Mullet House by March Studio

A twisted angular roof oversails this extension to a suburban house in Melbourne by Australian architects March Studio (+ slideshow).

Mullet House by March Studio

March Studio, which is best known for designing a series of stores for Aesop, was tasked with renovating an existing bungalow in Kensington and adding an extension that doubles the size of the interior.

Mullet House by March Studio

For the existing house, the architects retained the Edwardian facade but re-planned the interior to accommodate only bedrooms and bathrooms.

Mullet House by March Studio

The new two-storey structure extends from the rear of the house. The architects excavated part of the ground, allowing them to create a concrete basement and parking area with a timber-clad ground-floor level above.

Mullet House by March Studio

“The new extension is not meant to be sympathetic to an older style but rather has been shaped by the clients’ brief, solar access and one of Melbourne’s best views back onto the city,” said the architects.

Mullet House by March Studio

The angular black-zinc roof extends over a large living and dining room, and is angled up at two corners to allow light to filter in through clerestory windows.

Mullet House by March Studio

“This simple twisting operation grabs light and views,” said the architects. “The action and drama of the twist is expressed and amplified on the ceiling below by a series of hand-plugged timber battens.”

Mullet House by March Studio

The concrete structure on the level below contains a children’s playroom with circular glass skylights overhead, as well as a wine cellar, a laundry room and a bathroom.

Mullet House by March Studio

A car can be parked beneath the projecting upper level, while a terrace and garden are positioned just beyond.

Mullet House by March Studio

The building is named Mullet House, as a reference to the hairstyle that different at the back than at the front. According to the architects, a passerby has described the house as “formal up front with the party out the back”.

Mullet House by March Studio

Here’s some text from the architects:


Mullet House

Situated in Melbourne’s inner-city suburb of Kensington, ‘The Mullet’ performs contorted gymnastics in order to facilitate an ambitious brief on a small, yet opportunistic site.

Mullet House by March Studio

The clients, Scott Smith and Phoebe Moore, wanted to commission not only a new and comfortable home, but also sought a challenging design. Running a family business in construction, Scott and Phoebe’s own home would become an opportunity for them to showcase their own capabilities.

Mullet House by March Studio

A Heritage overlay shaped the design for the front of the dwelling, requiring that the cottage facade and first few rooms flanking Hardiman Street be retained and renovated, (red roof and all). This is where the formality is, the face to the heritage land of Eastwood Street blends seamlessly with its cottage neighbours. Three bedrooms and two bathrooms are resolved into the pre-determined Edwardian shell, freeing up the new extension for the living areas.

Mullet House by March Studio

The fun begins to emerge when rounding Hardiman Street. ‘I don’t like it’ – says one of the locals half way through construction. ‘It’s not in keeping with the area…’ The new extension is not meant to be sympathetic to an older style but rather been shaped by the clients’ brief, solar access and one of Melbourne’s best views back onto the city.

Mullet House by March Studio

The balancing act that the local resident detested emerged when the brief called for off-street parking. The house would straddle the parking area, and even with the grade of Hardiman Street to advantage, excavation was unavoidable. Since a digger would be coming to site anyway, the opportunity to dig a little deeper and sink a large concrete box (along with the children in it) was far too good to refuse.

Mullet House by March Studio

Buried within the concrete box is the rumpus room, wine cellar, laundry, and an additional bathroom. The box is capped with a concrete lid and garnished with strategically placed, trafficable glass skylights. The monolithic form anchors the new building into the side of the hill and is finished internally by the rough reality of building – and being – underground.

Mullet House by March Studio

The concrete lid of the concrete box is not only the ceiling for below, but also the floor in both the kitchen and exterior deck. The pivot around which the other spaces are spun, the kitchen serves all parts of the house, while the dining and living areas are tucked up above the garage and closer to the night sky of Melbourne’s city lights. Timber battens clad the extension, wrapping the three spaces together and providing a linear base for the last hovering piece.

Mullet House by March Studio

Soaring above the living spaces is the black zinc roof. On the northern edge the roof is pulled up to increase natural light to the northwest corner, and pushed down to the neighbouring building on Hardiman Street on the northeast, so as not to overshadow it. On the south side, the operation is reversed, and the southwest corner is lifted to create a framed view of the city. This simple twisting operation grabs light and views from two corners and anchors the remaining two with rain heads falling to collection tanks. The action and drama of the twist is expressed and amplified on the ceiling below by a series of hand-plugged timber battens.

Basement plan of Mullet House by March Studio
Basement plan – click for larger image
Ground floor plan of Mullet House by March Studio
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Section of Mullet House by March Studio
Cross section – click for larger image
Section of Mullet House by March Studio
Long section one – click for larger image
Elevation of Mullet House by March Studio
Long section two – click for larger image
Elevation of Mullet House by March Studio
Street elevation – click for larger image

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Reykjavík Lights Hotel by TARK and HAF for Keahotels

An ancient Icelandic calendar influenced the layout and interiors in this Reykjavík hotel designed by local architects TARK and HAF (+ slideshow).

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

Reykjavík Lights Hotel by TARK and HAF comprises 12 corridors, one for each month of the year, and rooms are themed around specific days in the traditional calendar.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

“A key element is the hotel’s unique visual calendar,” HAF founder Hafsteinn Juliusson told Dezeen. “Inspired by the ancient Icelandic calendar Rímtafla, it reflects the year-round daylight conditions in Iceland.”

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

In the lobby, a large spherical light hangs above a wooden polygonal bar.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

The lobby wall is decorated in graphics based on star constellations that can be seen from Reykjavík.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

Graphic designer Sveinn Þorri Davíðsson worked in collaboration with the architects to design the typography for the hotel’s signage and stationery, which is based on historic Icelandic runes.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

One hundred and five custom-made wallpapers were created for the hotel, which correspond to the colour spectrums of Iceland’s daylight conditions.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

Room are decorated with an eclectic mix of frames, which contain artworks showing the country’s traditions and seasons.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

Photography is by Gunnar Sverrisson & Vigfús Birgisson.

Here is some more information from the architects:


Reykjavík Lights is a new concept hotel managed by Keahotels. The hotel design is a collaboration between architecture studio Tark and HAF. Team HAF developed the concept, interior and visual design of the hotel. The concept revolves around Iceland’s ever-changing light conditions and how they reflect Icelandic everyday life.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

A key element is the hotel’s unique visual calendar. Inspired by the ancient Icelandic calendar Rímtafla, it reflects the year-round daylight conditions in Iceland. The visual calendar Rímtafla is divided by months and distributed onto 12 corridors. Each corridor represents a month of the year and each room is linked to a specific day in the ancient Icelandic calendar.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

The rooms are decorated with unique color palettes expressing Iceland’s unique color spectrums. Artworks inside the rooms demonstrate local and seasonal traditions and circumstances, such as the Northern lights or the Midnight sun. In all, 105 custom made wallpapers were produced for the hotel. Throughout the hotel you will find various decorations and information about Icelandic culture, history and light.

Reykyjavik Lights Hotel by TARK & HAF for Keahotels

Reykjavík Lights’ visual identity was developed in collaboration with graphic designer Sveinn Þorri Davíðsson. The typography is based on ancient Icelandic runes and the color scheme is an interpretation of the Icelandic light.

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New Pinterest board: storage

Pinterest board storage

Our new Pinterest board features a number of storage designs, including staircases that double as bookshelves, Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec’s Corniches shelves and a writing desk in the form of a life-sized mule. See our new storage Pinterest board»

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Bookbinder Shelf and bedroom furniture by Florian Hauswirth

Swiss designer Florian Hauswirth has designed a collection of bedroom furniture including an ash shelving unit with components made by a bookbinder.

Bedroom Collection by Florian Hauswirth
Bookbinder Shelf

The three-tier Bookbinder Shelf by Florian Hauswirth features two ladder-like oak side frames and four shelves, joined by wooden components that hook under the side struts.

Bedroom Collection by Florian Hauswirth

“It is a simple system with two screws per plank, which you don’t need an instruction manual to put together,” said Hauswirth.

Bedroom Collection by Florian Hauswirth
Radius Edge Bed

The shelving unit can be enclosed by adding coloured panels to the ends or flaps with tabs to the front, which were made of cardboard covered with textile by a bookbinder.

Bookbinder Shelf and bedroom furniture by Florian Hauswirth
Bookbox

“I adapted this craft and applied it to my furniture design,” he said. “It is somehow logical for a bookshelf to incorporate a bookbinding technique.”

Bookbinder Shelf and bedroom furniture by Florian Hauswirth

His Bedroom Collection also features a bed and storage box for small items kept beside it.

The Radius Edge Bed features a simple curved joint on the legs. “Wooden joints are usually quite sharp and edgy, but as a tree is round it seems logical to break this craft tradition,” explained Hauswirth.

Bookbinder Shelf and bedroom furniture by Florian Hauswirth

The Bedbox is made in the same materials as the panels for the shelving unit. It features a flap on the top for storing a mobile phone and a drawer that pulls out from the front.

Bedroom Collection by Florian Hauswirth
Bookbinder Shelf ash joints

Hauswirth previously worked at Vitra and studied industrial design at the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland. He currently works as a designer and teacher in Beil, Switzerland.

Photography is by Stefan Hoffmann.

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Skinned latex casts of derelict buildings by KNOL Ontwerp

Thin latex casts from derelict buildings hang in this installation by Amsterdam design studio KNOL Ontwerp to form ghostly recreations of the spaces they were taken from (+ slideshow).

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

Skinned is a growing collection of latex sheets cast from buildings and streets that can be cut, folded up and taken elsewhere by Jorien Kemerink, who founded KNOL Ontwerp with Celine de Waal Malefijt in 2009.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

The material creates a translucent copy of the architectural details but also captures some of the dirt. “The history of use is caught in the cast,” says Kemerink. “Like skin transplantations, they can be taken to other spaces where they get new spatial meaning.”

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

She particularly finds the process useful when designers or creatives take over a vacant building for a short space of time.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“When a vacant building is being reused again, you often encounter dirty or decayed spaces,” she explains. “The latex provides you with a way to ‘seal’ all the dirt and put a clean layer on top, making the place instantly useable.”

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“When you leave again the parts that you want to preserve can be cut out, folded and taken to new locations,” she adds.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

Kemerink recently taught a class at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, China, where she worked with students to make casts of places in the city.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“This project looks at the emotional connection that people have with a space,” she said. “My dream is to collect more and more special places in various places all over the world.”

Skinned latex casts of derelict buildings by KNOL Ontwerp

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Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp features latex casts of derelict buildings

Shrouds of latex cast from derelict buildings hang in this installation by Amsterdam design studio KNOL Ontwerp, forming ghostly recreations of spaces (+ slideshow).

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

Called Skinned, the project features a growing collection of latex sheets cast from buildings and streets that can be cut, folded up and taken elsewhere. It was initiated by Jorien Kemerink, who founded KNOL Ontwerp with Celine de Waal Malefijt in 2009.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

The material creates a translucent copy of the architectural details but also captures some of the dirt. “The history of use is caught in the cast,” says Kemerink. “Like skin transplantations, they can be taken to other spaces where they get new spatial meaning.”

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

She particularly finds the process useful when designers or creatives take over a vacant building for a short space of time.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“When a vacant building is being reused again, you often encounter dirty or decayed spaces,” she explains. “The latex provides you with a way to ‘seal’ all the dirt and put a clean layer on top, making the place instantly useable.”

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“When you leave again the parts that you want to preserve can be cut out, folded and taken to new locations,” she adds.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

Kemerink recently taught a class at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, China, where she worked with students to make casts of places in the city.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“This project looks at the emotional connection that people have with a space,” she said. “My dream is to collect more and more special places in various places all over the world.”

Skinned latex casts of derelict buildings by KNOL Ontwerp

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La Sentinelle house in Quebec by naturehumaine

This house in Quebec by Canadian studio naturehumaine has a gently sloping roof that follows the descent of the surrounding landscape (+ slideshow).

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

The two-storey family home was designed by naturehumaine for a site on the edge of Lac de la Cabane, a lake near the mountain village of Saint-Adolphe-d’Howard.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

Named La Sentinelle, or the Sentinel, the house is described by the architects as “a bird sitting at the edge of the cliff overlooking the lake”, as a reference to the L-shape made by the angular metal roof.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

One side of the house comprises a single storey and is orientated east-to-west at the highest point of the site, while a two-storey wing runs north-to-south and is positioned on a plateau slightly further down the slope.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

“The site has a plateau at the level of the road and then drops into a steep hill that leads down to the lake,” architect David Dworkind told Dezeen. “Budgetary constraints made the structural costs encompassed in building a house cantilevering off the hill impossible, so the positioning of the house was limited to the plateau.”

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

Wooden panels clad the exterior walls and are painted grey to match the galvanised metal roof.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

A timber staircase with a geometric steel balustrade leads into the upper level of the house, passing through a hall towards the kitchen, dining room and living area, as well as the master bedroom.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

This floor opens out to a large wooden deck, but also features a sheltered outdoor space that the architects refer to as the “three-seasons room”.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

“It’s an outdoor room that is closed off with insect screens,” Dworkind explained. “It can be used in spring, summer and fall but wouldn’t be used in the winter as it is uninsulated and too cold. You get the benefits of being outdoors but without the bugs.”

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

The lower level of the house was designed as a children’s zone, containing three bedrooms and a games room. A ladder in the games room leads to a small nook in the roof, offering an extra space for the children to play in.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

Photography is by Adrien Williams.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


La Sentinelle

After selling their previous country house because of the lack of natural light, a couple and their three kids decided to buy an empty lot and build a custom home to better suit their needs.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

They found a parcel of land with southern exposure at vast views of the lake ‘Lac-de-la-Cabane’.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

The constraints of the site led to an L shaped footprint where an east-west oriented rectangular block was placed at the top of the topography, and a north-south oriented block was slid underneath.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

The upper block contains the living spaces and master bedroom, and the lower block, also known as the ‘kids zone’, contains the three children’s bedrooms and a games room.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

A folded roof rises from the lower block covering the upper block and extending towards the cliffs edge as if it were about to take off, reminiscent of the wings of a bird.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

We see the house as a bird sitting at the edge of the cliff overlooking the lake, which is where its nickname ‘The Sentinel’ comes from.

La Sentinelle by naturehumaine

Type: Single family home
Intervention: New construction
Location: Lac de la Cabane, Saint-Adolphe-d’Howard
Completion Date: 2013

Site plan of La Sentinelle by naturehumaine
Site plan – click for larger image
Lower ground floor plan of La Sentinelle by naturehumaine
Lower floor plan – click for larger image
Upper ground floor plan of La Sentinelle by naturehumaine
Upper floor plan – click for larger image
Long section of La Sentinelle by naturehumaine
Long section – click for larger image

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Lab photographed from a bird’s-eye view by Menno Aden

This image by German photographer Menno Aden offers a view down from the ceiling onto an empty pharmaceutical laboratory.

Lab by Menno Aden

Menno Aden produced Lab as part of an ongoing project to document interiors from unconventional viewpoints. Previously he’s captured domestic interiors and public places, but this latest photograph focuses on the biological laboratory of a pharmaceutical company in Switzerland.

Lab by Menno Aden

There are no people in the shot, but the cluttered desktops reveal some of the activities that take place inside the space.

Lab by Menno Aden

“Through the steep top-view the deserted laboratory appears as a model,” said Aden. “As if the ceiling was removed, architectural structures and human traces of modern bio-laboratories become visible.”

Lab by Menno Aden

To create a flattened bird’s-eye view, the photographer took over 1000 shots from different places on the laboratory ceiling, then collaged 600 of them together to remove perspective distortions.

Lab by Menno Aden

It took two days to take all of the photographs, followed by three months of computer editing to create a single composite image.

Lab by Menno Aden

Adden told Dezeen he believes this kind of image production provides a more accurate representation of reality than traditional photography.

Lab by Menno Aden

“Interestingly photographs are still associated with ‘truth’ and ‘reality’, not only by consumers but also by many professional photographers who boast not to use Photoshop to distort authenticity,” he said.

Lab by Menno Aden

“In my photographic work this situation is indeed exactly vice versa: only the digital image processing allows the representation of a reality,” he continued. “Like a radiograph, it sometimes requires special techniques to look ‘behind the curtain’ and come a bit closer to the truth.”

Lab by Menno Aden

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Fogo Island Furniture by Ineke Hans

Dutch designer Ineke Hans plays on traditional Canadian furniture as part of these collections for remote artists’ community Fogo Island (+ slideshow).

Fogo Island furniture by Ineke Hans

Hans has created two collections of wooden furniture for the recently built Fogo Island Inn and a seating range for public use on the island, built by local craftsmen.

Fogo Island furniture by Ineke Hans

The designer’s outdoor furniture consists of chunky wooden planks painted bright red and sits on the hotel’s roof terrace.

Fogo Island furniture by Ineke Hans

Seating for the interior of the inn includes a traditional rocker with tapered legs and a slanted recliner called Get Your Feet Up.

Fogo Island furniture by Ineke Hans

“From the start I thought, whatever I do has to fit the island, its history and its people,” Hans told Dezeen. “The way things used to be made there in the old days was playful and practical at the same time.”

Fogo Island furniture by Ineke Hans

The wooden furniture is painted in colours taken from existing Fogo Island interiors and textiles. “I wanted to design furniture that the makers would also feel proud of and connected to,” said the designer.

Fogo Island furniture by Ineke Hans

Hans has also designed public seating scattered around the island, referencing local wooden structures and fencing to form six benches connected together in a zig-zag shape.

Fogo Island furniture by Ineke Hans

Fogo Island Inn was designed by Norwegian architecture studio Saunders Architecture as a hotel and gallery on stilts.

Fogo Island furniture by Ineke Hans

The picturesque island is dotted with artists’ studios and cabins as part of an ongoing arts residency programme being established in Newfoundland – see a slideshow of them here.

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Waar is Ekko? combined posters and signage for a music festival by Kok Pistolet

Dutch Design Week 2013: graphic designer Kok Pistolet painted over sections of 40 posters around Utrecht to turn them into directions from each location to a venue for a music festival (+ slideshow).

Waar is Ekko? by Kok Pistolet

The Ekko music club was one of the hosts for Le Guess Who? festival in November 2012. Pistolet‘s poster design promoting the venue incorporated drawings of hands that point right and left.

Waar is Ekko? by Kok Pistolet

The A0 posters were printed in monochrome and put up in various places across the city. The streets and turns from these locations to Ekko were then mapped by the designer.

Waar is Ekko? by Kok Pistolet_dezeen_14

Pistolet visited each poster and painted over some of the directions with bright colours.

Waar is Ekko? by Kok Pistolet

The right and left turns that remained in black and white became a route that led the visitor to the venue. As they got closer, more directions were painted out.

Waar is Ekko? by Kok Pistolet

“The concept was based on the basic function of a promotional campaign; getting people to visit the venue,” Pistolet told Dezeen. “We translated this basic given into a map-like system so people would be able to find Ekko from any place they encountered the poster.”

Waar is Ekko? by Kok Pistolet

This project was nominated in the category for Best Graphic at the Dutch Design Awards as part of Dutch Design Week 2013. The top prize went to Iris van Herpen’s 3D-printed fashion collection.

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