orange rubber strap with a sleek and sporty 41 by 41mm cushion-shaped case crafted from a carbon fiber and graphene powder composite. An interplay of satin and polished finishing lends further visual texture. A monopusher chronograph, this iteration of the beloved Hermès H08 wristwatch (originally designed in 2021 by Philippe Delhotal) features the automatic movement H1837 from the Swiss watchmaking division of the French maison.

<img data-attachment-id="308993" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/watches-and-wonders-2023-chronographs/attachment/slgc001_c-jpg-hd/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/coolhunting.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/SLGC001_c.jpg-HD-scaled.jpeg?fit=2560%2C1920&ssl=1" data-orig-size="2560,1920" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"16","credit":"YoshimitsuTAKANO","camera":"Hasselblad H6D-50c","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1658761365","copyright":"","focal_length":"125","iso":"100","shutter_speed":"0.008","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="SLGC001_c.jpg – HD" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Courtesy of Grand Seiko

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Courtesy of Grand Seiko

Grand Seiko Evolution 9 Tentagraph SLGC001

A function-oriented innovation set within sophisticated style, Grand Seiko’s Evolution 9 Tentagraph SLGC001 holds the record of the longest-running 10-beat chronograph on the market—as it maintains power for up to 72 hours. That’s thanks to the pioneering Japanese brand’s in-house calibre 9SC5 automatic chronograph movement, which resides within the chic wristwatch’s 43.2mm titanium case. Though the timepiece emphasizes legibility through its exacting design, the carefully decorated deep blue dial (and its pattern, inspired by the peak of Mount Iwate visible from Grand Seiko’s design studio) is simply beautiful to look at.

<img data-attachment-id="308994" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/watches-and-wonders-2023-chronographs/attachment/jaeger-lecoultre_reverso-tribute-chronograph_pink-gold_verso_02_16-9-jpg-hd/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/coolhunting.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/JAEGER-LECOULTRE_REVERSO-TRIBUTE-CHRONOGRAPH_PINK-GOLD_VERSO_02_16-9.jpg-HD-scaled.jpeg?fit=2560%2C1440&ssl=1" data-orig-size="2560,1440" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"Oliver Currat","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="JAEGER-LECOULTRE_REVERSO TRIBUTE CHRONOGRAPH_PINK GOLD_VERSO_02_16-9.jpg – HD" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Courtesy of Jaeger-LeCoultre

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Courtesy of Jaeger-LeCoultre

Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso Tribute Chronograph

The latest from Jaeger-LeCoultre is a double-sided engineering achievement. On one side of the 49.4 by 29.9mm stainless steel Reverso Tribute Chronograph module, there’s an ornately designed open-worked dial that indicates hours and minutes, alongside a nuanced chronograph function that includes vibrant blue hands and an uncommon retrograde 30-minute counter; on the reverse, there’s a refined gray-blue sun-ray dial along with hours and minutes. As with all Reversos, a wearer can easily flip between the two depending on need or desire. The sophisticated timepiece is powered by their impressive in-house developed manufacture calibre 860 manual-winding movement.

Hero image courtesy of Hermès

Top 10 kitchen appliances designed for quick, easy and efficient meal prep

If you’re a passionate lover of cooking, or you’ve recently kickstarted your cooking journey, and want to accelerate it even further in 2023, then you’ve reached the right place. Having an efficient and streamlined cooking process is the key to preparing dishes that simply taste excellent! And the number one aid you need in having an effortless process is an arsenal of great kitchen appliances.  With the right kitchen tools and appliances, cooking can be an increasingly fun and simplified process. The right products can reduce your prep time in half, make the little cooking tasks much easier, and help you with tedious and complicated techniques. From ‘The Tesla of Ovens’ to a compact induction cooker that fits every conceivable cooking method in its modular stackable design – these innovative and exceptional appliances are all you need in your kitchen.

1. Brava

Meet Brava, an oven that harnesses the power of pure light to cook food to perfection. Unlike radiant heat, which heats the entire oven chamber, light can be precisely delivered to specific zones within the oven chamber, allowing you to cook with precise control and no energy wastage.

Why is it noteworthy?

With three dedicated zones on the cooking tray, and lights above and below it to match, Brava can cook three-part meals at three different temperatures at the same time, on the same tray, and in minutes as opposed to hours on a grill or oven

What we like

  • The three light zones help focus the heat into three distinct categories, letting you cook meats and veggies on one tray, but at different temperatures
  • A camera built into the smart oven gives you a literal window into the oven’s interiors, letting you see your lasagna bake and your meat sear in real-time

What we dislike

  • Some people may prefer ovens with transparent displays

2. The BlendQuik

Designed to be used on the kitchen countertop as well as on a mountaintop, the BlendQuik is the world’s first mason jar-style portable blender that can do everything from making smoothies at home and protein shakes at the gym to churning up quick guacamole at a picnic or even a frappe in your car.

Why is it noteworthy?

The BlendQuik is a nifty blender with a vessel big enough to hold your daily smoothie, and a 10-blade design powerful enough to cut right through dense ingredients like carrots, nuts, ice cubes, etc. The blender’s motor and blades are built right into its leak-proof cap. Chuck your ingredients into the mason jar, lock the cap in place, and hit the power button before flipping it over.

What we like

  • Makes everything from shakes to dips, cocktails, slushies, batters, emulsions, purees, and everything else you’d otherwise need a large blender for
  • Features a portable design, so it’s  not restricted to the kitchen

What we dislike

  • We don’t know how durable it is, so it could get damaged when you travel

3. Pronto

Rather aptly named the Pronto, this relatively compact gadget handles every part of the cooking process, from weighing to sautéing, slow-cooking, simmering, reheating, and even air-frying thanks to its modular companion, the Alto.

Why is it noteworthy?

With its small footprint and multipurpose design, the dynamic duo of Pronto and Alto occupy a fraction of the countertop space and let you prep elaborate meals without all the messy dishes and dread-inducing clean-up. Pronto and Alto were designed to take the effort out of cooking, so you can focus on the most important part… eating!

What we like

  • Multipurpose design
  • Make meal prep easier, faster, and smarter

What we dislike

  • There is a learning curve involved in getting used to the design

4. The Affinitea Brewing System

Designed as an elegant tabletop device, the Affinitea Brewing System expertly makes you a fresh cup of luxury loose-leaf tea in just 90 seconds. The Clearview re-usable chamber takes care of every aspect from agitating, pressurizing, and steeping the tea brew, before straining and dispensing it directly into your cup.

Why is it noteworthy?

The patented chamber uses pressure and agitation to handle the steeping cycle perfectly, creating a brew that has fewer tannins (the chemical that creates that bitter aftertaste) while extracting the maximum flavour.

What we like

  • An LCD screen right above the control panel lets you view and confirm your choices
  • Has a subscription service allowing you to try different teas

What we dislike

  • Space-consuming and bulky design

5. Makit’s Portable Microwave

This cordless microwave uses the cordless XTGT system to help you heat your meals and snacks when you’re on the go. It has 40-volt rechargeable batteries and can use up to 500 watts for eight minutes and then 350 watts after that to save energy.

Why is it noteworthy?

When the batteries are fully charged, it will be able to warm up 11 meals or 20 drinks. It also has a USB port so you can also juice up your smartphone or a gadget, but of course, you’ll probably have to choose between your meal or your device. The microwave also comes with a handle and a strap so you can carry it around with you.

What we like

  • If you’re worried about safety, the design has safety measures in place for user’s convenience
  • It also deactivates when it’s tilted or when the door is opened

What we dislike

  • If you’re warming up frozen meals, it might take up more energy so you’ll be able to reheat fewer meals

6. The Slide Toaster

The toasting process begins in the Slide toaster with an LED ring indicating the toasting level and completion. The slide-up tray has a translucent design element to it so that you can keep an eye on the toast turning perfectly brown to your delight Level of the toast crispness can be set with an adjustment dial like all other toasters we’ve seen countless times. This is ably aided by audio indications to keep the user well-informed.

Why is it noteworthy?

Harry Rigler wants to reinvent the trusted image of the toaster with a detour to the soft form design of this household kitchen appliance. That too keeps in mind the requirements of modern users, and the present as well as future design progression of kitchen interiors. Rather than being a pop-up toaster like most out there, this is the Slide toaster which rolls the toasting grill to the side like a rollable smartphone. The tray slides out – you put in the bread and slide it back in.

What we like

  • Audio indications to update the user on their toast
  • Unique slide-out tray

What we dislike

  • The radically changed design may not be easily accepted in households

7. The CookMate

Designed for this new, ‘smaller than life’ home, the Cookmate is an all-in-one kitchen appliance that goes from prep to cooking to serving, in one device. Its modular design has stackable pieces that turn the cooktop into a pan, crock pot, and even a steamer. The induction coil on the inside works on electricity, saving the need to place a gas cylinder under the hob.

Why is it noteworthy?

The Cookmate looks at the cooking process as something that goes from idea to ingredient to table. Rather than focusing on just the cooking, this induction cooktop (although it seems highly reductive to call it just that) considers every aspect of the cooking process. This isn’t just clever, holistic design thinking, it also helps the Cookmate be more universally applicable so you save effort, energy, and space with other utensils.

What we like

  • Features an integrated weighing scale
  • Can be split into 6 parts

What we dislike

  • As we can either use one at a time or them all together, the cooking time has to be finely balanced for each layer

8. The SüpKüp

The SüpKüp is a travel mug that is not really a mug in itself but serves more as an alternative to the disposable paper coffee sleeves. It is able to hold the paper cups (medium and large at least) that most coffee shops provide, including the still pretty popular Starbucks.

Why is it noteworthy?

It is made from durable polycarbonate and has a pretty elegant and minimalist design that can still display whatever cup is snugly placed inside. This holder doesn’t need any liquid transfer or constant cleaning that’s why it’s more convenient.

What we like

  • Your hot drink can remain hot for longer, 50% longer, than when you just hold your paper cup
  • Has a double helix screw ejector that lets you eject the cup when you’ve finished just by twisting the rotating base

What we dislike

  • It helps retain your coffee drinkability rather than an alternative to disposable cups, leaving scope for future plastic-free design

9. The 4T7 Smart Chopping Board

The 4T7 Smart Chopping Board is meant to help simplify every stage of meal prep and go beyond it as well. Made up of different parts, all the components of the chopping board come together to create a rather innovative, united, and creative product.

Why is it noteworthy?

The 4T7 breaks meal prep into its different components, adding good design and tech wherever necessary. The board comes with 4 distinct parts, a main bamboo chopping board, a secondary silver-ion anti-bacterial board for veggies to prevent cross-contamination, a third heat-conducting defrosting tray that helps rapidly thaw frozen foods, and lastly, the 4T7’s base, which has its own built-in weighing scale. The only part of the 4T7 experience to exist outside the actual board is its smartphone app, which counts calories as you weigh your ingredients. Once your prep work is done, the digital display on the 4T7 can also function as a kitchen timer, while the board itself becomes a magnetic knife holder.

What we like

  • All of 4T7’s components are designed to be wonderfully functional as independent items
  • The board works equally well for fruits/veggies as well as for meats

What we dislike

  • It precisely counts calories for you, which isn’t always the best route to healthy eating, since many users can get unhealthily hooked on counting calories

10. Roll

Roll is an attempt to preserve not only the flavors of food but also their presentation. It eschews the traditional square or rectangular shape of food containers in favor of something round.

Why is it noteworthy?

What makes Roll different from bowl food containers (which do exist, of course) is that it wholeheartedly embraces the culture of using the lid or dish cap as a plate. That’s why the cap itself was made to look presentable, using soft and clean tones like ivory, sky blue, and terracotta. The idea is that you set the freshly cooked food on the lid itself and then later just cover it with the glass bowl when it’s time to put it away.

What we like

  • The next time you want to eat the food, you don’t have to rearrange the food again to make it presentable
  • Roll takes the food container concept upside-down, literally, by making it usable, whether as a bowl with a round lid or a plate with a bowl cover

What we dislike

  • Not the most shape-efficient design/shape for storage in a refridgerator

The post Top 10 kitchen appliances designed for quick, easy and efficient meal prep first appeared on Yanko Design.

Grimshaw unveils "sculptural" Sydney office skyscraper

Poly Centre office skyscraper in downtown Sydney by Grimshaw

Architecture studio Grimshaw has completed the 27-storey Poly Centre office skyscraper in downtown Sydney, which is fronted by a series of arched cantilevers.

Built on George Street near Circular Quay in central Sydney, the skyscraper is described by Grimshaw as “sculptural in form”.

Poly Centre office skyscraper
Grimshaw has created the Poly Centre office skyscraper in Sydney

It consists of three visually distinct elements – a concrete lift core to the east, a glazed office tower and a street-facing 11-storey tower made up of cantilevered concrete arches.

The shorter arched tower is designed to provide a covered walkway alongside the street and a series of double-height spaces for the office tower.

Arched spaces in office skyscraper
It contains a series of double-height spaces

Each of the double-height spaces connects two floors of office space within the main tower, creating “vertical villages” on the building’s lower floors. They each open out onto a balcony space.

The arched spaces are fronted with glass and protected from the sun by a series of vertical blades.

“Grimshaw’s Poly Centre is designed to maximise daylight, enable greater connectivity within and enhance enjoyment of public realm beyond,” said Grimshaw managing partner Andrew Cortese.

“We devised a system of elegantly elongated concrete arcs that are expressed at street level and repeated across each double-height floor plate to create mezzanines throughout the 27-storey build.”

Arched facade of Sydney skyscraper
It consists of three visually distinct elements

In total, the building contains 19,500 square metres of office space with a lobby occupying the ground floor and a large meeting space called the City Room located at the top of the tower.

“On the top floor ‘city room’ the arcs reappear as expressed steel,” added Cortese.

“For all this formal modelling, the tower has a sensuous feeling to it, materials vary in texture and tonality; light falls across its curves beautifully, soon to illuminate the village-like movement within.”

Poly Centre office skyscraper
Grimshaw described the composition as “sculptural”

The tower forms part of a wider development of the city block, which will include the Salesforce Tower at Sydney Place designed by UK studio Foster + Partners.

It also includes the Sydney Plaza & Community Building, which was recently completed by Ghanaian-British architect David Adjaye’s studio with artist Daniel Boyd.

The photography is by Peter Bennetts.


Project credits:

Architect: Grimshaw
Contractor: Watpac Besix
Structural engineer: WSP
Services engineer: Waterman
Hydraulic engineer: Arup
Facade engineer: Arup
Vertical transport engineer: Arup
Planning consultant: Urbis

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Earthscape Studio nestles vaulted house in Kerala forest

The Wendy House by Earthscape Studio

Locally produced bricks and recycled materials feature in this vaulted residence in Kerala, India, named The Wendy House.

Designed by Bangalore practice Earthscape Studio, the home is located within eight acres of dense forest and was designed to stand among the trees without disrupting the existing nature.

Exterior photo of The Wendy House
The Wendy House was designed by Earthscape Studio

“Our main aim was to not harm nature by cutting down the trees and other existing natural features on the site,” lead architect Petchimuthu Kennedy told Dezeen.

“When we visited the site, there were lots of trees such as mango, coconut, nutmeg, and teak. Since we didn’t want to disturb them, we made a grid on site and determined the shape of the house according to the placement of existing trees.”

Photo of The Wendy House
It was constructed using recycled materials

Aiming to draw from the surrounding nature, Earthscape Studio used locally sourced materials throughout the building, including recycled rods, broken tiles and earth from the site.

The studio also used traditional sithu kal bricks – small bricks constructed of three layers – sourced from within 50 kilometres of the site and joined by local workers to create the building’s vaulted form.

Photo of The Wendy House
It has a sweeping roof

“The bricks that we used are small sithu kal bricks, which were previously used along the south side of Tamil Nadu for the famous technique called Madras terrace roof,” said Kennedy, referring to an Indian roofing system that involves creating a series of sloping roofs to encourage rainwater drainage.

“Nowadays, the technique is no longer used and the community members who produce these bricks have become unemployed,” he continued. “We wanted to bring them back by engaging the local community with work.”

The Wendy House is split across two separate vaulted volumes each comprising three layers of bricks along with a fourth recycled waterproofing layer made from broken tiles from factories.

“We wanted no steel or concrete to be on our building structure and we don’t want to cut down any trees,” said Kennedy. “This timbrel vault technique is a catenary-based vault that requires no steel or concrete.”

“The catenary form is self-stabilising since the forces of the vault are transferred directly to the footing.”

Interior photo of The Wendy House
There is a courtyard at the centre

The vaulted forms were topped with a sweeping roof made from locally sourced, recycled mudga tiles.

Inside, the home has an open plan with a bedroom, bathroom and storage space in one wing, along with a living room, dining space, and pantry in the other.

Photo of the interior of the home
The home has an open-plan design

A courtyard with a small pond in its centre runs between the two blocks, punctuated on either end by curved rammed earth walls.

Framed with recycled rods, glass walls on the inner facing walls of the vaulted buildings offer views from the interior into the central courtyard.

Photo of a living space
It has built-in furniture

The recycled rods were also used alongside waste wood to create the frames for built-in furniture, including a bed, sofa, and kitchen counter.

Other Indian homes recently featured on Dezeen include a cylindrical house designed to collect rainwater and a home with large terraces sheltered by a jagged metal canopy.

The photography is by Syam Sreesylam.

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Prisoners’ Inventions (New Edition)

While incarcerated in California, author and illustrator Angelo was invited by art practice and publication Temporary Services to document the various things he’d seen his peers invent, ranging from immersion heaters to tattoo ink, pillows and chessboards. His findings—which are testament to the ways prisons deny people basic necessities as well as the inventiveness of people who are incarcerated—were collected and published in 2003 as Prisoners’ Inventions. This new edition features an additional 80 pages, with even more drawings, photos and blueprints.

This cross-laminated timber desert home rates high on sustainability + good looks

Called the Octothorpe House, this impressive home in the Oregon high desert area near Bend was commissioned by a couple Mike and Katherine to Mork-Ulnes Architects. Mike and Katherine decided to move out of their home in San Francisco, to a more outdoorsy rural space, as they felt it would benefit their young son. They wanted a home that would harmoniously merge with the desert landscape, and be environmentally friendly as well. To meet the client’s desire for a sustainable home, Mork-Ulnes Architects decided to use ‘cross-laminated timber’ in the construction of the home.

Designer: Mork-Ulnes Architects

The clients came to us with the idea of building one of the first U.S.-produced cross-laminated timber homes,” said Casper Mork-Ulnes. “They were inspired by the sustainability factor.” Now you may have heard of cross-laminated timber (C LT), it is essentially a wood product built from multiple layers of structural grade lumber that are arranged crosswise, and then glued and attached together. What makes this timber sustainable is the fact that it has a strength-to-weight ratio that’s similar to concrete, but it is five times lighter as compared to it. CLT is pre-cut off site, which also reduces construction waste immensely.

The architects utilized CLT to build the interiors and the exterior of the Octothorpe House, this prevented them from releasing almost 15 metric tons of greenhouse gases into the air. The wooden exterior of the home was treated using the shou sugi ban technique – a Japanese wood burning technique that provides resistance to fire, insects, and decay. The interiors, on the other hand, are inspired by Donald Judd’s Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas. The interiors feature concrete floors and dusty pink walls. The home includes two bedrooms and two guest rooms. “One of the guest rooms has a hidden Murphy bed so there is an office for the work-from-home couple,” said Lexie Mork-Ulnes. “The enclosed central courtyard, visible from most of the rooms in the house, doubles as an outdoor playground for their son. In the winter, the large garage space becomes an indoor playroom.”

The home has a really spacious and open feel to it, there’s a sense of liberty and freedom that runs through it, making it an extremely special living space. “The layout offers orchestrated glimpses into the central courtyard and ample views of the sky and desert all around. This creates a delightful connection with the surroundings,” said the architects.

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"Architecture is a hollowed-out profession with architects seemingly less vital than ever"

Architecture education

As architecture has evolved it has become detached from an understanding of construction and engineering that was once at the profession’s core, writes Eleanor Jolliffe.


There have always been architects. They, we, are a necessary, even vital, component to human society. Architects may not always have been called architects but for most of history there have been someones who “designed” shelter and guided its construction.

Paul Crosby and I have explored the last 3,000 years of the western history of these someones, charting the evolution of their practice and education for our recently released book Architect: the evolving story of a profession. What we found however, was that after 3,000 years of well-meant adaptation and evolution architecture is a hollowed-out profession with architects seemingly less vital than ever.

For the Romans, architecture encompassed everything in the physical and intellectual life of humankind

The Roman architect Vitruvius would barely recognise the modern profession. The architect he describes designs not only buildings but military machines, aqueducts and whole cities. His 10 books on architecture cover everything from inappropriate decoration on columns to the basics of hydraulic engineering. The role he describes as architect is a combination of master craftsman, engineer and artist. For the Romans, architecture encompassed everything in the physical and intellectual life of humankind.

Vitruvius wasn’t alone. The ancient Greeks also regarded the role of architect as impressively broad. Both Plato and Aristotle use the term “to architect” as a verb to describe a form of civic and intellectual leadership that applied great knowledge in practical ways for the common good.

It isn’t just the ancient world either. Even after the fall of Rome and amidst the turmoil of the middle ages architects were necessary in Europe, evolving to a craft-based role more suited to the localised economies of their time.

From this the astounding polymaths of the master masons emerged – their knowledge of materials, design and engineering combining to guide the construction of cathedrals and palaces of such astounding skill and beauty that they still awe us today.

Even the most artistic of Renaissance architects had a grasp of engineering

Approaching the Italian Renaissance we see an intellectualising of architecture that begins to divorce the architect from their understanding of the materials they work with.

However, even the most artistic of Renaissance architects had a grasp of engineering and of how the main materials they designed with were worked. Approaching modernity architects continue to remain skilled polymaths – drawing away perhaps from the builder-designer of the middle ages, but always remaining close to the technical aspects of their trade.

Is architecture a profession or an art? The answers, as they have come, are never final. Each century requires its own interpretation. The answer the last few centuries have decided upon has been an odd one, though.

In the UK the RIBA was formed in the mid 1800s to begin to regulate the architectural profession. It was founded on the divisive stance that architects could not join the new society if they had any involvement at all in the building trades. This controversial clause had come about in a well-meaning attempt to distance architects from the rampant fraud in the booming construction industry of the time.

This attempt to protect and professionalise architects however, began to fracture the overlapping roles of the construction industry. Nearly a century later, in 1958, a conference on architectural education took things a step further. In order to raise standards and competency, all architects would need to have a university level of education (resulting in the current three part UK system).

The logic is understandable, the outcome disastrous

“Architect” was from this point on to be a university-educated role, covering design, project management, leadership and so forth; with a new vocationally trained role: “architectural technician”, created to do the construction detailing. Greater specialisation had become necessary and appropriate as construction grew in complexity, and they felt this compartmentalisation of roles would allow all aspects of architectural work to be carried out more skilfully.

The logic is understandable, the outcome disastrous. They had decided on the question of “profession or art” by cleaving the profession in half. Perhaps accidentally, they had removed the knowledge the architect would need to fulfil their role from architectural education.

No one would consider removing the understanding of oil paints from a painter; but to remove the majority of the knowledge of construction skills and engineering from architects has somehow seemed logical.

The trajectory that followed from here has continued with the further delegation of the original role of architects. There are generalisations within these statements of course, it cannot be denied that architects do and will exist who buck this broad trend.

The majority of architects have done little to heal this fracture

The reports into procurement and construction industry relations of the 1980s and ’90s demonstrate and highlight the dangers of division in the construction industry. The Glasgow School of Art and Grenfell fire disasters, and their subsequent inquiries, highlight the hideous consequences of industry fragmentation and mismanagement.

The majority of architects have done little to heal this fracture, or to re-establish the social value of the process of construction. I am not sure if some individuals even believe in its value themselves.

Architects will always exist – they are vital, history has shown us this. The role we currently label as architect though, perhaps that is due some evolution.

Eleanor Jolliffe is an architect and writer based in London. She has a regular column in UK architecture title Building Design, and is co-author of Architect: The evolving story of a profession.

The main image is of architecture students on site in the 1950s, courtesy of RIBA collections.

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