Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Competition: Dezeen has teamed up with designers Another Studio to give readers the chance to win one of five MONUmini kits for building a tiny Centre Pompidou or Villa Savoye.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Another Studio has added the Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye to its range of build-it-yourself architectural model kits of landmarks that also includes London’s Tower Bridge and Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

The model of Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano’s Centre Pompidou in Paris shows off the inside-out design and skeletal framework. Rogers recently spoke to us about the building’s design in an exclusive interview to coincide the opening of a retrospective exhibition of his work, which we’re giving away tickets for in another competition.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Also in France, the second new model is Le Corbusier’s iconic modern Villa Savoye house located just outside Paris.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Etched stainless steel and paper sections are folded and locked together by following the simple step-by-step assembly instructions provided. Parts come in A5-sized envelopes with a short history of the building and can be purchased from Another Studio’s website for £15.50.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “MONUmini” in the subject line, stating which kit you would like to win. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers. Read our privacy policy here.

You need to subscribe to our newsletter to have a chance of winning. Sign up here.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Competition closes 26 August 2013. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeen Mail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

The post Competition: five Centre Pompidou
and Villa Savoye kits to be won
appeared first on Dezeen.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

London firm Paul Crofts Studio has completed a bakery on a high street in Suffolk, UK, with a motif based on a magpie’s nest set into the douglas fir serving counter.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

The Two Magpies Bakery in Southwold produces fresh bread and patisserie at the back of the shop every day and the kitchen can be seen through a window onto the seating area.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

“The space is made up of a series of bespoke elements made from douglas fir finished in white lye, creating clean lines with a contemporary feel and a pared-back canvas on which to display the highly crafted products on sale,” said Paul Crofts Studio.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

The birds-nest motif was created by illustrator Katharine Gorham and picked out in white resin. It’s repeated on the opposite side of the shop with criss-crossing white dowels supporting long shelves above the seating area, where a silver ring entangled in the sticks references the collecting habits of magpies.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

White timber dowels also protrude from the wall behind the counter to accommodate a series of bespoke wooden serving boards, as well as alongside the window where they provide perches for displaying loaves to passersby.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

“Warm wood, clean white detailing and a high level of craftsmanship combine to create an intimate and relaxed setting in which to enjoy the exceptional food on offer,” the studio added.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

The rear wall of the shop is clad in overlapping wooden shingles in shades of grey and tables in the seating area have their legs dipped in black.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

Cardboard luggage labels tied with string present information and pricing on the produce and the seasonal menu can be written on a brown paper roll hanging next to a blackboard behind the serving counter.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

Paul Crofts Studio has previously completed a crêperie in west London with gingham and lace patterns screen-printed onto the tabletops.

Two Magpies Bakery by Paul Crofts Studio

See all our stories about patisserie design »
See more stories about retail design »

The post Two Magpies Bakery
by Paul Crofts Studio
appeared first on Dezeen.

One Workplace Headquarters

Leader dans la vente de meuble en Californie du Nord, One Workplace fait appel à l’agence d’architectes Design Blitz pour créer son siège à San Francisco. Ils créent un espace hybride très design destiné aux employés comme aux consommateurs. Une très belle et innovante collaboration à découvrir en images.

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

db35
db30
db33
db15
db13
db16
db14
db34
db12
db23
db20
db3
db26
db29
db2
db6
db9
db10
db17
db24
db27
db1
db
db5
db4
db18
db22
db21
db25
db28
db31
db19
db11
db8
db7
db32

Cityscapes Paintings

Focus sur Jieun Park : une artiste coréenne qui possède une superbe coup de pinceau. Avec des oeuvres d’une grande qualité, elle nous démontre l’étendue de son talent en imaginant ces toiles représentant différents environnements urbains. Un traité très réussi et complet à découvrir dans la suite.

Cityscapes Paintings6
Cityscapes Paintings
Cityscapes Paintings5
Cityscapes Paintings4
Cityscapes Paintings3
Cityscapes Paintings2
Cityscapes Paintings7

Mutewatch atDezeen Watch Store

Mutewatch - Indigo Blue

Dezeen Watch Store: the popular touch-screen Mutewatch is now available in five new colours – and Dezeen Watch Store is one of the first retailers to stock them all.

Mutewatch - Nova Purple

Mutewatch was conceived when company founder Mai-Li Hammargren was living with a boyfriend who worked late night shifts. Just as he was getting to sleep in the early morning, her alarm would go off and wake him up. The solution? A silent alarm clock, worn around the wrist.

Mutewatch - Ivy Green

The design was inspired by the founders’ need for a personal wake-up alarm and the minimal-meets-retro aesthetic takes cues from Rubik’s Cube and classic Swedish design.

Mutewatch - Charcoal Grey

“We’re passionate about developing products for people who love simplicity and beautiful design,” said Mutewatch brand manager and partner Livia Moore. “We focus on the user experience, creating refined and useful tools for a mobile generation with the aim of simplifying people’s lives.”

Mutewatch - Pure Black

The integrated touch-screen allows the wearer to switch between functions by swiping across the display, tapping the top of each digit to activate the timer or alarm.

Mutewatch - Indigo Blue

Mutewatch plugs into a USB port and is fully charged within two hours. The device warns the wearer when the battery level is low and will automatically enter a hibernation mode.

Mutewatch - Charcoal Grey

Mutewatch features a fully adjustable wristband and is available in five colours: ivy green, nova purple, indigo blue, pure black and charcoal grey.

Mutewatch - Nova Purple

You can buy all of our watches online and you can also visit our watch shop in Stoke Newington, north London – contact us to book an appointment.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com

The post Mutewatch at
Dezeen Watch Store
appeared first on Dezeen.

Korshun Footwear: Shoes made without any glue or stitches fashionably merge style with sustainability

Korshun Footwear


by Dora Haller Dutch footwear designer Anna Korshun creates leather shoes that don’t require any glue or stitches. Almost magically constructed, the upper and outer soles are clicked together and…

Continue Reading…

Zoë Ryan appointed as curator of Istanbul Design Biennial 2014

Zoë Ryan appointed as curator of Istanbul Design Biennial 2014

News: British curator and writer Zoë Ryan has been appointed as curator of the second Istanbul Design Biennial, to be held from 18 October to 14 December 2014.

Zoë Ryan is chair and curator of architecture and design at the Art Institute of Chicago, as well as teaching art history at the institute’s school and the University of Illinois at Chicago.

The Istanbul Design Biennial is organised by the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (İKSV) and the theme will be announced by Ryan in November.

Last year’s inaugural event was curated by then editor-in-chief of Domus magazine Joseph Grima and Istanbul architect Emre Arolat. The theme was Adhocracy and focussed on how new methods of production are bringing about a “cultural revolution” – read more in our report from the opening.

Projects on show included a rotation-moulding machine powered by a cordless drill, 3D-printed plastic connectors that combine with standard wooden parts to make furniture locally and a plotter taking the text of the Open Source Architecture Manifesto from a Wikipedia page and writing it onto a wall over and over again.

See all our stories about Istanbul Design Biennial 2012 »

Here’s the announcement from the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts:


Zoë Ryan appointed curator of the second Istanbul Design Biennial

Zoë Ryan have been appointed as the curator of the second Istanbul Design Biennial, to be held from 18 October to 14 December 2014 by the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (İKSV). British curator and writer Zoë Ryan is the John H. Bryan Chair and Curator of Architecture and Design at the Art Institute of Chicago.

Since joining the museum in 2006, British curator and writer Zoë Ryan has been building the museum’s first collection of contemporary design in addition to expanding its holdings in historical and contemporary architecture. In addition to her work at the museum, she is an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Art History Department at the School of the Art Institute and at the School of Art and Design at the University of Illinois at Chicago where she teaches a Masters-level seminar focused on critical issues in design.

Prior to working at the museum, Ryan was Senior Curator at the Van Alen Institute in New York, a non-profit public art and architecture organization committed to improving the design of the public realm. In addition to editing the Van Alen Report, the Institute’s quarterly journal, she organised a variety of exhibitions including “The Good Life: New Public Spaces for Recreation”.

Ryan has also held curatorial assistant positions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Ryan is often called upon as a juror and critic and has lectured on her work internationally. She has served on the advisory committee of the Experimenta Design Biennial in Lisbon and was part of the curatorial advisory committee for Spontaneous Interventions in the U.S. Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2012. She served as Chair of the Jury for the National Design Awards, Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum, New York in 2013, and that same year was part of the jury for the Wheelwright Fellowship, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University.

Taking an interdisciplinary approach to her work, Ryan’s recent exhibitions include “Building: Inside Studio Gang Architects” (2012), the first survey exhibition of this Chicago-based architecture practice; “Fashioning the Object: Bless, Boudicca, and Sandra Backlund” (2012), which investigates the construction of narratives in fashion design; “Bertrand Goldberg: Architecture of Invention” (2011), a major retrospective of this iconic Chicago architect; “Hyperlinks: Architecture and Design,” (2010), an international survey exploring inter-disciplinary practices in architecture and design; “Konstantin Grcic: Decisive Design” (2009), the first solo exhibition of the work of this important industrial designer’ and “Graphic Thought Facility: Resourceful Design” (2008), the first solo show of the work of the eponymous London-based studio.

In fall 2012, Fast Company magazine named Zoë Ryan one of the 50 people shaping the future of design.

About the Istanbul Design Biennial

The 2nd Istanbul Design Biennial, organised by the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts from 18 October to 14 December 2014, will be realised under the co-sponsorship of Vestel and VitrA.
The conceptual framework of the biennial will be announced at a press conference in November 2013 by the curator Zoë Ryan.

The 2nd Istanbul Design Biennial Advisory Board Members are Chairman of the Board of Vitra Design Foundation, Mr. Alexander von Vegesack; architect, Han Tümertekin; architect, editor, writer and curator of the first Istanbul Design Biennial, Joseph Grima; Industrial Designer and Director of the first Istanbul Design Biennial, Özlem Yalım Özkaraoğlu; UltraRPM Chairman Paul McMillan; Vice Rector at Yasar University and Board Member and Design Coordinator of Izmir Mediterranean Academy, Prof. Tevfik Balcıoğlu and graphic designer, Yeşim Demir.

The post Zoë Ryan appointed as curator of
Istanbul Design Biennial 2014
appeared first on Dezeen.

Dyson launches vacuum cleaner the size of an A4 sheet of paper

Dyson DC49 smallest vacuum

News: British industrial design firm Dyson has launched a tiny vacuum cleaner for British homes, which are the smallest in western Europe and often lack space to store a full-size cleaner.

“57% of Brits complain that they don’t have enough space in their homes for storage,” a Dyson spokesperson told Dezeen. “A lack of storage space shouldn’t mean people have to compromise on the technology they buy. Engineers should respond by developing smaller, more efficient technology.”

Dyson DC49 smallest vacuum

The DC49 Multi Floor is just a fraction bigger than a sheet of A4 paper because it’s the first cylinder vacuum to be powered by a Dyson digital motor – the same motor that powers Dyson’s Airblade hand dryers.

It’s also designed to be the brand’s quietest cleaner yet. “When people are living on top of each other, technology needs to be quieter,” Dyson explained.

“Investing in our core technologies means we can develop leaner, more efficient machines. Using the new high-speed Dyson digital motor, we have developed a machine that is smaller and quieter, yet even more powerful,” British inventor and founder of the company James Dyson said.

The digital motor inside the vacuum weighs 670 grams and generates 1050 watts, whereas a normal AC motor generating the same power would weigh an average of 1.2 kilograms.

Dyson DC49 smallest vacuum

Dyson developed the product in response to the Royal Institute of British Architects’ report last year entitled The Way We Live Now, which found that many British homes lack storage space for household utility items like a vacuum cleaner, ironing board and rubbish bins. One participant in the survey admitted to storing his vacuum cleaner at his mother’s house, a twenty minute drive away.

In April this year another RIBA report entitled Case for Space revealed that the average new home in the UK is just 46 square metres, the size of a Jubilee Line train carriage on the London Underground, making them 15% smaller than in any other country in western Europe. The report also found that new-builds had decreased in size by 11% in the last ten years.

See more stories about Dyson »
See more stories about micro homes »

Here’s some more information from Dyson:


Smaller. Lighter. Quieter. High performance Dyson vacuum technology: Concentrated

Homes are getting smaller. The average new-build one-bedroom home in the UK is just 46 square metres (the size of a tube carriage on the Jubilee Line); and 57% of people say there is not enough storage in their homes for their possessions. Compromising on space shouldn’t mean compromising on technology.

Designed for the technologically astute Japanese, DC49 is engineered to be Dyson’s smallest, quietest Ball™ vacuum cleaner yet. The Dyson digital motor V4, allows DC49 to deliver the performance of a full size machine, in a small package.

Powerful but quiet: Engineers were challenged to develop Dyson’s quietest vacuum. Acoustic engineers developed simplified airways in the floor tools, funnelling the turbulent air downwards to dampen the sound. They adjusted the motor’s orientation, and smoothed the airflow inside the vortex fingers of the cyclone to reduce sound from the machine.

Concentrated technology: DC49’s body is lightweight, weighing just 2.7kg; making it 30% smaller than the DC47 Ball vacuum cleaner.

Ball technology: The machine is light to pull, can pivot on the spot, and follows obediently without snagging on corners. It has a low centre of gravity for negotiating tight turns and getting around furniture. There are over 100 components arranged in the ball including the motor, ducting and 5 metres of cable.

Improved floor tools: DC49 comes with both turbinehead and motorhead floortools. These have been re-engineered to improve pick-up and sound quality, and reduce weight. Simplified airways decrease noise levels and a self-tightening mechanism keeps the brush bar stable. A dust capture channel prevents dirt from escaping back to the floor, increasing pick-up. The new configuration of carbon fibre filaments and nylon brushes removes fine dust from hard floors and ground-in dirt from carpets.

The post Dyson launches vacuum cleaner
the size of an A4 sheet of paper
appeared first on Dezeen.

Garage of Bearbrick

Garage of Bears est une collaboration entre les créatifs d’OpenBox, qui ont pris en charge l’architecture du lieu, et d’Onion, qui se sont chargés de la présentation des dizaines d’ours et célèbre toys Be@rbrick multicolore qui ornent les murs. Le résultat est un espace au design novateur et ludique à découvrir.

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

gob9
gob8
gob7
gob6
gob
gob5
gob3
gob2
gob1
gob4

1/5 scale paper chair by Taiji Fujimori

Product news: Japanese designer Taiji Fujimori has designed a miniature paper chair, armchair and sofa, one-fifth the size of standard furniture pieces (+ slideshow).

1/5 scale paper chair by Taiji Fujimori

“Do not sit on this chair, but use it to accommodate other small items,” suggested Fujimori, showing the models used to support small items like keys, spectacles or ornaments.

The scaled-down furniture is made by folding and tucking a pre-cut sheet of paper together. It’s designed for use in the home or office and can be personalised by adding designs or messages to the paper.

1/5 scale paper chair by Taiji Fujimori

The paper chair measures 240 millimetres in height and is 200 millimetres wide. The chair is available in four colours: white, grey, red and blue.

Fujimori’s 1/5 scaled paper furniture range also includes an armchair (240mm x 220mm) and a sofa (240mm x 305mm).

1/5 scale paper chair by Taiji Fujimori

The chairs are produced and manufactured by Kami No Kousakujo.

1/5 scale paper chair by Taiji Fujimori

Prior to founding his own practice four years ago, Fujimori worked for architectural planning studio Itsuko Hasegawa Atelier. He specialises in furniture design and has worked in collaboration with architects including the 2013 laureate of the Pritzker Architecture Prize Toyo Ito, and Japanese studio Torafu Architects.

1/5 scale paper chair by Taiji Fujimori

Other paper projects that we have featured on Dezeen include Jule Waibel’s concertinaed handbag and pleated paper dress that expands with the movement of the body and Pepe Heykoop’s paper faceted vase covers.

Last month furniture giant Ikea launched a range of miniature furniture for dolls’ houses.

1/5 scale paper chair by Taiji Fujimori

See more stories about paper »
See more furniture »

Photography is by Taiji Fujimori.

The post 1/5 scale paper chair
by Taiji Fujimori
appeared first on Dezeen.