Boston invites designs for new public transport map

Boston invites designs for new public transport map

News: Boston’s public transport authority has launched a competition to redesign the city’s subway map.

From now until the end of April, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) is accepting submissions to transform the map’s cramped layout into a more user-friendly design.

The competition has already proved controversial due to the terms and conditions of entry stating that the transit authority owns the entire copyright of all submissions – a detail criticised as “insulting” by Australian graphic designer Cameron Booth.

“If the MBTA likes my ideas for their map — and they’ve surely seen enough of my body of work to know that it’s good — then they can bloody well pay me for it,” wrote Booth in a blog post, as reported by online magazine The Atlantic Cities.

Booth’s extensive portfolio of map designs includes a diagram of the American interstate road system in the style of the London Tube map.

Boston invites designs for new public transport map

Above: the current “spider map”

Entries to the competition will be judged on their creativity, aesthetic quality, clarity and usefulness, and the winning designs will be announced in mid-May as part of National Transportation Week.

We’ve featured lots of map designs on Dezeen, including dinner plates that collectively form a map of France’s Michelin-starred restaurants and a London Tube map redesigned to be geographically accurate – see all maps.

Projects in Boston we’ve published include Renzo Piano’s wing for the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and a branch of skin and haircare brand Aesop that uses wooden cornices as shelving.

The post Boston invites designs for new
public transport map
appeared first on Dezeen.

Interview: Lucy Voller and Molly Martancik: The friends behind There-There talk long-distance design

Interview: Lucy Voller and Molly Martancik

Brought together by a mutual appreciation for design and exploration, Lucy Voller and Molly Martancik met in college and formed an indelible friendship that would soon birth a long distance collaborative they call There-There. With Martancik based in Boston and Voller in Minneapolis, the two send inspiration and ideas…

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Aesop Newbury Street by William O’Brien Jr.

Cornices are commonly used to decorate the junctions between walls and ceilings, but at the new Boston shop for skin and haircare brand Aesop, cornices cover the walls and form shelves for the brand’s signature brown bottles.

Aesop Newbury Street by William O'Brien Jr.

Designed by architect and university professor William O’Brien Jr, the Aesop Newbury Street’s interior was inspired by the nineteenth century ornamental architecture that originated in Paris and is common in the neighbourhood.

Aesop Newbury Street by William O'Brien Jr.

The oak mouldings are arranged in horizontal rows across each of the walls, as well as along the edges of the counter.

Aesop Newbury Street by William O'Brien Jr.

“The display shelves are formed through the accumulation of several different custom crown mouldings to produce an unexpected texture, one that defamiliarises the moulding and transforms its role from an architectural element that conventionally highlights edges to an element that produces a rich and varied surface texture,” explained O’Brien Jr.

Aesop Newbury Street by William O'Brien Jr.

A staircase leads down into the store from the entrance and features a wrought iron balustrade with an oak handrail.

Like all of Aesop’s stores, a wash basin is included, while reclaimed oak covers the floors.

Aesop regularly commissions designers to come up with unique concepts for its stores. Others we’ve featured recently include a London shop modelled on a medical laboratory and a Paris shop with iron nails for shelves.

See all our stories about Aesop »

Here’s some more information from Aesop:


Aesop takes pleasure in announcing the opening of its first Boston signature store at 172 Newbury Street, Back Bay. Nineteenth-century planners fashioned this borough to be the ‘ornament of the city’, inspired and influenced by Hausmann’s redesign of Paris. The impressive architectural legacy is richly reinterpreted in the new store.

For the interior, William O’Brien Jr., Assistant Professor of Architecture at Boston’s MIT School of Architecture, recast several historic design elements deeply characteristic of the area. The space is dressed in a combination of new and reclaimed antique white oak – the former used for highly articulated display shelves, the latter for flooring. The ingeniously conceived shelving is formed through the accumulation of several different custom crown moldings – a shift from colonial ornamentation to contemporary functionality that defamiliarises and transforms, producing a rich and varied surface texture.

The entry stair presents a delicate balustrade of wrought iron bars topped by an ornamental white oak rail that effects a second form of defamiliarisation – here, as a tactile experience. As its profile twists on descent, the rail announces via the hand a gentle transition from the exterior bustle of Newbury Street to a calming and intimate environment that characterises the spirit of Aesop.

The post Aesop Newbury Street
by William O’Brien Jr.
appeared first on Dezeen.

The Boswash Shareway: Höweler + Yoon Architecture’s vision for the U.S. eastern corridor offers an inspiring glimpse of mobility in 2030

The Boswash Shareway

Last week in Istanbul a six month long discourse on the future of mobility in our megacities culminated an impressive showing of concepts from five international architecture firms visualizing their home cities in the year 2030. Organized as a competition by the Audi Urban Future Initiative, the program began…

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Twins Houses

Un beau projet par l’architecte de Boston, William O’Brien Jr avec cette maison située dans l’État de New York. Ces 2 résidences sont disposées dans un plan hexagonal avec des structures géométriques. Les maisons partagent un domaine agricole, le tout situé en pleine forêt.



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Previously on Fubiz

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Virtual Street Corners

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In an effort to bridge gaps between two neighborhoods of Boston, digital media artist John Ewing created the public art project Virtual Street Corners. The project, set to unveil June 2010, uses live video feeds between Boston locales Brookline and Roxbury to encourage neighborly affection between the predominantly African-American and Jewish neighborhoods.

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Social action site Dowser highlights Ewing’s effort, which his experience creating public murals around town inspired. In conversations with the public he found people kept to their own neighborhoods, rarely venturing beyond familiar stomping grounds. Virtual Street Corners aims to mediate that disconnect by using video and microphones to encourage virtual dialogue.

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The project has already gained attention for its forward-thinking ideals and technology—Virtual Street Corners won grants from the Black Rock Arts Foundation and the Knight Foundation, and is a finalist for a Cambridge Arts Council grant.


National Geographic 2009

Une sélection réalisée par Big Picture du site Boston, autour de l’édition 2009 du concours International Photography organisé par le célèbre magazine National Geographic. Près de 25 clichés représentatifs des animaux et de la nature. A découvrir en galerie dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz