GreeM hair salon with artifical light and shadow by Takara Space Design

White and black painted patches create artificial shafts of light and shadows on the walls of this salon in Japan by Tokyo studio Takara Space Design.

greeM hair salon by Yozo Suzuki

Architect Yozo Suzuki of Takara Space Design converted a former cafe in the Yamanashi Prefecture to create the hair and beauty salon, which is entitled GreeM.

The space had only small windows, so the architect used different shades of paint to exaggerate the appearance of light and shadow, in an attempt to brighten up an otherwise dark room.

greeM hair salon by Yozo Suzuki

“White and grey paintings, and artificial lighting on the walls looks like daylight from the windows,” said Suzuki. “With the combination of painted lights, shadows and lighting we tried to [add] the comfort that natural light has.”

The shades range from grey, light grey, white and cream, and the lighter patches are used to highlight seating areas and product displays.

greeM hair salon by Yozo Suzuki

There are two hair-dressing stations at the front of the space, with a hair-washing tucked away in a separate room.

Mirrors sit within chunky wooden frames, while wood-like vinyl tiles cover the floor.

greeM hair salon by Yozo Suzuki

Photography is by Keisuke Miyamoto.

Here’s some information from Yozo Suzuki:


Daylight of painting

There was a dark space which previous use is a cafe with small windows. Client requested us to convert the space to a beauty salon with low budget.

The way that we suggested was painting lights and shadows on the interior walls. White and grey paintings and artificial lightings on the wall look like daylight from the windows.

Floor plan of greeM hair salon by Yozo Suzuki
Floor plan – click for larger image

With the combination of painted lights, shadows and lighting,we tried to make a comfort as a natural light has. Customers can enjoy differences from ordinary lights.

Project name: greeM
Location: 4709-1 Ryuchi Kai-city Yamanashi Japan
Floor size: 45 sq m
Use: beauty salon for men and women. Hair cut, hair colour, hair perm, shampoo and head spa.
Floor: vinyl tile (wooden printed)
Wall: paint (white and grey)
Ceiling: paint on steel structures

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Golden public toilet by Gort Scott aims to “inspire confidence”

This golden public toilet in Wembley, London aims to evoke the days when lavatories were “civic buildings that aimed to inspire confidence and pride in a place”.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

With a perforated diamond pattern on its metal facade the Wembley WC Pavilion, designed by architects Gort Scott, sits in a newly landscaped and pedestrianised area and is intended to be “a singular and figurative building”.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

The project comes at a time when public toilet provision is declining. “The aim was, after all, for a special building that harks back to the days when public toilet buildings were types of civic buildings that aimed to inspire confidence and pride in a place,” architect Jay Gort told Dezeen.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

It was commissioned by Brent Council to develop the public convenience for a busy street in Wembley in northwest London. It consists of four urinals, a separate WC, a caretakers store and landscaped surroundings.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

The exterior of the structure is made from a shimmering golden aluminium, which is more perforated near the roof. During the day the perforations filter sunlight into the toilets, while at night the structure appears to light up from within.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

“We wanted a material that would allow the building to change depending on the weather and time of day,” said Gort. “On a sunny day, the reflectivity and shade of panels make the most of the faceted form, and then at night the perforations allow the building to glow.”

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

The architects used a traditional stamping machine to create the angular perforations. “A custom-made diamond-shaped cutting tool was produced after many prototype test sheets that were cut in our office to gauge the scale, shape and spacing of the holes,” he added.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

Interior walls are lined with white ceramic tiles. There’s also a rainwater collection tank concealed behind a mirror, which uses recycled water for flushing the toilets.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

The building has a four-sided concrete base, but looks like a star when viewed from above. Photography is by David Grandorge.

Here’s some project information from Gort Scott:


Wembley WC Pavilion

Gort Scott won the commission to design some new public conveniences on Empire Way in Wembley after an invited competition by Brent Council. The proposal is a modest, freestanding pavilion that will sit within a new garden and pedestrianised area that has been reclaimed from recent road realignments.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

This is an unusual commission given the decline in provision of such services by local authorities. The brief called for a public toilet building, containing 4 urinals, a separate WC and caretakers store and landscaping to the immediate area. Gort Scott won the commission via an invited competition by Brent Council. The client required a building that could underpin the aspirations of the borough in terms of quality design and sustainability and form a key part in the regeneration of the pocket park and mixed area in which the pavilion sits.

The design intention was to produce a singular and figurative building that also related to its context and helps to define a sense of place. Standing over five meters tall the WC pavilion commands a presence at the high point of the surrounding topography and can be seen as walking up the gentle slope of Empire Way towards the Town Centre. Each of the building’s sides is subtly differentiated in response to the specific contexts, whether a busy road or public space. The design was conceived developed through a number of physical models.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

The ground floor plan was developed to satisfy the brief requirements in a compact and efficient arrangement. It is based on a simple geometry, derived from a square, which suggests movement or rotation and allowing for a simple repeated construction, to minimise costs while ensuring quality.

The base of the building is constructed from concrete and will stand up to the anticipated knocks and scrapes of heavy use. Above head-height the structure becomes a filigree, shiny metal screen, allowing for light and ventilation without letting views in. The perforated water-cut screen further creates the effect of a glowing lantern during the evening.

Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott

The interior of the WC and urinals is robust and elegant: Up to 2.1m above ground, the walls are concrete, and tiled in utilitarian white ceramic tiles. A rainwater collection tank sits above the service room, clad in mirror, disappearing in its reflections of the surrounding perforated screen.

Although a small building the project acts as a showpiece for green technologies including rain water collection for flushing, natural ventilation, and PVs that power the lights, hand dryers and insulated D.W.C.

Pavilion floor plan of Wembley WC Pavilion Project by Gort Scott
Floor plan – click for larger image

Client: LB Brent
Location: Wembley, London
Start date: December 2012
Completion date: May 2013
Construction cost: £245,000 including landscaping
Architects: Gort Scott
Contractor: Brac Contracts
Structure: Price & Myers
M&E: Skelly and Couch
Planting: Brent Council
CDM: MLM

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Keperra House built around a sheltered deck by A-CH

A sheltered deck separates the bedroom from the living spaces of this tiny home in a suburb of Brisbane (+ slideshow).

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

The building was designed by Australian studio A-CH as a dwelling for a single occupant at the end of the garden of an existing property.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

A void at the centre of the building frames views of a mature Jacaranda tree and the main house beyond, and acts as the entrance to the two separate indoor spaces.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

“The semi-outdoor deck is the main breakout space which the occupant is forced to circulate across on a daily basis, heightening one’s awareness of the changing environmental conditions,” said the architects.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

On one side of the deck is a compact living and kitchen area, while the bedroom and a bathroom are located on the other side. Sliding doors can be opened to connect the inside spaces with the decking.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

The building is constructed from robust materials including cast concrete and galvanised cladding, which is also used to create oversized guttering that helps to shade the interior from the sun.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

Plywood panels used throughout the interior provide a sense of natural warmth and conceal amenities, and storage behind folding doors.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

Windows are carefully positioned to retain privacy where it is required, while making the most of views of the garden and neighbouring parkland.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

“The project seeks to experiment with the daily pleasures of compact dwelling and to celebrate the spirit of the place where it belongs,” the architects summarised.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

Photography is by Alicia Taylor.

Here’s a project description from A-CH:


Keperra House

Keperra is a post-war suburb North West of Brisbane CBD, once occupied by the military camps in the 1940’s and later with the development of Housing Commission in the 1950’s. The brief to add a detached sole occupant flat on an existing property presents an opportunity to rethink the typology of the secondary dwelling, commonly dubbed as the ‘granny flat’.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

The new dwelling is positioned along the rear boundary like a garden wall, with a defensive Southern facade as backdrop of a mature Jacaranda tree. The central covered deck space establishes ground connections with the newly defined garden while serving as an arrival court. This punctured void in the massing sets up a framed view of the landscape for the garden and the existing house.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

The dwelling is deliberately made to open up the Northern facade on to the natural settings of Kedron Brook creek reserve. With the footprint kept at a minimium of 45m2, the small spaces amplify the sense of dwelling in nature. This rare edge condition between site, suburb and parkland has the potential to offer connections for the occupant with the daily activities of the parkland life.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung

The elongated plan paired with generous openings extends the interior to the landscape beyond, while screening devices allow control of privacy from the occasional parkland strollers. A string of three connecting rooms essentially makes up the plan: living, semi-outdoor and sleeping. Each designated with an individual framing of expansive, intermediate and protected views respectively in response to the undulating landscape.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung
Site plan- click for larger image

These composed and at times oblique apertures enhance one’s sense of openness, immediacy and intimacy. The semi-outdoor deck is the main breakout space which the occupant is forced to circulate across on a daily basis, heightening one’s awareness of the changing environmental conditions.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung
Plan- click for larger image

Robust construction detailing are utilised throughout the project, and resilient materials are used primarily in their raw state to deliver a low maintenance dwelling within a constrained budget.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung
Cross section- click for larger image

The chiseled, board marked in-situ concrete has a rock like quality, emerging to form anchorage to the sloping land. Capped atop by the sharp edged galvanised cladding, with its subtly reflective surface captures the seasonal colour transitions of the surrounding foliage. The oversized folded zincalume gutter also doubles as a sunshade device over large Northern openings.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung
Long section- click for larger image

Internal spaces on the contrary display a sense of warmth and softness, with the use of materials such as locally sourced Cypress Pine and Hoop Pine plywood panels throughout. Material palettes have been kept simple to achieve a restrained and functional space, where storage units and amenities integrate within a concealed joinery wall. The project seeks to experiment with the daily pleasures of compact dwelling and to celebrate the spirit of the place where it belongs.

Keperra House by Atelier Chen Hung
Elevation- click for larger image

Practice Name: A–CH (Atelier Chen Hung)
Project Team: Melody Chen, James Hung, Renee Popovic
Physical Model: Yohei Omura
Structural Engineer: Northrop Consulting Engineers

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a sheltered deck by A-CH
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De Burgemeester office with an angular wooden staircase by Studioninedots

An angular wooden staircase ascends the lobby of this office renovation in the Dutch town of Hoofddorp by Amsterdam architects Studioninedots (+ slideshow).

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Studioninedots was tasked with renovating an entire 1970s office building. The architects began by removing an existing staircase and enlarging the space around it to create a void that visually connects a communal area on the ground floor with the levels above.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

The staircase acts as the focal point of this large atrium and was made by cladding a steel structure in plywood sheets to create a series of bridges and access points to the various floors.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Broad treads encourage spontaneous interaction between employees of the different firms that occupy the shared offices.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

“The staircase as a tool for communication, lends the building a collective identity,” said the architects. “As a vertical lobby that offers views of all floors, it tells occupants that they are part of a larger world.”

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Elsewhere, the architects employed a pared-back approach so that they “could channel more resources into one spectacular, shared amenity that boosts the whole building” – the staircase.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Latticed panels milled from the same plywood used for the staircase create decorative railings around the edges of the atrium.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Removing suspended ceilings revealed cast concrete beams that contrast with the warm wood of the staircase.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Large windows fill the lobby with natural light and provide views of the surrounding neighbourhood from every level.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Photography is by Peter Cuypers.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


De Burgemeester renovation by Studioninedots

From an abandoned and anonymous office building to a vibrant multi-tenant complex. That’s De Burgemeester, a commercial property in Hoofddorp renovated by Studioninedots and opened on 5 November 2013. The secret of the transformation? A vertical lobby featuring an open staircase where people meet face to face, a space that brings people together both literally and figuratively.

We space. That’s our name for this communal area at the heart of the building. It’s a place that brings people together. Out of the concrete floors we carved a 14-metre-tall void that houses a giant staircase that cuts diagonal lines through the void as it makes its way upwards, linking the different floors to one another. Now people are on the move, making their way back and forth on the timber steps. Some of them linger for a chat, and there’s space on the broad treads to sit for a moment. The sound of chatter and the aroma of coffee from the café below now fill the hall. Most of the office space has already been leased, bringing the building back to life once again.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

De Burgemeester was part of the ‘cloud’ of blue foam models on show in the Dutch pavilion at the 2010 Venice Architecture Biennale. In an exhibition entitled Vacant NL, the pavilion housed a vast model that depicted all the unoccupied buildings in the Netherlands. The exhibition proved confrontational for the way it captured the sheer scale of empty space and rendered it visible at a glance, and for the conclusion expressed: the era of growth is finished, and scarcely anything more needs to be built.

At the same time, that sea of blue also contained a promise. Vacant NL posed a creative challenge to architects: discover the potential of these buildings; adapt them for our era of economic stagnation and population decline; transform them, temporary or otherwise, into flexible and sustainable structures; to ensure a new appreciation of these buildings.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

What’s more, the crisis offers opportunities. The pressure of cost-cutting measures creates scope for other values. More does not necessarily mean better, and that’s something increasing numbers of people are coming to realize. Born out of the idea of cutbacks and facilitated by the internet, a flourishing culture of sharing has emerged.

Thanks to Greenwheels, Peerby and Airbnb we borrow and rent cars, tools and even homes from one another. People in more and more cities are setting up resident associations to make their neighbourhoods more sustainable. And vacant sites are taken as ‘test sites’ for new spatial developments such as urban farming. The sense that ‘everybody for himself’ no longer works, and the feeling that we can really achieve something by joining forces, is gaining widespread support. And, just as important: we’ve come to realize that it’s all much more fun together.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

The renovation of De Burgemeester is a response to these developments. Ymere housing association granted the building a new life as an office complex and in 2012 asked us to draw up a proposal. But the persistent crisis thwarted that ambition; it turned out to be unfeasible for a single client to occupy the entire building. That’s the reason it was decided to team up with an investor called Lingotto and turn the building into a multi-tenant complex.

Since office space with all sorts of extra amenities was no longer a realistic option with a lower budget, we completely changed our original proposal. Workspaces are fitted out without any frills so that we could channel more resources into one spectacular, shared amenity that boosts the whole building. The sculptural staircase, a social space where people can meet, a place that connects people to one another both literally and figuratively. The staircase as a tool for communication, lends the building a collective identity. As a vertical lobby that offers views of all floors, it tells occupants that they are part of a larger world. And precisely that feeling is the major quality of the renovated building.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

On top of that, we maximized those qualities that De Burgemeester already possessed: views of the surrounding neighbourhood and generous amounts of daylight. The openness and transparency achieved through the addition of glass partition walls and the voluminous atrium ensures views to the outside from almost everywhere within. Suspended ceilings have been removed to reveal the authentic concrete floor with T-beams. Now this rough, column-free load-bearing structure determines the atmosphere.
The timber-clad stairs and banisters add warmth to the interior. The staircase is constructed of steel and wrapped with simple sheets of plywood with a transparent varnish finish. Custom-made railings are milled from the same sheets using an affordable industrial technique that lends the result an almost handcrafted appearance.

To complete the story, we also designed the building’s visual identity. The leitmotif for the colourful graphic design is the comma, an optimistic punctuation mark that evokes positive expectations. De Burgemeester is already well on its way to meeting those expectations.

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wooden staircase by Studioninedots
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Singapore hotel covered with plants was “inspired by rock formations”

Movie: Wong Mun Summ of WOHA explains how the Singapore studio tried to recreate geological forms in the architecture of PARKROYAL on Pickering, which won the Hotels category at last month’s Inside Festival

PARKROYAL on Pickering by WOHA

PARKROYAL on Pickering by WOHA is a 367-room hotel on the edge of Singapore’s Central Business District, which features large balconies and terraces covered in 15,000 square metres of tropical plants.

PARKROYAL on Pickering by WOHA, Singapore

“We wanted to create a hotel in a garden,” explains Wong. “We have achieved more than 200% of the site area in green replacement. So the green areas in the building are actually larger than the site itself.”

PARKROYAL on Pickering by WOHA, Singapore

The balconies are made from layered slabs of contoured concrete, which continue inside the hotel in the reception areas on the ground floor. Wong explains that they were arranged to suggest natural landscapes.

PARKROYAL on Pickering by WOHA, Singapore

“All the inspiration comes from rock formations,” he says. “It’s a very organic feeling that you get from the building.”

He adds: “We wanted to mimic the idea of the sedimentary layer and that is actually quite obvious from the form of the various strata in the building. Each layer is grooved, so that it has more shadows and is more refined.”

PARKROYAL on Pickering by WOHA, Singapore

The hotel rooms themselves are more simple in design, but Wong says that the layout of each one is designed in relation to the garden outside.

“We wanted create a very warm feeling that is extending from the gardens,” he says. “The hotel rooms are configured in such a way that all of the rooms look into the sky terraces. Not only do you get a city view, you get a garden view.”

PARKROYAL on Pickering by WOHA, Singapore

The large windows in the bedrooms are broken up by an irregular pattern of timber mullions, which is replicated by the bespoke furniture and fittings inside the rooms.

“Because we were the architects [as well as the interior designers] we wanted to make sure there was a good transition from architecture to interiors,” says Wong. “So the idea was to transform [the windows] into framing structures for the cabinets, the shelves, and even the lamp fittings.”

PARKROYAL on Pickering by WOHA, Singapore

Wong says that he believes the hotel can be enjoyed by both passers-by and guests.

“We succeeded in creating a building that the man in the street can relate to,” he claims. “Quite often high-rise buildings tend to be very abstract, almost lacking in details. In this case what we have tried to do is humanise the skyscraper.

“It’s not just the guests that benefit from it, but also people who walk around in the city.”

Wong Mun Summ of Singapore studio WOHA
Wong Mun Summ of Singapore studio WOHA

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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“inspired by rock formations”
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Jaime Hayón says his Groninger Museum exhibition is full of “all kinds of crazy products”

A giant chess set and a hot-dog-shaped rocking horse are on show at a retrospective of work by Spanish designer Jaime Hayón at the Groninger Museum in the Netherlands (+ slideshow + interview).

Funtastico Jaime Hayon exhibition at Groninger Museum
Ceramic objects by Jaime Hayon on display at the Groninger Museum

The Funtastico exhibition is Jaime Hayón‘s first solo exhibition and encompasses a decade of his art and design projects, which he says includes “green chickens and all kinds of crazy products.”

“The show is really this synthesis of this crazy ten years in which a lot of things happened in many different countries and shows,” Hayón told Dezeen.

Funtastico Jaime Hayon exhibition at Groninger Museum
Rockin Sausage and other designs at the Groninger Museum

These range from small objects and furniture design, often created in ceramics, to large-scale installations and interiors.

“[My work] has developed in a very curious way,” said Hayón. “Each time the detail of the work is very intense and the know-how of the craftsmanship is becoming more and more sophisticated.’

Funtastico Jaime Hayon exhibition at Groninger Museum
The Tournament giant chess set at the Groninger Museum

Among pieces on show is The Tournament, a chess set recreating the Battle of Trafalgar fought by the British navy against France and Spain in 1805, which was aptly installed in London’s Trafalgar Square for the city’s design festival in 2009.

Also featured is his collaborative work with artist Nienke Klunder, including a rocking horse in the form of a purple hot dog and a cabinet with skyscraper-shaped cupboards.

Funtastico Jaime Hayon exhibition at Groninger Museum
Ceramics and artwork at the Groninger Museum

These art pieces sit alongside practical furniture and ceramics to form the exhibition, which runs until 30 March 2014.

“A lot of the time, people don’t understand what I’m doing because I’m kind of this guy who has a hybrid behaviour within design,” Hayón said. “I go from making very functional serious designs for companies such as Fritz Hansen to expressing myself and creating sculpture and non-functional items relating to themes.”

Green Chicken by Jaime Hayón
Green Chicken rocking horse

Hayón designed the interior of the information centre at the Groninger Museum when it was renovated in 2010. The museum has previously hosted a solo exhibition by Dutch artists Studio Job, who also designed spaces during the building’s revamp.

Here’s our interview with Jaime Hayón:


Dan Howarth: Tell me about the exhibition.

Jaime Hayon: The interesting thing is the work is focused on the artistic work so everything that is behind the industrial and the artistic work that I do. So its more focused on the installations that I’m doing with galleries and exhibitions in the last ten years. From the first at David Gill to the other exhibitions that I’ve done such as the one in Minneapolis, Lisbon, London, everywhere.

New York is Miami cabinet, 2012, by Jaime Hayón
New York is Miami cabinet, 2012

Dan Howarth: How has your work developed over the past ten years?

Jaime Hayon: It has developed in a very curious way because each time the detail of the work is very intense and the know-how of the craftsmanship is getting more and more sophisticated. So I would just say its just got more serious in terms of contributing more on the evolution of certain materials and certain aspects of the contemporary design. I think the work has evolved in a very meticulous way, the most detail that is possible and to show how we can show how we can challenge different materials and applications of these. Obviously theres a really magical part, which is also the research on the imagination and all the, fantasy behind the work.

Testa Mechanica Green, 2012, by Jaime Hayón
Testa Mechanica Green, 2012

Dan Howarth: What inspires your designs?

Jaime Hayon: I’ve been inspired by a lot of things, from the circus to lost worlds here and there. I’ve been trying to use those themes and try and get them back into track. I was inspired by nature creating cactus’, ceramic pigs and crazy stuff. Green chickens and all kinds of crazy products, which I think also shaped the identity of the work in the last ten years.

Ceccotti Twenty Two chair by Jaime Hayón
Ceccotti Twenty Two chair

Dan Howarth: Which of the projects is your favourite and why?

Jaime Hayon: I don’t have a favourite one because they all link from one to the other. I think I work like an artist than a designer and I’m trying to shape the style with the evolution of the work and to put it together. It’s basically a whole amount of coats that just get together and these coats create an identity of my work. It’s been evolving really well and I’m really happy about that.

Americano Plate 6, 2012, by Jaime Hayón
Americano Plate 6, 2012

Dan Howarth: What themes can be seen throughout the exhibition? Which ones stand out?

Jaime Hayon: In general I think the exhibition is very beautiful. I’m very happy about it. The curators are amazing, they’ve been doing great work. In the past they’ve curated some [Chinese artist] Ai Wei Wei shows, they’ve done the first [Australian designer] Marc Newson museum show, which happened to be in Groninger as well. They’ve done [fashion designers] Viktor and Rolf, McQueen, a lot of artists and designers before my exhibition. So I was really proud to have them asking me for that work.

Choemon Forma 1, 2010, by Jaime Hayón
Choemon Forma 1, 2010

Obviously we’re showing the collection that they own. It involves a lot of sketchbooks, the chess game that was presented at London Design Festival in 2009 at Trafalgar Square, also non-commissioned work. All these things are all put together and it’s an experience for people to look at the work and to understand what the boundaries of the work I’m doing. A lot of the time, people don’t understand what I’m doing because I’m kind of this guy who has a hybrid behaviour within the design discipline and I go from making very functional serious designs for companies such as Fritz Hansen to expressing myself creating sculpture and non-functional relating to themes, which I consider interesting because of their aesthetics and try to be them to another era through creativity.

Rockin Sausage, 2012, by Jaime Hayón and Nienke Klunder
Rockin Sausage, 2012, with Nienke Klunder

So basically the show is really this synthesis of this crazy ten years in which a lot of things happen in many different countries and shows. The contemporary vision of the work which goes from Turkey to the United States to Asia, and all these different countries in which different materials and local crafts so I think its a very interesting show for the public.

Funtastico Jaime Hayon exhibition at Groninger Museum
Jaime Hayón with his The Tournament giant chess set installation

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exhibition is full of “all kinds of crazy products”
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Business Playground meeting room by Mathieu Lehanneur

French designer Mathieu Lehanneur has created a meeting room in a London hotel where guests can relax beneath a canopy with an image of trees projected onto its surface (+ slideshow).

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

Mathieu Lehanneur designed the space for the Pullman London St Pancras hotel, where it provides a meeting room for business clients who want a creative environment suitable for work and relaxation.

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

Poker tables inspired the leather edge surrounding the large meeting table, which encourages people to lean forward as they would when playing cards.

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

“By bringing comfort and a certain suppleness to the table itself, I wanted to instil in each person the desire to participate and be at the heart of the debate, to go from passive to active, from spectator to participant,” Lehanneur explained.

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

A breakout space features comfortable armchairs and tables arranged underneath the faceted canopy, which is illuminated by a digital projection to create the impression of being “somewhere else, outside, under the trees.”

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

A series of illuminated boxes with reflective interiors contain unusual books and objects “inspired by the living spaces of scientists, aesthetes or collectors,” and were added to offer guests a source of inspiration.

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

Lehanneur also designed faceted pebble-shaped containers for storing meeting supplies such as notepads and pens.

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

The unique furniture designs and interventions will be applied throughout Pullman’s hotels in the future.

Here are some more details about the meeting room:


Pullman and Mathieu Lehanneur invent “Business Playground”: a place to work and a playing field for ideas

Pullman reinvents meetings with the “Business Playground” room created by designer Mathieu Lehanneur. This room reflects the brand’s “Work hard, Play hard” motto as well as its guests’ lifestyle. It combines performance and pleasure with a fresh take on the traditional aspects of a meeting: a meeting table designed like a poker table, a private area for informal conversations or breaks, and a cabinet of curiosities. All these features are designed to stimulate creativity and reinvent international hospitality codes. The Pullman London St Pancras will premier the “Business Playground” room from November 2013, before it is gradually rolled out across the network starting in 2014.

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

“Blurring” as a source of inspiration for meetings

The Pullman Hotels & Resorts cater for the new lifestyles and expectations of the brand’s clientele of cosmopolitan, mobile, hyper-connected travelers. These accomplished professionals, who travel for business or with their clans on holiday, are curious about the world around them. The “blurring” of private and professional life is part and parcel of their daily routine. As a result, whether they are travelling for business or for pleasure, they want to be able to work and live intensely during their stays.

Pullman is an event organization expert, with over 30,000 events organized in its hotels. It aims to offer a unique meeting experience and remove the increasingly artificial barrier between work and relaxation. To do so, it invited designer Mathieu Lehanneur to create a new approach to workspaces and design a boardroom that reflects its “Work hard, play hard” motto.

Business playground Mathieu Lehanneur for Pullman

Xavier Louyot, SVP Pullman Global Marketing explains, “Our business guests travel a lot. Hotel guestrooms and meeting rooms are part of their daily routine. Quality of service and efficient facilities are intrinsic to all upscale international hotels. So, it’s the experience that makes the difference. It takes inspiration for big ideas to make the leap forward. With “Business Playground” we aim to create unforgettable meetings for our guests, so that their gatherings in our establishments in London, Paris, or elsewhere are unlike any others.”

The “Business Playground” room is a far cry from very formal conventional meeting rooms and disrupts the codes of business with style by focusing on defining elements and unique furniture create specially for Pullman.

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by Mathieu Lehanneur
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“You’ll probably need an aspirin” after my Design Museum show, says Paul Smith

In this exclusive interview, British fashion designer Paul Smith shows Dezeen his new exhibition at London’s Design Museum, which contains a room “nicknamed the paracetamol room, because by the time you come out you’ll probably need an aspirin” (+ movie).

Paul Smith portrait
Paul Smith

Called Hello, My Name Is Paul Smith the show, which opened today, celebrates Paul Smith‘s career to date and reveals insights into his creative processes.

Hello My Name Is Paul Smith exhibition at the Design Museum office recreation
Recreation of Paul Smith’s office

“The whole point of the exhibition is really about encouragement,” he tells Dezeen while sat in a recreation of his cluttered Covent Garden office that has been created at the show. “It hopefully gives you the encouragement to think, well, I can move on from a humble beginning’,” he says.

Hello My Name Is Paul Smith exhibition at the Design Museum entrance
Entrance to the exhibition

Visitors enter the exhibition through a three-metre-square cube that simulates Smith’s tiny first shop on Byard Lane in Nottingham, which was only open for two days a week. Smith’s Covent Garden design studio has also be recreated, with material and pattern samples strewn amongst sketchbooks and colour swatches.

Hello, My Name Is Paul Smith exhibition at the Design Museum screens
Inside Paul’s Head

In a room called Inside Paul’s Head, images of flowers swirl around screens before morphing into prints covering Smith’s garments and accessories. “It’s nicknamed the paracetamol room, because by the time you come out you’ll probably need an aspirin,” Smith jokes.

The next space is a hand-painted wooden mock-up of the Paris hotel room that Smith used as his first showroom during Paris fashion week in 1976.

Hello My Name Is Paul Smith exhibition at the Design Museum hotel room
Hand-painted recreation of the Paris hotel room Smith showed his first collection in

“I think it was six shirts, two jackets, two jumpers and nobody came,” he recalls. “Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, nobody. I was leaving on Thursday and one person came at 4 o’clock, and I was in business.”

There’s also a section dedicated to Smith’s photography: “I’ve been taking photographs since I was 11. My Dad was an amateur photographer and his original camera is there on the wall. I shoot all our advertising and promotional material but also work for lots of magazines as a photographer.”

Hello My Name Is Paul Smith exhibition at the Design Museum collaborations
Paul Smith’s stripy MINI and skis

Smith’s collaborations over the years including a MINI car and a pair of skis painted with his signature colourful stripes are displayed together, along with cycling jerseys and a giant rabbit-shaped bin he has worked on.

“It’s really interesting for me to see,” he reveals. “They’re usually all hidden away somewhere. Seeing them all together is like ‘Oh wow! We’ve done quite a lot over the years’.”

A wall covered in 70,000 buttons is used to demonstrate the unique elements found in each of the brand’s stores worldwide, such as a room decorated with 26,000 dominoes at his recently extended Albemarle Street store in London’s Mayfair district. “It shows my passion to make sure all out shops are different,” he says.

Hello, My Name Is Paul Smith exhibition at the Design Museum clothes
Archive garments

Garments from Smith’s archive flank both sides of a long white corridor and are grouped into themes rather than age, while a movie documenting Smith’s most recent menswear show is played in the final room.

Hello, My Name Is Paul Smith exhibition at the Design Museum gallery
Gallery of pictures from Smith’s personal collection

The exhibition is laid out around a central space lined with a pictures from Smith’s personal collection, encompassing photographs by Mario Testino to framed drawings sent by fans.

Hello My Name Is Paul Smith exhibition at the Design Museum post it note
Giant Post-it note at the exit

On the way out, a giant Post-it note on the wall reads “Everyday is a new beginning”. Smith finishes by saying: “The idea is you come here, you get inspired, then the next day is the rest of your life.”

Paul Smith portrait with magnifying glass
Paul Smith plays around with a magnifying glass

The exhibition was curated by Donna Loveday and runs until 9 March 2014 at the Design Museum.

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Design Museum show, says Paul Smith
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Snøhetta unveils new staircase for San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

News: architecture firm Snøhetta has unveiled the design for a new staircase linking the existing San Francisco Museum of Modern Art with the 21,000 square-metre extension currently under construction.

The terrazzo stairs will lead visitors from the Hass Atrium of the old San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) building to the first floor of the Snøhetta-designed extension, which is scheduled to open in early 2016. It will be positioned directly beneath a large circular skylight designed by Mario Botta, the architect of the original building.

“We have imagined a stair that feels at home in Botta’s atrium, yet introduces the visitor to the language of the new spaces, creating a powerful overlap moment between the two worlds,” said Snøhetta principal Craig Dykers.

Snøhetta unveils new staircase for San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

He continued: “It bridges the current and future buildings, and extends the existing design vocabulary, while foreshadowing that of the new Snøhetta addition. Most importantly, the new stair serves the next stage in the trajectory of the museum, which is about reaching out, embracing a wider public and becoming more extroverted.”

The cantilevered body of the structure will be made from wood and will feature a clear glass balustrade.

“While grand in dimensions, the stair’s impressive cantilevered construction gives it a very modest footprint,” said Dykers. “Its atypically low walls make it feel smaller than it is, which gives the atrium a new, open, airy, character that looks to SFMOMA’s future.”

Snøhetta broke ground on the SFMOMA extension earlier this year. Once open it will double the gallery’s exhibition and education space, creating 12,000 square-metres of indoor and outdoor galleries.

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Schmidt Hammer Lassen wins competition for Danish theatre complex

News: Danish firm Schmidt Hammer Lassen has won a competition to design a theatre and cultural centre in Hjørring, Denmark, with plans for a series of buildings clad in Corten steel (+ slideshow).

Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

Working alongside local firm Arkitektfirmaet Finn Østergaard, Schmidt Hammer Lassen will design a 4200 square-metre complex named the Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre, which is set to open in 2016.

Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

The development will be made up of several rectilinear blocks, with walls of Corten steel and glass intended to fit in with the brick and plaster facades that typify the town’s architecture.

“We have designed a project where the architectural and functional concept has five main themes: integration in the city, openness, functionality, flexibility and materiality,” said architect John Foldbjerg Lassen, who is one of the founding partners of Schmidt Hammer Lassen.

Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

“We have designed a significant building which relates to its function in a pragmatic way,” he added. “It invites both active use and quiet breaks. It is a building that radiates its cultural meaning – it dares to be different, without stealing the focus from the existing qualities in the city.”

Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

The architects propose an open-plan layout that will allow corridors to be repurposed as backstage facilities.

Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

“The open plan ensures a high level of flexibility in the building, and only your imagination sets the limit for where and how the theatre productions can take place,” said architect Rasmus Kierkegaard.

“Actors and staff are visible to the visitors in the building, and the building will appear vibrant even with only a few persons present,” he added.

Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

Here’s some more information from Schmidt Hammer Lassen:


Schmidt Hammer Lassen architects wins competition for Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre

As part of a team, schmidt hammer lassen architects has won the competition to design Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre in Hjørring, Denmark. With this 4,200 square metre building, Hjørring gains a vibrant cultural hub in which to feature the city’s various cultural activities. The winning design was submitted by a team including schmidt hammer lassen architects, Arkitektfirmaet Finn Østergaard, Brix & Kamp, ALECTIA, Gade & Mortensen Akustik, AIX Arkitekter, Filippa Berglund scenography, and LIW Planning.

The architectural ambition for the new Theatre and Experience Centre has been to create a building which blends into the surrounding environment while standing out as a new, vibrant organism in the city.

Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

The Theatre and Experience Centre consists of a complex of buildings – a city within the city. Its characteristic corten steel façade, with its warm rusty red colours, corresponds well with the area’s existing plaster and brick façades; thereby creating an aesthetic whole between the city, the front plaza and the theatre building. A vibrant building with a glimpse of the backstage.

Inside, an open plan solution ensures visual and physical connections across the building. The boundaries between publicly accessible areas and the more traditional theatre functions are blurred. In the building layout special attention has been paid to making sure that all functions can operate optimally. At the same time many areas can be joined and the circulation areas can be used as backstage facilities.

Completion of Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre is expected in 2016.

Vendsyssel Theatre and Experience Centre by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

Architects: schmidt hammer lassen architects and Arkitektfirmaet Finn Østergaard A/S
Client: Municipality of Hjørring, Realdania
Area: 4,200m²
Construction cost: €16.5 million excl. VAT
Competition: 2013, 1st prize in restricted competition
Full-service consultant: schmidt hammer lassen architects
Engineer: Brix & Kamp A/S and ALECTIA A/S
Landscape architect: LIW Planning Aps
Other consultants: Gade & Mortensen Akustik A/S, AIX Arkitekter AB, Filippa Berglund, scenograf, arkitekt maa

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for Danish theatre complex
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