Cycling shoes by Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike

London Design Festival 2013: footwear designer Tracey Neuls has teamed up with Tokyobike to create handmade shoes with rubber soles and reflective strips especially for cycling.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek camel reflective

Tracey Neuls launched the cycling shoes for bike brand Tokyobike during this week’s London Design Festival.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek black reflective

The shoes feature rubber soles moulded in a single piece, which are designed to fit comfortably against bike pedals.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Fern grey reflective

The range includes Fern laced ankle boots, with small heels and a reflective strip stitched up the back for cycling in the dark.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek camel reflective

Geek shoes also have reflective detailing on the back and are available in black or camel. “Perfect for cycling or walking the city,” said Neuls.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek black reflective

The shoes are available from Tokyobike, 87-89 Tabernacle Street, and Tracey Neuls East, 73 Redchurch Street, until the end of the design festival on Sunday.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek black reflective

Tracey Neuls has previously collaborated with designer Tord Boontje to design a range of shoes featuring autumn leaves and illustration collective Le Gun to create a range of shoes inspired by items discovered inside a suitcase.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek neon red

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Photographs are courtesy of Tracey Neuls.

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Small House by Unemori Architects

Paper-thin shutters fold out from the walls of this narrow timber house in Tokyo by Japanese firm Unemori Architects (+ slideshow).

Small House by Unemori Architects

Unemori Architects clad the entire exterior with timber boards, then added matching shutters across the large windows.

Small House by Unemori Architects

“At the second and third floor there is a large hinged door in each room. If it’s opened, the inside of the room is enveloped in light and wind as if you are outside,” explained architect Hiroyuki Unemori.

Small House by Unemori Architects

Unemori positioned windows to offer the best views of the building’s surroundings. “The window is so big against the small rooms that every time a window opens or closes the view inside dramatically changes,” he added.

Small House by Unemori Architects

Small House accommodates a couple with a small child and is located within a densely populated suburban area of the city.

Small House by Unemori Architects

An entrance slotted into the corner of the building leads through to a circular white staircase, which spirals up to three storeys above and down to one below. Each floor contains one room, including two bedrooms, a dining room and a kitchen.

Small House by Unemori Architects

A glass-fronted bathroom is positioned on the roof and faces out onto the surrounding rooftops across a triangular roof terrace.

Small House by Unemori Architects

The architects used single layers of timber to construct the floors, which match furniture, surfaces and cupboards in the dining room and kitchen.

Small House by Unemori Architects

The compact site also includes a small driveway and a narrow space to park bicycles.

Small House by Unemori Architects

Other Japanese residences we’ve recently featured include a house with a staggered interior and gently sloping roof, a house lifted off the ground by a single central pillar and a tall house with views of a nearby observation tower.

Small House by Unemori Architects

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Small House by Unemori Architects

Photography is by Ken Sasajima.

Here’s some project description from the architects:


Small House

The small house which the married couple and their child live stands in the densely populated area in Tokyo. Though the neighbouring houses is very close, I aimed to design the house which exceed the physical narrowness living at the city.

Small House by Unemori Architects

I laid out the 4m×4m building as small as I could at the centre of site area 34m2 and made some space for flowing of light and wind around it. And by making the space, it’s possible to avoid setback regulation and it has the 9m high volume like a tower.

Small House by Unemori Architects

The inside is simple structure what is separated by the 4 floor boards and is jointed by spiral stairway.

Small House by Unemori Architects

Especially, by making some extremely thin floor boards (thickness 70mm) , the up and down floor boards got close and connected the whole space of the house without a break.

Small House by Unemori Architects

The space of around the house is useful to let light and wind in. The wall of the rooms borders the outside, so I put windows in the best position that harmonising with its surroundings.

Small House by Unemori Architects
Site plan – click for larger image

And the window is so big against the small room, every time the window opens or closes, the inside view dramatically changes.

Small House by Unemori Architects
Detailed site plan – click for larger image

Especially, at the second and third floor there is a large hinged door each room, if it is opened, the inside of the room is enveloped in light and wind as if you are outside.

Small House by Unemori Architects
Floor plans – click for larger image

By making the thin floor boards for connecting with their life and making the large windows what are opened toward the city, I aimed to exceed the segmentation, for example the upstairs and the downstairs, the inside and the outside, a building and the town, etc. to broaden the whole image of a house.

Small House by Unemori Architects
Floor plans – click for larger image

Location: Meguro-ku,Tokyo
Principal use: private residence
Family type: couple and child
Parking space: One car
Site area: 34.27 m2

Small House by Unemori Architects
Section – click for larger image

Building area: 17.47 sqm
Total floor area: 67.34 sqm
Plot ratio: 146.4%
Structural systems: steel frame
Scale: 1 basement and 4 storeys
Completion: August 2010

Small House by Unemori Architects
Detailed section – click for larger image

Materials:Exterior wall – flexible board t=8mm siding water-repellent coating, roof – FRP waterproof t=3mm topcoat, interior wall – whiteboard t=3mm, ceiling – lauan plywood t=4mm CL, floor – lauan plywood t=12mm UC
Architect:Unemori Architects
Structural engineer:Structured Environment
Developer : Taishin Construction

Small House by Unemori Architects
Elevation – click for larger image

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Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

London Design Festival 2013: London designer Adam Nathaniel Furman has created multi-coloured 3D-printed ceramic objects for his Designers in Residence commission at the Design Museum (+ slideshow).

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman consists of 3D-printed and ceramic vases and ornaments, painted in luminous colours and busy psychedelic patterns.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

The objects were created in response to this year’s Designers in Residence showcase at London’s Design Museum, which challenged four designers to develop a project in response to the theme of identity.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Furman told Dezeen that his response was to create artefacts about the life of a fictional designer. The final ornaments intend to capture the imaginary character’s need for belonging and their fascination for new media and digital fabrication technologies.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

“I believe very strongly in the power of character and scenario to tell complex truths about our contemporary state,” said Furman.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Meme Totem

The objects were created using a number of production methods including 3D printing laser-sintered nylon in bright colours, 3D-printing ceramics and spray painting.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Kitsch pot

“I’d always felt that identity was such a protean, gaseous, changeable thing,” the designer said. “It terrified me really. I mean, how inconstant we are, how fluid our identities are and how we change from year to year.”

For the project, Furman also produced a film that he said “compresses all the visual influences and theoretical explorations embedded in the project, in a non-didactic and fun way.” Watch it here:

Here’s a short movie about the designer, produced by Alice Masters for the Design Museum:

Furman is currently working at Ron Arad Architects is and co-director of architecture practice Madam Studio and Saturated Space research group at the Architectural Association School of Architecture.

The Designers in Residence 2013 exhibition opened last week and runs until 12 January 2014. Last year’s Designers in Residence included Oscar Medley Whitfield, Harry Trimble, Uri Suzuki and Lawrence Lek.

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Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Here’s a press release from the Design Museum:


Designers in Residence 2013
4 Sept 2013 – 12 Jan 2014
Adam Nathaniel Furman

This year’s Designers in Residence were invited by the Museum to respond to the theme of Identity, to explore how design can be used to convey, create or reflect a sense of identity through an object or experience.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Glued to his laptop, locked in his flat, emailing, DM’ing, posting, stressing and Skyping, what sort of a collection could a characterful designer produce in 3 months?

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Furman’s project explores the potential of now ubiquitous rapid fabrication techniques to free designers from commercial exigencies, and to instead prodigiously create any number of objects whose delineations are guided by and embody intensely personal narratives. The role of collector and designer collapse into one.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Yantraments 

Through a blog he created a character, a fictional tool, who existed for three months in a fever of rumination and production. Each post was a lived scenario which brought together a wider issue such as generalised anxiety or Facebook envy, with a fabrication technique such as 3d printed ceramic, or plaster, or plastic. The character fused these into a dizzying array of designs, each contributing to a collection which tells the story of a search for identity told through the design of objects. A journey which, thanks to technology, any one of us could embark upon in the near future.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Swirl and Stepwell

Furman terminated the character, and the tripartite display of his project consists of a table on which all the various objects are collected, a miniature museum of the said designer, as well as the blog through which the stories behind each of the objects is relayed, and a film which compresses and conveys in a non-didactic manner, all the various influences and themes embedded in the overall project.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Adam Nathaniel Furman

Adam Nathaniel Furman is a writer, designer, teacher and artist. He graduated from the Architectural Association in 2009 and is currently working at Ron Arad Associates. He also co-directs the Saturated Space Research cluster at the AA, and is co-director of the Architecture design practice Madam Studio.

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“Sculpture’s gift to architecture is the staircase” – Alex de Rijke

Dezeen and MINI World Tour: architect Alex de Rijke of dRMM talks to Dezeen about his practice’s Escher-inspired installation of staircases in this movie filmed outside Tate Modern in London. 

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke
Alex de Rijke of dRMM

The Endless Stair installation, constructed on the bank of the River Thames as part of this years London Design Festival, comprises 15 interlocking staircases demonstrating a new cross-laminated timber material.

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

“Endless Stair is a prototype,” explains de Rijke, who is co-founder of architects de Rijke Marsh Morgan and dean of architecture at the Royal College of Art. “It’s a research project into making a new material, or a new version of a material, namely a hard wood version of laminated timber, which is generally soft wood.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

dRMM chose to create an installation of stairs to demonstrate the material because of the sculptural quality of staircases, de Rijke says.

“Stairs are one of the nicest things about architecture,” he explains. “Somebody once said sculpture’s gift to architecture is the staircase.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

He continues: “My team were interested in Escher’s endless stair as a conceptual conceit. We thought we would make a very simple version of Escher’s sophisticated ideas.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

To recreate one of Escher’s drawings in 3D would be impossible, and de Rijke admits that the installation is not literally endless.

“Endless Stair is obviously a real staircase with a real end,” he says. “The idea of Endless Stair is that it can be endlessly reconfigured; it’s something that can be recycled and reused. There are 15 flights in this example, and they can be reconfigured with more or less in many different contexts.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

De Rijke says that the sculpture is meant to be fun, but forms part of a serious research project.

“All useful architecture has its origins in some kind of experiment,” he says. “We wanted to make a new material and we wanted to apply it and we did so with a kind of sculpture, but actually there’s a serious intent behind it, which is the application at the scale of buildings and larger structures.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

We drove to Tate Modern in our MINI Cooper S Paceman. The music featured in the movie is a track called Temple by London band Dead Red Sun.

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"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

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New Pinterest board: London Design Festival 2013

dezeen_New London Design Festival Pinterest board_6sq1

Our new Pinterest board features highlights from this year’s London Design Festival, including an installation of spinning paper windmills and the “world’s lightest” wooden table. See our new London Design Festival 2013 Pinterest board »

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Milan is “sitting in the past” says Patrizia Moroso

Patrizia Moroso

News: Milan is “sitting in the past” and Italy is “losing the culture behind production,” according to Patrizia Moroso, head of leading Italian furniture brand Moroso (+ interview).

“There are so many reasons, but we are losing the culture behind production,” she told Dezeen. “I don’t know how many more years we have production for because also companies are dying every day in Italy.”

Moroso made the comments during an interview with Dezeen at the designjunction show – part of the London Design Festival in London this week – where the brand has furnished the VIP room.

When asked to compare the design scenes in London and Milan, she said: “Milan unfortunately is sitting in the past and the past is gone. All the most important people of the beautiful past of Milan are very old or dead. I don’t see energy now; the city is like a closed box.”

London, by contrast, is “a sort of belly of the world,” she said. “London is the centre of many kinds of thinking. Many people, young people but also people from all over the world, are attracted because London is open.”

Moroso is creative director of the eponymous Udine-based company that was started by her parents, who asked her to help reinvigorate the firm during the recession in the eighties.

Under her influence, the small, craft-driven company began to collaborate with international designers including Konstantin Grcic, Patricia Urquiola and Ron Arad. Moroso is now one of Italy’s most highly regarded design-led furniture brands, yet it continues to manufacture all its products in workshops close to its headquarters in north-east Italy.

However Moroso fears that Italy’s craft-based manufacturing excellence is dying out. “Italy in a way is very much in a crisis because it doesn’t want to change, doesn’t want to move and is becoming very old,” she said. “We have had more than 20 years of bad management of our government, society, schools, institutions. Everything has almost disappeared, so this is very bad for culture and design is part of that.”

Milan remains the world’s most important centre for furniture design but there are concerns that it is losing its influence. Earlier this year Claudio Luti, president of the Milan furniture fair, said that poor planning was damaging the city’s reputation. He told Dezeen: “If things don’t work in the right way, they damage Milan, they damage our future.”

In April, Former Domus editor Joseph Grima told Dezeen that “an era is drawing to an end for Italian design.” He added that the Italian apprenticeship system, where crafts skills are learned directly from masters, is “in a little bit of a crisis” as the rest of the world moves towards a schools-based system.

Moroso agreed that Italy’s design schools were suffering. “The schools are collapsing,” she said. “When I see our universities and design schools, they are not the best in the world, they are not so important unfortunately. If you don’t give importance to learning, not immediately but in ten years you loose a generation of material culture.”

Moving production to emerging economies like China was not a solution for her company, Moroso added. But she laughed off concerns about Chinese companies copying her products.

“In China they have all the copies of everything, especially Supernatural chairs by Ross Lovegrove,” she said. “In every coffee bar you can find them. They’re not ours but they’re very famous so I’m happy!”

See all our stories about Moroso. Here is a full transcript of the interview:


Marcus Fairs: How does the design scene in London compare to Milan?

Patrizia Moroso: The differences are so many, of course. Milan unfortunately is sitting in the past and the past is gone. All the most important people of the beautiful past of Milan are very old or dead. I don’t see energy now; the city is like a closed box. There was a fantastic moment in the past but they are not changing or accepting influence from outside. Italy in a way is very much in a crisis because it doesn’t want to change, doesn’t want to move and is becoming very old.

Marcus Fairs: Are you talking about design or everything?

Patrizia Moroso: The society, unfortunately. For instance all the young people, many, many of them are going away. Especially from what I know, I have kids that are now starting university. One of my sons is here, in Oxford. Many other young people came to university in England, but also elsewhere. So that is strange because you see your best people, the young and the interesting people, going away because in Italy now it is very difficult to start to do something after your studies. It’s not a problem of money and financial price, it’s because people don’t want to think in another way. It’s very rigid.

So London, for me, is a little bit different. Many people, young people but also people from all over the world, are attracted because London is open. Of course I know that also here it is very expensive, from what I hear. England has lots of problems in terms of society. I was talking with a taxi driver yesterday and he said to me: “You know, I was living in London with my family and my son is obliged to go and live in the suburbs. Every day I have to drive for an hour to come into London because it’s no longer possible to sustain this level. Here, rich people come from all over the world, from Russia, from China, and they are buying houses that they stay in one week per year, and we’re losing our city.” This could be the beginning of something very bad I think.

But anyway, London is still alive. Probably because so many people are coming to study and are making their own things here, sometimes establishing themselves forever. Some of the big names in London architecture and design, friends of ours, they all come from outside, countries from far away. Turkey, Iran, Israel, Italy, France.

Marcus Fairs: Why is London important to Moros? Is it because of the contract market, with all the architects here?

Patrizia Moroso: It’s important first of all living or working in a place that is so exciting is always an occasion to stimulate your brain. That is for me, the first thing. But of course to have a showroom in London is because London is the centre of many kinds of thinking. Architecture is one of these and some of the most important studios in the world, of architecture and interior design, are based in London. Maybe then they have other studios around the world, but the main studios are here. Of course for that reason it is important to stay close to them. It’s a sort of belly of the world.

Marcus Fairs: Will Milan be able to retain its importance as a creative city, as a design city?

Patrizia Moroso: Milan is not my reality. I’m living and working in the countryside north-east of Italy [in Udine]. Milan has a lot of important human knowledge about making things, and I think we in Italy are fantastic at doing what we are able to do.

We have an incredible heritage of a very high quality of craft, but also transforming craft during the 60s and 70s in industry. Maybe not big industries because you know that the design industry is never that big, companies need to be medium-sized to work in a good way, but the companies began as little companies of craftsmen or things like that. Why? Because Italy is a country where the people have an incredible talent to make beautiful things in wood, in glass, in metal, whatever. Very refined. Still, for me, a country that can produce some of the best things.

For instance, in furniture it’s one of the best places in the world and one of the few places in Europe because we maintain these capabilities. In England, for some reason you lost these capabilities. You also were making, now I don’t know. You are great at thinking; that is something important. The reverse in Italy: we are great at making but unfortunately thinking belongs to culture and culture belongs to society. We have had more than 20 years of bad management of our government, society, schools, institutions. Everything has almost disappeared, so this is very bad for culture and design is part of that.

When I see our universities and design schools, they are not the best in the world, they are not so important unfortunately. For me one of the reasons is the schools. If you don’t give importance to learning, not immediately but in ten years you loose a generation of material culture. In Italy I believe some schools are still important because the teachers are very, very strong and make them good schools, but they are not paid very well. The schools are collapsing. For instance, design schools need a sort of laboratory. In Italy design schools are usually very academic and they are not letting the students try or make because there is no money to do this and no spaces for this kind of approach to design that is so important.

The most important schools that I know, like the Royal College of Art and Design Academy Eindhoven, they are factories for young designers and they can try to make what they think. There are so many reasons, but we are losing the culture behind production. So I don’t know how many more years we have production for because also companies are dying every day in Italy. This is so sad for me because really the craftsmen and the people that used to work in the factories have an incredible mentality, so I hope this will change.

Marcus Fairs: You don’t sound very optimistic about Italian design and manufacturing.

Patrizia Moroso: I’m not optimistic because I see what happens. I think the companies have the knowledge so all of them together can really teach a lot because they are going on making beautiful objects designed by designers from all over the world, usually. Some are also Italian, but not so many unfortunately. Thirty or 40 years ago Italian design meant not only production but also Italian people as designers, architects, but now fewer and fewer. Now we have to do something to start again and think about making projects.

Marcus Fairs: Can Moroso still survive in Italy or will you have to move your business to a different city?

Patrizia Moroso: I’m very nostalgic; my roots are very deep. I’m living there, staying there. All our production is done in our little city and we’ll go as long as I’m there. Of course we are curious and why not if you want to develop something that belongs to another culture and manufacture.

For instance, I remember when we went to India for hand embroidery. In Italy nobody knows this any more and Nipa Doshi [of Doshi Levien] was designing something that had to be done by hand in India, so we went to India but only for that. Or if I work with Tomek Rygalik, who is Polish, I want to develop some wooden chairs with him in Poland because he is living there, he knows how to work that wood in that factory, which could be our supplier.

So outside of Italy it is interesting if you have a reason to go, not to spend less money. The quality in Italy is very high and we want to keep it, so taking business somewhere else is stupid. Many of the companies that went to China ten years ago, they stopped production. First because the quality went down, then when China increased the quality. Now they also have good quality. The balance was not so convenient so they came back.

But what happens is that China is very fast, and people from China are running like trains. So in one second they see what is good and they are doing that. But if you go there and give all your information then it is obvious that someone can copy you, and very well. In China they have all the copies of everything, especially Supernatural chairs by Ross Lovegrove. In every coffee bar you can find them. They’re not ours but they’re very famous so I’m happy!

It’s a country that is changing, also for them things are deeply changing. I saw architects that are fantastic. Young architects that are coming out of China that can be interesting working here, why not? What is more global, I don’t know. But the work we are doing in Italy, in our cities, is very peculiar. And this is, in a way, the ratio we can give to the world. We don’t want to disappear, making things all over because that is what happens every day for dresses, for everything. We want to be very related with our country.

Marcus Fairs: You’ve done the VIP lounge here at designjunction. Tell us what you think of the show.

Patrizia Moroso: Designjunction is a new fair but it’s very interesting with a lot of young people here. I saw many young productions and designers, like in the past when I first went to England to meet the young Tom Dixon, the young Ron Arad, that generation. Every one of those people were making everything themselves, that was the beauty of English design, British design as they called it. This is also the secret of good design, to experiment in a moment of your profession with making by yourself. A good designer has to be able to produce something.

So that age in London was fantastic because all these names then became very famous. They were just doing things by themselves and I see a little bit of the same at this fair now. Some are very interesting, and why not help the fair to have a little place as a lounge.

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One, Two and Many by Marta Wengorovius

Lisbon Architecture Triennale: Portuguese artist Marta Wengorovius teamed up with architect Francisco Aires Mateus to create this small wooden library that can be used by only one person at a time.

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius

On show as part of the Lisbon Architecture Triennale, the reading cabin comprises a shed-like structure containing nothing but a single bookshelf and a raised seating area.

Daylight filters in through a skylight that punctures the gabled roof.

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius

Marta Wengorovius invited 20 guests to choose books for the library, creating a collection of 60 volumes.

“Sharing this itinerant project creates a community between people who read the books, the guests who chose the books and the people who will read the books wherever the cabin shall pass,” she said.

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius

Visitors can reserve time slots to occupy the library, whether it be an hour or a whole day.

The cabin first opened in Paredes and has since moved to Lisbon. The artist plans to relocate it each year, translating the books into different languages for foreign countries.

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius

Francisco Aires Mateus designed the structure. His studio also recently completed a pair of waterfront cabins in Grândola, Portugal.

Other buildings designed specifically for a single inhabitant include a micro home by Renzo Piano and a travelling performance venue.

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius

See more stories from the Lisbon Architecture Triennale »

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius
Floor plan

Photography is by João Wengorovius.

Here’s a project description from Marta Wengorovius:


Um, Dois e Muitos (One, Two and Many)

The project is an itinerant library that aims to be a compass of reflection concerning the themes: “One”, “Two” and “Many”. The 60 books in the library relate to: “One” (every single one chosen), “two” (every single one two chosen) and “many” (every single one many chosen).

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius
Cross section

The books were chosen by 20 guests invited to collaborate with the artist and to be part of this project. With the intersection of these various books there is a desire to produce a sort of manifest, a synthesis to enlighten our roots, and searching some earth (roots?). I believe that the truthful ones cross our past and present, and give flowers throughout the ages, enlightening the time that goes by.

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius
Long section

The library was planned to be in one different place per year. If exhibited in a foreign country the books will be translated to the native language of the country.

This art project had its first opening on December 2012 as part of the public art project in Paredes, north of Portugal.

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius
End elevation

Using Instructions

The Reading Cabin is to be used by one person at a time. The books can be read inside the cabin and requested to the entity where the Library is located. Sharing this itinerant project creates a community between people who read the books, the guests who chose the books and the people who will read the books wherever the cabin shall pass. The cabin was designed by Francisco Aires Mateus.

Reading Cabin by Marta Wengorovius
Side elevation

A Project by: Marta Wengorovius
In collaboration with: Francisco Aires Mateus and Ana Almada Pimentel
Photographs: João Wengorovius
Construction: Cenário Perfeito
Graphic design: barbara says…

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by Marta Wengorovius
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Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

London Design Festival 2013: British brand Another Country has launched its third series of wooden furniture and first range of patterned textiles at designjunction (+ slideshow).

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

Another Country has created a range of beech and oak tables, stools, benches and desks modelled on Edwardian workshop furniture.

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

Trestle-style tables and benches have rounded corners, with legs and edges of flat surfaces coloured grey, red or green.

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

Textiles for blankets and cushion are made from hand-dyed wool in three colourful geometric patterns.

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

The collection is on display as part of designjunction at The Sorting Office, 21-31 New Oxford Street, in London’s West End until Sunday.

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

Other products on show at the exhibition include a furniture collection by new brand Joined + Jointed and a set of wicker lights by Claesson Koivisto Rune.

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

Also during this year’s London Design Festival, Another Country launched a collection of bedroom furniture for London retailer Heal’s.

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

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More details in the text from Another Country below:


Another Country launches Series Three and Soft Series at London Design Festival

The blockbuster contemporary design show; designjunction, is back for another outing at London Design Festival 2013 and so is Another Country; who will be taking their place amongst the three floors and 120,000 square feet of contemporary design in the 1960s Postal Sorting Office in Covent Garden.

Another Country has a spectacular show planned for this September that includes the launch of Series Three, the latest collection of designs inspired by Edwardian workshop furniture, and a new textiles range; Soft Series, which includes cushions and throws. There will be some new adaptations of old favourites; new additions to the Pottery Series and a spectacular stand design besides.

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

Series Three

Another Country has applied its extensive knowledge of producing craft-inspired contemporary objects to create a series of Beech and Oak furniture that is their most functional to-date. The tables, stools, benches and desk that make up the Series Three collection is intended to be the perfect marriage of traditional craft construction and contemporary form.

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

A trestle-style table base was inspired by the utilitarian and adaptable design of Edwardian industrial workbenches. The base supports a solid Beech top and the joint where these two elements meet is a decorative craft detail that is carefully celebrated. Series Three is an articulation of Another Country’s mission to produce furniture that is efficient to make and to use; unconcerned with fashion and unfussy it is charming and hardworking. The rounded corners, thoughtful scale and splashes of colour – ‘Chamberlayne Grey’, ‘Wellington Red’ and ‘Oxford Green’ are the points of difference to note.

Beech is an underused but effective timber: hard, handsome, uniform and plentiful. Another Country is championing its revival as a contemporary wood in their Series Three collection alongside the equally beautiful oak.

Finishes: white oiled and waxed beech, white oiled and waxed beech + stained colour oiled and waxed oak, oiled and waxed oak + stained colour

Series Three and Soft Series by Another Country

Soft Series

Another Country is pleased to announce the launch of its very first textiles collection, which acts as a perfect accompaniment to each collection.

Another Country’s first textile collection is something special. The blankets and cushions that make up their Soft Series are jacquard woven, meaning they could produce complex patterns, and are made from soft, hand-dyed, 100% wool. We worked with Scottish textile designer Ruth Duff and acclaimed weavers Gainsborough Silk to produce three different graphic fabric designs.

Patterns: Small Cubes Green, Small Stars Blue and Large Cubes Purple

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Google unveils new logo

dezeen_Google logo_1sq

News: internet giant Google has unveiled a simplified logo that flattens its colours and ditches the drop shadow.

Following days of speculation, Google revealed the news in a blog post yesterday. The new logo will appear within a redesigned version of the search engine’s homepage – the most visited website in the world.

Google unveils new logo
Existing logo

“As part of this design, we’ve also refined the colour palette and letter shapes of the Google logo,” wrote Eddie Kessler.

The new homepage will be rolled out to users in upcoming weeks and will feature a revised menu bar that groups links into an “app launcher” on the right-hand side of the page, rather than within the existing black menu bar.

Google unveils new logo
Updated menu design

Rumours first circulated earlier this month that Google was planning to update its logo, after the flatter version showed up in a beta version of Chrome for Android.

The new logo is more in line with the cleaner graphics and uncluttered interfaces of Apple’s iOS 7 operating system, which was launched worldwide this week.

Google unveils new logo
New app launcher

Other brands to relaunch logos in the last year include the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York and American Airlines.

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Paper Space by Studio Glowacka and Maria Fulford Architects

London Design Festival 2013: design firms Studio Glowacka and Maria Fulford Architects have installed 1500 metres of undulating paper strips to create a pavilion at trade show 100% Design in London this week (+ slideshow).

Paper Space by Maria Fulfor Architects and Studio Glowacka

Studio Glowacka and Maria Fulford Architects draped streams of white paper over a square frame to create a temporary ceiling for the Paper Space auditorium.

Paper Space by Maria Fulfor Architects and Studio Glowacka

Additional strips of paper drop vertically to the floor and create a perimeter for the hub.

Paper Space by Maria Fulfor Architects and Studio Glowacka

Visitors are encouraged to share ideas on rolls of paper within the structure, which can then be torn off and taken away. “Paper is a blank canvas for communication and a receiver for ideas,” Maria Fulford said.

Paper Space by Maria Fulfor Architects and Studio Glowacka

“Paper Space is illuminated by borrowed light from the adjacent exhibitor structures, changing character like a paper chameleon depending on the neighbouring light conditions,” she added.

Paper Space by Maria Fulfor Architects and Studio Glowacka

There is also a bespoke table inside the space that was hand crafted by students at UCL Bartlett School of Architecture. It is made from five-millimetre-thick steel plates and white oak.

Paper Space by Maria Fulfor Architects and Studio Glowacka

Paper Space is being used to hold events, talks and debates during 100% Design, which is open until tomorrow.

Paper Space by Maria Fulfor Architects and Studio Glowacka

Other installations at London Design Festival this year include 5000 spinning paper windmills in a doorway at the V&A museum and an Escher-style installation of fifteen staircases positioned on the grass outside Tate Modern.

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Paper Space by Maria Fulfor Architects and Studio Glowacka

Photographs are by Alastair Browning.

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