Touch Digital by Post-Office

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Herringbone parquet covers the walls and floor of this photography studio in east London by local design practice Post-Office.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Partitions around retouching booths contain vertical slats covered in grey felt to provide a colour-neutral background for viewing images on a computer screen and dampen the noise from the open workspaces.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

The slats are finished in light wood on the side facing the communal areas and can be swivelled to control the levels of light in the booths.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Dark furniture in the reception and communal areas stands out against the wood.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

We’ve also featured herringbone parquet on the floor of a Parisian boutiquethe walls and ceiling of a personal shopping suite in London and seats in a Zurich cafe.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Post-Office is lead by designer Philippe Malouin and you can see more of his work plus interviews we’ve filmed with him here.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Photographs are by David Giles.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Here’s some text from the designers:


Touch Digital offices, Shoreditch, London.

Post-Office was commissioned to design the new offices of Touch, London’s leading fashion photographic service. Digital retouching agencies need a minimal amount of light in order to correctly visualise the computer screens. This constraint usually makes retouching studios a dark environment. We took this challenge to heart as we wanted communal areas of the new Touch offices to be bright and airy while providing low-light environments to facilitate the retouchers’ work.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

The new touch offices maximise the already generous amounts of space and light the warehouse had to offer. The space owes its aesthetic and choice of materials to Scandinavian classic modernism as well as 60s corporate American grandeur and the minimal art movement. The central retouching booths appear as minimal sculptures in a grand setting rather than individual work spaces. All of the retouching environments are lined in grey felt in order to offer a colour-neutral background for the retouchers while helping to noise-proof the open workspaces.

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BERG’s Little Printer goes into production

Little Printer available for pre-order

Dezeen Wire: Little Printer, the web-connected gadget we featured earlier this year that prints out personalised messages, news, birthdays and to-do lists collected from the internet on a till-roll, is now going into production.

Little Printer available for pre-order

We posted a movie about Little Printer a few months ago as part of our Designed in Hackney initiative. Since then BERG have been working to get the product into production, perfecting the mirror finish on the plastic, tweaking the API for developers and fixing radio interference bugs.

Little Printer available for pre-order

Developers, publishers and website owners now have 60 days to produce bespoke publications for Little Printer, and BERG’s Publisher’s Handbook is available to download here

Little Printer is available for pre-order at the BERG Cloud Shop, priced £199 GBP ($259 USD) plus shipping.

Here’s the full information from BERG:


Little Printer now available for pre-orders
Pre-order Little Printer now — personalised news with a face, only two inches across

BERG, the London product invention and design studio, today announced pre-order details for the hugely anticipated Little Printer, a smart printer for the home. Little Printer scours the Web on the owner’s behalf, assembling their interests into
delightful, personalised miniature newspapers, printed only two inches across.

Shipping in 60 days, BERG also fired the starting pistol for developers, publishers and website owners, inviting them to produce bespoke publications for Little Printer. With content uniquely customised for each user, and the easy Little Printer publishing platform, publishers can reach users directly in their homes in an inventive and highly engaging form.

Little Printer content partners already include the following:
• The Guardian – News headlines: The latest news, customised according to interest, delivered precisely when the reader wants
• Google – Integration with Google Tasks: Schedule a daily to-do list. Subsequent print-outs are updated as tasks are completed
• foursquare – Friend and location data and recommendations: If you’re heading out for the evening. schedule Little Printer to deliver a timely list of your friends’ locations just before you leave. Or get regular restaurant recommendations based on your location
• Arup – A collectable mini-series publication, cataloguing Arup’s renowned building projects such as the Sydney Opera House and the London Zoo Penguin Pool

Other publications include daily weather reports, horoscopes, and puzzles. Weekly birthday reminders, handy for keeping on the fridge or in the user’s wallet, are printed from Facebook. BERG and Facebook are working together on future and improved publications. Other brands are working with BERG on publications, including The Times of London and BBC Worldwide.

Owners manage their subscriptions using the mobile website “BERG Cloud Remote” on their smartphones (supported devices include iPhone, Android smartphones and Windows Phone). The unique publications are then printed at the precise time the owner chooses, using Little Printer’s compact, inkless, thermal printer, on 2.25 inch receipt paper. Owners can also send printed, direct messages to their friends via Little Printer, and choose from one of four characters to bring them their daily news: Little Printer prints its own face.

“We’ve built on our previous experience with publishing platforms and made it extremely easy for website owners to bring their services to Little Printer”, said Matt Webb, CEO and co-founder of BERG. “At a recent event, 25 developers with no previous experience of Little Printer produced 73 new publications in just eight hours using our Publishers Handbook.

We’re excited to bring Little Printer to both publishers, and users who have fallen in love with the delightful design and inventiveness of a Webconnected printer for the home. At initial announcement, Little Printer received global press attention with over 1 million views of the introductory video in the first 5 days. Over 60,000 people are signed up to hear news.”

Little Printer is packaged with BERG Cloud Bridge, which plugs into the user’s home broadband router to provide a connection to the Web, international power supplies, and spare paper. The box has been designed and produced in collaboration with Burgopak, winner of multiple awards for their innovative packaging.

Little Printer can be pre-ordered today from bergcloud.com, priced at £199 GBP ($259 USD) plus shipping, and is available for the UK, EU, USA, and Canada. The Publishers’ Guide can be downloaded from bergcloud.com.

About BERG
BERG has a track-record of innovation. The studio created the first magazine publishing platform for iPad (Mag+ with Bonnier AB), with the first magazine available on iPad’s day of launch. Fast Company list BERG as one of the world’s most innovative companies. BERG specialises in product invention and strategy, and has its design studio in London’s “Tech City” district. See berglondon.com for other projects.

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Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Dezeen Wire: “Software is the most important material we have come across in the last 100 years,” said Matt Jones of London studio BERG at yesterday’s Designed in Hackney Day of talks and discussions with some of the most interesting designers and architects from Dezeen’s local borough, curated in collaboration with Beatrice Galilee.

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Mayor of Hackney Jules Pipe (above) opened the event, saying that while the cutting-edge creative companies Hackney is known for may not make an obvious impact on economic growth individually, “in aggregate, they are a huge business in Hackney, and it is those start-ups and incubator spaces that we are keen on creating.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Digital Poets
“Software is the most important material we have come across in the last 100 years”

The talks kicked off with the theme of Digital Poets. Matt Jones (above) of BERG, Eva Rucki of Troika, Liam Young of Tomorrow’s Thoughts Today and writer and designer James Bridle urged designers not to separate the physical and virtual worlds in their work.

Matt Jones from design consultancy BERG began by getting the audience talking with his mantra for 21st century design: “There is no separate digital world. We must treat software as material.” After showing us projects including a comic that reveals characters’ hidden thoughts under UV light and a smart printer that creates customised mini-newspapers, he concluded: “Software is the most important material we have come across in the last 100 years.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Next, Eva Rucki from design studio Troika explained how she uses technology to engage people. “We try to create immersive experiences that make people consider things differently,” she said, citing the studio’s recent project in Hoxton Square, east London – The Weather Yesterday is a technologically-enabled LED installation that displays the weather from 24 hours ago and encourages participation and conversation in a public space.

James Bridle’s projects further his mission to make the internet “burst out onto the streets”, including animated GIFs on bus stop roofs and an imaginary airship that navigates using data from a London weather station. The audience especially liked Bridle’s assertion that pubs are vital to British design, proving a casual forum where designers can meet up to discuss big ideas.

Finally, Liam Young from Tomorrow’s Thoughts Today wowed us with an in-depth presentation about the intersections between nature and technology, arguing that “nature hasn’t been unspoilt for a long time”. He thinks cities have become “contemporary jungles” containing “a mash-up of nature and technology”, an idea that has inspired his own projects combining science fiction with science fact.

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Imagine: the Science of Design
“You can do things yourself; you can become an expert”

Jane ni Dhulchaointigh’s talk about making her fix-anything rubber moulding product Sugru a reality was the highlight of the Science of Design talks: she found everything she needed in Hackney to create the product she believed would empower people to change their surroundings and continued against financial odds to build her own brand. Her idea was that “when you modify or repair something it begins to mean more to you”, so instead of buying new items she created the air-curing silicone rubber so users can “hack” their belongings to more exactly fit their own needs.

Dhulchaointigh’s business is “a twenty-first century materials company with design and technology networks,” featuring images and videos of the inventive uses customers find for Sugru, such as a drop-proof camera for a three year old. It’s even being used to improve the grip of a Team GB Olympic fencer’s foil. Sugru’s message is one of empowerment: “you can do things yourself; you can become an expert.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

The Next Generation: Young Hackney Architects
“Architecture as software”

After lunch the discussion moved onto architecture, as architects from young Hackney-based practices We Made That, Erect Architecture, Studio Weave and Gort Scott joined Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs on stage to explain how they’ve each reinvented the design process in their projects. The focus of each presentation was on architecture as a form of software rather than hardware; a tool for enabling the narrative of a building or space to develop.

Oliver Goodhall and Holly Lewis of We Made That (above) even made a newspaper rather than a building in response to one brief. The also showed the audience their recent Fantasticology project, for which they gathered nuggets of information and distributed them onto benches around the Olympic Park. The architects used open-source tactics to collect facts from the public and Lewis described how people had tracked down the facts they’d contributed. “We like to start conversations about high streets, neighbourhoods and the public realm,” explained Lewis.

Community engagement was a recurring theme, whether it involves making friends with the makers of projects like Je Ahn and Maria Smith of Studio Weave or getting the public involved in the design, like Susanne Tutsch of Erect Architecture. “We want to create learning opportunities for the people that take part as well as for ourselves,” said Tutsch. “This helps to create the sense of ownership that supports a project after the architect has gone”.

Gort Scott continued this theme and brought attention back to the role of small businesses, reminding us that “60% of all London’s employment goes on around high streets” and they’re crucial to creativity because that’s “where collisions and conflicts between cultures happen.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Pecha Kucha

The next session saw nine presentations in the fast-paced Pecha Kucha format, with designers showing 20 slides for 20 seconds each to give a flavour of their work.

Something & Son (above) stole the show, showing their attempts to bring nature back into the city, adding to the sustainability and self-sufficiency themes that cropped up throughout the day. Their FARM:shop project, which opened last year, transformed an empty shop in Dalston into a farm for growing fish, chickens and vegetables. They also showed Barking Bathhouse with its ‘cucumber ceiling’ and ‘sustainable steam room’, and a project in which they simply cut the roof off a car and filled it with plants.

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Shoemaker Tracey Neuls told us how a design-led approach found her moulding shoes with plasticine. “A childlike mindset helps to open your inspiration,” she said, explaining that her brand avoids trends, focusing instead on producing timeless design.

Designer Dominic Wilcox (above) presented one of his recent projects, a vinyl record called ‘Sounds of Making in East London’. Wilcox recorded 21 segments for his aural document, including bell-ringing, pie-making, beer-brewing and even the sound of packaging Sugru.

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Reflections on Hackney
“It might be better to think of Hackney as a spirit or set of ideas”

The future of Hackney in the face of increasing gentrification was the focus of the closing panel discussion. Should artists and designers, who trade in new ideas, attempt to resist change?

Kieran Long (above), architecture critic at London’s Evening Standard newspaper, slammed the commercialisation of Shoreditch typified by a proposed hotel development on the former site of the Foundry, once a hub for young artists in the area.

“Once you’ve made a scene like this, people start to come and take advantage of it,” he said. “They use the brand of an artistic neighbourhood to build massive great hotels which, to my mind, have little or nothing to do with the architectural character of a conservation area – the Shoreditch triangle – and also have nothing to do with the social context of the artistic and design practice that goes on in Hackney and Shoreditch.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

Sarah Ichioka from the Architecture Foundation drew attention to more positive developments up the road, with the Dalston Curve demonstrating a community space in the shadow of large-scale housing developments.

Oliver Basciano from Art Review pointed out that cheap rent and a strong peer network remain the most important factors for any creative, and Hackney’s increasing gentrification is nudging young artists towards cheaper areas like Peckham in south London.

An optimistic rebuttal of the fear of gentrification came from Rob Alderson, editor of art and design blog It’s Nice That: “Hackney has changed over the past few years, and the pace of that change is only going to accelerate after the Olympics,” said. “This edgy eastern Eden has now been completely co-opted by the mainstream.”

Designed in Hackney Day highlights

But Hackney doesn’t need to be guarded, he argued. It might be better to think of Hackney as a spirit or a set of ideas to be championed beyond the borough. “Creative movements are often rooted to a time and place,” he said, citing Madchester, Silicon Valley and the Bauhaus. “They’ve given the world ideas and principles that have outlived those times and outgrown those places.

“Rather than bemoan change or be scared of change, we can race it and hopefully do something really exciting.”


Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices.

Taking place at Hackney House in the heart of Shoreditch during the Olympics, Designed in Hackney Day celebrated the incredible diversity of design talent in Dezeen’s home borough as well as providing a platform to discuss both the opportunities and threats to creative businesses in this fast-changing part of London.

We’ve also been publishing buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney all summer – see all our stories about design in Hackney here.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

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Designed in Hackney Day live

Designed in Hackney Day tweets

We’re reporting live from Designed in Hackney Day all day today, featuring talks and performances from the best and most interesting architects, designers and makers in the east London borough of Hackney that Dezeen calls home. We’ll be compiling the best tweets from the event here so check back as the day unfolds.

Tweet using #designedinhackney and check out photos from the day on Facebook.

You can download the full program for the day here and come down to the party this evening from 7pm. So come on down!

Designed in Hackney is a collaboration between Dezeen, curator Beatrice Galilee and Hackney Council.

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FREE Designed in Hackney evening tomorrow!

Clock Opera

If you didn’t manage to get a ticket for our Designed in Hackney Day tomorrow don’t worry, you can still attend the FREE evening event at Hackney House, featuring music by Dalston Superstore DJ Dan Beaumont (below) and electro-indie band Clock Opera (above).

Dan Beaumont, Dalston Superstore

Doors open at 7pm with music starting at 8pm. Before that there’s a happy hour for Dezeen guests from 5-7pm, so come along then to mingle with speakers and attendees from the Designed in Hackney Day and enjoy half-price cocktails and discounted beer and food supplied by Hackney gourmet cafe Railroad.

Dalston Superstore

Click here to register for the FREE Designed in Hackney evening

Date: 1 August 2012
Time: happy hour 5-7pm; doors open 7pm; music starts 8pm
Venue: Hackney House, 168 Shoreditch High Street, London E1 6HU.

Designed in Hackney Day: 1 August 2012

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Designed in Hackney Day: additional tickets now available

Designed in Hackney Day programme announced

After the first allocation of tickets sold out within 24 hours, we have increased capacity and released another limited batch of tickets for our Designed in Hackney Day on 1 August. Click here to register now for this FREE event and read on for more details…

On 1 August 2012 online design and architecture magazine Dezeen and writer/curator Beatrice Galilee will host a day celebrating Hackney’s incredible design scene at Hackney House in Shoreditch.

Designed in Hackney Day will feature design talks, discussions, debates, performances and a market involving the best and most interesting architects, designers and makers in the east London borough of Hackney, with a particular focus on young, emerging talents.

Featuring:

BERG
Technology Will Save Us
Sugru
Tomorrow’s Thoughts Today
Super Collider
Troika
Erect Architecture
Office Sian
Studio Weave
The Decorators
Poke
Jason Bruges
Tracey Neuls
CREATE
It’s Nice That
Dominic Wilcox
Pearson Lloyd
Something & Son
Roger Arquer
Tatty Devine
Gort Scott
We Made That

And more…

The Designed in Hackney Day programme can also be downloaded here.

Taking place in the heart of Shoreditch during the Olympics, Designed in Hackney Day will celebrate the incredible diversity of design talent in Dezeen’s home borough as well as providing an opportunity to discuss both the opportunities and threats to creative businesses in this fast-changing part of London.

It will also explore experimental design strategies that are emerging in the borough, with discussions involving leading Hackney critics and curators as well as creative practitioners.

This FREE event builds on Dezeen’s phenomenally successful Designed in Hackney online showcase – which has had over 1.5 million visits since launching in March – and will feature a full day of presentations by leading Hackney creatives plus interviews, panel discussions and more.

There will also be a buzzing market area where local designers will be able to show off their talents, demonstrate their ideas and sell their wares. A Pecha Kucha event will give a broad range of figures from Hackney’s creative scene the chance to share their work and views.

There will be an evening reception and entertainment late into the night featuring local DJs and bands.

The venue is Hackney House – the borough’s temporary cultural and business expo centre located at 186 Shoreditch High Street, London E1 6HU.

Designed in Hackney is a collaboration between Dezeen, curator Beatrice Galilee and Hackney Council.

Contact Designed in Hackney

See Dezeen’s rolling showcase of Hackney design here: http://www.dezeen.com/designedinhackney/

See our Google Map of Hackney architects and designers

Designed in Hackney Day
Hackney House
186 Shoreditch High Street
London E1 6HU

1 August 2012

FREE! Click here to register now

www.designedinhackney.com

Designed in Hackney

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Reality Check souvenirs by Tobatron at Dezeen Super Store

Sarcastic Olympic souvenirs for those who are cynical about the games are now available at Dezeen Super Store, 38 Monmouth Street, London WC2.

Reality Check souvenirs by Tobatron at Dezeen Super Store

Priced at £15 each, the bags and t-shirts sport artwork in a style similar to the much-ridiculed London 2012 graphics, with mocking phrases printed on brightly coloured angular shapes.

Reality Check souvenirs by Tobatron at Dezeen Super Store

Dezeen readers can get 10% off any Dezeen Super Store purchase (excluding sale stock and Jambox) and enter our competition to win a designer watch worth £150 by downloading this flyer and presenting it at the shop.

Reality Check souvenirs by Tobatron at Dezeen Super Store

See more products currently for sale at the store here.

Reality Check souvenirs by Tobatron at Dezeen Super Store

Dezeen Super Store
38 Monmouth Street, London WC2
1 July – 30 September 2012

The products were created by Hackney-based designer Tobatron. Scroll down to see a map of all the Hackney creatives we’ve featured as part of Designed in Hackney and click here for more details about Designed in Hackney Day on 1 August.

Here is some more information from Tobatron:


While “that big event in London” is taking place, inject some reality into the proceedings with these limited edition souvenirs.

They are designed by Tobatron in Hackney- a mere javelin’s throw away from the “big event” itself.

All ranges are ethically produced and are made in conjunction with accessories designer Elaine Burke and www.khama.co.uk – a network of women’s community groups in Malawi.

By purchasing these products you are helping to offer support and sustainable employment for women in one of Africa’s poorest regions.

Tobatron is the alter- ego of artist and designer Toby Leigh, his clients include The Guardian, FHM, Sony, Playstation and Channel Four.

His work can be viewed at www.tobatron.com and other products designed by Tobatron can be viewed and purchased here.

Elaine Burke is a London based accessories designer specializing in ethical fashion production in Africa. She has worked as a design consultant for ethical brands and developed ranges for ASOS, House of Fraser and Whistles.

Her company Khama is a network of womens community groups in Malawi making accessories and collaborating with micro-finance charities to help women in one of Africa’s poorest regions.


Designed in Hackney map:

.

Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands
Green = street art

See a larger version of this map

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

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The Gold Room by Lee Broom

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

Hackney designer Lee Broom has filled a room in a London mansion with studded furniture to host visting business leaders during the Olympic games.

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

The Gold Room is one of a series of newly furnished rooms at the nineteenth century Lancaster House, completed by a host of British designers that includes BarberOsgerby, Jasper Morrison and Sir Terrance Conran.

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

Broom’s room contains fourteen upholstered pieces from his 1930′s-inspired Salon collection, as well as oak and walnut tables featuring veneers and coloured stripes.

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

The rooms will remain in this guise throughout the Olympic and Paralympic games and will be used for a series of summits by government organisation the British Business Embassy.

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

See more projects by Lee Broom »

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

Here’s some information from Broom:


Lee Broom Takes Centre Stage at British Business Embassy During Olympic Games

This summer, acclaimed product and interior designer, Lee Broom curates a central room in the Lancaster House where the British Business Embassy will host global influential business leaders during the Olympic and Paralympic games.

Broom is one of an exclusive number of respected British designers, including Terrance Conran and Ross Lovegrove, invited to atmospherically enhance the British Business Embassy, which will take place at London’s historic Lancaster House. The magnificent 19th century house will be transformed to showcase modern art and design highlighting the talent of British or British-trained designers, photographers, furniture makers and sculptors.

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

The Gold Room by Lee Broom is the only room dedicated solely to one designer at Lancaster House. The historic room juxtaposed against Broom’s modern, contemporary pieces exemplifies the designer’s ethos of connecting the past and the future, the traditional and contemporary.

Included in the room are 14 pieces from Salon, an upholstered furniture collection in soft hues contrasted and accentuated with modern stud detailing. The room will feature several products from the range including armchairs, two-seater sofas, drum-seats, dining chairs and footstools. Further pieces included are: Parqlife, a side table and table in walnut veneer with complementing brass accents. Parquetry coffee table and lamp crafted from wenge, oak and walnut wood with blue accent stripe and panels. Carpetry console and pendant, which are from Broom’s first collection and feature pieces in satin lacquered blue with blue and beige carpet.

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

Demonstrating the designer’s commitment to his country’s heritage, all the pieces have been designed in Broom’s east-end studio and manufactured in the UK.

Broom says, “it is an honour to be invited to participate in this unique event, especially when the spotlight is on London during the Olympic and Paralympic games. Championing British design and manufacturing is something I feel passionate about and this centrepiece backs the best of UK creativity – it’s a hugely valuable opportunity.”

The Gold Room by Lee Broom

The British Business Embassy, developed by the UK trade & investment (UKTI) is the centrepiece of the government’s international business legacy programme. It will see over 3,000 UK and international business leaders come together for an ambitious series of global, sector and country summits. The embassy will stage a host of world-class speakers including Eric Schmidt, Sir Jonathan Ive and Howard Stringer.

Design leader and UKTI business ambassador, Sir John Sorrell, alongside Diana Yakeley, president of the British Institute of Interior Design have overseen the selection and creation of a total of 18 rooms at the British Business Embassy which will highlight British design talent. Other designers and contributors include Paul Smith for Conran and The Rug Company, BarberOsgerby, Jasper Morrison for Vitra, Sir Terrance Conran and Foster & Partners for Lumina.

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Hackney House Architecture Showcase details announced


Dezeen Wire:
 the London Borough of Hackney have announced the details of their Architecture Weekend, a free event showcasing architecture in the borough.

Taking place from 28 to 29 July at Hackney House, the event will give visitors the chance to speak to architects who have studios in Hackney or have designed work in the borough, with entertainment from comedians, musicians and DJs in the evenings.

Hackney House is also the venue for Dezeen’s Designed in Hackney day that will take place on 1 August.

See all our stories about architecture and design in Hackney »

See more details about Architecture Weekend below:


Daytime: Architecture Showcase, a public event showcasing Hackney’s best architectural designs and innovative ideas for the future shape of the borough.

Join us at a free event showcasing the best of the Hackney’s architects and architecture. Hackney Architecture Showcase, taking place on Saturday 28th July and Sunday 29th July, will play host to some of London’s leading architects who have designed structures or spaces in the borough, as well as Hackney-based architectural firms who are pioneering building design in the UK and across the globe.

Opening Times:

Saturday 28th July: 11am – 4pm

Sunday 29th July: 11am – 3pm

With models of the schemes, a chance to speak to the people behind them and special talks on excellence in design, this event is a MUST for architects, designers and creatives and anyone with an interest in the exciting schemes that are transforming Hackney!

The weekend will also be the last chance to nominate a building or space in the borough for entry into this year’s Hackney Design Awards, which celebrates great design and architecture in Hackney. Details of previous winners will feature at the event and anyone can make a nomination, including residents who inhabit newly developed homes; employees who enjoy their workplace; pupils who love their schools or people who are simply inspired by the look of a building or place in Hackney.

Featuring: Tim Ronalds’ Hackney Empire (2004 Royal Fine Art Commission Building of the Year Award), RIBA winner Henley Halebrown Rorrison’s projects in Hackney, Theis and Khan’s Bateman’s Row (2010 RIBA Stirling Award, Shortlisted), and Stephen Marshall Architects’ proclaimed Nile Street Residential development (The best new development in the affordable sector at the New Homes Awards 2006).

The venue is Hackney House – the venue set up by Hackney Council to showcase Hackney to media, business and investors during Games time. This is located at 186 Shoreditch High Street, London E1 6HU.

Saturday evening:

Hardeep Singh / DJ Prince Nelly

Comedy Night with Hardeep Singh, Des O’Connor and Johnny Cochrane followed by DJ Prince Nelly. Register for the Architecture Showcase by Friday 27th July for a chance to win a pair of tickets for Comedy Night! Winners will be chosen at random.

Sunday evening:

Konkoma / DJ Ben Pistor

Tonight’s entertainment comes from London-based band KonKoma who will bring us a rich blend of Afrofunk, jazz, soul and traditional African rhythms. DJ Ben Pistor continues the evening.

For tickets please email hackneyhouse@hackney.gov.uk

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details announced
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Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

Hackney-based artist Alex Chinneck has fitted identically smashed windows into a derelict factory just a mile away from the Olympic Stadium (+ slideshow).

Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

Presented in association with the Sumarria Lunn Gallery, the installation draws attention to issues of economic and social decline in an area that was hoping to benefit from the regenerative effect of the games.

Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

The project plays on the common assumption that unrepaired broken windows signify this kind of decline.

Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

Chinneck spent four months clearing out soil, water tanks and heat lamps from the abandoned factory, which had last been used to grow cannabis plants.

Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

He used industrial processes to replicate the same smashed window 312 times, with four pieces of glass creating the same break in every pane.

Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

The installation can be viewed until November 2012, after which the building will be demolished.

Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

The building is located on the corner of Mare Street and Tudor Road in Hackney, E9 7SN. Scroll down to see the site in our Designed in Hackney map.

Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

See all the stories from our Designed in Hackney archives »

Telling the Truth Through False Teeth by Alex Chinneck

Here’s some more information about the sculpture:


Everyone knows the broken window theory – that vandalised windows signal an acceptance of social decline. Not so in Hackney where 312 identically smashed windows are causing passers-by to double take. Nicknamed ‘the Banksy of glass’ by local residents, artist Alex Chinneck is replacing broken factory windows with… broken factory windows. Presented by Alex Chinneck in association with Sumarria Lunn Gallery and located just one mile from the Olympic stadium, this intervention transforms a derelict factory building into a public art project.

Growing up surrounded by the industrial architecture of London’s East End, the work of Alex Chinneck removes everyday construction materials from their utilitarian context. Inspired by the landscape of London’s industrial architectural heritage, he finds raw beauty in these solid, purpose-made buildings. Smashed windows in former industrial neighborhoods come as no surprise; but where others see vandalism, Alex Chinneck saw potential: “There is something mesmerising about the way light catches a broken window pane, not only is the glass shattered but so is the reflection.”

Starting with an abandoned factory that had been used to grow cannabis, Chinneck spent a gruelling four months removing the remnants: piles of soil, wires, grow bags, water tanks, plant pots and heat lamps. Following an intense period of preparation, Chinneck then used industrial processes to precisely replicate one smashed window 312 times, replacing each original factory window.

All the visible windows in this building have now been replaced with identically broken sheets of glass – the combination of engineering and accident helping to complete the illusion: “This project always evolved with consideration to sculpture, architecture and engineering but ultimately I like the simple idea of performing a magic trick on such a scale.” In total 312 panes from 13 windows have been replaced with 1,248 pieces of glass – four pieces form the perfect break in every pane. Fast becoming a Hackney landmark, the former factory will soon be demolished, the work disappearing with it.

About the artist:
Alex Chinneck was born in 1984 and is a graduate of the Chelsea College of Art and Design. Most recently he was nominated for the Royal British Society of Sculptors’ Bursary Award. Using contemporary methods of fabrication, Chinneck finds new and ambitious applications for everyday construction materials, removing them from their functional context to create playful installations. By making work that is unconcerned with creative disciplines his sculptures and installations co-exist across the realms of art, design and architecture.

Title: Telling the Truth Through False Teeth
Artist: Alex Chinneck in association with Sumarria Lunn Gallery
Location: corner of Mare Street and Tudor Road, Hackney, E9 7SN
Installation on view: now until November 2012


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Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

The post Telling the Truth Through False Teeth
by Alex Chinneck
appeared first on Dezeen.