Google doodle celebrates Antoni Gaudí’s birthday

Google doodle celebrates Antoni Gaudí's 161st birthday

News: today’s Google doodle honours the work of Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí, who would have been 161 today.

The illustrated interpretation of Google’s logo depicts stylised versions of some of Gaudí’s most famous works, including Park Guell and Casa Mila in Barcelona.

Sagrada Familia by Gaudi from Miguel/Shutterstock
Image of the Sagrada Familia courtesy of Migel/Shutterstock.com

Gaudí is one of Spain’s most celebrated architects and his hometown of Barcelona is home to many examples of his organic, Gothic-inspired architecture.

The Sagrada Familia church, which Gaudí designed before his death in 1926, is still under construction and is scheduled for completion between 2026 and 2028.

Gaudí’s work has influenced many contemporary designs, including Dutch designer Bam Geenen’s chair based on his method for designing arches of optimum strength.

Park Guell by Gaudi from Shutterstock
Image of Park Guell courtesy of Shutterstock.com

Previous Google doodles include an animation based on the famous film title sequences by American graphic designer Saul Bass, and an illustrated version of its logo resembling the architecture of Mies van der Rohe.

Yesterday Google Street View launched its first skyscraper interior, which allows users to explore inside the world’s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.

See all our stories about Google and design »

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Henning Larsen 1925-2013

Henning Larsen (1925-2013)

News: Danish architect Henning Larsen has died in Copenhagen at the age of 87.

Henning Larsen founded his practice in 1959, becoming one of Denmark’s most prolific modern architects. Celebrated buildings in his home country include the Copenhagen Business School Dalgas Have and the Royal Danish Opera, while abroad he is best-known for designing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs building in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and the Malmö City Library in Sweden.

Malmö City Library
Malmö City Library, Sweden

His most recent projects include the Harpa Concert Hall and Conference Centre in Reykjavik, Iceland, which won this year’s European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture, the Mies van der Rohe Award.

Larsen was praised by critics for the quality of light and shadow in his buildings and in 2012 he became the first Danish recipient of the Praemium Imperiale arts prize.

Harpa Concert and Conference Centre in Reykjavík by Henning Larsen Architects
Harpa Concert and Conference Centre in Reykjavík, Iceland

Although he was no longer directly involved with projects at Henning Larsen Architects, he closely followed the development of new designs and would often discuss details with his staff.

From 1968 to 1995 Larsen was a professor of architecture at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, where he himself had trained as an architect.

The Royal Danish Opera, Copenhagen
The Royal Danish Opera, Copenhagen

He died at home in his sleep on 22 June.

See all our stories about Henning Larsen »

Here’s a statement from Henning Larsen Architects:


It is with great sorrow that we have learned of the death of Henning Larsen. Architect Henning Larsen died in his sleep in his home in Copenhagen Saturday 22 June 2013. Henning Larsen was 87 years old.

In 1959, Henning Larsen founded his own architecture studio, and he was active for more than 50 years. Henning Larsen’s life work counts a number of significant building works in Denmark and abroad. He was often described as a “master the light”. From 1968 to 1995, he was a professor at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture in Copenhagen.

Henning Larsen’s significance for architecture goes far beyond his own projects. He has inspired generations of Danish and international architects with initiatives such as the architectural journal Skala, which he published for more than 10 years. His unique approach to architecture, combining a sharp artistic and analytical eye, allowed him to ask the exact question that grasped the opportunities of a given project. His tool was space and daylight.

Henning Larsen has received a number of awards and recognitions. Most recently, His Royal Highness the Prince Consort of Denmark’s Europe Nostra Award 2013 and in 2012 what is often referred to as the Nobel Prize of art, the Praemium Imperiale. In 2001, he established the Henning Larsen Foundation with the objective of promoting and disseminating architecture in its broad sense.

Henning looked upon the world as a palette of professional, artistic challenges and thus he was also one of few architects in his generation who actually worked in the entire world. Throughout his work as an architect, he managed to attract talented architects from all over the world. After their time working in his studio, they went home as ambassadors for Danish architecture.

Among Henning Larsen’s most important works abroad, you find the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Riyadh (Saudi Arabia, 1984), The Danish Embassy in Riyadh (Saudi Arabia, 1987) and Malmö City Library (Sweden, 1997). In Denmark, his most essential works include Copenhagen Business School Dalgas Have (1989), Enghøj Church (1994), Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek (1996) and the Royal Danish Opera (2004).

Henning Larsen’s influence on architecture has been grand. He created a culture in the company that is driven by professional ambition and a desire to work with projects where architecture can make a difference. This is a heritage that we will carry with us.

The funeral will take place in silence.

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Dezeen Music Project: Gettin’ Funky by Wave Crushers

This deep house track by German producers Wave Crushers has a wonderfully laid-back groove – the perfect way to ease into the weekend.

The track was submitted to Dezeen Music Project by German label Aux Audio.

You can listen to more house music on Dezeen Music Project here.

About Dezeen Music Project | More tracks | Submit your track

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Furniture retailer Dwell ceases trading

Furniture retailer Dwell caeses trading

News: UK furniture retailer Dwell has become the latest high-street design brand to go into administration, ceasing trading with immediate effect and closing all 23 of its stores.

Dwell‘s staff have been asked to stay at home while administrators are appointed. The company’s website has been taken offline and customers who have already placed orders have been advised to contact their card issuer.

Dwell, which specialises in contemporary furniture, lighting and accessories, opened its first store in Balham, south London in 2003.

Of the 23 existing stores, the majority are located in London and the south east of England, with others in Birmingham, Manchester, Bristol, Cardiff, Leeds, Nottingham, Solihull, Cheltenham and Glasgow. It operates a concession at the House of Fraser department store in London, which has also closed. The announcement means that around 300 jobs are at risk.

A spokesperson for Dwell said: “The business had been working with its advisers, to secure further working capital for the business and was actively in the process of talking to a number of interested parties. However, despite this interest, it did not progress. As a result we have been left with no option but to close the business with immediate effect.”

In 2011, furniture retailer Habitat was forced to place 30 of its stores into administration. It managed to retain three stores in the UK and set up outlets in branches of DIY retailer Homebase in a move that was criticised by Elle Decoration editor Michelle Ogundehin, who claimed Habitat was “as good as dead”.

In a movie filmed at last year’s Clerkenwell Design Week, producer Thorsten van Elten told Dezeen that online shopping is a “better model” because “the rents and rates on the high street are outrageous,” but added that people still love physical stores.

In an opposing move though, online homeware retailer Made.com opened a physical showroom in London last year, with CEO and founder Ning Li saying that a physical space was a good way to supplement the online shopping experience.

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Dezeen Music Project: FM002 by Simplex

The music we used on our first Dezeen and MINI World Tour report from Berlin is a tech-house track by Cardiff producer Simplex. We featured the track on Dezeen Music Project last year, and FM002 is another track taken from the same EP, albeit with a very different vibe.

You can listen to more tracks by Simplex on Dezeen Music Project here.

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Dezeen Music Project: Octave by Junior Size

The music we used on today’s Clerkenwell Design Week movie is a track called Octave by French producer Junior Size. It’s taken from his recent two-track EP called Trauma, released on the excellent Atelier du Sample record label.

The EP is currently available for free download.

Listen to more tracks by Junior Size on Dezeen Music Project here.

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Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum names new director

dezeen_Caroline-Baumann

News: the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum in New York has named Caroline Baumann as its new director.

Baumann will take up the role on 16 June, and will be responsible for overseeing the museum’s strategic direction and managing the renovation of the museum and the reinstallation of its galleries, which are due to reopen in autumn 2014.

“We’re rolling out an extraordinary plan for a vibrant future and establishing Cooper-Hewitt as the Smithsonian’s design lens on the world,” says Baumann. “The new Cooper-Hewitt visitor experience –physical and digital – will be a global first, a transformative force for all in 2014 and beyond, impacting the way people think about and understand design.”

She succeeds industrial designer Bill Moggridge, who was the museum’s director for two years until his death in September 2012. Baumann has been acting director of the museum since then.

She also previously served as associate director, acting director and deputy director at the museum, and worked at the Museum of Modern Art in New York from 1995 to 2001.

Previous exhibitions at the museum include a presentation of products using sustainable materials by designers including Yves Béhar and Stephen Burks.

Dezeen was in New York last month for Design Week NYC as part of our MINI World Tour. In two videos filmed with designer Stephen Burks, he told us that New Yorkers are becoming more interested in quality of life and took us on a stroll along the High Line elevated park.

See all of our stories about New York »

Portrait is by © Erin Baiano

Here’s some more information from the museum:


Caroline Baumann Named Director of the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum

Caroline Baumann has been named director of Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum in New York, effective June 16. Since joining Cooper-Hewitt in 2001, she has held many leadership positions at the museum, most recently as acting director.

Baumann will oversee the only museum in the United States devoted exclusively to historic and contemporary design. In this role, she will strengthen Cooper-Hewitt’s reputation to educate, inspire and empower people through design and oversee the renovation of the museum and the reinstallation of its galleries, which are set to reopen in fall 2014.

“Caroline is passionate about design and reaching people—physically and digitally—with its lessons and insights,” said Smithsonian Secretary Wayne Clough. “She has been key in the museum’s growing success over the years and has been especially adept at forming substantive partnerships in New York, in Washington, across the nation and, indeed, around the world.”

“I am honored to serve as the fifth director of Cooper-Hewitt at this seminal time in the museum’s history,” said Baumann. “We’re rolling out an extraordinary plan for a vibrant future and establishing Cooper-Hewitt as the Smithsonian’s design lens on the world. The new Cooper-Hewitt visitor experience—physical and digital—will be a global first, a transformative force for all in 2014 and beyond, impacting the way people think about and understand design.”

Baumann has been acting director of the museum since September 2012. She also served as associate director, acting director and deputy director between 2006 and 2009. From 1995 to 2001, Baumann worked at the Museum of Modern Art, where she raised funds for the museum’s Yoshio Taniguchi building project among other accomplishments. Before that, she was the director of development at the Calhoun School in Manhattan and art book editor at George Braziller Publishers. She received a master’s degree in medieval art from the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University and a bachelor’s degree in the history of art and French literature from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine.

Baumann is a member of the Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee for the U.S. Postal Service and the NYC Landmarks50 Advisory Committee and a director of the Royal College of Art U.S. Alumni Group Advisory Board. She is a member of the Collective, which staged the Collective.1 Design Fair in May in New York. Baumann is also a member of the NYCxDesign steering committee for New York City’s citywide event showcasing design.

During her tenure, Baumann has worked on a wide range of issues, including developing and implementing the museum’s strategic plan, leading the most ambitious fundraising campaign in the museum’s history and managing the museum’s educational, curatorial and digital efforts. Baumann is the liaison to the 32-member board of trustees. She played a critical role in the museum’s master planning process from 2004 to 2006 and participated in the selection of design architect Gluckman Mayner Architects and executive architect Beyer Blinder Belle.

Cooper-Hewitt’s main facility, housed in the Carnegie Mansion at East 91st Street and Fifth Avenue, is undergoing an expansion as part of a $64 million capital campaign that was launched in 2006, and includes a $54 million expansion and $10 million endowment. The expansion includes enlarged and enhanced facilities for exhibitions, collections display, education programming and the National Design Library, and an increased endowment. Baumann spearheaded this $54 million capital campaign.

Phase one of the expansion involved renovating the museum’s East 90th Street townhouses in order to free administrative space within the Carnegie Mansion and to create 60 percent more exhibition gallery space. The renovation of the townhouses was completed in September 2011. The second phase of the renovation, which involves mansion restoration and the creation of a new 7,000-square-foot gallery, is 100 percent funded and construction is nearly 60 percent complete.

During the mansion renovation, Cooper-Hewitt’s usual schedule of exhibitions, education programs and events are being staged at various off-site locations, including the Cooper-Hewitt Design Center in Harlem, which Baumann secured. The museum’s “Design in the Classroom” program, which teaches 21st-century skills by using design as a tool across the curriculum, has served 36,000 New York City K–12 public school children during the past two years.

Baumann has also overseen the expansion of the Cooper-Hewitt’s digital frontier with the launch of Object of the Day, a section of the website that features a new collection work daily and draws from more than 217,000 objects spanning 30 centuries.

Baumann succeeds Bill Moggridge, who was Cooper-Hewitt’s director for two years until his death in September 2012.

Secretary Clough named Baumann on the recommendation of a search committee chaired by Richard Kurin, the Smithsonian’s Under Secretary for History, Art, and Culture, with Kurt Andersen, Barbara Mandel and Judy Francis Zankel, all members of the museum’s board of trustees. The committee also included Emily Rafferty, president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Michael Caruso, editor-in-chief of Smithsonian magazine; and Seb Chan, director of digital and emerging media at Cooper-Hewitt.

About Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum
The museum has more than 70 full-time staff members, including curators, conservators and design education specialists, and the fiscal year 2013 operating budget is $16 million. The museum is 70 percent funded by earned and contributed income, the remainder coming from federal appropriations. Cooper-Hewitt presents compelling perspectives on the impact of design through educational programs, exhibitions and publications. International in scope and possessing one of the most diverse and comprehensive collections of design works in existence, the museum’s rich holdings range from Egypt’s Late Period/New Kingdom (1100 B.C.) to the present day and total more than 217,000 objects.

The museum was founded in 1897 by Amy, Eleanor and Sarah Hewitt—granddaughters of industrialist Peter Cooper—as part of The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art. A branch of the Smithsonian since 1967, Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum is housed in the Andrew Carnegie Mansion on Fifth Avenue in New York City.

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Zaha Hadid Architects to design stadium for Qatar World Cup

Zaha Hadid Architects to design stadium for Qatar World Cup

News: Zaha Hadid Architects has been appointed to design a new stadium in Qatar that will host matches during the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

The studio will work with engineering and construction specialist AECOM to deliver the scheme in the city of Al Wakrah, which is 12 miles from Doha.

During the tournament the Al Wakrah stadium will seat 45,000 spectators, with the capacity reduced to 20,000 as part of the legacy plan.

Last year, sports architecture firm Populous scrapped plans to air condition a stadium it is designing for the tournament, saying these systems are too expensive and “notoriously unsustainable” when used in desert environments.

Zaha Hadid Architects has also been selected to design the new national stadium for Japan and was the firm behind the Aquatics Centre for the London 2012 Olympics, which recently had two temporary spectator stands removed from its sides.

The Aquatics Centre was criticised for providing some spectators with a restricted view, although the studio claimed that this was not their fault.

See all stories about stadium design »
See all architecture and design by Zaha Hadid »

Here is some more information from AECOM:


AECOM wins Al Wakrah 2022 FIFA World Cup stadium contract in Qatar
03-Jun-2013

AECOM announced today that it has been selected to provide design consultancy and construction supervision services for the Al Wakrah Stadium and Precinct for the 2022 FIFA World Cup Qatar.

The Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee has appointed AECOM, in association with Zaha Hadid Architects, as the design consultant for the project.

Al Wakrah will serve as a host city for a 2022 FIFA World Cup stadium and precinct, and is located approximately 12 miles south of Doha. It is one of the oldest inhabited areas in Qatar, with a rich cultural heritage evidenced by its traditional Islamic architecture, historical buildings, distinctive mosques and archaeological sites.

The stadium will have a tournament capacity of 45,000 spectators during the games and, by using modular best practice design, the number will be reduced to 20,000 spectators for the legacy program in Qatar. Another important element of the design project will be the integration of cooling-technology systems with climate-control requirements for renewable energy production.

“We are delighted to be involved with the 2022 FIFA World Cup program and to support the Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee,” said AECOM Chairman and Chief Executive Officer John M. Dionisio. “This is an exciting time for Qatar, and our global team of forward-thinking sports experts is well equipped to meet the challenges that a project of this caliber demands.”

The vision set by the Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee is one that embraces the cultural heritage of the host city and the adjacent historical Qatari settlement of Al Wukair. Incorporating this identity will be a crucial part of the stadium design and enhancing the fan experience.

Work on the project is set to begin immediately.

About AECOM

AECOM is a global provider of professional technical and management support services to a broad range of markets, including transportation, facilities, environmental, energy, water and government. With approximately 45,000 employees around the world, AECOM is a leader in all of the key markets that it serves. AECOM provides a blend of global reach, local knowledge, innovation and technical excellence in delivering solutions that create, enhance and sustain the world’s built, natural, and social environments. A Fortune 500 company, AECOM serves clients in more than 140 countries and had revenue of $8.2 billion during the 12 months ended March 31, 2013. More information on AECOM and its services can be found at www.aecom.com.

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Brazil opens first solar-powered stadium ahead of 2014 World Cup

Brazil opens first solar-powered stadium, photo by Luan S.R.

News: a 1960s football stadium in Brazil has become the first of several in the country to be equipped with a solar-powered roof in preparation for next year’s FIFA World Cup.

The Mineirão Stadium in the south-eastern city of Belo Horizonte, originally built in 1965, has been fitted with a 1.4MW solar array on its rooftop.

The €12.5 million (£10.7 million) project will see energy fed back into the grid rather than being used directly by the stadium.

The next ground to be converted is the Mané Garrincha stadium in Brasilia, which will be fitted with a 2.5MW solar array providing enough solar energy to power nearly half the stadium.

Organisers had initially hoped to install solar arrays in all 12 of the 2014 World Cup venues, but with just over a year until the tournament starts, that target appears to have been lowered.

Brazil opens first solar-powered stadium ahead of 2014 World Cup
Mineirão Stadium, photo by ME/Portal da Copa/Nitro Imagens

Earlier this year, the stadium in Rio de Janeiro that was set to host athletics tournaments during the 2016 Olympics was closed indefinitely due to structural problems with its roof.

We recently reported on plans for a new basketball stadium on the waterfront in San Francisco and news that construction has begun on a football stadium in Bordeaux, France, designed by Herzog & de Meuron – see all stadiums.

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Dezeen Music Project: Baby (remix) by Debonair

Here’s a new track by UK DJ Debonair, a deep house remix of an original track called Baby by Norwegian producer Finnebassen. Both tracks, along with two other remixes, are available on an EP released by House of Disco records.

You can listen to other tracks by Debonair on Dezeen Music Project here.

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