School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

This primary school and kindergarten in Zaragoza was conceived by Spanish studio Magén Arquitectos as a village of classrooms with stripy cladding and pyramid-shaped rooftops (+ slideshow).

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

Magén Arquitectos completed the single-storey kindergarten building in 2010 and has since added a three-storey school and an accompanying canteen and sports hall.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

The three buildings wrap around a large shared playground and are united by a low-level canopy that runs along the facade of each block.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

“From a distant vision, the grouping of classroom ‘houses’ around the courtyard garden refers to the idea of a village or town, as a set of independent living units that colonise a place,” said the architects.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

A modular concrete construction guided the layout of the building, creating rows of classrooms with angled ceilings.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

“These prefabricated elements, topped with a skylight, function as lighting and sound absorption domes, providing a more uniform distribution of light across the surface of the classroom and significantly reducing noise inside,” said the architects.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

Each classroom faces towards the playground, but windows can be screened using colourful louvres in shades of red, orange and purple.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

Precast concrete staircases rise up through the three-storey building, plus the facades are selectively clad with timber panels.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

Magén Arquitectos is led by architect Jaime Magén. Other projects by the studio include aluminium-clad social housing and a timber and concrete building for Zaragoza City Council. See more architecture by Magén Arquitectos.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

See more recent school design, including a timber-clad school in Japan by Kengo Kuma.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

Photography is by Jesus Granada.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos

Here’s more information from Magén Arquitectos:


School Complex in Zaragozaf

The new school complex, which holds different educational levels from three to twelve years, is located in a residential area on the outskirts, southwest of Zaragoza. The absence of urban references, given the isolated location of the plot, makes to conceive the project from the inside out, based in their own internal requirements. From the educational point of view, the focus is on the pedagogical value of teaching spaces and the school is seen as a significant experience in spatial terms, related to the child’s creative world. In this sense, the project meets the sensorial relationship between children and architecture, using geometry, space, light, materiality and colour.

From the logic of the project, the proposed architecture develops the concept of unity and multiplicity, associated with the fragmentation of the program in classrooms and diverse sets of unique elements, “additive houses”, which are related by porches and patios, streets and squares, interiors and exterior. This approach also addresses the relationship between the domestic scale accompanying the child and the community dimension of public facilities in a new residential neighborhood. The study of the circulations, natural lighting and acoustics were other key factors in the development of the project.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos
Site plan – click for larger image

The project fits in with the urbanistic rules of the plot and the necessary differentiation between different educational cycles without losing its unitary condition. The centre has a total of 18 elementary classrooms, 9 children, six supportings classrooms, a multipurpose room, a library, a music room, a computer room, an arts classroom, gym, kitchen, staff rooms and administrative areas. The extensive program is divided into three smaller-scale buildings, as a result also of the need to build in phases. The layout of the main volumes (kindergarten, primary school, dining hall and gym) responds to the preferred orientation to the south of the teaching spaces, a different set of common outdoor areas to access, play and relationship, and prevent volumes cast shadows on these spaces.

A continuous porch links the three buildings, connecting their different accesses, which allow the differentiation of cycles and allow the use of some areas independently. An access for students to the kindergarten, one for elementary students, one for parents and teachers and a restricted one to the office, in the dining hall. The project is adjusted to the topography by two horizontal platforms with a height of 1.70 m. between them, coinciding with the different levels of access from the street. Given the relationship between interior and exterior spaces, all the spaces takes place mainly on the ground floor, except the elementary classrooms, a longitudinal prism whose three stacked floors remain the clearly horizontal configuration of the set.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

At the level between three and six years, the school contributes to the playful atmosphere that the child needs at this crucial stage for learning and skills development. The planning of the kindergarten, on the south side of the plot, is based in some ideas about setting up an environment specifically designed for the child, as the first level of socialisation, advanced by Maria Montessori in the early twentieth century, in their first “Case dei Bambini” (Children’s House). This idea of the classroom as a home that protects and shelters, refers to the anthropological origins of the room -the cabin- and is manifested in truncated-pyramidal pitched roofs over square classrooms. Each group of children inhabit a classroom-or “house” -. All are equal in elementary geometry, while different, by their position, orientation, location of the skylight, colour and relationship to the rest.

The classrooms are oriented to the south to ensure natural lighting and are grouped around the common outdoor space for games and outdoor activities. A cantilever, which runs around the perimeter of this space, protects from the sun and rain. From a distant vision, the grouping of classrooms, “houses” around the courtyard garden refers to the idea of village or town, as a set of independent living units that colonise a place.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos
Roof plan – click for larger image

From the inside, these prefabricated elements, topped with a skylight, function as lighting and sound absorption domes, providing a more uniform distribution of light across the surface of the classroom and significantly reducing noise inside. The increased height also improves thermal conditions in summer, while the underfloor heating system ensures comfort in winter. The child classroom setting, a key element in a building of this type, provides a direct correlation between this essential use and an identifiable form, such as spatial unit, structural and constructive. The building is based on a space module of 7.20 x 7.20 x 3.60 m., which matches the dimensions of the room and define its structure, functional organisation and its formal configuration. The other school spaces are configured through the subdivision and/or addition of these modules, creating airy and flexible interiors that would allow future expansion or reform actions. The modular skylight covered-up makes an identifiable profile, a fifth facade, visible from near residential buildings.

The configuration of dining hall and gym building is based on the clear distinction between the two main rooms of different surface and height although both airy and covered with skylights, and their respective service areas: toilets, kitchen, and facilities in the case of dining, locker rooms, toilets and stores, in the gym.

School Complex in Zaragoza by Magén Arquitectos
Sections – click for larger image

The attention to scale and volumetric fragmentation is also present in the linear building intended for elementary education. In this case, the project focused teaching areas in a volume of three floors, while the rest of the program (lobby, auditorium, library) are situated on the ground floor, linked to access. This arrangement allows the independent use of these spaces outside school hours. Given the organisation of classrooms, largely dictated by the economic logic of such projects, stairs are proposed as unique spaces in contrast to the regulatory route. The position and configuration of the three cores makes them transition spaces of relationship with the outside as lookouts that provide lighting and distant views from different levels indoors.

Both the haste in construction times of the phases and budget constraints conditioned building solutions and materials, advising to choose a standardised modulation system to facilitate its implementation. The use of composite panels with natural wood siding responds to reconcile the idea of industrialisation and speed of execution with a nice finish for the child. Within a rigorous modulation, the variable arrangement of the panels, horizontal or vertical, colour and finish in places, provides certain resonances of play, appropriate to the character of the project. Latticed aluminum slats protect classrooms and sieved solar radiation outside the presence in the classroom. In contrast to the chromatic treatment abroad, the interiors are characterised by neutral and uniform finishes; the surfaces in contact with the child, floors and walls, are finished to a certain height in continuity material in each space, and those out of reach in white with sound absorbing materials. The result is a school built entirely with industrial techniques that have enabled significantly lowering costs and deadlines.

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by Magén Arquitectos
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Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvær

Product news: one coloured glass bubble sits within another to form these lanterns by Norwegian designer Kristine Five Melvær (+ slideshow).

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Kristine Five Melvær‘s candle holders comprise a more opaque smaller inner bubble that holds the tea light, with a transparent outer layer that disperses the candle glow. Pairs of colours create a third hue where the layers overlap.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

During the lighter summer months the glassware can be used as vases for flowers.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

The Multi lanterns were developed with Norwegian glass company Magnor Glassverk and are on display at the Norwegian Centre for Design and Architecture until 25 August.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Kristine Five Melvær has also created lamps that look like buds about to bloom and a series of sheer slik room dividers.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

The most recent candle holders on Dezeen include a chunky designs made from a compound of stone and resin and a series that look like bent pipes poking through a wall.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Photos are by Erik Five Gunnerud.

See more candle holder designs »
See more design by Kristine Five Melvær »
See more glassware design »

Here’s some extra information from the designer:


The lantern Multi consists of two glass bubbles, one of them outside the other. The opaque inner bubble gives the light source an organic shape. The transparent outer bubble captures and exhibits the light. The two intersecting colors creates a new, more complex hue. Multi can also be used as a vase or as a light sculpture that interprets sunlight as color on the table. Multi’s function changes during the year. In the dark months the object glows. In the bright months the object displays the sunlight and flowers.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Multi is exhibited for the first time as part of the exhibition On Time at the Norwegian Centre for Design and Architecture from the 21st of June to the 25th of August 2013. The exhibition is curated by Klubben (Norwegian Designers Union). It is an exhibition about time, situations and objects. Nineteen Norwegian designers interprets 17 moments within 24 hours through 17 brand new objects.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Kristine Five Melvær developed the Multi lantern in cooperation with Magnor Glassverk, a Norwegian glass company. Multi will be developed further and launched as part of their collection.

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Kristine Five Melvær
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Ondo by Kenyon Yeh

Taiwan designer Kenyon Yeh has developed a simple wooden coat rack that leans up against a wall or corner.

Named Ondo, Kenyon Yeh‘s product comprises 13 parts that can be assembled from flat-pack using a handful of screws.

Ondo by Kenyon Yeh

Five arms cross the body of the rack, creating room to hang at least ten items. There’s also six rounded hooks that can facilitate hats, ties or bags.

Each part is made from oak and comes in either black or natural wood.

Ondo by Kenyon Yeh

Other products designed by Kenyon Yeh include a two-legged side table, which also needs to lean against a wall.

See more hangers for coats and bags, including one made from two ladders.

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Health Sciences Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Básico de Arquitectura

Spanish office Taller Básico de Arquitectura designed the facade of this university complex in Zaragoza as a layer of overlapping white scales (+ slideshow).

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

The Health Sciences Faculty joins two existing faculty buildings at San Jorge University‘s Villanueva de Gállego, several miles outside the city centre, and accommodates the school’s pharmacy, nursing and physiotherapy degrees.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

Taller Básico de Arquitectura divided the facility into three L-shaped blocks that surround an informal courtyard. A gap between two of the structures leads through to this central space, where all three entrances are located.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

“This faculty offers a new landscape of white scales breathing light on the outside, and it offers a big room opened to the sky on the inside,” say the architects.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

The overlapping facade panels run along the outer edges of each two-storey block. Windows are positioned underneath every “scale” and are orientated to bring in daylight from the south and east.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

Classrooms and laboratories are arranged in rows behind the outer facades, while connecting corridors run along behind the court-facing elevations, which feature exposed concrete surfaces.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

A conference room, a cafe and a multi-purpose area are also included, shared out between the smaller wings of each block.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

Other recently completed university buildings include a library with a robotic book retrieval system and an art and architecture college filled with double-height studios. See more university architecture.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

Here’s a project description from Taller Básico de Arquitectura:


Health Faculty

The new Health Faculty of San Jorge University is located on a campus on the outskirts of Zaragoza city. Although it is a rural campus, the nature in it is scarce. The forest along the campus is the result of a man created operation. The surrounding buildings, the Rectory and Communications Faculty, respond to a contemporaneous architecture that lives besides that nature.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

The Health Faculty joins the development of that little nature to reinforce the place where the existing buildings rest and where new buildings will do. The new faculty is not only another building; it becomes part of the new place. Architecture is thought as part of a new nature.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

The building program is organised in three concave lines. These white and scaled lines unfold on the campus as part of its landscape. Inside, on two floors, classrooms and laboratories are organised for teaching and research. Each scale catches the light needed for each room. The dimensions and shape of rooms allow a big variability of use. Consequently, it is possible an academic reorganisation in an easy way. Light coming through scales can be controlled, so digital technologies can be used inside rooms. The minor creases of each line contain the most public rooms of the new faculty: cafeteria, conference room and multipurpose rooms.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

The three lines enclose a big room open to the sky. All the access corridors to laboratories and classrooms face this big room. The square gives access to the three lines. Lines look at each other through the square, which discovers the inside of this mineral complex. The inside and outside relation of the faculty gets inverted. The concave outside happens to be the most interior room, and the convex inside becomes the most exterior place.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

The mineral nature of this faculty in San Jorge University offers a new landscape of white scales breathing light on the outside, and it offers a big room opened to the sky on the inside.

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

Location: San Jorge University Campus. Highway A-23 Zaragoza-Huesca Km 299. Cp 50830 Villanueva De Gállego (Zaragoza)

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

Authors: Taller Básico De Arquitectura, Javier Pérez-Herreras, Fco. Javier Quintana De Uña
Collaborating architects: Edurne Pérez Díaz De Arcaya, David Santamaria Ozcoidi, Leire Zaldua Amundarain, Daniel Ruiz De Gordejuela Telleche, Irene Ajubita Díaz,
Developer: Universidad San Jorge Foundatoin
Building company: San Jorge Ute
Building engineer: Carlos Munilla Orera

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura

Project: December 2009
Construction start date: 15/02/2010
Construction end date: 28/06/2012
Area: 8.853 sqm

Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura
Site plan – click for larger image
Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura
Sections – click for larger image
Health Faculty in Zaragoza by Taller Basico de Arquitectura
Elevations – click for larger image

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by Taller Básico de Arquitectura
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Doug Engelbart 1925-2013

Inventor of computer mouse Doug Engelbart 1925-2013

News: inventor of the computer mouse Doug Engelbart has died at the age of 88.

Transforming the way we understand computers and interact with technology, the mouse is regarded as one of the greatest innovations of the twenty-first century. The point and click system remains largely unchanged since its inception, and over one billion mice have been sold since it was made commercially available in 1984.

“Doug’s legacy is immense,” said Curtis R. Carlson, Ph.D., president and CEO of Stanford Research Institute (SRI) where Engelbart worked for 20 years. “Anyone in the world who uses a mouse or enjoys the productive benefits of a personal computer is indebted to him.”

Engelbart developed the computer mouse technology in the early 1960s. Bill English, the then SRI chief engineer, went on to design the first prototype in 1964 and the patent was issued in 1970. SRI went on to license the mouse technology to companies including Apple.

Engelbart unveiled his wooden prototype mouse at the 1968 Joint Computer Conference in San Francisco in what’s widely referred to as “the mother of all demos“. He demonstrated breakthrough innovations such as hypertext linking, real-time text editing, the use of multiple windows and shared-screen teleconferencing.

Engelbart held a vision for computers augmenting human intellect and dedicated his research to increasing what he called the collective IQ. For Engelbart, “the mouse was one part of a larger technological system whose purpose was to facilitate organisational learning and global online collaboration,” says SRI.

“Doug leaves a rich legacy of past accomplishments and his novel thinking will inspire generations to come,” said the Doug Engelbart Institute in a short statement on its website this week.

Tributes and recognition continue to pour in to the institute’s Facebook page this week: “So much of what we use today is owed to this mans genius mind. The internet, the computer mouse, the hyperlink,” said Karl Brody. “Doug Engelbart was the greatest innovator of the 20th Century and I am deeply saddened by his passing,” said William Miller. “The mouse was only one of his many innovations.”

Engelbart studied electrical engineering at Oregon State University and served as a radar technician during World War II. He worked briefly at as an electrical engineer for Nasa’s predecessor, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (Naca), before leaving to pursue a doctorate at the University of California, Berkeley. He joined SRI in 1957 and led its Augmentation Research Center (ARC) from 1959 to 1977.

He founded the Bootstrap Institute, now the Doug Engelbart Institute, which works closely with industry stakeholders to implement his work and helped develop the world’s first operational packet switching networks, Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANet), and the progenitor that led to the internet.

Engelbart received the National Medal of Technology in 2000 and in 1997 was awarded both the Lemelson-MIT Prize and the Turing Award.

Portrait of Doug Engelbart with his original mouse was taken in 2008, courtesy of SRI International.

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1925-2013
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Job of the week: designers at Universal Design Studio

Job of the week!

Our pick of the ads on Dezeen Jobs this week is an opportunity for designers to work with Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby at Universal Design Studio, co-creators of the Google Web Lab at London’s Science Museum (pictured).

Visit the ad for full details or browse other architecture and design opportunities on Dezeen Jobs.

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Universal Design Studio
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Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Product news: this collection of office furniture by Japanese design studio Nendo can be screwed together with a coin rather than tools (+ slideshow).

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

The two parts of each coin joint lie flush in the flat-pack panels when not in use, but with the push of a finger the screw component springs out to be loosened using small change.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Nendo designed the flexible Ofon range for office furniture brand Kokuyo to be used by companies who are constantly rearranging their workplaces.

dezeen_Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo_22

Different desks and shelves can be attached by fixing the joints on the top, bottom and side panels.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Small shelving units double as legs for desks or stack on top of each other and side by side to create larger storage solutions.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Pastel-coloured fabric panels fit over the cubby holes to conceal their contents, hinged along the top edges.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Black, white and wood veneer options for each variation can be ordered.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Nendo’s latest projects include bottle designs for coffee flavoured beer and an installation of shower-light hybrids.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Photos are by Hiroshi Iwasaki.

See more design by Nendo »
See more furniture design »

Nendo provided us with the following text:


Ofon

An office furniture collection designed for small workspaces.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Quick change is important for small offices. They need to be able to modify the office layout to respond to frequent moves, and to employee numbers expanding and contracting flexibly based on the organisation’s growth and the scale of each new project. We wanted our office furniture to be easily expandable and multi-functional, too.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

We developed a ‘coin joint’ that can be screwed and unscrewed with a single coin, rather than requiring tools.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Assembling the furniture is almost as easy as pushing a button. The two parts of the joint lie flat when the furniture is not in use, then spring out with the touch of a finger to be screwed together with the coin.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

We used this joint to assemble box-type shelves. Shelves not in use can serve as legs for cabinet-type desks.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

The upholstered panels that function as cupboard doors also function as partitions between the desks; placed together, they can also partition the office space. The result: a highly functional design that allows workers to focus and relax within the same small space, and offers the physical flexibility required for easy changes to the office layout.

Ofon by Nendo for Kokuyo

Since the design gives workers both ‘on’ and ‘off’ space and maximizes users’ ability to attach and detach the parts, ‘ofon’ was the perfect name for the collection.

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for Kokuyo
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Vote for the Unique Youngstar 2013 and win a watch

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition

Dezeen promotion: vote for your favourite outdoor product design shortlisted in the Unique Youngstar competition for the chance to win one of three Plicate timepieces by Benjamin Hubert from Dezeen Watch Store.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Micro Greenhouse by Åsa Agerstam. Top: Ar Vag by Thibault Penven

Winners of the new competition set up by event organiser Koelnmesse will exhibit in the Garden Unique section at the Spoga+Gafa trade fair in Cologne, taking place from 8 to 10 September.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Polyfine by Markus Bangerter

Seventy one young designers and teams submitted their products for outdoor living and judges selected a shortlist of 15.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Herbs Outdoors by Inesa Malafej, Studio etcetc

Shortlisted products include a miniature greenhouse in the shape of a pyramid, a fold-out fishing boat and lampshades made from bandages.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Flask by Konrad Lohöfener

A jury will choose three winning designs and one further winner will be selected by public vote via the Unique Youngstar website.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Contio by Matilda Lindblom Design & Architecture

Voters will be automatically entered into a prize draw to win one of three Plicate watches by Benjamin Hubert from Dezeen Watch Store .

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Klemmbrett Bank by Manuel Welsky Design Studio

For the full list of designs and more information about each project, visit the Unique Youngstar website.

The organisers sent us the information below:


Unique Youngstar: the nominees have been selected

Jury announces 15 finalists – exhibition of the prototypes within the “garden unique” format – official award-ceremony during the unique hour.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Pflix by Christian Heufelder

Once again this year the visitors of the spoga+gafa will hear the words: “And the winners are…”. Namely, since the successful introduction of the exclusive “garden unique” format in the year 2011, the accompanying young designer competition has been extremely popular. New this year: under the title “unique Youngstar” a total of 15 ideas will be showcased in a prototype exhibition at the world’s leading garden trade fair.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Circle by Konrad Lohöfener

Subsequently, the young designers will battle it out for the coveted title “unique Youngstar 2013”. The ultimate winners of the prizes endowed with prize-money totalling 7,000 Euros, will be announced during the “unique hour” on September 8th. In addition to the three winners selected by the jury, the Koelnmesse will also be awarding a prize that has been voted by the public.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Ter by Goula/Figuera Studio

In total 62 projects from 24 countries were submitted to the competition with the theme “Outdoor Living”. Design students and young designers, who have completed their studies no longer than three years ago, were eligible for participation. There was no limitation to the creativity of the competition entries: from outdoor furniture, to accessories or sunshade products, to outdoor lights, flooring suitable for outdoors or plant pots, through to grills – the submitted ideas didn’t make it easy for the jury to select their 15 favourites.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Fleet by Carolin Thieme

The jury’s decisions are based on the following essential assessment criteria: overall concept, originality of design, conceptual and visionary quality, functionality and the quality of presentation.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Stakes by Roee Magdassi

The competition once again boasted a star-studded panel of judges in 2013, comprising of the following team of experts: Tobias Lutz, founder and CEO of Architonic AG; Marcus Fairs, Chief Editor of dezeen; Eric Degenhardt, designer at Studio Eric Degenhardt; Karen Bofinger, Editor of the Architectural Digest, Camila Vega Faba and Harry Paul van Ierssel, both designers and co-founders of Harry&Camila.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Watercabinet by Francien Hazen

Prominently positioned

The prototypes of the designs of the 15 nominees will be exhibited at the spoga+gafa 2013 in the exclusive “garden unique” sector. In addition to having the opportunity to win the coveted prize, the young designers are also offered a unique presentation platform in an exclusive environment.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Hochbeet by Thinking Hands, Saskia Drebes, Cosima Geyer, Sandra Spoo, Simon Frambach and Tim Mackerodt

Those, who were not able to convince the international expert jury in the end, still have the chance to claim the prize awarded by the public. The 15 finalists will be presented on the competition’s homepage www.gardenunique.de/youngstars from May 24th to August 31st, 2013, since the prize awarded by the public will be determined by online voting.

Voting is open for the Unique Youngstar competition
Black Dogs by Yves Verhaegen

The results of the three prizes awarded by the jury and of the prize selected by the public will be announced at 5 pm on September 8th, in Hall 10.2 during the “unique hour”. The winners can look forward to prize-money to the value of 3,000 Euros (1st prize), 2,000 Euros (2nd prize), 1,000 Euros (3rd prize) and 1,000 Euros (Audience Award) respectively.

Plicate by Benjamin Hubert
Plicate by Benjamin Hubert

www.spogagafa.com

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RealFlex U-FORM+ shoes by Reebok

RealFlex U-FORM shrink to fit running shoes by Reebok

Sportswear brand Reebok has launched a range of running shoes that shrink to fit the wearer’s foot when heated with a hairdryer.

RealFlex U-FORM shrink to fit running shoes by Reebok

Reebok‘s RealFlex U-FORM+ shoe is heated with a hairdryer for two minutes until the logo on the back turns from black to red. The hot shoe is then laced tightly around the foot and left to cool for two minutes while the wearer sits still.

RealFlex U-FORM shrink to fit running shoes by Reebok

A synthetic mesh layer inside the upper shrinks as it cools to mould exactly to the contours of the skin, starting in the middle of the foot and wrapping around the heel.

RealFlex U-FORM shrink to fit running shoes by Reebok

The material replaces normal lining in the shoe so it doesn’t add any extra weight and perforations in the mesh mean it’s breathable. Reebok says the shoes can be reheated and reformed many times over without losing effectiveness.

RealFlex U-FORM shrink to fit running shoes by Reebok

“For top athletes we make custom-formed shoes,” says Bill McInnis, head of Reebok Advanced Concepts. “With U-FORM+ we’re going to do that for everyone.”

RealFlex U-FORM shrink to fit running shoes by Reebok

Other innovative sports shoes on Dezeen include trainers with criss-crossing bands inspired by Chinese finger traps, football boots with 3D-printed studs and shoes with cables round them that tighten on impact.

RealFlex U-FORM shrink to fit running shoes by Reebok

See all our stories about shoes »
See all our stories about sportswear »

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Anger over cancelled orders as design retailer Dwell reopens

Furniture retailer Dwell to reopen

News: collapsed UK furniture retailer Dwell is to reopen five of its 23 stores following a deal with the company’s original founder – but furious customers of the old company are claiming their orders will not be honoured.

Dwell, which ceased trading on 20 June 2013 with the loss of 300 jobs, held an estimated £1 million of customer deposits when it went into administration.

The company’s Facebook page has been flooded with comments by customers saying they have lost money. “I phoned up this AM only to be told that the order I placed on 25th May is null and void,” wrote Mags Mckie. “£500 worth of orders deleted from my account,” commented Susan Lowe Barrie.

“I was waiting for 4 chairs to be delivered,” said Margaret Jones in another Facebook comment. “Phoned customer services today and was told would def not get the order now and should contact bank to claim back payment. Was told I could reorder from new company as chairs were in stock.”

Dwell announced on Wednesday that Aamir Ahmad, who founded the brand in 2003 but left in November 2012, had agreed a deal to rescue the company and save 150 jobs.

He said in a statement: “Our priority lies with the customers and suppliers who have been let down by the former management. We are working hard to try and resolve the issues, in particular outstanding customer orders.”

He added: “Although we are not legally obliged to, we are doing everything we can to find a solution for customers who have lost out.  Our primary goal is to help customer and suppliers regain their trust in the dwell brand.”

Ahmad advised customers with outstanding orders to check the company’s social media platforms for advice. However Dwell’s Twitter account said: “Please note we are no longer dwell Retail Ltd. Previous orders will not be fulfilled, as we are now a new company.”

Customers reacted angrily to the tweet. “I’ve just been told by customer services that they’re not honouring deliveries, but I can buy from the new company!” said Andrew Lansdell on Twitter yesterday. “I’m only a customer and am £857 short, what are you going to do about that?” asked another customer.

The operator of Dwell’s Twitter account appeared to feel sympathy for customers’ plight, writing: “F***ing snakes indeed. I didn’t get paid by them either.

Dwell reopened its online store this week and will reopen five high-street stores from Saturday 6 July at Tottenham Court Road, Westfield London, Westfield Stratford City, Lakeside shopping centre in Essex, and Barton Square in Manchester.

Dwell, which specialises in contemporary furniture, lighting and accessories, opened its first store in Balham, south London in 2003.

Here’s the announcement of the rescue from Dwell’s blog:


Dwell, the furniture retailer, has been saved from disappearing off British high streets thanks to its founder Aamir Ahmad returning to lead the company. Ahmad’s plan will save over 150 jobs and keep the business operating from at least five stores and the web.

From Saturday 6th July, dwell will reopen their stores in Tottenham Court Road, Westfield White City, Westfield Stratford, Barton Square in Manchester and Lakeside in Thurrock. Talks with other landlords are underway with a hope that additional stores and jobs can be saved. Dwell’s online store (www.dwell.co.uk) will also reopen on Thursday. Advice to customers who have outstanding orders will be available on the company’s social media platforms.

Ahmad founded dwell with his family and friends in 2003 and successfully grew it over 9 years, but along with his co-founders was replaced in November last year. He will be stepping back in to run the business as CEO. Ahmad comments: “Our priority lies with the customers and suppliers who have been let down by the former management. We are working hard to try and resolve the issues, in particular outstanding customer orders. Although we are not legally obliged to, we are doing everything we can to find a solution for customers who have lost out. Our primary goal is to help customer and suppliers regain their trust in the dwell brand.

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as design retailer Dwell reopens
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