Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

French studio FREAKS freearchitects have inserted a rectangular timber tunnel inside this Paris cosmetics shop.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The shop, called Heliocosm, also features bright turquoise walls and a table where customers can mix their own natural cosmetics.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

An opening cut away from the wooden box provides the location for a salvaged second-hand table, while integrated shelves display products.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The tunnel leads from this workshop area to a lounge, where a wall-mounted photograph creates the illusion of a window facing snow-covered mountains.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

Another shop with a tunnel inside it was completed in London earlier this year – see our earlier story featuring an octagonal orange tunnel here.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

Photography is by David Foessel.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

Here’s some text from the architects:


Heliocosm – A Natural Cosmetics Shop in Paris

FREAKS freearchitects have been commissioned for the interior design of the shop for a new natural comestics brand Heliocosm located in Herold street, Paris 1st ward.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The program of the shop consists mostly in a big workshop table onto which the customers are invited to make up their own cosmetics based on natural products lead by professional tutors.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

As the total dedicated budget of 100K€ was pretty low compared to the total 100sqm area to be refurbished, the project focuses onto one single space characteristic: the impressive length of nearly 20 meters, pretty rare as a shop setting within the typical parisian context.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The major efforts were made on the renewal of the first and the last rooms, linked with a wood-covered tunnel-alike space hosting all the display shelves and cupboards.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

That space works as a theatre decorum into which doors and hole are managed to organize all the technical storage, access, restroom and extra display.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The chosen color is a light greenish blue, a so called “cool mint” color, applied all over floors, walls and ceilings, wrapping the visitors within a both refreshing and disturbing feeling.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The ending perspective of the shop is reinforced with a large scale print on plastic sheet representing mountains with a greenish lake dislocating the shop towards another parallel reality.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

That ending room is a lounge space, used both as a waiting room and a coffee/tea room.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The furnitures have all been found in second hand shops and markets, to not to engage too much the visitors into an “over design” experience while offering them a comfy and homy atmosphere.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects


See also:

.

Aesop at Merci by
March Studio
Kyoto Silk by
Keiichi Hayashi
Skin by Michael Young
and Katrin Olina

GRAB Thai Street Kitchen by Mansikkamäki+JOY

GRAB Thai Street Kitchen by Mansikkamäki+JOY

We found this Thai canteen furnished with construction materials a few streets away from Dezeen Space, which was open in Shoreditch until 16 October.

GRAB Thai Street Kitchen by Mansikkamäki+JOY

Design studio Mansikkamäki+JOY designed the London GRAB restaurant, where diners sit on red plastic stools at tables made from scaffolding.

GRAB Thai Street Kitchen by Mansikkamäki+JOY

Behind the counter, menu boards are mounted onto timber pallets and display a selection of street food dishes.

GRAB Thai Street Kitchen by Mansikkamäki+JOY

Walls at the back of the canteen are lined with corrugated metal, while light bulbs attached to red and blue cables dangle from the ceiling.

GRAB Thai Street Kitchen by Mansikkamäki+JOY

Furniture made from building materials seems to be popular with a few designers – see our older stories about a boutique with rails made of bronze-plated scaffolding, an office with wooden pallet tables and a motel made from scaffolding.

GRAB Thai Street Kitchen by Mansikkamäki+JOY

Photography is by Valerie Bennett.

The following text was sent to us by the restaurant:


GRAB Thai Street Kitchen by Mansikkamäki+JOY

A few minutes’ walk from Old Street Station sits the recently opened GRAB Thai Street Kitchen – a new concept in Thai cuisine. GRAB believes good Thai food does not have to be a once-in-a-blue-moon fine dining experience, instead, GRAB returns to the simplicity of Thailand’s urban street food culture – tasty, affordable and everyday. Customers walk into an accessible array of freshly prepared dishes with curries dispensed from behind the counter. Good food can be fast.

Mansikkamäki+JOY, in collaboration with Lifeforms Design, create an urban street atmosphere by translating affordable construction materials and street furniture into a clean and minimal interior space. Menus hang off a wall of backlit wooden pallets, whilst corrugated metal sheets line some of the neighbouring vertical surfaces. Large globe light bulbs are suspended from a web of red and blue cables, hang from the generous ceiling, reminiscent of the lively scenes of Bangkok. Communal tables were made in-house using the by-products of the restaurant’s construction and are coupled with the iconic red plastic stools that are so integral to the image of urban street vending in Thailand. An easy-going atmosphere, raw design and simple materials allow the food to speak for itself.


See also:

.

Grand Cafe Usine
by Bearandbunny
MS café by
Wunderteam
Café Coutume by
Cut Architectures

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

This year’s London School of Economics students can take time out from studies in a custom-built lounge, where boxy white stools slots into walls and a central table.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

Faceted walls and angled mirrors surround the Student Salon, which was completed by London architects Feix & Merlin just in time for the start of term.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

Students with work to do can plug their laptops into plug sockets and data points located within framed recesses in the walls.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

These recesses also house alarm panels, shelves, and signage.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

Other recent interiors featuring mirrors include an apartment with wrinkly mirrored walls and a clothes store with a photography studio concealed at its centre.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

Photography is by Andy Matthews.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

Here’s a little more from the architects:


*Student Salon*

Earlier this year Feix & Merlin Architects were invited by the LSE to re-imagine their Student Salon, a ground floor shop front type space in one of the campus buildings where students spend their free between lectures or come to just meet and hang out. The project was on a tight budget and timeline but is now complete, just in time for Fresher’s Week.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

The design incorporates new faceted timber wall lining with ornately framed or coloured recesses for custom made benches and desks as well as shelving, power+data points, alarm panels and signage.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

Angled mirrored panels on the walls and ceiling create a slightly surreal perspective as you walk in. A central desk has been custom made with pullout seating for all that hot-desking students do nowadays and a bench at the rear is the perfect place for a little bit of inter-disciplinary fraternisation.

Student Salon by Feix & Merlin

Location: St. Clements Lane, LSE Campus in Holborn, London
Status: Completed
Client: The LSE, London School of Economics


See also:

.

3013 Installation at the Architectural Association Chu Hai College Campus by OMA University Student Centre
by Chyutin Architects

White Cube Bermondsey by Casper Mueller Kneer

White Cube Bermondsey by Casper Mueller Kneer

Architects Casper Mueller Kneer have converted a south London warehouse into the city’s third White Cube gallery.

White Cube Bermondsey by Casper Mueller Kneer

White Cube Bermondsey is considerably larger than the galleries in St. James’s and Shoreditch and contains three separate exhibition areas.

White Cube Bermondsey by Casper Mueller Kneer

These areas comprise one space known as the South Galleries, a set of three rooms collectively known as the North Galleries and top-lit cube-shaped gallery called 9x9x9.

White Cube Bermondsey by Casper Mueller Kneer

The building also houses an auditorium, archive, storage warehouse, bookshop and private viewing rooms.

White Cube Bermondsey by Casper Mueller Kneer

A new canopy projects out from the engineering-brick exterior to shelter the gallery entrance.

White Cube Bermondsey by Casper Mueller Kneer

Other interesting gallery spaces worth a look include one in Japan with a softly curved shape and sliced entranceway and another in London inside a former office buildingsee more stories about galleries here.

White Cube Bermondsey by Casper Mueller Kneer

Photography is by Ben Westoby.

The following text was provided by the White Cube Gallery and the architects:


White Cube Bermondsey

144–152 Bermondsey Street is an existing warehouse and office building, set back from Bermondsey Street via an entrance yard. The building dates from the 1970s and has a modernist industrial appearance, with long horizontal window bands and a simple cubic shape. The outer walls of the building are constructed from dark brown engineering brick, with a concrete and steel framed internal structure.

“We were attracted by the dimensions of the original building, the deep views of up to 70 m”, Jens Casper says. “We tried to adopt these deep views for the Gallery Building. For us the project is a play of light, volumes and proportional relationships set against a raw material palette. Geometrically, each space is in itself very simple, yet the sequence of spaces creates a complex ensemble and rich spatial experience for the visitor.”

Materially, the industrial character of the building was maintained and enhanced by new additions and modifications. The structure was generally retained, but opened up towards Bermondsey Street. The entrance, reception, delivery areas and front yard were substantially modified and a new canopy has been introduced. The new entrance yard is enclosed by a sequence of 151 vertical steel fins along Bermondsey Street.

Internally, a series of new spaces were created – both public and private functions are organised around a central corridor which is 70 m long. Tube lights mounted onto raw-steel mesh ceiling panels provide this space with a distinct rhythm.

There are three principal exhibition spaces of varying proportions and light conditions, offering flexibility in the scale and nature of the artworks that can be installed:
‘9x9x9’ is a centrally located cubic space with a 9 m high ceiling. It has a translucent fabric ceiling and is flooded with natural light. The ‘South Galleries’, the largest display area, provides 780 m2 of column-free space. They are fitted with stretch ceiling panels and track lights, are part day-lit and sub-dividable. The ‘North Galleries’ are smaller and more experimental in character with fluorescent lighting. A 60 seat auditorium allows the presentation of films and lectures in blackout conditions.

Engineering and Construction

The new gallery spaces were inserted as self-supporting freestanding volumes, barely touching the envelope of the existing building.

The powerfloated concrete floors can take loadings up to 100 KN/m2. Walls and ceilings are constructed as steel cages allowing art to be installed at almost any point within the space.

Structural exclusion zones allow the punching through of walls at selected locations to allow entry points into the exhibition spaces to be coordinated with the ever-changing displays.

Doors are generally oversized to ease the transport of art between the spaces. The largest set of doors measures 4.3 m in height and 3.7 m in width. Large wall sections can be opened to allow the movement of works of art between the galleries, these operate around single points pivots measuring up to 5.4 x 3.2 m.

Materials

The materials that are set against the white gallery walls are industrial in character, often untreated and self-coloured. The floors are powerfloated natural grey concrete. Ceiling materials include stretch fabrics for viewing rooms and galleries. Untreated and powder- coated steel meshes are used for the public corridor, the new entrance canopy and the entrance divider. Doors are made from untreated mild steel or stainless steel and glass. Concrete, grey granite and steel dominate the external landscaping.

Information

White Cube Bermondsey provides more than 5440 m2 (58,000 sq ft) of interior space on a site of 1.7 acres (74,300 sq ft)

South Galleries – The largest display area with 780 m2 (8,400 sq ft)

North Galleries- Each of the three separate exhibition spaces known collectively as the ‘North Galleries’ will be 80 m2 (850 sq ft)

9x9x9 – This gallery is naturally top-lit and measures 81 m2

The building also includes substantial warehousing, private viewing rooms, an archive room, an auditorium and a bookshop.
White Cube Mason’s Yard and Hoxton Square

White Cube Mason’s Yard provides more than 1110 m2 (11,900) sq ft of interior space. The Lower Ground Floor gallery is 220 m2 (2,370 sq ft). The Ground Floor gallery is 85 m2 (925 sq ft)

White Cube Hoxton Square provides more than 890 m2 (9,500 sq ft) of interior space. The Ground Floor gallery is 160 m2 (1,700 sq ft). The First Floor gallery is 40 m2 (400 sq ft)

The White Cube Bermondsey Exhibition Programme for 2012-2013 will include Anselm Kiefer, Gilbert & George, Damien Hirst, Zhang Huan and Mark Bradford.

Project Team

Architect: Casper Mueller Kneer
Services Engineers: Bob Costello Associates
Structural Engineer: Atelier One
Fire Safety Consultants: Ramboll UK
CDM Consultants: Goddard Consulting
Project Managers: Millbridge Group
Quantity Surveyors: Millbridge Group
Executive Architects: RHWL Architects
Acoustic Consultants: BDP
Main Contractor: Life Build Solutions


See also:

.

Gallery by XTEN Architecture Tanada piece gallery by Geneto Art Gallery by Morphogenesis

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid Architects have completed a showroom in London for Spanish bathroom brand Roca.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Undulating white walls surround a reception and lounge area that snakes through the interior of the Roca London Gallery, which is located on the ground floor of a mixed-use building near Chelsea Harbour.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Shiny plastic benches and desks furnish the space, while bulbous light fittings of the same material are suspended overhead.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Arched openings lead from the reception into concrete caves, where products are displayed on integrated shelves and lights sit within recessed grooves.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

These rooms are formed from a jigsaw of glass-reinforced concrete elements that slot against one another with visible seams.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Around one corner is a glazed meeting room, whilst elsewhere are a series of interactive touchscreens.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Roca intend to use the showroom as a venue for exhibitions, seminars, meetings and other events.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Some other buildings with cave-like interiors were recently highlighted on Dezeen in a special feature – see these projects here.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Other London projects by Zaha Hadid include the aquatics centre for the London 2012 Olympics and the Stirling Prize winning Evelyn Grace Academysee these projects and more by Zaha Hadid here.

Photography is by Luke Hayes.

Here’s some more text from Zaha Hadid Architects:


Zaha Hadid, two times winner of the Stirling Prize, celebrates the launch of her third London project, the Roca London Gallery

The Roca London Gallery consists of a single floor measuring 1,100m2, where, as the Zaha Hadid studio intended, it appears that water has sculptured and defined each and every detail of the space.

Roca‟s commitment to design and innovation is clearly visible in the exterior of the building with its distinctive and unique façade which gives the Roca London Gallery its identity. Three almost organic portals which appear to have been shaped by water erosion open up this space to the city.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Click above for larger image

The movement of water is the overriding theme in the Roca London Gallery – flowing and merging exterior and interior spaces. The interior is sculptured white concrete and its state of the art lighting connects each of the different areas whilst serving as a central axis around which the Roca London Gallery revolves.

The interior is fabulous, functional and flexible, featuring cutting-edge, modern, audiovisual, sound and lighting equipment. This technology provides interaction with the brand and the opportunity to discover the company‟s history, its landmark achievements and the values on which all of Roca‟s work is based: the commitment to sustainability and particularly to innovation, design, wellness and saving water.

Roca London Gallery by Zaha Hadid Architects

Click above for larger image

The Roca London Gallery is intended to be much more than just a display space. Available to an extensive audience that will include everyone from design-savvy architects to design-hungry students, it will become a London hub hosting a wide range of activities such as exhibitions produced in-house or externally, meetings, presentations, seminars and debates, the criteria being a celebration of design in keeping with the Roca brand and company values.


See also:

.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha HadidGuangzhou Opera House by Zaha Hadid ArchitectsMAXXI by
Zaha Hadid

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Russian architect Peter Kostelov has slotted a timber structure into a two-storey apartment in Moscow to create two extra floors.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

The former top level of the apartment had ceiling heights of up to 8 metres, where the architect has inserted a mezzanine and new upper storey.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Openings in the walls of the wooden structure allow views between rooms on different levels, as does a cutaway in the ceiling of the middle floor.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Bespoke angled lamps hang from the ceilings of the billiard room and dining room on this level, while specially designed furniture fills rooms throughout the apartment.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Marbled tiles line the floor, walls and surfaces of the kitchen, which opens out to a second dining room on the lower floor.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

On the top floor, a semi-circular window stretches across the walls of a master bedroom and study.

Peter Kostelov refurbished another Moscow apartment in 2009, for which he used industrial materials, but readers thought that one was a bit too much like a prison. Take a look at it here.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Photography is by Alexey Knyazev.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

The following text is from Kostelov:


Multi-level apartment

Characteristic of this apartment is its inner space and cubic capacity.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

It is located on the top 18th floor.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Initially it was a two level apartment of total houseroom of 258 sq. meters.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

As for the first level it was quite common one: three meter standard height of ceiling and a houseroom of 69 sq. meters.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

The second level houseroom was larger 189 sq. meters and the height of ceiling varied from 3 to 8 meters in different zones.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Surely these unique space peculiarities caused project direction: to not only exploit maximum of this nonstandard extreme height but to make multi-level space.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

The owner of the apartment approved the idea, moreover it was requested that each member of the family should have extra space so that everyone including 3 children of different age and gender could have their private space for comfortable living.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Central part of the apartment on the second level was as large as 60 sq. meters and more than 8 meters high.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

The space was vertically divided into two levels by the newly made third level.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

After making necessary calculation on the thickness of overhead cover 0,5 m. was put as required space for structural beams, placing ventilation and final trimming.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

The highest ceiling 4,5 m was chosen for the living room located at the lower part of the second level. The upper part on the second level got 3m., where a bedroom, a bathroom and a study room are located. Thus the third level added 54 sq. m to the apartment.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

The covers between second and third floors have two clear spaces. One was left for the staircase, while the second one, the closest to the window, appeared to join two spare spaces of the second and third level, the flow of light of which makes partially two-tiered space.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

On the third level a dome made by glass partitions separates a bedroom and a study room, which allows the light to spread evenly. The floor space of 9 sq. m. was added to 20 sq. meters of the lower level. Consequently the floor space of each nursery room got 30 sq. m located on two levels.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

A home library ceiling in the right –hand side of the apartment is 4,4 m. The same as in children’s room the second level was made here which enlarged it to 8 sq. m. All in all 35 sq. m was added to houseroom.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Rearranging turned a duplex apartment into four-level apartment having added to it 90 sq. m. of extra house room (from 258 sq. m. up to 348 sq. m.)

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Click for larger image

Nearly all pieces of furniture (except settees and beds) were specially designed.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Click for larger image

The owners gave preference to warm and light colors.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Click for larger image

In contrast to upholstering the furniture was made from natural processed metal: dinner and low tables, bookstands, stools, shelves.

Multi-level apartment by Peter Kostelov

Click for larger image

Location: Moscow, Russia
Built Area: 348 m2
Architecture, Interior Design: Peter Kostelov
Development effort: Kovaleva T.N., Egorova N.G. “OAO Mosproect”
Projecting: 2009
Building: 2010-2011


See also:

.

Apartment in San Sebastian by pauzarq Penthouse apartment by Lecarolimited Axial Symphony by Design Systems

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by André Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

Sketches by this year’s Pritzker Prize Laureate Eduardo Souto de Moura covered several curving walls at the Portuguese architect’s former school in Porto last month (photos by José Campos).

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

Twenty years worth of drawings accompanied a collection of models and photographs that document fifty competition entries.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

Chests of drawers made from oriented strand board displayed the models alongside working drawings, construction photographs and additional sketches.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

Curators André Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira arranged the exhibition at the Álvaro Siza-designed Porto Faculty of Architecture (FAUP). Siza recently renovated another FAUP building, which we featured on Dezeen.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

You can see a selection of completed projects by Eduardo Souto de Moura in our special feature from earlier this year and watch a movie about Casa das Histórias Paula Rego by Eduardo Souto de Moura on Dezeen Screen.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

Here’s a description of the project from architect and critic Carlos M Guimarães:


The path to the Pritzker

The exhibition on the 2011 Pritzker Prize winner Eduardo Souto de Moura named “Competitions 1979-2010” is a tribute to a specific design approach and working method.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

It is also the first exhibition taking place at Oporto Architecture School (FAUP) concerning the works of a former student and professor.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

Instead of focusing on built projects and shiny photographs of the final product, the idea of the organisers André Campos and Pedro Guedes de Oliveira was to reveal the intense and sometimes obsessed working process behind this architect “ouvre”.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

In the two room exhibition gallery of Álvaro Siza’s Architecture School we can check for sketches, physical models, accurate drawings, photomontages, photographs and historic data of 50 projects prepared for competitions between 1979 and 2010.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Concursos 1979-2010 by Andre Campos and Pedro Guedes Oliveira

As we can read in the intro of the exhibition book, we are dealing here “with an informed architecture, produced with conceptual accuracy, commitment, engagement, just like a scientist who searches for a solution and an artist who knows precisely the path he does not want to take.”


See also:

.

Casa by Eduardo
Souto de Moura
Projects by Souto de MouraSouto de Moura wins Pritzker Prize

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

Beijing Design Week 2011: visitors were served tea at a heat-sensitive colour-changing table in a pop-up teahouse for Beijing Design Week.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

Design retailer WUHAO moved into the two-storey building in Dashilar Alley to host a sequence of installations, including plastic yellow canaries disguised as growing lemons and an arched opening lined with green paper butterflies.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

The table by designer Huo Yijin could be found in a downstairs room and changed colour from brown to green when hot water was spilt onto its surface.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

This excess water naturally drained into a disposal container through curved recesses that indented the tabletop.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

Folding stools provided seats around the table, while wisps of bamboo formed lampshades that hung overhead.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

Read our Beijing Design Week highlights here and see more stories about the festival here.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

Here’s a little more text from WUHAO:


WUHAO’s special Beijing Design Week Project WUHAO @ The Teahouse

WUHAO Curated Shop prepares to go from its ‘secret’ peaceful surroundings of 35 Mao’er Hutong, to ‘public’ in-the-bustling-streets with an exciting pop-up project created especially for Beijing Design Week.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

Set in Beijing’s historic Dashilar district, WUHAO @ The Teahouse will display an array of unique installations and lifestyle experiences with an everything-on-display-for-sale concept from cutting-edge fashion to unique tea products to playful toys.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

These will include established WUHAO’s partners like Hangzhou-based Innovo design studio, exciting new furniture designer Zhang Chen, and exclusive labels like Kiroic from Shanghai. It will also go from ‘exclusive’ to ‘affordable’ with many products available in the 10 to 500 RMB range.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

Located in a former teahouse, WUHAO has partnered with socially responsible tea company Tranquil Tuesdays to offer a new vision of this traditional space. Local creative talents will join, including designer Huo Yijin and his custom-made tea table, and designer Li Naihan with her new foldable furniture.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

In keeping with its key values, WUHAO @ The Teahouse will continue the ‘5 elements’ concept of ‘fire’, ‘metal’, ‘water’, ‘wood’ and ’earth’. The space promises to offer a unique selection of WUHAO’s products and labels, a collection of ‘Beijing souvenirs’, a brand new installation, a variety of cross-branding experiments with companies like Beijing Sideways – a specialist of motorcycle sidecar tours who will customize a special Beijing design tour linking Mao’er and Dashilan – and much more.

WUHAO @ The Teahouse

It is once more a fine balance between traditional Chinese content and a consistent contemporary design experience. Let’s spread south towards the summer fire dynamics!


See also:

.

Silent Heroes

told by Zhou Xun

Moolin

by Iasfera

LetThemSitCake!

by Dejana Kabiljo

Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun

Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun

Beijing Design Week 2011: here are some pictures of an exhibition curated by Beijing Design Week‘s creative director Aric Chen, where the childhood possessions of a Chinese actress were arranged beside illustrations of piecharts and explosions.

Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun

Zhou Xun’s humble furniture and objects were interspersed between household items from local residents at the Silent Heroes exhibition, which was located in the festival hub at Dashilar Alley.

Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun

Each object on show was chosen to reveal something beautiful about everyday life in China. Items included a rusty bed, a set of bamboo steamers, wooden chairs and an emerald green tiled floor.

Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun

Suspended plywood screens adorned with the sketches by Chinese illustrators Ray Lei and Chai Mi surrounded the exhibited items.

Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun

See more stories from Beijing Design Week here, including our roundup of highlights.

Photography is by Eric Gregory Powell.

Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun

Here’s some more information from the festival organisers:


Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun

Exhibition offers an intimate look into the actress’s life, and the richness to be found in common things.

BEIJING – Part of 2011 Beijing Design Week (BJDW), Silent Heroes: Objects, as told by Zhou Xun, is one of the highlights of Dashilar Alley, a series of exhibitions, talks, workshops and pop-up shops concentrated in Beijing’s historic Dashilar neighborhood, just south of Tiananmen Square.

Curated by Aric Chen, BJDW’s creative director, the exhibition assembles common objects from the childhood of Zhou Xun, one of China’s most acclaimed and admired actresses. Through intimate, first-person texts and audio recordings, Zhou shares her recollections of these otherwise unassuming things, which have been borrowed from her family in Quzhou, Zhejiang Province: her great-grandmother’s chair; a set of steamers marked with her grandfather’s unusual name, Meng Qiu (“Dream” and “Ball”); a washstand that became a symbol of romance and family affection; the bed where Zhou learned to dream on her own.

“On the surface, these objects might not appear to be especially remarkable. But through Zhou’s heartfelt storytelling, one begins to see their inherent richness,” says Chen. “I think it’s clear to most people that, as China continues its rush towards newness, something is being lost. We hope this exhibition will encourage a greater appreciation of older things, no matter how humble they might at first seem.”

Chen continues: “It’s not just temples and palaces, and books and paintings, that preserve culture; it’s also the implements of daily life. There’s a beauty and authenticity to be found in the imperfections that come with age, which is why this exhibition’s location in Dashilar is especially appropriate.”

For centuries, Dashilar was the lively, thriving commercial heart of Beijing. While it retains much of its character, the area has in recent decades experienced significant decline. The exhibitions, pop-up shops and other events of Dashilar Alley are part of a broader, longer-term effort to revitalize the area in a way that is more sensitive to its existing buildings, urban fabric, and local community.

Accordingly, Silent Heroes ends with objects chosen from the lives of current- day residents of Dashilar, who have generously shared their stories as well.

Throughout the exhibition, both Zhou’s objects and the Dashilar residents’ are inserted within imaginary worlds drawn by Ray Lei and Chai Mi, two of China’s most talented young illustrators. Alongside the texts and audio recordings, these drawings aim to elaborate the meanings that lend the objects their resonance—giving voice to many “silent heroes.”

“Although life is busy, we still need to appreciate those unassuming objects from our common history, to treasure those ‘silent heroes’ in our lives,” says Zhou. “For me, this was a new experience. And I hope to share more in the future.”

The exhibition is generously supported by Diesel.


See also:

.

Water Calligraphy
by Nicholas Hanna
LetThemSitCake!
by Dejana Kabiljo
Water Table Object
by Heng Zhi

Apartment by Pedro Varela & Renata Pinho

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

A yellow wall of storage divides this Portuguese apartment by architects Pedro Varela & Renata Pinho (photographs by José Campos).

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The renovation involved replacing the floor, adding storage and remodelling the kitchen, laundry room and bathroom.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The enormous yellow unit includes a pull-out stool with a smiling face for the client’s future child.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

See all our stories about projects in Portugal here.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The information below is from photographer Jose Campos:


The redesign of this apartment had to deal with specific issues: replace the existing floor, redesign the kitchen while keeping the laundry space, and create lots of storage room.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The bathrooms and master bedroom intervention is a welcome bonus to what was essential.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

Walls were remade out of carpentry work and house different solutions, from storage, to seating, partitioning and doors.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

Playful solutions such as assymetric round holes substituing knobs, and a smiley face substituting a handle, are carved in a yellow closet which is the project’s inner core.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The kitchen is like a big flipping machine, with a replaceable counter, convertible laundry room and hidden storage in a clean layout.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

A unified flooring and the furnishing/replacement of walls with closets gives the feeling of a bigger, somewhat openspace.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The bathrooms have two different geometric themes: one round, the other triangular; while the master bedroom uses wood to complement IKEA furniture.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho


See also:

.

Rounded Loft by A1Architects Apartment  by pauzarq Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes