New Pinterest board: storage

Pinterest board storage

Our new Pinterest board features a number of storage designs, including staircases that double as bookshelves, Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec’s Corniches shelves and a writing desk in the form of a life-sized mule. See our new storage Pinterest board»

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REK Bookcase Junior by Reinier de Jong

REK Bookcase Junior by Reinier de Jong

Product news: Dutch designer Reinier de Jong has scaled down his extendable REK Bookcase so it can be used by children to store books and toys.

REK Bookcase Junior by Reinier de Jong

Reinier de Jong released two smaller versions of the bookcase, first designed for his son as miniature copies of the 2008 model. “Despite the iPad and its countless toddler apps, my two-year-old son is very fond of his little books,” he said. “So I decided it was time for his own shelves.”

REK Bookcase Junior by Reinier de Jong

Each unit is made from five lightweight, poplar wood sections that slot exactly into each other.

REK Bookcase Junior by Reinier de Jong

When pulled apart, compartments are created between the horizontal elements for storing small items. The sections can be pushed back together again to save space.

REK Bookcase Junior by Reinier de Jong
Scale elevations – click for larger image and dimensions

The original REK Bookcase was one of our most popular stories when we first featured it in 2008 and it’s included in our Dezeen Book of Ideas. The design went into production earlier this year.

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Stacked Objects by Emiel Remmelts

The shelves in this furniture by design graduate Emiel Remmelts only stay up thanks to concrete blocks, bricks, a glass vase and magazine file boxes propping up one end.

Stacked Objects by Emiel Remmelts

Utrecht product design graduate Emiel Remmelts prototyped a bookcase and clothes rail in his Stacked Objects graduation project.

An ash wood frame forms one side of each piece, whilst the shelves require objects to be positioned on the other side to hold them in position.

“I wanted to create a product which was inspired by the construction of buildings,” Remmelts told Dezeen. “During the design process, I experimented with many different materials, including bricks, concrete, tiles, steel, glass and wood.”

Stacked Objects by Emiel Remmelts

“The objects in the shelving are used to create a dynamic composition, comparable to the method of creating a collage. Each composition is unique and defines the appearance of the shelves,” Remmelts said.

Remmelts picked up one-off objects from flea markets, charity shops and building sites. “That way I’m forced to make new compositions with each shelf,” he explained. “When I pass a building site, I alway look for new materials and inspiration.”

Stacked Objects by Emiel Remmelts

Remmelts recently graduated from Hogeschool voor de Kunsten Utrecht in the Netherlands where he studied product design.

Other shelving systems we’ve published recently include an expanding shelving unit that can bunch up or stretch out and modular shelving built from tessellating blocks that can also be used as stools or tables. We have also featured a number of staircases that incorporate bookshelves.

See more bookcases »
See more coat hooks »
See more furniture »

Photographs are by Jasper Timmermans.

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Set expanding shelving by Stephanie Hornig

This expanding shelving unit by Austrian designer Stephanie Hornig can bunch up or stretch out depending on how much space you have.

The Set shelving comprises a beech-wood frame with scissor-like pivots plus folded steel shelves. These sit over rails between each joint and stop the structure stretching any further.

Set shelving by Stephanie Hornig

“Strategic cut-outs form shelves that can be fastened on the axes of the flexible structure in order to fix it in position,” said Stephanie Hornig.

She explained how the positions of the notches allow the unit to rest in three different positions and small bookends can be slotted against the diagonals in a similar way.

Set shelving by Stephanie Hornig

Other adaptable bookshelves on Dezeen include interlocking shelves that slide out to make space for more books as required – one of our most popular stories ever – and hinged boxes that can be spun round to create a neat grid or a scattered circle.

Set shelving by Stephanie Hornig

See more clever bookcases »

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Inspired by braided structures I aimed to design objects that could create a two- or threedimensional pattern that is stretchable. The resulting shelving system is based on the principle of a scissors grid with extended axes to make room for shelves.

This creates a superimposed image of diagonals, which is adjustable and can be fixed in three different positions. Bended, powder-coated steel sheets with strategic cut-outs form shelves that can be fastened on the axes of the flexible structure in order to fix it in position.

Additionally, simple bookends can be inserted that lean directly against the wooden struts.

Materials: beech wood, steel
Dimensions: variable

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Bloom by Raw Edges

Milan 2013: London design duo Raw Edges came up with a bookcase shaped like a weaving loom to display novels by young British writers.

Bloom by Raw-Edges

The Bloom bookcase was commissioned by the British Council to hold works of fiction by literary magazine Granta’s pick of young British novelists.

Bloom by Raw-Edges

Raw Edges came up with a wooden frame resembling a loom – hence its name – that allows books to be slotted over the red threads and held at varying heights by sliding black stoppers.

Bloom by Raw-Edges

The bookcase holds one novel by each of the writers chosen by Granta in its once-a-decade list, which was first published in 1983.

Bloom by Raw-Edges

It was shown at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile during Milan’s design week earlier this month – see our round-up of the best furniture and lighting from the Salone or see all products and exhibitions from Milan 2013.

Raw Edges, a duo comprising Tel Aviv-born designers Yael Mer and Shay Alkalay, previously created a display of hundreds of fabric ribbons for Danish textile manufacturer Kvadrat and a shelf that slides apart to form a desk – see all design by Raw Edges.

Other bookcases we’ve featured lately include a zig-zagging wooden design by Japanese studio Nendo and an extendable bookcase with interlocking shelves – see all bookcases.

Here’s some more information from the British Council:


The Best of Young British Novelists bookcase

British-based design studio Raw-Edges has been commissioned by the British Council to design a bespoke travelling bookcase to house one carefully selected work of fiction from each of Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists. The bookcase will also hold editions of Granta magazine.

The highly inventive design means the books themselves take centre stage in the installation. The interactive nature of the bookcase also allows visitors to change the display by repositioning the books. It invites visitors to delve into the stories and also consider the books’ physical qualities and design. The bookcase will be on show during the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan, where a series of talks will consider the book as a physical object. This commission represents an opportunity for audiences overseas to engage with British design and British contemporary literature.

Before they were household names, they were Granta Best of Young British Novelists. At a celebration to be held at the British Council, on the evening of 15 April 2013, Granta will announce its once-in-a-decade selection of the twenty best British novelists aged under forty. Granta’s first generation-defining list of writers was published in 1983 and set the bar for the following decades.

The April announcement marks the publication of Granta 123: The Best of Young British Novelists 4, which includes a new story from each writer on the 2013 list. Granta 123 will be available to purchase from all good booksellers from 16 April in the UK and 23 April in the US.

Throughout 2013, the British Council and Granta are collaborating on an international showcase of contemporary British novelists, which features the twenty writers selected by Granta’s panel of judges. The first international events – including readings and conversation – will be announced on 15 April and will be taking place in more than ten countries including Russia, Qatar and India.

Books from each Granta Best Young Novelist on the 1983, 1993, 2003 and 2013 lists will be presented around the world in a bookcase designed by Raw-Edges Design Studio.

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REK bookcase by Reinier de Jong

Product news: this extendable bookcase by Dutch designer Reinier de Jong, which became one of our most popular stories ever after we published the prototype in 2008, has now gone into production.

REK bookcase by Reinier de Jong

Originally designed for a private client, the REK bookcase by Reinier de Jong has interlocking shelves that allow it to slide out to make space for more books as required.

REK bookcase by Reinier de Jong

The different shelf dimensions hold various sizes, while the narrowest slots are ideal for magazines. At its largest, the bookcase is 228 centimetres wide.

REK bookcase by Reinier de Jong

The original REK bookcase was finished with white laminate, but de Jong has now introduced a recycled laminate finish in grey and dark grey.

REK bookcase by Reinier de Jong

He has also made the bookcase lighter, reducing its weight to 80 kilograms, and added a stop to make sure the shelves don’t slide out too far.

REK bookcase by Reinier de Jong

Last year de Jong presented an extendable coffee table to complement the REK bookcase, while in Cologne this year he launched a folding wooden chair made from old wooden broom handles – see all design by Reinier de Jong.

Other adjustable bookcases we’ve featured include a set of hinged boxes that spin round to create different patterns and a set of modular units with chairs hidden inside them – see all bookcases.

Photographs are by Peter van Dijk.


A new and improved REK bookcase

More than four years after we designed and created the very first REK bookcase for a private client, we have taken a few significant steps forward. REK has a new finish, is much lighter and we have made some great photos of it.

What are books worth when there is internet, smart phones, tablets and e-readers? Not much at first sight. However, it is exactly these digital developments that enhance the appreciation of books. No longer functional carriers of information but rather artefacts representing one’s identity. It is not so much about the quantity of books anymore but what counts is a well-considered selection of quality books. Book shelves are therefore changing as well, from purely functional pieces of furniture to unique design pieces, equally important as the books they hold.

REK was designed back in 2008 by Reinier de Jong as a bookcase that grows with your book collection. The fewer the books, the smaller the bookcase. The zigzag-shaped parts slide in and out to accommodate books in the resulting spaces. The books can also be arranged according to their size. The narrow spaces are excellent for magazines.

The maximum dimensions of REK are: 202 x 228 x 36 cm. The original REK bookcase is finished with white HPL which gives it a cool and abstract look.

We recently introduced a new finish at the International Furniture Fair in Cologne: recycled HPL by Abet Laminati. The solid grey material creates a warm and intriguing result, especially on the edges where it looks as if it is seamlessly folded around the shelves. It is light grey with a texture that people associate with fine concrete or grey cardboard. REK is also available in a dark grey version of this material.

Furthermore, the new REK has lost weight. It has the same dimensions as the first one but weighs only 80 kg. A lot easier to transport but above all, easier to slide. We have also improved the guidance and added a stop, making sure the parts do not slide out too far.

REK can be ordered directly from us. Price is on request


Dezeen Book of Ideas out now!

The REK bookcase by Reinier de Jong is featured in our book, Dezeen Book of Ideas. Buy it now for just £12.

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Book Tower House by Platform 5 Architects

Walls of books fold around a wooden staircase in this renovation and extension to a north London home by Hackney studio Platform 5 Architects.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

“A key part of the brief was to house the client’s extensive collection of books,” Platform 5‘s Patrick Michell told Dezeen. “We proposed a double-height library wrapped around a stair.”

Book Tower House by Platform 5

The oak bookcases stagger up around the edge of the stairwell, finishing at a first-floor study space that cantilevers out over the room below. “The dramatic space was perfect for a small desk perched off the landing, with views to the floor below and out through the window,” said Michell.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

Platform 5 Architects also added an extension to the kitchen, doubling the size of the space to accommodate a new dining area with an exposed brick wall.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

“We used exposed brickwork in the extension to link the room with the garden by continuing the garden wall into the interior,” said Michell. “London stock brick is an essential part of the character of the city and it forms a beautiful backdrop to a domestic interior.”

Book Tower House by Platform 5

The zinc-clad extension gives the rear of the house a new elevation with a large glass door and L-shaped window seat.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

Wooden ceiling beams run along the length of the extension and create modular shelves along the top of the new brick wall.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

A kitchen island counter is made from exposed concrete, which the architects also used for the surface of the floor. “The robust finish sits comfortably with the muted tones and texture of the exposed brickwork and oak,” explained Michell.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

London-based Platform 5 Architects was founded in 2006 and is headed up by Michell and partner Peter Allen. Previous projects include a modest glass extension to a house in Dalston.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

Other residential extensions to complete recently include a dark brick extension near Lille and a rooftop addition in California.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

See more residential extensions on Dezeen »

Book Tower House by Platform 5

Photography is by Alan Williams.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

Here’s some more text from Platform 5:


The owners were keen to introduce contemporary interventions to create modern living spaces, while retaining and highlighting the Arts & Crafts influenced decorative aspects of the original house. A key element to the brief was the need to house an extensive book collection.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

A simple palette of oak, brick and concrete were used on the interior to link the different spaces and built in furniture was designed to create stage sets for domestic life.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

Above: ground floor plan

The main feature is a double height library built around a staircase at the heart of the house where oak panels and shelves lined with books create an intimate atmosphere. The stepped arrangement of the shelves mimics the stairs to give a sense of upward movement through the space, while at the top a small study has been incorporated into the landing; a peaceful area to work, overlooking the ground floor.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

Above: first floor plan

To the rear, a new kitchen side extension was built by resting a zinc-clad oak structure onto the party wall. Timber spars diffuse light from above, and create a series of niches against the wall. The existing rear elevation has been remodelled, with a large pivot door and a sitting area with slide-away corner glazing overlooking the garden.

Book Tower House by Platform 5

Above: long section – click above for larger image

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Concrete collection by Matali Crasset for Concrete by LCDA

Interieur: French designer Matali Crasset has created a collection of concrete furniture, including a lamp shaped like an interwar military listening device.

Concrete collection by Matali Crasset for Concrete by LCDA

Crasset recently became the artistic director of French concrete specialist Concrete by LCDA, and the Concrete collection is a result of this collaboration.

Concrete collection by Matali Crasset for Concrete by LCDA

The lamp references concrete acoustic mirrors, also known as “listening ears”, which were developed in Britain between the wars to concentrate sound waves and detect airborne invasions.

Concrete collection by Matali Crasset for Concrete by LCDA

The bookshelf is designed to be a “backbone of knowledge” with shelves like vertebrae protruding from a central spine.

Concrete collection by Matali Crasset for Concrete by LCDA

“This project combines fluidity and the desire to get away from the very common single-piece shapes when concrete furniture is concerned,” said the collaborators.

Concrete collection by Matali Crasset for Concrete by LCDA

Other projects by Crasset we’ve featured recently include a set of vessels shaped like horns, speaker components and loudhailers and a woodland hotel room on legs.

Concrete collection by Matali Crasset for Concrete by LCDA

We’ve been publishing some of the best projects from Interieur this year, including furniture that expands like popcorn and an arcade of light beams that appear to bend inwardssee all our stories about Interieur.

See all our stories about concrete »
See all our stories about Matali Crasset »

Photographs are by Simon Buisson.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


The international designer Matali Crasset is working with Concrete by LCDA as artistic director. This is a new stage in the development of Concrete by LCDA which, after putting its know-how into use to excel in interior design, from now on becomes a design and manufacturing company.

The international designer Matali Crasset is working with Concrete by LCDA as artistic director. This is a new stage in the development of Concrete by LCDA which, after putting its know-how into use to excel in interior design, from now on becomes a design and manufacturing company.

The aim is to tame concrete to so that it will be better incorporated into the heart of our daily life. The range of concrete products that Matali Crasset has designed for Concrete by LCDA invites concrete to be a fully-fledged player in our interiors, both for primary uses and more immaterial functions. So it is in this setting that the material and symbolic dimension of concrete is highlighted.

This initial collection of furniture and objects designed for concrete takes its strength from the beauty of the concrete material. By moulding the concrete, it becomes furniture and then enters into a dialogue with us in our life scenarios. In this way, Matali has designed a collection of timeless and sculptural objects, both obvious and essential, which combine a technical material and a know-how with a high level of craftsmanship with a sensitive approach.

The collection is comprised of three objects which suggest three functions and values: to meet, to store, to light.

Table

Concrete becomes the centre of the house with a very archetypal table which asserts its desire for continuity. The shape is meant to be simple to so that material’s sensitive aspect can be revealed: the texture of the wood’s grain will reveal more than the manufacturing mode, it locks the project into a long tradition of moulding. The concrete unobtrusively finds its place and becomes a key element in the apartment. Wooden frame is the most frequently used tool for framing concrete walls that are generally reinforced, a forming tool used since the 17th century made from pieces of wood. The concrete is both a very technical material – lightweight concrete – and a material which requires precise handwork; in this way, the mould leaves the trace of the wood and the handwork. This is an archetypal object, with a clean line which easily fits into any type of interior. A large table seating 6 to 10 persons in a spirit of conviviality and hospitality.

Technical description :
Table in ultra-high-performance fibre-reinforced raw concrete and inner core, with a mat varnish surface.
Dimensions: 250 x 100 x 75 cm, also available in 220*100*75 cm.
Weight: 120 kgs
Top 80 kg, each base 20 kg.

Lamp

The lamp is more unexpected, it shows that concrete knows no borders. It refers to the listening ears in Folkestone in England. These objects deriving from technology exiting between the two wars have become obsolete with the arrival of radar beams. The function of these large objects in reinforced concrete was to listen to the sky. The flag changes scale to become a light diffuser. It is placed in various locations in the apartment, standing or suspended. Here the concrete is moulded with great finesse to so that the design can be seen.

Technical description :
Dimensions: 53 x 50 x 31.5 cm
Ultra high-performance raw concrete, LED 18W lamp.
PCB (printed circuit board) made up of 0.5W 36 leds powered by 24V direct current. The power obtained is 18W or about 1800 lumen for a colour of 4000°.
A diffuser made of a white light spectrum moulded acrylic sheet offers an excellent diffusion strength and an eco-efficient solution.
Weight: 18kg

Bookshelf

This is a bookshelf in the image of the backbone of knowledge. The material is known for its strength, this project combines fluidity and the desire to get away from the very common single-piece shapes when concrete furniture is concerned. The material seems to be set in its lightness, like a freeze-frame shot, it retains the momentum and the dynamism of growth. The table and the storage space are a homage to human building genius, to major structures in raw concrete which symbolise modernity.

Technical description :
Dimensions: 190 x 95 x 35 cm.
Smooth ultra-high-performance concrete, Ductal.
Weight: each element 70 kg

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Vertical Loft by Shift

Dutch architects Shift ripped out the walls of this central Rotterdam townhouse and replaced them with a three-storey bookshelf.

Vertical Loft by Shift

The bookshelf, which is 10 metres wide and nine metres high, replaces the load-bearing wall in the middle of the house.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Contained in the shelves are kitchen appliances, wardobes, a walk-in closet and even a doll’s house in the children’s bedroom.

Vertical Loft by Shift

The steel stairs have been fitted close against the shelves to make all the books easily accessible.

Vertical Loft by Shift

The house is situated on a block of dilapidated nineteenth century buildings which was bought in its entirety by a developer to be restored. Each house was stripped bare, leaving the new homeowners free to make their own changes inside.

Vertical Loft by Shift

“What used to happen is that the municipality would tear the houses down, but they have beautiful facades, so it’s a good thing to try to keep them, ” said Shift architect Oana Rades. “It’s been a really successful strategy and it means a lot of people won’t move out of the city to the suburbs now.”

Vertical Loft by Shift

We previously featured another Rotterdam project by Shift – a monolothic pavilion with sliding glass windows.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Photographs are by René de Wit and Jeroen Musch.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Vertical Loft by Shift architecture urbanism – extreme makeover of a pre-war city dwelling in the centre of Rotterdam.

Vertical Loft by Shift

This so called do-it-yourself dwelling in the centre of Rotterdam is part of a bold experiment initiated by the municipality to revitalise dilapidated urban areas.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Run-down pre-war dwellings are renovated on the outside and brought back to their monumental appearance, while the interiors are stripped bare.

Vertical Loft by Shift

The empty shell dwellings are primarily bought by enthusiastic young people who transform them according to their specific needs, desires and budgets.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Real estate developers have picked up the initiative and a new demand driven market of urban housing has been generated in recent years.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Site plan

The result is a growing number of contemporary custom-made dream houses within the uniform old fabric of the traditional nineteenth and early twentieth century city.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Ground floor plan

Our dream was to create a vertical loft: a house without walls where all three floors are stitched together into one continuous space. The interior of the new house is organized by one oversized closet that connects all floors. It functions as a storage device for the whole house. This piece of XXL-furniture, measuring 10 meters in length and 9 meters in height, replaces the load bearing middle wall of the original house.

Vertical Loft by Shift

First floor plan

Its modular system integrates kitchen appliances, bookshelves, wardrobe, and a walk in closet. The introduction of a central void reinforces the presence of the closet. The void enables diagonal views through the house in which the closet is experienced in its full height. It also makes daylight penetrate far into the 14 meter deep house. Two steel stairs in the void make the bookshelves accessible and create a vertical circulation along and through the closet.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Second floor plan

The extreme makeover of the house is combined with a selective preservation of elements of the old casco. Industrial materials such as the phenol coated multiplex of the closet and the polyurethane flooring are balanced by the longitudinal brick wall that is left bare, the stained glass and the original doors that are restored and re-used. The roughness of the wall, full with traces of the past, tells stories about the continuous makeovers that the house has undergone in the last hundred years.

Vertical Loft by Shift

Section

Text: Shift architecture urbanism
Photography: René de Wit, Jeroen Musch
Shift architecture urbanism
www.shifta.nl
info@shifta.nl

Vertical Loft by Shift

Elevation

Design: Shift architecture urbanism, Rotterdam
Project architects: Oana Rades and Harm Timmermans
Contractor: JWK Bouwteam, Gerrit Kooiker, Ijzendoorn
Construction: B2CO, Richard Fielt, Ede
Installations: Installatietechniek Fred vd Pol & Zn., Ede
Floors: DRT, Oss
Fixed furniture: Gerrit Kooiker, Gaby van den Boom

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Squaring by Lee Sehoon

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

The hinged boxes of this bookcase by Korean furniture designer Lee Sehoon can be spun round to create a neat grid or a scattered circle (+ movie).

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

The Squaring bookcase is made from nine wooden boxes that can be rotated from a simple square into a circle of sloping boxes, finishing in a cross shape.

“Disequilibrium caused by different weights creates a new shape every single time,” explains the designer.

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

We’ve featured lots of bookcases on Dezeen, including a bookcase without shelves and another in the shape of a robot.

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

See our top ten most popular bookcases here.

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

See all our stories about bookcases »

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