WaterDream by Nendo for Axor

More showers! These hybrid shower-lights were created by Japanese designers Nendo for bathroom brand Axor and unveiled last week alongside the multi-headed shower by Front (+ slideshow).

WaterDream by Nendo for Axor

Nendo’s installation combines showers with lamps, with the installation featuring ceiling lights and a floor light that produce a cascade of water from their shades.

WaterDream by Nendo for Axor

“My aim was to combine what is most archetypal about the living space, the lighting, with water, so as to give the shower an enhanced sensuous dimension in a way we have not yet seen before,” says Oki Sato of Nendo. “The result is something that is not just a shower, nor just a lamp, but a hybrid – a magic trick with light and water that is available day after day.”

Oki Sato of Nendo with WaterDream Axor
Oki Sato of Nendo with his WaterDream installation for Axor

The installation is part of Axor’s WaterDream project, which investigates potential future bathroom scenarios.

“The natural coming-together of light and water is freed from spatial constraints,” says Philippe Grohe, head of Axor, which is part of German bathroom brand Hansgrohe. “What traditionally took place in separate rooms – reading under a lamp in the living room, taking a shower in the bathroom – can now be experienced free from spatial allocations or confinements.”

Oki Sato of Nendo for Axor
Oki Sato of Nendo

Nendo’s installation was presented alongside the copper-pipe installation by Swedish designers Front, which we published earlier.

Axor regularly collaborates with leading designers. Earlier this year it unveiled a new water-saving faucet by Philippe Starck and previous projects include a full bathroom collection by the Bouroullec Brothers and a range by Jean-Marie Massaud.

See more projects by Nendo, including a shoe store clad in shoes and bowls that quiver in the wind.

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Nendo for Axor
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Young people spend toilet time on Facebook, says bathrooms survey

Ideal Standard bathroom habits survey

News: the under-30s spend more time on the toilet than the over-55s – and they’re checking social media rather than reading a book, according to new research on Europe’s bathroom habits.

Using depth sensors and motion-mapping technology to investigate how people actually use their bathroom space, bathroom brand Ideal Standard discovered that younger people spent on average 1 minute and 39 seconds longer than on the loo than their parents’ generation.

The study, which was presented this week at the ISH bathroom trade fair in Frankfurt, looked at households from Germany, France, Italy and the UK, varying from single-occupancy homes to families spanning multiple generations.

Brits were found to have the quickest morning routine at 19 minutes 42 seconds – eight minutes faster than the Germans, Italians and French, who all average just over 27 minutes.

UK households also use their bath the least, with the French taking the most baths – half of those with a separate bath in their house use it at least once a day.

The researchers also found that while 40% of people say they want a new bathroom, it usually isn’t a bigger space they’re after, but a better use of their existing space.

Ideal Standard then asked British designer Robin Levien to create a “profile bathroom” for each of the households in the study, combining the brand’s existing products to create new spaces that meet the needs of each household.

This week we featured a shower with rain and fog settings that makes you feel like you’re washing outdoors – see all bathrooms on Dezeen.

Here’s the full press release from Ideal Standard:


What really goes on in the bathroom – Ideal Standard reveals findings of spy-in-the bathroom study

For most people it’s a sanctuary from which even partners and family members are excluded.

And yet, for two weeks in February, nineteen people in four countries agreed to let Ideal Standard, Europe’s leading bathroom specialist, track their every brush, splash and flush in the name of research.

In a first for bathroom research, prototype motion mapping technology was installed in bathrooms across Europe to monitor bathroom behaviours. By adapting depth sensors to provide accurate 3D tracking of the human body and using two sensors in each bathroom, Ideal Standard has been able to build a detailed picture of how people actually use their bathroom space.

It’s a tale of neglected baths and bidets, conflicting bathroom etiquette and maddening, illogically arranged bathroom suites.

The findings, supplemented with quantitative data gathered from 4000 people, will be revealed today at ISH 2013 in Frankfurt.

Behind the data lie some fascinating glimpses into family life: the parents who seek refuge from their families with long baths and showers; the bathrooms that double up as laundries and dressing rooms; the flatmates forced to do their ablutions in unison.

According to the findings, 40% of us crave a new bathroom, but interestingly, for the most part, it’s not a bigger space that we lust after; just a space that better meets our needs.

“We started with a hypothesis that in many homes the bathroom is not used as well as it could be,” said Kerris Bright, Chief Marketing Officer of Ideal Standard International.

“The findings seem to confirm what we suspected. Renovating a bathroom often starts with excitement and ends in disappointment. It’s hard to know where to start and harder to see past the limitations of the room.”

The publication of the study coincides with the launch of Ideal Standard’s new marketing campaign; A Beautiful Use of Space. The campaign features a series of abstract bathroom spaces – a far cry from the usual imagery of scented candles and infinity baths looking out onto lush forests – to capture the different needs a bathroom meets in a day; invigoration, transformation, relaxation and play.

Families from Germany, France, Italy and the UK participated in the study, representing a variety of households, from single occupancy to multi-generational homes.

From Rotherham to Wuppertal; from Milan to Paris, the families agreed to let their every movement in the bathroom be captured, analysed and scrutinised by Ideal Standard researchers.

The results of the quantitative and qualitative studies will be analysed over the coming months but already some fascinating insights are emerging which will help Ideal Standard and its design teams innovate for the future.

“We conducted the study because, uniquely, our product range spans every aspect of bathroom design,” said Kerris Bright. “We’ve always tried to understand how a bathroom works in totality and to think about the ergonomics of the bathroom to help our customers get the most out of their bathroom experience.”

The findings are published today in a paper entitled Bathroom Behaviours; how to optimise bathroom space for modern households.

“The bathroom is a unique space in the home,” said Dr John Curran, social anthropologist and author of the paper. “It stands out from other rooms in the home because it has to meet an array of needs.

“It’s a room that transforms us from one state of mind to another and can therefore mark different personas we have throughout the day. These transformational characteristics mean that the bathroom is embedded in everyday rituals – rituals that help define who we are.

“However, the design of bathrooms – the storage, fittings, aesthetic and the variation in size – means that meeting all the needs of household members becomes a challenge, all the more so in light of rapid demographic change which is seeing a rise in single person, all adult and multi-generational households and households with older people.”

For each of the bathrooms in the motion mapping study Ideal Standard has set about creating a ‘profile bathroom’ based on insights gathered. Each profile bathroom can be considered a useful starting point when designing bathrooms for different needs.

The profile bathrooms have been developed by Robin Levien, an award winning designer.

Robin used Ideal Standard’s full product offering – the core Connect range, the elegance of Softmood, the minimalism of Strada and an extended range of water and energy efficient showers and fittings – to create spaces which meet the needs of the different types of household in the study.

“It was important to have a multifunctional approach to the products we recommended in each of the bathrooms,” said Robin. “Based on the household make up, coupled with their individual preferences, we selected a range of Ideal Standard products to offer a complete solution. To borrow from Le Corbusier’s famous quote ‘a bathroom is a machine for living in’ so we made them more liveable.”

Editors’ notes

1 Some of the findings

Parental retreat

For parents, the bathroom represents something of a refuge from family life. Our quantitative data shows that adults in family homes spend longer in the bathroom than average and take longer baths, especially when the children in the house are under five. This was borne out by the behaviour of the parents in our motion mapping study who took longer to clean, preen and prepare themselves than others in the study.

Competing uses

And yet, whilst the bathroom can represent a place of retreat for parents, this is the group least likely to be satisfied with their current bathroom set up. They struggle with the multiple, sometimes conflicting, uses the space demands – spa, pharmacy, laundry, children’s playroom – and they are most likely to complain about clutter and lack of storage space. Again, the quantitative data is supported by qualitative evidence. The participants in our motion mapping study who made best use of their space were couples and singles.

The bathroom reclaimed

Older people living alone or as a couple were most likely to be satisfied with their bathroom, suggesting a sense of reclaimed space once children leave home. This group is able to create the largest storage space in their bathroom, despite the fact that the space needs to serve fewer people than average.

Adults only

For people living in all adult homes – for example students sharing a flat or families where the children have returned after university – the bathroom is most likely to be viewed as a purely functional space. This is the group that tends to shun long baths and relies instead on the shower. The bathroom is most likely to double up as a laundry in these homes. No one individual holds dominion in these households which means there is often pressure to do what you need to do and get out.

Do people use bidets?

Bidets are very common in some parts of Europe and much less common in others. For years bathroom designers have wondered how frequently bidets are actually used. Our motion mapping study offers only a limited glimpse into this intimate but important question. In one household the bidet was scarcely used at all during the experiment whilst in another it was used daily. Our quantitative data suggests that outside of Italy – where bidets are considered an essential part of everyday bathroom routine – the facility is used very infrequently. The French and the Brits in particular seldom use theirs.

Hot showers and cold baths

A composite analysis of all the homes in our motion mapping study suggests that baths are underused and that more and more people rely on showers for their daily bathing routine. It may be that we are coming to a time when having a bath in the main family bathroom is no longer a non-negotiable essential.

Have couples got it right?

More than any other group, couples are able to keep their bathroom spaces tidy and ordered. This may be a result of having the incentive of keeping the bathroom space tidy for the other person while not having the disruption that comes with family life – a perfect storm!

A Beautiful Use Of Space?

Based on the motion mapping study Ideal Standard Non executive design director Robin Levien, proposes a degree of reconfiguration in all cases, suggesting that a great many bathrooms are sub-optimally designed.

Who spends longest in the bathroom?

• The average person’s morning bathroom routine (shower, toilet, basin) takes 25m59s.

• Brits have by far the quickest morning routine at 19m42s – nearly eight minutes faster than the Germans (27m35s), Italians (27m33s) and French (27m11s)

• Women spend an average of 1m13s longer on the standard bathroom routine than men

• There’s nothing to choose between the genders when it comes to bathing – of those who have a bath only 36% are choosing it over a shower as part of the daily routine

• Under 30s are spending an average 1m39s longer on the toilet than over 55s – and they’re much more likely to be checking Facebook than reading a book

• UK households use their baths the least – 33% of those with a separate bath use it just a couple of times a week

• The French are the biggest bath fans – 50% of those with a separate bath use it at least once a day

• 35% of French households have no toilet in the main bathroom, while 95% of Italians have a bidet

• 18-30s want a bathroom space they can share, but showers for two get less appealing when respondents hit their 30s – by the time they hit their 50s the bathroom is a purely private space

• Germans are the least happy with their current bathrooms, while the Brits tend to be the happiest.

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Sensory Sky by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

This movie by German art director Mike Meiré for bathroom and kitchen brand Dornbracht features one shower that makes you feel like you’re washing outdoors and another that you use lying down.

Sensory Sky by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

Created by Sieger Design for Dornbracht, Sensory Sky has a wide and flat shower head with separate sprinklers for head and body and a “rain curtain” that creates a solid wall of water, as seen in the movie by Cologne-based art director Mike Meiré. There’s also a nozzle that uses cold water to create a foggy mist.

Sensory Sky by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

Users can programme their own settings or choose from three options: one that projects coloured lights on the rain curtain, another that combines fog and cool water with the smell of herbs and berries, and a third designed to evoke a summer storm by combining cold and warm water with a tropical fragrance.

Sensory Sky by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

The movie also shows the Horizontal Shower, which sprays water in a curtain along the length of the user’s body while they lie on a heated plinth.

Sensory Sky by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

Sensory Sky is on show at the ISH trade fair in Frankfurt until 16 March and will be available from autumn 2013 in brushed stainless steel and platinum or high-gloss stainless steel and chrome.

Sensory Sky by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

We previously featured a square tap by Sieger Design for Dornbracht that produces a wide row of individual streams of water.

Other unusual showers we’ve published include an outdoor shower that connects to a hosepipe and a circular shower that rotates to become a bath.

Sensory Sky by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

We recently featured a bathroom collection that appears to have been unpacked from the crate-like wooden bath and a bathroom with orange details by Marc Newson for Caroma – see all bathrooms.

Mike Meiré curated an exhibition for Dornbracht in Cologne a few years ago featuring street food stalls from around the world, as he explained in a movie filmed by Dezeen.

Here’s more information from Dornbracht:


The innovation: Sensory Sky
The vision: The feeling of showering in the open air
The special feature: Complex scenarios of rain, fog, light and fragrance
Design and concept: Sieger Design

Available for delivery: Autumn 2013
Dornbracht premiere: Sensory Sky – a feeling of showering in the open air

With Sensory Sky, Dornbracht makes showering a unique experience that stimulates all the senses. Different types of rain, fog, light and fragrance complement one another to create complex choreographies, inspired by weather phenomena and the moods of nature.

Throughout product development, the focus has been on keeping technology in the background. Sensory Sky combines technological complexity with minimalist design. The wide and flat rain panel has separate shower fields for head sprinkler, body sprinkler and rain curtain, a cold-water fog nozzle and light and fragrance functions.

Controls are easy and convenient to use thanks to the new digital Smart Tools that Dornbracht has developed on the basis of Smart Water technology. Smart Water stands for the vision of enlisting the numerous possibilities for digitisation in the bathroom (and kitchen), and making individualised applications convenient and easier to use.

A gentle press of the controls and the desired scenario begins:

Readjust is a choreography that invigorates the user and sharpens the senses. Temperature controlled fog (36-39°C) and light rain (28°C) reduce the daily flood of stimuli to a soothing minimum – until the gentle light of dawn begins, the sky gradually clears and perception becomes more alert, more intense once again. The composition of fresh woody meadow herbs and sweet hints of berries is reminiscent of the soft, pleasant fragrance of a dry forest floor and reinforces feelings of liveliness after showering.

Release is derived from the natural phenomenon of heavy summer rain that cleanses and liberates at the same time. Pent-up energies are unlocked in an expressive choreography of different kinds of rain, and invigorating changes in temperature and light. The choreography is accompanied by a refreshing, tropical fragrance with hints of citrus fruit and an earthy base. The change from cold (18°C) and warm (35°C) water in the rain curtain, together with the fascinating interplay of summer shower and sheet lightning, promote a feeling of liberation – a fresh beginning for body, mind and soul.

Rejoice protects, envelops and stabilises. The outer, warm rain curtain (35-38°C) becomes a projection screen for the light effects as water droplets glisten in the colours of the rainbow. A poetic fragrance composition combines fresh, clear notes with a sweet-spicy and woody finish. A multi-faceted and harmonious play with colours, fragrances and rain types that gradually transfers over the entire body and harmonises all of the senses.

A special feature of Sensory Sky is the fragrances synchronised to each choreography and inspired by the various weather phenomena and moods of nature. These fragrances are produced using high-quality natural essential oils and balms in co-operation with Kemitron, a specialist for spa and wellness fragrances. All fragrance compositions have also been tested by the International Fragrance Association IFRA, ensuring that they are of high quality and safe to enjoy.

Alongside the three scenarios, spray heads, nozzles, light and fragrances can also be separately set, independently of one another, for an individual shower experience. Whether the choreography is programmed or personal, Sensory Sky creates a uniquely sensual feeling, like showering in the open air.

Sensory Sky will be introduced at ISH 2013 and from autumn 2013 will be available in two different finishes: brushed stainless steel (in combination with matt platinum) and high-gloss stainless steel (in combination with chrome).

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for Dornbracht
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Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

Product news: Australian designer Marc Newson has created a 22-piece collection with orange details for bathroom brand Caroma (+ slideshow).

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

Marc Newson’s collection for Caroma includes a freestanding bath with black feet, an island bath and two toilets.

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

Two of the four basins have an integrated shelf on one side.

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

There’s also a fixed shower and a hand shower with orange details around the showerhead.

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

A selection of chrome taps and a urinal complete the collection.

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

Last year we filmed a series of interviews with Newson where he told us about making everything from beds to mobile phones to knives, and explained why he doesn’t believe in instruction manuals.

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

We’ve also featured lots of projects by Newson, including a minimalist rocking horse for Italian brand Magis and a brightly coloured camera for Pentax – see all designs by Marc Newson.

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

Other bathrooms we’ve published include a wooden collection by Japanese studio Nendo and a domestic spa by London studio Doshi Levien.

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

See all our stories about bathroom design »

Bathroom collection by Marc Newson for Caroma

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for Caroma
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Gentle by Matteo Thun & Partners for Dornbracht

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

Italian studio Matteo Thun & Partners present a series of gently rounded bathroom fittings for German design brand Dornbracht at ISH 2011 in Frankfurt, which opens today.

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

Called Gentle, the series includes fittings for a basin, bidet, shower and bath.

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

See also: Deque by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

Here are some more details from Dornbracht:


Everyday elegance: Dornbracht presents Gentle

At the ISH trade fair in Frankfurt (15 – 19 March 2011), fittings manufacturer Dornbracht is presenting Gentle, a new product that fits seamlessly and elegantly into an everyday bathroom context. Something special in the day-to-day routine – Gentle represents quality of function and serenity of form. The Gentle truely expresses everyday elegance.

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

“Gentle helps to bring collective consciousness to a modern home,” says Mike Meiré. “Gentle fits perfectly into a bright, open architectural language informed by clear lines and tactile materials such as wood, fabric, glass and ceramic. Urban typologies with memory-rich qualities.”

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

“Gentle is the result of architect Matteo Thun vision for a new stylist, classic design”, explains Managing Director Andreas Dornbracht. “Unlike other Dornbracht series, what makes Gentle so special is precisely how classic its form is. It signifies a very deliberate decision to open up our portfolio of traditional design.”

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

Gentle’s name describes its soothing character. It simultaneously implies something soft-tempered and cultivated. The lines of this easy-on-the-hands series has a stylish masculine undertone.

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

“Our main idea behind the design was based on simplicity, elegance and durability,” says Matteo Thun. “Gentle is effortless and self-explanatory. The reserved form, the clear lines and the tactile experience make Gentle special.” The result is a pleasing natural design that is there throughout the day without being obtrusive.

Gentle by Matteo Thun for Dornbracht

Gentle comprises fittings for washbasin, bidet, shower and bathtub and comes in chrome. Available for delivery in
summer 2011. The product was designed by Matteo Thun & Partners.

New product: Gentle
Product design: Matteo Thun & Partners
Characteristic feature: Naturally elegant and unobtrusively easy on the hands
Available for delivery: Summer 2011
First presentation: ISH 2011, Frankfurt


See also:

.

Deque by Sieger Design for
Dornbracht
Aqua Jewels by Marcel
Wanders
Triflow Future Talents
design competition

Deque by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

Deque by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

German studio Sieger Design present this flat, square tap for design brand Dornbracht at ISH 2011 in Frankfurt, which opens tomorrow.

Deque by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

Called Deque, the tap is designed to produce a wide horizontal row of individual streams of water.

Deque by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

The design comes in chrome and matte black.

Deque by Sieger Design for Dornbracht

German designer Mike Meiré created a sculpture to display the Deque range.

here are some more details from Dornbracht:


Dornbracht presents DEQUE

At the ISH trade fair in Frankfurt (15 – 19 March 2011), Dornbracht is presenting DEQUE, a new fitting for the bathroom. DEQUE ‘s visual language is characterised by the strong pared down aesthetic of its flat wide projection. The low and basin-hugging fitting draws one’s eyes to what is most important, the way that water is delivered.

“DEQUE represents the progression of the Dornbracht brand in avant-garde design,” says Managing Director Andreas Dornbracht. “The special feature we have developed for this fitting are the individual streams of water that are dispersed that provide a gentle and elegant experience while washing the hands.”

DEQUE ‘s contrasts stand out, the juxtaposition of the gentle flow of water with the severity of the fitting’s form and the contrast of the planar projection and the cylindrical control elements – a form that is particularly evident in the single-lever mixer.

“The natural cascade of water sets a deliberate contrast to the formal severity and perfection of the fitting,” says Michael Sieger.

With its planar form, DEQUE draws the eye to the fitting and the water it delivers, a perspective that evokes associations with the landscape architecture of Italian architect Carlos Scarpa (1906-1978). In combination with the two types of streams (the cascade of water and the gentle individual streams), this association marks the basis for designing DEQUE ‘s surroundings.

“The architecture unites the tremendous precision and geometry of the fitting with landscape architecture. The result is a sculpture comprising the fitting as a water-shaping source and the architecture as a water-structuring form,” explains Mike Meiré, who is responsible for the architecture of the DEQUE sculpture.

To follow the natural flow of water through this sculpture is to embark on a journey through the different applications of the series. Precise geometric forms depict a monolithic landscape of chrome and matte black. From washbasin to bath tub, from shower to deck-mounted, the different sources of water supply a flow that ties the different delivery forms of water together architecturally. It is not the architecture that unites the different water sources with one another, but rather the water itself that acts as the element uniting the architecture.

In addition to the DEQUE sculpture, four individual applications were designed for DEQUE. They each show a combination of outlets and a landscape element. The applications vary in size, yet exhibit a consistent architectural signature and material aesthetic.

DEQUE comes in the finishes chrome and matte black and will be available for delivery in September 2011. The design is by Sieger Design, the DEQUE bath architecture is by Mike Meiré.

New product: DEQUE
Design: Sieger Design
Available for delivery: Autumn 2011
First presentation: ISH 2011, Frankfurt


See also:

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Global Street Food by Mike Meiré for DornbrachtThe Farm Project by Mike Meiré for DornbrachtMore about
bathrooms