Zoff eyewear shop by Emmanuelle Moureaux

French designer Emmanuelle Moureaux has fitted out a Japanese spectacle shop with modular boxes in her signature colour blocks.

Located in the Mitsui Outlet Park in Iruma city near Tokyo, the Zoff eyewear shop by Emmanuelle Moureaux features identical rectangular units that have been stacked up to create display tables and counters, or mounted on the wall at various heights to form shelves.

Zoff eyewear shop by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Each one is coated in different hues, which Moureaux says represent “different snapshots from our daily lives, such as the magenta and yellow spreading endlessly in the field of tulips, the pale blue from the crystal clear lake, and the pink petals of cherry blossoms swaying in the wind.”

Two central display tables are made of more blocks in neutral tones and can be reconfigured as required.

Zoff eyewear shop by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Emmanuelle Moureaux has worked in Tokyo since 1996 and her work typically features repetitive elements in an assortment of bright, clear colours. She’s previously applied the style to a bank, a wedding dress and a stool with a transparent seat. See all our stories about design by Emmanuelle Moureaux.

Zoff eyewear shop by Emmanuelle Moureaux

We’ve also featured a former gallery in Paris that’s been converted into an optician’s shop, plus 3D-printed glasses by Ron Arad and others made of water buffalo horn. See all our stories about spectacles and shades.

Zoff eyewear shop by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Photos are by Daisuke Shima/Nacasa & Partners.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Renewal project for the eyewear shop Zoff opened in the outlet shopping center -Mitsui Outlet Park Iruma.

The blue sky between buildings, the pockets of green in the park on the street corner, and the colorful glittering neon at night. These are what we capture during our everyday life in cities. Travelling also gives us different snapshots from our daily lives, such as the magenta and yellow spreading endlessly in the field of tulips, the pale blue from the crystal clear lake, and the pink petals of cherry blossoms swaying in the wind. These sceneries from our experience are captured into rectangular frame, and then rhythmically spread in the space to create a joyful and heartwarming store.

The captured pieces are modularized into blocks of 800mm x 160mm. These modules are then used to design displays, fixtures and mirrors.

Different heights of these rectangular blocks create rhythm in the space which gives a sense of playfulness. This changes the ordinary way of shop displays, which are often too systematic. The design has focused on flexibility, such as the movable display blocks, with the exception of wall mounted display, and the colors representing sceneries can be changed along with the seasons.

The post Zoff eyewear shop by
Emmanuelle Moureaux
appeared first on Dezeen.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank, Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Designer Emmanuelle Moureaux has brought her trademark colour spectrum to a fourth bank branch in Japan by surrounding the facade with brightly coloured sticks (+ slideshow).

Sugamo Shinkin Bank Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

The Tokyo-based French designer wanted to visually tie together the interior of the bank and the street beyond, so she added 29 vertical rods outside the glass facade and 19 behind it.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

“This rainbow shower returns colours and some room for playfulness back to the town,” explains the design team.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

When the bank is open, the glass panels pivot open to let visitors through to an indoor terrace filled with an assortment of colourful chairs.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Two glazed courtyards separate this informal meeting area from the rest of the bank. Each one appears as a glass vitrine and contains bamboo trees intended to reflect the verticality of the sticks.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Located in Ekoda, near Tokyo, this is the fourth Sugamo Shinkin Bank designed by Emmanuelle Moureaux. Others include a Tokyo branch with horizontal bands of colour and a Tokiwadai branch with colourful window recesses. See more banks on Dezeen.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Moureaux has also used coloured sticks in furniture design and previously launched the Stick Chair with narrow rods for legs. See more design by Emmanuelle Moureaux.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Here’s a project description from the design team:


Sugamo Shinkin Bank / Ekoda branch

Concept: rainbow shower

Sugamo Shinkin Bank is a credit union that strives to provide first-rate hospitality to its customers in accordance with its motto: “we take pleasure in serving happy customers”. Ekoda is the forth branch (third for designing the entire building) Emmanuelle Moureaux designs, responding to the client’s expectation: “creating a bank the customers feel happy to visit”.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank, Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

The site is located in a commercial district with many stores. The site’s closeness to the town’s activities – also the heavy traffic and narrow sidewalk – inspired the architect to express this proximity in the building by merging the exterior and interior.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank, Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

The building is offset approximately two metres from the property line, and the timber-decked peripheral space is filled with colourful 9 metre-tall sticks. These 29 exterior sticks, reflected on the transparent glazed façade, mix naturally with the 19 interior sticks placed randomly inside the building. This rainbow shower returns colours and some room for playfulness back to the town.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank, Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Entering the building, the visitors would notice that they are still in an exterior courtyard leading to the bank’s interior. Here also, the inside and outside are integrated. Walking around the glazed courtyard inside, there is a cafe-like open space filled with natural light. The bamboos in the courtyard extend skyward in concert with the colourful sticks.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank, Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

The exterior deck space, interior open space, exterior courtyard, and the interior teller counters compose four layers of spaces. The layers are reflected on the glazing, and, combined with complex shadows, they create depth in the space.

Sugamo Shinkin Bank Ekoda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Above: site plan – click for larger image

The post Sugamo Shinkin Bank, Ekoda
by Emmanuelle Moureaux
appeared first on Dezeen.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Tokyo 2011: French designer Emmanuelle Moureaux presented a wedding dress made from 500 snowflake-like baubles at this year’s DesignTide Tokyo.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Named Toge, which is the Japanese word for ‘thorn’, the spiky shapes are made from wire that is more commonly used for the strings inside pianos.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

The bristles of the modular products were slotted together to create the dress, but can also be used to construct freestanding sculptures and partitions in an assortment of rainbow colours.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Emmanuelle Moureaux is based in Tokyo and exhibited another modular product at the design festival there last year – you can see more of our stories about the designer here.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Photography is by Daisuke Shimokawa and Nacasa & Partners.

The following text is from Emmanuelle Moureaux:


“Sharp-pointed thorns. It is a manifestation of its aggressiveness that it will not let others come near, and a manifestation of its own weakness. Aggressiveness and Weakness. When wrapped around in the two conflicting senses, I feel like reaching out and touch the pain in spite of myself.”

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

“toge” meaning “ thorn” in Japanese, is a modular product that combines (interlocking to each other) freely to create spaces.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

“toge” could be used as an architectural module for creating spaces, walls or partitions, or for creating free-standing sculptural pieces.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

“toge” looks soft and light as dandelion flowers but is hard as a sea urchin or chesnut.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

For its 1st presentation at DESIGNTIDE TOKYO 2011, emmanuelle designed a wedding dress made up of 500 pieces.

Toge by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Material: piano wire / epoxy resin
Weight: 2g / toge
Size: 147mm
Colors: 14 colors + white


See also:

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eda by Emmanuelle
Moureaux
Sticks by Emmanuelle
Moureaux
Stick Chair by
Emmanuelle Moureaux

Sugamo Shinkin Design

Située à Shimura au Japon, Emmanuelle Moureaux a encore une fois repensé le design intérieur et extérieur de l’architecture Sugamo Shinkin Bank. En jouant sur les couleurs de l’arc-en-ciel en couches, ce bâtiment donne un aspect rafraîchissant grâce à des espaces intelligemment pensés.



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Previously on Fubiz

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eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Tokyo 2010: designer Emmanuelle Moureaux presented eda, a prototype lightweight, modular product that combines to  create cloud-like forms, at DesignTide Tokyo 2010 earlier this month.

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

The installation of eda, which means ‘branch’ in Japanese, consisted of 2,000 interlocking carbon twigs.

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Moureaux suspended coloured twigs from the ceiling and used white ones to create a free-standing structure on the floor.

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Read all our stories about Emmanuelle Moureaux here.

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

See all our stories on Tokyo 2010 in our special category.

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Photographs are by Nacasa & Partners.

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Here’s little bit of text from the designer:


eda by emmanuelle moureaux

Beauty shown by plants in the natural world. Spreads of trees, colors of flowers, flows of leaf veins, linkages of cells. Everything is in a systematic harmony. In eda, forms are determined according to the natural system.

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

eda is assemblages of fine lines. Each line exists straight, And large complexities contain small simplicities. Biological forms overlap rhythmically, Link air with another and create new space orders. (“eda” meaning “ branch” in Japanese, is a product which creates spaces)

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

Design: emmanuelle moureaux
Prototype fabrication: ACM Inc.
Material: carbon
Weight: 2.5g / eda
Size: 250mm
Colors: 16 colors + white

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux

DESIGNTIDE TOKYO 2010 (2010/10/30-11/3)
For the first exhibition of “eda”, Emmanuelle designed an installation using 2000 pieces (eda). 900 colorful “eda” (suspended type) and 1100 white “eda” (standing alone type) composed and structured the space.

eda by Emmanuelle Moureaux


See also:

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Sticks by Emmanuelle Moureaux for Issey MiyakeStick Chair by
Emmanuelle Moureaux
Snowflake by Tokujin Yoshioka for Kartell

Sugamo Shinkin Bank

Un travail d’Emmanuelle Moureaux avec la décoration de cette banque Sugamo Shinkin à Tokyo. Une façade pleine de couleurs et de motifs se poursuivant à l’intérieur avec des graphismes d’arbres. Les plantes ont été introduites dans 7 vitrines éclairées à la lumière naturelle.



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Previously on Fubiz