Olympic Village furniture goes on sale


Dezeen Wire:
 London 2012 organisers have started selling off the furniture that will used by athletes in the Olympic Village before the games have even begun.

Items for sale range from beds and tables to clothes racks and mail sorters and can be purchased online at www.remainsofthegames.co.uk.

See all our stories about London 2012 »

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goes on sale
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The Square Root of Beautiful

This striking desk design is the latest addition to the Incunabular range of handmade contemporary furniture by UK-based design studio, invisiblecity. The design takes its dimensions and ratios from the international paper standard ISO 216, Series A. The geometric rationale behind the entire series is the square root of 2, which maintains the aspect ratio of each subsequent module. Not a math whiz? No worries- all you really need to know is that a lot of thought went into this gorgeous piece!

Designer: invisiblecity


Yanko Design
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(The Square Root of Beautiful was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Bound Basics by Toon Welling

Bound Basics by Toon Welling

Taut rope is all that holds together this furniture by Dutch design graduate Toon Welling.

Bound Basics by Toon Welling

The criss-crossing lengths of rope take the place of nails and screws for each piece in the Bound Basics collection, which comprises a desk, a chair and a set of shelves.

Bound Basics by Toon Welling

The furniture is held together by ‘tensegrity’, a word coined by architect Buckminster Fuller to describe the way components can be joined and supported by continuous tension.

Bound Basics by Toon Welling

Each piece is assembled from sustainable materials, including hemp rope and FSC-certified plywood.

Bound Basics by Toon Welling

Welling recently graduated from the product design course at Utrecht School of the Arts (HKU) in the Netherlands.

Bound Basics by Toon Welling

Photography is by Wouter Stelwagen.

Bound Basics by Toon Welling

See all our stories about furniture »

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Bound Basics is a line of furniture entirely held together by rope. Their design was inspired by the sculptural works of Kenneth Snelson and Santiago Calatrava. What is immediately apparent about their sculptures is their underlying structural strategies, their ‘tensegrity’. A term coined by Buckminster Fuller, tensegrity is short for tensional integrity. Binding parts in a web of tightened wire or cable, an elegant and stable construct emerges.

Entirely held together by the tensional force of the tautened cord, these structures project a deceptive simplicity and inherent strength. A series of exploratory tensegrity models soon developed into ideas for the Bound Basics, a furniture line that uses ropes instead of nails or screws and investigates the structural advantages of tensegrity.

The designs now collected under the name Bound Basics each attempt to expose the pieces’ construction and internal stability. The choice of the materials — FSC-certified ecological HPL multiplex and hemp rope — follows the same spirit, foregrounding the design strategy over the flash and glamour of high-tech surfaces.

Ultimately, these Basics are just that, basic furniture pieces modest and elegant enough to fit in homes or offices without being distracting, and instead striking a strong and lasting note of simplicity.

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by Toon Welling
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Does Wobbly Furniture Tilt Perceptions?

Can fixing that shaky table affect your desire for emotional stability? A new study suggests as much. Researchers at the University of Waterloo in Canada sat one group of volunteers in slightly wobbly chairs next to slightly wobbly tables while another group was seated in chairs next to tables that looked identical but didn’t wobble. Then they asked both groups to perform a couple of tasks: first, to judge the stability of the relationships of celebrity couples by rating the likelihood of a breakup on a scale of one (“extremely unlikely to dissolve”) to seven (“extremely likely to dissolve”) and then to rate their preferences for various traits in a potential romantic partner, also on a scale of one (“not at all desirable”) to seven (“extremely desirable”). The Economist recently revealed the rather ground-shaking results of the study, soon to be published in the journal Psychological Science:

Participants who sat in wobbly chairs at wobbly tables gave the celebrity couples an average stability score of 3.2 while those whose furniture did not wobble gave them 2.5. What was particularly intriguing, though, was that those sitting at wonky furniture not only saw instability in the relationships of others but also said that they valued stability in their own relationships more highly. They gave stability-promoting traits in potential romantic partners an average desirability score of 5.0, whereas those whose tables and chairs were stable gave these same traits a score of 4.5. The difference is not huge, but it is statistically significant. Even a small amount of environmental wobbliness seems to promote a desire for an emotional rock to cling to.

Watch for this finding to launch a trend in divorce lawyer office decor: rocking chairs.

Pictured: A work from Dutch designer Anna Ter Haar’s 2010 “Cinderella’s Chair” project.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

paq chair

The idea of paq chair was inspired simply by necessity. When moving into his new apartment, Géza Csire, the young product design engineer had o..

Woven

Woven – A desk where it is possible to work very personally/privately, but without losing contact with everything around the working space.

Skin and Bones

Inspired by the natural reduction of the skeletal system, the Pelleossa chair’s name literally translates to “skin and bones.” The handcrafted wood and stretched fabric chair combines the best of traditional workmanship and modern production efficiency. Each chair is made with a conventional “turn and copy” technique, where the repetition of only two diameters (30mm max and 15mm min) optimizes both the usable material

Designer: Francesco Faccin


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
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(Skin and Bones was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Ridged Roof Furniture by Ainė Bunikytė

You can enjoy breakfast, lunch or dinner on top of your sloping roof using this furniture by Lithuanian design graduate Ainė Bunikytė (+ slideshow).

Ridged Roof Furniture by Ainė Bunikytė

Entitled Ridged Roof Furniture, the transparent perspex table and two accompanying chairs can be secured to any building with a pitched roof and are attached to a ladder that hangs over the central ridge.

Ridged Roof Furniture by Aine Bunikyte

The rooftop seating area currently offers a view of the city from above the Užupis art incubator in Vilnius, but is inaccessible to anyone without their own ladder.

Ridged Roof Furniture by Ainė Bunikytė

Bunikytė was inspired by childhood memories of climbing onto rooftops to create the furniture for her graduation project at the Vilnius Academy of Art.

Ridged Roof Furniture by Ainė Bunikytė

Other graduate projects from this year include a tactile speaker and a set of tools controlled by mouth movements.

Ridged Roof Furniture by Ainė Bunikytė

Photography is by Kernius Pauliukonis.

Ridged Roof Furniture by Ainė Bunikytė

Here’s some text from the designer:


Ainė’s Bunikytė’s work is a table served on a ridged roof, it calls for a sip of tea over the old town while promising a romantic adventure. The cause of this object – to present vision, an offer to find a personal space, to dive deep into the dream envisioned by Ainė. Just as far the author believes, nobody has ever made any furniture for an angled rooftop.

The art design project with a series of future proposals and a realized one was presented for her graduation from master studies in Vilnius Academy of Art. This para-functional invitation – is a result of three years of research based on function paradoxes within design objects and designed spaces.

One of the most important element in the project is human’s inherent wish to find one’s own space, to have a secret, to differ, to find such place from which one could watch others but could stay unseen at the same time. The other aspect is a will to be higher, to be raised over the ground – this is the instinct of safety.

The idea was inspired from the author’s enjoyment to spend time on roofs and from admiration of old roofs since childhood.

Like other author’s design projects, such as interior space, the furniture is designed in a non-logical sequence, using paradox as a principle, but still it invites, enhances charm and wish since it comes from a dream.

The roof also becomes para-functional since it gains a new function – it becomes a floor. It’s a paradox that the table and the chairs would be almost functional if they weren’t unreachable. By defying conventional practice the furniture is balancing between the imaginary and the real. In our minds it creates a scenario of using it, but is still unusable. The invitation is even more stimulating since the transparent surfaces don’t hide but show what would wait for us.

A clear contradiction there lets the work to be assigned as a critical design object. The unusual format of presentation enables a wider spread of such practices as art design and especially critical design – not many of such works exceed the borders of meta-culture institutions and reach a wider audience.

The furniture interacting with surrounding architecture and beautiful panorama turns the city into a huge gallery in which the work is exposed.

This visionary furniture is created for Vilnius Oldtown roofs, most of which are pitched, but it becomes an interesting start and a suggestion to form such roof culture in the whole world. This is a proposal for a new conception of public space.

Created as art design object and presented on 3rd July, 2012, encouraged by lots of positiveness and curiosity, this academic project will become usable design work. Patents are pending for this project as well as for other ridged roof furniture units, and we are about to realize the idea in the nearest future.

The table and the chairs may be seen this summer on the roof of Užupis art incubator in Vilnius.

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by Ainė Bunikytė
appeared first on Dezeen.

Woody Chair

Woody is a chair with a simple design, functional and ergonomic, to which was added an asset: the illustration. To this propose, Galula links itself w..

Spikey Seating

The Icicle Chair applies wintery inspiration to gothic style to form one eye-catching seating solution! The design looks somewhat threatening with its sharp spikes but is contrasted by a sleek, uniform seat and back. The dungeon-esque design certainly isnt for everyone, but one thing’s for certain, it’s sure to be a conversation starter!

Designer: Ali Alavi


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
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(Spikey Seating was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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