Glass, timber and stone showroom created by Toyo Ito for Kinnasand’s “sensitive fabric”

Milan 2014: Japanese architect Toyo Ito spoke to Dezeen about his design for textile brand Kinnasand’s first Milan showroom and his “site specific” architecture (+ interview + slideshow).

Kinnasand, a company founded in Sweden over 200 years ago and now owned by Danish textile brand Kvadrat, asked the 2013 Pritzker Prize-winner Toyo Ito to develop its showroom interior for Milan design week.

Kinnasand Milan showroom by Toyo Ito

Ito rarely designs interior projects, but in an exclusive interview with Dezeen the architect said that he agreed to collaborate with Kinnasand as he felt that several of its fabrics were reminiscent of the transparency and natural influences inherent in some of his architectural projects.

“What I have felt from the start is that it would be important to create an architecture that is more site specific, that is going to take into account what surrounds the human begins,” said Ito, who discussed the underlying ethos that connects the wide variety of styles and forms he has experimented with.

“When I think about a new piece of architecture, I think about making it as if it was a piece of clothing that must be wrapped around a human being,” he said.

Kinnasand Milan showroom by Toyo Ito

Ito’s career has spanned more than four decades. Predominantly based in Japan, his best known projects include the Mikimoto Building, created for a jewellery company in the Ginza district of Tokyo – which features a series of irregular glazed openings all over its facade – and the Tod’s building in Tokyo with criss-crossed concrete bracing that echoes the silhouettes of the trees on the street it faces on to.

His more recent projects include the Sendai Mediatheque – a transparent glass cube that aimed to remove some of the architectural barriers around how space should be used. In 2011 he completed work on the Toyo Ito School of Architecture in Ehime, completed in 2011.

At the last Venice Architecture Biennale in 2012, he curated Japan’s award-winning pavilion presenting alternative housing solutions for the aftermath of the country’s 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Kinnasand Milan showroom by Toyo Ito

For Kinnasand’s showroom, he chose to translate the properties of the company’s textiles into the materials used for the showroom’s walls, floors and ceiling.

“Some of them were transparent, others were semi-transparent, all of them were very light and it really felt like they could float over the whole space of the showroom,” said Ito, describing the fabrics.

“I decided that the architecture for this space needed to be something that would not overwhelm the essence of these fabrics. It needed to be something that could leave the textiles the possibility to float around the space,” he added.

“This is the image that I had in my mind and this is also why I decided to use the reflective glass, but at the same time I decided it needed to be something with a not too strong reflection. I wanted to create a soft but deep environment for the showroom.”

Kinnasand Milan showroom by Toyo Ito

The glass walls have a frosted finish that reduces their reflectivity and are complemented by the dull shine of the electropolished steel panels on the ceiling and the polished white limestone floor tiles.

Two curving metal poles suspended from the ceiling provide rails over which the fabrics can be draped to enclose the central area of the showroom and form its only product displays.

A storage area for further fabric samples is concealed behind floor-to-ceiling wooden doors featuring minimal metal handles at one end of the space.

Kinnasand Milan showroom by Toyo Ito

The clean and bright aesthetic is enhanced by basic furnishings including a rounded meeting table and chairs made from pale wood, which reference the brand’s Scandinavian heritage.

Lighting is provided by spotlights and strips of LEDs hidden behind the edges of the ceiling that wash the walls in light that can be adjusted between different colours to alter the mood of the space.

Read the edited transcript from our interview with Toyo Ito:


Marcus Fairs: How did you get to come into contact with the brand and how did you apply your architectural ideas to an interior?

Toyo Ito: About one and a half years ago, I had a visit from a Kinnasand person that arrived in Tokyo with a suitcase full of textiles and I was asked if I would be interested in doing the interior design for the showroom. And I have to say that usually I don’t do just interior design, I do architecture. But in this case, the textiles that I had the chance to see were so beautiful, so brilliant, that I really wanted to do just the interior design for the space.

Marcus Fairs: Tell us about the way you’ve used the space here.

Toyo Ito: I had the chance to take first a look at all the textiles of Kinnasand and I realised that is was very sensitive fabric. Some of them were transparent, others are semi transparent, all of them were very light and it really felt like they could float over the whole space of the showroom. They could actually envelop, they could wrap the whole environment.

So I decided that the architecture for this space needed to be something that would not overwhelm the essence of these fabrics. It needed to be something that could leave to these the textiles the possibility to float around the space. This is the image that I had in my mind and this is also why I decided to use this reflective glass that you can see here but at the same time, I decided it needed to be something with a not too strong reflection. I wanted to create a soft but deep environment for this showroom.

In order to have the materials of this architecture not take all the attention in this space, I give a lot of attention to small details and this is why I decided to choose simple materials. As you can see for those doors, you have a surface that is very plain and flat but at the same time is very simple and linear. So you do not have a frame where the doors are actually hidden, you have some doors that become the surface itself of a very linear construction, so that it could envelop this whole environment. This is something that I really wanted to give great attention to in the details.

Kinnasand Milan showroom by Toyo Ito

Marcus Fairs: The white fabric with the pattern of circular dots on it reminds me of the facade of the Mikimoto building in Ginza, Tokyo, which has a similar pattern of circular windows. Did you spot that similarity?

Toyo Ito: Absolutely, I think that the fabric right behind me is perfect for my architecture. In relation to the building of Mikimoto in Ginza, it has got a very simple surface with several sized holes in it. Also, just by having a look at the fabric behind me, I think I would really like to use Kinnasand’s fabrics and textiles in my own architecture.

Toyo Ito’s Mikimoto building. Photo by Iwan Baan

Marcus Fairs: Throughout your career, there’s a lot of different forms you use and different structural solutions. How would you describe your approach to architecture?

Toyo Ito: As you said, my style, the materials I’ve been using, has changed throughout several eras. Also the shape and the form of my architecture. But there is one thing that is consistent, which is that my own architecture is something made for human beings. You have other architects that think if human beings are not a part of the particular architecture, that architecture will look even more beautiful. I do not think so. I think that architecture is something that must be made for human begins. That human beings must be partners with the architecture itself. So when I think about a new piece of architecture, I think about making it as if it was a piece of clothing that must be wrapped around a human being. This is my image of architecture.

Marcus Fairs: Sendai Mediatheque was a hugely revolutionary building because of the structure and the way it used data, and the Mikimoto building is fun and it has a pattern on it. So what is the link between those two different architectures?

Toyo Ito: Both the Sendai Mediatheque and the Mikimoto building have got a very important point which is the structure. Of course what I wanted to create was a kind of structure that had not yet been seen until that very moment. But what I wanted to focus my attention on is that when you decide to use a new kind of structure, you have to think of how you can make it as human as possible. To turn it into a human space as much as possible.

Sendai Mediatheque, 1995 – 2000, Miyagi, Japan. Photo by Nacasa & Partners Inc.

For the Sendai Mediatheque, I decided to use pieces of wood like tubes that would give the human being inside the space the idea of being surround by a forest – so you have a human being that can enjoy a video or just some time inside the forest. And for the Mikimoto building, of course that was also commercial architecture, so we didn’t have the chance of making the interior design. As for the main architecture, I decided that it was also interesting in that case to have the light entering the building as if it were through the leaves of a forest and so in both cases, you have a very natural element that is strongly felt by the human being inside the environment and that’s the common point in my architecture.

Kinnasand Milan showroom by Toyo Ito

Marcus Fairs: And the Tod’s building in Omatesando in Tokyo has a glass facade with large tree shapes set in it.

Toyo Ito: Of course Tod’s even more than the Mikimoto building, you would have the possibility to see a very strong and direct wooden silhouette, wooden structure. In that case, we didn’t have that much of a volume we could use and also the facade was L-shaped. In that case we decided to have a wooden structure and having it completely surrounded by wood you would feel like you were really surrounded and wrapped by nature and this is the image that I had when I created the design.

What I have felt from the start is that it would be important to create an architecture that is more site specific, that is going to take into account what surrounds the human begins. So it would be important to create an architecture that destroys that distance between human begins and nature. Up to now, human beings have lived in environments that are very far from nature and actually I would like the chance for human beings to live inside nature and to be surrounded by nature.

TOD’S Omotesando Building, 2002 – 2004, Tokyo. Photo by Nacasa & Partners Inc.

Of course you have to take one step at a time, and I think that if we do take one step at a time in that direction we can achieve some kind of evolution. And I can also tell you that to a certain extent, we are already going towards that direction, and if we continue completely towards the direction and arrive at the goal we will be able to enjoy a much more lively life. We will get back to a more primitive instinct that will give us the possibility to be more natural in our everyday life. Like animals to a certain point, having the possibility to completely enjoy the surroundings and that is the kind of architecture that I think we should all aim for.

Marcus Fairs: And when you say “we”, do you mean “we” as an architectural office, or “we” as a society?

Toyo Ito: Of course I mean my personal office but not only just that. I would like to think I am extending the meaning of what I just said to all people who are currently making architecture.

The post Glass, timber and stone showroom created by
Toyo Ito for Kinnasand’s “sensitive fabric”
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Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilić

Rubber-coated fabric is pinned to the walls and ceiling of this fashion boutique in Zagreb, Croatia.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Croatian architect Vanja Ilić designed the interior as both a shop and exhibition space for fashion designer Branka Donassy, who has a studio nearby.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

“Not only was the treatment of the fabric inspired by Donassy’s sculptural forms, perfect cuts and avant-garde fashion garments, but all of the textile elements in the implementation of the project were manufactured in Atelier Donassy,” Ilić told Dezeen.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

The shop is located within an old building in the north of the city and the pinned fabric reveals the outline of an existing barrel-vaulted ceiling.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Lighting is positioned behind the material and diffuses through as a subtle glow. Meanwhile, clothing can be suspended from hooks at each of the pinch-points.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Black and white curtains surround changing rooms at the back of the store, while the few solid walls and surfaces are made from black-painted chunky chipboard.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

We’ve previously featured a couple of fashion boutiques with fabric interiors, including a temporary store in Budapest and a Melbourne shop covered in tights.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

See more fabric interiors on Dezeen »

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Photography is by Miljenko Bernfest.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Here’s a project description from Vanja Ilić:


Donassy Open Atelier, temporary exhibition space and shop, Zagreb, 2012

The Donassy Open Atelier project created a temporary, flexible showroom whose purpose is to exhibit the work of the fashion designer Branka Donassy and other visiting artists. The existing storefront is in a historicist building, in a zone between Zagreb’s Upper and Lower Town. It has a barrel vault ceiling and is transformed with minimal budget and no building interventions. Architecture and fashion overlap, with the fashion design fabrication techniques completing the unique conceptual whole. The concept references exploration of avant-garde forms, construction and the meticulous nature of the artist’s work itself.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

The basic element of spatial design here is an elastic translucent cloth tailored and sewn according to the principles of couture, with no additional construction, anchored into the existing structure just with bolts, in a dotted pattern, which in the end resulted in an autonomous voluminous structure. Thus the whole space is draped in an elastic membrane which is simultaneously a form making element as well as a system to accomplish a diffuse and uniformed lighting, thanks to fluorescent tubes installed between existing vaulted ceiling and the translucent membrane itself. The anchoring elements are at the same time hooks for exhibits. The clothes racks are flexible and mobile so as to ensure quick transformation of space when needed. The rectangular black rubber coated fabric surface on the façade frames the front glass door, covering the damaged existing façade and accentuating the entrance, being a clear link between two worlds, the interior and exterior one. The floor is finished in contrast with the translucent luminous interior membrane, using black painted OSB panels.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Name of the object: Donassy open atelier
Address, town: Zagreb, Croatia
Author: Vanja Ilić
Architectural office: Vanja Ilić Architecture

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Client: Donassy open atelier
Net area: 35 m2
Project: year 2012
Completed: year 2012
Costs 2.600 eur

The post Donassy Open Atelier
by Vanja Ilić
appeared first on Dezeen.

Nanushka Beta Store

Nanushka Beta Store

Six architecture students have created a temporary fashion store in Budapest with a billowed canvas canopy and a sliced firewood floor.

Nanushka Beta Store

Daniel Balo, Zsofi Dobos, Dora Medveczky, Judit Emese Konopas and Noemi Varga hoisted 250 square metres of fabric into place around the walls and ceiling of the shop for clothing brand Nanushka.

Nanushka Beta Store

The firewood circles cover the whole floor of the store, while more sticks are fastened together to provide stands for accessories.

Nanushka Beta Store

Inflatable lights by Hungarian manufacturer Ballon are attached to the fabric ceiling and garments hang from rusted steel racks.

Nanushka Beta Store

Other popular fabric interiors we’ve featured include a hostel where guest sleep in fabric pods and a shop with hosiery stretched across the walls – see all the stories here.

Nanushka Beta Store

Photography is by Tamas Bujnovszky.

Here’s some more text from Daniel Balo:


Nanushka Beta Store

Located in the heart of Budapest and created for the 2011 autumn / winter season, the new Nanushka retail space aims to emphasis the brand’s core values and contrast the sometimes overwhelming racket of the urban experience.

Nanushka Beta Store

The young Hungarian fashion designer Sandra Sandor handpicked a team of enthusiastic graduates after posting an ad in several design schools. The selected architecture students, namely Daniel Balo, Zsofia Dobos, Dora Medveczky, Judit Emese Konopas and Noemi Varga, arrived to the team from separate universities and different classes. Working together for the first time, they had no more than three short weeks to finish the project.

Nanushka Beta Store

Quick and creative solutions had to be found to complete the task within the short deadline. However, they faced other constraints: they had to come up with a design that would leave the interior unharmed (only minor drilling was permitted) and also had to work with a relatively low budget. Also, the retail space in question had an unusually elongated shape. These were the circumstances under which they would attempt to create a natural, warm interior that would be in harmony with the values of the Nanushka brand.

Nanushka Beta Store

As inspiration for their design they used the wilderness and elements from classical wedding tents and barn weddings. Accordingly, they gathered together raw materials such as cotton, linen, firewood and rusted steel for the design.

First they created a rigging system for the 250 square meter canvas that would drape the interior by pulling cable wires below the ceiling. Running from front to back they were able to hoist the canvas into the air and let it fall and flow in a way that basically wrapped the entire retail space from the inside.

Nanushka Beta Store

They then sliced firewood into little circles and laid them out to create flooring. Small display stands were built from logs of wood that sprouted from the ground. Linen poufs and Ballon Lamps sharing the same cylinder shape strengthened the organic flow of the space, while the strict, geometric forms of the counter and fitting rooms, as well as the rusted steel racks created a firm counterpoint and a calm balance. Contrasts were also created with the choice of materials through the combination of rusty, rough, smooth and soft surfaces, all soothing variations of tranquil, clean, quiet white.

The use of these elements and materials was highly eco-friendly as their recycling was actually the basis of the entire design concept.

Nanushka Beta Store

Project information:
Project: Nanushka Beta Store
Location: Fashion Street, Budapest, Hungary
Client: Sandra Sandor – Nanushka
Design: Daniel Balo, Zsofi Dobos, Dora Medveczky, Judit Emese Konopas, Noemi Varga
Construction: Tamas Lindwurm – Honti Kft.
Lamps: Ballon Lamp Hungary
Photo: Tamas Bujnovszky
The project in numbers:
Gross area: 80 m2
Design and construction period: 3 weeks Lasting: November 2011 – February 2012 Canvas for the tent installation: 250 m2 Fire wood: 5 m3
Budget: 2000 €

ReOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

Billowing fabric mushrooms by New York designers Situ Studio have cropped up in the great hall of the Brooklyn Museum.

Watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

Pleated fabric surrounds the 16 columns that support the ceiling of the first-floor hall, located between galleries, a cafe and a bookshop.

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

Acrylic-stone benches and ledges encircle the base of each mushroom.

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

The exhibition will remain in place until 15 January 2012.

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

Other fabric interiors from the Dezeen archive include a hotel with a rippling ceiling and a showroom where translucent curtains hang from above.

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

Photography is by Keith Sirchio.

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

Here’s some more information from the materials supplier:


Brooklyn Museum utilizes HI-MACS® Solid Surface in the ten month long “reOrder”exhibit

The Brooklyn Museum is a lasting landmark in the New York area that brings more than 450,000 visitors annually to see its acclaimed artistic temporary exhibitions and permanent collections. The Great Hall of the museum, located on the first floor, is a 10,000 square foot room filled with 16 giant columns. The hall which is positioned between the café, museum book store and other creative exhibits, acts as a common area for museum visitors and personnel. It is also currently hosting an exhibit called, “reOrder,” until January 15 of 2012.

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

“reOrder” is a site-specific installation created by Situ Studio, an architectural design studio founded in 2005 in Brooklyn, New York. The installation alters the current classical architecture to help visitors understand the impressive scale of the main entrance, as well as explore the architectural ornamentation that allows the Grand Hall to not only be artfully decorated, but also functional.

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

In order to create the entire installment, LG Hausys donated its solid surfacing material for the project. Slabs of acrylic HI-MACS® Solid Surfaces were used to construct the Great Hall’s furniture. Wrapped benches and tables were positioned at the bottom of the columns, which currently are covered in elaborate fabric designs (pictured above).

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

“LG Hausys’ solid surfacing was used to construct furniture around the base of the 16 large classical columns in the Great Hall,” said Wes Rozen, one of Situ Studio’s five founding partners.  “A specialized computer was used to precisely cut pieces of HI-MACS®, which were then thermoformed into a range of curved shapes and brought together in wedges to encircle the base of the columns.  The finished furniture elements appear as extensions to the existing Doric architectural order, or as entirely new type of architectural ornamentation which is also functional.”

reOrder at the Brooklyn Museum by Situ Studio

Because HI-MACS® Solid Surfaces can be precisely thermoformed, or designed in virtually any size or three-dimensional shape, Situ Studio approached LG Hausys in order to use their materials. LG Hausys donated the material, and a sub-contractor finalized the thermoforming and seating installation. The designers from Situ Studio chose the White Quartz color variation from LG Hausys’ HI-MACS® Solid Surfaces Classic collection.


See also:

.

Rainforest by Patrick
Nadeau for Boffi
The Drop Series by
Olivia Decaris
NET by
Numen/For Use

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

Australian studio Edwards Moore have stretched tights across the walls and throughout the interior of this pop-up fashion store in Melbourne, Australia.

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

Created for Australian fashion brand Arnsdorf, the temporary store was opened for just three days and featured 154 pairs of tights stretched and wrapped around the space.

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

Photographs are by Tony Gorsevski.

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

More projects by Edwards Moore on Dezeen »
More fabric interiors on Dezeen »

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

More retail on Dezeen »
All our interior stories »

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

Here’s a tiny bit of text from the architects:


A cave-like space, providing an intimate setting and backdrop for the Arnsdorf’s Opticks Collection.

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

Inspired by crystalline forms, superman’s fortress of solitude and imagery of rocky landscapes, we reinterpreted an everyday wearable item – stretching and wrapping it to envelop the space in soft hues and showcase the sculptural collection.

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

(using a total of 154 pairs of tights)

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore

Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore


See also:

.

The Edges of the World by Ernesto NetoTape Installation by
For Use/Numen
Green Void by
LAVA

New Room by Nuno Capa

New Room by Nuno Capa

Portuguese studio Nuno Capa have completed the interiors for a hair salon in Braga, Portugal, featuring translucent curtains to partition the space into smaller zones.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Designed for hairdresser Pedro Remy, exposed concrete features throughout the New Room salon and the areas requiring a bit more privacy are divided using corrugated metal.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Double height curtains running on circular tracks enclose workstations to create semi-private booths.

New Room by Nuno Capa

The salon also functions as a training academy.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Photographs are by Rui Pires.

New Room by Nuno Capa

More salons on Dezeen »

New Room by Nuno Capa

More fabric interiors on Dezeen »

New Room by Nuno Capa

Here’s some more information from the graphic designer João Loureiro:


New Room is the latest space of the Portuguese hairdresser Pedro Remy. Hosted in the city of Braga, this innovative space designed by the architect Nuno Capa, it’s contemporary and minimalist.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Aiming to keep sight of the initial construction raw elements such as structural elements in concrete, these dialogues with the intervention of new fixed elements, ensuring the visual balance of a relaxing, comfortable and informal environment. It promotes the spatial fluidity for those who circulate, giving a special and different character to the workroom.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Alongside innovation, New Room offers an extensive menu of hairdressing and aesthetical services, targeted to customers who worry about their image and looking for new trends.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Our stylists are internally trained by our own academy to ensure a high quality service, always directing their attention to the customer’s life concept, personality, personal habits, appearance and hair type. This workspace is also a training academy, aiming to support all hairdressing and make-up professionals.

New Room by Nuno Capa

In the schedule is already a plan for continuous and quality training in the area of new methods and practical techniques. The business training in management of hairdressers, leadership and motivation of teams, marketing, among others, will enhance the diversity of educational knowledge offer, differentiation factors and enhance today’s professionals.

New Room by Nuno Capa

We advocate an equal degree of knowledge for all professionals, in order to glamorize this as one of the most important artistic interventions in the area of beauty that comes with the past, present and future of human civilization.

New Room by Nuno Capa

New Room is a new change, modernity and sharing knowledge for everyone’s future. We want to maximize the value of the concept and lifestyle for all our customers.

Project: New Room
Client: Pedro Remy
Architect: Nuno Capa
Design: João Loureiro


See also:

.

kilico. hair salon by
Makoto Yamaguchi
Nagi by Eiri Ota and
Irene Gardpoit Chan
Boa Hairdressers Salon by Claudia Meier

Dezeen archive: fabric interiors

Dezeen archive - fabric interiors

Antonio Ravalli Architetti’s hostel where guests sleep in fabric pods was our most-clicked story this week so here’s a selection of stories from the Dezeen archive featuring fabric interiors. See all the stories »