E15 unveils wood and marble home accessories collection

German brand E15 has launched a collection of wood and marble home accessories (+ slideshow).

E15 unveils wood and marble home accessory collection

The majority of the homeware in E15‘s latest range were created by the brand’s founder Philipp Mainzer, with items by designers Mark Braun and Jan Philip Holler.

E15 unveils wood and marble home accessory collection

“The new collection of accessories together with the existing range of blankets in fine wool and cashmere represent an extensive collection of accessories that enrich the pleasures of living, cooking and working,” said the designers.

E15 unveils wood and marble home accessory collection

Crafted from European oak or white Carrara marble, the round and rectangular cutting boards in the range each have a single hole towards one edge to provide a place to grip and for storing the items on hooks.

E15 unveils wood and marble home accessory collection

The Cut chopping board has metal bracings within the wood to prevent deformation from moisture and is untreated for hygiene reasons.

E15 unveils wood and marble home accessory collection

Bookends are formed from blocks of white Carrara or black Marquina marble, either as cubes or cuboids.

E15 unveils wood and marble home accessory collection

A waxed wooden fruit bowl by Mark Braun has sides that gently slope towards the centre until they plunge into a hole. This camber means that round fruit will roll into the middle of the bowl.

E15 unveils wood and marble home accessory collection

The collection also features Jan Philip Holler’s paper weights in the shape of small houses, which come in oak, walnut and polished brass.

E15 debuted the accessories at this year’s imm cologne event last month.

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Kulle day bed by Stefanie Schissler features a bobbly surface

Cologne 2014: this day bed by young designer Stefanie Schissler is intentionally lumpy to encourage users to snuggle into it.

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

The Kulle day bed by Stefanie Schissler has an undulating surface caused by the different sized pieces of upholstery foam concealed beneath its stretchy boiled-wool surface.

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

The German designer wanted to create a piece of furniture for relaxation that invites the user to lay down through its appearance.

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

“The look is something new, which is arising curiosity in people,” Schissler told Dezeen. “It is designed to arise the urge to touch and feel it.”

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

The small cubes of leftover foam used have different densities and heights so the squashiness varies across the surface. “Every bobble feels different,” Schissler explained. “You can feel them but in a very gentle and pleasant way. A lot of people describe it as a massage for the body.”

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

She added that the piece is not really meant for sitting on but as a landscape for relaxation. “The bobbles at the back are slightly higher so that you can lean your head on them to read a book, but in general the daybed is a piece that is not made to sit on, but to really lie in it, feel it and simply relax.”

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

Schissler graduates this year from Hochschule für Gestaltung Schwäbisch Gmünd in Germany, but developed this project during an exchange semester at Lund University in Sweden.

She presented the day bed as part of as part of the [D3] Design Talents exhibition at imm cologne earlier this month.

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Prado sofa with movable backrest cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

Cologne 2014: German designer Christian Werner has created a sofa for French brand Ligne Roset with backrests that can be placed in any position (+ slideshow).

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

Werner designed the Prado sofa to allow users the freedom to configure the sofa to suit their mood or lifestyle.

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

Weighted cushions that act as movable backrests and additional bolster cushions can be arranged in any configuration on top of the large seat, or used to create informal seating areas on the floor.

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

From front-on the cushions have a standard oblong shape but sweep out at the back to form a stable base.

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

A metal insert in the base enhances the stability of the cushions, while a non-slip surface prevents them from moving once they’re in position.

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

The sofa’s deep seat is raised on a black lacquered steel base and is available in two lengths.

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

The smaller size comes with two back cushions and two bolster cushions, and the larger with three back cushions and two bolsters.

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

Mattress ticking on the reverse side of the seat cushion means it can be flipped over to turn the sofa into an occasional bed, and an optional fitted sheet can also be specified.

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

Prado was exhibited by Ligne Roset at the imm cologne trade fair last week, along with a rounded sofa by Philippe Nigro and a combined coffee table and footstool by GamFratesi.

Prado sofa with moveable cushions by Christian Werner for Ligne Roset

Here are some more details from Ligne Roset:


Concept

“I don’t stand if I can sit. I don’t sit if I can lie down.”
“Some people succeed in finding their dream, whilst others create it if they can’t find it.”

It is through these quotations by Henry Ford and Theodor Fontane respectively that Christian Werner brings us his Prado nomadic settee. A way of showing us that the search for freedom and wellbeing has completely guided the design of this model. Quite apart from the habitual style exercise which surrounds a new settee – which consists of a principally aesthetic proposal – Prado represents first and foremost an approach based on the study of lifestyles, or in short, the human being. Here, therefore, we find the same ambition as that which brought us Smala in the early part of the new century.

Prado consists of a vast seat (sizes: 100 x 200 cm and 120 x 240 cm) which may be used either independently or with other elements, on which back cushions may be scattered at will. There is total freedom since these cushions, which are weighted and equipped with an anti-slip system, will remain in place without needing to be leant against or attached to anything. They could therefore be arranged on the floor for a few leisurely moments around a low table, whilst the seat could do duty as an occasional bed simply by turning over its seat cushion, the reverse of which is covered with mattress ticking.

The Oda low and pedestal tables (designed to slide above the seat cushion thanks to their cantilevered tops) were designed as the perfect complements to this settee, making it possible to create corner compositions, for example, or to add occasional tables on which one can place one’s personal effects.

Nomadic settee, removable cushions, 2 sizes 100 X 200 and 120 X 240.

The medium settee comes with 2 back cushions and 2 bolsters. The large settee comes with 3 back cushions and 2 bolsters. Optional armrest cushion (sold either singly or in pairs). Structure, back cushions, bolsters and armrests may be ordered in the same covering material, or in various colours and/or covering materials.

Another important and particularly interesting feature of Prado is the possibility of transforming it into a comfortable bed-settee, for the reverse of the seat cushion is covered in mattress ticking: simply turn the cushion over and use the optional fitted sheet to create a comfortable sleep platform either 100 or 120 cm in width.

Technical description

Structure in panels of chipboard clad in foam 50 kg/m3 and 110 g/m2 quilting.
Seat cushion in polyurethane foam 36 kg/m3 and 110 g/m2 quilting.
Base in Epoxy matt black lacquered steel.
Back cushion in injected foam 60 kg/m3 moulded onto a metal insert, equipped with elastic webbing and with a compartmented goose feather-filled comfort layer (10 % down / 90 % feathers) with 110 g/m2 quilting.
Anti-slip system.

Lumbar cushion filled with new goose feathers (10 % down / 90 % feathers).
Optional armrest cushion in polyurethane foam 35 kg/m3 and 200 g/m2 quilting.
A white 100 % cotton fitted sheet is also available for each settee.

Range

Large settee W 240 D 120 H 87 seat height 40.5
Medium settee W 200 D 100 H 87 seat height 40.5
Optional cushion W 40 D 23 H 15

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Thanks for the Sun colour-changing lamps by Arnout Meijer

Cologne 2014: the colour temperature of this series of LED lamps by Rotterdam designer Arnout Meijer can be adjusted to create different moods throughout the day (+ movie).

Meijer presented the project as part of the [D3] Design Talents exhibition at imm cologne trade fair last week.

He designed the Thanks for the Sun series in response to the need for light that fulfils different roles – providing bright white light for working and aiding concentration, and a warmer, more soothing hue to help people relax before bed.

Thanks for the Sun colour-changing lamps by Arnout Meijer

“When you think about a lamp design, you design everything but the light: you design the shade, construction, base, etc but in the end you just screw the light in,” Meijer told Dezeen. “I wanted to turn that around and let light play the main character. So I wanted to make a lamp series where the design and the shape was about the light.”

Each of the acrylic lamps incorporates an inner and outer strip of LEDs that can be adjusted using a dial or slider to change the colour of the light from a bright white to a warmer red or yellow.

Thanks for the Sun colour-changing lamps by Arnout Meijer

Light from the LEDs spreads across the surface and catches lines that have been milled into the transparent acrylic.

The patterns feature wavy lines that transition into smooth shapes as they radiate from the inner form to the outer edge.

“When I decided that I wanted to change between warm and cool light I thought it was important that when the character of the light changes, the character of the lamp changes as well,” explained Meijer.

Thanks for the Sun colour-changing lamps by Arnout Meijer

“When you see a drawing of a light bulb from the end of the nineteenth century there is always a sort of wave-like pattern, which mimics glowing,” the designer added. “Whereas cool white light is more modern and straight, like the hard line of a fluorescent tube.”

The collection comprises a narrow table lamp, a round table table and a larger wall lamp.

Meijer originally designed the lamps during his studies at Design Academy Eindhoven and is now using them as the basis for experiments on a larger scale, which he says will eventually result in a series of limited edition light sculptures.

Thanks for the Sun colour-changing lamps by Arnout Meijer

Photography is by Femke Rijerman.

Thanks for the Sun colour-changing lamps by Arnout Meijer

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Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Cologne 2014: Eindhoven designer Tsuyoshi Hayashi has used discarded roof tiles to create curving seats for a series of stools and benches (+ slideshow).

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Hayashi gathered the traditional kawara tiles from a factory in Takahama, a city in Japan with a long history of producing the curved roof tiles from local clay.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Across Japan, a five percent rate of kawara tiles being damaged during production results in more than 65,000 pieces being sent to landfill every year.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Hayashi cuts off the chipped or cracked parts of the damaged tiles and fixes them to a wooden frame that he designed to fit the standardised shape so no nails or glue are required for assembly.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

“The smooth curved shape [of the tiles] invites people to sit and it keeps one’s posture straight ergonomically,” Hayashi told Dezeen.

The designer added that the processes used to manufacture the tiles make them extremely durable and weatherproof so they can be used outdoors.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

“Japanese roof tiles are fired in more than 1200 degrees [Celsius], which makes them harder than the ones in Europe, which are mostly fired at around 800 degrees,” said Hayashi. “A single chair can support a person weighing up to 120 kilograms.”

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Other properties that attracted Hayashi to seek out a new function for these redundant objects included the variety of textures and colours that are produced.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

“Smoked roof tiles gives an ageing texture to the surface, and colours are created continuously by glazing companies as waste material after they showed them to the clients,” said the designer.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

The wooden frames can be constructed as single pieces or combined to create long benches with legs of different heights.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Hayashi graduated from Design Academy Eindhoven last year and opened his own studio in the city in December. He is working on projects that explore potential uses for various waste materials from factories in Europe and Japan.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

“My biggest wish is to collaborate with factories in each country and apply my design principle to propose unique value and locality of waste material,” said Hayashi.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

The Kawara project was exhibited as part of the [D3] Design Talents exhibition at imm cologne.

This year’s [D3] Contest was won by a storage rail based on a traditional Shaker-style peg board. Imm cologne continues until Sunday at the Koelnmesse exhibition centre.

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Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

Cologne 2014: a grid of thin wooden strips supports the surface of this table by German designer Ruben Beckers to make it extremely lightweight (+ slideshow).

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

Ruben Beckers named his 4.5-kilogram poplar wood table kleinergleich5, which means “less than five”.

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

“It is safe to assume that at just 4.5 kilograms, it is probably the lightest wooden table in the world,” he said.

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

Beckers employed a grid of extremely thin strips to create a rigid structure beneath the slender table top, so it could support objects placed on top.

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

The lengths of wood slot together at five-centimetre intervals to create the lattice, which is 28 millimetres deep.

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

Removable solid-wood legs are bent into the holes in the grid to connect them with the table top.

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

The table is half the weight of Benjamin Hubert’s lightweight table, unveiled during the London Design Festival last September.

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

The table was designed during the Wood*Transformation project at Kassel School of Art and Design, and is currently on display as part of the [D3] Design Talents exhibition at imm cologne.

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

This year’s [D3] Contest was won by a storage rail based on a traditional Shaker-style peg board. Imm cologne continues until Sunday at the Koelnmesse exhibition centre.

Wooden table by Ruben Beckers weighs just 4.5 kilograms

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Philippe Nigro designs rounded sofa for Ligne Roset

Cologne 2014: French designer Philippe Nigro has created a sofa for French furniture brand Ligne Roset with rounded edges like a bar of soap (+ slideshow).

Cosse sofa by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

Nigro‘s main aim with the design of the Cosse sofa for Ligne Roset was to optimise comfort, so he created a form with gentle contours that sweep around the sitter.

The designer described the shape of the sofa as: “Softly welcoming contours, a soft, delicate all-enveloping form which, sustained by a fine natural wood structure, floats above the ground.”

Cosse sofa by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

The seat features a curved front edge that transitions into undulating armrests and connects to the high, rounded backrest. Webbed elastic suspension adds to the comfort of the cushion.

“Mastery of the constraints of series production, hand in hand with optimized technology and materials, work together to produce freely-flowing shapes such as that of the Cosse settee,” Nigro added.

Cosse sofa by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

Simple wooden battens with a rectangular section are joined to create a minimal frame upon which the bulky body of the sofa rests.

A soldered steel framework supports the dense polyurethane foam shape, which can be upholstered in a choice of fabrics.

Cosse sofa by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

The base can be specified with a natural beech finish or a dark anthracite stain. Two sizes of sofa are available, with a matching footstool completing the family.

Cosse sofa by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

Cosse is being presented by Ligne Roset at its stand located in Hall 11.3 at trade fair imm cologne until Sunday.

Here’s a project description from Ligne Roset:


Concept

Comfort is a sensation. As with all sensations any description will be subjective, but is it not an impression of lightness, such as when a body is liberated from its own weight in the water?

Comfort, therefore, was the inspiration for the Cosse settee, along with the expertise acquired by Cinna over time, such as their capacity to integrate the required technology with the optimization of materials in a way which preserves lightness, perhaps through the use of minimally thick materials and discreet framework which will fade into the background for the benefit of the simplest and lightest possible forms.

Cosse sofa by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

Mastery of the constraints of series production, hand in hand with optimized technology and materials, work together to produce freely-flowing shapes such as that of the Cosse settee.

Softly welcoming contours, a soft, delicate all-enveloping form which, sustained by a fine natural wood structure, floats above the ground.

Cosse sofa by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

The remarkable comfort of the seat, achieved thanks to its elastic-webbed suspension, contributes to this feeling of comfort and lightness.

One will also note those little details which, as always with Cinna, add to the sumptuousness of the model: the meanders of the armrest, for example, and the resulting difficulty of upholstering these, or the extreme slimness of the solid wood feet.

Cosse sofa by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

Technical description

Structure in mechanically-soldered steel; Pullmaflex suspension; polyurethane foam 36 kg/m3 – quilting 110 g/m2. Armrest in moulded foam 60 kg/m3 – quilting 110 g/m2.

Base in natural or anthracite-stained solid beech. Covered in Uniform, or in 2 special fabrics, one of which has been designed by Bertjan Pot (Dia).

Large settee W 215 D 99 H 82 seat height 38
Medium settee W 175 D 99 H 82 seat height 38
Footstool W 82 D 58 H 32

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Table and pouffe hybrid designed by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Cologne 2014: Denmark design duo GamFratesi has combined a coffee table and pouffe to create footstools with integrated trays for French brand Ligne Roset (+ slideshow).

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Trouf, a cross between a tray and a pouffe, was designed by GamFratesi with both hard and soft surfaces as a multi-functional piece of furniture.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

“We wanted to join different functions just combining soft and hard surfaces, and create furniture where the different objects or moods find their place informally,” Enrico Fratesi told Dezeen.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Wooden trays for holding food or drinks are set into the upholstered tops, offset so a fabric section at one end can be used for laptops, books or resting feet.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Rounded edges were designed so sharp corners wouldn’t cause any issues when walking past. “It seemed correct to have a rounded shape,” said Fratesi. “Since the position of the furniture is in front of a sofa or a lounge chair, we wanted to facilitate the passage between sitting and pouf – avoiding any kind of angle and the rigid part.”

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

A palette of pastel colours was chosen for the fabric coverings, though these can be customised to match or stand out against the users’ existing furniture.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

“The colours that we have selected for these models are soft and nearly muted, but in fact the pouf can be upholstered with very different fabrics and colours so that can be in combination or contrast with the seat in front,” Fratesi explained.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

The surfaces are slightly raised on small white wooden legs. The trays are available in natural oak or stained the colour of anthracite, and can be removed along with the upholstery for cleaning.

Trouf is on display at Ligne Roset‘s stand located in Hall 11.3 at imm cologne until Sunday. It will also be shown at Maison&Objet outside Paris from 24 to 28 January.

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Das Haus conceptual future home installed at imm cologne by Louise Campbell

Cologne 2014: two shingle-clad houses converge to form this year’s Das Haus home of the future installation at the imm cologne fair by Copenhagen designer Louise Campbell (+ slideshow).

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Das Haus is an annual commission that allows a designer to imagine what their ideal future home would be like.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Louise Campbell designed a 240-square-metre dwelling devoid of interior walls, with openings at each end rather than doors.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

“There are no walls dividing the various zones, only soft textiles that can be rolled up or down as desired,” said Campbell.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Two timber-framed buildings intersect at an angle to one another, with the exposed beams and columns inside coloured grey and white to distinguish the different structures.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

These two elements are designed to represent the coming together of masculine and feminine within the home. A long dining table sits in the centre of where they meet.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

“There are no secrets and no pressure – the ideal marriage. Perhaps indeed the ideal house,” Campbell said.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

A line of beds for sleeping and lounging runs along one side of the space, in front of patterned fabric panels that line the walls.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Campbell modelled the kitchen on a workshop, hanging 573 tools on the white pegboard wall behind the counters.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

“Personally I feel very much at home here,” said Campbell. “Where floral wallpaper in a kitchen would not naturally present itself at the top of my list, plenty of fine tools do. Even so, I’d much rather sleep in an imaginatively decorated space than in a bare white bedroom.”

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

A 100-year-old stoneware bathtub has been placed in the middle of the living area and an upside-down canoe is balanced in the rafters.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

The house is clad in larch shingles with coloured tips and the roof is perforated with a pattern of diamonds, which becomes less open at the top of the walls.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Campbell’s design is installed at the centre of this year’s imm cologne design trade fair, which continues until Sunday.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Last year’s conceptual home of the future was created by Italian designer Luca Nichetto, who installed an eco-friendly environment full of plants. London studio Doshi Levien designed 2011 Das Haus, envisaged as part of a dense urban neighbourhood.

Read on for more text sent to Dezeen by imm cologne:


A house with two sides

» Das Haus – Interiors on Stage 2014 by Louise Campbell: a slow house full of handmade things
» Under the title 0-100. (Made to measure), Louise Campbell sounds the depths between man and woman, reason and emotion
» The very personal vision of a home the Danish designer has created for the imm cologne is unreservedly playful and sensuous

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

What Louise Campbell has erected in Pure Village (Hall 2.2) at the imm cologne with such incredible passion for detail isn’t one house, it’s two! Two timber-framed, prototypical houses with an exposed beam structure that look as if they were positioned at an angle to one another on the floor of the hall and then pushed inside one another like a telescope. The posts of one house have been painted white, those of the other a light grey. The rectangular overlap in the middle created by the intersection of the two volumes marks the spot where opposites are reconciled and the two houses merge into one.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Half designer portrait, half visionary blueprint

Das Haus – Interiors on Stage is the simulation of a home at the international interior design fair imm cologne. Every year, the imm cologne nominates a new designer whose plans are then used for the layout and furnishings. The furniture, colours, materials, lighting and accessories chosen by the Guest of Honour add up to an individually configured interior design. But this holistically conceived proposal isn’t just meant to be forward-looking; it should be practical as well – and above all authentic. Das Haus is an example of how it is possible to create a world of one’s own that becomes an expression of one’s own personality. Besides picking up on current interior design trends, the project also addresses the public’s aspirations and social change.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Louise Campbell turns Das Haus into an attractive stage for relationships

The structure, which has a footprint of 240 square metres and is made of wooden beams, larch shingles and lots and lots of fabrics, turns out to be a thoroughly attractive and seductive experimental setup. Louise Campbell wants to figure out how opposites can be reconciled through design. And in her eyes, the biggest conceivable contradiction in our lives is the (in-)compatibility of man and woman, of reason and emotion – which makes a partnership between the two the biggest experiment of all.

“I don’t understand why we don’t question something as fundamental as love more,” explains Louise Campbell provocatively. “What is love? How does a designer approach these questions? By circling around our physical bases through form.” She wanted to design Das Haus as a home “for him and her, for slow and fast, soft and hard, light and dark, colour and material, British and Scandinavian – with a tranquil space in the middle where everything fits together with some quirks, but no conflicts.” And in this case, “him and her” doesn’t just mean male and female, but the masculine and feminine side within each and every one of us.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Interior philosophy: omitting walls gives the other person more space

The Danish designer shows how both “he” and “she” can make themselves very much at home within these contradictions – and does away with various interior conventions in the process: Das Haus is one big, open space, the bed is a 16-metre-wide piece of furniture for sprawling, lounging and sleeping on, the bathtub stands in the middle of the living area and the kitchen is located in the man’s domain. In the middle, he and she meet at the big table in harmony. There are no proper rooms; instead, the various areas of the home are defined by the furnishings and accessories.

Besides featuring Louise Campbell’s own designs such as the LC Shutters lamps from Louis Poulsen and Zanotta’s Veryround Chair, Das Haus also contains a variety of products by other designers. Everything else was made by hand in Louise Campbell’s Copenhagen studio. And because she felt it was important to include something old as well, a 100-year-old stoneware bathtub was borrowed from the museum collection of Villeroy & Boch AG and set up in the middle of the living area. “There are no walls dividing the various zones, only soft textiles that can be rolled up or down as desired. There are no secrets and no pressure – the ideal marriage. Perhaps indeed the ideal house,” says Louise Campbell of her interior concept, in which everything is designed from the inside out.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

A tool wall with 573 tools

A large wall surface in the kitchen zone is one of the highlights of Das Haus. For Louise Campbell, the kitchen is both a workshop and a place to cook, and she has thus hung around 573 tools of every kind imaginable on the exterior wall. The big table is used for stirring, mixing, sawing, painting, hammering and sewing. And whilst technology is notable only by its absence, the house contains the instruments required for every conceivable kind of handicraft. Finding the right measure – the right balance between reason and emotion, perfection and cosiness, technology and craftsmanship, hectic activity and total relaxation – is a key theme for Louise Campbell, both in her design and in her version of Das Haus, which is why she has so aptly named it: 0-100. (Made to measure).

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

A playful house that exudes sensuousness

“Personally I feel very much at home here,” says Louise Campbell of her Haus. “So where floral wallpaper in a kitchen would not naturally present itself at the top of my list, plenty of fine tools do. Even so, I’d much rather sleep in an imaginatively decorated space than in a bare white bedroom.”

Louise Campbell’s house is a celebration of physical existence in the here and now. Digital projections are entirely absent. The warm lighting, exquisite textiles, comfortable rest zone and many playful details and accessories are a reminder of what is truly responsible for the quality of our homes and lives. Louise Campbell exemplifies this attitude by lending a willing hand with the construction of Das Haus, stapling, painting and draping as it takes shape. By celebrating classical sensuality and all that is handmade, her interior concept is the diametric opposite of the technophile tendencies that have become so widespread in today’s world. The designer cites Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, Sherril Jaffe’s Scars Make Your Body More Interesting, Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility and The Cure’s Wild Mood Swings as the sources of her creative inspiration.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Das Haus 2014 is a beacon of feminine design

By creating a low-tech house with open spaces that can be used flexibly to provide scope for all its occupants’ (contradictory) facets, Louise Campbell is continuing the Das Haus – Interiors on Stage series with a design that is just as remarkable as its predecessors. In 2012, Anglo-Indian designer team Nipa Doshi and Jonathan Levien were in charge of the new format’s debut, staging what was effectively an organically evolved space that permits communicative interaction between occupants and cultures. In 2013, Italian product designer Luca Nichetto created the next instalment of the design event as an elegant ensemble open to nature on all sides. Das Haus is located within the Pure Village format, which has been given a spacious new home in Hall 2.2 at the 2014 event.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

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[D3] Contest winners announced at imm cologne

News: a storage rail based on a traditional Shaker-style peg board, a scaly room divider and a magnetic lamp were revealed as the winners of the [D3] Contest for young designers at the imm cologne trade fair today.

D3 Contest winners announced at imm cologne
Ordnungshaber wedge hook border by Christoph Goechnahts

This year the [D3] Contest first prize was awarded to Swiss designer Christoph Goechnahts for his Ordnungshaber storage system – a reinterpretation of the peg rails common to furniture made by members of the Shaker religious sect in 1800s America.

D3 Contest winners announced at imm cologne
Ordnungshaber wedge hook border by Christoph Goechnahts

Wedge-shaped pegs slot into niches spaced along wall-mounted wooden rails.

D3 Contest winners announced at imm cologne
Ordnungshaber wedge hook border by Christoph Goechnahts

The wedge hook border is designed to run around the perimeter of a room and can also accommodate removable shelves.

Reverso scaly room divider by Yann Mathys
Reverso scaly room divider by Yann Mathys

In second place was Swiss designer Yann Mathys’ Reverso room divider featuring synthetic paper scales made of Tyvek, a lightweight material produced from plastic fibres, with one side shinier than the other. These tiles can be flipped by dragging a hand over the surface to create patterns across the screen.

Jella magnetic lamp by Lena Schlumbohm
Jella magnetic lamp by Lena Schlumbohm

The magnetic Jella lamp by German designer Lena Schlumbohm was given third prize. The desk lamp comprises a light source at one end of a pastel-coloured magnetic wand, which can be placed on any of the metal base’s angled faces.

The [D3] Contest awards prototype designs by up-and-coming designers as part of imm cologne each year.

Jella magnetic lamp by Lena Schlumbohm
Jella magnetic lamp by Lena Schlumbohm

This year’s judges included Scholten & Baijings cofounder Carole Baijings and British designer Sebastian Wrong.

Twenty-two nominated projects are currently display in Hall 1 of the Koelnmesse exhibition venue as part of the event, which continues until Sunday 19 January.

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