“Scum villages” planned for Amsterdam

Shipping container homes in Zwolle

News: Amsterdam’s problem families are to be moved to isolated caravans or shipping containers in the outskirts of the city under new plans announced by mayor Eberhard van der Laan.

The £810,000 programme will see social housing residents that continue to harass and intimidate their neighbours placed under surveillance for a period of six months. If they refuse to improve their behaviour, they will then be faced with eviction and relocation to one of several special units.

The new communities have been dubbed “scum villages” following earlier statements from right-wing campaigner Geert Wilders, who told Dutch newspaper the Telegraaf that offenders should be completely separated from society. ”Repeat offenders should be forcibly removed from their neighbourhood and sent to a village for scum,” he said.

Van der Laan’s spokesman Bartho Boer has denied claims that the initiative will create “scum villages” and insists that the plans will encourage good behaviour and improve communities. “A neighbourhood can deal with one problem family but if there are more the situation escalates,” he told Dutch News.

According to Boer there are over 13,000 complaints of anti-social behaviour every year in Amsterdam from victims of abuse and homophobia. Frequently it is these law-abiding tenants that are forced to move, rather than their nuisance neighbours.

“The aim is not to reward people who behave badly with a new five-room home with a south-facing garden. This is supposed to be a deterrent,” he said.

Shipping containers are already being used for student housing in Amsterdam, but a set of ten have been set aside as a trial project for the scheme, where several persistent offenders have been housed under 24-hour supervision.

Another Amsterdam project that will use shipping containers is temporary retail centre Boxpark, set to open next year. Shipping containers are also being increasingly used as housing in other countries, including as emergency accommodation for victims of natural disasters in Japan. See more stories about shipping containers on Dezeen »

See more stories about housing »

Photograph courtesy of Shutterstock.

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Dezeen Music Project: Position To Fly by Strong Asian Mothers

The first three movies from our Dezeen Live series of talks filmed at 100% Design will feature tracks by east London band Strong Asian Mothers, so we thought it was time to put some more of their tracks up on Dezeen Music Project.

This track is called Position To Fly and is full of catchy vocal hooks, big beats and even bigger bass-lines. Watch out for the tasty horn section that comes in towards the end of the track too.

You can listen to more Strong Asian Mothers tracks on Dezeen Music Project here, and watch today’s Dezeen Live movie featuring Tom Hulme, design director at IDEO, here.

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House in middle of Chinese motorway demolished

House demolished from centre of a Chinese motorway

News: a five-storey house that had stood for over a year at the centre of a Chinese motorway has finally been demolished.

Top: photograph is by Reuters/China Daily.

The house in Wenling, in China’s Zhejiang Province, was one of over 400 properties that had stood in the path of the new road, but owner Luo Baogen was the only resident who refused to accept a compensation deal. Luo, 67, claimed that the offer wasn’t enough to cover the cost of buying a new home.

As Luo and his wife remained in the house, the government constructed the new motorway around them and photographs of the bizarre scene subsequently went viral across the internet.

However, after meeting with Chinese officials on Friday, Luo was at last persuaded to sign the demolition agreement and accept the offer of 260,000 yuan (just over £26,000) and a site for a new house. “It was never a final solution for us to live in a lone house in the middle of the road. After the government’s explanations, I finally decided to move,” said Luo.

House demolished from centre of a Chinese motorway

Above: photograph is by Jin Yunguo/Asianewsphoto

The owner and his wife moved out of the house immediately to allow the bulldozers to begin demolition.

Solitary properties left in the midst of development are a frequent occurrence in China and are referred to as Dīngzihù, or “nail house”, meaning they are hard to get rid of like a stubborn nail. All land in China is owned by the state, so residents are rarely able to stay for long in these houses, especially as the officials have the power to remove their water and power supply.

Other recent stories from China include plans to construct the world’s tallest building in just 90 days and a masterplan for Shenzhen that’s larger than the whole of Manhattan.

Meanwhile Neri&Hu recently told Dezeen that their fellow architects in China are “lost” and need to stem the tide of “half-assed” building projects in the country, while Aric Chen, the creative director of Beijing Design Week, had previously warned that China needs to “slow down” and pay more attention to issues of authenticity, process and identity.

See all our stories about China »

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Dezeen Music Project: Die For Your Love by Atomic League

We’re ending the week on Dezeen Music Project with this lush electronica track by Glasgow artist Atomic League. Die For Your Love builds up to a gentle crescendo with catchy melodies and syncopated drum rhythms layered over the big, pulsating synth at the track’s heart.

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Registration opens to exhibit at Ventura Lambrate 2013

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

News: Dutch company Organisation in Design has issued a call for entries to designers and brands to show at Ventura Lambrate 2013 during Salone de Mobile in Milan next April.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Previous exhibitors include designers Jaime Hayon (work pictured above) and Moritz Waldemeyer, among a carefully curated selection of brands and designers.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Above: project by Zunaga

The Ventura Lambrate design district in the north east of Milan will be open from 9 to 14 April 2013.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Above: project by Nina & Svenja

Register to exhibit at www.venturaprojects.com/apply and send completed applications to milano@organisationindesign.com. Find out more about Ventura Projects here.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Above: project by Universita di Bolzano

Dezeen are media partners for Ventura Lambrate 2013 – see all our stories from last year’s event here and Ventura Lambrate 2011 here.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Above: lamp by Haags Werk

Here is some further information from the organisers:


Ventura Lambrate 2013 call for entries

Ventura Lambrate 2013, the only completely curated design district of Fuorisalone, returns for its fourth successive year. Hereby Organisation in Design invites you to apply now for the first selection round; deadline for this is January 5th 2013.

We are looking forward to reconnect with our previous participants, and to start up collaborations with new exhibitors. For this edition we are especially interested in occasional collectives by designers, curated presentations, and commercial brands with exceptionally creative projects.

Ventura Lambrate also welcomes renowned and established designers, as well as emerging young designers, design labels, cultural institutions and galleries and other interesting initiatives to apply for Ventura Lambrate 2013.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Above: chairs by Bernotat&Co

Designers about Ventura Lambrate

”I would like to express my happiness of being here at Ventura Lambrate 2012, because I love this area. In 2011 I came for the first time and I immediately fell in love with this area. It felt really well, I honestly think I belong much more in this type of area than on the fair, especially because it is a place where there is much more space for research and conversation.” – Jaime Hayon

”For us it was our very first fair and collection, so we didn’t know what to expect at all. To be concrete, taking part in Ventura Lambrate 2012 brought us features in several magazines, blogs and on TV, and 2 large retailers that would like to sell our products. The overall experience of taking part in Ventura Lambrate has been wonderful and encouraging.” – Fred & Juul

”I think there’s a shift going on in Milan for the design week, the classic area of the cool and new used to be Zona Tortona but all the more edgy, interesting and young design has moved over here to Lambrate.” […] “It’s a beautiful area; it got amazing architecture with really beautiful spaces. Now all the cool designers are here, so it’s a very good spot to be!”- Moritz Waldemeyer.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Above: installation by Analogia

From Tuesday April 9th to Sunday April 14th 2013, Ventura Lambrate will feature the most talented outings of the international design world, through an organic exhibition circuit, the public composed of press, professionals and design enthusiasts are challenged to look at design from a different perspective.

Read more about the Ventura Projects here.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Above: project by In Residence Design

Ventura Lambrate 2013 media partners

We announce the first media partners for Ventura Lambrate 2013; Dezeen and DAMn Magazine.

“I really enjoyed Ventura Lambrate this year (2012). The whole area was well-curated and vibrant. It’s definitely the most interesting design district in Milan.” – Marcus Fairs, editor-in-chief at Dezeen

”You don’t have to be Hannibal Lecter to appreciate that a gut feeling goes well with a trained eye. And for Margo Konings and Margriet Vollenberg of the self-explanatory Organisation in Design, this mix of intuition and experience is a way of making sure that Ventura Lambrate – the project they launched in Milan during the FuoriSalone in 2010 – stays on course.”- DAMn Magazine

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Ventura partnership

Organisation in Design invites companies to collaborate with Ventura Lambrate 2013 on special projects or to become a sponsor to the event. In exchange for your support Organisation in Design offers several benefits to you.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for entries

Switching Facebook page

Please be aware that we have changed our Facebook page. To keep following Ventura Lambrate and the Ventura Projects please ‘like’ us at www.facebook.com/venturaprojects. Follow us on Twitter as well, through www.twitter.com/VenturaProjects.

Ventura Projects is founded and produced by Organisation in Design. Ventura Lambrate is a registered trademark.

www.venturaprojects.com

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Dezeen Music Project: I Hate Everyone Especially You by 800xL

This experimental electronica track by Newport producer 800xL is an unusual concoction of trippy sounds and rhythms that, in lesser hands, could easily have become an incoherent mess. In fact, 800xL manages to hold it all down with a wonderfully slow, deliberate and chilled-out bass that’s worth listening to on a good pair of headphones to fully appreciate.

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“Built environment more beautiful than nature” – UK planning minister

Countryside housing, photo by treehouse1977

News: buildings can be “more beautiful than nature” according to the UK’s planning minister, who is calling for an area of countryside twice the size of Greater London to be built on in order to solve the housing crisis.

Speaking to the BBC’s Newsnight programme in an interview to be broadcast tonight, Nick Boles said: “The built environment can be more beautiful than nature and we shouldn’t obsess about the fact that the only landscapes that are beautiful are open – sometimes buildings are better.”

He added: “We’re going to keep the green belt, but if people want to have housing for their kids, if they want to have people able to bring up their kids in a small house with a garden, they’ve got to accept that we’ve got to build more on some open land.”

The Conservative minister, who was appointed in this September’s reshuffle, noted that up to two million new houses could be built if more open land is developed.

“In England at the moment we’ve got about nine per cent of land developed in any way – so that’s 91 per cent that is not. All we need to do is build on probably on another two or three per cent of land over the next 20 years and we’ll have solved our housing problem,” he argued.

Increasing the total area of developed land in England from nine per cent to 12 per cent would mean building on an additional 1,500 square miles of open countryside, an area twice the size of Greater London, according to the Daily Telegraph.

Boles also said living in an affordable home with green space nearby is a “basic moral right, like healthcare and education,” and added that developers were to blame for the lack of quality housing developments.

“Land is expensive but to some extent [developers] are just lazy. They didn’t talk to local people or get involved enough,” he said, while also describing current housebuilding as “ugly rubbish” and criticising some new housing estates as “pig ugly”.

Last year the Institute of Public Policy Research warned that England will face a housing shortfall of 750,000 by 2025.

We recently reported that a high-density, car-free city for 80,000 people is being built from scratch in a rural location near Chengu, a project that could be repeated across China if successful.

At this year’s Venice Architecture Biennale, architect Alex de Rijke from Dutch firm dRMM told Dezeen that UK architects could learn from the Netherlands by designing floating housing.

See all our stories from the UK »

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Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Mode:lina Architekci

Polish studio Mode:lina Architekci built a tank out of cardboard tubes to make this pop-up shop for Swedish watch brand TRIWA (+ slideshow).

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Mode:lina Architekci

Located in Poznań Plaza shopping mall in the city of Poznań, Poland, the Tube Tank was designed by Mode:lina Architekci to be low-cost and quick to construct.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

The tank is built from over 900 cardboard tubes and held together with brightly coloured ratchet straps.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

The architects settled on the material first and then discovered that a tank shape would be a simple and secure way to piece the cardboard together.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

“When we did some experiments with strapping the tubes with ratchet straps, the most stable construction looked like a caterpillar tread – we decided to follow this look,” architect Jerzy Woźniak told Dezeen.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

The display cabinets for the posters and watches are made from chunky chipboard panels.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

TRIWA sales assistants stand inside the tank to sell watches to passing customers.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

Cardboard tubes have popped up in a few projects on Dezeen, including an installation in a London department store by Nicholas Grimshaw’s studio and a Japanese boutique made of hanging cardboard tubes.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

Previous projects by Mode:lina we’ve featured include a stark police station interior and a London soundscape played through tangled pipes, which we filmed as part of our Dezeen Platform micro-exhibition.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

See all our stories about cardboard »
See all our stories about Mode:lina Architekci »
See all our stories about shops »

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

Photographs are by Mode:lina Architekci.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Once again mode:lina accepted a challenge, to create a temporary store for Swedish watch brand TRIWA. Goals, similar to previous year, were:
Use of renewable materials – Low cost
Speed of constructing
But above all, to further increase global brand awareness.

Previous cooperation between the two exceeded by far client’s expectations – pictures of the store were published around the globe, both online and offline.

Once more, designers decided to use a very well known raw material – paperboard. Only this time it was rolled into tubes. Over 900 of paper tubes, wrapped with ratchet-straps around cabinets built from raw OSB wood panels. That’s how the Tube Tank was born. Meet Triwa Pop-Up store! See you at Poznań Plaza mall (Poland)!

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

Project: Tube Tank – TRIWA Pop-Up store
Design: mode:lina architekci (Paweł Garus & Jerzy Woźniak)
Project team: Paweł Garus, Jerzy Woźniak, Kinga Kin
Realisation: November / Listopad 2012
Area: 10 m2

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Removal of design from school curriculum is “insanity” – Neville Brody

Neville Brody

News: plans to remove creative subjects from the UK curriculum are “short-sighted insanity”, according to incoming D&AD president Neville Brody (+ interview).

Speaking to Dezeen, Brody described government plans to overhaul the curriculum as “one of the biggest mistakes in British government” and added: “The UK government is trying to demolish and smash all ideas about creative education.”

In September, education secretary Michael Gove announced plans to replace GCSE examinations for students up to the age of 16 with a new English baccalaureate (EBacc) system. Creative subjects such as art and design will not count towards the EBacc qualifications, which instead are graded on performance in academic “stem” subjects. These stem subjects are English, mathematics, history or geography, the sciences and a language.

“They haven’t included any creative subjects as part of the Ebacc, which is an absolutely short-sighted insanity,” Brody said.

Brody fears the changes will discourage students from studying arts subjects, leading to the closure of some UK art schools and a decline of the creative industries.

“The creative industries need high-quality creative graduates. If we’re not getting the graduates, we’re not going to sustain the industry,” said Brody. “Creative services as a percentage of GDP is higher here than any other country, so why would you not want to support, promote and build that?”

Brody, who runs London graphic design agency Research Studios as well as being dean of the Royal College of Art’s school of communication, becomes president of visual and advertising design body D&AD on 1 December.

Brody said he disagreed with comments made by broadcaster Andrew Marr last week, who claimed the Royal College of Art would become a “Chinese finishing school” if changes to the curriculum went ahead.

“It’s not about people being tailored for industry,” he said. “What the Royal College does is develop skilled dangerous minds, otherwise there’s no point in doing it “

However Brody described the government’s attitude to overseas arts students who come to the UK to study as “blindness”.

“A lot of [foreign] students, especially at the Royal College, want to stay on here and want to contribute,” he said. “If you’re categorising non-UK students as immigrants, which this government has done, you’re ignoring the fact that they’re bringing several billion pounds into the country, not only fees but money spent on living accommodation, expenses, etcetera, and now we’re saying at the end of all of that, ‘thank you for your money, now leave.’ An alien visiting would find that hysterically funny. It’s just absurd.”

As part of his one-year D&AD presidency, Brody will launch a new initiative called the D&AD Foundation, which will lobby on behalf of design education, and raise funds for design students and courses.

Brody said: “The proportion of our influence creatively compared to the size of the country is massive, so the D&AD foundation that we’re launching in January, will hopefully start to attract and redirect funds from the creative industry, and from the corporate world that needs the creative industry, and funnel that back into the grassroots of developing opportunity including education.”

The D&AD, which this year celebrated its 50th anniversary, needs to become more vociferous in support of design, Brody added: “D&AD needs to have a more active voice. Historically it’s not really lobbied, it’s not taken on issues, and really kind of left those areas to other people but this is a turning point now.”

Neville Brody made his name as art director for The Face and Arena magazines in the 1980s. He is the current dean of the Royal College of Art’s school of communication and has just designed a new typeface for the college. His own design firm, Research Studios, has offices in London, Paris, Berlin, Barcelona and Tokyo. Dezeen previously filmed an interview with Brody for the Design Museum’s Super Contemporary exhibition, in which he talks about the people, places and cultures that have defined his life in London. See all our stories about Neville Brody.

See below for an edited transcript of the interview between Dezeen editor Rose Etherington and Brody:


Rose Etherington: What do you hope to achieve in your D&AD presidency?

Neville Brody: Well my interest isn’t really to do with the ceremonial aspect of being the president of D&AD. It’s an interesting junction because this is the beginning of the next 50 years in a way. I think D&AD is recognised as one of the most important awards to win, so how can we leverage that focus on excellence and use it as a way of developing excellence for the future?

We’re now in a space where the UK government is trying to demolish and smash all ideas about creative education. So we have to ask serious questions: what responsibility does D&AD have within that? And also, the creative industries here need high quality creative graduates. If we’re not getting the graduates we’re not going to sustain the industry.

They’re trying to smash creative education, and it makes no sense. As you know, they haven’t included any creative subjects as part of the Ebacc, which is an absolutely short-sighted insanity. The government’s complete lack of vision and its complete focus on stem subjects beggars belief and I think they’re making one of the biggest mistakes in British government.

We’re not going to regenerate and reinvent our manufacturing industry that’s for sure. So if you look at the skills we need not only in computing engineering but in programming software development, in games design, advertising as part of the creative service industry, design, and we’re recognised as one of the best quality in the world in the UK. Creative services as a percentage of GDP is higher here than any other country, so why would you not want to support, promote and build that? It’s not just about the music industry, and obviously our struggling film industry, it’s about developing these great minds.

Rose Etherington: If the government goes ahead with this, what would the creative industries look like in Britain in 20 years time?

Neville Brody: Well in 20 years time, will we still have this level of global commissioning of UK creative services? I would say probably not, especially with China opening hundreds of art schools at the moment, focussing not only on the manufacturing but also on the innovative and creative side, and at the other end marketing and distribution.

So where does that leave the UK? The proportion of our influence creatively compared to the size of the country is massive, so the D&AD Foundation that we’re launching in January, will hopefully start to attract and redirect funds from the creative industry, and from the corporate world that needs the creative industry, and funnel that back into the grassroots of developing opportunity including education.

Rose Etherington: Tell me a bit about how the D&AD foundation would work.

Neville Brody: It’s going to be the place where all of the education activities at D&AD will sit. So it has two kinds of remits, or three in a way. One is that it will be a focusing and an emphasising of all of the educational activities. D&AD does a massive amount [but] it has not surfaced, so people aren’t usually aware of the scope of it.

Secondly, it would help separate educational activities from industry activities, which would be the awards, the book, the membership, talks, stuff like that. Of course there’s the money making side in order to raise endowments and donations directly into the foundation, so it can be used directly to support students in universities.

The third area for me is that D&AD needs to have a more active voice. Historically it’s not really lobbied, it’s not taken on issues, and really kind of left those areas to other people but this is a turning point now. This year will be much more vocal, and I think Laura Jordan-Bambach who is coming [as president] next year would also be vocal in different areas. And I think D&AD has to have a voice, and it does ultimately represent visual designers and advertising in this country. So hopefully expect to hear more from us.

Rose Etherington: You mentioned all of the design schools that are being set up in China. Earlier this week Andrew Marr wrote a piece saying that the RCA could become a Chinese finishing school. How do you feel about that?

Neville Brody: Well, number one, I always call the Royal College an “unfinishing” school. There’s a particular quality and there’s a particular what I call an RCA-ness, which you can’t identify. It’s not about people being tailored for industry. What the Royal College does is develop skilled dangerous minds, otherwise there’s no point in doing it. It develops the minds and individuals that will go out and change the industry. So it’s kind of leadership through innovative thinking really that they’re looking for. This country is not going to be looking at developing finishing schools for Chinese students.

The blindness is the UK government making sure that when people graduate with their BA or MA that they don’t leave the country, so it has the opportunity to capitalise on the skills sets it’s training. A lot of students, especially at the Royal College, want to stay on here and want to contribute, but the government is saying ‘well we’re going to invest in educating for non-UK students, but we have no interest in using that education to help our industries. It’s almost to the point of deportation. It’s just insanity.

And economically, it makes no sense. If you’re categorising non-UK students as immigrants, which this government has done, you’re ignoring the fact that they’re bringing several billion pounds into the country, not only fees but money spent on living accommodation, expenses, etcetera, and now we’re saying at the end of all of that, ‘thank you for your money, now leave.’ An alien visiting would find that hysterically funny. It’s just absurd.

Rose Etherington: So does D&AD plan to tackle this problem of students being classed as immigrants as well?

Neville Brody: It’s certainly on the table for discussion. It’s certainly a part of a much bigger picture. It’s not part of our directly remit, of course, because what’s going to happen in the next few months is that we’re looking at all aspects of how to maintain quality and opportunity in the creative industries in the UK, and I wouldn’t have thought immigration was an area for D&AD to touch. But survival of creative education in the UK is an area we have to touch, so we have to help think about how best to ensure that going forward. Of course, the best thing to ensure this is if the government supports it properly.

Rose Etherington: So what specific things would you like to see the government do in order to support it?

Neville Brody: Money. Some art schools will definitely go out of business in the next five years in this country. It’s unsustainable, with the extra pressures that government’s putting onto art schools; putting pressure on schools to get rid of art in its curriculum. Because it’s saying that it’s going to give money to schools and academies based on the success in the stem subjects. It doesn’t consider creative subjects, so what happens then is that schools will not invest in art or performance or any of those areas because it won’t go to their bottom line. And so schools might end up focusing many of their hours on teaching maths and sciences and English, and may not even offer art in future.

A lot of schools had to close playing fields and sell off land in order to try and raise money, and so sport collapses, and it’s just insanity. It will lead to further collapse and will lead in the end to such a massive need for reinvestment.

Otherwise other countries will be buying up these facilities, and extracting all the profits, and then not paying tax back into this country. I’m all for internationalism but I’m also all for healthy creative industry of this country.

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Dezeen Music Project: Talk To Me by BADEN

This brooding house track is by Brighton-based DJ and producer BADEN. If you’re enjoying the vibe, make sure you check out the other house tracks we’ve featured on Dezeen Music Project here.

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