Balloon Chair by h220430 appears to float above the ground

Balloon Chair by h220430

Milan 2014: Japanese studio h220430 has created a chair that looks like it is held in mid-air by balloons, which will go on show at Ventura Lambrate in Milan on Tuesday.

Balloon Chair by h220430

A follow-up to the Balloon Bench designed by h220430 in 2011, the Balloon Chair appears to by suspended beneath ten helium balloons.

The chair aims to recreate the feeling that Pascal, the protagonist of 1950s film Le Ballon Rouge, has when a cluster of balloons carried him over Paris, rescuing him from a group of bullies.

Balloon Chair by h220430

Whereas the bench was suspended from four anchor points in a ceiling to maintain the illusion of flight, the chair fixes to a wall.

The leather-covered seat is made from fibre-reinforced plastic, steel and urethane, while the balloons are made from fibre-reinforced plastic and cord, meaning they cannot be deflated.

The designers will be showing the Balloon Chair at Ventura Lambrate from 8 to 12 April, during Milan’s design week. 

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to float above the ground
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Shelter Awareness

The Life-Light is a unique directional system that includes inflatable balloons integrated on streetlights. During an emergency situation, the balloons inflate and guide people to the nearest shelter. It displays the most efficient route, thus speeding the navigation process.

  • Life-Light is automatically activated by the central service system when a disaster warning alert is activated.
  • The system inflates balloons around streetlight poles, which indicate evacuation information and allow people to take a precise and speedy route to a shelter.
  • It is installed on streetlights at intervals of fifty meters.
  • The light flashes on and off, and a sound alert is also incorporated.
  • The dual mode of communication allows the system to be understood by those with visual or hearing impairments.
  • The lack of complex language or lettering also allows foreigners to readily understand it.
  • The system’s battery is charged by the city’s electricity supply as well as by solar power, so even if the city’s power grid goes down, it can still function.
  • The system also uses smart technology; if a route is blocked by a collapsed building, for example, the system updates and leads people to the next closest shelter point.

Life-Light is a 2013 red dot award: design concept winner.

Designers: Lee Jae Yong & Kim Pill Yoon


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(Shelter Awareness was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. Water Shelter – Sustainable Shelter Solutions by Robert Nightingale
  2. Subtle Reminders for Eco-Awareness
  3. AWARENESS at Łódź Design Festival


    



Floatastic by Qastic

American studio Qastic has created an inflatable pavilion with a floating roof held down by fabric veils (+ slideshow).

dezeen_floatastic_by_qastic_16

Called Floatastic, the structure was designed by Connecticut firm Qastic for a wedding ceremony. They intended to create a temporary shelter without imposing any loads on the ground.

dezeen_floatastic_by_qastic_sq_1

A giant horizontal white balloon is filled with helium. As it rises upwards, a series of fixed fabric veils keep the inflatable overhead and appear to dangle like jellyfish tentacles. “Buoyancy is achieved through the efficient harnessing of a noble gas,” said Qastic.

Floatastic by Qastic

The designers said that the floating pavillion is the result of research into buoyancy and structures that are made by reversing the position of the load.

Floatastic by Qastic

“Since the surrounding environment and microclimate fluctuate in every 24-hour cycle, our studies found that the floating pavilion will experience many buoyant conditions which are unique but steady,” said the firm.

Floatastic by Qastic

Here’s a film featuring the structure floating in the wind:

We’ve featured other stories about inflatable structures recently, including a pop-up pavilion that looks like a soap bubble and a twisted tubular inflatable pavilion installed in east London.

Floatastic by Qastic

See more inflatable architecture and design »
See more pavilion design »

Photographs are by Net Martin Studio.

Here’s more from Qastic Lab:


Floatastic

Balance Through Buoyancy is a research base pavilion called “Floatastic” by QASTIC Lab, which was designed and built for a private client to serve as a temporary shade pavilion for a wedding ceremony in Edgerton Park, in New Haven Connecticut – an Olmsted planned landscape.

Floatastic by Qastic

This deployable structure aims to create a floated shelter which avoids imposing any loads to the ground, which traditional structures require. Instead it proposes a well-fabricated balloon, which is filled with Helium to raise the imposed loads of fabric veils and any possible dynamic environmental loads toward the sky.

Floatastic by Qastic

Buoyancy is achieved through the efficient harnessing of a noble gas. The idea of ‘flesh’ is explored through the pavilions possible functions and effects, by which an abstracted mass can impose on fabric surfaces in both relaxation and tension.

Floatastic by Qastic
Elevation with Floatastic at full height – click for larger image

It is within this dialogue of the helium container and the loads that we can test possible architectural and spatial effects, with articulation between Balloon edges and fabric veils exploring the possibilities in which the complex surface veils are relaxed or in tension in double curvature configurations.

Floatastic by Qastic
Floatastic shown at different heights – click for larger image

Making use of the method of reversing load bearing systems, the form of the pavilion is defined by geometrically precise formwork that is then fabricated with randomly varying edges both for the horizontal balloon and the PVC pipes on the ground to allow for varied functions at different heights, climates and locations.

Since the surrounding environment and microclimate fluctuate in every 24 hours cycle, our studies found that the floating pavilion will experience many buoyant conditions which are unique however steady.

Floatastic by Qastic

Metaphorically, Floatastic envisioned to be a surrealistic and breathtaking imitation of the Jellyfish that appear alive and tries to swim against the external forces in the water. However, rather than being in the water, Floatastic questions its audiences to unconsciously know if they are floating in the sea or on the ground.

Floatastic by Qastic

Architects: QASTIC Lab
Location: Edgerton Park, New Haven, Connecticut. USA
Constructor: QASTIC Lab
Client: Jahangir Mohamadzadeh
Designer & Team Leader: Mahdi Alibakhshian
Design and fabrication Team: Ali Sadeghian, Reza Zia, Ahmad Jamei, Carlos Bugatti, Delara Zarrinabadi, Lili Saliani
Design & Fabrication Consultant: Nathaniel Hadley, Mohamad Reza Mojahedi
Conceptual & Visualization Consultant: Gregory Hurcomb
Exhibition Period: July 2013

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by Qastic
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Disegno Gioia: Sketches from jewelry designer Guiliano Capogrossi Colognesi’s latest line

Disegno Gioia

On paper, self-taught jewelry designer Guiliano Capogrossi Colognesi has all it takes for his company, Disegno Gioia, to be successful. He presents beautiful and creative design concepts and has a working website on which to showcase them, but the products—with price tags of anywhere from $100,000 to $25 million—won’t…

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Pont de Singe bridge by Olivier Grossetête

French artist Olivier Grossetête used three enormous helium balloons to float a rope bridge over a lake in Tatton Park, a historic estate in north-west England.

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

Oliver Grossetête created Pont de Singe, which means “monkey bridge”, for the Tatton Park Biennial, which this year was themed around flight.

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

Located in the park’s Japanese garden, the structure comprised a long rope bridge made of cedar wood held aloft by three helium-filled balloons. The ends of the bridge were left to trail in the water.

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

Though visitors weren’t allowed to use the bridge, it would theoretically be strong enough to hold the weight of a person, according to Grossetête.

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

Replacing the usual foundations and joints of a bridge with three balloons leads us to question our perceptions, the artist explained. ”My artistic work tries to make alive the poetry and dreams within our everyday life,” added Grossetête.

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

The artist had previously experimented with another floating bridge in his 2007 project Pont Suspendu, where he used a cluster of helium balloons to float a small bridge structure into the air.

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

Balloons have appeared in a number of projects we’ve featured on Dezeen, including a proposal for a transport network of enormous floating balloons and a bench that appears to be held up by bunches of balloons at each end.

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

We’ve also featured lots of unusual bridges on Dezeen, such as a wobbling wire bridge designed to span the Seine in Paris and a sunken bridge in a moat that brings the water up to a pedestrian’s eye level.

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

See all our stories about balloons »
See all our stories about bridges »

Pont de Singe by Olivier Grossetête

Photographs are by Wilf and Duncan Hull.

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by Olivier Grossetête
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Balloon by Uli Budde for Vertigo Bird

Balloon by Uli Budde

Berlin-based designer Uli Budde placed a flat disc above the bulb of this lamp so that it looks like a hot air balloon taking flight.

Balloon by Uli Budde

Balloon, which was created by Uli Budde for Slovenian lighting brand Vertigo Bird, consists of a bulb in a cylindrical base with a thin aluminium disc leaning over it.

Balloon by Uli Budde

Inspired by antique oil lamps and candle holders, Budde used the disc as a circular reflector to diffuse the light from below, producing a warm glow.

Balloon by Uli Budde

The resulting shape leaves room for our own associations, according to Budde. “Is it a balloon soaring into the air, a small glowing sun or an oversized light bulb?” he asks.

Balloon by Uli Budde

The lamp is made from lacquered aluminium and plastic and is available in white or yellow.

Balloon by Uli Budde

Balloon was shown in Copenhagen last week and will appear in Zurich from 23-25 November as part of the international design fair Blickfang.

Other designs inspired by balloons we’ve featured on Dezeen include a desk supported by giant Jenga blocks at one end and balloons at the other and a light that looks like a helium balloon stuck to the ceiling.

See all our stories about lamps »
See all our stories about balloons »

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Balloon is a table lamp generating diffused, ambient lighting.

Balloon owes elements of its forms to the typical antique oil lamps and candle holders with a reflector placed behind the flame to reflect and direct the light. Besides, the idea that we often consider the moon to be a light source (next to fire and the sun, for example) although it is just enlightened by the sun, gave the stimulus to work with indirect light.

The lamp’s light source is situated inside a cylindrical base. Light shines upwards and lights the reflector, which tilts forwards, re-directing and reflecting a diffused glimmer of light. Through its simplicity and figurative character, the lamp leaves room for associations and fantasy – is it a balloon soaring into the air, a small glowing sun or an oversized light bulb?

For the special exhibition format called ‘blickfang selected’, five renowned personalities from the design scene have chosen young talents involved in furniture design. Uli Budde has been invited as one of them by Philipp Mainzer – architect, designer and co-founder of furniture brand e15 – to present his work at blickfang Copenhagen in Øksnehallen from 9-11 November, 
blickfang Zürich in Kongresshaus from 23-25 November and 
blickfang Basel in Messe Basel from 8-10 March 2013.

The lamp is available in White and Yellow.

Design: Uli Budde
Producer: Vertigo Bird
Year: 2010/11
Light source: 9W energy-saving fluorescent light
Material: lacquered aluminium, plastic parts
Size: 280x425x135mm
Colors: matte white/matte yellow

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for Vertigo Bird
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Balloon by Crous & Calogero for Estiluz

Balloon by Crous & Calogero for Estiluz

This lamp by Barcelona studio Crous & Calogero for Spanish brand Estiluz is shaped like a helium balloon floating against the ceiling or wall.

Balloon by Crous & Calogero for Estiluz

The Balloon lamp is made of translucent polyethylene and has a red string hanging down that switches between bright lighting, softer lighting and off modes when you tug it.

Balloon by Crous & Calogero for Estiluz

The project won a Silver Delta Award for industrial design at FADfest in Barcelona.

Read more about the Delta Awards and see the winning design, a bike that grows with your child, in our earlier story. See a nest of tables that also won a silver award here and a rug made of espadrille soles that was shortlisted here.

Balloon by Crous & Calogero for Estiluz

See all our stories about lighting »

Here’s some more information from the award organisers:


The Balloon lamp collection by Estiluz was inspired by the memories of both adult and kid generations. We all remember losing a balloon we were holding in our hands, don’t we? In this case, the balloon doesn’t drift off into the sky, because it finds its home on your ceiling or wall and gives out light to brighten your rooms.

Balloon features ceiling and wall versions. To give these pieces the ethereal appearance desired, the shade is made of brushed polyethylene, a translucent material that hides an energy saving fluorescent bulb.

What’s more, a fine red cable hangs from the shade, serving as a switch in the wall version, offering general lighting, night-light and off positions. The night-light is a 0,5W LED bulb that will gently light up dark areas and will guide and comfort us during the night.

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for Estiluz
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Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Following our previous story about a labia-like staircase, these images by French photographer Stefan Tuchila illustrate the womb-like orbs created by artist Anish Kapoor in the Grand Palais, Paris.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Formed of three 35 metre-high interconnected balloons, the Leviathan sculpture has a dark purple skin and a translucent red interior.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

From inside, the silhouette of the palace ceiling is visible through the bulbous red rubber.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The sculpture was designed for the fourth Monumenta exhibition, which closes imminently.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

See our earlier story on the ArcelorMittal Orbit by Anish Kapoor »

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

See more images of this project on the photographer’s website.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The following information is from the press release:


MONUMENTA 2011
Anish Kapoor at the Grand Palais
Leviathan from 11th May to 23rd June 2011

Each year MONUMENTA invites an internationally-renowned artist to turn their vision to the vast Nave of Paris’ Grand Palais and to create a new artwork especially for this space. MONUMENTA is an artistic interaction on an unparalleled scale, filling 13,500m2 and a height of 35m.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The first three MONUMENTA exhibitions were hugely successful, drawing in 150,000 visitors over five weeks. In 2007, the first challenge was met by German artist Anselm Kiefer, who resides in France, followed by American artist Richard Serra in 2008 and French artist Christian Boltanski in 2010.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

For its fourth incarnation, the French Ministry for Culture and Communication has invited Anish Kapoor, one of his generation’s greatest artists, to produce a new work for the Nave’s monumental space, from 11th May to 23rd June 2011.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Thirty years after his first exhibition in Paris, MONUMENTA marks Anish Kapoor’s return to the French capital. He is considered as one of the most important sculptors of our time. His work has profoundly enlarged the scope of contemporary sculpture, as much by his mastery of monumental scale as by the colourful sensuality and apparent simplicity emanating from his works. All this contributes to the fascination they hold for the public at large, as demonstrated, for example, by the popular success of Cloud Gate in Chicago.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Born in Bombay in 1954, he has lived in London since the 1970s. His work rapidly gained international recognition and has been awarded numerous prizes, including the famous Turner Prize, which he won in 1991. His career has been the subject of a number of solo exhibitions at the world’s most prestigious museums, including the Louvre, the Royal Academy, Tate Modern, etc. Recently, he has been commissioned to design the key landmark for the forthcoming Olympic Games in London: a 116-metre-high sculpture entitled « Orbit ».

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The artist describes the work he is creating for MONUMENTA as follows: “A single object, a single form, a single colour.” “My ambition”, he adds, “is to create a space within a space that responds to the height and luminosity of the Nave at the Grand Palais.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Visitors will be invited to walk inside the work, to immerse themselves in colour, and it will, I hope, be a contemplative and poetic experience.”

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Designed using the most advanced technologies, the work will not merely speak to us visually, but will lead the visitor on a journey of total sensorial and mental discovery.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

A technical, poetic challenge unparalleled in the history of sculpture, this work questions what we think we know about art, our body, our most intimate experiences and our origins.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Spectacular and profound, it responds to what the artist considers to be the crux of his work: namely, “To manage, through strictly physical means, to offer a completely new emotional and philosophical experience.”

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The awe-inspiring strength of Anish Kapoor’s work is a fertile ground that favours the democratization of the access to contemporary art.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Through this series and subsequent exhibitions, the French Ministry for Culture and Communication hopes to appeal to the widest possible audiences.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

To exceed the visitor’s expectations, artistic educators, whose knowledge and teaching abilities multiply the possibilities to access and understand the artwork, will be on hand throughout the exhibition to talk to visitors, widening their understanding of contemporary art at no extra cost.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

School groups will have their own special programme developed in collaboration with the French Ministry for National Education.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Multidisciplinary and fun, the programme is designed for young visitors, ranging from nursery school to high school, one highlight being dance workshops in partnership with the Théâtre National de Chaillot.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

There will be learning activities on the internet, making it possible to link the artist’s work to school programmes.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Themed cross-generational tours will also create a link with Anish Kapoor’s creation.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

In addition, tours for the disabled will be available, in order to facilitate access to today’s heritage.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Finally, throughout the exhibition, an events programme will propose a dialogue between word, music, dance and Anish Kapoor’s work and the creations it shelters, in order to uncover new aspects of his creation.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Jean de Loisy is curator of Monumenta 2011. Independent exhibition curator, he has held among other positions that of creation inspector for the French Ministry for Culture and Communication, Cartier Foundation curator and curator at the Georges Pompidou Centre. He has directed and co-directed a variety of art centres in France. He has organized numerous solo artist exhibitions and memorable exhibitions such as “La Beauté” in Avignon in 2000, or “Traces du sacré” in 2008 at the Pompidou Centre. He has been working for 30 years with Anish Kapoor, for whom he organized numerous exhibitions including the 2009 retrospective at London’s Royal Academy of Arts.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The MONUMENTA admission price is 5 Euros, with concessions 2.50 Euros. The cultural programme (free with admission) proposes concerts, performances, readings and ‘encounters’ in connection with Anish Kapoor’s artwork. A bi-lingual highly documented website will help visitors to prepare their visit.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

A fully illustrated album, co-published by the CNAP and the Rmn-GP publishing services, Paris 2011, and monograph, co-published by Flammarion and the CNAP, will be published in connection with this event.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Organised by the French Ministry for Culture and Communication, the exhibition is co-produced by the Centre national des arts plastiques (CNAP) and the Etablissement public de la Réunion des musées nationaux et du Grand Palais des Champs-Elysées (Rmn-GP).


See also:

.

Queens Museum of Art
by Elliot White
Metropol Parasol
by J. Mayer H.
Nissan Y150 Dream Front
by Torafu Architects

Balloon Bench by h220430

Balloon Bench by h220430

This floating bench by Japanese studio h220430 appears to be held up by bunches of balloons at either end.

Balloon Bench by h220430

The aluminium Balloon Bench is suspended from anchor points in the ceiling, concealed by clusters of polyethylene balloons.

Balloon Bench by h220430

See also: Rubber Stool by h220430

More benches on Dezeen »

Here are some more details fromt he designers:


This is bench was visually inspired by the feeling of floating that the main character felt in the French movie, “Le Ballon Rouge”(1953).

In reality the bench is suspended from the ceiling by 4 anchors concealed by the balloon shapes. This creates the illusion of the bench being lifted by balloons.

W:1050 D:400 H:FREE SH:FREE


See also:

.

Rubber Stool
by h220430
Pylon by Marcus Abrahamsson
and Kristoffer Fagerström
In Flakes by
Mount Fuji Architects Studio

Balloons – MTV Brazil

Afin de célébrer le 21e anniversaire de MTV Brésil, Caldeira Dulcidio a réalisé avec Paranoid BR cette animation retraçant les plus grands artistes musicaux. Cette vidéo explose 10 ballons par seconde, soit près de 600 au total, fixés et alignés sur une distance de 200 mètres.



balloonmtvbrasil3

balloonmtvbrasil2

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