Deskontalia store in Donostia by VAUMM

Internet shoppers in San Sebastian can now pick up their purchases from a shop that appears to be furnished with nothing but cardboard boxes (+ slideshow).

Descontalia by VAUMM

Spanish architects VAUMM designed the store for group discount voucher website Deskontalia as a place where customers can pick up their deliveries and find out about the latest offers.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Unlike most shops, the space has no products to display, so the architects were challenged with filling an empty room. Inspired by the cardboard boxes used to transport purchases, they developed a concept to cover the floor and walls with boxy wooden furniture and shelving.

Descontalia by VAUMM

“Cartons are converted into the measurement unit of the architectural proposal,” explain the architects. “Small cartons are elements to generate a kind of sculpture that envelops the walls and roof to create different environments which users can interact with.”

Descontalia by VAUMM

Most of the boxes are used as shelves that can be reconfigured to suit different displays. Others are made from wood and provide tables and stools where customers can sit and browse the website.

Descontalia by VAUMM

A reception counter lines the edge of the room and also resembles a pile of boxes.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Aside from the boxes, the shop’s interior is kept simple, with existing walls and columns painted white and plants positioned beside the windows.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Other cardboard interiors include a cardboard meeting room for Bloomberg, a cardboard bank and a fold-out cardboard shop.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Spanish architects VAUMM are based in San Sebastian. Past projects by the firm include a golden culinary centre and an outdoor elevator.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Photography is by Aitor Ortiz.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Here’s a project description from VAUMM:


Deskontalia store in Donostia – San Sebastian, Gipuzkoa, Spain.

When somebody thinks about a shop, he can hardly avoid thinking about the products sold inside, and therefore those products are those which give sense of the need for a space. What would it happen if that object of desire was any? What if no one?

For Deskontalia store, located in a urban downtown street, the sale has occurred even before one reaches the local. The space should be a pick up point for any product that one could imagine buying over the Internet, but even something else.

Descontalia by VAUMM

From that point of view the space should become not only a space to sell, but a space to be a meeting point between brand and people, an open space, a place of the city where an online business becomes a physical reality.

The store activity is linked to package traffic, cardboard containers in which travel purchased products, which are collected in this new architectural space. A small counter where to exchange these packages of hands, solves all the functional requirements of the trade.

Descontalia by VAUMM

The space has been treated as a white empty space where old items such as masonry walls or casting pillars are bathed in this colour, as well as more contemporary new resin pavement, in an attempt to transform the store not in a shop but in a store where different transformations may occur.

Cartons are converted into the measurement unit of the architectural proposal. Small cartons are elements to generate a kind of sculpture that envelops the walls and roof to create different environments which users can interact with.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Above: floor plan – click above for larger image

These packaging boxes incorporate the graphic image of the brand, a d-, like a strip on both sides, 90 degrees in space. Thus, the store gets a sculptural object at its scale by stacking the cartons with multiplications of their shapes and cubic components, qualified by the impression of the brand. Somehow it has been generated a kind of recycled space, in which low cost boxes transcend the value and meaning we could give to them individually, to become artistic and modulate the space when considered together.

The walls are not only boxes bookshelf but also part of the shell, the roof parts are not only sculptures but also shapes that break the echo sound of the store which also modulate the sound.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Above: ceiling plan – click above for larger image

Cartons are organized this way in which the white container has become the store, which can be moved at any time, changed or simply replaced by other objects. The cartons composition will be transformed as easily as the other part of the store, which is the Deskontalia web site, which is also shown in the store through two digital projections which interact with users.

Furniture is also involved in this changing condition, so its module-based design lets multiple configurations of the store, so you can have a lecture, read a newspaper, show a new product, or just hang out in internet.

Descontalia by VAUMM

Above: shelving concept – click above for larger image

The counter, stools and tables, somehow show the same packaging language, that besides also incorporates to the design other meanings such as low cost, the ephemeral, the changing and the casual, all of them concepts that underlie also the Internet purchase which serves to this commercial space.

The post Deskontalia store in Donostia
by VAUMM
appeared first on Dezeen.

Basque Culinary Center

Les équipes du cabinet Vaumm Architects ont pensé ce “Basque Culinary Center” situé à San Sebastian au nord de l’Espagne. Avec cette école de cuisine au design réussi, les différents facettes et espaces du lieu extérieur et intérieur sont à découvrir en visuels dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

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Urban Elevator by Vaumm

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

An outdoor elevator by Spanish architects Vaumm connects the mountainside neighbourhoods of a Spanish town to those in the valley.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

The elevator shaft, at Errenteria in northern Spain, has a steel truss structure encased in clear glass, through which the moving elevator is visible.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

At the lift summit a bridge branches outwards to meet the steeply inclining ground.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

Ridged concrete wraps around the base of the tower, retaining the sloping landscape.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

More stories about viewpoints on Dezeen »

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

Photography is by Aitor Ortiz.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

Here are some more details from the architects:


Urbanisation and Urban Elevator in Galtzaraborda, Errenteria

In the middle of the 1960’s the industry of the region suffered a great development that led to the need for labor, generating new neighbourhoods in a short period of time.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

These neighbourhoods, as Galtzaraborda, are usually high density areas which often have left the valley floor and its settlements begin to climb up the mountains. The buildings are placed following the logic of the topographic lines, covering different levels and creating irregular voids between them that are used to connect at maximum slope different levels.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

The void space that concerns us is the natural connection between high levels of housing and the lower level occupied by the equipment, train station, sports center and nursery. This irregular and casual space is dominated by the presence of a huge tree to be maintained as a valuable witness of the change process in the neighbourhood.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

Click above for larger image

The elevator has been built “in the only place where it could be”, its location is a crossing point resulting from the rule requiring minimum distances, maintaining the view of site from the houses around and not exceeding alignments of them. The second point that determines the shape of the elevator is the position of the gateway bridge which is misalignment and tangent to the elevator to keep away from the tree, focusing the pedestrian way in the virtual axis of the void space.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

Click above for larger image

In this position, the gateway does not focus the eye on the door of the elevator, it allows the visitor to walk through it with a visual depth much more open and serves as an observation point on the environment, the distant mountains and the harbour of Pasaia. It has sought the maximum slenderness and transparency throughout the element; all pieces have been designed using rigid steel panels with truss triangulations.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

Click above for larger image

The triangulations is the answer, first, to the structural logic and second, to an industrial language, in this sense, concrete walls have been form worked with sheet metal casing to provide them the mentioned industrial character. It is constructed in order to impregnate a sentimental relationship with the industrial language of the steel manufactures and the harbour that after all gave rise to Galtzaraborda.

Urbanization and Urban Elevator by Vaumm

Click above for larger image

Architects: VAUMM
Technical Architect: Julen Rozas
Construction: Obegisa
Project: Errenteria Garatuz
Production: City hall of Errenteria
Photography: Aitor Ortiz


See also:

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Holmenkollen ski jump
by JDS Architects completed
Landmark by Birk + Heilmeyer
& Knippers Helbig
Top of Tyrol
by Astearchitecture