Skinned latex casts of derelict buildings by KNOL Ontwerp

Thin latex casts from derelict buildings hang in this installation by Amsterdam design studio KNOL Ontwerp to form ghostly recreations of the spaces they were taken from (+ slideshow).

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

Skinned is a growing collection of latex sheets cast from buildings and streets that can be cut, folded up and taken elsewhere by Jorien Kemerink, who founded KNOL Ontwerp with Celine de Waal Malefijt in 2009.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

The material creates a translucent copy of the architectural details but also captures some of the dirt. “The history of use is caught in the cast,” says Kemerink. “Like skin transplantations, they can be taken to other spaces where they get new spatial meaning.”

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

She particularly finds the process useful when designers or creatives take over a vacant building for a short space of time.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“When a vacant building is being reused again, you often encounter dirty or decayed spaces,” she explains. “The latex provides you with a way to ‘seal’ all the dirt and put a clean layer on top, making the place instantly useable.”

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“When you leave again the parts that you want to preserve can be cut out, folded and taken to new locations,” she adds.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

Kemerink recently taught a class at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, China, where she worked with students to make casts of places in the city.

Skinned by KNOL Ontwerp

“This project looks at the emotional connection that people have with a space,” she said. “My dream is to collect more and more special places in various places all over the world.”

Skinned latex casts of derelict buildings by KNOL Ontwerp

The post Skinned latex casts of derelict buildings
by KNOL Ontwerp
appeared first on Dezeen.

Can City mobile aluminium furnace by Studio Swine

London designers Studio Swine built a mobile foundry and used it to cast aluminium stools from drinks cans they collected on the streets of São Paulo (+ movie).

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Over 80 percent of the city’s recycling is collected informally on carts pulled by independent waste collectors known as catadores. Studio Swine wanted to create a system that would help them recycle the rubbish they collect into products they can sell.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The pair collected discarded cans from a street vendor and used cooking oil for fuel to smelt the aluminium on site, turning the street into an improvised manufacturing line. They made moulds by pressing objects they found locally into sand collected from construction sites in the area.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine - crushed cans

The resulting stools have tops that bear the impressions of ventilation bricks, a palm leaf, the base of a basket, a hub cap and plastic tubing.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

“Unlike the conventional aluminum furniture, they’re each unique and expressive,” said the designers. “Manufactured on the spot, they transform ephemeral street materials into metal objects, providing a portrait of the street.”

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The resulting stools were donated to the vendor who provided the cooking oil and the furnace remains in São Paulo, where the project will continue with a new series of products and furniture made in a favela.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

“Mining the city for materials, the perception of the city changes,” said the designers. “Where once you saw rubbish, now you can see resources to be transformed into new products.”

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The project was commissioned by Coletivo Amor de Madre Gallery in São Paulo and involved working with several catadore co-operatives to find both the materials to make the furnace, and the oil and cans to use it.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

“Each stool takes around 60 cans, but catadores collecting cans around a football stadium on a match day bring in many thousands of cans,” Studio Swine told us. “The idea is that catadores will share a furnace and greatly increase the amount of money they can get for the materials they collect.”

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

They suggest that the furnace can be used to cast anything to sell, including small items like souvenirs for the 2014 World Cup or 2016 Olympic Games. “However, the potential of open sand casting lends itself very well to larger pieces and we are interested in how this can be incorporated into small scale architecture,” they added.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Finding ways to enhance local industries by making products from waste on-site is familiar ground for Studio Swine, who graduated from the Royal College of Art in 2011 with a project that proposed making stools from waste plastic picked up by fishing trawlers, melting the material down and moulding it into furniture onboard the boat.

They’re also no strangers to making and selling in the streets, having designed a mobile food stall for cooking and selling pig heads the year before.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Here’s some more information from Studio Swine:


In nature, everything is interconnected and there is no concept of waste, but in cities there are lots of loose connections.
The city has so much potential, there’s a strong culture of improvisation here. The streets are busy with people looking to make a living in ingenious ways, ever flexible to emerging opportunities.

In a city with some 20 million residents the waste is on a massive scale, however over 80% of the recycling is collected by an informal system of independent Catadores, pulling their handmade carts around the streets.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

We looked at the way they worked, the materials they collected, and how we could learn from them to create a new model of manufacturing – taking waste materials that could be readily found, to manufacture goods on the street, with the potential to make livelihoods extend beyond rubbish collection.

The world is becoming increasingly more globalised, something that we are interested in is how design can help retain a strong regional identity.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

We wanted to tap into this existing street culture – to turn a public space into a manufacturing line. We went around the streets collecting things we can cast. Mining the city for materials, the perception of the city changes, where once you saw rubbish, now you can see resources to be transformed into new products. The city consumes a lot of fried food so we collected used cooking oil for free and plentiful fuel.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Then we needed to make moulds which are cheap and adaptable. As Sao Paulo is under constant development, construction sand can be found all over the city.

What is the future of manufacturing? Where the industrial revolution was built on the concept of making the same thing thousands of times, will future manufacturing incorporate individual characteristics or even chance?

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

There is something magical about the moment cold hard metal becomes a hot liquid – the moment it’s quickened and given life. We wanted the surface to reverberate with the texture of the sand and the metal’s molten state, to bear clearly the impression left by the objects we found that day.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

We made stools for the food vendor that provided the waste cans & oil. Unlike the conventional aluminum furniture they’re each unique and expressive. Manufactured on the spot, they transform ephemeral street materials into metal objects, providing a portrait of the street.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

Where the majority of carbon cost is in the transportation of goods rather than their production – we could see manufacturing returning to our cities, adaptable to customisations and able to ‘cast on demand’.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The potential of mobile sand casting is endless, offering another way to produce. From small items to architectural elements, it can change the face of the city.

Can City aluminium furnace for Sao Paulo catadores by Studio Swine

The project was made possible with the generous support of Heineken.

The post Can City mobile aluminium furnace
by Studio Swine
appeared first on Dezeen.

I Have a Lifestyle model-kit window installation by Fabio Novembre for Tommy Hilfiger

Our second story today featuring products presented like model kits is Italian designer Fabio Novembre‘s window installation for Tommy Hilfiger at La Rinascente department stores.

I Have a Lifestyle installation at La Rinascente by Fabio Novembre for Tommy Hilfiger

I Have a Lifestyle included Fabio Novembre‘s interpretation of a man’s wardrobe, with items from the autumn 2013 Tommy Hilfiger Tailored campaign displayed alongside items including a champagne bottle, headphones and a bicycle to create a men’s lifestyle kit.

The kit of parts was split into sections, with a mannequin and small accessories on one side, clothing and larger accessories in the centre, then sports equipment at the other end.

I Have a Lifestyle installation at La Rinascente by Fabio Novembre for Tommy Hilfiger

“The final result was a still-life composite of the essential items a man should have in his wardrobe inspired by Tommy Hilfiger’s quintessentially all-American aesthetic,” said Novembre.

Pieces were held in place by interlocking metal tubes and the whole installation was painted blue.

I Have a Lifestyle installation at La Rinascente by Fabio Novembre for Tommy Hilfiger

The display was installed at La Rinascente in Rome in September, before it was moved to the Milan store for October.


Fabio Novembre is pleased to announce a collaboration with Tommy Hilfiger for its Fall 2013 Tommy Hilfiger Tailored campaign to create an artistic window display. The unique installation will be revealed in the windows of La Rinascente in Rome from 10 to 23 September 2013, and then in La Rinascente in Milan from 8 to 14 October.

I Have a Lifestyle installation at La Rinascente by Fabio Novembre for Tommy Hilfiger

Titled “I Have a Lifestyle”, the installation is Novembre’s creative interpretation of a man’s wardrobe, incorporating pieces from the Tommy Hilfiger Tailored collection. The piece features metal tubing with interlocking pipes running throughout, each coated with navy blue nitro and acrylic paint.

An expression of men’s lifestyle, the final result is a still-life composite of the essential items a man should have in his wardrobe inspired by Tommy Hilfiger’s quintessentially all-American aesthetic. Novembre’s “I Have a Lifestyle” installation will appear in the windows of La Rinascente, Italy’s most renowned department store, in both Rome and Milan.

The post I Have a Lifestyle model-kit window installation
by Fabio Novembre for Tommy Hilfiger
appeared first on Dezeen.

Toren van Uitwierde staircase by Onix

Dutch Design Week 2013: architecture studio Onix has inserted a wooden staircase inside a medieval Dutch church to provide access to the apex of the bell tower (+ slideshow).

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix

Onix created the route to allow visitors to explore a previously inaccessible part of Uitwierde church, which is located in the Dutch province of Groningen.

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix

Visitors are led past original building features, such as the clock and bells, while information boards tell the story of the tower’s history.

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix

The angular bannister of the staircase changes height as it ascends, framing different views of the thirteenth-century building, and interior windows reveal details of the historic stonework.

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix

The architects slotted the modern structure around the wooden beams that frame the tower, allowing them to jut through in some places.

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix

A seating area is located on the uppermost section of the route and leads out a balcony offering views of the surrounding countryside.

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix

Toren van Uitwierde, which translates as Tower of Uitwierde, won the Spatial category at last week’s Dutch Design Awards, where the selection committee said: “The design directs the gaze of the visitor in a surprising way. You move and you are guided by the design.”

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix

Other winners included a concept for shrinking the human population, while the top prize went to Iris van Herpen’s fashion collection featuring 3D-printed garments.

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix

Here’s a project description from Onix:


Tower of Uitwierde

On the northern edge of Delfzijl stands the tower of Uitwierde. For this tower, we have made a design so that the tower can be used as a viewpoint. The path to the viewpoint is designed as an experience path that shows the specific characteristics of the tower.

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix
Concept diagram

The tower consists of three distinctive areas: the dark basement (entrance), the vertical tower space and the space under the hood. These spaces are connected by the experience path in the form of a staircase. The closed railing of the stairs constantly changes height and thus leads the sight of the visitor. The path leads the visitor along specific points, such as the clock, the bells and the old construction, but also along information points that tell something about the history of the tower and its location. At the end of the route the path is also visible on the outside of the tower. Here is the viewpoint overlooking the surrounding countryside and in the distance, behind the dike, the water of the Ems.

Toren van Uitwierde by Onix
Concept diagram

The post Toren van Uitwierde staircase
by Onix
appeared first on Dezeen.

Crystal wireless LED installation by Studio Roosegaarde

Dutch Design Week 2013: designer Daan Roosegaarde has unveiled a “Lego from Mars” installation consisting of hundreds of wireless LED crystals that light up when placed on the floor (+ movie).

Crystal by Studio Roosegaarde

Crystal, a permanent installation that has opened in Eindhoven during Dutch Design Week, allows visitors to arrange the glowing crystals in patterns – and even steal them.

Crystal by Studio Roosegaarde

“We made thousands of little crystals which have two LEDs in them,” Roosegaarde told Dezeen. “When they’re placed in the area that you see here, they light up. It’s a sort of Lego from Mars. You can play, you can interact, you can steal them.”

Crystal by Studio Roosegaarde

There’s no battery, no cables,” he added. “The floor has a weak magnetic field, which gives light to the Crystals by wireless power.”

Crystal by Studio Roosegaarde

The installation is located in a void created at the newly refurbished Natlab, a building that once contained the Philips Natuurkundig Laboratorium (Philips Physics Laboratory) and which played a key role in the development of products including the electric lightbulb and the compact disc.

Crystal by Studio Roosegaarde

“This location is quite special. Philips produced the lightbulb here; Einstein worked here on a lot of ideas,” said Roosegaarde. “So the city commissioned us to think about the future of light, where light gets liberated. It jumps out of the lightbulb and becomes free.”

Crystal by Studio Roosegaarde

LEDs are housed inside plastic tokens which visitors can tesselate to form patterns or words. Roosegaarde plans to publish the designs so that people can produce their own open-source versions in future.

Crystal by Studio Roosegaarde

“Every month we will make new crystals,” said Roosegaarde. “We will open-source how to make them, so students can make their own in different colours and shapes. New crystals will arrive and I will have nothing to do with it. People can do whatever they want. In that way it becomes an eco-system of behaviour. That’s going to be super-exciting, to let go of control and see what will happen.”

Crystal by Studio Roosegaarde

Visitors to the installation have already used the Crystals to write messages, including a marriage proposal. “We had one lady whose boyfriend proposed to her last night. He wrote ‘Marry me’ and he brought her here.”

Daan Roosegaarde of Studio Roosegaarde
Daan Roosegaarde of Studio Roosegaarde

Today Roosegaarde also unveiled a concept for an “electronic vacuum cleaner” that could remove smog from urban skies.

Here’s some text from Studio Roosegaarde:


Innovative Crystals of light in Eindhoven

Daan Roosegaarde: “People can play and share their stories of light”

At the start of the Dutch Design Week on Saturday 19 October the interactive light artwork CRYSTAL can be experienced in Eindhoven. The permanent artwork consists out of hundreds of LED-crystals which brighten when people touch them. Artist Daan Roosegaarde calls them “Lego from Mars”. The name refers not only to its futuristic design, but also to its endless potential to play. CRYSTAL has been previously exhibited in Amsterdam, Paris, Moscow and is now permanent in Eindhoven NL.

The Crystals are placed in a black tunnel at the Natlab, the place where Einstein once worked, where Philips produced its lightbulbs, and the first CD-ROM was presented. They are part of the light program Light-S which wants to create new experiences between people and space. CRYSTAL is a perfect match, the Crystals are white geometric shapes with LEDs inside. The local floor has a magnetic field which allows the Crystals to light-up. CRYSTAL is therefore one of the latest innovations in light. The artwork CRYSTAL can be experienced at night at Natlab, Kastanjelaan 500 in Eindhoven NL.

Interactive crystals

CRYSTAL is not only innovatie in terms of appearance, but also the interactive element makes the artwork unique. With Crystals people can share their creativity. For example someone used Crystals for a wedding proposal to his girlfriend by writing the letters ‘Marry me’. Artist Daan Roosegaarde describes this phenomenon as “Facebook Square”, where social media and light are combined to create new public places.

The future with CRYSTAL

Studio Roosegaarde will continue to make new Crystals with the vision that light is enhancing the relation between people and their environment. The coming years the studio will develop Crystals with different shapes and colors together with high-tech companies and cultural organisations. Crystal keeps on growing.

About Daan Roosegaarde

Daan Roosegaarde (Nieuwkoop, 1979) is artist, innovator and ambassador of the Dutch Design Week 2013. With his Studio Roosegaarde he explores the relationship between art and technology to make the world more interesting, better or beautiful. Interactive designs such as ‘Dune’ and ‘Smart Highway’ have been exhibited around the world. www.studioroosegaarde.net

About Light-S

Light-S is an innovative project by the city of Eindhoven and Park Strijp Beheer. Within Light-S several projectteams are researching how light can create new experiences between people, space and technologies. www.light-s.nl

The post Crystal wireless LED installation
by Studio Roosegaarde
appeared first on Dezeen.

Spaces in Between by Aldo Bakker at Gallery Libby Sellers

Spaces in Between by Aldo Bakker at Gallery Libby Sellers

Dutch designer Aldo Bakker has curated an exhibition at Gallery Libby Sellers in London that presents his products alongside complimentary pieces from the gallery’s inventory.

Pose by Aldo Bakker at Spaces in Between
Pose by Aldo Bakker

Gallery Libby Sellers invited Aldo Bakker to select works from its collection that share materials or details with his own and present these as a way “to create interesting conversations, connections and juxtapositions between the two.”

Watering Can by Aldo Bakker for Spaces in Between
Watering Can by Aldo Bakker

Bakker chose pieces by Formafantasma, Max Lamb, Julia Lohmann, Peter Marigold, Jonathan Muecke and Lex Pott, and says that he was interested in seeing his work alongside that of designers such as Lamb and Marigold because of their contrasting working methods.

“Both Max and Peter work in the moment, their works comes to existence by doing,” Bakker told Dezeen. “In my case, the moment is dissolved in the whole, and you do not see many traces of the process of making.”

Wooden Vase by Peter Marigold at Spaces in Between by Aldo Bakker
Wooden Vase by Peter Marigold

Materials that recur often in Bakker’s work, including metal, wood, glass and ceramic, are also prevalent in the works that he chose for the show.

“Contrary to a solo exhibition, a group show offers more entrances to the different works, and most likely enables the viewer to see the objects more clearly and precisely because of the oppositions,” Bakker explains. “I hope that the differences between the works will help visitors understand them better.”

Stepstool by Jonathan Meueke at Spaces in Between by Aldo Bakker
Stepstool by Jonathan Meueke

At the 2010 Milan Furniture Fair Bakker presented a series of copper objects, including a tubular watering can that features in the exhibition.

Spaces in Between is at Gallery Libby Sellers until 14 December 2013.

Here’s are some more details from the gallery:


Spaces in Between
15 October – 14 December 2013

Gallery Libby Sellers is pleased to present Spaces In Between – a group show curated by the award-winning designer Aldo Bakker.

Craftica by Formafantasma and FENDI at Spaces in Between by Aldo Bakker
Craftica by Formafantasma

Contemplation and communication are at the heart of Bakker’s practice; his works in wood, metal, glass and ceramic are rigorously considered and purposely provoke reaction from the end user. By way of highlighting this, and to initiate a dialogue with the gallery, Bakker was invited to select objects from both the gallery’s existing works and his own extensive repertoire in order to create interesting conversations, connections and juxtapositions between the two.

Having had free access to the gallery’s entire inventory, Bakker’s choices confirm his position as an arbiter of materials, detail and form. His final selection comprises works by Formafantasma, Max Lamb, Julia Lohmann, Peter Marigold, Jonathan Muecke and Lex Pott – and each will be presented as counterpoints with specific designs from Bakker’s own works. While Bakker will introduce these interchanges between objects, it will be left to the visitor to bring their own interpretations and translations to the conversations.

Particles by Aldo Bakker at Spaces in Between by Aldo Bakker
Particles by Aldo Bakker

Bakker (b.1971) views his designs as the work of a ‘vormgever’, which in Dutch literally means ‘giver of form’. As he says, “both in my language and in my form, I choose to approach ‘authenticity’ and ‘originality’ very precisely and I allow my designs to acquire physical shape only when I deem them to be ‘autonomous entities’”. His work can be found in international public collections, including Vitra (Germany), the Victoria & Albert Museum (London), the Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam), Museum Boijmans van Beuningen (Rotterdam), the Zuiderzee Museum (Enkhuizen) and the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum (New York). He has collaborated with clients including Thomas Eyck, Izé, Sèvres, Nodus and Wallpaper*. Bakker was the recipient of the 2012 Z33 Architecture Competition Award, and has also won Wallpaper* Design Awards for ‘Best Stool’ and ‘Best Use of Material’ (2011). He lives and works in Amsterdam and is a tutor at the Design Academy Eindhoven.

Opening times: Tuesday – Friday, 11am – 6pm Saturday, 11am – 4pm

The post Spaces in Between by Aldo Bakker
at Gallery Libby Sellers
appeared first on Dezeen.

Kora Vases by Studiopepe for Spotti Edizioni

Six limited-edition vases were created by Milan designers Studiopepe for a window installation in central London based on the work of postmodern designer Ettore Sottass (+ slideshow).

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

Designed for Italian design brand Spotti Edizioni, the Kora Vases by Studiopepe were exhibited as part of the So Sottsass exhibition at design store Darkroom London for the London Design Festival 2013.

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

The vases with asymmetric handles were specially customised in a range of hand-painted graphic patterns and bright monotone colours.

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

So Sottsass featured a number of works by contemporary designers that referenced forms and patterns used in Ettore Sottsass’ work during the mid twentieth century.

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

Darkroom is a design accessories shop curated by Rhonda Drakeford and Lulu Roper-Caldbeck.

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

Here is more information from Darkroom:


This is Sottsass with a twist, so expect a sculptural array of hand-painted laminate-style patterns, colour palettes that clash cute with crazy, and juxtaposed materials that push the boundaries between furniture and fashion, plus jewellery that double as objets d’art, and textiles, cushions, stationery and bags.

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

Visionary and contrary, throughout his life Sottsass worked across many disciplines, and his influence can be found everywhere from high fashion to office furniture in the second half of the 20th century.

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

From the iconic Valentine typewriter for Olivetti, to the subversively kitschy furniture of the Memphis group, Sottsass enlivened the functionality of ordinary objects, while pushing the boundaries of current tastes and creating new paradigms for future design.

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

For our So Sottsass season, Darkroom will be drawing on the designer’s bright and playful palette from his time with the legendary Memphis Group, and we’ll also be finding inspiration from the rough-edged modernism of his early ceramics.

Kora Vases by Spotti Edizioni

The post Kora Vases by Studiopepe
for Spotti Edizioni
appeared first on Dezeen.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop

ELEV installation by Elevation Workshop architects

Beijing architecture studio Elevation Workshop completed a freestanding structure made from strips of strengthened bamboo for Beijing Design Week 2013.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop architects

Elevation Workshop was one of thirteen practices invited to create an installation using bamboo steel, a laminated and treated material that is formed using bamboo and produced in China.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop architects

Designed and assembled by the practice, the structure is formed from vertical members that stand at angles to zig-zagging horizontal planes. Visitors interacted with the piece by sitting or lying on the benches, or by walking through a hinged upright element that opens like a door.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop architects

All the installations were exhibited at the 751 D-Park, a former industrial facility in northeast Beijing.

Beijing Design Week 2013 featured a few of installations, including a pattern of strings through a Beijing hutong and a pavilion surrounded by 1200 vertical brass tubes.

See more information from the architects below:


ELEV installation for Beijing Design Week

The installation is a freestanding system that contains space for human activity and interaction.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop architects
Plan- click for larger image

The design generates an ambiguous space by creating a set of floating horizontal surfaces that offer functional need for visitors.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop architects
Section- click for larger image

They are invited to lie, sit, stand and walk through the installation, constantly shifting between being enclosed and being exposed.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop architects

The suspended edge condition provides a gradual and soft connection to the surrounding area.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop architects

The boundary between inside and outside is blurred.

Clue installation by Elevation Workshop architects
Perspective diagram -click for larger image

The elegant vertical element resembles the material quality of bamboo, lean yet strong.

The post Clue installation by
Elevation Workshop
appeared first on Dezeen.

Studio Visit: The Principals: The Brooklyn-based group designs everything from dominoes to shop interiors and high-concept installations

Studio Visit: The Principals


What does a studio—one that turns out a broad range of projects that require attention to the most finite details as well as broad strokes and big picture ideas—need? Balance. And after what The Principals founders…

Continue Reading…

Paizi 38 installation by reMIX Studio

Beijing designers reMIX Studio created a string installation that guided visitors through a derelict building to a pop-up restaurant at Beijing Design Week 2013 (+ slideshow).

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

Entitled Paizi 38, reMIX Studio created the intervention as part of the urban regeneration of the historic Dashilar hutong in Beijing.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

Lengths of string and a wooden path created a journey through three traditional courtyards, leading visitors over rubble and through holes in the walls.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

Threaded through the doorways, the strings spanned room lengths in grouped arrangements.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

In the final courtyard space, lightbulbs hung from the ends of the strings over dining tables at a temporary restaurant.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

“The city builds millions of square metres every year at an uncontrollable speed whilst instead this project forces the investors, the designers, the city to a new slowed-down development,” said the practice.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

Following the temporary intervention for this year’s Beijing Design Week, the space is to be turned into a boutique hotel.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

At last year’s event a constellation of illuminated ceramic yoghurt pots were hung in the stairwell of a former bicycle factory and Nike shoe material was used to create a colourful web in a rusting gas tower.

See more installation design »
See more architecture and design in Beijing »

Here’s some more information from the designers:


This space will become after the Beijing Design Week a new boutique hotel that will be grafted into the existing building through precise insertions and punctual modifications.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

These considerations are the premises and the constrictions of the temporary installation we are exhibiting today. Starting from the structural survey and the analysis of the actual spaces that in succession form an extended horizontal layered system – an unique feature for a building typology such as this one especially in this area of Beijing.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

We propose a new connective path that reveals the existing building secrets and tunnelling throughout the architectural body it highlights in few observations points the quality and characteristics of the future intervention.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio

The system of new portals is a succession of points of view that, passing in the position where the new hotel circulation will be placed, forces the visitors into an unexpected journey; challenging his imagination and forcing him to redefine the meaning of “exploration”.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio
Diagram showing before installation and after hotel is built

The path ends in the main room where a series of photographs taken from the Orchid hotel construction will show the quality of the future refurbishment.

The Orchid installation by reMIX Studio
Plan and elevation

The tunnel, branching in a three lines lighting feature marks visually the areas of the main space where the opening dinner of the Beijing Design Week will take place.

The post Paizi 38 installation
by reMIX Studio
appeared first on Dezeen.