Kengo Kuma stacks wooden layers inside office and cafe

Japanese architect Kengo Kuma has layered wooden boards to create striations inside this workspace and cafe for an online restaurant guide based in Osaka (+ slideshow).

Gurunavi cafe and office by Kengo Kuma

Kengo Kuma designed the interiors of two spaces for Gurunavi: one that’s used as a physical base and information centre for the Japanese restaurant guide and another that serves as a cafe.

Gurunavi cafe and office by Kengo Kuma

Both follow the same design language, with surfaces created using layers of plywood to create a landscape that functions as furniture.

Gurunavi cafe and office by Kengo Kuma

“We piled up pieces of wooden panels to build the interior like topography,” said Kuma. “Various kinds of food-related items are laid out on this wooden ground.”

Gurunavi cafe and office by Kengo Kuma

At the Shun*Shoku Lounge cafe, the wooden boards are stacked from floor to ceiling in one corner and create a counter in the centre plus seating around the sides.

Gurunavi cafe and office by Kengo Kuma

Similarly in the workspace, the strata wrap around the edges of the room and extend out at various heights to form shelving, desks and seating.

Gurunavi cafe and office by Kengo Kuma
Shun*Shoku Lounge

The two spaces are both enclosed by glass walls on three sides and a solid wall at the back. They are separated by a tunnel that leads to further retail units at Osaka’s main railway station.

Gurunavi cafe and office by Kengo Kuma

A similar layering effect also features in Kuma’s design for the V&A museum in Dundee, which was granted planning permission in August last year.

Gurunavi cafe and office by Kengo Kuma

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Geology of Shoes by Barbora Veselá

London College of Fashion graduate Barbora Veselá has layered-up leftover scraps of leather to create striations based on rock formations on the surface of these shoes (+ movie).

Geology of Shoes by Barbora Vesela

Barbora Veselá looked to the patterns of eroded sedimentary rocks at the Prokopské údolí nature reserve in the Czech Republic when creating her Geology of Shoes footwear.

Geology of Shoes by Barbora Vesela

“The project takes inspiration from sediment layers and from effects of erosive processes in nature as well as from traditional shoe making techniques,” said Veselá.

Geology of Shoes by Barbora Vesela

By overlapping spare strips of leather suede-side-up around a traditional last, she built up the shape of the shoes piece by piece.

Geology of Shoes by Barbora Vesela

Veselá then sanded down the scraps to create the final forms and reveal the rippled layers. As the odds and ends of material are always different shapes, each shoe is unique.

Geology of Shoes by Barbora Vesela

The colours of the stripes were influenced by shaded contours found on old geological maps. The footwear formed Veselá’s final project at Cordwainers College, part of the London College of Fashion.

Shoe lasts used for Geology of Shoes by Barbora Vesela
Shoe lasts

Striations also feature in Zaha Hadid’s chrome-plated shoes with cantilevered heels for United Nude and we recently compiled a roundup of our stories about strata in architecture and design.

Colourful geological map
Old geological maps

Film and photography are by Petr Krejčí.

Sedimentary rock formations at the Prokopské údolí nature reserve in the Czech Republic
Sedimentary rock formations at the Prokopské údolí nature reserve in the Czech Republic

The post Geology of Shoes by
Barbora Veselá
appeared first on Dezeen.