Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

The bulbous lower level of this residence in Thailand by local studio Architectkidd looks like it’s being squished by the rectilinear storey above it (+ slideshow).

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Architectkidd designed contrasting forms for the two floors of Kirimaya House in Khao Yai, north east of Bangkok.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

“The site of the house in a wide open and horizontal landscape led us to re-think how typical houses are constructed,” said the architects.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Covered in vertical wood shingles around the top, the long first floor sticks out further on one side than the other.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

The round volume beneath is clad using locally-fired clay tiles that are slightly staggered on top of each other to create the curving form.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Windows are cut out from the blob-like shape in horizontal strips, where the tiles curve inward to meet the frames.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

The building is entered through double doors beneath the overhang of the first floor, which covers a stepped terrace that is used as a space for yoga.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd living room

Guest bedrooms, bathrooms and storage rooms are located within the ground-floor blob.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

A central staircase leads to an open-plan living area in the cuboid above, which leads out on a terrace on one side of the blob’s roof.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd bathroom

The master bedroom is housed in the end of the cantilever, with the diagonal steel supports for the floating section breaking up the view through the full-height windows.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd terrace

Photography is by Luke Yeung and Manassak Senachak.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Two contrasting structures are joined to form this private residence in Thailand.

The house located 150 kilometres north east of Bangkok, near Khao Yai. The site of the house in a wide open and horizontal landscape led us to re-think how typical houses are constructed.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Instead of repetitive structures and vertical enclosures containing interior functions, we were interested in how the interior spaces of the house – with their different uses, dimensions, levels and orientation – could respond differently to the surrounding outdoor spaces.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Each floor of the house has a distinct layout, geometry and structure. The upper floor contains the main living and bedroom areas that have a specific direction toward the outside views. In contrast, the lower floor is a circular space that is omni-directional in its orientation and responds to the different ways that people can approach the house by car and by foot.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd ground floor plan
Ground floor perspective plan – click for larger image

While each floor is distinct, they are co-dependent with each other, with the upper floor resting on and cantilevered from the lower floor. The lower floor, being close to the surrounding landscape, is built up from locally-fired clay tiles that are laid horizontally and stacked.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd
First floor perspective plan – click for larger image

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Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

Dutch Design Week 2013: Dutch designer Elisa van Joolen has taken left over sample shoes from sports brand Nike and turned them inside-out to create new footwear (+ slideshow).

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

Elisa van Joolen contacted Nike and acquired its sample stock from previous seasons that would have been disposed of otherwise.

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

She then recycles the sneakers and creates new designs by cutting off the bottoms, turning the material inside out and stitching on bases of cheap sandals.

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

“I emphasise the potential of the depreciated samples and give them a new life,” said Van Joolen.

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

Inverting the shoes removes any branding across the design, plus reveals different colours and graphics from the internal parts.

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

Elastic straps that hold the tongue in place create stripes down the sides of the shoes and the “sample not for resale” text printed on the inner forms graphics toward the back.

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

Van Joolen uses the soles cut from the shoes to make flip-flops, punching holes in them and threading laces through so they act like straps.

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

The project was shortlisted in the fashion section of the Product category at this year’s Dutch Design Awards, which was won by Iris van Herpen’s Voltage collection.

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

“Van Joolen gives a new meaning to recycling,” said the jury. “With this collection she kicks in the shins of international footwear brands and shows them that recycling can go hand in hand with a nice product. It is not often that such a good story is converted to an interesting result.”

Invert Footwear by Elisa van Joolen

Footwear alleged to be made from bio-engineered stingray skin was also nominated for the 2013 awards. All shortlisted products are on show in Eindhoven this week as part of Dutch Design Week.

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Wooden Houses in Amsterdam by M3H Architecten

Untreated timber cladding and angular dormer windows feature at this small housing development in Amsterdam by Dutch studio M3H Architecten (+ slideshow).

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

Comprising two narrow houses and a three-storey apartment block, the small development slots into a row of residential buildings in Bellamy, a neighbourhood west of the city centre that has seen a number of renovations and demolitions over the last ten years.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

M3H Architecten designed the buildings to fit in with the “unique, diverse and small-scale character” of the suburb, where plot sizes vary and houses are interspersed with commercial buildings.

“The street’s architectural characteristics are defined by its staggered facades, irregular plot sizes and the varying heights of its buildings,” said the architects.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

Timber clads the walls and rooftops of the structures, contrasting with the brick facades of neighbouring buildings. Each facade comprise two layers of wooden slats, plus a water-retaining layer of bitumen that helps the buildings dry quickly when wet.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten
Photograph by Allard van der Hoek

“The slats are double-layered to help with ventilation,” explained the architects. “What is essential when using untreated wood in the Dutch climate is that the wood on the facades be well ventilated so that it can dry quickly after being rained upon.”

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten
Photograph by Allard van der Hoek

The designers used a Brazilian timber that will gradually fade to grey over time, and concealed gutters and roof drains behind the facade’s outer layer.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

Both houses are identical in plan, each with two storeys that open out to rear gardens and first-floor balconies. The apartments also come with private patios, including a large roof terrace that belongs to the top-floor residence.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

“Even though these are very small homes, their generous amount of daylight, wide views and large outdoor spaces give each a unique quality and one never has a feeling of being confined,” added the architects.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

Photography is by Tobias Bader, apart from where otherwise stated.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Wooden Houses

For the past decade, Wenslauer Street in the Bellamy neighbourhood of Amsterdam has been undergoing a metamorphosis. In collaboration with the city council, the Stadgenoot housing corporation and various individuals, architects and small developers, a dozen dwellings have been renovated, and more than ten old houses have been demolished and replaced by new buildings.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

The Bellamy neighbourhood is a neighbourhood where living and working have always been mixed, leading to a wide variety of buildings in the area. In 2011, M3H restored a house and built a new ‘steel’ house. Since then, five M3H-designed dwellings have been built: an ensemble of two houses with gardens and three small apartments.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

The development plan for Wenslauer Street and its existing buildings was moulded and altered to suit Bellamy’s unique, diverse and small-scale character. In this way, the highly valued historical aspect of the neighbourhood was preserved: because the properties were run-down, they were not eligible for ‘protected face’, or historical protection status. The street’s architectural characteristics are defined by its staggered façades, irregular plot sizes and the varying heights of its buildings. Business lots alternate with smaller and larger residential plots.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

The front yards and trees that lined Wenslauer Street at the beginning of the 20th century have disappeared, unlike the adjacent Bellamy Street, where these have been largely preserved. The street’s architectural characteristics follow from the irregular plot sizes, which often are determined by commercial or residential zoning. The varying heights of the buildings in the area find their roots in the neighbourhood’s village-like character, but Amsterdam contractors and carpenters have also built larger housing blocks next to the original polder development.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

In order to make the houses more economically viable for residents, and to encourage home improvement, it’s possible to build extensions on the houses. This was recommended in a spatial study created in 2005 by Marina Roosebeek. Using the study as a model, zoning exemptions can be requested for extensions on existing spaces. The spatial study is founded on an analysis of insolation (sunlight) on Wenslauer Street, which is narrow, and also addresses the maintenance of the existing variety and irregular subdivisions of the street, as well as the visual impact of the staggered heights of the buildings.

The building space for M3H’s ensemble was determined by the boundaries set forth in the spatial study. For houses 65 and 67, that meant a single-story building on the street side, with a sloped roof. Two single-family dwellings with gardens were built in that space. The sloped roof permits a great deal of sun to fall on the narrow street. A window in the ridge of the roof lets sun into the north-facing kitchen and bedroom.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten

Wenslauer Street 69 is next to a four-storey building, and was permitted to be three storeys high. It consists of three small apartments, each having its own spatial quality and outdoor space. The residence on the ground floor has a south-facing patio with access to both the living room and bedroom. From the patio a long sightline through the entire residence is visible, from front to back. The apartment on the first floor has a south-facing roof terrace, and the apartment on the second floor has the option for a terrace on its roof.

On the front side of this apartment there is a special corner window that provides a wide view of the whole street. On the rear side, both upper residences have another corner window with views over houses 65 and 67’s patios and enclosed yards. Even though these are very small homes, their generous amount of daylight, wide views and large outdoor spaces give each a unique quality, and one never has a feeling of being confined.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten
House floor plan – click for larger image

The façades, dormer windows and sloping roof surfaces were all constructed with the same material. This serves to create a sculptural dimension with a unique look that suits the diversity of homes on Wenslauer Street. The sculptural quality is strengthened through simple and abstract detailing. The type of wood used is untreated FSC certified Sucupira Amarela, which will, within two years, become uniformly grey.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten
House section – click for larger image

What is essential when using untreated wood in the Dutch climate is that the wood on the façades be well ventilated so that it can dry quickly after being rained upon. For this, a double layer of slats is placed within the timber framing of the houses, and has a water-retaining layer of bitumen. The slats are double-layered to help with ventilation. The gutters and roof drains are thus easy to hide behind the wooden façade. This also compliments the sculptural aspect of the construction.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten
Apartment floor and roof plans – click for larger image

The ensemble was built as a hybrid construction. The structural shell was made in a way common in The Netherlands: with sand lime brick walls and wide slab concrete flooring. The façades, dormer windows and sloping roofs were timber-framed. Despite a limited budget, M3H tried to include wood in as many elements as possible. The Wenslauer Street houses demonstrate a shift in the application of wood for construction and components of the façade not often seen in The Netherlands. In the brick city of Amsterdam, it’s uncommon to use wood. In fitting wood into our plan for this project, we hope to contribute to a wider acceptance of wooden buildings made by commissioning parties, contractors and residents.

Wooden Houses by M3H Architecten
Apartment section – click for larger image

Project Title: Wooden Houses, Wenslauer Street 65-69
Client: Sticks & Stones Developments Ltd.
Architect: M3H architecten
Site area: 323m2
Gross Floor area: 440m2
Location: Wenslauer Street 65-69, Amsterdam (NL)
Status: Built march 2013
Cost: 400.000 euro
Collaborators: Tobias Bader, Wouter Kroeze, Marc Reniers, Machiel Spaan

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Rillen Vessels by Christoph Finkel at Luminaire Lab

Dezeen promotion: a collection of striated wooden bowls, vases and pots by German artist Christoph Finkel are currently on display at design brand Luminaire‘s exhibition space in Miami.

Rillen Vessels by Christoph Finkel at Luminaire Lab

Christoph Finkel carved the Rillen Vessels from sections of tree trunks, in woods including oak, maple and birch.

Rillen Vessels by Christoph Finkel at Luminaire Lab

He used vintage turning machines, which he rebuilt to fit his needs, and hand-carving tools to create the forms before sanding the pieces and leaving them to dry out.

Rillen Vessels by Christoph Finkel at Luminaire Lab

First displayed in Milan last year, the products are now on display in the Luminaire Lab at 3901 NE 2nd Avenue, Miami, Florida.

Rillen Vessels by Christoph Finkel at Luminaire Lab

The vessels are also available to purchase from Luminaire’s online store.

Keep reading for more information from Luminaire:


Recognising the intrinsic, natural qualities of wood, German artist Christoph Finkel pushes the limits of woodworking to create stunning, sculptural vessels. Experimenting with both machine and hand tools, Finkel reduces heavy, raw wood into perfectly shaped bowls and vessels. Viewing wood as a living material, the artist is interested in the history and natural characteristics of each piece and highlights these qualities as he creates his unique objects.

Rillen Vessels by Christoph Finkel at Luminaire Lab

Born in Allgüa, Germany in 1971, Finkel grew up in a small village in the southern German Alps. His father, a third-generation wood tuner, introduced his son to the craft at his home studio. This passion continued as Finkel attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Nürnberg where he began sculpting primarily in wood. His artistic endeavours lead him to develop a series of bowls, which was a new and exciting challenge for him. As an artist, he saw the potential for creating sculptural forms rather than traditional functional vessels.

Rillen Vessels by Christoph Finkel at Luminaire Lab

Each bowl begins with the careful selection of wood from locally sourced trees including oak, maple and birch as well as fruit trees. Finkel first cuts the tree with his chainsaw to get a rough form. If necessary, the wood must be dried before he can begin to turn and carve the piece to shape. Using various vintage metal turning machines that the designer rebuilt to fit his needs, with several steps of hand carving using specially made steel and iron knives and wood turning tools, he achieves the desired surface. Before the bowls are finished, sanding with paper or a steel brush may also occur before the piece is dried for up to three months.

Rillen Vessels by Christoph Finkel at Luminaire Lab

Luminaire spotted Finkel’s remarkable work during the 2012 Milan Fair where it was shown alongside Paola Lenti’s exhibition at the Chiostri dell’Umanitari. A number of these one-of-a-kind pieces will soon be offered at Luminaire’s showrooms.

www.luminaire.com

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Eurostar appoints Christopher Jenner as creative director

Eurostar trains at St Pancras station in London

News: interior designer Christopher Jenner has been appointed creative director of rail company Eurostar, stepping into shoes vacated by Philippe Starck who designed the firm’s train interiors, lounges and staff uniforms a decade ago.

Christopher Jenner has been taken on board to work on new and existing design projects for Eurostar, the company that runs the high-speed passenger trains that link the UK to mainland Europe, as it prepares to launch a new fleet of trains.

“This partnership gives me the opportunity to bring my design skills to a wide range of customer touch points,” said Jenner. “Travel plays such an important part in our lives, and this collaboration with Eurostar will allow me to further elevate the customer experience.”

Starck was previously tasked with redesigning the train interiors, terminals, check-in lounges, signage, staff uniforms, cutlery and food for the company in 2001 and continued to work with the firm as a consultant until 2005.

Eurostar interior concept by Christopher Jenner 2012
Eurostar interior concept by Christopher Jenner, 2012

Jenner designed a conceptual Eurostar cabin in February 2012, which featured individual seats covered in quilted yellow fabric, plus a combination of hardwood and carbon-fibre surfaces.

Main image of Eurostar trains is courtesy of Shutterstock.

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NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner

A house-shaped tower with no windows rises from the roof of an ageing warehouse to create a new archive building for the state of North Rhine Westphalia, Germany, designed by German architects Ortner & Ortner.

NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner

Under construction beside the harbour in Duisburg, the NRW State Archive will become the largest archive in Germany, with 92 miles (148 kilometres) of shelving contained behind its walls.

NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner

Ortner & Ortner designed a 76-metre tower to rise up from the centre of the old brick warehouse, which is a listed corn silo building constructed during the 1930s.

NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner

They’ve also added a snake-like extension that stretches out from the north-west facade, accommodating reading rooms, offices and storage facilities over six storeys.

NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner

“In architectural terms the addition blends with the existing building, but without weakening the independence of either,” say the architects.

NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner

Dark red brickwork contrasts with the brown bricks of the old building, plus the architects have infilled original windows to create a protective enclosure for housing the archive’s fragile contents.

NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner
Photograph by Thomas Mayer

The building is scheduled to complete in November.

NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner
Photograph by Thomas Mayer
NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner
Site plan
NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner
Concept diagram
NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner
Lower level plan – click for larger image
NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner
Upper level plan – click for larger image
NRW State Archive, Duisburg by Ortner & Ortner
Cross section – click for larger image

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Wrong Colour Furniture System by Minale-Maeda

Dutch Design Week 2013: the aluminium structures of these cabinets by Rotterdam studio Minale-Maeda poke through their plywood skins to create a coloured grid on the inside and dashed patterns on the outside.

Wrong Colour Furniture System by Studio Minale-Maeda_dezeen_6sq

The Wrong Colour Furniture System by Minale-Maeda has a structure made of anodised aluminium, with teeth in the bars that bite into the plywood panels and secure them in place once slotted together.

Wrong Colour Furniture System by Studio Minale-Maeda_dezeen_6sq

Each bar is colour-coded in cyan, magenta and yellow according to its orientation. The ends of the bars pierce the plywood panels where they are attached, creating a distinctive grid pattern on the outside with vertical cyan dashes and horizontal magenta ones.

The yellow components are only visible behind the legs and inside the cabinets, framing each module with a yellow square.

Wrong Colour Furniture System by Studio Minale-Maeda

“The name Wrong Colour comes from the idea that it is like an X-ray of a piece of furniture, processed with imaging technologies like in baggage scanners to highlight differences in densities between materials and better separate them when they overlap,” Minale-Maeda told Dezeen. “It follows the idea that the project is about transparency in production and construction, and the colours are crucial in highlighting the separate elements.”

Wrong Colour Furniture System by Studio Minale-Maeda_dezeen_6sq

“The other reason to have three different colours is that they serve as a guide in the assembly of the piece, because each plane has a separate colour so it aids in picking the right parts for each panel and later in assembling the panels into a box,” they added.

Wrong Colour Furniture System by Studio Minale-Maeda_dezeen_6sq

The modular units can be stacked in different configurations and can be ordered with or without doors direct from the designers. “There is great flexibility in materials and colours that we are experimenting with, so custom schemes is one direction we are developing and the other is having a greater variety of module sizes,” they said.

Wrong Colour Furniture System by Studio Minale-Maeda_dezeen_6sq

Wrong Colour Furniture System was nominated for the Dutch Design Awards and is on show alongside the other shortlisted projects as part of Dutch Design Week in Eindhoven until Sunday.

“Many influences converge in this piece of furniture, including those of Rietveld, Mondriaan and Japanese culture,” commented the selection committee. “It is a modular system turned inside out in an interesting way.”

Wrong Colour Furniture System by Studio Minale-Maeda_dezeen_6sq

Naples-born Mario Minale and Tokyo-born Kuniko Maeda founded their studio in 2006 after graduating together from the Design Academy Eindhoven. They often highlight the method of construction a key aesthetic component in their work and past projects include plywood furniture joined with 3D-printed connectors and a collection that can be downloaded and produced locally.

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HENN to build 280-metre Chinese skyscraper

News: German studio HENN has won a competition to design a 280-metre skyscraper in Taiyuan, China (+ slideshow).

Cenke Tower by HENN

HENN designed the office and hotel building, named Cenke Tower, for a site in the centre of the Chinese city, which is located in Shanxi Province.

Cenke Tower by HENN

The front and rear facades will feature smooth profiles that curve gently outwards, while the narrow sides are designed with convex curvatures. Each of these elevations will be glazed, exposing the aluminium cross-bracing supporting the structure.

Cenke Tower by HENN

The majority of the building will accommodate offices, while the hotel will be located on the uppermost floors and a shopping centre will be housed in the basement.

Cenke Tower by HENN

An entrance on the western side of the tower will provide access from the adjacent boulevard, plus a sunken courtyard on the opposite side of the building will lead visitors through to the shops inside.

HENN has previously designed several skyscrapers for China, including a 450-metre tower for Haikou and five towers for the business district of Wenzhou.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Cenke Tower

The new tower for the Cenke Group is located on the north-south axis in the centre of the Chinese metropolis of Taiyuan. As well as office space, the building also contains a hotel on its upper floors and a retail area at the basement level. The longer sides of the 280 metre-high building take the form of convex shells with vertically accented facades constructed from opaque aluminium elements and glass of various degrees of transparency.

Cenke Tower by HENN
Site plan – click for larger image

The trapezoid-like shape reduces successively with the building height in the upper levels and determines the amount of direct sunlight admitted to suit the planned use of the space within. While the offices receive optimum solar shading and maximum interior daylight, the hotel guests can enjoy the widest possible views over the city.

The narrower sides of the tower with their concave curvatures and smooth transparent glass facades strike a counterpoint to the solid, powerful overall appearance of the building. They allow views into the building’s interior and show off the elegant, diagonally braced structure.

Cenke Tower by HENN
Elevation one – click for larger image

The entrance area is located on the western side of the building along the lively boulevard. A planted sunken courtyard south of the building merges seamlessly into the basement.

Cenke Tower by HENN
Elevation two – click for larger image

Location: Taiyuan, China
Client: Cenke Groupe
Start of planning: 2014 – 2015

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D&V Multibrand Store by Guise

Scandinavian architects Guise designed this retail space in Stockholm as a blank canvas for any fashion brand to display their garments against (+ slideshow).

Multibrand Store by Guise

Guise designed the white interior of the D&V Multibrand Store to provide a neutral background for different retailers.

Multibrand Store by Guise

Powder-coated steel pillars have perforated corners to accommodate a flexible steel shelving system and also allow clothes to be hung directly from the holes.

Multibrand Store by Guise

The pillars are arranged in staggered lines and spread throughout the store, grouped for garments designed by different clothing labels.

Multibrand Store by Guise

Central display units are made of asymmetrical stacks of angled boxes, which each flare outward from their bases to create more surface area on top for folded items.

Multibrand Store by Guise

“We used a floor area of 40 by 40 centimetres, equivalent to one folded shirt,” said the designers. “This area was designed to grow into a table with a surface for seven shirts. This was repeated until the table offered an area for 20 shirts.”

Multibrand Store by Guise

Oak-clad storage boxes line the edges of the shop and the cash register covered with toughened glass. All pieces of furniture were custom made for the store.

Multibrand Store by Guise

Guise have also designed custom-made furniture for this Stockholm shoe retailer.

Multibrand Store by Guise

Photography is by Brendan Austin.

Here is some more information from the architects:


We used a floor area of 40×40 cm, equivalent to one folded shirt, this area were designed to grow to a table for 7 shirts. This logical course of action was repeated until the table offered an area for 20 shirts. The final shape is a result of this commercial rationality, making a 20 times profit in display area.

Multibrand Store by Guise
Floor plan – click for larger image

Being asked not to have any specific garments or brand in mind the space was designed as a neutral space similar to a warehouse. White and with no branded features, hence the empty photos.

D&V Multibrand Store by Guise
Display unit concept diagram

We designed a L-shaped beam with a perforation along the corner. Shelves were custom designed to fit the perforated pillars. The beams were distributed asymmetrical around the store, like a forest of pillars where clothes can hung or be placed according to every new items needs.

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Open-source visual identity for Eindhoven by Virtual Design Agency

Dutch Design Week 2013: a team of ten Eindhoven architecture, design and advertising studios have been brought together as a “virtual” studio to design a new open-source identity for the Dutch city.

Variations of the “raw and rough” logo have been given to local businesses to adopt and design studios have been encouraged to create their own interpretations.

“We did something really unique we think,” said Peter Kentie, managing director of the city’s marketing organisation Eindhoven365, which commissioned the logo. “We started up something called the Virtual Design Agency and we picked the best of the best of the Eindhoven region – graphic and motion designers, fashion designers, architects, typographers – and we put them together as a new company to create the identity.”

Both the logo and the process of procuring it are intended to reflect the energy and creativity of Eindhoven, which has burgeoning creative and technology industries and which was named the world’s most “Intelligent Community of the Year” in 2011.

“Eindhoven is a city in development,” said Kentie. “The task originally was to create a marketing brand for the city but what we also did was take the opportunity to rebrand the logo, the identity of the city council, of the city itself.”

New visual identity for the city of Eindhoven

Graphic designers Raw Color, architect Marc Maurer and creative agency Scherpontwerp were among the studios selected to contribute to the project.

“Eindhoven as a city is about working together,” Marc Koppen of Scherpontwerp told Dezeen. “Everyone knows each other, works together, talks about the projects together. That’s why we came up with the idea of trying to work with many agencies, not just one.”

Koppen added that the open-source nature of the logo reflected the spirit of multi-disciplinary collaboration in the city. “That’s also the theory about the city, that everyone is involved and works together, working on it and with it,” he said. “If you want to do it in your own way, then it’s possible.”

New visual identity for the city of Eindhoven

After initial discussions between the ten studios Scherpontwerp, Edhv and Eric de Haas were asked to take the concept ideas forward together. They worked on the project from their separate office spaces, forming the Virtual Design Agency, with designers from the earlier stage acting as consultants.

Together the group came up with a simple grid of lines to create the logo, which comprises three thick zig-zag shapes spaced on top of each other to form an abstract letter E.

“The idea is about energy,” said Koppen. “We tried to find a way to visualise the energy of the city and what people often say about Eindhoven is that it’s a really raw and rough city.”

The grid behind the logo means the angular sections can be filled in different colours and shades, adapting it for companies or sectors across the city. A red graphic on a white background is used for the starting point as the city’s historic colours.

New visual identity for the city of Eindhoven

The team also created a font called Eindhoven to accompany the logo, formed in a similar style but without sticking to the grid. “[The font and logo] have the same kind of edginess,” Kentie said. “The typography also gives you the feeling that its not completely finished, like a work in progress.”

The identity was completed in June and has already been applied to civic vehicles, signage around the city and even T-shirts for runners competing in the Eindhoven marathon. Eindhoven365 have given the graphics to local businesses to customise and use as part of their own branding.

“With the energy symbol you can do everything,” Koppen told us. “You can load it with images, make it 3D or 2D, change the colours. You can really build it up with a lot of different pieces and angles. We show it now in a really basic way but underneath there’s the structure that you can use to transform it and everyone can do that in their own way.”

Eindhoven is currently hosting this year’s Dutch Design Week, where Daan Roosegaarde has unveiled an installation consisting of hundreds of wireless LED crystals and Iris van Herpen scooped the top prize at the Dutch Design Awards.

Read the full interview with Scherpontwerp’s Marc Koppen below:


Dan Howarth: Tell me about the origins of the project.

Marc Koppen: We started about one and a half years ago I think and we were asked by Eindhoven to give a short presentation on the city as the designer with ten different companies. They chose three companies to do the job, that was a little bit strange in the beginning because you have your own style of course. We had to find a new way of working together on such a huge project and we are three totally different design agencies. It was a little bit strange in the beginning, but after half a year it started to take off a little bit, it was great.

Dan Howarth: Which other design agencies did you work with?

Marc Koppen: One of the design agencies is called Edhv and the other is Eric de Haas. Most of the time we don’t physically work together, we aren’t in the same room but we try to discuss the work. We make our own work for the city then we bring it back together, to the group and discuss it.

Dan Howarth: Did you work with graphic designers and architects as well?

Marc Koppen: In the beginning it was really a big selection. There were artists, architects, photographers, colour designers, graphic designers and we all worked together on the decisions, but in the end it was really necessary to get the work done so they chose to do the work with graphic designers. But right now, at the moment we are still inviting people to work with us. Raw Color are advising us on the colours, we are still working with a lot of different agencies.

Dan Howarth: And they are all based in Eindhoven?

Marc Koppen: No, one is based in Amsterdam I believe, but they are all originally designers from Eindhoven. They moved to different cities but they are from Eindhoven.

New visual identity for the city of Eindhoven

Dan Howarth: Do you think this is the first time that so many agencies have come together to work on a project like this?

Marc Koppen: I’m not sure but coming from the briefing in the beginning we discussed that Eindhoven as a city is about making and working together, taking on different project together. Years ago, for example I worked in Amsterdam and there the agencies are really working for themselves. You don’t often talk with other designers or you’re not supposed to meet with the clients of other designers so its nice to work in Eindhoven, it’s really an open structure. Everyone knows each other, works together, talks about the projects together and thats why we came up with the idea of trying to work with many agencies, not just one. It won’t be the first time but I don’t know about another case.

Dan Howarth: So the logo is designed to reflect the fact that Eindhoven is a place where people collaborate.

Marc Koppen: Yeah we started that discussion very early on when we came together to talk about a vision for the city. They came up with the idea to work together, they chose three agencies to coordinate it and do the basic design work. But they are still asking us to talk with a lot of people about it and get a lot of people involved. It was their idea to do it this way yes.

Dan Howarth: So are you still operating under the title of Virtual Design Agency?

Marc Koppen: Yes because it’s the closest idea to what it is! We [each] have our own workspace, we are not sitting together. It was a little strange in the beginning.

Dan Howarth: How did you come up with the coloured zig-zags of the logo?

Marc Koppen: We tried to find a way to visualise the energy of the city. What people often say about Eindhoven is that it’s a really raw and rough city. For example if you take a look at Utrecht or Amsterdam, or The Hague, or Maastricht, they’re cultivated in a certain way and they have a history. Eindhoven is really a rough city where a lot of work has to be done. It’s called the City of Light because [electronics giant] Philips started their lighting company here. So we had to find a visual way to transform the energy and that all started with energy and lighting. That’s the really basic idea about it.

New visual identity for the city of Eindhoven

Dan Howarth: The city is encouraging local businesses to use and adapt the identity. Was the idea to have an open-source logo?

Marc Koppen: Yes sure, that’s also the theory about the city, that everyone is involved and works together, working on it and with it. If you want to do it in your own way, then it’s possible. The basics are done but now we have to translate it to other people. So we have to find a way of inspiring other people because we cannot write a book about how to use it, it would be too difficult, everything is possible, but we have to inspire other designers to use it in the right way. We’re working on it right now. That’s a really nice process.

Dan Howarth: What parts of the design allow it to be adapted?

Marc Koppen: The typography is our own. We call it the Eindhoven and you can work with it as a typeface. With the energy symbol you can do everything, you can load it with images, make it 3D or 2D, to change the colours. There’s a really nice grid underneath it so you can really build it up with a lot of different pieces and angles. We show it now in a really basic way but underneath there’s another structure that you can use to transform it so everyone can do that in their own way.

Dan Howarth: Are red and white the colours of the city?

Marc Koppen: Yes, they are really the colours of Eindhoven and we thought about changing it, but the fact that it has to stand for energy and have a rough edge to it. When you see it with other logos, its a little bit rough, its not really “nice”. We have to stand for that energy and the raw hard red does that.

The post Open-source visual identity for Eindhoven
by Virtual Design Agency
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