CONST lamp by THINKK studio at Ventura Lambrate

CONST lamp by THINKK studio

Milan 2012: Bangkok designers THINKK studio have created a lamp that slots together like a children’s toy.

CONST lamp by THINKK studio

The designers simplified the product into three basic components; a base, a body and a shade.

CONST lamp by THINKK studio

A marble block base balances the lamp and has a serrated edge for holding pencils.

CONST lamp by THINKK studio

The octagonal oak body can be rotated to position the lamp at different angles, while an LED light sits within a metallic red, yellow or white shade.

CONST lamp by THINKK studio

The lamp is being presented at Ventura Lambrate in Milan this week. Click here to see another adjustable lamp they are exhibiting.

CONST lamp by THINKK studio

The Ventura Lambrate design district is open from 17 to 22 April. Download the free map and guide here and see all our stories about Ventura Lambrate 2012 here.

CONST lamp by THINKK studio

Here are some more details from THINKK studio:


Const uses “play” as a methodology for design process. The main idea behind the desk lamp CONST are three basic components; base, body and shade. Keeping in mind these simple elements and their role, Const playfully combines expression with function. The marble base keeps the octagon-shaped wood body balanced and the same time one can adjust the angle of the shade by rotating it. CONST gives one the ability to have fun with functionality.

CONST lamp by THINKK studio

Materials: Marble / Oak Wood / Aluminum / LED Light Dimension: 27×25 h35

Public House by Lee Broom at Ventura Lambrate

Public House by Lee Broom

Milan 2012: British designer Lee Broom is showcasing furniture and lighting at an exhibition styled like a British public house at Ventura Lambrate in Milan this week.

Public House by Lee Broom

Oak panelling and etched glass windows salvaged from an old English pub line the walls, while an reclaimed oak bar is positioned opposite.

Public House by Lee Broom

Lighting suspended from above includes crystal light bulbs cut like whiskey decanters, which Broom is launching at the show. Read more about them in our earlier story.

Public House by Lee Broom

The Ventura Lambrate design district is open from 17 to 22 April. Download the free map and guide here and see all our stories about Ventura Lambrate 2012 here.

Here’s some more text from Broom:


Launch Of Lee Broom, Public House
Salone Del Mobile 2012
17 – 22 April 2012

This month, the critically acclaimed British designer, Lee Broom, will launch his first, solo exhibition in Milan during the Salone del Mobile. Entitled Public House, the show will mark the fifth anniversary of the Lee Broom brand, showcasing a selection of Broom’s hero pieces in one curated space, for the first time.

Public House by Lee Broom

Inspired by the age-old institution of the British pub, with a multi-dimensional, surreal twist, Public House will bring a truly British experience to the Ventura Lambrate design district. Reflecting a common theme in Broom’s work, materials used within the exhibition will be of authentic British origin, reclaimed from old pubs. Deconstructed oak panelling, etched glass and an ornate wooden bar will act as eclectic, statement backdrops to Broom’s British designed and manufactured collections.

This cultural amalgam of old meets new is reflected in Broom’s collections on show. New pieces, including a striking light and exciting new editions to existing products, will complement Broom’s core collections, showcasing the scope and variety of his work.

Public House by Lee Broom

Public House will also complement the launch of Broom’s collaboration with renowned international Scotch whisky, Ballantine’s 12 Year Old. Broom has designed an exclusive serving ritual, influenced by vintage crystal whisky decanters, with a very modern twist, to be launched at the exhibition.

“I am very excited to be exhibiting for the first time in Milan. I wanted to showcase my work in a quintessential British environment, creating an experience for visitors which they could usually only experience in the UK.” – Lee Broom

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Milan 2012: the 400 wooden slats of this table top by Mauricio Affonso allow it to expand, contract and fan out into a full circle.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

It has a birch base with gate legs that fold out or tuck away as it changes shape.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

The Fan Table is on show at Ventura Lambrate as part of Paradise, a show of work from the Royal College of Art in London.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

The Ventura Lambrate design district is open from 17 to 22 April. Download the free map and guide here and see all our stories about Ventura Lambrate 2012 here.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Here are some more details from Affonso:


Mauricio Affonso’s Fan Table will be exhibited during the Milan Furniture Fair in Ventura Lambrate as part of the Paradise exhibition organised by the Royal College of Art, 17-22 of April, 2012.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

The Fan Table explores the role of tables as the infrastructure for social interaction. The surface can freely expand, contract and revolve in an effortless fan like movement of the hand.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Mauricio Affonso is interested in designing with a deep understanding of the situations in which furniture find themselves in the world. In this case, he was driven by the idea of investigating the reciprocity between table and context.“Furniture can be quite limited sometimes,” explains Affonso, “I wanted to move away from the table as an static object and create a self-transforming table that can spontaneously adapt itself to play a new role in the fabric of a situation.”

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Hence, the Fan Table can be quickly transformed into an array of different shapes and sizes to suit its context or use.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

The table surface is created from over 400 slats that rests on a geometric base both in which are constructed out of birch wood.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Paradise features the work of Royal College of Art students selected by Professor and Head of Design Products Programe Tord Boontje and tutor Onkar Kular.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

“PARADISE contemplates the discovery of something or somewhere more wondrous. Rallied by the desire for change and compelled by a dissatisfaction with the present, RCA students author their own atlases of Paradise, landscaped by different paths in the quest for a better future.”

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Brazilian-born Canadian designer Mauricio Affonso began his career after earning a degree in Industrial Design from OCAD University. While based in Toronto he also worked as Creative Lead for home accessories company Umbra.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Mauricio has shown his work internationally and has been featured in many major design publications worldwide. He has also participated in numerous design workshops led by acclaimed designers such the Campana Brothers and Patricia Urquiola to name a few.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Mauricio has recently relocated to London where he is pursuing a Master of Arts degree from the renowned Design Products program at the Royal College of Art.

Fan Table by Mauricio Affonso at Ventura Lambrate

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer at Ventura Lambrate

These knobbly seats by Belgian designer Maarten De Ceulaer are on show at Spazio Rossana Orlandi in Milan this week.

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer

Each piece in the Mutation series is made from foam spheres, cut so they fit together, attached to a frame and coated in rubber or flocked.

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer at Ventura Lambrate

De Ceulaer’s work is also on show at the Triennale di Milano and as part of IN Residence at Ventura Lambrate.

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer at Ventura Lambrate

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile takes place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer at Ventura Lambrate

Photographs are by Nico Neefs.

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer at Ventura Lambrate

Here are some more details from Maarten De Ceulaer:


Mutation Series

The pieces in this series look like they weren’t made by hands, but have grown to their present form organically. They might be the result of a mutation in cells, or the result of a chemical or nuclear reaction. Perhaps it’s a virus or bacteria that has grown dramatically out of scale. The Mutation pieces make you look at furniture in a different way.

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer at Ventura Lambrate

Maybe one day we would be able to grow a piece of furniture like we breed or clone an animal, and manipulate it’s shape like a bonsai tree. On the other hand, the project can be seen as an experimental review of classic furniture upholstery. It reminds us of the famous and iconic deep buttoned (Chesterfield) sofa’s, interpreted in a highly contemporary and sculptural way.

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer at Ventura Lambrate

Instead of upholstering springs and foam with leather or textile, these pieces are created by carefully composing patterns with cut-offs of foam spheres of various sizes, and applying them onto a structure. In the end the entire piece gets coated, with a durable rubber or tactile velvet-like finish. It is hardly possible to ever recreate such a specific pattern, so every piece is completely unique.

Mutation by Maarten De Ceulaer at Ventura Lambrate

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslingerat Ventura Lambrate

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Milan 2012: designer Werner Aisslinger of Berlin and Singapore will present a chair growing inside a greenhouse at Ventura Lambrate in Milan this week.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Shown as part of an exhibition of design from Berlin called Instant Stories, the Chair Farm project envisages furniture that’s grown rather than produced and harvested locally rather than exported globally.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

The plant is trained inside a metal mould then released once it reaches maturity.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

In October we published a story about a building grown from cherry trees that won’t be completed for 100 yearstake a look here.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

The Ventura Lambrate design district is open from 17 to 22 April. Download the free map and guide here and see all our stories about Ventura Lambrate 2012 here.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

See all our stories about Werner Aisslinger here, including his Iconograph watch for Lorenz at Dezeen Watch Store.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Photographs are by Nicolo Lanfranchi.

Here’s some more information from Aisslinger:


“Plant yourself a chair …”

Werner Aisslinger presents his plantation chair at the Milan Furniture Fair

Once again in April, the most recognised fair of the furniture industry opens its gates for design aficionados from all over the world. At the Milan Furniture Fair, visitors will witness a small sensation at “Instant Stories”, the special exhibition from Berlin at Lambrate: Amidst the platforms showing the latest in furniture design, a greenhouse is staged. Visitors are confronted with a gigantic box that gives the impression as if it has just fallen from heaven. This laboratory-like stage setup promises to be as spectacular as watching a dinosaur hatch from its egg: A chair is born from a steel corset! The only difference to the egg-comparison is the fact that the shell of the “chair farm” prototype is inside the chair’s structure instead of being outside.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

After the removal of the corset, a unique chair is revealed – truly singular, because nature cannot be programmed to deliver a certain result. The chair is no longer produced in the classical sense of the word. Instead, it grows of its own volition in a greenhouse or on a field. When it has reached maturity, the steel corset is opened and removed, revealing a naturally grown chair. The title of the project by this Berlin-based designer, who imagines huge “product plantations” in the future, reflects this utopian means of production: the “chair farm”.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Urban Gardening

Strawberries in winter, pumpkins in spring – everything is possible. But since the early 80s, or since discounters have moved into urban environments instead of staying out of towns, we have been witnessing a contradictory movement: a wish to return to a more primary and genuine way of living. Global markets with their unpredictable mechanisms increasingly intimidate consumers. More and more people are discovering the advantages of buying and consuming regionally grown seasonal products – advantages such as eating healthier, saving resources and being environmentally friendly. People know and care about their CO2 footprint. They want to make their own decisions about which resources they tap to eat, live, travel, etc. This new and different state of mind centers on leaving the role of a passive consumer and becoming an active, mindful individual. Home-grown food is harvested and stored. A new activism is blossoming. At the same time, a re-orientation towards collective living and working spaces is taking place. A good example for this is urban gardening, where residents open and share their garden space instead of having small individual allotments. In Berlin and other cities, project teams have formed which trade different kinds of services – car sharing, sofa surfing and urban gardening are no longer mere fashion statements.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Green Design

People are discovering that life in all its multitude is much too beautiful to wrap it up in sanitized and ready-to-eat packages according to EU and DIN regulations. A cheer to the unconventional and surprising things in life!

This structural change has also influenced the world of product design. Many designers have anticipated the change towards green design or eco-pluralistic design and have recognized it as a chance – one of the most prominent ones being Werner Aisslinger from Berlin. He has been experimenting with new materials and sustainable production methods for years.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslingers at Ventura Lambrate

Design and Technology

Aisslinger’s first technological experiment with polyurethane foam used in the automotive industry was serialized in 1996 by Cappellini and was added to the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York in 1998. This was the genesis of the “Juli chair”, an integral part in the world of modern design.

His first synthetic gel-furniture “soft cell” caused a sensation at the Salone del Mobile at the turn of the century. The “soft cell” lounge chairs found an enthusiastic audience with their mixture of medical technology, two-plane TechnoGel, and slightly transparent honey-combed upholstery in space-ship optics.

In the following years, Aisslinger turns to different design worlds: He designs the ideal work space for vitra, builds hotels which live up to their name, and with “loftcube” he creates the true 21st century dacha.

In 2011, Aisslinger achieves another major coup in regard to chair design: The “Hemp chair” is made of natural fibers that are turned into a high-tech composite by using an environmentally friendly water-based binder (Acrodur). The chair is hardened by strong heat and mechanical pressure without producing hazardous or toxic substances. The Hemp chair is lightweight and has a cardboard texture – masking its extreme resilience and durability. This chair received a great deal of attention at the Furniture Fair in Milan last year, clearly standing out with its curved, organic shape and its subtle color among all other designs in the colorful sea of novelties.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Chair Farm Project

The development from “Hemp chair” to “chair farm” was merely a logical consequence in Aisslinger’s work. It is a further development in his three-component master-plan: sustainable production, new materials, and an outstanding simplicity in design.

One of Aisslinger’s main concerns is the cutting edge between aesthetics and everyday culture. He commutes between Berlin and Singapore, where he maintains a second studio. From a bird’s eye perspective, structural connections often seem clearer than on the ground: In an airplane with a view of the Indian Ocean, Aisslinger wondered if food and everyday products will still be decentrally produced and shipped around the globe in the future.

As a matter of fact, tendencies such as “urban farming” and “integrated farming” are not merely the eco-utopian dreams of urban Bohemianism. They are at this moment tested and tried on the rooftops of Paris or Berlin and surpass the output and efficiency of industrial agriculture by a factor of 15. So Aisslinger is convinced that food production in urban spaces – giving everyone the possibility of becoming a passionate producer of agricultural products – will be the future in regard to quality and sustainability. Therefore, he thought about a way to invert production in furniture design back from globalized serial manufacturing to resource-conserving local production. And he came up with the answer: Chair farm is as simple as it is radical. Aisslinger states his intention as wanting to offer design-users a chair that is made with as little resources and as reduced an amount of waste as possible.

Project: Chair Farm
Year: 2012
Designer: Werner Aisslinger
Exhibition: “Instant Stories”, Milano-Lambrate
Location: Ventura Lambrate: “Overlite,” Via Privata Oslavia 8, 20143 Milano
Press Preview: Monday April 16, 15:00 – 20:00
Opening Hours: Tuesday April 17 – Sunday April 22, 10:00 – 20:00
Opening Night: Wednesday April 18, 19:00 – 23:00

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutterand Ido Bruno

This school table by industrial design students Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno is specifically designed to form a safe shelter for pupils during earthquakes.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

It’s common practice for school children to hide under their desks when an earthquake strikes but standard tables are not built for the purpose and can trap those sheltering underneath if they collapse in the wrong way.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

The students considered different collapse scenarios and the need to maintain an escape route, as well as the day-to day requirements of teaching and cleaning.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

The table will be presented at Ventura Lambrate design district in Milan this month as part of a showcase of work by students from Jerusalem’s Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, entitled Design Bonanza Bezalel.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: detail of a crush zone element, photograph by Ido Bruno

It’s also been nominated for the Design Museum’s design of the year award, due to be announced on 23 April.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: 1000 kg steel and concrete block at moment of impact, photograph by Ido Bruno

Dezeen are media partners for Ventura Lambrate, which takes place from 17 to 22 April. Download a map and guide to Ventura Lambrate here and see all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: 1000 kg impact test, photograph by Ido Bruno

Studio photographs are by Tzur Kotzer.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: Arthur Brutter demonstrating rescue tunnel, photograph by Ido Bruno

Here are some more details from the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design:


At any given time, more than 300,000,000 pupils worldwide are facing impending danger because their schools are not built to withstand an earthquake. While it is common to instruct pupils to crawl under tables in case of an earthquake, existing classroom tables often turn into lethal traps for those taking refuge.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: table after 1000 kg sack impact test, photograph by Ido Bruno

This table is designed for a range of collapse scenarios. It provides a comprehensive solution by creating both covering, protection and a passageway for rescue team accessibility.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: standard school table impact test, photograph by Ivan Bianchini.

To date, the patent-pending design has successfully withstood a series of rigorous vertical impact tests and is currently awaiting official approval of the world-leading Structural Engineering department of Padua University, Italy.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: 500 kg impact test,photograph by Ivan Bianchini.

Earthquake table is light enough for two children to lift and move, as well as adapted to classroom cleaning and other routine, non-emergency needs.

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: 800 kg sack impact test, photograph by Ivan Bianchini.

Design Bonanza Bezalel at Ventura Lambrate
Via Massimiano 6,
20134 Milan
Tuesday 17 – Sunday 22 April, 10:00 – 20:00

Earthquake Proof Table by Arthur Brutter and Ido Bruno

Above: 1000 kg impact test, photograph by Ivan Bianchini.

FABRIKAAT exhibition at Ventura Lambrate

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Dezeen promotion: an exhibition of products for the garden designed by students from Rotterdam’s Piet Zwart Institute will take place at the Ventura Lambrate design district in Milan later this month.

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Top: Brick Biotope by Micaela Nardella and Oana Tudose
Above: Blindfolded by Anette Backe and Dominika Dyminska

Students from the Master of Interior Architecture & Retail Design programme were asked to explore traditional craft processes in their designs.

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Working in teams, they learned specific techniques such as cutting, knitting, weaving and moulding, before applying these to products that reconsider the role of the garden.

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Micaela Nardella and Oana Tudose’s Brick Biotope is made from sand and plaster and offers a nesting space for birds in the built environment.

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Angelique Etman and Marie Gade-Lundlie have used weaving and crochet techniques combined with hardening resin to create cocoon-like furniture.

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HERB² by Mariann Hildal and Milda Liubinskaite is a wall of interconnected herb planters for indoor use with a manual pulley system that allows the position of the units to be adjusted to control light exposure and ventilation.

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Anette Backe and Dominika Dyminska have created an accordion-like wooden structure that can provide shelter from sun, wind or rain using simple cutting and scoring techniques.

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Material experimentation by Angelique Etman and Marie Gade-Lundlie

Exhibition: Tuesday 17 April – Sunday 22 April, 10.00-22.00 hrs
Cocktail Party Tuesday April 17, 16:00-19:00 hrs
Location: Ventura Lambrate, 
Via Massimiano 6
, 20134 Milan

Here is some more information from the Piet Zwart Institute:


What is FABRIKAAT?

FABRIKAAT is an exhibition at Ventura Lambrate 2012 investigating the re-emerging role of the garden through a “research through making” approach to design and craft. In a digitally saturated world, this body of work celebrates and promotes research, ideas and the nuances of making by hand.

The work exhibited was made during an intensive three-month thematic design studio with integrated seminar and media courses, by students in the Master of Interior Architecture & Retail Design program at the Piet Zwart Institute in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The spirit of FABRIKAAT became an integral part of the culture, programming and deployment of the courses during this period.

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Material experimentation by Angelique Etman and Marie Gade-Lundlie

FABRIKAAT approached the idea of craft by asking the following questions:

By embracing a bottom-up “research through making” approach to design, can new material behaviors and applications emerge? In our digital age, what can be learned through the process of making by hand? Can design solutions be offered that augment existing typologies in our built environment, such as the garden?

Craft was the inspiration for the design project on two fronts.  First, historical examples of craft were researched and analyzed, particularly Dutch crafts, as a source of inspiration.  Secondly, the principles of the crafts investigated formed the strategy for the development of the individual projects.  The studio was programmed into four categories: historical reference, fabrication techniques, materials, and application.

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Rendering of Blindfolded by Anette Backe and Dominika Dyminska

Students worked in teams and became experts in specific techniques such as cutting/folding, knitting/weaving, molding, and cutting/scoring. They spent extensive periods of time in rigorous, unadulterated experimentation mode – exploring materials, their behavior, techniques and applications. This process informed the design parameters for the development of the investigations and full-scale projects.

The exhibition is named after the Dutch word Fabrikaat that means to make by hand.

www.pzwart.wdka.nl/interior-architecture

Download the Ventura Lambrate 2012map and guide

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Dezeen is proud to be online media partner for Ventura Lambrate design district in Milan again this year and we’ve teamed up with initiators Organisation in Design to provide this downloadable map and guide to the area.

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Located in a variety of exhibition spaces in a former industrial area to the east of the city centre, the Ventura Lambrate design district is now in its third year and runs from 17 to 22 April 2012.

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The area will host presentations by leading designers including Jaime Hayon and Lee Broom plus work by emerging designers, collectives and academic institutions such as London’s Royal College of Art and Israel’s Bezalel Academy. Details of all exhibitors can be found on the map.

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New initiatives at this year’s Ventura Lambrate include a mixed group show called the Ventura Lab(oratory) and the Ventura Runway, a curated exhibition of projects by upcoming talent.

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Download the map and guide to Ventura Lambrate »

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Click here to see all our stories from Ventura Lambrate 2011, including a series of films we made in the district and our JamScape installation with Jawbone and Yves Behar.

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Photographs show last year’s event and are by Claudio Grassi, courtesy Organisation in Design.

Here is some more information from Organisation in Design:


Ventura Lambrate 2012

Good news for the design world: Ventura Lambrate® will be in Milan from 17th to 22th April 2012, simultaneously with the 51st Salone Internazionale del Mobile! With this third edition, Ventura Lambrate, confirms itself as an established key-event of Milan Design Week. Throughout an organic exhibition circuit, which as usual will be situated in the Lambrate area of Milan, visitors will discover the most surprising results of contemporary design, in a journey through different locations and different experiences.

Ventura Lambrate 2012: focus

The fresh and professional Ventura Lambrate will present the talents of international design. A diverse mix of poetry and intellect, uniqueness and democracy will challenge the vision of the public. Projects and concepts that have reinvented forgotten techniques, that shift your focus, and that create new perspectives will be on show.

Ventura Lambrate 2012 will lead visitors to discover the best outings of the international design world, make new business and get inspired by the following focuses:

  • Established designers will present their masterpieces and latest works
  • Prestigious institutions will show the trends and thoughts in contemporary design culture,with renowned Academies who will present the best works of their students, young promises for the future of design…
  • Individual design studios will show their vision of design through their creations.
  • A particular selection of commercially oriented brands will present their brave collections.
  • The Ventura Lab(oratory). and the Ventura Runway will offer an overview of brand-new projects by selected, talented designers.
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Summing up, Ventura Lambrate 2012 will present a strong selection of design creativity; besides all stereotypes, just good design!

The exhibitions are on the following addresses:

Via Ventura 2, 3, 5, 6, 15
Via Massimiano 6, 23, 25
Via Privata Oslavia 1, 8
Via Sbodio 30
and Via Conte Rosso 5, 22

Metro Lambrate, MM2 Green Line exit Lambrate FS (direct connection: 15 minutes from Zona Tortona / Porta Genova)
Bus line 54, via Pitteri corner via Privata Oslavia

General Opening Hours: Tuesday 17 April 2012 – Sunday 22 April 2012, 10:00 – 20:00
Press Conference: Wednesday 18 April 2012, 09:00 – 11:00 press breakfast
Open Evening: Wednesday 18 April 2012, 20:00 – 22:00

www.venturalambrate.com

THINKK Studio and Studio 248at Ventura Lambrate

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Bangkok designers THINKK Studio and Studio 248 will team up to present furniture and lighting at Ventura Lambrate in Milan next month, including this adjustable lamp that’s held together by a single cord slotted through the components.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Other exhibits will include a chair with a double back for different sitting positions, a wardrobe designed for picking out and displaying seven outfits for the week and a set of vases that won’t stand up straight.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Vases with concrete bases in wire frames by Decha Archjananun of THINKK Studio were featured on Dezeen last summer – take a look at them here.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

The third edition of Ventura Lambrate design district in the north east of Milan will be open from 17 to 22 April 2012.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Here are some more details from the designers:


Observing specific details in the simplest everyday actions resulted in this collaborative project by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 that explores specific gestures unmet by conventional furniture: “ARMS chair”, a multi-armrest chair for various sitting gestures, and “7-day-closet” for personalising outfit selections for the week.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

This collaboration also features works with hidden twists such as “Merging Top”: stackable tilted vase set that puts the fun back into flower arranging, and “Crane Lamp”: simple at first glance, but its flexible joints can transform it into many different shapes and positions.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Our collaborative project will be exhibited at Ventura Lambrate (Ventura LAB), Via Massimiano 6, Milan during 17th -22nd April 2012.

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

ARMS chair
Designed byTHINKK Studio

Nowadays, many chair designs are focused on creating unique forms and materials, but very few of them consider the functions that we often overlook. Having carefully observed the way people sit on chairs, we found that the armrest is in fact, an interesting object; it can be used in so many ways, positions and at so many different heights, representing formal or informal expressions. “ARMS chair” offers additional armrests to answer to different sitting gestures, making it unique to each user despite its simple form.

Materials : Ash wood/ Fabric
Dimensions : 49 x 60 H 75

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

7-day-closet
Designed by Studio 248

We often find our closets overcrowded with clothes we rarely wear. And of course, more than often, we find ourselves spending ages to find that favourite item we wear all the time. This “7-day-closet” will help you set out what to wear week by week, featuring your favourite outfits, for your working day, holiday, or for whatever occasion that suits your mood. The design is versatile to suit each person’s unique style: the pole can be rotated outwards, making room for longer dresses or pants. The drawers are designed for more casual outfits that can be folded on top of each other, so you could simply pull out your favourite design from the stack. Everyone plans ahead what to do week by week, so why can’t we do the same with clothes?

Materials : Ash wood
Dimensions : 40 x 70 H 155

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Merging Top
Designed by THINKK Studio

Inspired from a classic toy known as the Spinning Top, “Merging Top” comes with 2 different vases, of different shapes, sizes, and degrees of tilt, to create new styles of flower arrangements. The small vase can be stacked on top of the large vase, transforming into a sculpture-like form that combines two contrasting materials which complement each other. With this Merging Top, flower arranging takes on another level of fun.

Materials : Marble / Ash wood / Ceramic
Dimensions : 12 (diameter) H 16 / 22 (diameter) H 10

Furniture by THINKK Studio and Studio 248 at Ventura Lambrate

Crane Lamp
Designed by Studio 248

“Crane Lamp” is inspired from the shape of the crane used in construction sites, which can transform into different formations. Likewise, this lamp is able to twist and turn according to the user’s desire, through the simplest and most seamless joints. The craftsmanship of this Ash-wood creation makes it appear like an unsuspecting piece of sculpture, ready to transform into a lamp at any time.

Materials : Ash wood
Dimensions : 15 x 15 H 40

Designers:

Decha Archjananun and Ploypan Theerachai from THINKK Studio
Jakkapun Charinrattana from Studio 248

Ventura Lambrate 2012 call for visitors


Dezeen Wire:
Organisation in Design are now accepting applications from designers and companies wishing to exhibit at Ventura Lambrate 2012 in Milan next April. 

The third edition of Ventura Lambrate design district in the north east of Milan will be open from 17 to 22 April 2012.

See all our stories about Ventura Lambrate 2011 here.

For more information and to get involved, send an email milano@organisationindesign.com

Here are some more details from Organisation in Design:


Ventura Lambrate 2012

Organisation in Design, is very pleased to announce the opening of the Ventura Lambrate 2012 exhibitor application.

This will be the third edition of Ventura Lambrate, the only completely curated design district of Fuorisalone.

From Tuesday April 17th, 2012 to Sunday April 22nd, the most talented expressions of the international design world will be on the Ventura Lambrate stage, for a public composed of press, professionals and design enthusiasts.

By showing a diverse mix of craftsmanship and technology, poetry and intellect, nature and science, uniqueness and democracy, Ventura Lambrate 2012 leads visitors to discover the best outings of the international design world, make new business and get inspired.

Ventura Lambrate invites renowned and established designers, as well as emerging young designers, cultural institutions and galleries, interesting initiatives and creative collectives to apply for Ventura Lambrate 2012.

Dezeenwire

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