“We need to steel ourselves for more rapid architectural obsolescence”

American Folk Art Museum opinion Mimi Zeiger

Opinion: Mimi Zeiger argues that dismay over the New York Museum of Modern Art’s plan to demolish the next-door American Folk Art Museum represents “a lingering sentimental belief that architecture is an exception to the rules of obsolescence.”


The recent flurry of critical missives and tweets over MoMA’s decision to demolish the next-door American Folk Art Museum (AFAM), designed by Tod Williams and Billie Tsien, has got me thinking about Harley Earl. The square-shouldered vice president and head of design at General Motors introduced stylised curves, chrome, and sex appeal into an industry driven by function. His most significant contribution to American culture, however, may be not the tail fin but planned obsolescence.

The idea that a manufacturer builds the death (by uselessness or tastelessness) into the birth of an object was once radical. It transferred the decision about when a product reaches the end of its life from the producer to the consumer. Could your sense of self-worth – your Cadillac, your iPhone – weather one more season before becoming démodé? Today, upgrading is a function of Moore’s law, the observation that technology gets exponentially smaller and more powerful every two years. It’s like breathing: one inhale, one exhale.

Architecture — or really I should say buildings, excusing for the moment the theoretical or speculative options — has largely been spared the frequency of model changes. This slower epochal cycle owes less to a belief in Vitruvius’ firmitas, utilitas, venustas than to the economic fact that buildings cost more than a Chevy. Then there’s the social contract that buildings, even not exactly great buildings, should stick around awhile.

Yet MoMA‘s decision to follow Diller Scofidio + Renfro‘s recommendation to start fresh on 53rd Street, just thirteen years after the AFAM‘s celebrated opening, leads us to reconsider architecture’s obsolescence. Perhaps we need to steel ourselves for more rapid architectural cycle. Harvey Earl introduced new auto body models every three to five years. Too slow. Our era trades on the pop-up, the art-fair tent and the pavilion. The breathless pace of the internet only underscores design as a temporary, consumable product to be traded over mobile devices. To know the American Folk Art Museum is to Instagram the American Folk Art Museum.

Yet in all this churning through history, we have to remind ourselves that Williams and Tsien’s museum is considered the first new significant piece of architecture built after 9/11. You could even say that its facade of alloyed bronze panels, pockmarked from pouring hot metal onto bare concrete in the casting process, represented New York City’s toughness, resiliency, and belief in art, folk art, and art of the people in the face of adversity.

In his 14 December 2001 review, New York Times architecture critic Herbert Muschamp lauded the building, writing:

“We can stop waiting for state officials to produce plans for redeveloping the city’s financial district. The rebuilding of New York has already begun. The new American Folk Art Museum in Midtown, designed by Tod Williams and Billie Tsien, is a bighearted building. And its heart is in the right time as well as the right place. The design delves deeply into the meaning of continuity: the regeneration of streets and cities; the persistence and mingling of multiple memories in the changing polyglot metropolis; and the capacity of art to transcend cultural categories even as it helps define them.”

In retrospect, Muschamp’s effusive wordsmithing borders on hyperbole. Yet in focussing on the cultural context in which the building was born, it captures much of what is missing from current discussion (which tends to be markedly concentrated on functionality and new square footage). If we practice the rules of obsolescence, the death of this signature piece of architecture was designed in at the beginning.

As much as I would want to praise the American Folk Art Museum for pointing a way forward out of that dark time, the structure is no phoenix. From the beginning it was anachronistic. This is its downfall.

Although completed in the new millennium, it is an artefact from the 1990s, or to crib from Portlandia, an artefact from the 1890s. Muschamp’s title suggests as much: Fireside Intimacy for Folk Art Museum. “Our builders have largely dedicated themselves to turning back the clock,” he writes of Williams and Tsien’s obsessive attention to materiality.

The museum is a little too West Coast for midtown – too much like somethign from the Southern California Institute of Architecture, before computation took command. Its design values everything the current art and real estate markets reject: hominess, idiosyncrasy, craft. By contrast, Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s scheme emphasises visibility and publicness. The same could be said for an Apple store.

A message from MoMA director Glenn D. Lowry posted on the museum’s website touts that the new design will “transform the current lobby and ground-floor areas into an expansive public gathering space.” Indeed, the much talked-about Art Bay, the 15,500-square-foot, double-height hall in the scheme, walks a fine line between public space and gallery. Fronted with a retractable glass wall and designed for flexibility, the Art Bay is so perfectly attuned to the performance zeitgeist, that it makes Marina Abramović want to twerk.

When the plans to demolish AFAM first surfaced in the spring of 2013 and the efficacy of its galleries to support MoMA collections came into question, I rebutted the suggestion that the cramped layout was flawed, suggesting instead that we see it within the legacy of the house museum, akin to Sir John Soane’s Museum in London, where the architect spent his later years arranging and rearranging his antiquities. Or even a sibling of 101 Spring Street, Donald Judd’s SoHo studio and residence now preserved as an artefact of contemporary art history and an exemplary piece of cast iron architecture. Fiscally rescued from obsolescence, these are zombie edifices: institutions frozen in time and largely immune from market ebbs and flows.

The sad fate of the American Folk Art Museum comes on the heels of a rough year. Cries of #saveprentice, although loud in the Twittersphere, ultimately fell on deaf ears so Bertrand Goldberg’s Prentice Women’s Hospital (1970) in Chicago fell to the wreaking crews this past autumn. Richard Neutra’s Cyclorama Building (1962) in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, was also deemed defunct and unfashionable. Michael Graves’ Portland Building (1982) might be next, given reports of the cost to maintain the postmodern icon.

Past preservation movements grew out of grassroots efforts such as the Miami Design Preservation League, which formed in 1976 to save what would become the city’s Art Deco district, or the Los Angeles Conservancy, galvanising two years later to save the Los Angeles Central Library. Is the future of preservation advocacy or apathy?

The Tumblr #FolkMoMA, initiated and curated by Ana María León and Quilian Riano, dragged the fate of AFAM – a pre-internet building – into the age of social media. The hashtag set the stage for a robust dialogue on the subject and a much-needed commons for debate, but failed to save architecture from capital forces.

In weighing in to protest or eulogise the passing of the American Folk Art Museum, perhaps what we mourn is not the building per se, but a lingering sentimental belief that architecture is an exception to the rules of obsolescence. This building strived to represent so many intimacies, but ultimately its finely crafted meaning was deemed disposable.

Fingers may point at the ethics of Diller Scofidio + Renfo’s decision to take on the project or wag fingers at MoMA’s expansionist vision, but the lesson here cuts deeper into our psyche. Architecture, as written in long form, exceeds our own life spans and operates in a time frame of historical continuity. Architecture writ short reminds us of our own mortality, coloured by mercurial taste.

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Wowhaus converts a Moscow road into a riverside park

Russian studio Wowhaus has transformed a four-lane highway beside Moscow’s Moskva River into the city’s first year-round park, featuring rows of trees, fountains, cafes and artists’ studios (+ slideshow).

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

Extending from the northern perimeter of Gorky Park, the Krymskaya Embankment project creates pedestrian pathways and cycle routes alongside the southern bank of the river, connecting with the Central House of Artists gallery building and Muzeon Fallen Monument Park.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

Starting at the Krymskaya Bridge, Wowhaus divided the stretch into four zones that each accommodate different activities, then used a wave motif to unite various design elements that include cobbled paving, wooden benches, buildings and pathways.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

“The central design element of the embankment is the wave,” said the architects. “Wave-shaped benches, and pedestrian and cycling waves create an artificial landscape.”

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus

“In summer the wave-shaped multi-level layout can be used for walking, cycling or roller skating, while in winter it is a perfect setup for sledging, skating or skiing,” they added.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus

The first zone encompasses the area in front of and underneath the bridge. It includes a wooden stage for outdoor performances, as well as a series of sheltered benches made from reconstituted stone and wood.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

The next section accommodates the artists’ studio and exhibition spaces, which are contained within a 210-metre-long structure featuring wavy roof profiles.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

A riverside pathway runs along beside the structure, leading on to a fountain area behind. Here, jets of water are laid out on a 60-metre-long grid to create an interactive water feature, flanked by rows of linden trees designed to reference classic French streetscapes.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

The final zone, entitled Green Hills, includes landscaped areas interspersed with winding pathways and various pavilions. Wooden benches slice into the hillsides and are surrounded by rowan trees, apple trees and hawthorns.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

Here’s a project description from Wowhaus:


Krymskaya Embankment

A once unappealing Krymskaya embankment, only recently separated from the Muzeon park and the Central House of Artists, has been transformed beyond recognition: what once was a road has turned into a lane for pedestrians and bicycles. Fountains have been set up, wave-shaped artist pavilions have replaced a chaotic exhibition area and small hills with benches scattered about have become part of the landscape park thus extending a green strip from Gorky park on the other side of the Krymsky bridge.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus

Objective

To turn a quiet four-lane road into a new city landmark, thereby bringing life to the deserted area of Muzeon park between the Central House of Artists and the Moskva river.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

Solution

To link the Krymskaya embankment to a 10 km pedestrian and cycling route that starts at Vorobievy Gori and to replace the road with a landscape park with distinct transit and sport features while preserving the artists’ exhibition zone.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

The transformed Krymskaya embankment is the first year-round landscape park in the centre of Moscow. In summer the wave-shaped multilevel layout can be used for walking, cycling or roller-skating while in winter it is a perfect setup for sledging, skating or skiing. The central design element of the embankment is the wave: wave-shaped benches, pedestrian and cycling waves create an artificial landscape.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus

The park zone was divided into four parts: an area in front of the bridge, an artists’ zone around a “Vernisage” pavilion, the Fountain Square and “Green Hills”. When planning each zone, the view from the other bank was also considered.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

Under the Krymsky Bridge

A transit zone connecting Gorky Park with the Krymsky embankment has become a popular spot and also provides shelter from the rain now that a stage, and two wooden amphitheatres have been built. 28 artificial rock and metal benches illuminated from the inside are scattered along the way as an amenity for pedestrians and cyclists from Muzeon to Gorky park.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

Vernissage zone

The entrance of Muzeon is a 210 metre wooden vernissage with a wave-shaped roof (the pavilion was designed by Asse Architects).

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

Fountain zone

The fountain zone which is the central element of the new park, faces the Central House of Artists and is separated from the river by a linden alley. A fountain jet, 60 metres long and 14 metres wide, is one of the options of the so called “dry” fountains when the edge of the water is level with the paving. The fountain has an internal system of dynamic lighting that allows various lighting patterns.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus

49 lindens were planted in a classic French park order to the north-east of the fountain on the embankment. A special planting technology, used in Russia for the first time, allows walking and cycling on these lanes without causing damage to the trees.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

“Green Hills”

When planning this part of the pedestrian route special attention was paid to the artificial landscape and plantation. Hills designed for walking and resting were furnished mainly with steppe plants. Trees and bushes with decorative crowns like lindens, hawthorns, rowan trees and ornamental apple trees were planted on hills from where one can contemplate and admire the scenery.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

The artificial relief is accentuated by wave-shaped wooden benches and beach beds that are “cut” into hills between walking lanes. There is also an artificial pond in this part of the park.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Alexander Minchenko

Pavilions

In accordance with the bureau’s project there are three pavilions on the Krymskaya embankment, the fourth one will be completed by the end of 2013 and will replace a gas station. Pavilions will be used as cafes, stores and bike rentals.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus

Pavilion near the fountain square is designed by Darya Melnik and the cafe-pavilion in the “Green Hills” zone is designed by Anna Proshkuratova. The bike rental pavilion closest to the 3rd Folutvinsky Lane is equipped with a concrete roof ramp for bikes or skateboards, designed by Roman Kuchukov.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

All pavilions feature an extensive use of glass, some of them even use structural glass shapes – U-shaped toughened glass with high-bearing capacity.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

Lighting solutions

To make the park accessible and attractive for guests 24 hours a day, planning takes into account night time illumination, especially the point lighting of certain landscape elements. Ornamental lamps that are installed in groups among plants on the hills illuminate the area and create a striking visual. All the lanes are illuminated as well so that pedestrians and cyclists do not get lost.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus
Photograph by Olga Ascension

On the Fountain Square the “dry” fountain together with the linden alley make up a lighting composition that combines the dynamic colour lighting of the fountain jets with the softer warm-white illumination of the regular rows of the linden alley.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus

Area of the Krymskaya embankment:45 000 m2
Length of the embankment: 1 km
Area of planting: 10 700 m2
Planting: 44 726 perennial and ornamental plants, 96475 bulbous plants, 485 trees and bushes.
Number of flowerbeds and hills: 34, 3 of which are breast walls
Area of paving: 24 318 m2
Length of bicycle lanes: 4684 m2
Light: 1419 light fixtures
Fountain info: fountain dimensions – 12m х 60 m, 203 sprayers
Area of pavilions: pavilion on the Fountain Square – total area 275 m2, pavilion on “Green Hills” – total area 35 m2, bike rental pavilion: total area 200 m2.

Krymskaya Embankment Moscow park by Wowhaus

Bureau partners: Dmitry Likin, Oleg Shapiro
Leading project architect: Mikhail Kozlov
Architects: Maria Gulida, Alena Zaytseva, Roman Kuchukov, Darya Melnik, Tatyana Polyakova, Anna Proshkuratova, Anastasia Rychkova, Tatiana Skibo, Yarmarkina; with the participation of Yuriy Belov, Anna Karneeva, Olga Lebedeva, Anastasia Maslova
Senior project engineers: Dmitry Belostotsky, Ivan Mikhalchuk
Planting: Anna Andreeva
Lighting: Anna Harchenkova
Constructors of pavilions: Nussli (consulting), Werner Sobek
Artificial landscape consulting: LDA Design
Fountain and electricity engineering: Adline
Chief design contractor: MAHPI

Photos: Olga Alekseenko, Yuriy Brazhnikov/Village, Nikolay Vasiliev, Olga Voznesenskaya, Elizaveta Gracheva, Darya Osmanova

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Hollowed-out house in Sydney by Tribe Studio

Australian office Tribe Studio has hollowed out the centre of a 1920s house in Sydney to create angular ceilings and a wide entrance to the garden (+ slideshow).

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

Tribe Studio created House Chapple by retaining the original 1920s frontage of the old bungalow, renovating the interior and replacing a later extension at the rear.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

“The challenge of this house was to achieve sun and privacy while appreciating both aspects,” said the architects. “Our client wanted to retain the romantic elements of the house and its sense of humility in a suburb of flashy new builds.”

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

The architects removed a suspended ceiling in the centre of the house, creating a double-height living space with pyramid-shaped ceiling profiles. They also added skylights at the top and installed pendant lights with long cables.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

“We allowed light into the centre of the plan, promoting stack-effect ventilation and reinforcing the unusual order of operation of the house,” they added.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

A street-facing sunroom is positioned above the garage, with views out across Sydney Harbour. The room opens out into the main living space that includes a lounge, kitchen and dining area.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

Three bedrooms, a TV room and a study are positioned along the sides of the main space.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

At the rear, the wide entrance opens onto a wooden deck flanking a garden with a long rectangular swimming pool.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

Polished wooden floorboards and white walls feature throughout, while the brick exterior walls have been painted white.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

Photography is by Katherine Lu.

Here’s a project description from Tribe Studio:


House Chapple

With fantastic harbour views and a northerly orientation to the street-front and a wonderful garden and existing pool to the rear, the challenge of this house was to achieve sun and privacy while appreciating both aspects.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

The house has been in our clients family since the 1960s. An important part of our brief was finding a balance between new and old architecturally and sentimentally.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

Our client wanted to retain the romantic elements of the house, and its sense of humility in a suburb of flashy new builds. She was simultaneously keen to have a new start in this house and have it feel her own.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

The strategy is a modest one: retain the original 1920s bungalow frontage and replace a poor 1960s addition at the rear.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

The primary move is to cave out central part of the plan as living spaces with clear views to the front (harbour) and back (garden). The central band of living space is contained on either side by cellular ribbons of bedrooms and utility.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

The living space occupies the area underneath the peak of the original roof. The ceiling is removed and a series of distorted pyramid ceiling voids are created within the original geometry, allowing light into the centre of the plan, promoting stack effect ventilation and reinforcing the unusual order of operation of the house.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

On the high side of the site, the master bedroom is nestled against an existing cliff-face, juxtaposing its harbour view and a close encounter with mossy sandstone and a cheeky orchid garden.

Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio

The intention is modest: a replacement addition that is fully concealed from the street and minimal facelift to the front.

Floor plan of Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio
Floor plan – click for larger image

Project Title: House Chapple
Project Design Practice: Tribe Studio
Design Team: Hannah Tribe, Miriam Green, Ricci Bloch
Project Location: Mosman, Sydney NSW
Completion Date: March 2013

Section of Renovated single-storey house with distorted ceiling voids by Tribe Studio
Section – click for larger image

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“First 3D-printed book cover” created with a MakerBot

3D-printed book cover of On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee created with a MakerBot

News: US publisher Riverhead has collaborated with 3D-printing firm MakerBot to create the first printed book sleeve.

A desktop MakerBot Replicator 2 was used to print the slipcase for Korean-American writer Chang-rae Lee’s futuristic novel On Such a Full Sea, released on 7 January.

“We think the 3D-printed slipcase for On Such a Full Sea is a work of art, and one we are very proud to have helped create,” said MakerBot CEO Bre Pettis.

3D-printed book cover of On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee created with a MakerBot

The case was designed by Riverhead art director Helen Yentus and members of MakerBot’s in-house design team.

The title lettering is extruded and stretched across the white printed sleeve, as a continuation of the flat writing on the yellow hardback tucked underneath.

“What I like about this project is that it re-introduces the idea of the book as an art object,” said Lee. “Content is what’s most important, but this [3D edition] is a book with a physical presence too.”

3D-printed book cover of On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee created with a MakerBot

The technology was used as an experimental proposal for the future of books covers, which the designer says are becoming less significant as digital books are more widely read.

“We’ve talked a lot about what’s going to happen to books and cover designers if covers aren’t necessarily going to be the focus anymore,” said Yentis in a film about the book. “We’re looking for new ways to present our books.”

Only 200 copies have been produced with the printed covers, each signed by the author. These limited editions are on sale for $150 (£91) and the book is also available with an alternative hardback cover, as well as an electronic version.

When Dezeen spoke to Pettis in 2012, he told us that cheap 3D printers mean manufacturing can again take place at home – read the full interview here.

More information from the publishers follows:


3D-printed slipcase for hardcover of Lee’s latest novel On Such a Full Sea

In an unprecedented and innovative format, award-winning and Pulitzer Prize–nominated author Chang-rae Lee debuts his new novel, On Such a Full Sea, with a first-of-its-kind 3D printed slipcase, printed on a MakerBot Replicator 2 Desktop 3D Printer.

This highly anticipated new novel, set in a dystopian future America, comes as a signed limited edition hardcover with a custom 3D printed slipcase, designed by Helen Yentus and MakerBot. Only 200 of the 3D printed slipcases will be sold.

“What I like about this project is that it re-introduces the idea of the book as an art object,” said Lee. “Content is what’s most important, but this [3D edition] is a book with a physical presence, too. Of course I hope what’s inside is kinetic, but the physical thing isn’t normally meant to be. This edition feels as if it’s kinetic, that it has some real movement to it. It’s quite elegant as well.”

In talking about the 3D printed slipcase that was made on a MakerBot, Lee noted, “It’s all about changing the familiar. That’s ultimately what all art is about. That’s what we all do as writers.”

Though it won’t be released until January, On Such a Full Sea has been lauded and highlighted in all of its early reviews: “An astonishing feat of encapsulated genius from the inimitable Lee… Brilliant… A heart-thumping adventure,” said Library Journal. Booklist said On Such a Full Sea is “Always entrancing and delving…. Takes a truly radical leap in this wrenching yet poetic, philosophical, even mystical speculative odyssey…. Electrifying.” And Kirkus described the novel as “a harrowing and fully imagined version of dystopian America… Welcome and surprising proof that there’s plenty of life in end-of-the-world storytelling.”

Chang-rae Lee using a MakerBot Replicator 2 to create his 3D-printed book cover
Chang-rae Lee using a MakerBot Replicator 2

Chang-rae Lee is a deeply influential writer who tells stories about race, class and immigrant life in America. He has built a dazzling reputation as “a spellbinder” (Hartford Courant), “a master craftsman” (Washington Post), and “an original: (Los Angeles Times), and has been honoured with top prizes, including a PEN/Hemingway Award, Dayton Literary Peace Prize, and Asian American Literary Award; been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize; nominated for the Neustadt International Prize for Literature; and selected for the New Yorker’s “20 Writers for the 21st Century” list.

“We are honoured to work with Chang-rae Lee and Riverhead Books,” noted Bre Pettis, CEO of MakerBot. “We think the 3D printed slipcase for On Such a Full Sea is a work of art, and one we are very proud to have helped create.”

On Such a Full Sea is a bold and thrilling departure from Lee’s previous novels. In On Such a Full Sea, Lee has turned his acute eye toward the future of America. The story takes place in a chilling dystopia, a century or so beyond the present, where abandoned post-industrial cities like Baltimore have been converted into forced labor colonies and populated with immigrant workers. China is a distant, mythical memory. Environmental catastrophes have laid waste to much of the world, a cancer-like disease has infected the entire population, and stratification by class and race is more pronounced and horrific than ever. The fate of the world may lay in the hands of one tiny, nervy girl named Fan, an enigmatic and beautiful fish-tank diver who jolts the labor colony by running away.

Epic in scope, masterful in execution, and page-turning right to the shocking end, On Such a Full Sea fires on many levels: it is simultaneously a heart-stopping survival adventure across the wasteland of a wrecked continent; a deeply moving story of a girl’s first love; and a searing, frightening commentary on where America may be headed if we don’t strive to do better. The Boston Globe writes that Lee “asks the crucial and abiding question: How do we live a kind and decent life in this woeful world?” On Such a Full Sea imagines a future in which that question is more urgent than ever, and challenges us to ask what we need to change today.

Chang-rae Lee is the author of Native Speaker, winner of the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award for first fiction; A Gesture Life; Aloft; and The Surrendered, winner of the Dayton Peace Prize and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Selected by The New Yorker as one of the “20 Writers for the 21st Century,” Lee is professor in the Lewis Center for the Arts at Princeton University and a Shinhan Distinguished Visiting Professor at Yonsei University.

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African children’s library with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

This children’s library with rammed earth walls in Burundi, Africa, was built by Belgian studio BC Architects and members of the local community, according to an open-source design template (+ slideshow).

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

The Library of Muyinga is the first building of a project to build a new school for deaf children, using local materials and construction techniques, and referencing indigenous building typologies.

African children's library with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

BC Architects developed the design from a five-year-old template listed on the OpenStructures network. They adapted it to suit the needs of the programme, adding a large sheltered corridor that is typical of traditional Burundian housing.

African children's library with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

“Life happens mostly in this hallway porch: encounters, resting, conversation, waiting,” explained the architects. “It is a truly social space, constitutive for community relations.”

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Rammed earth blocks form the richly coloured walls and were produced using a pair of vintage compressor machines. They create rows of closely spaced piers around the exterior, supporting a heavy roof clad with locally made baked-clay tiles.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

“The challenge of limited resources for this project became an opportunity,” said the architects. “We managed to respect a short supply-chain of building materials and labour force, supporting the local economy and installing pride in the construction of a library with the poor people’s material – earth.”

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

The wide corridor runs along one side of the building, negotiating a change in level between the front and back of the site. Glass panels are slotted between columns along one of its sides and hinge open to lead through to the library reading room.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Here, bookshelves are slotted within recesses between the piers, while a large wooden table provides a study area and a huge hammock is suspended from the ceiling to create a more informal space for reading.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Wooden shutters reveal when the library is open. They also open the building out to the area where the rest of the school will be built, which is bounded by a new drystone wall.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

“A very important element in Burundian (and, generally, African) architecture is the very present demarcation of property lines. It is a tradition that goes back to tribal practices of compounding family settlements,” said the architects.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

High ceilings allow cross ventilation, via a pattern of square perforations between the rammed earth blocks.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Here’s a more detailed project description from BC architects:


The Library of Muyinga

Architecture

The first library of Muyinga, part of a future inclusive school for deaf children, in locally sourced compressed earth blocks, built with a participatory approach.

Our work in Africa started within the framework of OpenStructures.net. BC was asked to scale the “Open structures” model to an architectural level. A construction process involving end-users and second-hand economies was conceived. Product life cycles, water resource cycles en energy cycles were connected to this construction process. This OpenStructures architectural model was called Case Study (CS) 1: Katanga, Congo. It was theoretical, and fully research-based. 5 years later, the library of Muyinga in Burundi nears completion.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Vernacular inspirations

A thorough study of vernacular architectural practices in Burundi was the basis of the design of the building. Two months of fieldwork in the region and surrounding provinces gave us insight in the local materials, techniques and building typologies. These findings were applied, updated, reinterpreted and framed within the local know-how and traditions of Muyinga.

The library is organised along a longitudinal covered circulation space. This “hallway porch” is a space often encountered within the Burundian traditional housing as it provides a shelter from heavy rains and harsh sun. Life happens mostly in this hallway porch; encounters, resting, conversation, waiting – it is a truly social space, constitutive for community relations.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

This hallway porch is deliberately oversized to become the extent of the library. Transparent doors between the columns create the interaction between inside space and porch. Fully opened, these doors make the library open up towards the adjacent square with breathtaking views over Burundi’s “milles collines” (1000 hills).

On the longitudinal end, the hallway porch flows onto the street, where blinders control access. These blinders are an important architectural element of the street facade, showing clearly when the library is open or closed. On the other end, the hallway porch will continue as the main circulation and access space for the future school.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

A very important element in Burundian (and, generally, African) architecture is the very present demarcation of property lines. It is a tradition that goes back to tribal practices of compounding family settlements. For the library of Muyinga, the compound wall was considered in a co-design process with the community and the local NGO. The wall facilitates the terracing of the slope as a retaining wall in dry stone technique, low on the squares and playground of the school side, high on the street side. Thus, the view towards the valley is uncompromised, while safety from the street side is guaranteed.

The general form of the library is the result of a structural logic, derived on one hand from the material choice (compressed earth blocks masonry and baked clay roof tiles). The locally produced roof tiles were considerably more heavy than imported corrugated iron sheets. This inspired the structural system of closely spaced columns at 1m30 intervals, which also act as buttresses for the high walls of the library. This rhythmic repetition of columns is a recognisable feature of the building, on the outside as well as on the inside.

The roof has a slope of 35% with an overhang to protect the unbaked CEB blocks, and contributes to the architecture of the library.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Climatic considerations inspired the volume and facade: a high interior with continuous cross-ventilation helps to guide the humid and hot air away. Hence, the facade is perforated according to the rhythm of the compressed earth blocks (CEB) masonry, giving the library its luminous sight in the evening.

The double room height at the street side gave the possibility to create a special space for the smallest of the library readers. This children’s space consist of a wooden sitting corner on the ground floor, which might facilitate cosy class readings. It is topped by an enormous hammock of sisal rope as a mezzanine, in which the children can dream away with the books that they are reading.

The future school will continue to swing intelligently through the landscape of the site, creating playgrounds and courtyards to accomodate existing slopes and trees. In the meanwhile, the library will work as an autonomous building with a finished design.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Local materials research

The challenge of limited resources for this project became an opportunity. We managed to respect a short supply-chain of building materials and labour force, supporting local economy, and installing pride in the construction of a library with the poor people’s material: earth.

Earth analysis: “field tests and laboratory tests” – Raw earth as building material is more fragile than other conventional building materials. Some analyse is thus important to do. Some easy tests can be made on field to have a first idea of its quality. Some other tests have to be made in the laboratory to have a beter understanding of the material and improve its performance.

CEB: “from mother nature” – After an extensive material research in relation with the context, it was decided to use compressed earth bricks (CEB) as the main material for the construction of the building. We were lucky enough to find 2 CEB machines intactly under 15 years of dust. The Terstaram machines produce earth blocks of 29x14x9cm that are very similar to the bricks we know in the North, apart from the fact that they are not baked. Four people are constantly producing stones, up to 1100 stones/day.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Eucalyptus “wood; the strongest, the reddest” – The load bearing beams that are supporting the roof are made of eucalyptus wood, which is sustainably harvested in Muramba. Eucalyptus wood renders soil acid and therefor blocks other vegetation to grow. Thus, a clear forest management vision is needed to control the use of it in the Burundian hills. When rightly managed, Eucalyptus is the best solution to span spaces and use as construction wood, due to its high strengths and fast growing.

Tiles: “local quality product” – The roof and floor tiles are made in a local atelier in the surroundings of Muyinga. The tiles are made of baked Nyamaso valley clay. After baking, their color renders beautifully vague pink, in the same range of colors as the bricks. Each roof surface in the library design consists of around 1400 tiles. This roof replaces imported currogated iron sheets, and revalues local materials as a key design element for public roof infrastructure.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects

Internal Earth plaster: “simple but sensitive” – Clay from the valley of Nyamaso, 3 km from the construction site, was used for its pure and non-expansive qualities. After some minimal testing with bricks, a mix was chosen and applied on the interior of the library. The earth plaster is resistent to indoor normal use for a public function, and has turned out nicely.

Bamboo: “Weaving lamp fixtures” – Local bamboo is not of construction quality, but can nicely be used for special interior design functions, or light filters. In a joint workshop with Burundians and Belgians, some weaving techniques were explored, and in the end, used for the lamp fixtures inside the library.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image

Sisal rope: “from plant to hammock” – Net-making from Sisal plant fibres is one of the small micro-economies that bloomed in this project. It took a lot of effort to find the only elder around Muyinga that masters the Sisal rope weaving technique. He harvested the local sisal plant on site, and started weaving. In the pilote project, he educated 4 other workers, who now also master this technique, and use it as a skill to gain their livelihood. The resulting hammock serves as a children’s space to play, relax and read, on a mezzanine level above the library space.

Concrete “when it’s the only way out” – For this pilot project, we didn’t want to take any risks for structural issues. A lightweight concrete skeleton structure is inside the CEB columns, in a way that both materials (CEB and concrete) are mechanichally seperated. The CEB hollow columns were used as a “lost” formwork for the concrete works. It is our aim, given our experience with Phase 1, to eliminiate the structural use of concrete for future buildings.

Children's library in Africa with rammed earth walls by BC Architects
Section – click for larger image

Project Description: Library for the community of Muyinga
Location: Muyinga (BU)
Client: ODEDIM
Architect: BC architects
Local material consultancy: BC studies
Community participation and organisation: BC studies and ODEDIM Muyinga
Cooperation: ODEDIM Muyinga NGO, Satimo vzw, Sint-Lucas Architecture University, Sarolta Hüttl, Sebastiaan De Beir, Hanne Eckelmans
Financial support: Satimo vzw, Rotary Aalst, Zonta Brugge, Province of West-Flanders
Budget: €40 000
Surface: 140m2
Concept: 2012
Status: completed

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Google buys domestic technology firm Nest in first step towards connected home

Nest Thermostat

News: Google has announced it is poised to acquire domestic technology firm Nest for $3.2 billion, a move that will increase the tech giant’s presence in the home. 

Google made the announcement yesterday that it is to pay $3.2 billion (£2 billion) for Nest, which was founded in 2010 by former Apple executives Tony Fadell and Matt Rogers. The company produces network-enabled home infrastructure such as thermostats and smoke alarms that can be controlled from smartphones.

The acquisition is the second largest in Google’s history, after its takeover of Motorola Mobility in 2011. The move suggests Google is rushing to achieve the creation of a connected home, where objects and appliances monitor residents’ behaviour and communicate with each other to adjust the domestic environment.

Integrating such a system in homes before rivals like Apple would force subsequent products to rely on Google’s technology and protocols.

Despite Google’s ownership of the Android operating system, Nest assured its users that the technology will remain compatible with Apple’s iOS software and other web browsers in statement on the company’s website.

After the acquisition, Nest will continue to be led by Fadell under the same name and branding. The closing of the deal is subject to conditions and approvals, but it is expected in next few months.

Nest Protect smoke alarm
Nest Protect smoke alarm

The Nest Thermostat (main image) is designed to learn what temperatures a resident likes their home to be and builds a personalised schedule by picking up on routines. The thermostat can be adjusted using a smartphone app, allowing home owners to control their energy usage remotely.

The firm’s recently launched smoke alarm Nest Protect can also detect carbon monoxide, gives an early warning using lights and speech, plus can be silenced with the wave of a hand. It too connects with smart devices to alert the user when it is activated.

“[Nest is] already delivering amazing products you can buy right now – thermostats that save energy and smoke alarms that can help keep your family safe,” said Google CEO Larry Page. “We are excited to bring great experiences to more homes in more countries and fulfil their dreams.”

“With [Google’s] support, Nest will be even better placed to build simple, thoughtful devices that make life easier at home, and that have a positive impact on the world,” said Fadell.

Last week we reported that Google has joined up with automotive manufacturers to integrate its Android operating system into cars, another a step towards the completely integrated network of objects and systems that has come to be known as the Internet of Things.

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Table and pouffe hybrid designed by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Cologne 2014: Denmark design duo GamFratesi has combined a coffee table and pouffe to create footstools with integrated trays for French brand Ligne Roset (+ slideshow).

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Trouf, a cross between a tray and a pouffe, was designed by GamFratesi with both hard and soft surfaces as a multi-functional piece of furniture.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

“We wanted to join different functions just combining soft and hard surfaces, and create furniture where the different objects or moods find their place informally,” Enrico Fratesi told Dezeen.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Wooden trays for holding food or drinks are set into the upholstered tops, offset so a fabric section at one end can be used for laptops, books or resting feet.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Rounded edges were designed so sharp corners wouldn’t cause any issues when walking past. “It seemed correct to have a rounded shape,” said Fratesi. “Since the position of the furniture is in front of a sofa or a lounge chair, we wanted to facilitate the passage between sitting and pouf – avoiding any kind of angle and the rigid part.”

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

A palette of pastel colours was chosen for the fabric coverings, though these can be customised to match or stand out against the users’ existing furniture.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

“The colours that we have selected for these models are soft and nearly muted, but in fact the pouf can be upholstered with very different fabrics and colours so that can be in combination or contrast with the seat in front,” Fratesi explained.

Trouf table and pouffe hybrid by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

The surfaces are slightly raised on small white wooden legs. The trays are available in natural oak or stained the colour of anthracite, and can be removed along with the upholstery for cleaning.

Trouf is on display at Ligne Roset‘s stand located in Hall 11.3 at imm cologne until Sunday. It will also be shown at Maison&Objet outside Paris from 24 to 28 January.

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Michael Graves’ Portland Building faces threat of demolition

Michael Graves' Portland Building faces threat of demolition

News: Michael Graves’ seminal postmodern work the Portland Public Services Building is under threat of demolition, following news that the 32-year-old building needs more than $95 million worth of repairs.

Also known as the Portland Building, the 15-storey municipal office block in Portland, Oregon, was completed by American firm Michael Graves & Associates in 1982 and is credited with being one of the first major buildings of postmodernism, yet its demolition is one of several options under consideration by city officials following a recent analysis of the building’s condition.

According to the assessment, a complete overhaul of the building would require $95 million (£58 million), while replacing it or relocating could cost anything between $110 million and $400 million (£67 million and £243 million).

Michael Graves' Portland Building faces threat of demolition

The Portland Building has been plagued with major structural problems and defects ever since its completion, many of which are attributed to the tight $25 million budget of the original construction.

The recommendation of the report was to renovate the structure, which would take two years and require finding a temporary home for 1300 employees that currently work in the building. However, city commissioners have branded it a “white elephant” and are considering pulling down both this building and a neighbouring courthouse to make way for an all-new public services complex.

“My reaction is we should basically tear it down and build something new,” long-standing commissioner Dan Saltzman told local newspaper The Oregonian, describing the building as “a nightmare for people who work there”.

“There’s got to be a better option than putting another $100 million into a white elephant,” added Nick Fish, who oversees the city’s water and environmental services bureaus.

Responding to the news, architect Michael Graves described the Portland Building as “a seminal project”, as recognised by its addition to the USA’s National Register of Historic Places in 2011. “Of course my preference would be to repair the existing structure,” he said.

Michael Graves' Portland Building faces threat of demolition

Architectural historian Charles Jencks underlined the importance of the building in his influential book The Language of Post-Modern Architecture, where the author wrote: “The Portland still is the first major monument of Post-Modernism, just as the Bauhaus was of Modernism, because with all its faults it still is the first to show that one can build with art, ornament, and symbolism on a grand scale, and in a language the inhabitants understand.”

The news emerges in the same month that the Williams and Tsien-designed former American Folk Art Museum in New York is lined up for demolition to allow an extension to the neighbouring Museum of Modern Art, just 13 years after the building’s completion.

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Libeskind unveils timber-clad physics centre for Durham University

News: New York architect Daniel Libeskind has unveiled images of a timber-clad building to house physics researchers at Durham University in north-east England.

The £10 million Ogden Centre for Fundamental Physics will be located beside the university’s existing physics department on South Road and will accommodate two growing organisations – the Institute for Computational Cosmology and the Institute for Particle Physics Phenomenology.

Daniel Libeskind unveils timber-clad physics centre for Durham University

Studio Daniel Libeskind won a competition to design the building back in July, but has only just revealed images following the news that over £5 million of charitable donations have been made towards the project.

“This new building will provide a tremendously stimulating environment and foster even closer synergies between the two Institutes’ research areas,” commented Martin Ward, head of Durham’s physics department.

Daniel Libeskind unveils timber-clad physics centre for Durham University

Public consultation on the design will take place later this month, and the building is due to complete in 2015, subject to planning approval.

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Das Haus conceptual future home installed at imm cologne by Louise Campbell

Cologne 2014: two shingle-clad houses converge to form this year’s Das Haus home of the future installation at the imm cologne fair by Copenhagen designer Louise Campbell (+ slideshow).

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Das Haus is an annual commission that allows a designer to imagine what their ideal future home would be like.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Louise Campbell designed a 240-square-metre dwelling devoid of interior walls, with openings at each end rather than doors.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

“There are no walls dividing the various zones, only soft textiles that can be rolled up or down as desired,” said Campbell.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Two timber-framed buildings intersect at an angle to one another, with the exposed beams and columns inside coloured grey and white to distinguish the different structures.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

These two elements are designed to represent the coming together of masculine and feminine within the home. A long dining table sits in the centre of where they meet.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

“There are no secrets and no pressure – the ideal marriage. Perhaps indeed the ideal house,” Campbell said.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

A line of beds for sleeping and lounging runs along one side of the space, in front of patterned fabric panels that line the walls.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Campbell modelled the kitchen on a workshop, hanging 573 tools on the white pegboard wall behind the counters.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

“Personally I feel very much at home here,” said Campbell. “Where floral wallpaper in a kitchen would not naturally present itself at the top of my list, plenty of fine tools do. Even so, I’d much rather sleep in an imaginatively decorated space than in a bare white bedroom.”

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

A 100-year-old stoneware bathtub has been placed in the middle of the living area and an upside-down canoe is balanced in the rafters.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

The house is clad in larch shingles with coloured tips and the roof is perforated with a pattern of diamonds, which becomes less open at the top of the walls.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Campbell’s design is installed at the centre of this year’s imm cologne design trade fair, which continues until Sunday.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Last year’s conceptual home of the future was created by Italian designer Luca Nichetto, who installed an eco-friendly environment full of plants. London studio Doshi Levien designed 2011 Das Haus, envisaged as part of a dense urban neighbourhood.

Read on for more text sent to Dezeen by imm cologne:


A house with two sides

» Das Haus – Interiors on Stage 2014 by Louise Campbell: a slow house full of handmade things
» Under the title 0-100. (Made to measure), Louise Campbell sounds the depths between man and woman, reason and emotion
» The very personal vision of a home the Danish designer has created for the imm cologne is unreservedly playful and sensuous

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

What Louise Campbell has erected in Pure Village (Hall 2.2) at the imm cologne with such incredible passion for detail isn’t one house, it’s two! Two timber-framed, prototypical houses with an exposed beam structure that look as if they were positioned at an angle to one another on the floor of the hall and then pushed inside one another like a telescope. The posts of one house have been painted white, those of the other a light grey. The rectangular overlap in the middle created by the intersection of the two volumes marks the spot where opposites are reconciled and the two houses merge into one.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Half designer portrait, half visionary blueprint

Das Haus – Interiors on Stage is the simulation of a home at the international interior design fair imm cologne. Every year, the imm cologne nominates a new designer whose plans are then used for the layout and furnishings. The furniture, colours, materials, lighting and accessories chosen by the Guest of Honour add up to an individually configured interior design. But this holistically conceived proposal isn’t just meant to be forward-looking; it should be practical as well – and above all authentic. Das Haus is an example of how it is possible to create a world of one’s own that becomes an expression of one’s own personality. Besides picking up on current interior design trends, the project also addresses the public’s aspirations and social change.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Louise Campbell turns Das Haus into an attractive stage for relationships

The structure, which has a footprint of 240 square metres and is made of wooden beams, larch shingles and lots and lots of fabrics, turns out to be a thoroughly attractive and seductive experimental setup. Louise Campbell wants to figure out how opposites can be reconciled through design. And in her eyes, the biggest conceivable contradiction in our lives is the (in-)compatibility of man and woman, of reason and emotion – which makes a partnership between the two the biggest experiment of all.

“I don’t understand why we don’t question something as fundamental as love more,” explains Louise Campbell provocatively. “What is love? How does a designer approach these questions? By circling around our physical bases through form.” She wanted to design Das Haus as a home “for him and her, for slow and fast, soft and hard, light and dark, colour and material, British and Scandinavian – with a tranquil space in the middle where everything fits together with some quirks, but no conflicts.” And in this case, “him and her” doesn’t just mean male and female, but the masculine and feminine side within each and every one of us.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Interior philosophy: omitting walls gives the other person more space

The Danish designer shows how both “he” and “she” can make themselves very much at home within these contradictions – and does away with various interior conventions in the process: Das Haus is one big, open space, the bed is a 16-metre-wide piece of furniture for sprawling, lounging and sleeping on, the bathtub stands in the middle of the living area and the kitchen is located in the man’s domain. In the middle, he and she meet at the big table in harmony. There are no proper rooms; instead, the various areas of the home are defined by the furnishings and accessories.

Besides featuring Louise Campbell’s own designs such as the LC Shutters lamps from Louis Poulsen and Zanotta’s Veryround Chair, Das Haus also contains a variety of products by other designers. Everything else was made by hand in Louise Campbell’s Copenhagen studio. And because she felt it was important to include something old as well, a 100-year-old stoneware bathtub was borrowed from the museum collection of Villeroy & Boch AG and set up in the middle of the living area. “There are no walls dividing the various zones, only soft textiles that can be rolled up or down as desired. There are no secrets and no pressure – the ideal marriage. Perhaps indeed the ideal house,” says Louise Campbell of her interior concept, in which everything is designed from the inside out.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

A tool wall with 573 tools

A large wall surface in the kitchen zone is one of the highlights of Das Haus. For Louise Campbell, the kitchen is both a workshop and a place to cook, and she has thus hung around 573 tools of every kind imaginable on the exterior wall. The big table is used for stirring, mixing, sawing, painting, hammering and sewing. And whilst technology is notable only by its absence, the house contains the instruments required for every conceivable kind of handicraft. Finding the right measure – the right balance between reason and emotion, perfection and cosiness, technology and craftsmanship, hectic activity and total relaxation – is a key theme for Louise Campbell, both in her design and in her version of Das Haus, which is why she has so aptly named it: 0-100. (Made to measure).

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

A playful house that exudes sensuousness

“Personally I feel very much at home here,” says Louise Campbell of her Haus. “So where floral wallpaper in a kitchen would not naturally present itself at the top of my list, plenty of fine tools do. Even so, I’d much rather sleep in an imaginatively decorated space than in a bare white bedroom.”

Louise Campbell’s house is a celebration of physical existence in the here and now. Digital projections are entirely absent. The warm lighting, exquisite textiles, comfortable rest zone and many playful details and accessories are a reminder of what is truly responsible for the quality of our homes and lives. Louise Campbell exemplifies this attitude by lending a willing hand with the construction of Das Haus, stapling, painting and draping as it takes shape. By celebrating classical sensuality and all that is handmade, her interior concept is the diametric opposite of the technophile tendencies that have become so widespread in today’s world. The designer cites Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, Sherril Jaffe’s Scars Make Your Body More Interesting, Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility and The Cure’s Wild Mood Swings as the sources of her creative inspiration.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

Das Haus 2014 is a beacon of feminine design

By creating a low-tech house with open spaces that can be used flexibly to provide scope for all its occupants’ (contradictory) facets, Louise Campbell is continuing the Das Haus – Interiors on Stage series with a design that is just as remarkable as its predecessors. In 2012, Anglo-Indian designer team Nipa Doshi and Jonathan Levien were in charge of the new format’s debut, staging what was effectively an organically evolved space that permits communicative interaction between occupants and cultures. In 2013, Italian product designer Luca Nichetto created the next instalment of the design event as an elegant ensemble open to nature on all sides. Das Haus is located within the Pure Village format, which has been given a spacious new home in Hall 2.2 at the 2014 event.

Das Haus 2014 house of the future concept by Louise Campbell at imm cologne

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