Underwater hotel room opens off the coast of Zanzibar

Holidaymakers can now spend nights sleeping beneath the surface of the ocean at this partially submerged hotel suite in the Zanzibar archipelago (+ movie).

Underwater hotel room opens off the coast of Zanzibar

Located 250 metres off the coast of Pemba Island, the Underwater Room forms parts of the Manta Resort, a holiday retreat on the mainland of the island, and comprises a three-storey floating structure with its lowest level positioned four metres beneath the water.

Underwater hotel room opens off the coast of Zanzibar

After being escorted to the remote suite by boat, guests use a staircase to descend to their underwater bedroom, where windows on every wall allow 360 degree views of the underwater coral reef and sea life.

Underwater hotel room opens off the coast of Zanzibar

“Some [reef fish] have taken up residence around the room, which affords them some protection from predators,” said the resort owners. “For instance, three bat fish and a trumpet fish called Nick who is always swimming around and seemingly looking in!”

Underwater hotel room opens off the coast of Zanzibar

Coral is expected to grow around the outer walls, plus underwater spotlights are fitted below the windows to encourage squid and colourful sea slugs to come into view.

Underwater hotel room opens off the coast of Zanzibar

The structure was designed and built by Swedish company Genberg Underwater Hotels and takes its cues from Utter Inn, a floating structure on Lake Malaren in Sweden that was modelled on a traditional Scandinavian house.

Underwater hotel room opens off the coast of Zanzibar

Like this structure, the Underwater Room has a timber-clad upper section that sits above the water. This includes lounge and bathroom facilities, as well as a roof deck that can be used for either sunbathing or stargazing.

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Dezeen wins third award in two weeks

News: Dezeen was named Digital Service of the Year at the IBP Awards in London last night – our third major accolade in two weeks.

Dezeen wins third award in two weeks

The IBP judges described Dezeen as “amazingly high quality” and praised “exciting developments” including the UK’s first-ever print-on-demand magazine and the introduction of our Opinion section.

The Hospital Club named Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs as one of the 100 “most influential, innovative and interesting people in the creative and media industries”

The accolade comes three days after Dezeen founder Marcus Fairs was named one of the 100 most influential creatives in the UK, and a week after Fairs won the Business Web Editor of the Year prize at the BSME Awards.

The British Society of Magazine Editor’s award for Business Web Editor of the Year 2013 went to Dezeen’s Marcus Fairs

“The Dezeen entry was of an amazingly high quality,” said the IBP judges. “The sheer volume of content is impressive in itself, but also there have been several exciting developments in the past underlined by evidence of impact. The service is certainly not standing still, for example traffic growing 17 percent to 37.3 million visits,” the judges commented.

They added: “Innovations since last year have included a beautifully designed and produced print-on-demand magazine covering the fascinating world of 3-D printing; a partnership with Google and the introduction of an Opinion area.”

The IBP’s Digital Service of the Year award is presented to publications “using digital platforms available to do something different”.

“The judges were looking for real innovation and change that anticipated future development,” said awards host Peter Murray at the ceremony at the Four Seasons Hotel on Park Lane in London.

Organised by the International Building Press, the annual IBP National Journalism Awards honour journalists and publications working in media for the built environment.

Dezeen beat The Architects Journal, Building4change and Construction News to win the category. We were also highly commended in the same category last year.

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New York loft conversion based on a 1960s modular Swiss house by Ali Tayar

This New York loft conversion by local architect Ali Tayar is divided using bespoke prefabricated panels based on a Swiss modular housing system from the 1960s (+ slideshow).

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

Tayar designed the home for Maryana Bilski, a creative director he previously collaborated with on the interior of a hotel in Switzerland, who oversaw the restoration of the 1872 cast iron building in the city’s Soho district.

Bilski commissioned a small steel-framed pavilion on top of the building, hidden behind a mansard roof and based on a system devised by Swiss architect Fritz Haller in 1967. “As a boy in Switzerland, my partner lived in the first Haller modular house. This was like an extension of that childhood home, here in New York,” Bilski said.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

Wanting to continue the idea of this modular construction in the apartment below, Tayar created a bespoke prefabricated system using 1.2-metre-square aluminium panels to build freestanding boxes that house the master and guest bedrooms, and kitchen units and appliances, as well as modular ceiling panels.

“Fritz Haller’s idea of modular architecture informed my whole education,” he said. “So I conceived of the interior of the original loft, below the penthouse, as a custom-made prefabricated system based on the geometric model Haller had developed.”

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

“The interior is completely free of the building shell,” said Tayar. “It came in boxes and got installed. It can be uninstalled, put back in boxes, and taken out.”

Porthole windows in some of the aluminium panels used to construct the bedrooms allow light to enter during the day and seem to glow at night, while the bright orange panels used for the kitchen inject a hit of colour into the predominantly neutral interior.

Original wooden columns that appear throughout the space influenced the choice of larch for the ceiling, kitchen units and for storage panels clipped onto the bedrooms.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

Tayar designed an expansive sectional grey sofa to create a large lounge area, while the antique chairs and settee nearby flank chrome and glass coffee tables designed by Haller.

A staircase leads up to the penthouse, where the glazed walls provide views across the city.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

Photography by Eric Laignel.

Here’s a project description from Ali Tayar:


Soho Penthouse

Designing interiors for the Omnia hotel in Zermatt, Switzerland, Ali Tayar of the Parallel Design Partnership developed a close working relationship with Maryana Bilski, the project’s American expat creative director. Tayar subsequently designed a carbon-fiber yacht for Bilski’s Swiss partner. When the couple were planning a move to New York, they turned again to Tayar for their duplex, the final phase in an almost decade long rehabilitation of one of SoHo’s finest cast-iron buildings.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

As at the Omnia, Bilski oversaw the SoHo project. She worked with Bialosky + Partners Architects on a painstakingly authentic restoration of the 1872 building’s facade, elaborately ornamented in the style of France’s Second Empire-even recasting replacement elements in iron rather than less-expensive fiberglass.

Then, on a flat section of the roof, hidden by a Haussmann-esque mansard, she asked the firm to erect a small steel-framed glass penthouse pavilion, using a modular system devised by the Swiss architect Fritz Haller in 1967. “As a boy in Switzerland, my partner lived in the first Haller modular house. This was like an extension of that childhood home, here in New York,” she says.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

The 1,300-square-foot penthouse pavilion was also an extension of Tayar’s studies at Germany’s Universität Stuttgart and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

Instead of subdividing the 4,500 square feet of loft space with conventional studs and plasterboard, Tayar constructed his two principal architectural elements from 4-foot-square modules in grey anodised aluminium, used either on their own or with larch panels snapped in.

These pods contain the master suite and the guest suite, the former raised because the windows at the front of the loft are higher. Translucent portholes puncture the panels of both pods, letting light in during the day and out at night. Similar panels, only bright orange, sheathe the front of a third unit, a freestanding wall with a grandly scaled version of the Pullman kitchen built into the back. The ceiling’s perforated larch panels are modular, too.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

He limited his palette to just a few materials, starting with the honey-colored larch – a softwood not normally associated with luxury construction but chosen to coordinate with the original Doric columns. There is also granite for the two baronial fireplace surrounds, the bathroom’s walls and tub and sink surrounds, and the kitchen’s counter and backsplash. The only strong colour is the orange of the kitchen panels.

“Furnishing the apartment was a matter of weaving together the history of the building with the history of the clients,” he says. The result takes a long view of modernism – one that starts with its birth in the second industrial revolution of the mid-19th century, the world of the crystal palace and the cast-iron facade, and continues to develop up to the present. The first purchase was a set of Danish 1950’s dining chairs, fine-boned in rosewood and leather.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

That was easy. “I know what I like,” Bilski says. Finding a suitably expansive sofa for the living area was harder. After rejecting several contemporary models, she suggested Tayar design something himself, and he came up with a 15-foot-wide gray sectional with black lacquered elements, a nod to her admiration for Eileen Gray. Less monumental are a pair of Haller’s glass-topped chrome cocktail tables and a century-old settee and armchairs.

In the dining area, a massive silvery table base supports an enormous oval of granite. “It was the biggest piece we could find,” Tayar says. Bilski adds, “It truly anchors the space. They had to bring it in with a crane. I can’t believe they’ll ever be able to take it out again.” The entry’s console table, a long slab of Japanese cedar topping elegantly splayed carbon-fiber legs, is a custom design very similar to a table in his own apartment.

Soho Penthouse by Ali Tayar

Art offers a link to the Omnia in particular and Switzerland in general. A large black-and-white photograph of the Alps, taken by the late Balthasar Burkhard, hangs in the living area. “We used a lot of his work at the hotel. That one was a gift from him when the project was complete,” Bilski says. Meanwhile, two striking wrought-iron sculptures came from the original Haller house.

As for the entry’s huge Keith Haring graffiti drawing, it was purchased in 1997 from a gallery in SoHo but immediately whisked off to Europe. Bilski couldn’t wait to bring the Haring home.

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Competition: five Minuteman watches by squarestreet to be won

Competition: we’re now stocking the Minuteman timepieces with bioplastic cases by Hong Kong brand squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store, and we have five for readers to win.

Minuteman watches by Squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store - tortoise
One Hand, tortoise

Squarestreet has released its first watch range, designed by Alexis Holm and David Ericsson.

inuteman watches by Squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store - honey closeup
Two Hand, honey

The Minuteman comes in two different versions. The first is a standard two-hand model that highlights the hour with a circular tip.

Minuteman watches by Squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store - black
Two Hand, black

The second has a gas-meter style face and a single hand that moves every five minutes.

Minuteman watches by Squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store - Two Hand Honey
Two Hand, honey

Each hand-made outer casing is fabricated from cellulose acetate, which comes in solid orange or black plus translucent shades including grey, tortoise, honey and green.

Minuteman watches by Squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store - One Hand Tortoise
One Hand, tortoise

A stainless steel pressure case surrounds the mechanism so the watch is waterproof and can withstand dives down to 30 metres.

Minuteman watches by Squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store - One Hand Black
One Hand, black

The watches come with either a black or white face and straps in patterned or plain leather and nylon, in a multitude of colours – see the full range here.

Minuteman watches by Squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store - One Hand Grey
One Hand, grey

Winners can select either the Minuteman One Hand or Two Hand face style and specify which colour they would like to receive.

Minuteman watches by Squarestreet at Dezeen Watch Store - Two Hand Grey
Two Hand, grey

Squarestreet was set up by designers Alexis Holm and David Ericsson, who also designs watches for his brand VOID that are some of our most popular models on Dezeen Watch Store.

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Squarestreet watches” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers. Read our privacy policy here.

You need to subscribe to our newsletter to have a chance of winning. Sign up here.

Competition closes 19 December 2013. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeen Mail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

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ON Headquarters with a pool of oil in the lobby by BLANCASMORAN and LSA Arquitectos

This headquarters for an oil and gas company in Mexico City features a square pool of reflective oil in the centre of the lobby (+ slideshow).

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The interior was designed by local studios BLANCASMORAN and LSA Arquitectos, who selected materials that evoke the client’s business.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

In the lobby, the architects inserted a metal plinth and filled the top 15 centimetres with a processed oil that produces a slick and highly reflective surface.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

Elsewhere, materials with rich patterned surfaces have been chosen to reference the millions of years it takes for geochemical processes to transform fossilised organic materials into crude oil.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

“Since oil is a material generated after million of years we thought about using materials that could suggest the passing of time as well so we chose one mineral material, in this case the Iranian Travertine, and one vegetal material, the walnut timber veneer,” architect Abel Blancas Morán told Dezeen.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The Iranian marble is used to cover a wall behind the reception desk that leads into the offices, where it also appears on walls and partitions.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The walnut veneer is used to clad the curving external wall of the circular boardroom and in the directors’ offices.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

“Each layer in the marble texture represents a period of time where different kinds of sediments settled and the result of all these years is this lovely texture,” said Blancas Morán. “In the case of the timber texture, each line also represents a year.”

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The round boardroom is situated in the centre of the interior plan with a circulation area containing breakout spaces surrounding it.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

Directors’ offices feature desks with glossy surfaces that reflect the warm wood panelling, while an open plan work space has a contrastingly minimal interior with rows of bright white desks.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

Photography is by Rafael Gamo.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The architects sent us this short project description:


ON Headquarters

Located west of Mexico City within the corporate and financial district boundaries, -ON- Headquarters is the base of operations of a company providing services to the oil and gas industry.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

After accessing the headquarters through the Lobby and its oil pool, the Board Room functions as the project´s epicentre and generates in its surroundings a concourse where most of the company´s activities and interactions take place. This concourse is the crossing and meeting point for directors, associates, assistants, interns, and guests.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The nature of the company´s business is intended to be reflected in the materials chosen to allocate architectural brief. Being TIME the most important component in the creation of the industry´s raw material (oil), textures and surfaces expressing time and its traces where specifically chosen to contain the required spaces in the programme.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

ON Headquarters
LSA Arquitectos / BLANCASMORAN (Imanol Legorreta Molin, Pablo Sepúlveda de Yturbe, Abel Blancas Moran)
Project Architect: Almendra Corona

Floor plan of ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN
Floor plan – click for larger image

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Peter Saville abstracts Lacoste’s crocodile logo for Holiday Collector polo shirts

French fashion brand Lacoste has enlisted graphic designer Peter Saville to reinterpret its famous crocodile logo for a range of polo shirts.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

Lacoste presented Peter Saville with a blank canvas to redesign its L.12.12 polo shirt for the Holiday Collector no.8 range.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

Saville chose to keep to the original colours of white polo and green logo, but abstracted the iconic crocodile to adorn the left breast of the shirts.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

He created a string of squiggly, spiky and minimal iterations of the reptile, to be used in place of the design that has featured on Lacoste’s apparel since the company first launched tennis wear in 1933.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

The logo was kept to roughly the same size and shape, though some designs are more abstract than others. The shirts come in translucent green packaging to match the logo’s colour.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

Tennis player René Lacoste, the brand’s founder, was nicknamed The Crocodile after his Davis Cup team captain promised to buy him an alligator suitcase if he won an important match.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

Earlier this year Lacoste asked Saville to design a new logo for the brand’s eightieth anniversary, which was used to adorn polo shirts, bags and other apparel.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

Saville won the London Design Medal earlier this year and working with Kanye West to design a new visual identity for the rapper. His prints were used on garments and footwear in the Spring Summer 2014 collection by Japanese label Y-3.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

This isn’t the first designer collaboration for Lacoste, which previously teamed up with the Campana Brothers to create a range of clothes.

Peter Saville holiday collector polo shirts for Lacoste

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Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

Here’s a set of images by photographer Hélène Binet showing Zaha Hadid‘s recently completed Heyder Aliyev Centre that rises from the surface of a plaza in Baku, Azerbaijan (+ slideshow).

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

London-based architectural photographer Hélène Binet captured the interior and exterior of the cultural centre, which was designed by Zaha Hadid Architects as the main venue for exhibitions, concerts and other cultural activities in the capital city.

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

The 57,000-square-metre building was conceived as a fluid structure emerging from the ground as folded, undulating ribbons that form a continuous surface and wrap over glazed facades.

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

Clad with thousands of glass fibre reinforced concrete tiles, the building was designed to be a “celebration of traditional Azeri culture.”

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

“One of the most critical yet challenging elements of the project was the architectural development of the building’s skin,” said the architects.

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

The interior features a library, large auditorium, conference centre and meeting rooms.

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

The structure combines concrete with a steel space frame, with all vertical columns hidden beneath the swooping, folding shell.

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

Light from the interior spills out over the outer surfaces at knight through gaps in the folds of the exterior.

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

The building was nominated for awards at both this year’s World Architecture Festival and the biennial Inside Festival.

Heydar Aliyev Centre by Zaha Hadid photographed by Hélène Binet

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OMA completes De Rotterdam “vertical city” complex

News: architect Rem Koolhaas’ studio OMA has completed its colossal “vertical city” in Rotterdam, the Netherlands (+ slideshow).

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Michel van de Kar

OMA designed the giant De Rotterdam complex for its home city, where the building sits on the south bank of the Maas river.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Ossip van Duivenbode

The 44-storey interconnected glass towers span a width of over a hundred metres and remain roughly the same floor area for the entirety of the building’s 150-metre height.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Ossip van Duivenbode

“We made a building that consists of separate volumes that were slightly shifted vis-a-vis each other so that it was very adaptable,” Rem Koolhaas told Dezeen during a tour of the building today.

“We could easily replace one part with another part and therefore accommodate different logics and arguments,” he added. “This shifting creates a large building, but a large building that is a very dynamic presence in the city.”

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Ossip van Duivenbode

Overlapping blocks form the three towers that all share a plinth, in which lobbies and public spaces are located.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Ossip van Duivenbode

These blocks contain separate office spaces, residential apartments, hotel and conference facilities, restaurants and cafes. Workers and residents share the conference, sport and restaurant facilities.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Charlie Koolhaas

The building is named after one of the ships that transported Dutch immigrants to America from 1873 to the 1970s.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Philippe Ruault

Rem Koolhaas recently accepted an award for the best tall building of the year for the CCTV Headquarters in Beijing, ten years after declaring he wanted to “kill the skyscraper”.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Philippe Ruault

Here’s some information from OMA:


De Rotterdam

OMA today marks the completion of De Rotterdam, a mixed-use, 160,000-metre-square slab-tower conceived as a “vertical city” on the river Maas.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Philippe Ruault

Ellen van Loon: “Efficiency has been a central design parameter from day one. The extreme market forces at play throughout the course of the project, far from being a design constraint, have in fact reinforced our original concept. The result is a dense, vibrant building for the city.”

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Ossip van Duivenbode

With the building’s completion, a critical mass has been established on the Kop van Zuid, realising the long-established vision of a second city centre south of the Maas. The building is named after one of the original ships on the Holland America Line, which from 1873 to the late 1970s transported thousands of emigrating Europeans bound for New York from the Wilhelmina Pier, next to which De Rotterdam is situated.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Ossip van Duivenbode

The three stacked and interconnecting towers of De Rotterdam rise 44 floors to a height of 150 meters and span a width of over 100 meters. Nevertheless, the building is exceptionally compact, with a mix of programs organised into distinct but overlapping blocks of commercial office space, residential apartments, hotel and conference facilities, restaurants and cafes.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Ossip van Duivenbode

Office employees, residents and hotel guests are brought together in conference, sport and restaurant facilities. The building’s shared plinth is the location of the lobbies to each of the towers, creating a pedestrianised public hub by means of a common hall.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Photograph by Michel van de Kar

Rem Koolhaas: “Despite its scale and apparent solidity, the building’s shifted blocks create a constantly changing appearance, different from every part of the city. The fact that it stands today represents a small triumph of persistence for the city, the developer, the contractor and the architects.”

Section of OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Perspective atrium section – click for larger image

The various phases of design and construction were supervised by partners-in-charge Rem Koolhaas, Ellen van Loon and Reinier de Graaf, and associate-in-charge Kees van Casteren. De Rotterdam is developed by MAB Development and OVG Real Estate.

OMA completes De Rotterdam building
Perspective long section

Project: A mixed-use vertical city
Status: Commission 1997, groundbreaking December 2009, completion November 2013
Clients: De Rotterdam CV, The Hague (Joint venture MAB, The Hague / OVG, Rotterdam)
Location: Rotterdam, Netherlands
Site: Former harbour waterfront between KPN tower and Cruise Terminal at Kop van Zuid
Program: Total 162,000m2: offices 72,000m2; 240 apartments 34,5000m2; hotel (278 rooms) / congress / restaurant 19,000m2; retail / F&B 1,000m2; leisure 4,500m2; parking (approx. 650 vehicles) 31,000m2

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“vertical city” complex
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Hong Kong museum restaurant by Joyce Wang features “spiral staircase” chandeliers

Movie: in our next exclusive video interview from Inside Festival, interior designer Joyce Wang discusses the custom-made fittings and furniture she designed for Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong.

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

Ammo, which won the Bars and Restaurants category at last month’s Inside Festival, is part of a new museum and headquarters for the Asia Society in Hong Kong.

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

“It was previously an ammunition storage facility that the British used to store explosives about a hundred years ago,” Wang explains. “We were asked by the client to convert the space into a museum café and from that a more luxurious and high-end dining experience was born.”

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

Despite only having three months to take the project from design conception to completion, Wang says that most of the furniture and fittings were custom-made for the project, including three sculptural chandeliers shaped like spiral staircases.

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

“Practically everything apart from the lightbulbs [was custom designed],” Wang claims. “We didn’t want people to identify any of the furnishings, accessories or bits of furniture.”

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

She continues: “The space has three feature staircase chandeliers. We worked closely with the fabricator and lighting consultant on how to use plumbing pipes to construct these really complicated forms and have electricity running through them.”

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

Wang says she wanted the restaurant to be dramatic because many people would use the space to enter the museum as well as eat there.

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

“The arrival experience was very important to us,” she says. “Instead of conceiving of it as a museum café it became this lobby of arrival for the museum. We wanted it to have different clues as to what was going to happen upstairs in the museum.”

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

“A lot of people visit the restaurant and they don’t realise that the bunker-like ceiling pays tribute to the vaulted ceiling of the museum above.”

Ammo bar and restaurant in Hong Kong by Joyce Wang

The restaurant has been very successful since it opened, Wang claims.

“There’s a two-month-long waiting list and it’s difficult to get into, especially for dinner,” she says. “I think it’s an interesting space because from lunchtime to dinner it really feels quite different.”

Joyce Wang portrait
Joyce Wang. Copyright: Dezeen

This movie was filmed at Inside Festival 2013, which took place at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore from 2 to 4 October. The next Inside Festival will take place at the same venue from 1 to 3 October 2014. Award entries are open February to June 2014.

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Google’s colourful Madrid headquarters by Jump Studios

Colour-coded meeting rooms and private workspaces are tucked behind wooden arches at the Google offices in Madrid by London practice Jump Studios (+ slideshow).

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

For Google‘s headquarters in the Spanish capital, Jump Studios fitted out two floors of the Torre Picasso – a high-rise to the north of Madrid city centre.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

“The office spaces now boast a higher degree of flexibility and functionality, which fulfil the aspirations of the client who wanted a unique and friendly workplace with local character,” said the studio.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The lower level houses the reception area, lecture theatre and canteen, as well as office space.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Graphics and patterns are printed on the walls, ceiling and around the front of the reception desk.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The kitchen serving the canteen is surrounded by a curved wall clad in cork, which contains storage shelves and cabinets.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

On the floor above, timber arches designed to reflect traditional Spanish architecture separate the workspace around the outside of the floor from meeting rooms and cubicles for private work.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

There’s also a multi-functional recreation area with a ping-pong table and self-catering equipment.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Google is springing up new offices across the globe. Earlier this year Allford Hall Monaghan Morris applied for planning permission to construct a 27-hectare headquarters for the company in London’s King’s Cross.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Here’s the information sent to us by the designers:


Google Madrid HQ

The extensive fit out and refurbishment of Google’s Madrid HQ sets new standards in office interior design on the Iberian peninsula.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Jump Studios, a London based architecture practice with a recently launched satellite office in Lisbon, has completed Google’s new Madrid office using advanced materials to deliver a highly sustainable and inspiring new workplace for the company’s Iberian operations.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Jump Studios is currently shortlisted for the BD Architect of the Year 2013 Award in the Interior Architecture category for a range of projects including Google Madrid.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Overview

The Google Madrid project comprises the fit out of two floors in one of Madrid’s most prestigious high-rise buildings – Torre Picasso.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Working with the concept of a timber arched core element – a reference to the spatial and material qualities of traditional Spanish architecture – the scheme has greatly improved the efficiency of the floorplate and created a highly characteristic ambience that is relaxed and sophisticated at the same time.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The office spaces now boast a higher degree of flexibility and functionality, which fulfil the aspirations of the client who wanted a unique and friendly workplace with local character.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Now an approachable and usable space with a strong identity, productivity has greatly increased.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Project Details

The lower of the two adjacent levels occupied by the client houses the main reception, lecture theatre, canteen and a multi-functional area with fully equipped kitchen catering for the entire office.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

On the upper level can be found the bulk of the office space as well as more extensive breakout spaces with room for games, additional informal presentation areas, shower facilities, a massage room and hammock area.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The overall layout and arrangement of particular spaces and elements has been carefully considered and developed to suit the working style of the company in general while meeting the more exact needs and requirements of the local workforce.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The very specific acoustic requirements of the project for both the meeting rooms and the individual video conferencing cabins necessitated the careful selection of subcontractors and the very close co-ordination of all the teams involved to provide both robust and aesthetically pleasing solutions and details.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The use of sustainable materials contributed to the project’s LEED Gold rating.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Project Delivery and Sustainability

The project was delivered in five separate phases, which allowed the offices to remain open throughout.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios
Level 1 – click for larger image

It involved a high level of co-ordination and collaboration between the architectural, engineering and contracting teams – Jump Studios, Deerns and Construcía with strong project management from Artelia Spain.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios
Level 2 – click for larger image

The post Google’s colourful Madrid headquarters
by Jump Studios
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