Sofa Collection by Edward Barber & Jay Osgerby for Knoll

Milan 2013: London designers Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby have unveiled a collection of sofas for American furniture brand Knoll at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan.

Knoll Sofa Collection by Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby

Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby, the duo behind the London 2012 Olympic torch, have designed a series of furniture with cast aluminium legs that can be finished in red, white or black paint.

Knoll Sofa Collection by Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby

The range includes two and three seat sofas, an armchair and ottomans, available in a selection of fabrics including leather, as well as side tables and a stool. They are on display at Knoll’s stand C01-D02, Pavilion 20 at the Milan Fairgrounds in Rho, and in the brand’s showroom located at Piazza Bertarelli 2.

Knoll Sofa Collection by Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby

The sofas feature in our round up of the best products at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile.

Knoll Sofa Collection by Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby

Knoll is also presenting a collection of rotating, sliding and motorised furniture by architect Rem Koolhaas at the Prada exhibition space in Milan – see all our coverage of Milan 2013 here and our map of events taking place across the city here.

As BarberOsgerby, the designers have previously designed limited edition stripy tables for Established & Sons and a tilting chair for Vitra.

See all our stories about design by BarberOsgerby »
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Bristol classic by Daniel Wellington now at Dezeen Watch Store

Bristol classic by Daniel Wellington at Dezeen Watch Store

Dezeen Watch Store: new in at Dezeen Watch Store this week is this classic timepiece by Swedish watch brand Daniel Wellington.

Bristol classic by Daniel Wellington at Dezeen Watch Store

Founded by Filip Tysander, the watch brand launched in 2011 following an encounter with a British gentleman named Daniel Wellington, whose timeless style inspired the design and the name of the watch collection.

Bristol classic by Daniel Wellington at Dezeen Watch Store

The watch has a slim 6mm case with short lugs and a 40mm case diameter, making it a suitable size for a male or female wrist. Bristol classic comes with a brown leather strap and is available with a rose gold or silver case. See all of the options at Dezeen Watch Store.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com

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Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

This rusted steel cabin in Wisconsin woodland is a practice studio for a musician designed by Milwaukee office Johnsen Schmaling Architects.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

The client, a country and western composer, asked Johnsen Schmaling Architects for “a space that allows him to think and create,” including a small rehearsal room and an area for storage.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

To create the outer shell of the structure, the architects used pre-weathered steel covered with traces of oil stains, alloy imperfections and roller marks.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

“The carefully detailed steel envelope, its warm colour of ferrous corrosion echoing the hues of the derelict machinery left behind in the area’s abandoned farm fields, turns the building skin into an ever-changing canvas,” they explain.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

The lower half of the two-storey structure is a small concrete podium, partially buried beneath the sloping ground. A line of clerestory windows skirts the upper edge of the concrete, emphasising the separation between the top-floor studio and the storage room below.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

Both ends of the rehearsal room are glazed and can be opened up to allow cross ventilation. One side opens out to a sheltered deck, while the other leads onto the mossy roof of the floor below.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

To soundproof the building the architects added a sandwiched layer of plasterboard and sound-absorbent adhesive within the walls, while a high-density foam insulation fills the cavities.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

Other rural projects we’ve featured on Dezeen include a wooden folly that cantilevers across a lake and a concrete pavilion in a Texan park.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

Photography is by John J. Macaulay.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

Above: exploded 3D diagram

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

An unassuming structure embedded in Wisconsin’s rural landscape, this intimate retreat serves as a studio for a Country Western musician to write and record his music. With its formal discipline, exacting details, and a carefully restrained material palette, the building, while unapologetically contemporary, continues the tradition of Midwestern pastoral architecture and its proud legacy of aesthetic sobriety, functional lucidity and robust craftsmanship.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

Above: floor plan

A concrete podium, carved into a steep hill to provide storage space, supports a simple linear volume for the studio space, its long sides covered by a weathering steel shroud. Oversized glazed openings at each end of the studio provide access into the space and out onto the vegetated roof of the storage plinth, carefully framing views of the picturesque surroundings. The steel shroud cantilevers over the edge of the studio volume to create a covered porch, a sheltered outdoor extension of the interior studio space. Along its edges, the shroud is slightly lifted off the concrete plinth, teasingly exposing a narrow, diaphanous clerestory that allows the studio volume to seemingly float above its base. During the day, the clerestory provides natural light for the storage space below; at night, it emits its soft, ominous glow into the dark landscape.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

Above: long section

The building materials – exposed concrete and steel, glass, and wood – were locally sourced and chosen for their ability to age gracefully over time. The carefully detailed steel envelope, its warm colour of ferrous corrosion echoing the hues of the derelict machinery left behind in the area’s abandoned farm fields, turns the building skin into an ever-changing canvas. Alloy imperfections, surface oils, and roller marks from the steel mill all leave their individual traces as the material weathers, juxtaposing the building’s strict geometry and formal restraint with a stubbornly unpredictable veneer.

Studio for a Composer by Johnsen Schmaling Architects

Above: cross section

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No Bad Colours by Ron Arad

No Bad Colours by Ron Arad

Milan 2013: pulses of electricity change the colour of this workstation unveiled by designer Ron Arad at Salone in Milan this week (+ movie).

No Bad Colours by Ron Arad

No Bad Colours by Ron Arad is presented as part of Jean Nouvel’s Project: Office for Living installation in the SaloneUfficio space, which sets out the architect’s vision for offices of the future.

No Bad Colours by Ron Arad

The workstation is a simple black box with a desk and shelves against a colour-changing wall, which uses a patented technology developed by UK materials firm Versatile Technologies.

No Bad Colours by Ron Arad

The colour of the wall changes instantly or fades slowly as pulses of electricity are applied to a layer of fluid held between transparent sheets.

No Bad Colours by Ron Arad

The user can change or programme the colours with Bluetooth technology using their desktop, laptop, tablet or smartphone application.

No Bad Colours by Ron Arad

The wall doesn’t require artificial lighting and once a colour has been selected it needs no extra power to be maintained.

No Bad Colours by Ron Arad

“We are talking about reflecting rather than transmitting colours, so we don’t require backlit panels and the surfaces enjoy rather than suffer from external light,” said Arad.

Yesterday we reported on Arad’s new range of 3D-printed spectacles and sunglasses for eyewear brand pq and Dezeen editor Rose Etherington posted a round-up of highlights from the Salone, including an aluminium sideboard by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec and monochrome pendant lamps by Zaha Hadid.

See our snaps from each day on Facebook »
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See our map of the best things to see at Milan 2013 »

Here’s some more information from Versatile Technologies:


In a blink, a beautiful block of green-veined marble is transformed into a rich shade of gold. At the touch of a button, a spectacular restaurant transitions from its winter theme to spring. The walls of a corporate office brighten to lift the spirits and productivity of employees near the end of the workday. And as caterers prepare for the arrival of guests, a family kitchen becomes the backdrop for a high-class cocktail party.

Introducing Active True Colour from Versatile Technologies, Ltd. — a dynamic surface material technology that enables infinite and instant changes in colour, design and pattern. Active True Colour is being introduced in Milan at Salone Internazionale del Mobile 2013. The revolutionary, patented Active True Colour technology enriches living spaces, workspaces and public spaces by dramatically expanding and enriching the way people experience colour and design. Using Active True Colour, surfaces are no longer static; they become adaptive and vital expressions of mood, tone, season and environment.

Ron Arad is presenting the first Active True Colour piece, an integrated colour-changing workstation containing a desk, shelves and wall, within his new project, No Bad Colours, as part of a Jean Nouvel-curated exhibition, Office For Living, taking place inside the Salone Ufficio Pavilion during the Salone del Mobile. This is the first outing of Arad’s ongoing development of products and projects incorporating Active True Colour in his role as lead designer and art director of the product.

“I was very excited to join this project as it offered a genuine new possibility to alter colours at will in both architectural spaces and small products,” said Mr. Arad. “The main ‘news’ here is that we are talking about reflecting rather than transmitting colours, so we don’t require backlit panels and the surfaces enjoy rather than suffer from external light. We immediately started work in a variety of scales and contexts. This is just the beginning.”

Active True Colour delivers a nearly endless spectrum of yet-to-be imagined original designs, natural colours, patterns, and architectural finishes that can be applied to virtually any surface (interior and exterior walls, floors, table/counter tops, furniture, etc.). Active True Colour delivers vivid and beautiful colours, reflecting the ambient light, just like natural colour. The technology is nothing like the harsh, intrusive and more energy intensive light-emitting design solutions offered through LED, LCD or Plasma.

“Active True Colour is the foundation of a game-changing surface material and there is no better place to introduce it to the design and architecture community than the Saloni 2013,” said Ran Poliakine, chairman, Versatile, Ltd. “The potential for incorporating Active True Colour into the design of all the places we live is as infinite as the boundaries of your imagination.”

“As Active True Colour becomes a new standard for innovative, adaptive surface materials, we’re no longer going to ask what colour an object is without adding the word ‘now,'” said Eyal Cohen, CEO, Versatile, Ltd. “We’re not going to choose colour when we buy, we’ll choose colour as we go. Active True Colour opens up a colourful new world of design possibilities that can evolve based on life’s ever-changing moments in time.”

Initially, Versatile Technologies, Ltd. will partner with a select group of the world’s top designers, architects and real estate developers. Subsequently, Versatile plans to offer an electronic catalogue of stock and original colourful designs and patterns to all architects and designers seeking to work and design with this new medium. Versatile will deliver an array of architectural finishes: stone (marble, granite, etc.), wood, fabric, metals, glass, leather, sand, stucco; plus original surfaces that spring from the imaginations of designers.

How Active True Colour Works: For the layman, the foundation of the revolutionary, patented Active True Colour technology is organic chemistry. Versatile, Ltd. has pioneered and developed a proprietary, very low power technology that can be used to indefinitely change surface colours. The coloured layer of Active True Colour consists of a fluid held between transparent sheets that can selectively reflect a range of colours. The colours can be easily changed – either instantly or by fading – by applying pulses of electricity to the fluid film, which reorients the molecules of the fluid to create other colours. Active True Colour does not require any artificial, projected backlighting. Once the colour is generated, no further power is required to maintain the natural colour. Dr. David Coates, chief technology officer and the creator of Active True Colour, has
published more than 80 articles and eight scientific textbook chapters, and is named as an inventor on over 200 patents.

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Impulsive Furnishing Unit wins Frame Moooi Award 2013

Impulsive Furnishing Unit

Milan 2013: a compact furniture production line designed by Design Academy Eindhoven alumni Thomas Vailly, Itay Ohaly and Christian Fiebig has won this year’s Frame Moooi Award.

Impulsive Furnishing Unit

The creators of the Impulsive Furnishing Unit were presented with the interior design award this evening in a ceremony at the Salone del Mobile in Milan.

Impulsive Furnishing Unit

Thomas Vailly, Itay Ohaly and Christian Fiebig’s design compresses a whole furniture factory to the size of a standardised plywood pallet so that it can be shipped and used anywhere.

“By adjusting the CNC machine to the thickness of each sheet, it will only cut one sheet at a time,” explain the designers. “As soon as the machine is finished with cutting the top sheet it will cut two holes as handles on one of the length sides of the board.

Impulsive Furnishing Unit

“This side of the machine can then be opened and the cut board can be pulled out. The CNC machine will smoothly drop on the next sheet to cut. If one pallet of wood is almost finished it simply has to be stacked on the next pallet, and the machine continues to cut sheet by sheet.”

Impulsive Furnishing Unit

The machine was used to create furniture for the C-Fabriek exhibition in the Netherlands last year, where visitors were invited to pitch in and make furniture, lighting, clothes, shoes and more on experimental production lines.

Inner Fashion

Above: Inner Fashion

The Frame Moooi Award is presented annually to furniture or lighting custom-designed for a specific public or commercial interior and the winner receives €25,000.

Inner Fashion

Above: Inner Fashion

The finalists were anonymously selected by Jana Scholze, curator of contemporary furniture and product design at the V&A museum in London.

Stool Unit

Above: Stool Unit

Vailly is also showing a compact fashion production line designed with Laura Lynn Jansen, called Inner Fashion, and another one-man furniture factory, Stool Unit, in Milan this week at Cascina Cuccagna, Via Cuccagna 2, on the invitation of Eindhoven-based StudioKlawer.

Stool Unit

Above: Stool Unit

We’ve previously featured a few other designs by Ohaly, including benches that have been torn or smashed into individual chairs and jewellery carved from layers of coloured paint applied to a wooden table – see all design by Itay Ohaly.

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Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Milan 2013: French architect Jean Nouvel has set out his vision for the office environments of the future in a huge installation at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile this week (+ slideshow).

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Commissioned by Cosmit, the parent company of the Salone, Project: Office for Living sees Jean Nouvel explore the changes taking place in the workplace and offers an alternative to today’s “unliveable” offices.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

“In 30 or 40 years’ time we will be stunned to see just how unliveable most of today’s offices really were,” explained Nouvel. “Grotesque clones, standardisation, totalitarianism, never the merest hint of being pleasurable to inhabit.”

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The exhibition in the SaloneUfficio area begins in a darkened space, where four movies show stylist Agnès B, photographer Elliot Erwitt, artist Michelangelo Pistoletto and writer and film director Alain Fleischer each discussing the concept of office space.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The visitor then enters various office scenarios devised by Nouvel, including an apartment imagined as a comfortable workspace and a series of offices divided by sliding walls and portable blinds.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The blank space of a converted warehouse allows a free and flexible arrangement of furniture and lighting, while a scenario in a high-tech skyscraper explores how sliding, collapsible walls and modular furniture can make a city office a more stimulating environment.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

“We can work, and will increasingly work, in apartments, in our own apartments, in converted warehouses,” added Nouvel. “If we were to work in office skyscrapers, we would have to invent spaces impregnated with generosity, receptive to each and everybody’s universes and personalisations.”

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The installation also features new pieces by designers Michele De Lucchi, Marc Newson, Philippe Starck and Ron Arad, who presents a piece of colour-changing furniture.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Another space is dedicated to demonstrating innovative lighting systems for offices, while a final room houses a selection of furniture by some of Nouvel’s favourite architects.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

In an interview with Dezeen earlier this year, Nouvel argued that contemporary offices are functional and rational but not effective. “The office today is a repetition of the same space for everyone,” he said. “General solutions are bad solutions for everyone.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The Project: Office for Living installation is on show in Pavilion 24 of SaloneUfficio at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan until 14 April.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Earlier today we posted a round-up of highlights from the Salone, including a lamp with a glass base by Industrial Facility and chairs with wavy backs by Spanish designer Patricia Urquiola. See all news and products from Milan this year and check out our interactive map of the best parties, exhibitions and talks.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Other recent projects by Nouvel include an office block in Paris that looks like a pile of three separate buildings and a collection of aluminium chairs for Emeco – see all architecture and design by Jean Nouvel.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Here’s some more information from Cosmit, organisers of the Salone:


Jean Nouvel presents “Project: office for living”

The theme for the Saloni 2013 collateral event is the office. A dedicated area inside saloneufficio’s pavilion 24, will be given over to French architect Jean Nouvel’s exploration of enjoyment in office living. From 9th to 14th at the Milan Fairgrounds, Rho.

“‘Project: office for living’ is intended to illustrate ‘the concept of taking pleasure in life’: working is an integral part of living and we often spend more time in our offices than we do at home,” says Nouvel.

Specially commissioned by Cosmit, Pritzker Prize 2008 winner Nouvel’s project explores the tremendous changes that have marked out living and working spaces over the last few years.

“Once we reject cloned and alienating spaces, it becomes clear that there are many possible solutions,” says Jean Nouvel. “We have to change our behaviours, plan and think of work with a different mindset: no matter where an office is situated, it has to have a space it can call its own, identifiable, alterable, on a human scale, with its own history and objects, an enjoyable environment, basically.”

Within a dedicated 1,200 m2 area inside saloneufficio’s pavilion 24, Jean Nouvel will explore contemporary building concepts informed by a rejection of cloned, alienating, standardised and serially repetitive spaces, inspiring exhibitors and visitors with different ways of achieving alternative aggregation formulas.

The “office for living” exhibit takes the form of a small district, a small city – showcasing unique and unusual work scenarios that endeavour to demonstrate that, because of their individuality, workspaces need to be able to make for happy living as well as to provide inspiration. These are not utopias, or showrooms, or collections of a few exceptional pieces: these offices are representative of ordinary situations, often existing ones, and feature office furniture produced in the main by saloneufficio exhibitors.

A monolith rises in the middle of saloneufficio, as intriguing as it is inviting, showing four video-portraits – of the stylist Agnès B, the photographer Elliot Erwitt, the artist Michelangelo Pistoletto and the writer and film director Alain Fleischer – each raising their concerns and expressing their points of view on the office space.

Five groundbreaking work situations are freely grouped around the monolith, serving to accentuate just how outdated today’s attitudes to the workplace really are.

The first of these is a classic city-centre apartment, left intact: the reception rooms, bedroom, kitchen, fireplaces, floors and mouldings have been left untouched. The space, used for both work and entertaining, is furnished to chime with the original architecture and the echoes of the past, with several different activities taking place in a warm, intimate atmosphere. The spaces are comfortable, individual and original. The apartment serves as a pleasing backdrop for living, enabling self-expression through objects and work, conserving the functional ethos of the office yet without prompting the same resonance.

The second is informed by the increasing vogue for working from home. During the day the house serves as an office, reprising its domestic function in the evenings, at weekends and on days off. “Habitation” and “office” become interwoven: the lines between office and home furniture become blurred, in a space in which even the objects have a dual existence.

Then there is an open space, containing pieces of industrial furniture that can be put together, stacked, taken apart and reassembled, breaking with the totalitarian, repetitious character of today’s offices. Furniture from several different eras is combined, incorporating objects from different spheres. The openness of the space enables everyone to express themselves freely, building their own working environments: cut off from their neighbours or in close contact; sitting on their desks or hunkering down on them. Different varieties of wood, cardboard, leather and coloured plastic rub shoulders, crowned with atypical and unexpected objects, marking out an irregular and astonishing cityscape.

The fourth space consists of a warehouse, a basic steel container of the kind found in city suburbs the world over. These often-empty cubes make for free-range furnishing. Their particular spatial quality affords each and every form of appropriation and differentiation. They make for and absorb specific non-systematic, totally flexible furnishing, lighting and decorating solutions. The scope for unfettered conversion is what sets this free space apart.

Rationalism provides the theme for the final space: a high-tech, open-plan office system which, while conforming to normality and to rational standardisation, is geared to transformation. The footprint, which may seem static and repetitive, is in fact free-form: sliding, collapsible walls enable individual offices to be built, either opening out into the adjacent space or the corridor or providing isolation. The doors are sliding or folding, there are blinds for light regulation, with frosted glass for intimacy. Sophisticated wood and chrome finishings and high-tech components impart a luxurious feel. An overall yet generous layout, geared to enjoyment in life.

A light laboratory promoting artistic and pictorial lighting for working environments, breaking with the monotony of traditional, homogeneous office lighting, is another feature. Prototype lamps, providing hitherto undreamt-of lighting solutions enabling each person to create their own lighting system,
Are on exhibit.

Spaces unfettered by traditional rules, therefore, with the concept of enjoyment in work firmly first and foremost, allowing people to put their own spaces together as best suits them, with plays of light and reflections.

Jean Nouvel has also put together a small compendium of furnishings by his great heroes, a homage to extraordinary designs of the past that are still tremendously contemporary. The pieces are displayed in front of the photographs of the places for which they were conceived by their “creators,” the masters who make up the imaginary museum that fires his inspiration.

The VIP lounge, where Ron Arad, Michele De Lucchi, Marc Newson and Philippe Starck have been interviewed in their own workplaces and expounded on their visions, rounds off the project.

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“Anything can happen in Milano this week”

Dezeen and MINI World Tour: we kick off the second leg of our Dezeen and MINI World Tour in Milan, with a tour of the city from architect, designer and proud resident Fabio Novembre.

As we drive around the city in our MINI Paceman during the movie, Novembre explains that despite being relatively small, with just 1.3 million inhabitants, Milan has a global profile. “It belongs to the network of important international cities, but it’s probably the smallest one.”

"Anything can happen in Milano this week"

Fabio Novembre is from the south of Italy but moved north to study architecture at the Politecnico di Milano – a design school which was, and still is, regarded as the best in Italy. “I moved to Milano when I was 17,” Novembre says. “I’ve been living here more or less for the last 29 years.”

The designer points out that three of Italy’s biggest industries – finance, fashion and design – are all based in Milan. Unlike many other Italian cities, Milan is a place where things tend to work, he says: “I can tell you as an Italian this is really an exception. It’s not as beautiful a city as Rome but the only things that work in Italy are based here.”

"Anything can happen in Milano this week"

Our tour of the city takes in the famous Duomo cathedral, the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II shopping arcade (above) and the Torre Velasca (below), a pioneering skyscraper built in the 1950s by architects BBPR.

This interview was filmed as the city geared up for the Salone Internazionale del Mobile, the world’s biggest design fair, which, together with hundreds of events that take place across the city, transforms Milan for a week each April.

"Anything can happen in Milano this week"

“500,000 people are involved in the Salone del Mobile,” says Novembre. “It’s a very democratic event. All areas of Milan are colonised by people who want to show their projects.”

The sheer number of people, shows and parties mean that the week is unparalleled in the design world. “Anything can happen in Milano during this week,” Novembre concludes.

Over the coming days we’ll be posting more movies from Milan, including visits with Novembre to some of the places he feels best reflect the changing city, plus interviews with many of the leading figures taking part in the design festivities.

"Anything can happen in Milano this week"

See all our coverage of Milan’s design week or check out more stories about Fabio Novembre.

This movie features a MINI Cooper S Paceman.

"Anything can happen in Milano this week"

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Twin’Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

Milan 2013: following a teaser movie, British designer Ross Lovegrove unveils his concept car for French car brand Renault at the Triennale Design Museum in Milan (+ slideshow).

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

Lovegrove added colourful LED patterns over the glass roof and down the windshield edges of the carbon fibre Twin’Z electric city car, after Renault invited the British designer to provide finishing details to the bodywork.

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

“Passengers are hooded in a technological envelope that bathes them in a light which responds to the energy and pulse of Twin’Z,” says Ross Lovegrove. “This roofscape heightens the sensation of space and blends seamlessly into the rear window.”

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

The smaller two of four headlights glow through radial fibrous spokes, a motif also used for the bright green wheel alloys. Swirling lines adorn the tyres, which were developed by manufacturer Michelin.

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

Lovegrove also designed the interior of the four-seat vehicle and added fluorescent yellow bands to emphasise the contours of the design. “The interior is not broken up into separate elements and all passengers feel very much part of the travelling experience,” he says. “The rear seat backs have been integrated into the floorpan to create space and a new, informal aesthetic.”

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

Instead of a dashboard, statistics such as speed and range are displayed on a smartphone that sits where a gearstick would usually be. Four electric doors open without handles like pairs of shutters on each side, alleviating the central pillars found on most cars.

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

The car’s colour was inspired by French painter Yves Klein, whose signature blue hue was also the muse for a collection of pleated garments we featured last week. “It echoes France’s cultural heritage while also mirroring the virtues of our planet. After all, isn’t the Earth blue when seen from space?” says Lovegrove.

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

Other recently designed concept cars include Audi’s vehicles that drive and park themselves and Pininfarina’s car that has no windshield.

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

The car is on show at the Triennale Design Museum in Milan, Viale Alemagna 6. Elsewhere in the city, Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec have designed an installation of spinning cork platforms for BMW i.  Check out our map of events taking place in Milan this week.

See all our stories about designs by Ross Lovegrove »
See all our stories about car design »
See all our coverage of Milan 2013 »

Here’s some additional information from Renault:


Twin’z Concept-Car – a refreshing view of the city-car, blending technology and refinement

Renault and British designer Ross Lovegrove today took the wraps off Twin’Z. This concept car is the fruit of their close collaboration and brings together two worlds where Design plays an important role : the world of furniture and that of the automobile.

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

As the ‘Play’ petal of Renault Design’s life-cycle ‘flower’, Twin’Z is the latest concept car in the programme which sets out to illustrate Renault’s new design strategy through parallels with threshold phases of human existence. Twin’Z is a fun, modern, artistic take on the city- car which plays on emotions and excites the senses. It draws its inspiration from the heritage of some of the brand’s most emblematic models, such as the Renault 5 and Renault Twingo. The Twin’Z is an all-electric car with rear-wheel drive and a rear-mounted motor.

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

Renault invited British designer Ross Lovegrove to add some design flourishes and the result is an arresting blend of technology and refinement. Ross Lovegrove was given a free hand to imagine a cabin that is truly occupant-friendly. This project eloquently illustrates the many possible sources of inspiration that can drive Design and represents an original approach to the city-car.

Twin'Z concept car by Ross Lovegrove for Renault

Ross Lovegrove’s personal vision of the automobile takes its inspiration from the world of nature, and the result combines an unprecedented play on light and organic forms to make Z28RL an endearing, almost living object.

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Paolo Soleri 1919-2013

Paolo Soleri, photo from Cosanti Foundation

News: Italian architect Paolo Soleri, whose vision of an environmentally conscious form of architecture led to the founding of an experimental eco-town in Arizona, has died at the age of 93.

Born in Turin, Soleri studied architecture at the Politecnico di Torino in 1946 before moving to Arizona, USA, where he was mentored by the hugely influential architect Frank Lloyd Wright.

In Arizona, Soleri developed his concept of “arcology” – architecture that embraces ecology in order to reduce energy use and waste, save water and promote interaction with the natural environment. Putting his ideas into practice, in 1970 he founded the counter-culture community of Arcosanti in the desert 70 miles north of Phoenix.

Intended as an alternative to suburban American life, the town was built by hundreds of student volunteers and future settlers with the aim of housing 5000 people in its densely packed buildings.

Paolo Soleri's Arcosanti, photo from Cosanti Foundation

Above: the ceramics apse in Arcosanti

As the hippy ideals of the 1960s faded, Arcosanti struggled to attract residents, reaching a peak population of about 200 in the mid-1970s. Today there are fewer than 60 permanent residents of the town, but thousands of students and tourists still arrive at Soleri’s “urban laboratory” each year to learn more about the architect’s ideas and methods.

Soleri was made an honorary fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1996 and awarded the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2000.

We’ve featured a huge variety of eco-towns and green architecture on Dezeen, including a project in South Africa to build houses from sand bags, a conceptual building that would grow algae for biofuel and a masterplan for a zero-carbon city in the Middle East by Foster + Partners – see more environmentally friendly design.

Images are from the Cosanti Foundation.

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1919-2013
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Dezeen’s pick of Milan 2013: Salone

Milan 2013: we’ll be rounding up our highlights from each major design district in Milan as the week unfolds, starting with Dezeen editor Rose Etherington’s choice of new furniture and lighting at the Salone.

Scroll on for the hottest launches from international furniture brands at Salone Internazionale del Mobile, lighting firms at Euroluce and young designers at SaloneSatellite, plus an installation on office design by Jean Nouvel at Salone Ufficio.

Check out Dezeen’s map of Milan 2013 to find all the best parties, exhibitions and talks around town or see all our stories about design at Milan 2013.

Salone Internazionale del Mobile

Sofa by BarberOsgerby for Knoll

Rem Koolhaas’ firm OMA created the scenography for American brand Knoll, with sheer white curtains encircling the new range of sofas by Londoners BarberOsgerby (above).

Mathilda by Patricia Urquiola for Moroso

Moroso’s colourful stand based on a tangram puzzle was devised by Patricia Urquiola and features three new products by the Spanish designer, including the felt Mafalda chair and the Mathilda chair with a backrest wrapped in natural rushes (above).

Dumbo by Tomek Rygalik for Moroso

Other highlights in the extensive new collection include a modular furniture system called Bikini Island by Werner Aisslinger (pictured top) and a rounded chair called Dumbo by Polish designer Tomek Rygalik (above).

Folly by Ron Arad for Magis

The Magis stand packs in prototypes of a large looping rotational-moulded bench named Folly by Ron Arad (above), an extending table that rolls out on big wheels at one end by Philippe Starck, the Theca sideboard by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec and a tangled wire-frame chair by Konstantin Grcic called Traffic (below).

Traffic by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

Grcic seems to be everywhere: with US brand Emeco he presents his Parrish chair (below), first created for Herzog & de Meuron’s Parrish Art Museum and now in production, for BD Barcelona Design he presents his B Bench based on the famous Barcelona Chair – alongside outdoor furniture by Jaime Hayon – and for Mattiazzi he’s showing a stool to match the Medici chair he launched with the Italian brand this time last year.

Parish by Konstantin Grcic for Emeco

Mattiazzi also presents wooden chairs based on camping furniture by Jasper Morrison and a three-legged high stool by Industrial Facility.

Folding Park Life by Jasper Morrison for Kettal

Additionally, Morrison has a stacking aluminium chair called Village and a new folding version of his Park Life chair (above) on show with Spanish brand Kettal.

tandard Chair by Jean Prouve in new colours by hella Jongerius for Vitra at Salone

Hella Jongerius brings her expertise with colour to the Vitra stand, where she’s applied a new palette to Jean Prouve’s Standard chair (above) and the Eames’ Hang it All coat hooks. She also shows a ring of swatches called the Daylight Wheel, demonstrating how our perception of colour changes throughout the day.

Sparkle Stool and Table by Tokujin Yoshioka for Kartell at Salone

Kartell’s presentation mimics a galleria and features plastic stools based on cut-crystal glasses (above) by Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka plus a sofa by Philippe Starck that the brand claims is the largest injection-moulded piece in the world.

Euroluce

Shade by Paul Cocksedge for Flos

Above image is by Mark Cocksedge

The Euroluce lighting show takes place alongside the Salone del Mobile and it’s the Italian brands that stand out. Key product launches this year include Shade by Paul Cocksedge for Flos (above), which uses an LED light source on the floor to illuminate the shade hanging from almost invisible wires above.

Lightwing by Jean-Marie Massaud for Foscarini

On the Foscarini stand, new pieces include Lightwing by Jean-Marie Massaud (above), which uses a wing or sail-shaped reflector to soften or direct the LED light source, and the bubble-like Yoko by Anderssen & Voll (below). Slamp has new lamps by designers including Nigel Coates and Zaha Hadid.

Yoko by Anderssen & Voll for Foscarini

Oluce, one of the oldest Italian lighting companies, shows the Semplice lamp by Industrial Facility with a glass base wrapped round the beam of light, while Luceplan presents Ascent lamp by Daniel Rybakken, dimmed by pushing the shade down the stem.

Salone Ufficio

The centrepiece of the Salone Ufficio office furniture exhibition is Jean Nouvel’s Office for Living installation (below), where visitors have the sensation of being transported from a dark cylindrical hall into workspaces in a skyscraper, period house or converted industrial warehouse, depending on which door they choose to enter.

Jean Nouvel Office for Living at Salone

The installation also features a glimpse into the workspaces of designers including Philippe Starck and Marc Newson, and a new range of colour-changing furniture by Ron Arad (below).

Active True Colour by Ron Arad

SaloneSatellite

Studio Vit at SaloneSatellite

SaloneSatellite is the area at Salone where the young designers and brands present their work to the industry. Our favourites this year were mostly lighting and included Studio Vit’s ceramic lights with big bowls as reflectors (above), Samuel Treindl’s cabinets from Ikea cut up to create lamps as extensions and Thomas Schnur’s Rubber Lamps (below).

Rubber Lamp by Thomas Schnur at SaloneSatellite

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Salone
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