Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid photographed by Luke Hayes

Here’s a full set of photographs of Zaha Hadid’s new extension to the Serpentine Gallery, which features a glazed restaurant with an undulating fabric roof (+ slideshow).

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Located five minutes walk from the main gallery building in London’s Kensington Gardens, the Serpentine Sackler Gallery opened earlier this week. Exhibition spaces occupy a renovated nineteenth century munitions store, while the restaurant is housed in a new structure that curves out from one side.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

“The idea here was to use a new material – a tensile structure – and to look at domes and a shell structure to achieve a lightweight contemporary project,” said Zaha Hadid at the launch.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Built from a glass-fibre textile, the new tensile structure forms a free-flowing white canopy that is supported by five tapered steel columns and outlined by a frameless glass wall.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Describing the contrast between the new and old structures, she said: “We don’t look forward by looking backwards. It is necessary sometimes to to be able to match and be adjacent to historic buildings. The idea here was to really prove that you can have these two worlds, which are the new and the old, and then the garden and the park together in a seamless way.”

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

“This structure is meant to be a very contemporary light touch that leaves the existing structure autonomous,” added senior designer Patrick Schumacher. “I think we have achieved the acuity of space and structure, of sculptural elegance, lightness and transparency.”

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Dezeen published the first photos of the gallery and restaurant from the press preview earlier this week.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

This year’s Serpentine Gallery pavilion by Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto is also still on show nearby and features a cloud-like grid of steel poles. See more stories about the Serpentine Gallery »

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Other recently completed projects by Zaha Hadid include a building at Hong Kong Polytechnic University and the Heydar Aliyev Centre cultural centre in Azerbaijan. See more architecture by Zaha Hadid »

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Photography is by Luke Hayes.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Here’s a statement from the architects:


The Serpentine Sackler Gallery, Zaha Hadid Architects

The Serpentine Sackler Gallery consists of two distinct parts, namely the conversion of a classical 19th century brick structure – The Magazine – and a 21st century tensile structure. The Serpentine Sackler Gallery is thus – after MAXXI in Rome – the second art space where Zaha Hadid and Patrik Schumacher have created a synthesis of old and new.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The Magazine was designed as a Gunpowder Store in 1805. It comprises two raw-brick barrel-vaulted spaces (where the gunpowder was stored) and a lower square-shaped surrounding structure with a frontal colonnade. The building continued to be in military use until 1963. Since then The Royal Parks used the building for storage. The Magazine thus remained underutilised until now. Over time, much amendment and alteration hasoccurred inside the historic building and its surroundings.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects
Roof plan – click for larger image

Instrumental to the transformation into a public art gallery was the decision to reinstate the historic arrangement of The Magazine building as a free standing pavilion within an enclosure, whereby the former courtyards would be covered and become internal exhibition spaces.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects
Basement floor plan – click for larger image

In order to reveal the original central spaces, all non-historic partition walls within the former gunpowder stores were removed. The flat gauged arches over the entrances were reinstated whilst the historic timber gantry crane was maintained. Necessary services and lighting were discreetly integrated as tonot interfere with the ‘as found’ quality of the spaces. These vaults are now part of the sequence of gallery spaces. The surrounding structure has been clarified and rationalised to become a continuous, open sequence of exhibition spaces looping around the two central powder rooms, thus following the simplicity and clarity of Leo von Klenze’s Glyptothek as an early model for a purpose-built gallery.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects
Long section – click for larger image

What was a courtyard before, became an interior top-lit gallery space. Longitudinal roof lights deliver natural daylight into the whole gallery sequence surrounding the central vaults and witha fixed louver system they create perfectly lit exhibition spaces. Retractable blinds allow for a complete black-out of the galleries. The continuous sky-light makes the vertical protrusion of the central core of the building (containing the two vaults) legible on the inside. These reconstructions and conversions were designed in collaboration with heritage specialist Liam O’Connor and in consultation with English Heritage and Westminster City Council. In addition to the exhibition spaces the restored and converted Magazine also houses the gallery shop and offices for the Serpentine’s curatorial team.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects
Cross section – click for larger image

The extension contains a generous, open social space that we expect to enliven the Serpentine Sackler Gallery as a new cultural and culinary destination. The extension has been designed to complement the calm and solid classical building with a light, transparent, dynamic and distinctly contemporary space of the 21st century. The synthesis of old and new is thus a synthesis of contrasts. The new extension feels ephemeral, like a temporary structure, although it is a fully functional permanent building.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects
Front elevation – click for larger image

It is our first permanent tensile structure and realisation of our current research into curvelinear structural surfaces. The tailored, glass-fibre woven textile membrane is an integral part of the building’s loadbearing structure. It stretches between and connects a perimeter ring beam and a set of five interior columns that articulate the roof’s highpoints. Instead of using perimeter columns, the edge beam – a twisted ladder truss supported on three points – dips down to the supporting ground in front, in the back, and on the free west side. On the east side this edge beam (and thus the roof of the extension) swings above the parapet of The Magazine. A linear strip of glazing gives the appearance that the roof is hovering above The Magazine without touching. The Magazine’s western exterior brick wall thus becomes an interior wall within the new extension without losing its original function and beauty. This detail is coherent with the overall character of the extension as a ‘light touch’ intervention. The envelope is completed by a curved, frameless glass wall that cantilevers from the ground to reach the edge beam and fabric roof.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects
Side elevation – click for larger image

The interior of the new extension is a bright, open space with light pouring in from all sides and through the five steel columns that open up as light scoops. The anticlastic curvature of the roof animates the space with its sculptural, organic fluidity. The only fixed elements within the space are the kitchen island and a long smooth bar counter that flows along The Magazine’s brick wall. The tables, banquets and chairs are designed as a continuous Voronoi pattern, reminiscent of organic cell structures.

Serpentine Sackler Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects
Rear elevation – click for larger image

Our aim is to create an intense aesthetic experience, an atmosphere that seems to oscillate between being an extension of the delightful beauty of the surrounding nature and of being an alluring invitation into the enigma of contemporary art.

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photographed by Luke Hayes
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Luke Hayes photography in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

Luke Hayes photography in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

Prints of the London 2012 Aquatics Centre by photographer Luke Hayes are now on display in The Changing Room, a space at Dezeen Super Store that is given over to a different creative each week to showcase their products or artwork.

Luke Hayes photography in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

The black and white photographs of Zaha Hadid’s purpose-built games venue capture the undulating form of the roof and the scale of the structure compared to its visitors.

Luke Hayes photography in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

Prints are available to purchase at a range of sizes on request: ask in-store for more details.

Luke Hayes photography in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

If you have a product or piece of work you would like to exhibit at The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store, please email ben@dezeen.com with The Changing Room in the subject line.

See more products available at Dezeen Super Store »
See more photography by Luke Hayes on Dezeen »
See more stories about London 2012 »

Dezeen Super Store
38 Monmouth Street, London WC2
1 July – 30 September 2012

www.dezeensuperstore.com

The post Luke Hayes photography in The Changing
Room at Dezeen Super Store
appeared first on Dezeen.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Our pop-up Christmas design store The Temporium has opened at 65 Monmouth Street in Seven Dials, Covent Garden in London.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

The shop is open until 24 December and hosts products by over 20 designers and brands, as well our latest Dezeen Watch Store pop-up.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: Diamond Lights by Eric Therner for Frama

Designers Jaime HayonPaul Cocksedge and Dominic Wilcox have created unique products and displays, while brands Established & Sons and Another Country present a collection of furniture and accessories.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

The store features a festive window display of Diamond Lights by Eric Therner for Frama.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Products by fashion designer Justin Oh, homeware brand All Lovely Stuff and much more are displayed on Revolver shelving by Studio Henny van Nistelrooy.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Food company Pom Pom Takoyaki are providing delicious snacks inspired by traditional Japanese takayoki.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: Dezeen Watch Store

You can see a full list of products and designers in our special category.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: embroidered homewares by Charlene Mullen

Check out pictures from the opening party on our Facebook page.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: furniture and accessories by Matilda and Dinosaur Designs

Dezeen presents The Temporium
65 Monmouth Street
Seven Dials, Covent Garden
London WC2H 9DG

Map

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: furniture by Another Country

Telephone:
020 7503 7319

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: furniture and products by Established & Sons

Dates:
1-24 December 2011

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: hand-knotted rope neck pieces by Helena Westerlind

Opening times:
Monday – Saturday: 11:00 – 19:00
Late-night shopping Thursday until 20:00
Sunday: 12:00 – 17:00

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: glass and ceramics by Jaime Hayon for Baccarat and Lladró

Photography is by Luke Hayes.

The Temporium at 65 Monmouth Street

Above: Japanese snacks by Pom Pom Takoyaki

More info: www.thetemporium.com

The Temporium 2011

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

The London Design Festival may be over but Dezeen Space is still open at 54 Rivington Street, London EC2A 3QN until 16 October.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Every day for 30 days a different designer will exhibit their work on the one metre by one metre Dezeen Platform.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Exhibits so far include shoes by Victoria Spruce, furniture by Roger Arquer, a model island shaped like a QR code and street art by Stewy.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

We’re filming interviews with Dezeen Platform exhibitors throughout the month and you can watch them on Dezeen Screen here.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

See the full lineup for Dezeen Platform here.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Moments in Time is a series of sculptures by Dominic Wilcox, commissioned by Dezeen Watch Store and sold exclusively at Dezeen Space.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Each presents a tableau with tiny characters balanced on the hands of a watch – check them out in our story here and watch an interview with Wilcox here.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Dezeen Space also hosts our latest Dezeen Watch Store pop-up with dozens of new models and you can pick up a copy of our new book, the Dezeen Book of Ideas, for just £12.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

We’re selling T-shirts, magazines, bicycle lights, stationery and analogue amplifiers for smartphones made out of old vinyl records by Paul Cocksedge, so be sure to check out the shop.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

There’s also a lighting installation by Plumen, winners of the 2011 Brit Insurance Design of the Year award.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Dezeen Screen is based at Dezeen Space, where we’ve set up a video studio to interview interesting people who drop in during the month.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Thanks to everyone who dropped in during the London Design Festival – if you didn’t make it we hope to see you there in the next few weeks!

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Dezeen Space

Address:
54 Rivington Street, London EC2A 3QN

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Dates:
17 September to 16 October 2011

Dezeen Space at 54 Rivington Street

Opening hours:
11am to 7pm Monday to Saturday
11am to 5pm Sunday

www.dezeenspace.com


See also:

.

Julian Hakes
at Dezeen Platform
C.A.N
at Dezeen Platform
Sivan Royz
at Dezeen Platform

Dezeen Screen: Indian Ocean Tsunami Memorial by Carmody Groarke

Dezeen Screen: Indian Ocean Tsunami Memorial by Carmody Groarke

Dezeen Screen: here’s a movie by photographer Luke Hayes that shows the making of Carmody Groarke‘s Indian Ocean Tsunami Memorial, which was quarried in France installed outside London’s Natural History Museum. Watch the movie »

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

London designer Giles Miller installed this bar for Inside World Festival of Interiors at a former petrol station as part of Clerkenwell Design Week in London last week.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Called Step Inside, the installation by Chetwoods Architects featured furniture by local designers suspended from scaffolding overhead.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Miller covered the bar in 1500 yellow ceramic tiles, laid at 20 degrees to the curved MDF surface to create two opposing swirls.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

The bar was topped with grey quartz by Cosentino while the tiles were made in the UK and provided by Materials Lab.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Dezeen are media partners for the Inside World Festival of Interiors, which will take place 2-3 November 2011 in Barcelona.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Clerkenwell Design Week took place 24-26 May. See more stories about the event »

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Here are some more details from Inside World Festival of Interiors:


STEP INSIDE BAR AT CLERKENWELL DESIGN WEEK

VISIT THE ‘EXPLODED ROOM’ AT THE STEP INSIDE BAR — BROUGHT TO YOU BY INSIDE WORLD FESTIVAL OF INTERIORS 2-3 NOVEMBER 2011, BARCELONA

Visit the Step Inside Bar’s ‘exploded room’ at the Clerkenwell Garage on Clerkenwell Road and you will find a topsy-turvy world where design anarchy flips convention on its head and chaos rules! In a unique instillation designed by Chetwoods Architects, furniture from some of Clerkenwell’s most exciting participants will ‘explode’ in an innovative way.

Celebrating the UK launch of Inside: World Festival of Interiors – Step Inside Bar operated by Clerkenwell establishment Giant Robot will be serving wonderfully festive Inside-themed drinks. Come and delight in the disorder as you have a drink at the bar designed by Giles Miller Studio, one of the UK’s most exciting up and coming design talents, with products from Materials Lab, the design worlds interactive materials resource and Cosentino.

Inside is a brand-new festival celebrating the world’s finest interior designers and their projects. Through a series of fringe events, talks, installations and the prestigious awards programme, Inside will be a vibrant platform for creative thought, mutual inspiration and idea exchange – capturing the design zeitgeist in style over two exciting days in Barcelona.


See also:

.

Pop-up store
by Giles Miller
C-X75
by Jaguar
Dezeen Watch Store at
Clerkenwell Design Week

JamScape photographed by Luke Hayes

JamScape in Milan

Milan 2011: here’s a selection of photos by architectural photographer Luke Hayes of JamScape, the audio installation created by Yves Behar of fuseproject and Jawbone in collaboration with Dezeen.

JamScape consists of monolithic forms made of over 1,600 Jambox wireless speakers.

Dezeen readers submitted the original audio tracks that play through the speakers.

The installation is located at Via Ventura 5 in the Ventura Lambrate district of Milan until Sunday 17 April (download the Ventura Lambrate map and guide).

See our video interview with Gabriel Lamb of fuseproject, designer of JamScape with Yves Behar.

Below: Yves Behar

See all our stories from Milan 2011

Dezeen podcast: Stephen Bayley on Designs of the Year 2011

Dezeen podcast: in this recording for the Design Museum in London, design commentator and one of the founders of the museum Stephen Bayley talks about the Brit Insurance Design of the Year 2011, on show at the museum until 7 August.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

Can’t see the play bar? Click here.
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In the podcast, Bayley talks about his role chairing the jury for the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year awards, founding the museum with Terence Conran in the 1980s and how to judge whether design matters.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

Nearly 100 shortlisted designs across the fields of architecture, product, furniture, graphics, fashion, interactive and transport design will be on show at the museum until 7 August 2011.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

The seven category winners are due to be announced on Monday 28 February and the overall winner will be announced at a ceremony on 15 March.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

See the full shortlist in our earlier story.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

See also:

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year winner 2010
Brit Insurance Designs of the Year winner 2009
Brit Insurance Designs of the Year winner 2008

Exhibition photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Here are some more details from the Design Museum:


Showcasing a year in design, the fourth annual Brit Insurance Design Awards features an international shortlist ranging from Yves Behar’s Swarovski Chandeliers to concrete Emergency Shelters designed in Wales. Nominations also include the Apple iPad as well as six different app’s including the popular Angry Birds game.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

Industry experts have nominated innovative and engaging designs from around the world across seven categories: Architecture, Fashion, Furniture, Graphics, Interactive, Product and Transport. Stephen Bayley will chair the 2011 jury and will be joined by art and design curator Janice Blackburn OBE, graphic designer Mark Farrow, novelist Will Self, Pro Vice-Chancellor of Kingston University Penny Sparke and Simon Waterfall co-founder of digital agency Poke. We are pleased to announce that Bill Moggeridge, Director of the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, New York will also join this year’s jury.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

The nominations will be on show at the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year Exhibition at the Design Museum from 16 February – 7 August 2011. From this comprehensive list, the jury will select the seven category winners to be announced on 28 February 2011. The overall Brit Insurance Design of the Year will be announced at the Awards Dinner on 15 March 2011 and this year’s awards trophy will be exclusively designed by Ross Lovegrove.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

Alex Newson, curator of the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year exhibition comments, “The sheer breadth of the shortlist reaffirms the importance of good design and how it can help improve daily lives or even refresh the familiar. Whether it is through ingenious temporary home solutions or a new cycle scheme for London, it is a fascinating list of nominees.”

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

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Listen to all our podcasts »


See also:

.

Winner 2010:
Min-Kyu Choi
Winner 2009
Shepard Fairey
Winner 2008:
Yves Béhar