Herman Miller to Buy Maharam for $156 Million


(Photo: Maharam)

After four generations of family ownership, Maharam is changing hands. The beloved New York City-based textiles firm, founded in 1902 by Louis Maharam, is being acquired by Herman Miller for $156 million, the company announced this week. “Much as we’ve struggled with this decision, our philosophical kinship with Herman Miller helped make this difficult step a far easier one,” said CEO Michael Maharam, who along with his brother, Stephen (who serves as COO), will remain active in the day-to-day management of the company for the next couple of years. “Herman Miller’s potential to provide the wherewithal to pursue important new initiatives, as well as an established reach into both retail and international markets and the greatest possible strength of association, offers a powerful lever in achieving our design-centered strategic vision.” Maharam is perhaps best known for its re-editions of iconic 20th century designs, including the work of Anni Albers, Charles and Ray Eames, and Alexander Girard. In recent years the company has developed textiles with collaborators such as Hella Jongerius, Paul Smith, Marian Bantjes, and Sarah Morris.

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Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

There’s an upside-down living room on the ceiling of this Polish fashion boutique created by design studio smallna for fashion brand Risk. Made in Warsaw (+ slideshow).

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

The designers at smallna were influenced by the reversible nature of Risk. Made in Warsaw’s clothing range, in which items can be worn inside-out or back-to-front, to create the illusion of defying gravity.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

An inflatable sofa by Polish brand Malafor, a chair and a side table have been fixed to the ceiling, along with a crumpled skirt and a pair of shoes that appear to have been discarded onto the simulated floor above.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

White-painted steel pipes protrude from the walls, ceiling and floor, snaking around the perimeter of the space and forming rails from which clothes appear to hang in both directions.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

A circular dressing room wrapped in a grey fabric curtain extends the full height of the shop, connecting floor to ceiling as though it could be accessed from either plane.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

An upside-down balloon that appears to be made from concrete hangs from the ceiling, seemingly reversing the rules of gravity.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

The same balloon, when viewed from the reversed perspective, appears to be floating but held to the ground by a brick. This deceptive installation was created by Polish artist Joanna Gwóźdź, whilst Daiusz Kwiet – another Polish artist – was commissioned to paint the walls of the shop to look like the sky.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

Vintage light fittings are dotted around the space, including 1940s American train lights, 1960s Polish tram lights and a Japanese mirrorball from the 1970s.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

All the soft furnishings throughout the shop are made from the same grey melange fabric that the Risk. Made in Warsaw designers use to make their clothes.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

Other shop interiors we’ve recently featured on Dezeen include the Who*s Who fashion boutique by Italian designer Fabio Novembre and a series of five outlets designed by Zaha Hadid for Milan-based fashion designer Neil Barrett. See all our stories about shop design.

Risk. Made in Warsaw Shop by smallna

Photography is by Celestyna Król.

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YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Tokyo-based Klein Dytham Architecture has used the television-shaped icon of YouTube’s logo to decorate the walls of the video website’s new production studio in the Japanese capital (+ slideshow).

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Architects Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein reproduced the red logo in lacquered ceramic to tile the walls of the reception. The tiles continue through to a lounge and a kitchen area, gradually fading to pink and then white.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

“Clear branding is everything in the trillon-clip video landscape we live and surf,” Dytham told Dezeen. “It is seems to work; Time magazine uses the wall in their news articles about YouTube globally!”

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

In some places the shape is also used to create wooden box shelves, while elsewhere it provides the framework for a wall of black and white photographs.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Located in the KPF-designed Mori Tower, YouTube Space Tokyo is the company’s third video production suite to open, following others in London and Los Angeles, and it contains filming studios, editing rooms, training areas and lounges.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

The main studio is arranged in front of a large window, allowing a skyline view as a backdrop for filming. Other features include a long curtain that can be used to partition spaces and modular sofas that can be reconfigured for different formats.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Dytham explains that the biggest challenge was fitting studio lighting into the ceiling heights of a typical office floor. “By locating the studios in areas of the floor plan with the least amount of air-conditioning ducting we could make them work in standard floor to floor heights,” he explained.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Klein Dytham Architecture also recently completed a Tokyo bookstore that, like the YouTube Space, uses the logo of the brand for the pattern on its walls. Dytham discusses this project in an interview we filmed at the World Architecture Festival.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

See more architecture by Klein Dytham »
See more new projects in Tokyo »

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Read on for more details from Klein Dytham Architecture:


Klein Dytham architecture
YouTube Space Tokyo

Klein Dytham architecture’s (KDa) project has its origins in a global act of generosity. YouTube has created YouTube Space Tokyo that provides free facilities for the use of their top video producers in Asia. Including studios, production suites, training areas, and lounges, the Tokyo center is one of a number of similar facilities YouTube are creating around the world – others are in London and Los Angeles. YouTube’s goal was to create a kind of ‘collaborative production facility’, providing both training and production support to help their most energetic producers elevate their videos to a fully professional level.

KDa’s unique interior project is located high in the Mori Tower in central Tokyo. On entering, the visitors encounter a visually striking wall of red panels derived from the YouTube’s iconic logo – the logo is three-dimensionalized, cast in lightweight ceramic and lacquered. Serving to orient visitors to the facility, the logos fade from bright red in the reception area to pink in the lounge to white in the café and kitchen area.

Around this KDa have arranged production studios, an audio recording space, a green screen studio, control rooms, an editing suite, a make-up room, green rooms, a VIP space, a café, and a large training room for seminars and learning software. All of the spaces – not just the studios – have been designed to allow shooting. The variety of wall surfaces, carpet shades, and ceiling configurations is intended to provide a wide range of settings. One wall serves as a ‘Hall of Fame’ showing images of the top producers. A super-long curtain – made from fabric by famed Tokyo manufacturers, Nuno – snakes through the interior allowing flexible division of the space. A custom-designed sofa can be rearranged to suit a variety of formats – panels, interviews, and so on. The space has also been arranged to maximize the use of the skyline view, including the iconic Tokyo Tower, as a shooting backdrop.

The project is remarkable in squeezing fully equipped production studios into a standard office floor. In the past, production studios required high ceilings to prevent the hot lighting rigs literally cooking performers. Modern LED lights, however, are cool and can be used in the space offered by high-rise office floors. KDa still needed to overcome considerable technical challenges, which they achieved in part by carefully placing the studios in areas of the floor relatively free of ducting and thereby gaining extra ceiling height.

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Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

Interiors firm Studio Linse selected classic furniture by celebrated Dutch designers for the cafe of the recently reopened Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

The new cafe occupies an elevated platform in one of the former courtyards of the historic decorative arts museum, a space that now functions as the building’s entrance hall following an extensive renovation by Cruz y Ortiz Arquitectos.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

Studio Linse used tables and chairs by Gerrit Rietveld, Wim Rietveld, Kho Liang Ie, Friso Kramer and Martin Visser to create a symmetrical dining area featuring pale shades of cream, grey and beige.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

“The main goal was to honour the architecture of the building, so we designed something that was not too overwhelming and in the same colour tones as the rest of the space,” designer Barbara de Vries told Dezeen. “We then decided to take Dutch design classics and tried to choose really timeless pieces.”

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

The studio used the same polished Portuguese stone as the new flooring to create a long counter spanning the length of the cafe. “We wanted the bar to look like it rises out of the floor,” added De Vries.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

To complete the space, two statues from the Rijksmuseum’s large collection were relocated to the entrance points and positioned to face one another.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

The Rijksmuseum reopened to the public earlier this month. See pictures of the renovated galleries in our earlier story.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

See more cafes on Dezeen, including one that also combines a laundrette and a hairdressing salon.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

Photography is by Ewout Huibers.

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end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

A timber lattice supports shelves, worktops, lighting and mirrors down one side of this beauty salon in Osaka by Japanese designer Yasunari Tsukada (+ slideshow).

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Located in the Kitahorie neighbourhood, the salon occupies a long and narrow building, so Yasunari Tsukada designed a clean white interior with few partitons to keep the space as open as possible.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

The gridded wall of timber runs along the right-hand side of the space to create workstations for seven stylists, each with a number of possible shelving configurations.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

“We wondered if we could create flexible, extensible walls without imposing any limitations on their functionality,” explains Tsukada. “In concrete terms, our solution involved building three-dimensional lattice screens resembling parts of a jungle gym that function as architectural pieces of furniture.”

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Openings in the grid create spaces for mirrors, while pendant lights hang through from above and glass panels can be slotted in and out to rearrange the shelving layout.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Two extra seats face a large mirror on the opposite wall, while a plywood screen accommodates a reception desk.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

A narrower wooden framework provides additional shelves towards the rear of the 28-metre-long room, plus a hair-washing area is tucked away at the back.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Named end…Link, the salon is one of the first completed projects by Yasunari Tsukada, who launched his studio in 2012.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Other recently completed salons in Japan include one lined with ceramic tiles and another with birch trees wedged between the floor and ceiling. See more salon interiors.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Photography is by Stirling Elmendorf.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Here’s some more information from Yasunari Tsukada:


end…Link / beauty salon

The name of this beauty salon was inspired by the owner’s passionate desire to turn it into a destination for “the last word in beauty”. Although the design was first completed about five years ago, the previous premises soon grew to feel a little cramped due to the rapidly expanding size of the team, which prompted the owner to move to a new and larger location.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

The rented unit that the owner had prepared as the new platform for his venture was a slender, elongated space measuring 28m deep, with a frontage of 4.4m. Taking advantage of this narrow frontage, we configured each of the spaces in a straightforward manner by taking cues from the existing frame and contours of the property. In addition, by making efficient use of the length of the unit, we were able to maintain a certain distance between each space while connecting them seamlessly to each other. Keeping the number of partitions to an absolute minimum and painting the entire space white achieved a feeling of abstraction, as well as a sense of giving equal importance to both the new and old materials that comprise the walls, ceilings, and floors. The result was an interior that gave pride of place to the people and objects within it.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

The styling space is where the owner’s particular obsessions and passions came to the fore. He requested that we incorporate various functional elements into the mirrored surfaces (for storing or hanging objects). In response, we wondered if we could create flexible, extensible walls without imposing any limitations on their functionality. In concrete terms, our solution involved building three-dimensional lattice screens resembling parts of a jungle gym that function as architectural pieces of furniture. These screens were created using only a structural framework, with no particular significance attached to the form of the lattice itself. When lighting fixtures, glass panels, hooks and other objects are attached, however, the lattice begins to take on a new dimension. Affixing glass panels turns them into display shelves, or tables for the use of customers. Just imagine the transformations that these lattice screens will undergo, thanks to the multiple efforts and innovations of the staff.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Our heated, passionate discussions with the owner gave us real food for thought. Over the course of many meetings, our plans and designs continued to evolve and change repeatedly. Before long, we found ourselves starting to enjoy the progress of these changes. Thus was born a space that would serve as a base for the owner and his team to communicate their ideas and thoughts to their clients, promising the start of a new phase in its evolution and growth.

end…Link beauty salon by Yasunari Tsukada

Project information
Project Name: end…Link
Location: Kitahorie Nishi-ku, Osaka, Japan
Use: Beauty Salon
Built area: 114.56m2
Completion : 2012 November
Design: Yasunari Tsukada design
Contractor: Infinity

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Dezeen offices by Post-Office

The ground floor of Dezeen’s north London office The Surgery has been transformed into a walk-in watch shop by local studio Post-Office (+ slideshow).

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

What used to be the reception at the former doctor’s surgery is now an area for Dezeen Watch Store customers to come and look at, try and buy timepieces from the curated selection available at our online store.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

Watches are caged behind black metal-mesh doors in back-lit plywood storage units, and peg board has been added to hang tools for packing and distributing products including our Dezeen Book of Ideas.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

Post-Office founder Philippe Malouin and his team divided the waiting room with a patchwork of reclaimed windows, creating separate meeting and work spaces.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

“It made immediate sense to create a wall of glass as a barrier,” Malouin told us. “We sourced most of the Victorian windows from eBay, but had to do a lot of research to find windows the right size that could be cut and pasted into the space.”

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

Plants now hang below the skylight in the meeting room and cacti are mounted on the wall.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

“The main features in the space that caught our interest were the windows in the roof,” said Malouin. “They reminded us of a greenhouse, so we filled the space with live plants.”

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

A red sofa obtained at a local market sits below the cacti and a mix of old and new Stool 60s by Alvar Aalto for Artek stand among more foliage around a traditional Berber rug.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

“We wanted to use vintage items to make the space less formal and more homely,” he said.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

Molded plastic Eames chairs from Vitra and bespoke plywood tables furnish the workspace, along with a display of our heads that were scanned and 3D printed for our print-on-demand publication Print Shift.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

Mounted on the walls in both spaces are Malouin’s LED lamps that emanate light through shutter-like slats, which he designed as one of last year’s W Hotels Designers of the Future award winners.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

Outside, the facade has been given a fresh lick of white paint and a relief of our logo has been added above the letterbox.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

When Post-Office originally designed the Dezeen office in 2011 they added a gold curtain, which has been replaced by light grey fabric, and kitted-out the space with Malouin’s Market Table and Hanger Chairs. An exhibition of new work by Malouin is currently on show at an exhibition in Milan.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

Photography above is by Luke Hayes.

Dezeen offices by Post-Office

Wallpaper* Magazine styled Malouin and Dezeen director Rupinder Bhogal as pharmacists for a feature about the space and Dezeen Watch Store, which appears in their May 2013 issue. Photograph by Daniel Stier.

Dezeen is based at 100a Stoke Newington Church Street, London N16 0AP – stop by and take a look at our watches.

See more designs by Philippe Malouin »
See more office interior design »

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Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Milan 2o13: Dutch brand Moooi presented their Unexpected Welcome collection among giant portraits and undressed manequins in Milan’s Tortona district last week (+ slideshow).

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Arranged in small room layouts within a large warehouse, the display featured furniture and products such as lamps formed from upside-down buckets and bathtubs by Belgain artists Studio Job, and a family of red tables by Chinese designers Neri&Hu.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Portraits and images by Dutch photographer Erwin Olaf were blown up to divide the space and provide backdrops for the products.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

The dark space was illuminated by a range of table, floor and pendent lamps from the collection and a small number of spotlights mounted on rigs that criss-crossed the beams in the former industrial space.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Black, cream and orange manequins sporting no clothing could be spotted standing by furniture or reclining on chairs.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

The Frame Moooi award winner, a compact furniture production line designed by Design Academy Eindhoven alumni, was announced in the space on 10 April.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Before the collection was unveiled in Milan, Moooi sent us a set of product sketches by the designers that contributed to the collection.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Moooi’s Unexpected Welcome was located in the Tortona district, not far from where Dezeen set up a video studio in the MINI Paceman Garage as part of our Dezeen and MINI World Tour.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Photography is by Valentina Zanobelli.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

See more designs by Moooi »
See all of our Milan 2013 coverage »

Moooi sent us the following information:


Find your way home to Moooi’s ‘unexpected welcome’ at via Savona 56

On occasion of the 52nd edition of the Salone del Mobile, Moooi has prepared an entire collection of refreshing new designs and surprising experiences that will be revealed at an unexpected location: via Savona 56. From the 8th to the 14th of April Moooi is taking up residence in the imposing space of 1.700 m2 and transforming it into a stylish assembly of colourful living quarters, new product displays, lounges, an artistic exhibition, along with the Frame Moooi award nominees exposition, panel discussion, exclusive ceremony and VIP cocktail evening.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Moooi’s biggest gift to the public is to reveal how a wide empty space can be magically transformed into several iconic, rich and colourfully dressed living quarters. This assortment of interior environments is decorated with an inspiring variety of patterns and colours to embrace any kind of space and make people of different ages, cultures and personalities fall in love with their homes. Of course Moooi will make sure to dress and accessorise all the interior sets with an irresistible blend of exquisite richness, nurturing warmth and colourful playfulness.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

The living quarters will be furnished with items from the current collection & many new, exciting creations by Marcel Wanders, Studio Job, Joost van Bleiswijk, Edward van Vliet, Neri & Hu, Nika Zupanc, Moooi Works/Bart Schilder, Bertjan Pot, Raimond Puts, Lorenza Bozzoli and ZMIK (Mattias Mohr & Rolf Indermuhle). You are welcome to enjoy, amongst others, the artistic temperament and intimate nature of Marcel Wanders’ Canvas, Zliq and Cloud sofas, the retro atmospheres of Nika Zupanc’s Golden Chair and the sophisticated brightness of ZMIK’s Kroon chandeliers. Take some time to walk around and study the high-stream inventiveness of Joost van Bleiswijk’s Construction lamps, the pragmatic playfulness of Studio Job’s Bucket & Tub lamps and the graceful symbolism of Lorenza Bozzoli’s Juuyo lamps.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

The new designs can also be admired and observed in detail along an extensive ‘catwalk’ presentation, in which they ‘pose’ individually to share their pristine beauty with the public. This unexpected home vision brings to life a whole world of new ideas and inspiring settings to brighten up daily life with a touch of magic. It represents a place where visions converge and where every traveller can stop to admire the perfect eclectic mix of culture & experiences that make a home environment more beautiful and unique.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Celebrating the successful cooperation and friendship between two highly creative souls, Marcel Wanders has asked renowned photographer Erwin Olaf to join the Moooi presentation with a grand selection of photographs from his personal work. Interior design meets artistic photography and they connect, creating the perfect balance between two inspiring, stylish and playful realities. The photographs unfold their stories and feelings on a large scale, reaching a stunning height of 4,5 meters especially for this exhibition.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Admiring them feels like stepping into a world of exceptional sophistication, permeated with the sharp intensity of human emotions and enveloped in a dreamy haze of subtle tension. Although cleverly concealed, their hidden stories instinctively appeal and connect to our deepest sense of being, revealing the strong frailty of the human spirit. Erwin Olaf has chosen to challenge the public with pieces for his series Grief, Fall, Keyhole and Berlin which respectively challenge everyday notions, dwell on sensations of shame & guilt, or show the transcendent relation between people in a different light. A real must-see during the Salone del Mobile!

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Especially for this occasion the Moooi presentation will be inhabited and characterized by a number of colourful mannequins by Hans Boodt. Combining 25 years of experience in visual merchandizing, creativity and know-how, the world-famous, high-quality mannequins of Hans Boodt never fail to make a great impression with their strong charisma. They will make themselves at home at Moooi’s presentation, bringing an extra feeling of intimacy to the living quarters and resembling peoples’ personality, style & taste. Real and surreal at the same time!

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

This year the exclusive Frame Moooi Award ceremony, VIP cocktail evening and panel discussion will also take place in via Savona 56. On the 10th of April a selected crowd of design professionals is invited to attend a unique cocktail evening dedicated to the celebration of creativity and design. Jana Scholze (Curator of Contemporary Furniture at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum) will crown the winner, who will receive a tempting award of €25,000. Detailed information on the 10 shortlisted designs will be available throughout the entire week of the Salone on artistic, informative panels at via Savona 56.

Unexpected Welcome exhibition by Moooi

Are you looking for inspiration? Would you like to admire all these creations with your own eyes? Then take a break and find your way home to Moooi’s Unexpected Welcome in via Savona 56!

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Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Nike running shoes were suspended around an illuminated track as though on the feet of eight invisible athletes for this installation at Beijing’s 798 arts district by Shanghai design office Studio-at-Large (+ slideshow).

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

As a one-day launch for the 2013 Nike Free collection, the installation presented the different colour combinations of the shoes around a five-lane running track, with some appearing frozen in motion while others lay flat.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

A dark-tinted mirror mimicking the shape of the track was positioned directly above and brightly coloured garments were suspended around the perimeter like a row of spectators.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Entitled The Track, this installation was the second of three zones designed by Studio-at-Large for the Nike Free launch event.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

The first was an exhibition designed to explain the history of the collection using a system of triangular display stands.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

The Finish Line was the third zone in the space, where visitors were invited to sit on rows of benches and use headphones to listen to speeches from different athletes.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

First images of the Nike Free Trainer 5.0 were revealed on Dezeen a few weeks ago and the shoe features a criss-crossing body that reference a Chinese finger trap.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Other installations by Nike include a colourful web in a rusting gas tower for the Flyknit collection and a set of motion-sensitive LED walls at the east London Boxpark store. Watch a movie we filmed at the NikeFuel Station at Boxpark or see more stories about Nike.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Photography is by Jonathan Leijonhufvud.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Here are some details from Studio-at-Large:


Nike Free 2013 (Greater China)

The latest generation of Nike Free was introduced in Beijing’s 798 art district in an environment designed to highlight the natural motion running franchise’s pedigree of athletic innovation and enhanced aesthetics.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

The installation was divided into three key spaces: The A-Z of Nike Free; The Track; The Finish Line. The first drew inspiration from the flexible shoe’s geometric outsole to present an interactive experience of imagery, video, and objects that reveal the story and design process behind the Free, whose development dates to 2001.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

With the impression of walking into a stadium, visitors entered The Track, where the LED circuit was mirrored from above, adding a depth of vision and light to the space. Complementing the dynamic collection, the illuminated track lines interacted and highlighted the vibrant colorways and sleek silhouette of the product.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Reminiscent of crossing the final racing line, the presentation space in the third area used thin-layered walls to frame the spatial experience for the audience to engage with guest speakers including American Olympic gold medalist Allyson Felix and Chinese sprinter Wei Yongli.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Event: Nike Free 2013 Media Showroom and Exhibition, Greater China
Location: Beijing, China
Date: March 2013

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Design Firm: Studio-at-Large
Design Director: Albert Tien
Architect: Ryan Newman (R&D Office)
Designers: Lawrence Wu, Vladimir Dubko

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Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Architecture office AR Design Studio has converted an old stable block in Hampshire, England, into a three-bedroom family house (+ slideshow).

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

The historic Manor House Stables, once home to a Grand National-winning horse, comprised a single-storey building with brick and stone walls and a gently sloping gabled roof. AR Design Studio was tasked with transforming the Grade II listed structure into a modern home without removing any of the period features.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

“The concept was to preserve the existing while making any new additions simple and pure in order to let the original character shine,” explain the architects.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

To retain the original timber partitions, the architects made few changes to the plan, creating rooms in the old stables and allowing a corridor to stretch out in front.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

The three bedrooms are pushed to the western end of the building, while a kitchen and dining room are located in the middle and a lounge opens out to a small terrace on the eastern side.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Many of the original doors are restored inside the house, while the old timber-framed windows are replaced with modern glazing and powder-coated steel frames, and new skylights are installed to bring more light in through the roof.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Redundant features of the stables are also reused in the design. These include the old horse troughs, now used as sink basins, and tethering rings that function as towel hoops.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

A polished concrete floor runs through the house, plus dark tiles line the walls and floors of each of the bathrooms.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Earlier this year a Portuguese studio also converted a stable block into a family house, while a team of Copenhagen architects previously inserted an artist’s studio with an anodised aluminium roof into an old stable in Denmark.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Photography is by Martin Gardner.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Here’s some more information from AR Design Studio:


Manor House Stables

Friday April 5th 1946, on a beautifully clear spring afternoon crowds cheered as the 25/1 racehorse, “Lovely Cottage”, strode triumphantly past the finishing post to be crowned winner of the Grand National, the UKs largest horse race. Trained by Tommy Rayson and ridden by Captain Robert Petre at the first true Aintree Grand National race since 1940, after the Second World War, and the last to take place on a Friday, which had been the tradition since 1876.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

That weekend “Lovely Cottage” returned home to the small village of Headbourne Worthy, near Winchester. He received a hero’s welcome before settling in for a well-earned rest in the stables at the Manor House where he was housed.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

These stables, that were once beautiful and functioning have since remained unused and have fallen into a state of dilapidation. Fortunately, this Grade 2 listed stable block, steeped in poignant historical character and narrative was not forgotten. It has been transformed into an elegant and contemporary 3 bedroom family home by RIBA award winning architects AR Design Studio.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Practice Director, Andy Ramus, discovered this piece of overlooked historical heritage while undertaking a large scale refurbishment at the Manor House and immediately recognised its potential. The team at AR could see past its existing rundown state. There was a clear potential to create a sophisticated, contemporary family home within the historical context of the building and the picturesque Hampshire countryside.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

The history and character of the Stable’s was very much a driving force in design and there is a firm belief at AR Design Studio that design constraints and restrictions can often create the most interesting solutions. The concept was to preserve the existing while making any new additions simple and pure in order to let the original character shine. This results in an innovative arrangement of spaces according to the Stable’s existing layout, in order to maintain many of the existing exposed timber interior walls. These were then cleaned, stripped back and refurbished to reveal an exquisite amount of detailing and craftsmanship.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

With the existing internal walls brought back to life, the next task was to turn the Stables into a home for the modern family and bring it into the present day. In order to respect the character of the property a clean, contemporary and neutral approach was taken to the rest of the renovation which juxtaposes perfectly with the original timber walls, allowing them to stand out as pieces of art against a beautifully simple contemporary backdrop. Many of the existing features were refurbished and re-purposed for use in the home environment; the original horse troughs were cleaned and converted for use as sink basins, the old horse ties act as towel rings in the bathrooms and original doors are preserved where possible to give a sense of real period character.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Above: floor plan – click for larger image

The Stables benefits from 3 large double bedrooms, with 2 en suite rooms to accompany a spacious family bathroom. Being a single-storey property with long continuous views, the layout was tailored and split between sleeping and living accommodation with a single constant circulation running through the entire building. The welcoming and spacious open-plan kitchen dining area is conveniently located at the heart of the home, leading into the light and roomy lounge which benefits from full height glazed doors that open out onto the sleepy village setting.

The entire property is super insulated, and the heated polished concrete floor throughout provides a functional uniformity to the spaces as well as recounting the Stable’s agricultural history. New windows and roof lights fitted throughout give the whole place a warm, bright and clean feel; creating an excellent environment as a backdrop for a family home.

Manor House Stables by AR Design Studio

Above: long section – click for larger image

The finished Stables is completely transformed from its existing dilapidated condition and is now a perfectly working family home, bursting with contemporary style juxtaposed against delightful period character.

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by AR Design Studio
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Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Milan 2013: French architect Jean Nouvel has set out his vision for the office environments of the future in a huge installation at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile this week (+ slideshow).

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Commissioned by Cosmit, the parent company of the Salone, Project: Office for Living sees Jean Nouvel explore the changes taking place in the workplace and offers an alternative to today’s “unliveable” offices.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

“In 30 or 40 years’ time we will be stunned to see just how unliveable most of today’s offices really were,” explained Nouvel. “Grotesque clones, standardisation, totalitarianism, never the merest hint of being pleasurable to inhabit.”

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The exhibition in the SaloneUfficio area begins in a darkened space, where four movies show stylist Agnès B, photographer Elliot Erwitt, artist Michelangelo Pistoletto and writer and film director Alain Fleischer each discussing the concept of office space.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The visitor then enters various office scenarios devised by Nouvel, including an apartment imagined as a comfortable workspace and a series of offices divided by sliding walls and portable blinds.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The blank space of a converted warehouse allows a free and flexible arrangement of furniture and lighting, while a scenario in a high-tech skyscraper explores how sliding, collapsible walls and modular furniture can make a city office a more stimulating environment.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

“We can work, and will increasingly work, in apartments, in our own apartments, in converted warehouses,” added Nouvel. “If we were to work in office skyscrapers, we would have to invent spaces impregnated with generosity, receptive to each and everybody’s universes and personalisations.”

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The installation also features new pieces by designers Michele De Lucchi, Marc Newson, Philippe Starck and Ron Arad, who presents a piece of colour-changing furniture.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Another space is dedicated to demonstrating innovative lighting systems for offices, while a final room houses a selection of furniture by some of Nouvel’s favourite architects.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

In an interview with Dezeen earlier this year, Nouvel argued that contemporary offices are functional and rational but not effective. “The office today is a repetition of the same space for everyone,” he said. “General solutions are bad solutions for everyone.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

The Project: Office for Living installation is on show in Pavilion 24 of SaloneUfficio at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan until 14 April.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Earlier today we posted a round-up of highlights from the Salone, including a lamp with a glass base by Industrial Facility and chairs with wavy backs by Spanish designer Patricia Urquiola. See all news and products from Milan this year and check out our interactive map of the best parties, exhibitions and talks.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Other recent projects by Nouvel include an office block in Paris that looks like a pile of three separate buildings and a collection of aluminium chairs for Emeco – see all architecture and design by Jean Nouvel.

Project: Office for Living by Jean Nouvel

Here’s some more information from Cosmit, organisers of the Salone:


Jean Nouvel presents “Project: office for living”

The theme for the Saloni 2013 collateral event is the office. A dedicated area inside saloneufficio’s pavilion 24, will be given over to French architect Jean Nouvel’s exploration of enjoyment in office living. From 9th to 14th at the Milan Fairgrounds, Rho.

“‘Project: office for living’ is intended to illustrate ‘the concept of taking pleasure in life’: working is an integral part of living and we often spend more time in our offices than we do at home,” says Nouvel.

Specially commissioned by Cosmit, Pritzker Prize 2008 winner Nouvel’s project explores the tremendous changes that have marked out living and working spaces over the last few years.

“Once we reject cloned and alienating spaces, it becomes clear that there are many possible solutions,” says Jean Nouvel. “We have to change our behaviours, plan and think of work with a different mindset: no matter where an office is situated, it has to have a space it can call its own, identifiable, alterable, on a human scale, with its own history and objects, an enjoyable environment, basically.”

Within a dedicated 1,200 m2 area inside saloneufficio’s pavilion 24, Jean Nouvel will explore contemporary building concepts informed by a rejection of cloned, alienating, standardised and serially repetitive spaces, inspiring exhibitors and visitors with different ways of achieving alternative aggregation formulas.

The “office for living” exhibit takes the form of a small district, a small city – showcasing unique and unusual work scenarios that endeavour to demonstrate that, because of their individuality, workspaces need to be able to make for happy living as well as to provide inspiration. These are not utopias, or showrooms, or collections of a few exceptional pieces: these offices are representative of ordinary situations, often existing ones, and feature office furniture produced in the main by saloneufficio exhibitors.

A monolith rises in the middle of saloneufficio, as intriguing as it is inviting, showing four video-portraits – of the stylist Agnès B, the photographer Elliot Erwitt, the artist Michelangelo Pistoletto and the writer and film director Alain Fleischer – each raising their concerns and expressing their points of view on the office space.

Five groundbreaking work situations are freely grouped around the monolith, serving to accentuate just how outdated today’s attitudes to the workplace really are.

The first of these is a classic city-centre apartment, left intact: the reception rooms, bedroom, kitchen, fireplaces, floors and mouldings have been left untouched. The space, used for both work and entertaining, is furnished to chime with the original architecture and the echoes of the past, with several different activities taking place in a warm, intimate atmosphere. The spaces are comfortable, individual and original. The apartment serves as a pleasing backdrop for living, enabling self-expression through objects and work, conserving the functional ethos of the office yet without prompting the same resonance.

The second is informed by the increasing vogue for working from home. During the day the house serves as an office, reprising its domestic function in the evenings, at weekends and on days off. “Habitation” and “office” become interwoven: the lines between office and home furniture become blurred, in a space in which even the objects have a dual existence.

Then there is an open space, containing pieces of industrial furniture that can be put together, stacked, taken apart and reassembled, breaking with the totalitarian, repetitious character of today’s offices. Furniture from several different eras is combined, incorporating objects from different spheres. The openness of the space enables everyone to express themselves freely, building their own working environments: cut off from their neighbours or in close contact; sitting on their desks or hunkering down on them. Different varieties of wood, cardboard, leather and coloured plastic rub shoulders, crowned with atypical and unexpected objects, marking out an irregular and astonishing cityscape.

The fourth space consists of a warehouse, a basic steel container of the kind found in city suburbs the world over. These often-empty cubes make for free-range furnishing. Their particular spatial quality affords each and every form of appropriation and differentiation. They make for and absorb specific non-systematic, totally flexible furnishing, lighting and decorating solutions. The scope for unfettered conversion is what sets this free space apart.

Rationalism provides the theme for the final space: a high-tech, open-plan office system which, while conforming to normality and to rational standardisation, is geared to transformation. The footprint, which may seem static and repetitive, is in fact free-form: sliding, collapsible walls enable individual offices to be built, either opening out into the adjacent space or the corridor or providing isolation. The doors are sliding or folding, there are blinds for light regulation, with frosted glass for intimacy. Sophisticated wood and chrome finishings and high-tech components impart a luxurious feel. An overall yet generous layout, geared to enjoyment in life.

A light laboratory promoting artistic and pictorial lighting for working environments, breaking with the monotony of traditional, homogeneous office lighting, is another feature. Prototype lamps, providing hitherto undreamt-of lighting solutions enabling each person to create their own lighting system,
Are on exhibit.

Spaces unfettered by traditional rules, therefore, with the concept of enjoyment in work firmly first and foremost, allowing people to put their own spaces together as best suits them, with plays of light and reflections.

Jean Nouvel has also put together a small compendium of furnishings by his great heroes, a homage to extraordinary designs of the past that are still tremendously contemporary. The pieces are displayed in front of the photographs of the places for which they were conceived by their “creators,” the masters who make up the imaginary museum that fires his inspiration.

The VIP lounge, where Ron Arad, Michele De Lucchi, Marc Newson and Philippe Starck have been interviewed in their own workplaces and expounded on their visions, rounds off the project.

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by Jean Nouvel
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