“The market cannot solve the housing crisis” – Justin McGuirk


Dezeen Wire:
 in an article for Domus magazine, design critic Justin McGuirk examines the social and physical decline of London’s social housing, discussing the part played by luxury real-estate developers and how architects have been held accountable.

Council housing blocks in Hackney, Newham, and Southwark are cited as examples, as McGuirk calls for the British government to accept responsibility for the city’s housing crisis and to work with architects to protect residents from the ruthlessness of the property market.

Read the full article here »

See also: our interview with McGuirk on the future of design criticism.

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– Justin McGuirk
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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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Merchandising System by OMA for Coach

Dezeen Wire: architects OMA are developing a modular display system for the stores of American accessories brand Coach.

Merchandising System for Coach by OMA

Inspired by the categorised storage systems of the stores that first opened in the 1940s, the units will create both shelving and space dividers that can be adapted to suit different locations.

The first two systems are planned for flagship stores in New York and Tokyo, with the former due to open in September and the latter to follow in 2013.

OMA have recently been nominated for the Stirling Prize with their Maggie’s Centre, Gartnavel in Glasgow and their Rothschild Bank headquarters in LondonSee all the nominations here »

See more projects by OMA, including a series of interviews we filmed with Rem Koolhaas »

Here’s some information from OMA:


OMA to reimagine retail for Coach’s new stores

American retailer Coach has commissioned OMA to develop a new merchandizing system that accommodates Coach’s wide diversity of products while returning to the clarity of Coach’s heritage stores. The collaboration, led by OMA partner Shohei Shigematsu, will be inaugurated in upcoming flagship stores in New York and Tokyo.

Since establishing its first workshop in 1941, Coach has diversified its product range and styles, while simultaneously broadening the spectrum of its retail environment: from factory stores to outlets, shop-in-shops, boutiques and flagships. Although this expansion transformed Coach from a specialist leather atelier to a global distributor of “democratized luxury goods”, it also clouded the clarity of the brand’s original, library-like stores which used a rigorous organizational system, categorically sorting products inside minimal wooden shelving at assisted counters.

Shigematsu commented: “We wanted a system that could tell the story of any of Coach’s wide repertoire of products, whilst projecting the legibility of its original stores. We created a system of modular display units that can be assembled to respond to the specific needs of each locale. In typical instances they are used for display; in others, they come together as an interior fixture. These units can also enclose spaces for program or curation, and by creating enclosures, they can also act as façades. OMA’s intention is to use combinations of this logical system to create magical spatial possibilities for Coach, in line with Coach’s motto of ‘logic and magic.“

Set to open in September 2012, Coach’s 1,930 square foot flagship shop-in-shop in New York’s newly renovated, Macy’s Herald Square will mark the first manifestation of OMA’s concept for Coach stores. OMA will also implement its concepts in the brand’s upcoming new multi-level flagship in Omotesando, Tokyo, with expected completion in 2013.

Both projects for Coach were designed by OMA’s New York office, led by partner-in-charge Shohei Shigematsu with project architect Rami Abou-Khalil.

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by OMA for Coach
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“Olympics will only take place in non-democratic countries,” say authors of Olympic Cities report

Olympic Cities report by XML

Dezeen Wire: democratic nations won’t be able to host the Olympics in future due to increasing tensions between the public interests of democracies and the commercial interests of the games, according to a new report published by Dutch architecture, research and urbanism studio XML to coincide with the London 2012 Olympics

Speaking to Dezeen about their new book, entitled Olympic Cities, Max Cohen de Lara and David Mulder of XML said it is harder for strong democracies to host the Games because the decision-making process takes longer and the public can be “uncomfortable with the idea of all the privileges” that organisers receive. ”It could be possible that the Olympic Games will only take place in upcoming, non-democratic countries who simply have the centralised power and money to organise them, but that would very much distance the Olympic Games from how it started.”

The authors say there is a cyclical nature to the Olympics, with their significance changing roughly every 20 years, and claim the Games are currently in a commercialised “franchise” stage after the near-bankruptcy of host city Montreal in 1976 forced the model to change.

However, they warn that the current status of the Games as a televised ‘mega-event’ should not provide strategies for future Olympic bids as we could be approaching another significant shift in attitude: ”The business model of the Olympic Games is 50% based on income from television, and obviously what television is will very much change over the coming 20 years.”

Commenting on the legacies left behind by the Olympics over the years, they said: “Inevitably, the enormous scale of the Olympics as mega-event forces any aspiring host city to think about its post-Games legacy. London’s candidacy was built around the promise of uplifting East London. In reality, however, the dominant commercial interests of the IOC and its sponsors make you wonder really how social the Games even can be in its current form.”

Their report was commissioned by the Dutch Goverment ahead of its bid for the 2028 Games.

See all our stories about the London 2012 Olympics »

Here’s some more from XML:


Currently the Games – just like any other global brand – are a strongly centralised project in every respect. Its sources of revenue are closely linked to the current model of the mega-event and the model of the entertainment industry, in which control over images (eg. television) and exclusive space (eg. Disneyland) are decisive factors. The IOC requires that host countries implement far-reaching legislative measures to protect the interests of official IOC sponsors, and legal exemptions are expected in numerous other areas.

It is particularly difficult for democratic countries, such as the Netherlands, to harness sufficient support for these legal exemptions and the allocation of vast (public) funds to host the Olympic Games. The recent Italian withdrawal of Rome as applicant city for the Games of 2020 also shows that it is becoming difficult for European countries currently undergoing austerity measures to sustain the balance between large scale investments and maintaining public support for such a mega-event.

Without change, the IOC runs a risk that the Olympics can only be organised long-term by centrally controlled countries with impetuous economic growth. The question is how this will relate on a long-term to the ideals of Olympism and thus to the credibility of the Olympic Movement.

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countries,” say authors of Olympic Cities report
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Shed create gender-neutral toy department at Harrods

Shed create gender-neutral toy department at Harrods

Dezeen Wire: this week Harrods opened the doors to its first gender-neutral toy department, designed by London and Singapore-based interior architects Shed.

Shed create gender-neutral toy department at Harrods

The London department store commissioned the multi-million pound Toy Kingdom to be grouped by theme rather than gender, with new zones including an enchanted forest, a miniature toy world, a circus big top and a sweet shop.

Shed create gender-neutral toy department at Harrods

Last year Shed also completed an Art Deco-inspired shoe salon at Harrods. See all our stories about Shed here.

Shed create gender-neutral toy department at Harrods

Photos are by Ed Reeve.

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toy department at Harrods
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Olympic stamps by Hat Trick Design

London 2012 stamps by Hat Trick Design

Dezeen Wire: London studio Hat Trick Design have produced a set of Royal Mail stamps featuring iconic architecture from the capital to celebrate the London 2012 Olympics.

London 2012 stamps by Hat Trick Design

Tower Bridge, Tate Modern, the London Eye and the Olympic Stadium all feature on the stamps alongside the Olympic sports of fencing, diving, cycling and running.

London 2012 stamps by Hat Trick Design

London Mayor Boris Johnson said: “Even fleet-footed Hermes himself would hang up his winged sandals and send his letters through Royal Mail if he saw the quality of these beautiful Olympics-themed stamps.”

London 2012 stamps by Hat Trick Design

We’ve also previously shown stamps for Royal Mail and the Dutch postal service featuring design classics.

London 2012 stamps by Hat Trick Design

See all our stories about the London 2012 Olympics »

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Hat Trick Design
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Luca Nichetto to design Das Haus at imm cologne 2013


Dezeen Wire:
Venetian designer Luca Nichetto is to create an installation representing his ideal home for the Das Haus installation at trade fair imm cologne in January.

The first Das Haus was created by London designers Doshi Levien for this year’s event and you can see what they came up with in our earlier story.

The next imm cologne takes place from 14 to 20 January 2013.

See all our stories about Luca Nichetto »
See all our coverage of this year’s imm cologne »

Here’s some more information from the organisers:


After its successful premiere in 2012, “Das Haus – Interiors on Stage” is set to continue at the imm cologne 2013. In Luca Nichetto’s “Haus”, everything revolves around a centrally located living room that is intended to become the centre of a sustainable way of living that integrates nature.

The premiere of the new design installation format at the imm cologne was a huge success for both the trade fair and the designers. As guests of honour, designer couple Nipa Doshi and Jonathan Levien had the unique opportunity to blaze a trail for the future development of the series with their interpretation of this innovative new assignment. And that is precisely what they did: in their hands, “Das Haus – Interiors on Stage” became a crowd-puller that fully justified its location in the midst of Pure Village, the trade fair’s lively forum for interior design. In particular, the new conceptual approach of adopting a less abstract stance than previous formats and instead aiming to furnish the artificial architectural framework in lifelike fashion was welcomed across the board.

“Of course ‘Das Haus’ is about tendencies in current product and interior design as well,” says the imm cologne’s Creative Director Dick Spierenburg, summing up the public interest in a nutshell, “but what really makes this format so interesting for visitors and the public is that it is filtered through the personality of the guest designer.”

This time round, the guest designer is from Venice: Luca Nichetto, who comes from the famous island of Murano and has been strongly influenced by the glasswork of its craftsmen, sees himself as an autodidact. He is famous for doing things his own way. And so he has remained loyal to Veneto and the region’s infrastructure of design producers and subcontractors, a network that is rapidly gaining international significance. In 2006 he founded his own design studio in Venice’s Mestre Harbour, opening a second studio in Stockholm in 2011. His company develops designs for everything from sofas, chairs, office furniture, lamps and carpets all the way to glasses, vases and kitchen accessories. He is widely regarded as one of the most sought-after young designers in Italy and collaborates with a multitude of international brands, including Bosa, Casamania, Cassina, De Padova, Established & Sons, Foscarini, Fratelli Guzzini, Glass, Globo, Italesse, Kristalia, La Chance, MG Lab, Moroso, Offecct, Salviati, Skitsch and Tacchini. It is, he says, his experiences with the design culture that permeates everyday life in Sweden that motivate him to combine the modern, functional and democratic design philosophy of Scandinavia with the emotional, flamboyant tradition of Italy, which is geared towards craftsmanship just as much as it is towards speed. As in 2012, the imm cologne has thus selected a representative of the younger generation of designers who nevertheless has sufficient experience to largely furnish even an extensive living space installation like “Das Haus” with his own products.

With his plans for “Das Haus”, Luca Nichetto wants to pursue his growing interest in sustainable design. What particularly appeals to him about the project is the possibility of conducting a holistic experiment that goes far beyond the scope of pure product design. “Nature is often regarded as a combination of different elements located outside. Occasionally nature is there just to accomplish decorative functions, thus losing its vital essence and characteristics. When I think about the development of our contemporary human lifestyle, keeping in mind the objects I’ve designed, I imagine a house with a central ‘living room’ like a beating heart,” reveals Nichetto. He compares “Das Haus” with a small planet where the living room becomes as important as the Amazon Rainforest is for the earth: “A green lung that helps us live”. His “Haus” will thus become a study of the relationship between the macrocosm and the microcosm – an idea that draws its inspiration from a short film by Ray and Charles Eames entitled “Powers of 10”. “All the rooms will be linked to this ‘Green Heart’, which will transform my house into a totally eco-friendly container, with natural features incorporated into the high standard of living that ‘Das Haus’ provides for its inhabitants.”

At the next imm cologne in January 2013 Pure Village, where “Das Haus” is located, will be changing floors and moving to Hall 3.1, along with the D3 Design talents exhibition and the lecture forum “The Stage”. Pure Village was launched in 2010 as a conceptual and spatial extension of the Pure segment. With its systematically planned trade fair architecture and extended interior design offering, it has proved an ideal addition to the large-scale brand presentations in Hall 11. Under the title Pure, the imm cologne brings together presentations by brand-name manufacturers from a wide variety of segments who feel a special commitment to design. Anybody who wants to get an idea of the latest original interior design ideas and avant-garde designs from the wide spectrum on offer at the imm cologne will find what he is looking for here. The great demand for premium exhibition space calls for targeted expansion of the Pure format. The imm cologne 2013 will therefore see the addition of a third Pure element: Pure Editions, a platform for creative brands with visionary products and product concepts.
.

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at imm cologne 2013
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“Higgs boson discovery announced in Comic Sans” – HUH


Dezeen Wire:
despite being one of the most significant scientific events of the past decade, the recent discovery of the Higgs boson particle was announced using Comic Sans, the most hated, informal typeface – HUH

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in Comic Sans” – HUH
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Qatar accused of “counterfeiting 1000 street lamps”

Qatar accused of ripping off Barcelona street lighting

Dezeen Wire: Spanish lighting brand Santa & Cole has launched a lawsuit accusing the state of Qatar of copying street lighting devised for Barcelona by Catalan designer Beth Galí in 1996.

Qatar accused of ripping off Barcelona street lighting

920 lights have been installed by the Ashghal public authority along Al Waab Street in Doha (top and above), which Santa & Cole claim are counterfeits of their Latina street lamps designed by Galí (below). They also claim the designs incude low-quality light sources that dazzle drivers and thin steel that represents a structural safety hazard.

Qatar accused of ripping off Barcelona street lighting

Read more on the campaign website, Facebook page or Twitter.

See more stories about street lighting on Dezeen »

Here are some more details from Santa & Cole:


Lawsuit against Qatar due to counterfeiting 1,000 streetlamps and threatening the intellectual property of their designer

The public company Ashghal from Qatar forged the “Latina” streetlamp, designed by the architect Beth Galí, and manufactured and marketed by the company Santa & Cole. Nearly 1,000 forged units were installed on Al Waab Street, the main street in Doha.

Beth Galí has lodged a lawsuit in the Courts of Barcelona to report the case, in which she expressed her “full confidence in justice to resolve a large-scale forgery case that is threatening the creativity of professionals and European companies”.

BCD and Santa & Cole, as well as several personalities working in architecture and design in Barcelona, went to the courts to show their support and to make the facts public.

Javier Nieto, Chairman of Santa & Cole: “It is unbelievable that a country such as Qatar could commit such a serious case of forgery”
Pau Herrera, Chairman of BCD: “Protecting design as a factor of innovation is essential to create economic and social value in Europe”

One of the biggest cases of public counterfeiting in the history of Design

The architect Beth Galí, the Chairman of Santa & Cole, Javier Nieto Santa, and the Chairman of BCD (Barcelona Design Centre), Pau Herrera, invited the media to Courts of Law in Barcelona to publicly announce the large-scale forgery committed by Qatar.

The meeting, carried out at the doors of the Courts of Law in Barcelona, was held due to the lawsuit for pain and suffering lodged on June 29 by Beth Galí against Qatar, which forged the “Latina” streetlamp via the public company Ashghal in 2006, designed by her and manufactured and marketed by the company Santa & Cole.

This case of large-scale forgery is especially relevant as the offender is a sovereign state, in addition to the case being particularly large and the development of events.
The crime committed by Qatar can be seen along the 10 kilometres of Al Waab Street, the main street in the capital of Qatar, Doha, where the public company Ashghal installed approximately 900 forgeries of the “Latina” streetlamp.

Although the case is being made public now, the facts go back to April 2005, when Ashghal requested Santa & Cole to complete an entire lighting project for Al Waab Street for the 14th Asian Games (Doha, 2006). After the Qatari authorities chose the “Latina” streetlamp, which was adapted beforehand to meet the needs of the project, and having submitted five different projects with models and technical specifications, Ashghal requested a local company to make nearly 1,000 copies of the “Latina” streetlamp in 2006.

After six years of trying to reach an amicable agreement, and after the Qatari government refused the arbitration of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the case is now in the hands of the Courts of Barcelona and one of the largest acts of piracy in the history of design committed by a sovereign state is now being made public.

In this context, the claimant, Beth Galí, expressed her “full confidence in the Spanish legal system to resolve a blatant case of large-scale forgery” at the courts.
Supporting the business sector and design BCD (Barcelona Design Centre) and Santa & Cole, as well as other personalities working in the design and architecture sector in Barcelona, were with Beth Galí during the submission of the first lawsuit to show their support and to make the facts public.

Javier Nieto Santa, the Chairman of Santa & Cole, stated to the media that the “Latina” streetlamp case perplexed him, ensuring that “it is unbelievable that Qatar, a sovereign nation and member of the WIPO and the WTO, bound by the Paris Convention and the TRIPS Agreement, could commit such a large case of forgery, which undoubtedly shows a complete disregard for copyright”.

In this regard, Pau Herrera, Chairman of BCD, ensured that “protecting design as a factor of innovation is essential to create economic and social value, and represents one of the most important assets of professionals and European companies”. Herrera added that cases such as this one “do not only damage our business, but also the city model Barcelona wants to project”.

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1000 street lamps”
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Design Museum awarded £4.6 million from Heritage Lottery Fund

Commonwealth Institute to be new Design Museum

Dezeen Wire: the Design Museum in London has been awarded £4.6 million towards developing the museum’s new home in south London by the Heritage Lottery Fund.

Design Museum by John Pawson

The museum also received £300,000 from the fund in September 2010 and in June last year the museum’s co-founder Terence Conran donated a cash gift of £7.5 million, including proceeds from the sale of the lease of the current Design Museum building at Shad Thames.

Design Museum by John Pawson

The museum will relocate to the former Commonwealth Institute building in south London (top image), originally designed by RMJM in the 1960s and currently being redeveloped by John Pawson. The new museum is set to reopen in 2014.

See more images of the design in our earlier story and read more about the Design Museum here.

Here are some more details from the Design Museum:


New Design Museum wins £4.65m from Heritage Lottery Fund

The Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) has awarded the Design Museum a grant of £4.65million towards its plans to create the world’s leading museum of contemporary design and architecture at the former Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, it was announced today. This is in addition to the £300,000 of development funding awarded by HLF in September 2010.

With the addition of the HLF grant, the Design Museum has made good progress towards raising the necessary funds to complete the new Design Museum project which is due to open in 2014. The campaign also aims to raise an endowment fund to ensure the long-term sustainability of the museum.

John Pawson has redesigned the interior of the former Commonwealth Institute, a Grade 2* listed building which has lain dormant for over a decade. The move will give the Design Museum three times more space in which to show a wider range of exhibitions, showcase its world class collection and extend its learning programme. The move will bring the museum into Kensington’s cultural quarter where it will join the V&A, Science Museum, Natural History Museum, Royal College of Art and Serpentine Gallery.

Deyan Sudjic, Director of the Museum said ‘This is a vital step forward for the new Design Museum and an outstanding vote of confidence in the future of this very exciting project.’

Sue Bowers, Head of the Heritage Lottery Fund London, comments “We are delighted to be supporting this transformational project that will see the Design Museum, London relocated to a new and improved home. The move to the former Commonwealth Institute building will not only give this iconic building a new and long-term use, but will also allow the Design Museum’s extensive permanent collection to be available for free for the first time. With three times the space of the museums former home in Shad Thames visitors will be able to better appreciate Britain’s considerable design achievements. This is an exemplary project that will transform the museum’s important collections and add to Kensington’s already thriving cultural quarter.”

The museum has made great progress towards its fundraising target through pledges and donations including: The Conran Foundation, The Dr Mortimer and Theresa Sackler Foundation, the Atkin Foundation, The Hans and Marit Rausing Charitable Trust, The Wolfson Foundation, The Garfield Weston Foundation, Sir Siegmund Warburg’s Voluntary Settlement, 29th May 1961 Charitable Trust, The Arnold Foundation and The Department for Culture Media and Sport.

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from Heritage Lottery Fund
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