Aurora Pots with iridescent lids by Phil Cuttance

Each of these resin pots by east London designer Phil Cuttance is embellished with a unique iridescent sheen on its lid.

Aurora Pots with iridescent lids by Phil Cuttance

Phil Cuttance hand-cast each simple Aurora Pot with a rounded bottom and flat lid from a water-based resin.

Aurora Pot by Phil Cuttance

He submerged the lid under water and drops a small amount of polish onto the surface to form an oily slick. He then lifted the lid up, catching the colourful pattern on its top.

Aurora Pot by Phil Cuttance

“I have always liked the visual effect of oil or polish slicks on water,” Cuttance told Dezeen. “I wanted to simply find a way to transfer a polish slick from the water’s surface and preserve it on an object.”

Aurora Pot by Phil Cuttance

The slick created by the polish is different each time, so every pot in the set is one of a kind.

Aurora Pot by Phil Cuttance

Photography is by Petr Krejčí.

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The Magazine restaurant at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery extension by Zaha Hadid

Here are some images of the restaurant inside the Serpentine Sackler Gallery extension by London architect Zaha Hadid, which opened today in the city’s Kensington Gardens (+ slideshow).

The Magazine restaurant at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery extension by Zaha Hadid

The Magazine is a new restaurant venture, taking up residence in the new addition to the Serpentine Sackler Gallery with the interior, kitchen area, bar and structure itself all designed by Zaha Hadid.

Chef Oliver Lange’s Japanese cuisine is served beneath the undulating fabric roof, which curves down to meet the ground at three points around the periphery.

The Magazine restaurant at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery extension by Zaha Hadid

The entrance to the extension is located on one side of the adjacent 200-year-old brick building formerly used as a gunpowder store, which houses the gallery.

Tables are positioned around the sculptural columns extending down from oval skylights. Diners can enjoy views of the surrounding landscaped gardens through the glass walls that curve around the space.

The Magazine restaurant at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery extension by Zaha Hadid

The extension to the gallery officially opened in September, when we featured a full set of images by photographer Luke Hayes.

Photography is by Ed Reeve unless otherwise stated.


The Magazine

Chef Oliver Lange opens The Magazine restaurant at the new Serpentine Sackler Gallery.

Pritzker Prize-winning architect Zaha Hadid’s first designed restaurant space in her first building in central London, will open on 1 November 2013 at the new Serpentine Sackler Gallery in Kensington Gardens operated by celebrated hospitality company K&K London Ltd. At the helm of The Magazine restaurant and bar is Berlin-born chef Oliver Lange, one of the most exciting contemporary chefs in the industry, and a past guest chef for Kofler & Kompanie’s notable Pret A Diner events in London.

The Magazine restaurant at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery extension by Zaha Hadid

The Magazine bar will be serving a small selection of light bar snacks, 10am until 7pm daily, catering for the visitors to the gallery.

The Serpentine Sackler Gallery gives new life to the Magazine, a former 1805 gunpowder store, located five minutes walk from the Serpentine Gallery on the north side of the Serpentine Bridge. With 900 square metres of new gallery, restaurant and social space, the gallery will be a new cultural destination in the heart of London and will present an unrivalled programme of exhibitions and events.

Oliver Lange was brought up in a family passionate about food and so began to cook at an early age. While studying art he realised it was cooking that was his real passion, and so he travelled to learn about the different cuisines of the world. His first great love was Japan: he dedicated his young talent to immersing himself in the tastes, techniques and textures of the Japanese kitchen. He was so successful at incorporating the precision and dedication of Japanese cooking into his own European heritage, that his masters awarded him the name Ollysan.

The Magazine restaurant at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery extension by Zaha Hadid
Photograph by Luke Hayes

There is an organic flow to the newly designed structure – the continued movement stems from the membrane roof that playfully undulates and is penetrated only by columns filtering natural light into the room – while clear glass walls give the impression of dining within the surrounding garden, landscaped by Arabella Lennox-Boyd.

Ollysan’s experimental cooking, combined with Zaha Hadid’s inspirational and contemporary architecture, creates an overall distinctive and innovative dining narrative – whilst the marriage of the original building instils The Magazine restaurant’s rich and vibrant history. His vision for the food compliments the two contrasting linked buildings – where the traditional meets the modern. Ollysan brings the philosophy of Japanese cooking into his kitchen – its dedication, respect for the purity of ingredients, balancing of tastes and most importantly kokoro (heart and soul) to British and European cooking.

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Job of the week: site architect at Heatherwick Studio

Dezeen Jobs architecture and design recruitment

This week’s job of the week on Dezeen Jobs is a position for a site architect at Heatherwick Studio, whose proposal for a garden to span the River Thames on a new pedestrian bridge is pictured. Visit the ad for full details or browse other architecture and design opportunities on Dezeen Jobs.

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MMT Calendar wooden pocket watch now available at Dezeen Watch Store

Dezeen Watch Store: MMT Calendar, a distinctive pocket watch with a wooden shell, is now available in two finishes at Dezeen Watch Store (+ slideshow).

MMT Calendar now available at Dezeen Watch Store

The MMT Calendar watch from Hong Kong-based brand MMT combines wooden components with elegant polished metal accents.

MMT Calendar now available at Dezeen Watch Store

The timepiece comes in three pieces: a stainless steel watch body, a smooth wooden shell and a leather clip strap. The hand-made wooden shell, in walnut or maple, is designed to naturally age with everyday wear and the strap allows the watch to be worn in a variety of ways.

MMT Calendar now available at Dezeen Watch Store

Other features include a minimal dial with a date window, customised Japanese three-hand movement, and a mineral crystal lens.

MMT was founded in 2011 by two brothers, Jeremy and Baptiste Guedez, and their friend Thomas Letournex, with the aim of re-introducing the pocket watch to a new generation.

MMT Calendar now available at Dezeen Watch Store

The MMT Calendar is available in two finishes: walnut wood with rose gold and a dark brown leather strap, or maple wood with stainless steel and a beige leather strap.

Buy it now for £165 with free shipping »

MMT Calendar now available at Dezeen Watch Store

You can buy all of our watches online and you can also visit our watch shop in Stoke Newington, north Londoncontact us to book an appointment.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com

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Can City mobile aluminium furnace by Studio Swine

London designers Studio Swine built a mobile foundry and used it to cast aluminium stools from drinks cans they collected on the streets of São Paulo (+ movie).

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Over 80 percent of the city’s recycling is collected informally on carts pulled by independent waste collectors known as catadores. Studio Swine wanted to create a system that would help them recycle the rubbish they collect into products they can sell.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The pair collected discarded cans from a street vendor and used cooking oil for fuel to smelt the aluminium on site, turning the street into an improvised manufacturing line. They made moulds by pressing objects they found locally into sand collected from construction sites in the area.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine - crushed cans

The resulting stools have tops that bear the impressions of ventilation bricks, a palm leaf, the base of a basket, a hub cap and plastic tubing.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

“Unlike the conventional aluminum furniture, they’re each unique and expressive,” said the designers. “Manufactured on the spot, they transform ephemeral street materials into metal objects, providing a portrait of the street.”

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The resulting stools were donated to the vendor who provided the cooking oil and the furnace remains in São Paulo, where the project will continue with a new series of products and furniture made in a favela.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

“Mining the city for materials, the perception of the city changes,” said the designers. “Where once you saw rubbish, now you can see resources to be transformed into new products.”

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The project was commissioned by Coletivo Amor de Madre Gallery in São Paulo and involved working with several catadore co-operatives to find both the materials to make the furnace, and the oil and cans to use it.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

“Each stool takes around 60 cans, but catadores collecting cans around a football stadium on a match day bring in many thousands of cans,” Studio Swine told us. “The idea is that catadores will share a furnace and greatly increase the amount of money they can get for the materials they collect.”

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

They suggest that the furnace can be used to cast anything to sell, including small items like souvenirs for the 2014 World Cup or 2016 Olympic Games. “However, the potential of open sand casting lends itself very well to larger pieces and we are interested in how this can be incorporated into small scale architecture,” they added.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Finding ways to enhance local industries by making products from waste on-site is familiar ground for Studio Swine, who graduated from the Royal College of Art in 2011 with a project that proposed making stools from waste plastic picked up by fishing trawlers, melting the material down and moulding it into furniture onboard the boat.

They’re also no strangers to making and selling in the streets, having designed a mobile food stall for cooking and selling pig heads the year before.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Here’s some more information from Studio Swine:


In nature, everything is interconnected and there is no concept of waste, but in cities there are lots of loose connections.
The city has so much potential, there’s a strong culture of improvisation here. The streets are busy with people looking to make a living in ingenious ways, ever flexible to emerging opportunities.

In a city with some 20 million residents the waste is on a massive scale, however over 80% of the recycling is collected by an informal system of independent Catadores, pulling their handmade carts around the streets.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

We looked at the way they worked, the materials they collected, and how we could learn from them to create a new model of manufacturing – taking waste materials that could be readily found, to manufacture goods on the street, with the potential to make livelihoods extend beyond rubbish collection.

The world is becoming increasingly more globalised, something that we are interested in is how design can help retain a strong regional identity.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

We wanted to tap into this existing street culture – to turn a public space into a manufacturing line. We went around the streets collecting things we can cast. Mining the city for materials, the perception of the city changes, where once you saw rubbish, now you can see resources to be transformed into new products. The city consumes a lot of fried food so we collected used cooking oil for free and plentiful fuel.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Then we needed to make moulds which are cheap and adaptable. As Sao Paulo is under constant development, construction sand can be found all over the city.

What is the future of manufacturing? Where the industrial revolution was built on the concept of making the same thing thousands of times, will future manufacturing incorporate individual characteristics or even chance?

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

There is something magical about the moment cold hard metal becomes a hot liquid – the moment it’s quickened and given life. We wanted the surface to reverberate with the texture of the sand and the metal’s molten state, to bear clearly the impression left by the objects we found that day.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

We made stools for the food vendor that provided the waste cans & oil. Unlike the conventional aluminum furniture they’re each unique and expressive. Manufactured on the spot, they transform ephemeral street materials into metal objects, providing a portrait of the street.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Where the majority of carbon cost is in the transportation of goods rather than their production – we could see manufacturing returning to our cities, adaptable to customisations and able to ‘cast on demand’.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The potential of mobile sand casting is endless, offering another way to produce. From small items to architectural elements, it can change the face of the city.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The project was made possible with the generous support of Heineken.

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Arboleda house by Horibe Associates

The clients for this small house in Tokushima, Japan, asked architect Naoko Horibe for a timber interior and an exterior that looks like a sports car.

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

Naoko Horibe of Osaka studio Horibe Associates says she designed the house to “combine two completely opposing concepts in a single structure, without a sense of clashing.”

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

“One was an exterior like a sports car; the second was a natural interior featuring wood,” she said.

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

A cloak of galvanised metal folds over the sides and roof of the structure, forming an asymmetric shape with a streamlined appearance.

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

This layer of cladding overhangs both the front and rear of the building, creating a sheltered entrance and shading the house’s windows.

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

The interior centres around a combined living and dining area, which leads directly into every other room and removes the need for corridors.

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

Timber roof joists are left exposed across the ceilings, plus the pitch of the roof creates a pair of triangular windows along the upper sections of the walls.

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

The angled roof also allows space for a small loft, which the architect describes as a “special den” for the family’s husband.

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

A bedroom and traditional Japanese room run along one side of the house and are slightly elevated to create storage spaces underneath.

Arboleda by Horibe Associates

Photography is by Kaori Ichikawa.

Floor plan of Arboleda by Horibe Associates
Floor plan – click for larger image
Arboleda by Horibe Associates
Loft plan – click for larger image

Key to diagrams:

1.Approach
2.Entrance
3.Living, dining and kitchen
4.Food storage
5.Terrace
6.Japanese-style room
7.Bedroom
8.Walk-in closet
9.Lavatory
10.Washroom
11.Bathroom
12.Closet
13.Loft

Long section of Arboleda by Horibe Associates
Long section
Section of Arboleda by Horibe Associates
Cross section
West elevation of Arboleda by Horibe Associates
West elevation
South elevation of Arboleda by Horibe Associates
South elevation

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World Design Guide relaunches with key events for 2014 – redirect

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World Design Guide relaunches with key events for 2014

World Design Guide relaunches with key architecture and design events in 2014

We’ve relaunched and updated our World Design Guide to the best architecture and design events to include festivals for 2014, plus read on for details of key fairs and conferences taking place this month.

The 2014 guide features a selection of events that have been announced so far – see them all here. More will be included as venues are finalised and dates are confirmed.

World Design Guide is now part of a new product called Dezeen Guide, which over the coming months will grow into a comprehensive guide to what’s happening in architecture and design around the world.

Dezeen Guide to design and architecture events

Here are the key events taking place in November:

» Gwangju Design Biennale: until 3 November 2013
» Lisbon Architecture Triennale: until 15 December 2013
» Tokyo design week: until 4 November 2013
» Design Week Ireland: 5-11 November 2013
» 3D Printshow London: 7-9 November
» EXD’13 Lisbon: 7 November – 22 December 2013
» BOOM: The Future of Latin American Design: 14-19 November 2013
» 3D Printshow Paris: 15-16 November 2013
» Istanbul Design Week: 27 November – 1 December 2013
» New Generations: 28-30 November 2013

Dezeen Guide to design and architecture events

New events added this month:

» Shenzhen/Hong Kong Biennale: 6 December 2013 – 28 February 2014
» Wearable Futures conference: 10-11 December 2013

See all events in Dezeen Guide »

You can still add Dezeen Guide events to your calendar so you never miss a thing. For more information or to submit an event for inclusion in the Dezeen Guide, please email hello@dezeenguide.com.

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House E/J in Tel Aviv by Paritzki & Liani Architects

This house in Tel Aviv by Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects has a transparent ground floor, which reveals a terracotta-brick floor that extends out into the garden (+ slideshow).

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Paritzki & Liani Architects demolished the end property from a row of existing houses in the coastal neighbourhood of Herzliya, then built a new three-storey residence with the same size and proportions as its predecessor.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Rather than using the same footprint as the old house, the architects pulled the new volume apart in the middle and rotated one of the halves by 90 degrees.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The two new volumes sit side by side, connected at one end by a corridor but visually separated by a semi-enclosed courtyard that slots in between.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The two ground-floor spaces provide a living room and a combined kitchen and dining room. Both rooms are wrapped on three sides by glass walls, making them visible to one another and the garden.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

“We wanted to unite the garden and the ground floor,” architects Paola Liani and Itai Paritzki told Dezeen. “We used terracotta bricks in a fishbone pattern for the flooring of both the interior and exterior.”

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Plaster-covered walls surround the two upper floors, which each accommodate a pair of bedrooms.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

There’s also a basement floor, containing a spare room and a laundry area.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Here’s a project description from the architects:


House E/J

House E/J is located near the sea, surrounded by closely positioned eclectic residential houses.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

On the site there was an existing semi-detached house of only 80 square metres with a sloping roof. The construction regulations did not allow to increase the 80 square metres of built area on the ground floor.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Thanks to the request of the inhabitants for a quite dense program (4 bedrooms, all equipped with private bathrooms, a separate guest suite, entrance, kitchen, dining, living, guest lavatory, laundry room, storage, shelter and parking) we found a strategy based on perceptive mechanism (light-wind) and typological devices (environment).

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The first consideration was to elude the surroundings and thus create a new and protective green garden.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

For reasons concerning scale and volumetric perception we decomposed the volume in two separate houses, two volumes rotated perpendicular to one another, with a patio between them.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The elements of this habitat, base, patio, stairs, were reloaded with a new operative function: they are devices with new possible levels of existence.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Design concept

The transparent base, that supports the three upper levels and reunites the functions (L,K,D), is considered an illusion box composed of intervals in the functional spaces, such as sliding doors and a mirror. These elements expand or increase the visual limits of the site.

Lower ground floor plan of EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Basement floor plan – click for larger image

The movements of the inhabitants in the house are fixed or hidden by new scenes of contemplation that differ according to the changing of light and reflections. The terrain is materially marked by the presence of continuous terracotta.

Ground floor plan of EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The patio tunnel is the insertion of zenithal light and wind into the illusion box. Above all it brings a sensorial and psychological implication of vertigo; in each floor the openings change according to the layout of the private rooms. Each bedroom has a view towards the surrounding growing garden or to the internal passage of the patio tunnel.

First floor plan of EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image

In order to obtain the forth façade we’ve cut a threshold of light above the stairs located between the confining wall of the adjacent property and the house, allowing a diffuse illumination in each and every level. The final result seems quite silent; nothing however is what it appears to be.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Second floor plan – click for larger image

Location: Herzliya, Israel
Site area: 375 metres squared
Total floor area: 263 metres squared
Storeys: 4
Completed: 2013

Section of EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Section – click for larger image

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Ink made from insects by Evelien Crooy

Dutch Design Week 2013: graphic design graduate Evelien Crooy has made her own ink from insects and used it to screen-print the cover of a book about the creatures.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

Evelien Crooy produced the ink from cochineal, a small insect native to tropical and sub-tropical regions including parts of South America.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

The bodies of female cochineal have been used for centuries to produce a crimson dye called carmine, which is commonly found in food and cosmetics as a colouring agent.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

Having discovered that the colour was also used by Rembrandt in his painting, The Jewish Bride, Crooy set about researching other products containing cochineal and compiled them in a pocket-sized book.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

“Because I’m not a painter but a graphic designer I wanted to use the colour to silkscreen and develop an ink,” Crooy told Dezeen. “I also think there is a dark side to the whole idea of using an insect but I wanted to show her beauty and all the colours she can produce.”

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

By mixing the colour with salt and natural acids such as lime, Crooy was able to produce different shades and a consistency that is suitable for silkscreen printing.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

She used the ink to print a cover for her book and plans to produce further experiments including silkscreened posters.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

“Right now it’s an expensive material but who knows, maybe it can be used for industry in the future,” said Crooy, who recently graduated from Utrecht School of Arts in the Netherlands.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

The project was presented alongside a plastic made from pressed insect shells at the Klokgebouw building in Eindhoven during Dutch Design Week earlier this month.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

Yesterday we published a story about a book that’s printed in squid ink, while other projects using animal parts in new ways include electronic products made of crab shells and goggles made from fish scales.

Insect ink by Evelien Crooy

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