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Teo Yang Looks at Tradition to Design the Future

South Korea’s leading online publication, LongBlack, shares their translated story exclusively for COOL HUNTING readers

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Design

Teo Yang Looks at Tradition to Design the Future

South Korea’s leading online publication, LongBlack, shares their translated story exclusively for COOL HUNTING readers

<img width="1024" height="683" src="https://150102931.v2.pressablecdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/02-Teoyang-Portrait_2021-1024×683.jpg" class="attachment-large size-large wp-post-image" alt="teo yang portrait 2021" style="object-fit:cover" data-attachment-id="360982" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/teo-yang-looks-at-tradition-to-design-the-future/attachment/02-teoyang-portrait_2021/" data-orig-file="https://150102931.v2.pressablecdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/02-Teoyang-Portrait_2021.jpg" data-orig-size="2560,1707" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"2.8","credit":"INYEONG HEO","camera":"Canon EOS 5D Mark IV","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1617384728","copyright":"STUDIO HER","focal_length":"28","iso":"400","shutter_speed":"0.025","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="02 Teoyang Portrait_2021" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Designer Teo Yang sitting in his hanok in Gye-dong, Seoul. Teo Yang gained his aesthetic sense from his mother, who was an art collector, and his architectural sense from his father, who worked in construction. ⓒ Teo Yang Studio

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COOL HUNTING Editors’ note

We’ve been increasingly interested in everything that’s going on in South Korea—from hosting our most recent travel experience there to observing the myriad ways the country is innovating across the worlds of design, technology, art, fashion, food, spirits and more. We were fortunate to meet the team behind LongBlack, the country’s fastest growing online publication. It’s now a primary resource for entrepreneurs and creators, and it has a very unique business model. It publishes a single in-depth feature each day, and that feature is available for 24 hours. Subscribers pay a modest fee, and are able to share the story with friends and colleagues within that time period, which serves as a great funnel for new subscribers. Once a subscriber you have access to the archive from the day you joined; earlier stories can be accessed by a fee.

Because each of their features are so beautifully done and in depth, we thought it would be fun to share some of them with CH readers, and we’ve curated a few that we think are exciting to share with you. This is our first one. You’ll notice it’s longer than most CH features, and because it is written in LongBlack’s editorial voice it differs from ours. Instead of rewriting it we wanted to honor their style by translating it. Do let us know what you think in the comments. 

This feature is about one of our favorite designers anywhere, Teo Yang. A friend of CH, Teo is a multidisciplinary designer, entrepreneur and creative force. In addition to his design studio he has a furniture company, a fragrance company, a skin care company, and he writes science fiction in his spare time. What ties all of his work together is knowledge, honor and respect for the past. His work is  infused with this vocabulary, though he’s not nostalgic or period, but often in spirit and not in literal appropriation.

A Word from LongBlack 

LongBlack explores leaders across vertical—we call our approach a singular taste. But how can one develop a singular taste? The word feels vague, and there’s no textbook to guide you. Perhaps we can learn if we meet with someone who’s spent a long time developing their own singularity.

Teo Yang is a designer. His Studio is highly recognized by numerous global media outlets, including Wallpaper, Monocle, and Design Anthology. In 2021, it was featured as one of the world’s top 100 interior design studios in By Design.* Recently, it made its name into AD100—a list of the top 100 studios as selected by Architectural Digest.**

LongBlack met with Sohyun Choi, Head of Design & Marketing of NAVER**, to walk up the hills of Bukchon, Seoul. We passed by an old-fashioned tea house, a modern café serving popular desserts, and traditional gift shops along the bending routes of old town, when we finally reached the hanok**** where Yang lives and has a studio.

You can view the article in Korean on LongBlack (access provided for CH readers for free)

TeoYang Studio @teoyang

*Published by Phaidon Press
**
Naver: a Big tech company in South Korea, with a revenue of 6.8 trillion KRW (approx. $5.2B)
****hanok: a traditional Korean house, often featuring wooden structures with a courtyard in the center

Interviewer : Sohyun Choi, Head of Design and Marketing of NAVER [a Korean technology company]

Teo Yang—a “designer”? I hope these words do justice. He is a designer who changes the future through the legacy of the past. 

Yang studied Interior Design at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) and Environmental Design at ArtCenter College of Design. He trained under Marcel Wanders, the renowned Dutch designer, and has been directing the Teo Yang Studio in Korea since 2010.
*Known for his experimental works that add modern elements to classical designs. He works with international brands such as Moooi, B&B Italia, Moroso, and Mondrian Hotels.

Yang designed several hanok spaces and renovated the Gyeongju National Museum. Then he launched his own cosmetics, furniture, and fragrance brands. Phaidon Press once wrote, “[Yang has] a flair for bringing the past into present.” Teo Yang is a designer who translates Korean tradition into modern spaces, brands, and lifestyle.

We entered the dining room of his hanok. Laid out on a small table were yellow-colored sweets paired with tea, and candied kumquats topped with plum blossom petals, freshly picked a couple days before.

Chapter 1
Alone in the Korean Gallery

As a child, Yang wanted to become an archeologist. His friends liked robots and cars, but he was fascinated by old artifacts like samurai swords and terracotta warriors.

Yang’s mother had a big influence on him. She was an art collector. It was the ’80’s in Korea and the term “design” was unfamiliar to many people. Still, Yang remembers how she made a day-long trip to the bank, exchanging dollars and making overseas arrangements, all to collect original copies of Architectural Digest.

On his way home from elementary school Yang would see his mother park among the school buses. She’d yell, “Yang, let’s go see the antique shops!” or “Let’s go explore the new gallery!” Yang sometimes felt shy, but he still followed along.

He grew to love antiques. It was one of those days that he begged his mother to buy japsang (decorative figurines placed on the roofs of palaces or pavilions, believed to protect the buildings from fire) which now stands on top of his roof.

“The japsang are now sitting on the eaves of this hanok. My mother told me, ‘Teo, I see your future in these japsang.’ From then on, it seemed like the entire universe spoke to me. Everything I’ve done in life seemed to link back to traditional Korean elements.”

01-teoyang
The japsang on the roof of Teo Yang’s hanok in Gye-dong. This is the same japsang he found as a child and begged his mother to buy for him. ⓒ LongBlack

At college, he set his aim high. SAIC held tough standards, firmly believing that “art changes the world.” Professors often told the students that they’re “the bricks that support humanity.” Yang came to the U.S. with growing hopes, and aspired to make a mark in history. 

There was the loneliness. He was an international student, alone in the states. It was none other than the Korean gallery, a small corner space at the Art Institute of Chicago, that provided comfort for Yang. While other students chose to see Andy Warhol and Monet, Yang paid daily visits to the gallery of his home. He would sit there, make sketches and do assignments, alongside a moon jar (a traditional Korean white porcelain shape made during the Joseon dynasty) and a single portrait. He reflected on the solitude of these artifacts while away from home, alone in this foreign land for many years.

After graduation Yang interned at Marcel Wanders Studio. His job was to scan catalogs from museums and antique shops across the Netherlands and present them to Wanders. Yang naturally developed an eye for exquisite arts, while Wanders taught him the theory of space.

“I learned a lot from Wanders. He would say things like ‘Do you know what baseboards are for? They are to prevent repeated wall damage from mop sweeps.’ They were the Western design principles. And I began to wonder, what about Korean design principles?”

<img width="1024" height="683" data-attachment-id="360982" data-permalink="https://coolhunting.com/design/teo-yang-looks-at-tradition-to-design-the-future/attachment/02-teoyang-portrait_2021/" data-orig-file="https://150102931.v2.pressablecdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/02-Teoyang-Portrait_2021.jpg" data-orig-size="2560,1707" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"2.8","credit":"INYEONG HEO","camera":"Canon EOS 5D Mark IV","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1617384728","copyright":"STUDIO HER","focal_length":"28","iso":"400","shutter_speed":"0.025","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="02 Teoyang Portrait_2021" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Designer Teo Yang sitting in his hanok in Gye-dong, Seoul. Teo Yang gained his aesthetic sense from his mother, who was an art collector, and his architectural sense from his father, who worked in construction. ⓒ Teo Yang Studio

” data-medium-file=”https://150102931.v2.pressablecdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/02-Teoyang-Portrait_2021-300×200.jpg” data-large-file=”https://150102931.v2.pressablecdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/02-Teoyang-Portrait_2021-1024×683.jpg” role=”button” src=”https://150102931.v2.pressablecdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/02-Teoyang-Portrait_2021-1024×683.jpg” alt=”teo yang portrait 2021″ class=”wp-image-360982″ />

Designer Teo Yang sitting in his hanok in Gye-dong, Seoul. Teo Yang gained his aesthetic sense from his mother, who was an art collector, and his architectural sense from his father, who worked in construction. ⓒ Teo Yang Studio

Chapter 2
Tradition in the Vanishing Alleyways

Yang didn’t have his now-distinguishable design principles from the start. Though he returned to Korea in 2010 and founded the Teo Yang Studio, he still had an overseas influence for a long time.

There was a high demand for Western design, and Yang had advantages. His first project, an experimental concept store called KWIN, an experimental retail space where clothes and accessories were displayed like gallery pieces, and more than ten mirrors were hung on one wall to create a unique aesthetic; it was featured in Vogue. He published Moving Day, an essay on interior design, and wrote columns for a popular lifestyle magazine called Lemon Tree. He slowly began to make a name for himself.

Yang gained recognition when he introduced the idea of concept stores at the 2013 Daelim Bath showroom. He designed the entire showroom as an archival space, naming it a “Modern Bath Library.” Once a mere layout of products now transformed into a study room, showcasing the 50 year history of Daelim Bath. Corners were reserved for small plants, nourished by water saved from toilets, to reflect the company’s philosophy.

This was very unconventional, but Yang went further. He even turned his showroom into a lifestyle shop. Curated by himself, bathroom supplies such as sponges, light fixtures, and toothbrush holders were put on display, with price tags for sale. You can find many such shops in Seoul now, but the term “lifestyle shop” was so unfamiliar back then, that the show was called “a bathroom accessory business.”

“Many people found it shocking. We had fundamentally changed the definition of a ‘showroom.’ Rather than displaying products, we chose to showcase our concepts and artistic directions of the brand. Many called me arrogant, asking why an interior designer meddles with the showroom, typically a domain of operations or sales.

But a designer must never forget the final result, the whole. Interior design is one part of the story. If a client wants to realize a concept of lifestyle, the designer must create a shop for them.”

Yang’s early projects were successful, but differ significantly from his current work. He explains that he didn’t have his design manifesto back then, and that the presence or absence of a manifesto highly changes the quality of the work.

“I think I was caught up in a xenocentric mindset. I wanted to imitate Western styles. But the more I worked, the more I realized I couldn’t continue like this. My work lacked justification. There is a vast difference between simply becoming a designer and being a designer with a manifesto. It took me four years to find mine.”

03-teoyang
Teo Yang personally wrapped the covers of the books in the hanok’s study with traditional Korean paper. Piled up among various artworks, they look like antique books. ⓒ LongBlack

The Mission of his Hanok: Survival, rather than Preservation

Yang’s manifesto is ‘to bring tradition closer to the present day.’ It came to him naturally when he visited a hanok. It was 2012, Yang and his mother were visiting Gye-Dong in search of a new home. As soon as he stepped into a hanok, his mother said, “This is exactly like the hanok I saw in a dream.”

Living in a hanok transformed his work completely. Before, Yang was primarily focused on Western-style spaces. Now he began to think how the legacy of hanok, and the Korean traditional lifestyle that comes with it, could be continued in the generations to come.

Yang transformed his hanok, originally built in 1917. First, he installed air conditioners, outlets, and chargers in out-of-sight spots behind the doors of wooden cabinets. Then came the home appliances that could be operated with just a cell phone. It became a smart home, with the latest technology camouflaged by traditional elements.

Yang also tailored each space to fit contemporary needs. What used to be the reception room now housed ancient earthenware alongside a wine refrigerator. This was once a conservative space where women were not allowed in ancient times. Now anyone was invited into this dining room, to enjoy a glass of wine.

“When I first unveiled this hanok, people said, ‘this young designer has ruined a good hanok.’ But you need to see beyond preservation. This hanok was designed specifically for an urban lifestyle, created with the keyword ‘modern’ in mind.

‘How should hanok be presented in the age of modern technology?’ If people don’t consider the technological aspect, this hanok is done for. Its lifespan is over. While it is important for old houses in rural areas to be preserved as a form of heritage and academic data, the hanok villages in Gahoe-dong and Bukchon need to prove that they can survive into the next generation.”

Yang’s hanok renovation received global attention. Wallpaper featured his hanok in a four-page story, called the “Seoul revival.” Revival? Was Seoul dying? When Yang moved to Bukchon, he witnessed the vanishing alleyways firsthand.

“When I first moved here, it was what you call an old-town alleyway. You could see businesses necessary for daily life, like repair shops, barbers, and delivery carts. You could easily peek into a neighbor’s hanok. Families would keep the doors open while sitting on floor tables to eat. That was something truly Korean.

But since then, those hanok have all turned into cafés. They started disappearing one after another each week, and one day, I found that they had all been torn down.”

Witnessing the changes in Bukchon, Yang realized what he had to do: to preserve Korean sentiments. He needed to bring tradition closer to the present day.

04-teoyang
Teo Yang found his manifesto when he moved into a hanok in Gye-dong, Bukchon, in 2012. The name of one of the two attached hanok is Cheongsong-jae, an urban-style hanok built in 1917 during the late Joseon era. ⓒ LongBlack

Chapter 3
Past: Manghyang Rest Stop, Recreating Nostalgia from Joseon

For tradition to survive, it must be relevant in the present day. After encountering hanok, Yang devoted himself to revive tradition. Projects that followed—the 2015 Taegeukdang bakery remodeling, the 2016 Manghyang Rest Stop restroom renovation (of which he is particularly proud), and the 2017 design of the Korean Cultural Center in Beijing—show his efforts to amend aging traditions to meet modern needs.

“I’m particularly fond of doing public projects. They may be the type of project that designers avoid the most. Budgets are limited, time is short, a lot of paperwork, and you get attacked in various committee meetings… Nevertheless, I love public projects because we get a chance to set the future guidelines on how to treat these spaces.”

The Manghyang Rest Stop restroom attempted to solve a problem typically associated with rest stop restrooms: it proved that when spaces change, people also change.

“Design is about solving life’s problems in the most beautiful way. The problem with rest stop restrooms was that they all looked the same. No matter where you went, there’d be random paintings of the alps or The Little Prince on the walls without any context. Instead, I wanted to showcase the nobility of the nearby town, Cheonan.”

Cheonan is a region where a hyanggyo (a state-run secondary educational institution from the ancient Goryeo and Joseon periods, established by the government to educate local talents), a gathering place for scholars and intellectuals from all over the country, was located during the Joseon dynasty. Outside the restroom entrance, Yang installed chairs, bar tables, and desk lamps, all facing a large window with a full view of Cheonan’s natural scenery. The spot brings back the ancient academic halls of hyanggyo to modern visitors, the same experience of scholars who studied in halls with open views.

He also photographed local relics from Cheonan and framed them inside the bathroom stalls. In the central area with washbasins, he added a mini-sized garden to mimic the inner courtyards of hanok. The restroom’s ceiling, with a narrow gap allowing for a peek of the sky, was inspired by hanok doors. In 2019, the Manghyang Rest Stop restroom was voted the top “Customer Recommended Rest Stop Bathroom” by the Korea Expressway Corporation. 

“The janitors told us on many occasions, ‘People have changed. They don’t spit or throw trash on the floor anymore.’ That’s the problem-solving power of a well-designed space.”

05-teoyang
2016 Manghyang Rest Stop restroom renovation. The design was inspired by the architectural principles of a Joseon-era hyanggyo. The central area of the restroom is reminiscent of a hanok courtyard, and the ceiling mimics the doors of a hanok. ⓒ Teo Yang Studio

Chapter 4
Present: EATH Library, Easing Tradition into the Present

Yang didn’t want to limit his work to interiors; hHe wanted to introduce tradition to a broader audience. The problem was that traditions were perceived as boring and difficult, but Yang believed he could introduce tradition in a more relatable manner for contemporary audiences. So, he launched a brand.

In 2019, Yang introduced EATH Library (short for Evolutionary Achievement from Traditional Heritage) an herbal skincare brand. This puzzled many—why would an interior designer venture into cosmetics? 

“Cosmetics were a means to an end to reach people. I want to explore a wide variety of traditional categories. As long as I can lower tradtion’s barrier to entry tradition, it doesn’t matter how I do it.”

Yang was dissatisfied with how herbal medicine had been previously represented. Advertisements often featured models wearing hanbok (traditional Korean clothes) and lots of the symbolic red, which felt outdated and stereotypical. He pondered on the essence of herbal medicine.

“I asked a traditional herbal medicine doctor. ‘What is herbal medicine?’ He said, ‘Herbal medicine is simply 2000 years of our accumulated desire to care for others.’ As he said this, I noticed the antique books stacked up behind him. The paper in an antique book is too thin for the book to be placed vertically. I thought to myself, ‘That’s it. The way those old books are stacked on top of each other is the essence of herbal medicine.’”

He designed containers of EATH Library products using the antique books as a motif. The container itself is shaped like three antique books stacked on top of each other, while the spherical cap symbolizes the essence of contemporary art. This packaging received a design award from Wallpaper in 2019. The products are also being offered as amenities in hotels such as Four Seasons China and Signiel Vietnam.

“Sales of EATH Library products weren’t so great, but I think I achieved my goal. My goal was to inform people that there is such a thing as ‘Korean medicine,’ especially for the audience who regard herbal medicine as a uniquely Chinese phenomenon.”

Following EATH Library, Yang launched the furniture brand Eastern Edition in 2020 and the home aromatics and perfume brand Sinang in 2022. Eastern Edition reimagines Joseon-era lifestyles for urban living, adding legs to floor mats and wheels to traditional display cases. Sinang’s showroom is located in an old shopping center, soon to be demolished, witnessing the fading history.

“There’s a passage in Lao Tzu’s Tao Te Ching that I really love: ‘The importance of a wheel is not in the wheel itself but in the empty space it surrounds, and the importance of a vessel is not in its beauty but in the emptiness it contains.’ Why do we, the people of this era, focus only on appearance? I didn’t want that. I wanted to show the essence.”

06-teoyang
This EATH Library container was designed to look like three antique books stacked up. The container received a design award from the Wallpaper. ⓒ EATH Library

Chapter 5
Future: Gyeongju National Museum – Taking Artifacts out of Glass Windows.

Yang didn’t stop at introducing tradition into the present. He wants to ensure its survival into the future, creating guidelines for spaces and lifestyle so that future and past can coexist.

In 2020, Yang redesigned the lobby of the Gyeongju National Museum. He changed how the visitors experience the museum completely. Instead of viewing artifacts passively, they would encounter them. What he did was quite radical. He took artifacts out of their dedicated galleries and put them in the lobby, without any glass windows to enclose them. His peers found this “changed the future of museums.”

“I start planning by writing out a script. How visitors would find this place, what path they take, what conversations they have in the elevator, which lobbies they walk through, and so on. But there is an unspoken truth about museums. Most people come to take pictures of the artifacts.”

To take a good photograph, you need a closer distance to the artifacts. Of course, Yang faced huge opposition when he suggested removing the protective glass. What about any potential damage from visitors? He implemented carbon reduction devices, marble pedestals, and bamboo fences to ensure a safe distance and good preservation capacity. To this day, none of the artifacts have been damaged. Rather, the artifacts are protected by the visitors themselves.

Staff from Yang’s studio spent multiple days analyzing patterns of visitors. They noticed that visitors were constantly asking for directions. Yang installed windows in the museum, aiding visitors in orientation and creating a more refreshing atmosphere. More visitors now made their way to the final area of the exhibition.

The renovation was finished in just two months by a team of six staff members. Time magazine selected Gyeongju as one of “The World’s 100 Greatest Places of 2021” and specifically recommended visiting the Gyeongju National Museum.

“The former director of the Seoul Museum of Craft Art told me, ‘Teo, beyond its beautiful design, the Gyeongju Museum had a huge impact on the way I see things. It made me realize that we need to change our museum as well.’”

After the Gyeongju National Museum was reworked many other museums began their renovations. In 2021, the National Museum of Korea unveiled “A Room of Quiet Contemplation,” attracting over a million visitors in the past two years. The same year, the Seoul Museum of Craft Art opened, praised for “turning tradition into a trendy spot.”

07-teoyang
For the renovation of the lobby of the Gyeongju National Museum, artifacts were brought out of their dedicated galleries and displayed without a glass window against the visitors. This introduced a way of experiencing a museum—you don’t view artifacts, you encounter them. ⓒ Teo Yang Studio

Craft Art, Lifestyle of the Future

Yang is deeply involved in the craft scene. He directed the 20th-anniversary exhibition for the craft foundation YÉOL and the 2022 Craft Trend Fair. Yang says craft art is not a mere matter of handiwork, but is a lifestyle.

“History is all about balance. In a digital era where the ignorance of the metaverse or NFTs means falling behind, craft is a means of restoring balance. There is a clear, growing desire for handmade items.”

However, as the interest in craft grows, they are often treated as ‘artworks.’ Yang warns against this perspective, emphasizing that crafts should first and foremost be practical items.

“I use crafts like dishes and ceramics extensively in my home. Craft should exist for reality, not the other way around. Craft should not demand attention or purchases; they must first serve as essential goods for modern people. Craftspersons should aim for this goal and raise awareness of the relevance of craft art in daily life.”

08-teoyang
Craft items and artworks in Teo Yang’s hanok. He led the 2022 Craft Trend Fair as a chief director. ⓒ LongBlack

Chapter 6
Coda: There isn’t much time

Interior design, recreating public spaces, and launching his own brands, Yang’s work transcends the boundaries of traditional design. But is his approach really unique? He says there is a misunderstanding of design.

“Don’t stay limited to one domain. Design is planning for the whole. Design is the process of curation of all things—curation of people’s spaces, lifestyles, and values.”

Being a designer seems to be increasingly challenging. He confesses he no longer knows how to feel satisfied with his work. The pressure to achieve more weighs heavy on his shoulders.

“As a designer, you need to create a driving force that helps people move forward. I’m not going to save everyone on earth, but at least I want to have a positive impact on Bukchon and Seoul in the 21st century. That’s why I feel there isn’t much time. I need to move fast. A decade passes too quickly, and I wonder how long I can keep working at this pace.”

09-teoyang
The lobby of Gyeongju National Museum, renovated in 2020. One of the entrance doors was blocked and repurposed into a large window. This artistic resting spot is completed by Gyeongju’s Namsan hills, a lion statue, and visitors on benches in the same view. ⓒ Teo Yang Studio

A Word from LongBlack’s Editor 

Maybe I had misconceptions about Teo Yang. To the Korean public, he is well-known for his media presence and designing celebrities’ homes. These can sometimes overshadow his philosophy as a designer.

“Many people ask me, ‘what can I do to become famous?’ That question is very strange to me. I’ve never thought that ‘I want to be an influencer.’ I simply write, create meanings, and share my thoughts. Recognition came later.”

Yang will continue on his mission – to bring tradition closer to the present day. Before we end our short journey with Yang, I’ll share one last secret from him.

“I can’t work without books. I get scared when a big project deadline approaches, but I reassure myself, ‘It’s okay, I will find answers, again, in my books.’ Books are infused with someone’s soul. All we need to do is read, and absorb decades’ worth of philosophy and knowledge.”

I am also grateful for the philosophy Yang shared with us today.

Did you find this article interesting? If you want to read more inspirational content from LongBlack, please add your email here. We will contact you when the English version of LongBlack is released

All-new Audi A6 e-tron: A Bold Vision in Electric Vehicle Design

The Audi A6 e-tron combines advanced technology with striking aesthetics. Both the exterior and interior reflect Audi’s dedication to precision and innovation. From the moment you see the A6 e-tron, its clean, sophisticated lines are evident. The design integrates functionality with a bold visual presence. Here’s a closer look at the details that make this vehicle a remarkable entry into the electric vehicle market.

Designer: Audi

The front design features Audi’s signature inverted single frame, encased in a sleek black mask. This design cleverly integrates the main headlights, ADAS sensors, and air intakes, creating a seamless and functional front end. The slim daytime running lights and wide grille give the A6 e-tron a broad, assertive presence on the road.

Audi S6 Sportback e-tron

The side profile of the A6 e-tron impresses with its dynamic roofline and low ride height, enhancing aerodynamic efficiency and contributing to a sleek, sporty look. The prominent Quattro blisters over each wheel arch emphasize the car’s performance capabilities, giving it a powerful stance. A black insert along the sill area highlights the battery’s placement, stretching visually to the rear and integrating the reflectors for an extended appearance. For those who prefer a more traditional touch, the Avant model features a distinctive aluminum-look trim from the A-pillar to the roof spoiler, adding a unique and stylish element.

At the rear, the A6 e-tron combines sporty elegance with functional aerodynamics. A continuous three-dimensional light strip spans the vehicle’s width, housing the second-generation digital OLED rear lights. With 450 individual segments, these lights offer customizable light signatures and enhance road safety through car-to-X communication. The rear diffuser, designed for optimal aerodynamic performance, and the additional spoiler on the Avant model reduce drag and improve stability at high speeds.

Audi’s aerodynamic excellence shines in the A6 e-tron. The vehicle achieves a low drag coefficient (0.21 for the Sportback, 0.24 for the Avant) thanks to several key features. Air curtains at the front manage airflow around the wheels, reducing turbulence and drag. The slim greenhouse and sloping roofline contribute to a sleek profile that cuts through the air with minimal resistance. Underneath, the car’s underbody is extensively sealed and optimized, including specially adapted wheel trims and 3D bumps ahead of the front wheels to streamline airflow further.

The controllable cool-air intake under the Singleframe grille ensures efficient cooling while minimizing aerodynamic losses. The rear diffuser balances lift and drag, enhancing stability at high speeds. The Avant model includes an additional spoiler on the diffuser and side spoilers at the rear to manage airflow more effectively, contributing to its slightly higher drag coefficient than the Sportback but still maintaining impressive aerodynamic performance.

The second-generation virtual exterior mirrors, now with electrically foldable compact cameras, reduce the vehicle’s front area and improve the drag coefficient. These mirrors enhance the car’s sleek look and provide a practical benefit by lowering aerodynamic drag.

 

Inside, the A6 e-tron continues to impress with a user-focused design. The digital stage concept features a panoramic display, blending a 14.5-inch MMI touch display with an 11.9-inch virtual cockpit. An optional 10.9-inch MMI front passenger display offers Active Privacy Mode, allowing passengers to enjoy entertainment without distracting the driver. The second-generation augmented reality head-up display provides relevant information directly in the driver’s line of sight.

Comfort and functionality take center stage in the interior design. The “soft wrap” extends door to door, creating a cohesive and enveloping space. High-quality materials cover every surface, differentiating between comfort-oriented and precisely designed control areas. The low-lying, slim air vents blend into the background, emphasizing the interior’s clean lines. Displays for the virtual exterior mirrors are ergonomically positioned inside the doors for easy viewing.

Audi S6 Sportback e-tron

The Audi A6 e-tron seamlessly integrates modern technology. The infotainment system, powered by Android Automotive OS, updates over the air to keep the latest Audi Connect services up-to-date. The Audi Application Store offers a variety of third-party apps, while the enhanced e-tron route planner ensures efficient travel. The Audi assistant, integrated with ChatGPT, provides intuitive voice control for various vehicle functions, enhancing the overall driving experience.

With its curved design and OLED technology, the MMI panoramic display consists of an 11.9-inch Audi virtual cockpit and a 14.5-inch MMI touch display. This digital stage is complemented by the optional 10.9-inch MMI front passenger display, which features Active Privacy Mode. Thanks to intelligent light direction control based on speed and seat occupancy, the front-seat passenger can enjoy entertainment content without distracting the driver.

The interior design emphasizes a homely ambiance with clear structures and spaciousness. The “soft wrap” extends from the doors across the entire width of the control panel, creating a cohesive and enveloping space. Comfort-oriented areas feature generous surfaces and soft materials, while control areas use high-quality, high-gloss black finishes to highlight the interaction points. The low-lying, slim air vents blend seamlessly into the background, maintaining the interior’s clean lines.

Audi S6 Sportback e-tron

The displays for the optional virtual exterior mirrors are positioned ergonomically inside the doors, ensuring they are easily visible without distracting the driver. This thoughtful placement enhances the driver’s ability to monitor their surroundings comfortably.

The Audi A6 e-tron sets new standards in electric vehicle design. Its exterior combines elegance with aerodynamic efficiency, while the interior focuses on user-friendly technology and comfort. Personally, I love the look of the Avant—it’s stylish and incredibly practical. Which model do you prefer?

U.S. Market Specific Information

Audi will launch the A6 e-tron, A6 e-tron quattro, and S6 e-tron Sportback variants in the U.S. market. The offer structure for the A6 e-tron in the U.S. market will differ from the global release.

The A6 e-tron (RWD) Sportback delivers 362 hp and accelerates from 0-60 mph in an estimated 5.2 seconds, with a top speed of 130 mph. The A6 e-tron quattro Sportback offers 422 hp and achieves 0-60 mph in about 4.3 seconds, maintaining the same top speed. The S6 e-tron Sportback has 496 hp, which can be boosted to 543 hp with launch control, reaching 0-60 mph in an estimated 3.7 seconds and a top speed of 149 mph.

Audi A6 e-tron Family

EPA range specifications will be announced closer to the U.S. on-sale date. The European drag coefficient of 0.21 Cd is based on a specific wheel offering. Unfortunately, virtual exterior mirrors are unavailable in the U.S.

The A6 e-tron features a 100 kWh battery (94.4 kWh net), with AC charging at 9.6 kW (240V/40A) and DC fast charging at 270 kW HPC at 800 volts, capable of reaching 10-80% SOC in 21 minutes. Available colors for the U.S. models include Magnetic gray (solid), Glacier white metallic, Mythos black metallic, Plasma blue metallic, Malpelo blue metallic, and Typhoon gray metallic. The S6 e-tron also offers a Siam beige metallic and Daytona gray pearl effect.

The A6 and S6 e-tron offer up to eight customizable light signatures. However, due to U.S. regulations, certain lighting functionalities—such as adaptive matrix LED headlights, car-to-X communication, and active digital light signatures—will not be available. More detailed information will be announced closer to the U.S. on-sale date, including final U.S. market-specific product information, performance specifications, pricing, and EPA-rated range/emissions information.

The post All-new Audi A6 e-tron: A Bold Vision in Electric Vehicle Design first appeared on Yanko Design.

Five architecture and design events in August from Dezeen Events Guide

Photo of sculpture by Tomie Ohtake

Aberto/03 and 16th Alvar Aalto Symposium – The Weight of Architecture among the architecture and design events featured in Dezeen Events Guide this August.

Other events taking place during the month include the Entourage, Life Cycles: The Materials of Contemporary Design and Gather: Catalyst 2024.

Life Cycles: The Materials of Contemporary Design
2 September 2023 to 25 August 2024, USA

The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City is exploring circular design with its exhibition Life Cycles: The Materials of Contemporary Design.

The showcase addresses regeneration in design through technological advancements, presenting lamps, speakers, bricks, vases and other objects made from innovatively designed materials.

Erotica Generica is by Strat Coffman. Photo and photo above is courtesy of the MAK Center

Entourage
22 June to 15 September 2024, USA

Entourage is an exhibition held at Los Angeles‘ MAK Centre displaying body-centric architectural projects, including work by New York-based practice MOS, collaborative project Your Restroom is a Battleground and architect Strat Coffman.

The exhibition demonstrates research projects focusing on human rights within architecture, with MOS examining bodies in architectural drawings and renders and Your Restroom is a Battleground highlighting the functions of and politics surrounding toilets.

Photo of sculpture by Tomie Ohtake
Sculptures are displayed in the home of Tomie Ohtake. Photo is by Ruy Teixeira courtesy of Aberto

Aberto/03
10 August to 6 October 2024, Brazil

Aberto is an annual exhibition celebrating local architecture and heritage, with this year’s event spotlighting homes and studios in São Paulo, Brazil.

The exhibition, which has travelled around Brazil, marks its third edition being located at Japanese-Brazilian artist Tomie Ohtake and Chinese-Brazilian architect and designer Chu Ming Silveira’s residences.

The exhibition includes the houses and art designed to complement or respond to them, as well as furniture created by Chu Ming Silveira’s son, Alan Chu.

Gather: Catalyst 2024
11 to 13 August 2024, USA

The annual Gather conference by the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID) returns, this year taking place in Denver, Colorado.

The travelling conference is hosted over three days, inviting ASID members to outline industry insights and projects in their talks, as well as network between sessions.

The event takes place at the Sheraton Denver Downtown Hotel.

Photo of building in Finland
The tour of buildings designed by Alvar Aalto includes the Muuratsalo Experimental House. Photo is by Maija Holma

16th Alvar Aalto Symposium – The Weight of Architecture
22 to 23 August 2024, Finland

Located at the University of Jyväskylä, the 16th Alvar Aalto Symposium presents a programme of talks centre around the role of architecture in social, environmental and political changes.

Speakers include architects Juho Grönholm, Antti Nousjoki, Samuli Woolston, Hilda Rantanen, Thomas Brogren, Emma Johansson, Willem van Bolderen, Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara, academics David Benjamin and Helena Mattsson, designer Ehab Sayed, historian Barnabas Calder and climatologist John Schellnhuber.

Named after the late architect Alvar Aalto and organised by the Alvar Aalto Foundation, the event also offers guided tours of the architect’s buildings in Finland.

About Dezeen Events Guide

Dezeen Events Guide is our guide to the best architecture and design events taking place across the world each year. The guide is updated weekly and includes virtual events, conferences, trade fairs, major exhibitions and design weeks.

Inclusion in the guide is free for basic listings, with events selected at Dezeen’s discretion. Organisers can get standard, enhanced or featured listings for their events, including images, additional text and links, by paying a modest fee.

In addition, events can ensure inclusion by partnering with Dezeen. For more details on inclusion in Dezeen Events Guide and media partnerships with Dezeen, email eventsguide@dezeen.com.

The post Five architecture and design events in August from Dezeen Events Guide appeared first on Dezeen.

Foster + Partners unveils masterplan for rebuilding Antakya post-earthquake

Antakya rebuilding masterplan by Foster + Partners

British architecture studio Foster + Partners has revealed its masterplan to rebuild Antakya, Turkey, following the Turkey-Syria earthquakes last year.

Foster + Partners worked with engineering consultant Buro Happold, transport planner Mic-hub, and Turkish practices DB Architects and KEYM Urban Renewal Centre on the city masterplan, which focuses on a 30 square kilometre area of Antakya, the capital of Turkey’s Hatay province.

It forms part of the Turkish Design Council‘s wider plan to rebuild Turkey after the earthquake, which took place on 6 February 2023, destroying multiple cities and killing more than 50,000 people.

Antakya rebuilding masterplan by Foster + Partners
Foster + Partners has unveiled its masterplan for rebuilding Antakya

The practice focused on re-establishing the pre-existing characteristics of the area and enhancing them, aiming to encourage displaced people to return.

According to Foster + Partners, around 80 per cent of the buildings in Antakya were damaged in the earthquake. The practice plans to maintain the surviving structures and create an efficient road hierarchy that encourages public transport, pedestrians and cyclists.

Aiming to design the city for resilience, Foster + Partners identified areas around rivers at risk of flooding and will create green areas around them to provide more space for water runoff while also increasing nature-filled public space.

River surrounded by public space
Public green space around streams will help prevent flooding

“Before the earthquake, the city of Antakya faced some challenges that we aim to address during the sustainable reconstruction,” said Foster + Partners partner Loukia Iliopoulou.

“There were a lot of buildings built in flood-prone areas and next to the existing streams, the city grew organically and in a relatively uncontrolled manner which resulted in sprawl, the public realm was car-dominated, and there was an uneven distribution of open space with community facilities.”

“There were also a lot of qualities we wanted to retain within the proposed urban framework – the buildings that survived the earthquake, the permeability and the granularity of the urban fabric, the variety in the block typologies, the green spaces that were well-established in the collective memory of the residence, and the location of amenities that are also important to residents,” Iliopoulou continued.

Plaza design for the Antakya rebuild
Plazas will double as emergency gathering space

The wider masterplan for Antakya includes 13 districts, each with its own commercial hubs and high streets designed to evoke memories of the building fabric that existed before the earthquake.

“We haven’t changed the main structure of the city,” said Iliopoulou.

“We’ve prioritised the heart of the city and some basic social infrastructure, such as the high streets with live-work units – I will be happy for the rest of the fabric to evolve over time.”

The buildings will be designed to be earthquake-resilient by having mainly simple rectangular forms in a variety of heights, adequate separation between buildings, and avoiding setbacks and overhangs.

Public plazas will also double as emergency gathering spaces, with access wide enough for emergency service vehicles and enough space on the plazas to assemble emergency shelters.

Hatay rebuilding masterplan by Foster + Partners
Foster + Partners aimed to maintain the characteristics of Antakya before the earthquake

Foster + Partners plans to begin rebuilding in one area of Antakya, starting with building the high streets to establish homes near places of employment.

The practice hopes to expand rebuilding to the wider city in the future.

“If you want to start by phasing it out, every neighbourhood module comes with its own infrastructure that is enough to cover the needs of the residents within that neighbourhood – it has a modular approach based on the way we’ve treated the neighbourhood scale,” said Iliopoulou.

Render of a public plaza in Hatay
Roads will be designed to prioritise car-free travel

Earlier this year, Foster + Partners spoke to Dezeen about the practice’s goal for the masterplan, where they described how working with local aid helps the recovery process in post-disaster rebuilding.

Last year, chair of the Turkey Design Council Mehmet Kalyoncu told Dezeen the Hatay rebuilding project is the “most sophisticated urban problem in the world”.

The images are by Foster + Partners.

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Pharrell Williams calls for architecture competitions to return to Olympics at LA 2028

Humanrace by Pharrell Williams

Louis Vuitton creative director Pharrell Williams wants to bring the arts competitions, which were last held in 1948, back to the Olympics.

Speaking at an event at the Frank Gehry-designed Louis Vuitton Foundation building to mark the opening of the 2024 Olympics in Paris, William suggested that he would like to see the arts competitions return to the games in 2028.

“At one point the Olympics actually had like the arts as a section that ran all these competitions – sculpture, architecture and visual arts,” he told the Associated Press.

“The idea [is] we get to put the arts back in, and maybe by 2028. Why not take this moment to raise an awareness?”

Olympic Stadium, by Jan Wils, Amsterdam 1928
Jan Wils won the Olympic gold for architecture in 1928

The arts competitions were part of modern Olympic founder Pierre de Coubertin’s vision for the games and were held from 1912 to 1948 alongside the sporting events.

Medals were awarded in five categories – architecture, literature, music, painting and sculpture – for pieces that were inspired by sport.

Notable winners of the architecture awards include Dutch architect Jan Wils for the design of the 1928 Olympic stadium in Amsterdam. In 1936, German architect Werner March won a gold medal in the town planning section and a silver in architectural design for the Reich Sport Field, which hosted the games.

The arts competitions were removed from the games following the 1948 Olympics as the organising committee was concerned that professionals were allowed to enter, while the sports were competed by amateurs.

The next Olympics, where Williams hopes to see the arts reinstated, will be held in Los Angeles in 2028.

They will follow this year’s games that are currently taking place in Paris at venues across the city, where the major themes have been reuse and renovation.

Our Olympic Impact series, which is running throughout the games, will investigate whether the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games can be the blueprint for sustainable major sporting events.

The post Pharrell Williams calls for architecture competitions to return to Olympics at LA 2028 appeared first on Dezeen.

Fifteen Olympic architecture icons from the last 100 years

Olympiapark, by Behnisch & Partner and Frei Otto, Munich 1972

For most of the last hundred years, statement architecture has played a central role at the Olympic and Paralympic Games. With that potentially set to change, we look back at 15 of the most significant examples as part of our Olympic Impact series.

Due to growing concerns about sustainability, far fewer permanent venues are likely to built for the Olympics in future.

At Paris 2024, the focus has been on using existing structures, with an understated timber aquatics centre the only major new stadium.

However, the games have commissioned numerous impressive works of architecture in their 128-year history.

Some of the world’s best known architects, including Pritzker Architecture Prize-winners Kenzo Tange, Jacques Herzog & Pierre de Meuron, Zaha Hadid and Frei Otto have designed venues for the games.

Beyond simply forming the backdrop for athletic endeavour, these buildings have often helped to define each Olympics.

Below are the 15 most architecturally significant Olympic buildings:


Olympic Stadium, by Jan Wils, Amsterdam 1928
Above photo via Shutterstock. Top photo by Tobi 87

Olympic Stadium by Jan Wils, Amsterdam 1928

Designed by architect Jan Wils as the main venue for the 1928 Olympics, this red-brick stadium is a key example of the Amsterdam School architecture style – part of the wider international expressionist style.

Wils won an Olympic gold medal in the architecture competition for the design of the stadium as part of the art competitions that were included in the early games.

A 46-metre tower overlooking the stadium is topped with a cauldron that held the first Olympic flame.


Euro 2024 stadiums. Olympiastadion, Berlin.
Photo by Matthias Süßen

Olympic Stadium by Werner March and Albert Speer, Berlin 1936

Designed by German architects Werner March and Albert Speer, the Olympiastadion in Berlin was commissioned by Adolf Hitler to be the centrepiece of the infamous 1936 Olympics.

The colossal stadium has an instantly recognisable form, with its seating bowl broken by a large gap where the Olympic torch was originally placed.

It has since hosted the 1974 and 2006 World Cups, as well as the recent final of the 2024 Euro football tournament.

Like Wils, March was himself a winner at the games, taking home an Olympic gold and silver medal for the design of the park surrounding the stadium.


Palazzetto dello Sport, by Annibale Vitellozzi and Pier Luigi Nervi, Rome 1960
Photo by HerRobin

Palazzetto dello Sport by Annibale Vitellozzi and Pier Luigi Nervi, Rome 1960

Designed by Italian architect Annibale Vitellozzi, the Palazzetto dello Sport basketball venue is topped with a 60-metre-diameter dome.

The thin reinforced-concrete roof, which was engineered by Pier Luigi Nervi, was created from 1,620 prefabricated pieces and supported on a ring of Y-shaped flying buttresses.

Nervi designed several other structures at the games including the nearby Flaminio Stadium, co-designed with his son Antonio Nervi, and the Corso di Francia Viaduct road bridge.

In the south of the city, the Palazzo dello Sport, co-designed with architect Marcello Piacentini, hosted the boxing events.


Kenzo Tange
Photo by Kakidai

Yoyogi National Stadium by Kenzo Tange, Tokyo 1964

Designed by Pritzker Architecture Prize-winner Tange as the aquatics centre for Tokyo’s 1964 Games, the arena is topped with a distinctive, draped roof.

The highly engineered roof was hung from a pair of large steel cables hung from two concrete towers and anchored to the ground.

Following the games, the swimming pool was removed and the arena converted to be used for ice hockey, gymnastics, basketball and volleyball.

The stadium was one of several 1964 Olympics venues that were reused as venues during the 2020 games.


Nippon Budokan, by Mamoru Yamada, Tokyo 1964
Photo by Wiiii

Nippon Budokan by Mamoru Yamada, Tokyo 1964

Also built for the 1964 Olympics, the octagonal Nippon Budokan was designed by Japanese architect Mamoru Yamada to host the judo events at the Games.

Like Yoyogi National Stadium, the venue was reused at the 2020 games, when it hosted the karate events.


Palacio de los Deportes, by Félix Candela, Mexico City 1968
Photo by Alejandro Linares Garcia

Palacio de los Deportes by Félix Candela, Mexico City 1968

Another Olympic building with a distinctive roof, the Palacio de los Deportes was built to host the basketball events at the Mexico City games.

Designed by Spanish-Mexican architect Félix Candela, who is known for the development of thin concrete shell roofs, the circular arena is topped with a square-patterned dome.

Made of copper-clad plywood sheets, this roof is supported on a tubular aluminium frame resting on steel arches.


Olympiapark, by Behnisch & Partner and Frei Otto, Munich 1972
Photo by GraphyArchy

Olympiapark by Behnisch & Partner and Frei Otto, Munich 1972

Perhaps the best-known project by Otto, who was posthumously awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2015, the Olympiapark in Munich was the centrepiece of the 1972 Olympics.

German architecture studio Behnisch & Partner arranged the main venues – stadium, aquatics centre and gymnastics arena – alongside a lake at a former rubbish dump.

To unite the venues, they were all topped with a translucent canopy created by Otto, which was supported on 58 cast-steel pylons. The pioneering tensile structure was designed to echo the peaks of the nearby Alps mountains.


Olympic Stadium, by Roger Taillibert, Montreal 1976
Photo by Wilfredor

Olympic Stadium by Roger Taillibert, Montreal 1976

Nicknamed The Big O due to its doughnut-shaped roof, the main stadium for the Montreal Olympics was designed by French architect Roger Taillibert.

Its unique roof was designed to be retractable, using cables attached to a 165-metre-high inclined tower, which stands alongside the stadium and contains the games’ aquatic centre.

Due to construction delays the stadium’s roof and tower were not complete for the Olympics, with the project finally finished in 1987. Even when complete, the roof could not operate in high winds and in total was only ever raised 88 times.


Olympic Gymnastics Arena
Photo by Arne Müseler

Olympic Gymnastics Arena by Kim Swoo-geun and David H Geiger, Seoul 1988

This gymnastics arena was the most interesting building constructed for Seoul 1988.

Designed by architect Kim Swoo-geun with engineer David H Geiger, the building is topped with a self-supporting cable dome, which was the first of its kind.

A smaller venue topped with a similar roof was built alongside it to host the fencing events.


Olympic architecture: Montjuïc Communications Tower by Santiago Calatrava, Barcelona 1992
Photo by Ralf Roletschek

Montjuïc Communications Tower by Santiago Calatrava, Barcelona 1992

Despite not being a venue for events, the Montjuïc Communications Tower is one of the most recognisable structures created for the Barcelona Olympics.

Designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava to transmit television coverage of the games, the 136-metre-tall structure is meant to evoke an athlete holding a torch.


Olympic Velodrome in Athens
Photo via Shutterstock

Olympic Velodrome by Santiago Calatrava, Athens 2004

Calatrava designed numerous structures for the Athens Games as part of an overhaul of the Athens Olympic Sports Complex, designed to improve the quality of the venues while adding a unifying aesthetic.

He added roofs to the two largest venues on the site, the stadium and velodrome, both in his signature style.

At the velodrome, he enclosed the venue with a roof hung from cables supported on a pair of tubular steel arches, which echo the roof of the stadium. The roof was clad with wood internally to improve acoustics, while a central strip of glass provides natural light.

Along with the venues, Calatrava designed a series of 99 tubular steel arches that connect the venues and the kinetic Nations Wall sculpture, as well as entrance canopies, bus stops and other street furniture.


Olympic architecture: Beijing 2022 stadium
Image courtesy of Herzog & de Meuron

National Stadium by Herzog & de Meuron, Beijing 2008

Better known as the Bird’s Nest due to its distinctive steel lattice envelope, the National Stadium was designed by Swiss studio Herzog & de Meuron, with Chinese artist Ai Weiwei acting as a design consultant.

The showpiece for China’s first Olympics, the project proved controversial due to the demolitions needed to build the monumental stadium.


London Aquatics Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects
Photo by Hufton + Crow

London Aquatics Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects, London 2012

Designed by Zaha Hadid Architects, the Aquatics Centre was an architectural highlight of the London 2012 Olympics.

Like many of the games’ venues the aquatic centre was designed to be reconfigured with a reduced capacity into a legacy mode after the competition finished.

The swooping main building was flanked with a pair of temporary wing-like seating stands, which were removed following the games.


Olympic architecture: Velodrome, by Hopkins Architects, London 2012 Olympics
Photo by Martin Pettitt

Velodrome by Hopkins Architects, London 2012

Along with the aquatics centre, this velodrome was one of five permanent venues built on the Olympic Park for the London 2012 Olympics.

The venue is topped with a Pringle-shaped, or hyperbolic paraboloid-shaped, steel-framed roof.

It was one of three Olympic buildings – the others being Populous’ Olympic Stadium and the London Aquatics Centre –  shortlisted for the Stirling Prize, although none won.


Olympic architecture: The wooden exterior of Japan National Stadium
Photo by Japan Sport Council

Japan National Stadium by Kengo Kuma, Tokyo 2020

Designed by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma as the centrepiece of the 2020 games, which took place in 2021 due to Covid-19, the Japan National Stadium hosted the opening and closing ceremonies as well as the athletics events.

The oval stadium was partly construct from timber, with seating covered in a latticed larch-and steel-canopy. It was wrapped in terraces that contain plants and trees.


Olympic Impact artwork by Capucine Mattiussi
Illustration by Capucine Mattiussi

Olympic Impact

This article is part of Dezeen’s Olympic Impact series examining the sustainability measures taken by the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games and exploring whether major sporting events compatible with the climate challenge are possible.

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Erbar Mattes creates "expansive feel" for brick house in London

House in Wimbledon by Erbar Mattes

London studio Erbar Mattes has completed a timber-framed house in Wimbledon that is formed of three mono-pitched structures unified by buff-brick cladding.

Erbar Mattes was tasked with creating a modern four-bedroom family with the same footprint as a bungalow that previously occupied the site at the end of a street in the former Belvedere Estate.

It is broken into three blocks with vaulted roofs, double-height spaces and strategically placed windows, which the studio said is designed to create an “expansive feel within an otherwise compact footprint”.

Exterior of London home with pale bricks
Erbar Mattes has completed a timber-framed house in Wimbledon

“The house draws its richness from a diversity of scale, light and views,” Erbar Mattes told Dezeen.

“The client’s existing house had very low ceiling heights so we started exploring ways of creating generous rooms while maintaining the building’s footprint compact and away from the neighbours” it continued.

“Enlarging the building footprint would have reduced the size of the garden, so rather than expanding horizontally, the house maximises efficiencies in plan.”

Buff-brick facades of home by Erbar Mattes
It is formed of three mono-pitched structures

The ground floor of the Wimbledon home is defined by open-plan social spaces orientated towards the garden, prioritising views of the landscape.

A “hall-like”, double-height open-plan kitchen and dining area features picture windows and large skylights to flood the space with natural light.

Courtyard outside Wimbledon house
The home is wrapped by buff-brick cladding

Above is the main bedroom suite, which overlooks the family living room via a balcony window and sliding privacy screen.

The block at the southwest of the site has three en-suite bedrooms on the first floor, while the ground floor is given over to storage, a utility room and a home office.

Living room of house in Wimbledon by Erbar Mattes
The ground floor of the home is defined by open-plan social spaces

Using the boundary wall from the Belvedere Estate that abuts the home, the studio created an intimate courtyard on one side, accessible via timber-framed sliding glass doors.

Conscious of the surrounding vernacular context, the studio experimented with massing options through model making.

“The house has two neighbours: a larger neo-Georgian house and an original period house of smaller scale,” explained the studio’s director Demian Erbar.

“We were searching for a solution that would mediate between the two by breaking down the mass of the building,” Erbar continued.

“Maintaining a monolithic appearance towards the street in keeping with its historic context, we proposed an intimate character for the upper floor, and punctured a few larger openings in the ground floor social spaces which benefit from the views and connection to the garden.”

double-height dining room with white walls
There is a “hall-like” kitchen

A pale buff-coloured brick facade wraps the three blocks together, finished with traditional flush lime mortar pointing and stone copings.

Internally, the whitewashed walls, ceilings, and polished concrete floor are paired with the warm tones of Accoya window frames and light oak joinery to create a “calm and neutral setting”.

Dining room at house in Wimbledon by Erbar Mattes
A courtyard sits is bordered by an existing wall

Completing the project is a ground-source heat pump and whole-house heat recovery ventilation system, designed to reduce the design’s operational carbon emissions and running costs.

Erbar Mattes was founded in 2015 by Erbar with Holger Mattes. Elsewhere, the studio recently overhauled a pair of duplex apartments in a former pub and added a limewashed brick and glass extension to an Edwardian house.

The photography is by Ståle Eriksen.

The post Erbar Mattes creates “expansive feel” for brick house in London appeared first on Dezeen.

Top 10 Marvel-Themed Products To Help You Join The Deadpool & Wolverine Movie Madness

The Deadpool & Wolverine movie took the theaters by storm, and the whirlwind that has followed has put us in a complete Marvel mood! And we’re here to celebrate the Marvel universe and pay tribute to it. For all the Marvel diehard fans out there, we’ve curated a collection of super fun and functional products that will add a pinch of superhero drama to your life. From a dynamic Wolverine Xbox Controller to economical earbuds inspired by Deadpool – these innovative designs are a must-have for all Marvel lovers! Have fun.

1. Wolverine Xbox Controller

Designed by Do3D, this is the Wolverine Xbox Controller. It features a yellow body, and three Adamantium claws which sharply appear outwards, from behind the controller. The controller pairs up perfectly with its Deadpool counterpart, and this controller comes along with a set of 3D files that can be bought and 3D printed.

Why is it noteworthy?

The Wolverine-themed controller augments the controller’s body much like its Deadpool counterpart. The back features an attachment, offering a themed take on the controller. The controller also has the signature back-of-the-fist with three Adamantium claws, which emerge from the inside.

What we like

  • Features a diamond-plate-inspired texture, and a wolverine whisker pattern

What we dislike

  • The claws attachment is purely cosmetic and has no functionality

2. Immortal 121 Earbuds

Designed by boAT Lifestyle, these TWS earbuds have been shaped like Deadpool’s mask. The Immortal 121 earbuds are equipped with cutting-edge features, packed in an incredible package that costs only USD 20.35.

Why is it noteworthy?

The Deadpool earbuds offer 40 hours of playback, 40 milliseconds of latency, Bluetooth 5.3, adjustable EQ, IPx4 water resistance, and a game-changing 10-minute charging time so you’re never out of energy!

What we like

  • Economical and well-priced
  • Deliver 180 minutes of listening time

What we dislike

  • Some users may find the LED lights a bit flashy

3. LEGO Captain America Shield

This life-size LEGO Captain America shield is built using 3000 pieces and measures almost 18.5 inches in diameter. The shield is also accompanied by a tiny Captain America Minifigure! It is a total must-have for anyone who loves the Avengers or has a soft spot for Captain America.

Why is it noteworthy?

The shield isn’t made from vibranium, of course, but it really does look and feel like the real deal, and if you’ve ever accidentally stepped on a LEGO brick, you know it is as tough as vibranium when you take the shooting pain that courses through your body in consideration.

What we like

  • Accompanied by a Minifigure of Captain America from Avengers Endgame holding the shield and Thor’s Mjolnir

What we dislike

  • Has a high brick count, which may be tough to put together for beginners

4. Marvel 3D-printed Headphone Stands

Designed by Angled, these Marvel 3D-printed headphone stands are intended to become the interesting centerpiece of any geek’s desk. The stands are 3D-printed to scale and can easily accommodate the most standard headphones (and even VR headsets).

Why is it noteworthy?

Each headphone stand is 3D printed, and yet it features an extraordinary amount of detail. Angled partnered up with designers and artists to build new variants and models online. The detailed models are then approved by Angled’s  team based on sizing, proportions, and the ability to print without any flaws.

What we like

  • Can be customized and painted to make them more realistic
  • Includes stands that hold your Xbox or PS controllers

What we dislike

  • Not very compact, and will occupy substantial space on your desk or table

5. Cheeky Controllers

Named the Cheeky Controllers, this Series X console features the perfectly contoured rear of the gamepads. The front has the texture and imprint of Deadpool’s thighs marked with leg holsters and the iconic logic.

Why is it noteworthy?

The accessory has a leathery texture on both sides, representing the superhero’s costume in the latest movie. The controller’s curious cushy design is quite innovative, but does raise the question of whether it will improve or worsen your gaming experience.

What we like

  • Features a red and black spandex suit

What we dislike

  • Players with smaller hands will find it difficult to grab the rear and release the trigger button inputs

6. LEGO Avengers Set

The LEGO Avengers set is 35.5 inches tall and was designed as a part of the 60th anniversary of the Avengers. It is meant to be one of the tallest sets when it is put together. The LEGO set also includes brick-built Dum-E.

Why is it noteworthy?

If you look closer, you will notice the Quinjet, Leviathan, and two Chitauri flyers from the 2012 Avengers Assemble. The interior showcases scenes from the Infinity Saga, Age of Ultron party, and Endgame.

What we like

  • Features a removable roof and side panels to recreate any of the scenes

What we dislike

  • It is a pretty big LEGO set and will occupy quite a bit of space

7. Andaseat Marvel Collaboration Series Gaming Chairs

You can now indulge in your inner superhero, and bring out that Marvel love with the Andaseat Marvel Collaboration Series superhero gaming chairs. The superhero-inspired chairs are equipped with an ergonomic PVC design, and they offer an AD + PVC leather which is quite comfy to the touch.

Why is it noteworthy?

The chairs feature a reclining back that tilts 90-160 degrees to keep you super comfy while you play. The chairs are available in four different editions – Captain America, Iron Man, Spiderman, and Ant-Man. Each chair has a design and color scheme that resembles their respective superhero.

What we like

  • Features adjustable armrests that offer support to your forearms

What we dislike

  • There is limited availability outside of the US currently

8. TVA Multifunctional Computer

Meet the JK Captain’s TVA Multifunctional Computer, it features retro-futuristic tech, as well as a multifunctional computer design that reminds you of an orange globe-like computer that is connected to the TVA Holoprojector. The computer is quite drop-dead gorgeous.

Why is it noteworthy?

The designer created an orange bubble monitor with gizmos which remind you of the onscreen adaptation on Loki. It also features a white keyboard, as well as accents of yellow and the gimmicky orange which are seen throughout the body of the contraption.

What we like

  • It features a reel tape recorder, the volume toggle buttons, the microphone, forward, rewind, play, pause, record buttons, and a full-scale qwerty keyboard.
  • It has an exquisite attention to detail, which can be seen in the 3D render.

What we dislike

  • The color scheme might be painful to some people’s eyes

9. Babypool Popcorn Bucket

Designed by Regal Cinemas, this pint-sized merchandise is supposed to be a Babypool Cup and Bucket Combo. The adorable merchandise imitates the naughty variant of Deadpool from the new Deadpool and Wolverine movie. You can enjoy your snacks while watching the new movie!

Why is it noteworthy?

Deadpool is placed on a tiny theater chair, and he wears a pacifier and a miniature red suit. Deadpool’s arms are raised with milk bottles by his side.

What we like

  • Super cute and functional merchandise

What we dislike

  • Might scare some kids (or even adults)

10. Superhero-Themed Products

Designed by Instagram user Coldstar Art, these futuristic and uber-cool helmets are inspired by popular cinematic legends that span across a whole variety of universes. The superhero-themed helmets are AI-generated, and although they may not be very great to wear, each one is exceptional to look at.

Why is it noteworthy?

These helmets dip into the MCU universe with a Punisher helmet and a Deadpool helmet. The Punisher helmet looked quite badass with a skull-inspired design and a respirator on the front. While the Deadpool headgear is quite recognizable, and features a red and black colorway.

What we like

  • The helmets are both safe and sexy

What we dislike

  • They’re conceptual, so we are unsure how well they will translate into tangible products

The post Top 10 Marvel-Themed Products To Help You Join The Deadpool & Wolverine Movie Madness first appeared on Yanko Design.