Totokaelo Art—Object

Fashion authority Jill Wenger expands into design with a new sister site
totokaelo-1.jpg

What might have been confined as one of Seattle’s best-kept secrets, Totokaelo fortunately grew from a brick-and-mortar shop in the Fremont neighborhood to an online boutique turning out a sharply edited selection of minimalist fashion. Founder and creative director Jill Wenger has honed an impeccable eye for clothing and accessories that balance timeless elegance with a sense of sartorial adventure—the name is Latin for “reach to the edge of the stars”—and since 2003 the beloved site has turned out a mix of alternative high-fashion and up-and-coming designers hand-picked by Wenger. Having become loyal fans in the fashion realm, we were thrilled about the launch of the new sister site, Totokaelo Art—Object, aimed at bringing a similar motif of enduring but cutting-edge style into the home.

totokaelo-2.jpg
totokaelo-3.jpg

Art—Object debuts with collections from a bevy of independently minded designers who bring a strong sense of intelligent perspective to their work, while still aligning themselves with the brand’s overarching aesthetic. Stock includes ceramic bells, bones and jewels from Brooklyn artist Michelle Quan, sculptor Alma Allen‘s turned raw wood stools, minimal wares like Russian stacking dolls and candles from Maison Martin Margiela and polygonal planters by Matthew Cleland of Score & Solder. Wenger identifies her roster of designers as friends, and announced the brand’s new exclusive collaborative furniture line with Joel Kikuchi and Larry Olmstead.

totokaelo-5.jpg
totokaelo-6.jpg

To browse the selection, learn more about the artists and shop—Art—Object shares a shopping cart function with Totokaelo’s fashion site—visit the website.


Folklore by Danielle and Rob Reid

Folklore by Danielle and Rob Reid

Wall panels and shelves in this north London design shop are made from reclaimed floorboards and scaffolding planks.

Folklore by Danielle and Rob Reid

Folklore was set up by designer Danielle Reid and her husband Rob to sell a curated selection of handmade and antique products.

Folklore by Danielle and Rob Reid

The old floorboards are arranged diagonally behind lengths of rope suspended from metal railings, which support the sanded wooden shelves.

Folklore by Danielle and Rob Reid

See more stories about shops on Dezeen »

Folklore by Danielle and Rob Reid

Here’s some extra information from Folklore:


Folklore, A New Design Store Opens In London

Folklore was set up by Danielle Reid and her husband Rob with a simple idea that better living is possible through design; both the online and offline shop features a selection of goods for home and life that are created with care and made to last.

Some are handmade, antique or made from recycled or found materials. Others are easily recyclable at the end of their life. All are made in an environmentally mindful way.

The interior of the shop was designed by Folklore. Danielle’s background is in design. We curate mindful design for the home and work with brilliant designers and makers. We source everything ourselves.

We look for craftsmanship, quality, simplicity and durability in our range and this is reflected in the design of the store. We chose a simple colour scheme with raw, natural and reclaimed materials.

For example, the hanging shelving is made from reclaimed scaffolding planks. We sanded them back and left the wood untreated to allow the natural beauty of the wood to come through. The wall cladding is Victorian floorboards which we left bare.

Paco Roncero’s workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

Test tubes of olive oil line one wall of this high-tech workshop designed for Michelin-starred chef Paco Roncero by Spanish studio Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos.

Paco Roncero workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

Located in the nineteenth century Casino de Madrid building, which also houses his Terraza del Casino restaurant, the workshop provides a space for olive-oil expert Roncero to experiment with new ideas.

Paco Roncero workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

The room, which is higher than it is wide, had significant damage to its floors and mouldings. Carmen Baselga’s studio renovated the space in collaboration with designers S3-Tau and created a clean white interior with room to seat nine people.

Paco Roncero workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

Along one wall is the ‘oleotec’, which holds 216 types of olive oil in glass test tubes. The oils are identified by the numbers and the letters engraved alongside them, while a touch screen provides information about each one.

Paco Roncero workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

The ceramic table has heated areas to keep plates warm or cool as required, while vibrating areas help to prepare certain dishes. A cooking hob and tap are integrated into the table, and guests can even take notes directly onto the surface.

Paco Roncero workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

Diffusers are installed inside hanging tubes to vaporise water and maintain the correct humidity. Some diffusers also hold unusual custom-made scents, including mushroom and humid grass.

Paco Roncero workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

Appliances including a dishwasher and fridge are hidden inside ash-panelled units along the walls.

Paco Roncero workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

A translucent screen, printed with an image of Roncero’s hands, lets light enter the room without glare.

Paco Roncero workshop by Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos

Photographs are by Gerald Kiernan.

See more stories about restaurants »

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Projecting Paco Roncero’s dream:
An innovative project of multisensory gastronomy

Project: Paco Roncero workshop in The Casino of Madrid
Designed by: Carmen Baselga Taller de Proyectos in collaboration with S3-Tau (departament of Innovación from Tau firm).
Paco Roncero: Chef with three “Repsol Sun”, two Michelín Stars and a Nacional award of Gastronomy 2006. Olive oil specialist.

The project takes place in a space where the most advanced technologies, the new materials and ecosustainable systems for the I+D+I will be put together with the risqué gastronomic proposals of a perfect technique from the chef.

The place

The space is Paco Roncero’s gastronomic research workshop of Paco Roncero, where the chef develops his new creations. It is a place to experiment in the double meaning of the word, that is, testing, trying; but also to experiment with the meaning of feeling and perceiving. And with this aim the surroundings and the different work spaces have been designed.

This place will allow an exploration of the relationships between gastronomy and the surrounding: human perception from the influence of, for example, certain colors, shapes and flavors; or from environmental comfort variables such as temperature, humidity, sound and light, manipulated in the search of well-being, or looking to generate different types of sensations that result in emotions, trying to build, with all this, a synesthetic experience where taste is the backbone.

The place is located on the same floor as the libraries in the old “Casino de Madrid”, in C/Alcalá number 15. It is not accessible to the general public, because it is a private work area. To the different sessions, lunches or experimental dinners that are going to be programmed with certain cadence, one can only go with direct invitation from the chef, due to the fact that they will be forming part of the research project.

The room has very peculiar proportions; it is very long and it is higher than it is wide, with a big entrance door at each end; one of them is linked to an office to support the running of the workshop, that has also been designed inside the project. There is a running theme of the materials and base colours throughout. The other door links to the noble areas of the Casino and this is where the guests will enter and leave.

At the beginning we found a space dating back to 1910, but very damaged with old, however not antique, floors that had replaced the original ones made of wood, some of which could be found with an old fitted carpet in some areas. Some of the decorative molding was broken and in general both ceilings and walls appeared to be covered with stippled-finish paint which ran over the surface of the room indiscriminately above the mouldings and decorative reliefs. Cables, gutters or switches of different models and periods were superimposed depending on the needs of the offices that had been there. The air conditioning installation, as it was on the surface was very invasive; it had a lot of presence and had ruined part of the ceiling and the walls.

The aim was to create a big white box that kept the character of its time, whereupon the first work was the rehabilitation. Inside this box, in a superimposed way allowing the difference between the past and present to be seen, the space was projected, designing the different elements that modernized it and defined it with a contemporary and changeable character thanks to technology (projections, different types of lighting, sound, scents, etc…).

The access

Like with every liturgical ritual, first of all you need to go through water. The first thing you find when you arrive, just behind the door, is a washbasin welcoming you. This washbasin is the model Kubo from Boing, made of flexible polyurethane, and the tap is the Ondus model from Grohe. Two clothes racks, made of stainless steel and designed by Carmen Baselga_Taller de proyectos, flank the sides of the main entrance.

El pavimento

The floor is particularly special as it incorporates the heating system for this room with the Waytec System with heated sheets and automatic temperature control. This is the Colortech 60×60 natural white model from Tau, which continues in line with the rest of the ceramic materials used in the project. This shows the different applications and uses of the product Keraon from Tau, chosen in this case in natural white colour.

The table

Conceived as a type of large worktop to test new dishes, there is also room to seat nine guests including the chef. The surface is made of keraon (Tau ceramic) and the structure of the table legs is made of ash. Under this naive appearance, multiple uses are hidden, thanks to the technology that lives inside it and thanks to the goodness of the ceramic surface that allows the most sophisticated effects to combine with something as basic as, for example, taking notes or sketching directly on the table.

The water and fire areas are integrated into the table to be able to cook, however there are also capacitative sensors to control the sound or the temperature of the table. It has nine individual heated areas whose function is keep the plate warm, another hotter area and a cooling area near the kitchen area, as well as zones of agitation and vibration between the guests that will help to prepare certain dishes during the meal. The tap is K7 Digital model from Grohe, that has a wireless control. It is an innovation that is shown in this space as a novelty.

The chairs

The chairs were designed based on special needs, taking into account that the height would not be the habitual for an eating chair, because they have to be used with the table/worktop that is 97cm high. On the one hand we were searching for comfort; they have to be comfortable for a meal and its after-lunch/after-dinner conversation. On the other hand, an essential requirement was that they had to be of adjustable height and swivel with wheels to allow full mobility. From all of this, a hybrid chair was invented, between what would be an office seat, a kitchen chair and an armchair. As a chair/armchair, the model Tauro from Andreu World offered us all the guarantees of comfort, and starting from here appropriate modifications were made to reach the planned aims.

The oleotec

This has a capacity for 216 types of olive oil that the chef will be selecting as an expert in olive oil. It was created using the mural system Dry System, in Keraon in natural white color, combining bright and matt surfaces, where the numbers and the letters are engraved to be able to identify each oil. The touch screen located in the center gives the information about every product in this oil panel. When the oleotec was designed, a convection cooling system was created, leaving a free space in the upper and the lower part, which is the same principle that “Trombe wall” used in passive solar projects. In this way, the oils do not heat up, inside it keeps them all at the same temperature. For this reason, we also chose a cold light to light them from behind. In addition to seeing the real color of each oil, it creates a very singular atmosphere as the light is emitted through the oil test tubes.

The electrical appliances and the furniture that integrate them

All the electrical appliances are new models from Miele. We have a cutting-edge induction hob in white, some ovens, a large capacity fridge, “vinoteca” and a dishwasher. These electrical appliances are integrated into the furniture units that surround the room on each side, and at the same time they are not in your direct view when you enter the space. These furniture units are paneled with ash, integrating different inspection hatches to gain access to both electrical and plumbing installations. That means it is very easy to make changes to these installations, if needs be.

The ceiling: the hanging tray, the mobiles

Another aim was to integrate the technology (which is a lot) and leave some bridges that allow the installations to be enlarged and modified very easily without damaging the space every time. That is why we designed the hanging tray from the ceiling, an accessible floor, while leaving a space in the inside part. The worktop’s legs are communicated directly with this free cavity, which is accessible from the lower part. The tubes that emerge from the central hanging tray had been conceived to house different types of lighting, projectors, cameras, scent spreadings, extraction systems in the kitchen area, etc.

It is a space that is best measured in cubic meters than in square. 235 m3 are completely used, due to the fact that it is possible to work both lengthwise and widthwise, as it is as wide as it is high. In the upper part, on both sides of the central tray, two mechanical arms move back projection moving screens that are used to create different atmospheres and/or to support the images that can be projected onto the table. They can adopt different positions, either close to or far from the guests.

Above the access area, there is also a digital blackboard, that, when it goes down, is placed in front of the furniture unit nearest to the chef’s chair, which allows for punctual theoretical talks.

The sound

Surround-sound speakers in the ceiling and under the table have been installed.

The scents

This has been done through diffusers installed inside the tubes located in the hanging tray. These diffusers are also going to provide the space with the necessary humidity degree, just vaporizing water, without scents. Several scents have been expressly created for this space, as for example the sea smell, or a mushroom and humid grass that will be useful for supporting certain moments.

The curtains and the hands

Three motorized rolls of 220 cm wide x 438 cm high cover the three large windows of the room. Two layers, one of them completely opaque to make the space darker, and another made of translucent screen, which has the printed image of the chef’s hands and it is the one that will be used during the working daytime hours as it it lets the light enter in a sifted way.

The huge pictures of Paco Roncero’s hands manipulating and molding are a clear allegory to the kitchen as transformation, and it was considered from the basic transformation, the most natural that exists, which is water passing through its three states: solid, liquid and gaseous.

Domótica

The installation of a domotic system shows the programmation of different scenes during lunches or dinners, combining lights, sound, projections from the ceiling projectors and the movement of them, projections on the table, different effects, the use of a camera, etc.

Clamping The Wood For Furniture

It started off as a project exploring the possible ways of using clamps, and soon the Holdfast assignment stumbled into this eclectic range of exciting furniture. The idea was to employ clamps as tools as well as fasteners and are fashioned to reflect simplicity. They are based on the holdfast clamping system that holds materials to the surface of a workbench.

Samuel explains, “The components are manufactured using a computer controlled wire bending device. The components are then inserted into a through hole and wedged under the material they are supporting, creating tension in the vertical leg and in turn creating a strong stiff supporting structure for shelves as well as side tables, stools and other occasional home furnishings.”

I find it a fascinating new way to create furniture, a wonderful blend of metal and wood.

Designer: Samuel Weller


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Clamping The Wood For Furniture was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. Stump Furniture Made From Reclaimed Wood
  2. Is That. . . Wood?
  3. Hug your morning wood…

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

French designer Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance has fitted out a restaurant at the top of the tallest skyscraper in central Paris.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Named Ciel de Paris, the new restaurant is located on the 56th floor of the Montparnasse Tower, which at 210-metres-high is taller than everything else around it bar the Eiffel Tower.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Warm lighting glows out from behind the circular mirrors covering the ceiling, as well as around the edges of the room and from beneath the curved central bar.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Chairs designed by Duchaufour-Lawrance feature smooth grey resin and fibreglass shells with orange leather linings.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

This week Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance also revealed a spiralling bookcase inspired by the shape of a fossil.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

See all our stories about restaurants »

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Photography is by Vincent Leroux/Temps Machine.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Here’s the full press release:


Ciel de Paris

Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance has designed a soft and profound amber bubble of light on the 56th floor of the Montparnasse Tower: the new Ciel de Paris restaurant interior design and furniture.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

From the bay windows to the central bar, depending on the aura of the mirrors, the skilled composition of the sombre reflections strengthens and transforms perspectives. The view becomes space; space becomes the view.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

The golden glints of the City of Light bounce off the sensual curves and materials. Paris is sparkling and all of a sudden the tower is more desirable.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

This primarily touristic venue has become welcoming and ethereal, a pleasurable experience designed for everyone.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Furniture + Lights – Bespoke design by Noé Duchaufour- Lawrance

Bar: wood fibre and resin structure, Corian interior with Stopsol extra white glass top, golden interior
Lights produced with Artemide
Ceiling light dimensions: 300x200cm
Ceiling light and suspended illuminating mirrors: made of Stopsol glass (colourless mirror) + honeycomb + gold painted dome
Bar Stools: resin composite materials + glass fibre exterior, grey satin-finish colour, Stolz leather interior, grey satin-finish coated steel base

Furniture – Bespoke design by Noé Duchaufour- Lawrance

Armchairs: resin composite materials + glass fibre exterior, satin-finish grey colour, Stolz leather interior, grey satin-finish coated steel base
Tables: Corian top, lacquered MDF below and resin composite materials + glass fibre, grey satin-finish coated steel base

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Description of Materials and Furniture

Lighting: tailor-designed, in partnership with Artemide
275 lights suspended from the platform comprising:
– direct honeycomb lighting fittings creating graduated light from the outside to the inside
– backlit indirect lighting fittings creating a halo of light projecting onto the ceiling
Acoustic Ceiling: OWAcoustic premium system – Owaplan
Bar: wood fibre and resin structure, Corian interior with Stopsol extra white glass top, golden interior
Main Walls: grey velvet paint
Entracne Wall: curved staff
Back Wall: curved staff
Column Trim: bronze mirror with transparent degradation
Woodwork: lacquered metal
Floor: made-to-measure Taî Ping carpet for the restaurant area and Royal Mosa ceramic sandstone for the entrance hall and sanitary area
Seat: resin composite materials + glass fibre exterior, grey satin-finish colour, Stolz leather interior, grey satin-finish coated steel base.
Benches: wooden structure + upholstered with Stolz leather
Tables: Corian top, lacquered MDF underneath and resin composite materials + glass fibre, grey satin-finish coated steel base

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Total area: 400 m2, 160 seats
Interior design – Designer: Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance
Project Leader: Lluc Giros
Team: Laetitia Leinartz, Grégoire de Lafforest and Alfredo DaSilva
Lighting designer: L’Observatoire International
Visual identity: Yorgo Tloupas

Installer: Chantiers Baudet
Furniture production: Tabisso
Lighting production: Artemide
Carpet production: Tai Ping

The SuperCool

An Australian couple’s innovative approach to homeware retailing
supercool-1.jpg

For many, choosing how to outfit their home has become as important as how they choose to dress. With people like Tom Selby showcasing interesting creatives’ homes and work spaces, and thousands of Pinterest boards dedicated to home décor it’s become the expression of personal style through interiors has reached a fever pitch. Helping Melbournians do this is The SuperCool, a pop-up shop and online store created by Kate Vandermeer and David Nunez (Noonie). Enticed by the quirky goods on offer, we caught up with Kate to discuss retailing, retro styling and the reasons why pop-up shops are here to stay.

supercool-2.jpg

How did the idea for The SuperCool come about?

We both wanted to work together doing something creative and we love stuff for the home/studio spaces. In my own trend research as part of iSpyStyle I’d noticed that pop-up shops were more than just a fad and did some research regarding vintage peddlers. I found the idea of taking your wares to the people was a really relevant retailing style in the current retail revolution we’re having. So we workshopped that idea and then on our honeymoon met with heaps of artists, designers and vintage collectors.

It all began late last year, as a bit of an experiment to see how it would go. After just the first two locations Melbourne Central and Pope Joan we realized we had tapped into something unique. The response from customers and media was pretty overwhelming and we thought that we should go guns a blazing into 2012 with TheSuperCool!

How does it work in terms of finding and hiring the spaces?

There’s no real strategy; it’s very organic. We look for unusual spaces that have good foot traffic. We like to collaborate with other industries (Pope Joan and St Ali in terms of food, and Great Dane in terms of high-end Scandinavian-style furniture) and we like to move around different neighborhoods.

supercool-3.jpg

You have some really different stuff. Where do you source product?

Literally all over the world. We’ve had product from Norway, Sweden, Germany, France, UK, Spain, USA, Hong Kong, Argentina, Brazil and, of course, Australia. We like to have a healthy mix of both local and international design and we support a lot of small independent designers and makers and work with a variety of vintage collectors. We’ve also started making some product ourselves and hope to do more of this down the track.

supercool-4.jpg supercool-5.jpg
Are you able to make a full-time living from this? If not what else do you guys do?

So far, I’m the only one full-time in the business, plus I’ve still got a handful of clients from iSpyStyle that I take on project work with and try to fit around TheSuperCool. Like any new business, you put in far more hours than you see profits but we’re starting to see the rewards from this and its definitely given us hope that it will be a full-time gig for both of us soon. Noonie still works full time in the corporate sector alongside working on TheSuperCool at nights and weekends.

supercool-6.jpg

In addition to being business partners you’re also married. How has it been working together?

I would say 90% of the time I’m pretty lucky—we have really similar taste and views on business. I’m a bit more cautious and he’s more of a risk-taker. So we balance out each other well. He’s awesome at logistics, systems, operations and is a wickedly good researcher and buyer. I handle the branding, social media, online store and admin side, as well as the visual merchandising. We both do the retail side of things and we both enjoy connecting with the customers and chatting about what they’ll do with our stuff.
That other 10% is tough. When we’re exhausted from working 45 days straight and we have to bump in/out of a shop—it’s physically full on and that can test your patience, but we’ve managed to make it work thus far and we can see a light at the end of the tunnel.

supercool-9.jpg

How does The SuperCool differ from other online shops (i.e. for people unable to visit the pop-ups)?

We like to think that we offer an interesting curation of unique objects. We put time and effort into the displays of our products online as well as in store. We offer great affordability for people and that they don’t get ripped off. We’ve also tried to make the online store descriptions an echo of how we are in store when chatting with customers. We offer DIY tips, we try to be witty and not take ourselves too seriously and make it fun! The online store still has a long way to go though and we’ve got some big plans for the future.

supercool-7.jpg supercool-8.jpg
What’s next?

We’re pretty excited to announce that we have just taken on a six-month lease for a semi-permanent shop at SO:ME Space at the South Melbourne Markets. We did a pop-up there for six weeks earlier this year and it was so well received, so when one of the shops came up for lease we jumped on it.


Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

Artist Esther Stocker has built a disjointed grid of black blocks across the floor, walls and ceiling of Z33 – House for Contemporary Art in Hasselt, Belgium.

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

The arrangement of the blocks suggests a grid that’s only half visible, leaving the viewer to mentally piece together the remaining elements.

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

‘Based on a Grid’ is part of Z33′s current exhibition ‘Mind the System, Find the Gap’, in which more than 30 international artists offer their interpretation on the idea of gaps in the system.

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

The exhibition continues until 30 September 2012.

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

See more stories about installations »

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

Here’s some more about the exhibition:


‘Based on a Grid’ , commission 2012 – Esther Stocker In ‘Based on a Grid’ (2012),

Esther Stocker creates a spatial system from a series of black painted wooden blocks in the entrance hall of the Z33 exhibition building. The visitor is drawn into the installation, as it were, and is challenged by the system, the grid that is there but not immediately visible. For Stocker, the system is implied as much by its gaps as it is by its contours. But do we want to look for the system or are we happy to lose ourselves in the chaos of scattered elements drifting apart? A decision which according to Jan Verwoert, contributing editor at Frieze Magazine and freelance author, depends on the position one takes or is willing to take with regards to ordering structures. He therefore concludes: “Using abstraction as a medium, [Esther Stocker] formulates a critical position with respect to the authority of ordering structures.”

‘Mind the System, Find the Gap’ is this year’s summer exhibition at Z33 – House for Contemporary Art. More than 30 international artists seek out the gaps in the system.

Our society is governed by all sorts of systems and structures that organise and steer life. No system, however, whether political, judicial, economical, socio-cultural or spatial, can comprise life in its entirety. Every system has gaps, leaks and ambiguities.

The artists in the exhibition Mind the System, Find the Gap seek out these gaps. They set forth from this intermediate position to unveil, circumvent or criticise ruling systems and structures.

‘Mind the System, Find the Gap’ does not proffer an overly simplified critique on the notion of systems and structuring principles, but aims to seek out its complexity.

For the past few years, strong thematic exhibitions on societal issues have been Z33’s trademark. It is Z33’s ambition to challenge the visitor to look at the day-to-day reality with a different set of eyes, as do the artists in ‘Mind the System, Find the Gap’.

June 3 – September 30 2012
Z33 – House for Contemporary Art
Zuivelmarkt 33
3500 Hasselt
Belgium

Self-Watering Planter by Joey Roth

Ancient Native American irrigation systems inspire a thoroughly modern gardening vessel
planter-1jpg

We’ve all been guilty of neglecting that would-be herb garden on our balcony, or watched regretfully as each passing day slowly withered the petals of an indoor bouquet. When temperatures reach the boiling point and your calendar starts rejecting all new appointments, your potted plants suffer through the drought before shriveling up and succumbing to death by disregard. With the laid-back gardener in mind, designer Joey Roth aims to make small scale green-thumbing easier with his simple, aesthetically pleasing and downright ingenious self-watering planter made from unglazed terra cotta.

planter-2.jpg

All smooth lines and gentle curves, Roth’s planter is a practical piece of artwork inspired by the ancient Olla irrigation techniques of various Native American tribes, relying on surprisingly simple mechanics to nourish your plants automatically while preventing water loss to evaporation and run-off. The designer came up with the idea when sifting through different irrigation methods for his own garden in southern California, where traditional hoses and sprinklers weren’t cutting it. “Olla irrigation involves just the slightest human intervention in natural processes,” says Roth. “I wanted to bring the elegance of this irrigation method above ground and possibly indoors… to articulate the beauty of everyday materials and rituals using the fewest number of gestures.”

planter-3.jpg planter-4.jpg

The planter’s naturally porous earthenware allows water to seep gently from the central chamber into the outer donut-shaped ring, where you can place soil and up to three herbs or six succulents to grow into a swirling arrangement of plant life. The permeable terracotta inner chamber acts as both a filter and regulator of the water that is pulled by the plant’s roots into the outer chamber, a process that prevents over-watering. The simple lid over the inner cylinder blocks the negative effects of evaporation, keeping your water cool and fresh and your plants happy.

planter-5.jpg

In the age of all things sustainable, Roth’s planter couldn’t be more apropos, providing us all with an easy way to make our lives just a little more green. The first production run will be complete midway through August, but pre-orders are available on his website at $45 apiece. Later this year, Roth hopes to introduce a second version of his striking Sorapot and add a subwoofer to his Ceramic Speaker , in addition to a brand new EDC bag, coffee tools, and lighting.


Switch Box in House by Naf Architect & Design

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

All the rooms of this renovated Tokyo house by Japanese studio Naf Architect & Design are connected to a wooden box at its centre.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

The architects liken this connecting room to an electrical switch box.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

It contains staircases leading up and down, an entrance from the house into the client’s chiropractic surgery and a small seating area.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

Narrow grooves between each of the wooden slats let light filter inside and provide space for hanging picture hooks.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

The living and dining room is located on the first floor just above, where the the roof of the box forms the surface of a kitchen worktop.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

See more stories about Japanese houses on Dezeen here.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

Photography is by Toshiyuki Yano.

Here’s some more information from Naf Architect & Design:


Switch Box in House

This is a total interior renovation project of an existing house, installing a box made of deck lumber in the middle of the house.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

The existing house is 17 year-old, two-story, 4-bedroom wooden structure on top of semi-underground garage. It could serve as home, but we could not see how and for whom the room layout was made.

New owner of the house is a family of three; a couple with a child. Installed in the center of the house is a hall-like space made by a large box which gives a doorway to chiropractic clinic run by the wife, to the bedroom of the couple, to the entrance of the house, to living and dining room upstairs, and to karaoke room in basement. As rooms of various purposes were relocated in the existing house, the composition of the house became more like that of a complex facility. The box-like space which brings together traffic lines and connects each room is, in a sense, switch box of traffic lines.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

The box is made of deck lumber, whose top side has large interspace between lumber and let sunlight pour downstairs. On the sides of the box are smaller interspaces to avoid the gaze but large enough to let through the voices. It allows loose spatial continuity from the second floor to the basement and at the same time, interspaces are adjusted to keep privacy when there are guests. In the living-dining room on the second floor, the top of the box comes up to the height of a counter suitable for housework. High side windows on the sloped ceiling take in ample sunshine and the top of the box can be used as sunroom. Hooks can be placed between the deck lumber to hang pictures, hangers or foliage plants anywhere we like. There is almost no exterior space for garden within the premises, and it was our challenge to introduce various living scenes indoors by using the box.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

The existing house before the renovation was one of many typical houses in the real estate market. In this renovation, we made Karaoke room in the basement, taking advantage of the sound insulation properties of concrete foundation. We see possibilities in creating new living environment by taking advantage of such properties.

Switch Box in House by Naf Architect and Design

Name of the Project: Switch Box in House
Location: Suginami ward, Tokyo
Category: detached house
Structure: Wood construction
Maximum height: 8.859m
Frontal road: 5.54m on the west
Site area: 71.51m2
Total floor area: 127.99m2
Completion: Desember 25, 2012
Architect: Akio NAKASA(director), Daisuke AOKI

New Pinterest board: kitchens

New Pinterest board kitchens

We’ve added a new board to Pinterest compiling all the best photos of kitchens from the pages of Dezeen. We now have over 3000 followers on Pinterest – join in here.

See all of our stories about kitchens.