Monarch Coffee Table
Posted in: UncategorizedTeanest
Posted in: UncategorizedDezeen Platform: today at Dezeen Space, Pia Wüstenberg showcases pieces from her Processed Paper project, a series of products made of recycled paper.
She rolls and twists waste paper into a raw material, then experiments with processes and applications.
“The material can be very delicate and transparent, or equally it can be structural and strong,” she explains. “This depends on the way it is processed in the initial making of the raw material and in the way it is refined in the shape-giving process.”
Pieces at Dezeen Platform include pendant lamps and a folding table where the two wide legs are actually integrated vases.
Wüstenberg is a German-born designer, now working in London after her time in Finland. She graduated from the Royal College of Art this summer – see our story on her Stacking Vessels graduation project here.
Wüstenberg is not alone in tackling the huge quantities of waste paper that modern life generates: Mieke Meijer and Vij5 presented their NewspaperWood project at Ventura Lambrate in Milan this year, Debbie Wijskamp makes pulped paper into blocks then saws them up to build furniture and Jens Praet completed a similar project for Droog in 2008. Greetje van Tiem creates textiles from old newspapers and Aesop have recently launched in New York with a kiosk at Grand Central that’s made from over 1000 copies of the New York Times.
See our top ten stories about paper here.
Each day, for 30 days, a different designer will use a one metre by one metre space to exhibit their work at Dezeen Space. See the full lineup for Dezeen Platform here and see all our stories about the work on show here. We’re also filming interviews with all the exhibitors – watch them on Dezeen Screen.
More about Dezeen Space here.
Dezeen Space
17 September – 16 October
Monday-Saturday 11am-7pm
Sunday 11am-5pm
54 Rivington Street,
London EC2A 3QN
See also:
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Thomas Hudson at Dezeen Platform | Julian Hakes at Dezeen Platform | Roger Arquer at Dezeen Platform |
Quada Chair
Posted in: UncategorizedParabolic
Posted in: Uncategorizedklassiker lounge chair
Posted in: UncategorizedThe Lily Chairs
Posted in: UncategorizedThe Crates by Naihan Li
Posted in: 2011, Beijing Design Week 2011, crates, Naihan LiBeijing Design Week 2011: Beijing architect Naihan Li presented crates that unfold to become a collection of furniture at a pop-up disco lounge for Beijing Design Week.
The largest crate at Concierge in Dashilar Alley folded out into a mini cinema and karaoke box, while others became chairs and tables.
Other crates from the collection conceal folding sofas and beds, while some contain dressing tables, kitchens and wardrobes.
One of the wooden storage boxes folds into a table football.
Lee teamed up with curator Beatrice Leanza as part of the collective think-tank BAO Atelier to create the Concierge installation for the festival.
Folding stools from the collection were also on show at the WUHAO teahouse during the week – see our earlier story here and see more stories about Beijing Design Week here.
Another range of furniture designed around packing crates was presented by Dutch designers Studio Makkink & Bey in London last year – see more about this project in our earlier story.
Here’s some more information from the festival organisers:
BAO Atelier for Beijing Design Week 2011
Architect and designer Li Naihan’s latest series of home and office furniture The Crates (2011) is inspired by the volatile and exuberant spirit of a contemporary urban habitat like Beijing and its epic detournment of building construction, decay and regeneration.
Li’s mobile creations accommodate with poetic comfort the moody impracticality of globe-trotting, and always on the move lifestyles.
Sofas, beds, bookshelves, workstations, and foosball tables pop out of their own shipping shell to form a unique spatial language that is whole with a ‘total’ concept of dwelling.
Wooden crates become carapaces to contain the body, objects and memories we carry with them: situational freeplay and sculptural abstraction blend here to make room for a design practice which is intrinsically relational and open-ended.
In this occasion, a brand new all-in-one media box is going to be presented, inclusive of a mini- cinema, a dj deck, lights and karaoke appliances, multimedia screens and a seating area.
Concierge is developed in collaboration with Beatrice Leanza, curator and co-founder with Li of Beijing-based studio BAO Atelier, a creative lab integrating curatorial, editorial and design production to promote new encounters and transversal research among the visual arts, design and architecture.
This special installation materializes an inexistent part of an actual building dubbed ‘The House of Leaves’, a semi-private/semi-public residence located on the edge of the 5th Ring Road in Caochangdi village.
Drawn upon an intimate image of both action and reflection, this serendipitous space represents an antechamber of no definite time or spatial confines, a public retreat and an interior garden activated by a politics otherwise known as ‘meeting’.
Daily talk-shops and presentations are accompanied by impromptu cooking sessions kindly provided by local food lovers.
See also:
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Crate Series by Makkink & Bey | Authentic Wood by Le Corbusier | Woodware by Max Lamb |