“China needs to slow down,” says Beijing Design Week creative director Aric Chen

"China needs to slow down," says Beijing Design Week creative director Aric Chen

News: as a Chinese company announces plans to build the world’s tallest skyscraper in just seven monthsBeijing Design Week creative director Aric Chen says that contemporary China should “slow down” and look to “craft thinking” to tackle both small and large-scale design challenges the country is facing.

Speaking to Dezeen at the second annual event in the Chinese capital, Chen explained that the craft thinking theme of the festival was chosen “to expand the notion of craft beyond handicrafts and heritage to be more about authenticity, process and integrity – a constant awareness of what you’re doing, and how you’re doing it, no matter what it is that you’re doing.”

The Chinese design and manufacturing industry is often associated with mass production, so the design week organisers took the opportunity to showcase a creative ethos that is more quietly bubbling in Beijing.

"China needs to slow down," says Beijing Design Week creative director Aric Chen

Above: CONtradition papier-mâché furniture by MICROmacro lab

Chen says that although craft thinking “applies to teapots and furniture, it’s just as relevant to how you make a meal, how you build a city, even how you create a society,” adding: “We see craft thinking as being applicable to many of the larger challenges that China faces. It was our ambition to get people from all levels, from the general public to government officials, to think about it.”

"China needs to slow down," says Beijing Design Week creative director Aric Chen

Above: Geo City, Smart City exhibition at the China Millenium Monument Museum of Digital Art

This idea was explored across various platforms at the event, through projects presented by local designers such as hand-made papier-mâché furniture by design studio MICROmacro lab to the exhibition titled Geo City, Smart City, which focuses on how to use data visualization and other digital tools to design more humane, livable cities.

Chen also mentions that as China tends to be “very results oriented”, he hopes the event will inspire people to “think more carefully” about process rather than finished product.

See all our photos from Beijing Design Week in our Facebook album here.

Read more about Broad Sustainable Building’s plans to build a 220-storey pre-fabricated skyscraper in just seven months in our earlier story here and see all our stories about China here.

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World’s tallest skyscraper to be built with ready-made ‘Meccano’ pieces

Broad Sustainable Building skyscraper

News: a Chinese company plans to build the world’s tallest skyscraper in just seven months using pre-fabricated components slotted together like a Meccano toy.

Construction firm Broad Sustainable Building has already successfully demonstrated its approach on a smaller scale by constructing a 30-storey tower in 15 days, but now the company has set its sights on erecting a 220-storey tower in just seven months.

Broad Sustainable Building

Above: Broad’s 30-storey tower during construction last year

On completion, the skyscraper would be taller than Dubai’s Burj Khalifa and include schools, a hospital, 17 helipads and apartments for over 30,000 people. The foundation is scheduled to be laid in November with a completion date set for March 2013.

Traditional building methods waste both time and materials, Broad’s CEO Zhang Yue argues. His pre-fabricated towers are designed with a different load-bearing structure, which uses less concrete and steel and can be produced in the safe confines of the factory, ensuring consistent quality.

Broad Sustainable Building, photo by Reuters Terril Yue Jones

Above: workers constructing Broad’s 30-storey tower last year

Zhang made his estimated $1.2 billion fortune on air conditioning systems before turning his attentions to construction. A passionate environmentalist, he intends to help China build a future of clean air and sustainable living. Even Broad’s employees must comply with his vision, abiding by strict guidelines laid out in a manual issued by Zhang that include tips on conserving energy and brushing your teeth.

Perhaps not content with plans to construct the world’s tallest building, the company already has its sights on an even more audacious project – a two-kilometre high skyscraper with 636 floors.

We recently reported that nine of the 20 tallest buildings under construction in the world are located in China.

See all our stories about skyscrapers »
See all our stories about China »

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Mobile kitchen wins the first NWW Design Award

News: a mobile kitchen designed by Anna Rosinke and Maciej Chmara has won the top prize at the inaugural NWW Design Awards at Vienna Design Week.

NWW Design Award

The designers created the cooking cart and collapsible table to tour Austria and make friends with locals in the streets by sharing food with them. Read more about the project in our earlier story.

NWW Design Award

Second prize went to a chair called Donald by Philipp Hermes and Dustin Jessen, which is formed in two parts that slot together and join with Velcro-like pads.

NWW Design Award

In third place was the Stoolbench system by Johanna Dehio, comprising stools that can be joined by a plank of wood with holes in the top to make a bench, and small round tables that can be joined with a larger plank to make a long dining table.

NWW Design Award

The winners received €5000 and a trophy created by Austrian designer Thomas Feichtner. The three winning designs will be prototyped and exhibited in a travelling exhibition.

NWW Design Award

Nearly 300 projects were submitted to the judging panel, which was led by artist Vito Acconci and included Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs.

NWW Design Award

The NWW Design Award was founded by Viennese family-run furniture company Neue Wiener Werkstätte and will be held every two years from now on.

NWW Design Award

See our photos of people we bumped into at Vienna Design Week on our Facebook page.

NWW Design Award

Here’s some more information from the organisers:


This was the first NWW DESIGN AWARD: The winners have been declared!

Last Friday, the NWW DESIGN AWARD for innovative interior design was presented for the first time. During the Vienna Design Week, the initiator, Stefan Polzhofer, and the chairman of the jury, Vito Acconci, publicly presented the three winning designs in the magnificent rooms of the Kursalon Vienna. The presentation of the NWW Design Award 2012 shortlist offered an exciting insight into the ideas workshops of the young designer scene. The award ceremony was moderated by the Head of the ORF-TV Culture Section, Martin Traxl. The success of the new initiative was celebrated with 450 guests until the early hours of the next day at the After-Award Party.

Reflecting current trends and supporting new products: The NWW DESIGN AWARD was established by Neue Wiener Werkstätte with the intention of initiating an exchange of ideas and knowledge between creative minds, institutional partners and companies, and with the aim of defining new standards and trends for exclusive furniture design and to bring them to the attention of the general public. As pointed out by Stefan Polzhofer, the managing director who guided KAPO Moebelwerkstaetten GmbH and the brand Neue Wiener Werkstaette into the 21st century, the NWW DESIGN AWARD is directed equally towards young designers and students of design as to established interior architects and designers. The documentation of all submitted works will be developed into a Design Think Tank Archive.

The theme of 2012 was: Meta Mobility – our life as modern nomads

297 projects that were submitted from over 20 different countries presented the jury of experts, headed by star designer Vito Acconci, with a difficult task. The three winning designs were selected from a shortlist of the 17 best projects and their creators received the coveted NWW Design Award Trophy (designed by the national award winning designer Thomas Feichtner) during the award ceremony in the Kursalon Vienna last Friday.

Prior to the award ceremony, Heik Afheldt, renowned futurologist, journalist and economic advisor, reviewed, in his keynote speech, the motivic area of the cultural history of mobility, the many aspects of which had to be made clearly visible by the participants of the competition by means of sketches and renderings of the furnishings of modern hyper-nomads.

THE WINNERS 2012

1st Prize: MOBILE HOSPITALITY by Maciej Chmara & Anna Rosinke/AUT

The designer Maciej Chmara was born in Gdynia, Poland, in 1984. He studied in Gdansk, Linz and Vienna; together with Ania Rosinke, he stands for chmara.rosinke (Vienna). The predominantly sociocultural motivated projects of the studio are classed between architecture, design and art and stand out by their simplicity, ecological awareness and a poetic language of form that reduces objects to their archetype. The project MOBILE HOSPITALITY topicalises personal initiative in the urban area. Kitchen furniture as a happening: With this easy to transport kitchen with the surface area of a euro-pallet, you have everything you need with you: crockery, cooking utensils for up to 12 people, fresh herbs, three gas cookers, a foot pump for waste water. The startling colours of DIY superstores contrast with solid wood manufactured in outstanding quality. To be enjoyed outdoors, in a holiday cottage, a loft or wherever city nomads want to stop for a while.

2nd Prize: DONALD by Philipp Hermes & Dustin Jessen/D

The designers Dustin Jessen and Philipp Hermesmet met at Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen in 2006 where they studied industrial design and began developing projects together. In 2010, they founded Hermes/Jessen Industrial Design. The project DONALD is a chair of moulded wood that was created in connection with their bachelor thesis and in co-operation with the producer of moulded wood, Becker Brakel. The shape is the result of an iterative, comprehensive design process where the human being was the central focus and technical feasibility greatly influenced its form. The chair can be produced entirely in Brakel. The wood comes from beech trees from the surrounding woods which are sustainably managed.

3rd Prize: STOOLBENCH by Johanna Dehio/D

The designer Johanna Dehio was born in Munich in 1984. She studied product design at the University of Applied Sciences Potsdam and at the UDK Berlin. The ‘Berliner by choice’ is co-founder of the exhibition series Transalpino and has organised and curated exhibitions for the Furniture Fair in Milan and the Designmai/DMY in Berlin. The project STOOLBENCH was inspired by spontaneous solutions and improvisations of temporary seating. It consists of several stools that are complemented by rounded recesses to form a bench, and small, round tables that can be formed into a long dinner table. All elements are veneered with different types of wood and offer an aesthetic overall view even when the individual parts rest unused against a wall.

The designer of this winning design can look forward to a prize money of EUR 5,000. The Neue Wiener Werkstaette will produce prototyps of all three prize-winning designs and put them on show in a travelling exhibition; they will be shown at the Milan Fair, Cologne Fair, designforum Styria, NWW showroom in Vienna and other international venues. In addition to the organiser of the award, the Neue Wiener Werkstätte, various national and international design partners, universities and companies support this new award which, in the future, will be held with changing themes every two years.

The Neue Wiener Werkstätte is a brand of KAPO Möbelwerkstätten GmbH. The family-owned company, managed by Stefan Polzhofer,
uses the brand to further devleop the achievements of the historic Wiener Werkstätte. It stands for a characteristic combination of tradition, craftsmanship and design. The original carpentry shop was founded by Karl Polzhofer I. in 1927, in East Styrian Pöllau. Four generations have worked to transform the former workshop with two workers into an internationally successful company with over 250 employees and a turnover of approx. €25m.

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Foster + Partners to build Park Avenue skyscraper for Lehman Brothers

425 Park Avenue by Foster + Partners

News: Foster + Partners has won a competition to design a 200-metre skyscraper for collapsed real estate company Lehman Brothers Holdings and partner L&L Holding Company on Park Avenue in New York.

425 Park Avenue by Foster + Partners

Lehman Brothers famously kickstarted a global financial crisis when they filed for bankruptcy protection back in 2008, but four years on the estate of the bank still controls more than $10 billion of real estate assets.

According to developers, the office tower will be the first new building on Park Avenue in over 50 years and is conceived as a tapered structure of steel and glass.

“Our aim is to create an exceptional building, both of its time and timeless, as well as being respectful of this context,” said architect Norman Foster. Citing Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson as inspitations, he explained how the building will “set a new standard for office design and provide an enduring landmark that befits its world-famous location.”

The tower will be split into three tiers, separated by landscaped terraces, and each section will feature column-free floors.

Other projects in progress by Foster + Partners include a pair of towers beside the Seine in Paris and an art museum with four overlapping peaks in China.

See more stories about Foster + Partners »

Here’s some extra information from the architects:


Foster + Partners wins competition for new tower at 425 Park Avenue, New York

Foster + Partners is delighted to be selected by a partnership of L&L Holding Company and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LBHI) to design their new office tower at 425 Park Avenue. The new building will create an enduring landmark that befits its exclusive location, and is uniquely of its time and its place.

The project presents an outstanding opportunity to contribute to the existing character of Park Avenue and responds to the scale and datum of the Avenue and neighbouring buildings. Clearly expressing the geometry of its structure, the tapered steel-frame tower rises to meet three shear walls that will be illuminated, adding to the vibrant New York City skyline. Its elegant facade seamlessly integrates with the innovative internal arrangement that allows for three gradated tiers of column-free floors.

Offering world-class sustainable office accommodation, the new building anticipates changing needs in the workplace with large, open spaces that encompass flexible use. Each of the three tiers – low, medium and high-rise – is defined by a landscaped terrace that provides an excellent amenity for tenants and offers panoramic views across Manhattan and Central Park. At the street level, the conceptual design for 425 Park Avenue gives as much to the City as to the people that will work in it with the potential for a large civic plaza marked by significant works of art.

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3D printers could “print ammunition for an army”

Ronen Kadushin

News: advances in 3D printing could allow people to “print ammunition for an army”, according to Ronen Kadushin (pictured above), one of the pioneers of the open design movement.

Kadushin spoke to Dezeen following the news that a pro-gun group in America is developing open-source blueprints for weapons that could be downloaded and printed at home.

“It is frightening for governments because it means the total dissemination of arms into a community,” Kadushin said. “You know, you can basically print ammunition for an army, and this is very frightening.”

Kadushin said open-source design and the “maker” movement risked being tainted by misuse of new technologies. “All you need is one person that makes a 3D printed weapon, kills somebody with it, and then it goes to the press and the same bad press that hackers have will project onto makers,” he said. “This is a very, very dangerous situation.”

3D-printed guns

Above: 3D printed gun components

The Israeli-born designer described the open-source design movement as akin to the hippie movement of the sixties, and said it represented a different approach to the traditional industrial design system. “Maybe in the sixties it was free love, but today it’s about free information,” he said.

“The industrial design establishment – the system – is much more about the bottom line: about making money from innovation, and not about having any kind of vision about how the human race or human society should progress to the future.”

Kadushin, who is based in Berlin and runs a company producing design for furniture, lighting and accessories that are freely available for people to download and adapt, has previously come up with open-source products including a contraceptive device made from a copper coin and a mallet for smashing up iPhones.

Open design emerged as one of the main themes at the Milan furniture fair in April this year – watch our filmed interview with Domus editor-in-chief Joseph Grima about the movement.

Flat Nouveau chair by Ronen Kaduishin

Above: Ronen Kadushin’s Flat Nouveau chair

Below is a transcript of the interview with Kadushin, conducted by Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs in Vienna last week during Vienna Design Week, where Kadushin showed his latest open-source project, a chair cut from a single sheet of aluminium and bent into shape (pictured above).


Marcus Fairs: Tell us about yourself and what you do.

Ronen Kadushin: I’m Ronen Kadushin, I’m a designer, I do open design, and I teach and talk about open design.

MF: Tell us about what open design is and why suddenly there’s a lot of discussion about it; why is it suddenly something that people are seeing as a vibrant force in design?

RK: Open design in very plain terms is trying to transform industrial design into a network structure, into a situation where it is in tune with the big vision of humankind today, which is in the internet. And when you think about the internet as the platform to make design or to distribute design, then making design open is a very logical proposition.

MF: And by “open” you mean that anyone can participate?

RK: Yes. A design is basically a piece of information that is on the network, which can be downloaded, changed, produced, copied and so on.

MF: And this is the antithesis of what a lot of brands and designers think of as design: that it’s an intellectual property that should be controlled and exploited.

RK: Yes. Industrial design traditionally is about exclusivity, while open design is talking about it being inclusive. And by doing so it is in phase with what is going on in the world. I look at the 99% movement – the Occupy movement – which wants transparency and inclusivity, and I think open design is within this kind of concept about how things should go.

MF: And open design in a way is a bridge between the traditional design community and this new community: the geek community, the maker community, which is many ways perhaps a more exciting community, a more future-focussed community. It’s a way of doing things that is having a more profound change on the world than traditional design.

RK: Yes. The maker movement, or makers in general, are not a product of the industrial design education system. They developed their things in the context of open-source software and open hardware, so open design comes very naturally to them. And their society, or their network, is very appreciative of achievement and recognition. You are evaluated, and you are respected by your contribution to the community.

MF: Rather than being the person that did all of the work, and has your stamp on it, it’s more like you were an important part of it.

RK: You contribute something that other people will work on and develop and so on, so it’s more about the process than the end product.

MF: Tell us about the maker fair you went to, where it felt almost like the hippy movement all over again.

RK: I was at a FabLab conference in Amersfoort in Holland a few weeks ago and making, or being a maker, in that context was more about being ready for the transition – they call it a transition. Writing code, printing 3D products, developing their own tools, doing urban agriculture, urban bee-keeping, recycling, living a sustainable lifestyle – a real sustainable lifestyle – is in context with what they’re doing with objects as designers. And it was extremely interesting to live a week within a tribe of technological hippies. Maybe in the sixties it was free love, but today it’s about free information.

MF: It sounds like that that kind of community has an idealism, a pioneering spirit that perhaps the traditional design world has lost.

RK: The industrial design establishment – the system – is much more about the bottom line: about making money from innovation, and not about having any kind of vision about how the human race or human society should progress to the future.

MF: Designers often say “I want to change the world’”, but there’s a limit to how much you can change the world through a slightly different chair shape.

RK: Yeah, I remember very vividly the title of Karim Rashid’s book ‘I Want to Change the World’. I opened the book and I saw that he wants the world to be pink. And [laughs] I think I would disagree a little with his choice of colours. The world is changing if you want it or not, it’s about understanding where it is going, and what you can do about it in a very serious and responsible way, and it’s not about the making money side of it. It’s more about basically putting out or suggesting a way where the troubles, or the catastrophes that are coming to us will be handled, how they will be met. And part of the solution – in the minds of makers and other open-source communities – is the network. The network is a central part of a proposed solution to this.

MF: And makers, just like designers, tend to be optimistic people, they tend to see the positives of what they’re doing, but then there was a story that came out this week about open source guns, about gun enthusiasts in America printing their own weapons to get around restrictions. So all of this can be used for different ends as well, rather than making things better.

RK: Yes, the maker movement is in many ways a double-edged sword: whatever is positive will have also a negative aspect to it, and I think 3D printing of weapons is a proposition that was waiting to come up. Somebody actually made it happen. And you cannot stop it. It is frightening for governments now, because it means the total dissemination of arms into a community. You know, you can basically print ammunition for an army, and this is very frightening. And I don’t think it will go all the way in this direction, but I think it brings about possibilities, notions, directions. Nobody will kill anybody with a 3D printed gun soon, I hope. But in the future, you don’t know.

MF: But you can guarantee that when it does happen, then the whole network, the whole community you’re talking about, the whole notion of Open Design and rapid prototyping will suddenly have a much higher profile than before… but for the wrong reasons.

RK: You know, to make a movement to look bad, all you need is one person that makes a 3D printed weapon, kills somebody with it, and then it goes to the press, and the same bad press that hackers have will project onto makers. This is a very, a very dangerous situation.

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UK government bans curved school buildings

Evelyn Grace Academy by Zaha Hadid Architects

News: there will be no curved or glass walls on any new school buildings constructed in the UK, thanks to a set of government guidelines released this week.

Evelyn Grace Academy by Zaha Hadid Architects

Above and top: Evelyn Grace Academy by Zaha Hadid Architects – photos by Luke Hayes

As part of a bid to standardise school design and cut costs, the ‘baseline’ templates place restrictions on room sizes, storey heights and building shapes for 261 replacement school buildings planned across the country.

The reports call for “simple, orthogonal forms” with “no curves or ‘faceted’ curves” and having “minimal indents, ‘dog legs’ and notches in the plan shapes”. They also state that buildings should have ”no glazed curtain walling or ETFE roofs”.

The Langley Academy by Foster + Partners

Above: The Langley Academy by Foster + Partners – photo by Nigel Young

These restrictions will put an end to designs such as the curved timber Langley Academy by Foster + Partners (above) and Zaha Hadid’s zig-zagging steel and glass Evelyn Grace Academy (top), which was awarded the Stirling Prize last year by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA).

These projects have been criticised for being too costly by education secretary Michael Gove, who in a conference last year said: ”We won’t be getting Richard Rogers to design your school, we won’t be getting any award-winning architects to design it, because no one in this room is here to make architects richer.”

Clapham Manor Primary School by dRMM

Above: Clapham Manor Primary School by dRMM – photo by Jonas Lencer

In response to the reports, the RIBA has raised its concerns, claiming that “the proposed ‘flat pack’ approach is inflexible and will deprive students and teachers of quality environments that are proven to support teaching and learning”.

“In these times of austerity of course we need to cut our cloth on all spending, however the government’s proposals for the design and construction of future schools are far too restrictive with too much focus on short term savings,” said RIBA president Angela Brady.

All Saints’ Academy by Nicholas Hare Architects

Above: All Saints’ Academy by Nicholas Hare Architects – photo by Hufton + Crow

Here’s a press release from the RIBA listing its key concerns:


The RIBA five key concerns over the Governments approach to ‘Baseline Design’ are:

1. A failure to create functional spaces for excellent teaching

The RIBA is concerned that a ‘one size fits all’ approach will place a straitjacket on future generations of teaching professionals and quickly render these schools redundant in the light of developments in pedagogy and technology.

2. Not ensuring discipline and student wellbeing

The minimal circulation spaces have the potential for serious congestion, with the consequential impact on behaviour and wellbeing. The designs for secondary schools include narrow corridors and concealed stairs that are difficult to supervise; in many schools this is likely to result in the need for additional staff supervision to maintain good behaviour and avoid bullying. For example, in Guildford’s new Christ’s College school by DSDHA architects, the corridors were designed to eradicate bad behavior and isolation which was prevalent in the school’s previous 1960s building; the new circulation spaces are compact and easy to monitor; and since moving to its new building, Christ’s College has been named as one of the country’s most improved schools.

3. Ignoring the safeguarding of environmental comfort

The low energy environmental strategy is welcomed but the success of the layout is predicated on optimal conditions that may be difficult to achieve in reality. Relatively minor changes in orientation, internal finishes, or structural systems will significantly affect lighting, ventilation, heat gain and acoustics, which will in turn negatively impact on teaching and learning; eg well-ventilated and well-lit classrooms are crucial to aiding and extending student concentration.

4. Disregarding statutory requirements for accessibility and inclusion

The RIBA has serious reservations about the ability of the baseline designs to accommodate students and staff with disabilities and in general to meet statutory access requirements.

5. Not delivering long-term sustainability and value

The lack of engagement between sufficiently experienced design teams, educationalists and end users risks these minimum requirements being delivered without consideration of the particular needs of each school community. If the baseline designs are not developed appropriately to meet the teaching and operational needs of every school they may not be fit for purpose and therefore will not deliver the value for money solutions that the government intends.

While the RIBA continues to welcome the Government’s objectives of achieving increased value for money and identifying ways to rationalize the complex process of design and construction, the Institute is calling on the following improvements to be made the ‘Baseline Design’ proposals:

» School designs are subjected to independent review by recognised local education practitioners and school leaders to establish their ability to support excellent teaching and meet future community needs.

» The development of the baseline designs take full account of the statutory requirements for access and the current guidance on designing for students and staff with physical impairments and other disabilities, including sensory and other ‘invisible’ impairments;

» The Environmental strategy be subjected to rigorous testing using a range of structural solutions and finishes;

» Designs are tested against a variety of ‘real life’ site situations in order to establish their viability before their final release;

» EFA clarifies which parts of the baseline design are intended to be indicative or recommended as opposed to mandatory;

» The output specification is developed in sufficient detail in order to safeguard functionality and prevent the erosion of design quality in the tender process;

» Clients and schools receive expert advice from qualified and experienced design professionals on the quality and functionality of any contractor’s proposals using the baseline design.

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Cadbury wins court battle over trademark Pantone 2658C purple wrappers

Cadbury wins purple trademark battle_photo by Rob Warde

News: Cadbury has won the right to stop rival chocolate makers using its signature colour, Pantone 2685C purple, on their wrappers.

The chocolate giant has been battling its Swiss rival Nestlé for the last four years over the use of the purple, which has appeared in Cadbury’s packaging for almost 100 years.

Last December a court ruling gave Cadbury exclusive rights to the hue, despite Nestlé’s claims that a colour could not be used as a trademark.

Now Britain’s High Court has overturned Nestlé’s appeal, ruling that Pantone 2685C purple is “distinctive of Cadbury for milk chocolate.”

Pantone’s colour system is used by printers and designers around the world to standardise and accurately match colours. Cadbury uses 2685C purple in its logo and its most recognisable packaging, such as Dairy Milk and Twirl bars.

See all our stories about chocolate »

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Frank Gehry unveils plans for Toronto’s entertainment district

News: architect Frank Gehry has today unveiled proposals for a major new art gallery and university complex at the centre of Toronto’s entertainment district.

Frank Gehry unveils designs for Toronto

Working alongside David Mirvish, director of production company Mirvish Productions, Gehry has designed three 80-85 metre-high residential towers on the top of the new buildings, which will be located beside the historic Royal Alexandra Theatre on King Street West.

Frank Gehry unveils designs for Toronto

The Mirvish Collection gallery will sit beneath two of the towers and house a collection of abstract art built by David and Audrey Mirvish over a period of 50 years. The neighbouring OCAD University Public Learning Centre for Visual Art, Curatorial Studies and Art History will be positioned beneath the third tower and will accommodate exhibition galleries, seminar rooms, studios and a public lecture theatre.

Frank Gehry unveils designs for Toronto

“It’s especially interesting that this project involves the arts,” said Gehry. “With this project, I wanted to create buildings that were good neighbours to the surrounding buildings and that respected the rich and diverse history of the area.”

Six properties currently located on the site will be preserved and maintained as part of the development, as will the Canada Walk of Fame along King Street West and Simcoe Street, but three warehouses and a small theatre are set to be demolished.

Gehry is also designing the new campus for Facebook, and recently donated $100,000 towards a new annual prize for architecture graduates.

See all our stories about Frank Gehry »

Here’s the full press release from the developers:


David Mirvish and Frank Gehry Unveil Conceptual Design to Transform Toronto’s Entertainment District

Reimagining of King Street Entertainment District Continues Mirvish Family’s Legacy While Supporting Toronto’s Thriving Cultural Corridor

Major Cultural Additions to the District Include the Mirvish Collection, a 60,000-Square-Foot Gallery Dedicated to Abstract Art, and OCAD University Facility

David Mirvish, founder of Mirvish Productions, and world-renowned architect Frank Gehry today unveiled the conceptual design for a mixed-use project that will transform Toronto’s downtown arts and entertainment district and advance the area’s future as a thriving cultural centre. The multi-year, multi-phase project is the largest and most significant urban commission to date for the Toronto-born architect, bringing new cultural, residential and retail spaces to a site immediately next to the Royal Alexandra Theatre and creating a new visual identity for the city’s premier arts district.

The Mirvish/Gehry project is the vision of David Mirvish, who through his family’s support of the arts has helped make the city a major international centre for performing arts and has transformed the downtown King Street Entertainment District. Bordered by many of Toronto’s leading cultural institutions including the Royal Alexandra Theatre and Roy Thomson Hall to the east, the Toronto International Film Festival Bell Lightbox to the west, and the John Street Cultural Corridor to the west culminating at the Art Gallery of Ontario to the north, the project will have at its centre the new Mirvish Collection museum and a new facility for OCAD University.

Frank Gehry, whose other major Canadian project is the redesigned Art Gallery of Ontario (2008), grew up in the King Street West neighbourhood, and his design relates directly to the scale, materials and feeling of the area. “We see an opportunity to join our history with Frank Gehry’s history and continue our ongoing commitment to the neighbourhood,” said David Mirvish. “This area was transformed 50 years ago after my father purchased the Royal Alexandra Theatre, and this project will continue the theatre’s future and transform the neighbourhood again for the next 50 years. I am proud that we can continue this legacy that my father began.”

“It is very special for me to be able to work in Toronto where I was born and to engage the neighbourhoods where I grew up,” said Gehry. “It’s especially interesting that this project involves the arts. That is always meaningful to me. With this project, I wanted to create buildings that were good neighbours to the surrounding buildings and that respected the rich and diverse history of the area. I also wanted to make nice places for the people who live in and visit the buildings. David has an exciting vision, and I am thrilled to be a part of it.”

The Mirvish/Gehry design will create a new profile for the arts and entertainment district at the streetscape and in the skyline, add significantly to the John Street Cultural Corridor, and provide new and enhanced public spaces. The site includes the north side of King Street West and the south side of Pearl Street, occupying the entire block between John Street and Ed Mirvish Way and a portion of the block between Ed Mirvish Way and the Royal Alexandra Theatre, and consists of six properties owned by the Mirvish family. The Canada Walk of Fame, located along King West and Simcoe Streets, will be preserved and maintained. The project’s development, management and construction will be led by Peter Kofman of Projectcore Inc. in conjunction with David Mirvish.

The conceptual design, which will continue to evolve, consists of two six-story stepped podiums, which relate in scale and articulation to the neighbouring buildings, topped by three iconic residential towers, ranging in size from 80 to 85 storeys. Each tower has a complementary but distinctive design, which fits with the history and texture of the surrounding neighbourhood. The trio of towers works together to form a dynamic still life on the skyline. The west block of the plan, oriented to King Street West, features a stepped podium with the Mirvish Collection in the atrium and planted terraces that create a green silhouette overlooking King Street and Metro Square. The east block of the plan includes the preservation of the Royal Alexandra Theatre and another stepped podium housing the OCAD University facility that fronts onto King Street West.

The new 60,000-square-foot Mirvish Collection will be a destination for viewing contemporary abstract art from the exemplary collection of Audrey and David Mirvish. The collection was built over 50 years, beginning when David Mirvish ran a globally recognized art gallery in Toronto from 1963-1978. The Mirvish Collection comprises works by leading artists including Jack Bush, Anthony Caro, Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis, Robert Motherwell, Kenneth Noland, Jules Olitski, Larry Poons, David Smith and Frank Stella. The nonprofit Mirvish Collection, which will be free and open to the public, will present curated artist-focused exhibitions that leverage the depth of the Mirvish holdings and will be available to other institutions. It will also host traveling exhibitions.

The project incorporates a new multi-floor facility for the OCAD University Public Learning Centre for Visual Art, Curatorial Studies and Art History, including exhibition galleries, studios, seminar rooms, and a public lecture hall. The galleries will feature curatorial programming drawn from OCAD University faculty, the OCAD University Art Collection, the OCAD University Archives and the Printmaking and Publications Research and Production Centre. “Urban universities such as OCAD University contribute to and benefit from their situation within a creative city,” said Dr. Sara Diamond, OCAD University President andflivbrary Vice-Chancellor. “We are a hub for art, design, media, research, innovation and the business of creativity, and this new facility, in the heart of a transforming cultural district, is a perfect setting for OCAD University.”

As part of the plan, the Princess of Wales Theatre, owned and operated by Mirvish Productions, will be replaced along with adjacent warehouses. The artist Frank Stella, whose commissioned murals are part of the Princess of Wales Theatre, will partner with Frank Gehry to develop new work for the project, integrating art and architecture. “The Princess of Wales Theatre is a wonderful space to experience theatre, but the next step for the future of this neighbourhood is providing new kinds of cultural spaces,” said David Mirvish. “We are dedicated to providing more theatre in Toronto, not less, and through our other theatres, we will continue to provide world-class theatre experiences.”

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Germany needs “new design language,” says German design prize organiser

Germany needs "new design language," says German design prize organiser

News: German industry needs to move away from the minimalist, Bauhaus-inspired aesthetic and develop a new design language is order to stay competitive, according to the organiser of the country’s national design prize.

“German design is very functional, very minimal, but the world is moving,” said Joerg Suermann, who earlier this year took over responsibility for the Design Award of the Federal Republic of Germany. “To be successful in the future we have to think about what will happen in the future, what is necessary for the future.”

Suermann said that a new generation of German designers were turning their backs on the rationalist approach pioneered by German schools such as the Bauhaus and the Ulm School of Design, and whose pared-down aesthetic has dominated German industrial design.

“The young generation want to change something,” Suermann told Dezeen. “They want to have a new design language. I think it’s important to give them the visibility and to show off to the international [community] that we have not only Bauhaus, not only Ulm, that a lot of new things are happening.”

Suermann is managing director of DMY Berlin, which this year took over administration of the state-backed design prize from the Frankfurt-based German Design Council, which had organised the award for 42 years. The prize will now be awarded in Berlin as part of a wider move to establish the German capital as the nation’s cultural capital.

Under DMY Berlin, the award will shift its emphasis away from the big brands that have dominated in the past and instead celebrate the work of individual designers.

“German design is known in the world because of the big brands – Mercedes and so on,” Suermann said. “Normally the big design awards are focusing on the design brands or companies. Our government gives the design award to support the design industry, and I think the designers also need support. If the designer gets an award for his work, then maybe it helps him to find new clients, and this is missing [other] awards. This is is what we want to change.”

The winners of the Design Award of the Federal Republic of Germany will be announced on 25 October.

Top image shows Braun AG Studio 1 radio and record player by Hans Gugelot and Herbert Lindinger, 1956, Ulm.

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Gun enthusiasts release open-source kits for 3D-printed Wiki Weapons

3D-printed guns

News: a group of libertarian activists in the U.S. plans to distribute open-source blueprints for homemade 3D-printed guns, provoking questions about the potential uses of the increasingly affordable technology.

Defense Distributed, the activist group led by Texas law student Cody Wilson, has just received $20,000 in funding for its Wiki Weapon project to create instruction kits for working guns. Individuals would be able to download the kits and use them to 3D-print their own weapons at home, sidestepping the need for a gun license.

News of the project comes just weeks after another American hobbyist became the first person to successfully build and fire a 3D-printed gun. Michael Guslick claimed to have fired 200 rounds from his .22 calibre pistol, which he made by fitting a 3D-printed plastic receiver – the only part of a gun that requires a license in the U.S. – to the other gun components, which don’t have to be registered. Guslick said he then adapted the components to make a semiautomatic rifle (below).

3D-printed guns

Anab Jain, founder of the collaborative design practice Superflux, drew attention to Guslick’s homemade gun and the legal and ethical questions it posed at last week’s Global Design Forum in London. Making guns with 3D-printing technology might seem “unsettling”, she told the audience, but it points to the dramatic changes that lie ahead as design expertise, technology and equipment become more accessible to individuals.

“The old rules and regulations about who is the designer, who is the manufacturer and who is the distributor change when people have the tools and opportunities to become the designer, manufacturer and distributor themselves,” Jain told Dezeen today.

“The problem is that sometimes we get so scared about new technology and just think about the worst case scenario, which is what happened with GM [genetically modified food],” she added. “It’s about making sure there is a possibility to debate these things instead of just becoming passive consumers and saying, ‘tomorrow I can order a 3D-printed gun if I want’.”

3D printing technology has become significantly more accessible recently, with retailers now offering the printers for as little as $600, but the legality of homemade guns remains an unresolved issue.

On its website, Defense Distributed states: “It is legal to produce any category of weapon you could ordinarily legally own, so long as you are not providing it for sale or are not prohibited from possessing firearms in the first place.” These rules would only be relevant to U.S. citizens, however. ”If you are in another country, proceed with the expectation that every bit of this is illegal,” the website adds.

Today the group made public a letter it had received from StrataSys, a company that makes 3D printers, cancelling their lease of a printer and stating that it was company policy “not to knowingly allow [its] printers to be used for illegal purposes.” Meanwhile, the group has announced that computer files for its ‘WikiWep’ prototype plastic handguns will be made available for download in the coming weeks.

Digital manufacturing and open-source design have dominated the debate at this year’s design fairs. Following Milan’s furniture fair in April, Dezeen’s editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs explored the new era of digitally driven production in a post for our series on technology and design. You can see all our stories on open-source design here.

We also recently reported on a robotic 3D printer that makes architectural structures from sand or soil – see all our stories about 3D printing here.

See all our stories about technology »
See all our stories about the Global Design Forum »

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