M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

A house once occupied by Mexican communist party founder M. N. Roy has been converted into a nightclub by French architects Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

The private club, located in a run-down terrace in the Roma district of Mexico City, is named M.N.ROY in honour of its famous former resident.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

The outside of the house is left completely unaltered, concealing the nightclub where a textured timber pyramid envelops a double-height dance floor and DJ booth.

M.N.Roy Club by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Rough timber blocks and glistening copper tiles cover the walls of other rooms, which are filled with wooden and leather furniture.

M.N.Roy Club by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Corridor walls are clad with black basalt tiles that are dramatically lit from below to accentuate patterns carved into their surfaces.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Behind the pyramid, black walls gradually step inwards to surround a dimly lit bar.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Clubbers overlook the dance floor from a glass-fronted mezzanine.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

More stories about bars and nightclubs on Dezeen »

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

More stories about projects in Mexico on Dezeen »

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Photography is by Ramiro Chaves.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Here are some more details from Godefroy:


M.N.ROY club in Mexico City

Chic By Accident from the Franco Mexican architect Emmanuel Picault together with the French architect Ludwig Godefroy just completed a private club in Mexico City, called M.N.ROY.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

What s M.N.ROY ?

M.N.ROY is a project made as an open question, the one has for goal not to answer obviously what’s actually the M.N.ROY.

M.N.Roy Club by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

In this way, the place can be perceived as an anti-project of what could be the commission of a private club in Mexico City, an more precisely in its Roma neighborhood.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

In fact Roma has been very important in the definition of the architectural identity of this space, located in a very dueling neighborhood, and responding on one hand to its past, the one of the high mexican bourgeoisie of Porfirio Diaz (Mexican dictator 1876 – 1911) time which abandoned the neighborhood after the 1985 earthquake; and the today’s reality of a trendy urban area that Roma became.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

The club is the expression a high singular personality settling in the strong left over of its past time.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

According to this, where normally the renovation of the facade appears to be the starting point, the opposite was done: letting the facade untouched to increase the rupture between the original meaning of the house and the redefinition of it.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

We kept the house as a testimony of what it was, the house where Manabendra Nath Roy founded the first clandestine Mexican communist party.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

By not touching the facade we made paradoxically appealing the building from outside, stimulating the curiosity of the people passing by and seeing a large queue trying to enter an almost ruin house.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Once inside, we made another step in a schizophrenic architectural way, introducing a new language, deeply belonging to the mexican culture, and nevertheless completely stranger to the Porfirio Diaz architecture time.

M.N.Roy by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

We used a pre-hispanic language reminiscence inside, in a participative way and not contemplative as could be a nostalgic neo pre-hispanic vision of it, introducing new materials (copper, leather, wood, volcanic stone), geometries (puuc art, maya arch, pyramids), and everything, down impressive generous volumes.

M.N.ROY by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

M.N.ROY is the impossible mix of cultures, volumes, architectural styles, making possible an improbable modern space of melting pot.

M.N.Roy by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Architects: Emmanuel Picault / Ludwig Godefroy

M.N.Roy by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Creative team: Rodrigo Madrazo / Marco Margain / Claudio Margain / Rodrigo Diaz Frances / Paolo Montiel / Leon Larregui / Emmanuel Picault / Ludwig Godefroy

M.N.Roy by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Industrial design: Laila salomon / Emmanuel Picault / Ludwig Godefroy

M.N.Roy by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Administration: Roberto Ayala

M.N.Roy by Emmanuel Picault and Ludwig Godefroy

Construction: Aaron Yepez / Jose Luis Madrigal / Carlos Tapia / Base por altura / Alonzo Mungia / Carlos Cortes / Jose Luis Iturbe / Rigoberto Martinez


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Primewine Bar by
Sandellsandberg
26 Lounge Bar
by Cor
Maison Du Champagne by
Lin, Bolchover and Carlow

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto

A swirling labyrinth of cardboard conceals sculptures by Italian artist Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery in London.

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery

Entitled The Mirror of Judgment, the recently opened exhibition displays artworks that represent Christianity, Islam, Judaism and Buddhism.

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery

The corrugated cardboard maze stands at around shoulder-height.

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery

Pistoletto, who is famed for using reflective surfaces in his work, has positioned mirrors beside the sculptures to reflect the wiggling cardboard.

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery

The exhibition continues until 17 September and coincides with Peter Zumthor’s Serpentine Pavilion, a temporary summer shelter that is located just outside. More details about the pavilion in our earlier story.

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery

More stories about cardboard on Dezeen »

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery

Photographs are by Sebastiano Pellion.

Mirror of Judgement by Michelangelo Pistoletto at the Serpentine Gallery

Here are some more details from the gallery:


Michelangelo Pistoletto
12 July -17 September 2011

A new exhibition by leading Italian artist Michelangelo Pistoletto opens this summer at the Serpentine Gallery. Winner of the Golden Lion Award for Lifetime Achievement at the Venice Biennale in 2003, Pistoletto is acclaimed worldwide as a key figure in the development of conceptual art and as a founder of the influential Arte Povera movement.

For his exhibition at the Serpentine, titled The Mirror of Judgement, the artist has devised a labyrinth that guides visitors through the Gallery’s interior where they discover a series of sculptural works. He describes the labyrinth as ‘a winding and unforeseeable road that leads us to the place of revelation, of knowledge.’ Pistoletto’s maze alters the viewers’ understanding of the architecture and makes each one a fundamental part of the work itself.

Throughout his career, Pistoletto has worked as a theorist and activist using art to inspire and produce social change. In 2004 he announced the most recent phase of his work, the Third Paradise, an imagined new level of human civilization. The exhibition will include elements from the Third Paradise series and representations of four major religions; Christianity, Islam, Judaism and Buddhism.

Born in Biella, Italy, in 1933, Pistoletto began as a painter in the mid-1950s and in the 1960s received critical acclaim for his series of Mirror Paintings. These works broke down the traditional notions of figurative art by reflecting their surroundings and the viewer as a part of the image, linking art and life in an ever changing spectacle.

The exhibition at the Serpentine continues the artist’s exploration of participation. In the late 1960s, Pistoletto established The Zoo, a workshop open to artists, filmmakers, intellectuals, poets and the public that centred on collaboration and performance. The projects he worked on with The Zoo were closely entwined with his individual studio practice, combining material form, pictorial space and theatrical gesture. This focus on participation developed in 1998 with the creation of Cittadellarte: Fondazione Pistoletto, a centre for the study and promotion of creativity of all kinds. This interdisciplinary approach is an intrinsic part of his goal to unite the diverse strands of human civilisation through art.

Also on view is the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 designed by Peter Zumthor, 1 July – 16 October.


See also:

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Rolls by Sinato
for Diesel
Karis by Suppose
Design Office
Heart of Shapes by
Keiko + Manabu

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Visitors to a recent Liverpool exhibition rolled eggs down seven timber follies designed by London studio Aberrant Architecture.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Called The Social Playground, the exhibition at Liverpool’s Foundation for Art and Creative Technology (FACT) was based around the British tradition of racing eggs down hills at Easter.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Each structure incorporated informational displays about various FACT programmes for the community.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The exhibition ran from April to June 2011.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The following information is from Aberrant Architecture:


The Social Playground

‘Knowledge Lives Everywhere’ Exhibition FACT, Liverpool.

As part of Knowledge Lives Everywhere, an exhibition at FACT, aberrant architecture have designed The Social Playground, a giant interactive landscape built in collaboration with local community groups.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The Social Playground is based around the British game of egg rolling, an Easter tradition that sees families decorating hard boiled eggs and rolling them down local hills and slopes.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

aberrant’s version invites visitors to race wooden eggs down and around seven unique structures that represent and display work by the various groups FACT works with.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Each structure is a landscape for visitors to explore and reveals a different part of FACT’s Collaboration Programme and its relationship to the city.

Kevin Haley, Co-Director of aberrant architecture said: “The structures where designed in collaboration with the various groups that FACT works with. This collaboration involved a series of workshops which asked the groups to identify the main issues and interests that they were exploring collectively and challenged them to design a structure that related and responded to these issues.”

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Mike Stubbs, Director/CEO of FACT said: “Galleries and museums are not just about objects; they are about the people who use them: students, children, researchers, schools, older people, families. This exhibition is about giving a platform our schools, young people and community programmes and demonstrating the role of the 21st century arts centre in community cohesion, civic engagement, well-being and lifelong learning. Visitors to the galleries should expect to experience a social playground – where the emphasis is on open invitation, not private view!”

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Specific details about each of the seven structures and the specific community groups that aberrant worked with are as follows.

The Healthy Spaces Hub

Located in the FACT atrium, The Healthy Spaces Hub represents FACT’s partnership programme with Liverpool City Council. The Healthy Spaces Hub demonstrates the ethos of the programme which aims to transport people to an alternative space through digital art.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The programme is based in the Garston area of Liverpool and the structure references the coal drops that used to populate Garston Docks at the beginning of the 20th century. Entering the structure takes the visitor to a natural environment and immerses them in the sounds of Wild Song at Dawn by Chris Watson (an audio artwork permanently installed within Alder Hey Children’s Hospital since 2008). The façade of the structure features planted bird boxes to house the Twitter plants of artist Ross Dalziel, and elements of Alison Kershaw’s long term collaborative commission with Mersey Care. Windows in the coal drop are created from slogans from the “Five Ways to Wellbeing” manifesto, which have been lasercut into the façade.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Communications Tower

Inspired and produced by Freehand (FACT’s Young People’s Programme), The Communications Tower demonstrates how the Freehand programme reaches out across the Northwest, bringing art and film into the bedrooms, youth clubs and computers of young people.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Based on a telecommunications tower, a beacon for long distance communication, it demonstrates the important role that social networks such as Facebook play in keeping young people in touch with each other and with organizations like FACT. Satellite dishes on the tower show films and exhibit the projects that FACT and Freehand are engaged with.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The Freehander Fabrication

The second structure, produced by the Freehanders – the steering group that helps drive the Freehand programme – is all about a future Liverpool taken over by creativity. It shows how Freehand and young people are part of Liverpool’s artistic infrastructure and includes a striking new film commission produced by the Freehanders.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The structure makes reference to their unique work by presenting a collage of familiar city centre sites -The Bombed Out Church, The Everyman Theatre and The Futurist cinema – as a future Liverpool landscape; one in which the real and the imaginary are interwoven. Within this landscape the Freehanders will create graffiti-billboards on which they will depict their visions of both possible and impossible futures for their city.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

At the centre of the structure, an outdoor cinema offers a place to sit amongst the rooftops and view a show-reel of the Freehanders’ work.

The tenantspin Digital Citizen’s Hub

The rise of digital technology has meant that in one way or another we are all producers. Whether it be a text message to a friend, or a Facebook profile, we are increasingly using technology to find a voice. Over the last 12 years, FACT and Arena Housing’s tenantspin programme has empowered individuals and communities to tell stories and share knowledge through a wide range of training programmes and workshops.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The Digital Citizen’s Hub is a guide to how you can develop your voice through digital media. The structure is based on Coronation Court – the tower block and the flats where tenantspin first began broadcasting a series of webcasts over a decade ago. This structure represents new forms of digital debate which provides an individual with an audience of listeners. Within the Hub, visitors are able to learn about what it means to be a Digital Citizen. They also have the opportunity to view webcasts from tenantspin’s twelve year archive, showing the wide range of local and global issues that have been covered.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The Communi-Tree

The Communi- Tree represents The Network Enterprise Team (NET), a collaboration between FACT and The Academy of St Francis of Assisi. The partnership began in 2009 during FACT’s Climate for Change exhibition and through the programme young people work with businesses to create ethical and environmental products. The students then sell these products to raise funds in order to take part in an ongoing cultural exchange with FACT’s New York partners.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Inspiration for the tree structure grew organically out of a workshop, during which the young people were split into smaller groups and challenged to design a structure. Several groups had a similar idea of the using a tree that becomes a mini market place for their products. The final structure features branches that provide hanging locations for the merchandise on sale and the trunk encases various screens displaying films that the group have made. The egg rolling course wraps around the trunk like a vine.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

North Liverpool Pavilion

tenantspin is FACT and Arena Housing’s 12-year-old groundbreaking community arts and media project. Designed with a representative group of partners, the North Liverpool pavilion, references the physical appearance of Anfield/Breckfield and acts as community hub for people to share, understand and interact with community based practice.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The structure is directly influenced by the pubs of Liverpool; specifically the now closed Salisbury, a community pub, midway up Granton Road, which like many pubs in the city was once a place for local people to meet and share space and time together. A new lounge is carved out of an interior that once belonged to a familiar pub from the local area. Within this lounge lies a place to sit and view some of tenantspin’s community projects in Anfield and Breckfield. The lounge also provides a positive place for communities to meet.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The Flying FACT Academy

Representing FACT’s Schools and Learning Programme, this structure has been developed in collaboration with Creative and Media Diploma students at Knowsley Community College.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The Flying FACT Academy is an airship that flies around the city working with students and artists to embed creativity and media at the heart of learning. In the belly of the mobile academy lives a series of screens and speakers that allows the structure to project the work students have made working with FACT artists, onto the ground. The structure is shown attached to a docking station – one of many that would be stationed around the city, representing the idea of FACT dropping off projects or briefs to engage its students.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

The mobile academy offers the opportunity to expand FACT and turn the entire city into a school.

The Social Playground by Aberrant Architecture

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Mini Golf Club
by La Bolleur
The Long Drop by
Studio Glithero
Wood Work by
Karen Ryan

NET by For Use/Numen

Net by For Use/Numen

Visitors can clamber inside a stretchy web of netting installed by For Use/Numen at Belgian gallery Z33 this summer.

Net by For Use/Numen

The designers from Croatia and Austria suspended large nets from the walls and ceiling to creating a shifting landscape that’s distorted as people move around inside.

Net by For Use/Numen

For Use/Numen are best known for their Tape Installations, which use several kilometers of transparent sticky tape to create cocoons between the pilars of a host building or scaffolding. See our earlier story about their installation at DMY Berlin 2009 here.

Net by For Use/Numen

NET is on show at Z33 in Hasselt until 2 October 2011.

Net by For Use/Numen

See our stories about past exhibitions at Z33 »

Net by For Use/Numen

Photography is by Kristof Vrancken.

The following information is provided:


First Belgian exhibition by Austrian/Croatian design collective

From 3 July to 2 October Z33 – house for contemporary art shows the new installation ‘NET’ by the Austrian/Croation design collective Numen / For Use. They have created this new installation for their first exhibition in Belgium.

NET consists of flexible nets suspended from the walls and ceiling, which form a floating ‘landscape’. This landscape gives visitors the opportunity to climb in these nets or to explore the space. The installation refers to biomorphic architecture and urban dream images from previous decades.

Numen / For Use is the design collective of Sven Jonke, Christoph Katzler and Nikola Radeljkovic. As For Use they are active as product designers for major design companies, while they realize interiors, exhibitions and public spaces as Numen.

Z33

Z33 is a house for contemporary art based in Hasselt, Belgium. It is an unique laboratory and meeting place for experiment and innovation. Since its founding in 2002, Z33 produces and shows projects that reflect on societal and scientific evolutions. This is translated into concrete themes in which everyday things play a central role.


See also:

.

Tape Installation by
For Use/Numen
Netscape by Konstantin
Grcic
Bench Between Pillars
by Ryuji Nakamura

Jeff Lewis and Friends Return for New Season of Flipping Out, Now with More Design

Bravo’s design-fueled summer programming train rolls on! As Martyn Lawrence-Bullard and Mary McDonald continue their delightful scenery chewing over on Million Dollar Decorators (last night’s episode included a priceless shot of McDonald taking delivery of an Edible Arrangement, which instantly convinced her that the sender/would-be client was not a good match), quiptastic house flipper and interior designer Jeff Lewis returns for a fifth season of Flipping Out. In anticipation of tonight’s premiere, we spoke with Lewis and his trusty assistant Jenni Pulos (who has a second career as a rap artist for the toddler set) about the Jeff Lewis design ethos, what’s in store for the new season, and whether they see a Million Dollar Decorators/Flipping Out crossover special in their future.

This season, the focus of Flipping Out shifts from flipping properties to designing spaces. How would you describe the Jeff Lewis Design aesthetic?
Jeff Lewis: I definitely lean more contemporary and my looks are definitely more streamlined. And I like big open spaces. I don’t really like a ton of furniture. I’m not one of those people that over-accessorizes. That’s a little trick of the trade that designers do which I don’t. I work out a different fee structure, so, I don’t mark up everything that I buy for my client. That’s the reason that you’ll see a lot of homes that are over-accessorized and over-furnished.

[Some designers] hang something on every single wall and they put something in every corner. Well, news flash—they mark up every single thing they buy. They have a vested interest in over-selling furniture and accessories to you. So that’s the problem. I suggest working out a flat fee with a designer or an hourly rate. You don’t want to do the mark ups because then, they—I mean not all of them, but a lot of them, obviously—the more furniture they sell you the more money they make. So that’s why you’re seeing, when you open up these magazines and you say, my god, I can’t even walk around that room!

Jenni, how would you describe Jeff’s style?
Jenni Pulos: Jeff, I would like to say that I think that you possess a warm relaxed modern style. You like that? I just filled in the “relaxed” this morning. What do you think?

Lewis: Well, when I did the kitchen for House Beautiful that’s what it was called. They basically said that what I do is “soft modern.” It’s basically taking a very modern space but warming it up. Because that’s the problem for people that love contemporary design. It does tend to feel chilly, and it’s not always so family-friendly.
continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Akio Hirata’s Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

Hats by Japanese milliner Akio Hirata appear to float between the floor and ceiling in this installation by Japanese designers Nendo.

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

The 4000 hats are suspended from invisible threads, surrounding visitors and appearing to hover like ghosts.

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

The majority of the hand-made hats are white, interspersed with the occasional coloured or patterned piece.

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

The installation forms part of a retrospective of Hirata Akio’s work at the Spiral Garden in Tokyo.

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

More projects by Nendo on Dezeen »
More exhibition installations on Dezeen »

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

Photography is by Daici Ano.

Here are some more details from Nendo:


“Akio Hirata’s Exhibition of Hats”

The graphic and exhibition design for the first major Japanese retrospective of internationally-known milliner Hirata Akio’s seventy years of work. For the exhibition space, we wanted to make Hirata’s hats stand out.

The mass-produced non-woven fabric hats we created for the space are the antithesis of Hirata’s carefully handmade hats, and bring them into sharp relief through dramatic contrast.

Hirata oversaw the shape of these hats, which float and stream through the exhibition like ghosts or shells of the real hats exhibited. Some are exhibition stands; others become walls, ceilings and diffusers to scatter light through the space. Flooded with roughly 4000 of these ‘ghost hats’ as though shrouded in a cloud, the exhibition space softly invites visitors inside. There, they find not clear-cut paths to follow but an environment in which they can wander and discover Hirata’s creations as they like, as a way of physically experiencing the creative freedom that underlies Hirata’s work.

Exhibition Information
June 15th – July 3rd, 2011 at Spiral Garden
Address: 5-6-23 Minami-Aoyama, Minato-ku, Tokyo


See also:

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2D/3D Chairs by Yoichi
Yamamoto for Issey Miyake
Contemporary Craftsmanship
by CuldeSac for Hermès
24 Issey Miyake Shop at
Shibuya Parco by Nendo

Café/day by Suppose Design Office

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

The asphalt surface of a car park extends inside this cafe in Shizuoka, Japan, by Japanese architects Suppose Design Office.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

White-painted road markings continue across the interior floor surface, denoting route directions and zebra crossings.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

Door frames and furniture details are picked out in yellow, matching the flagpoles of a driving school that occupies the car park.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

Recycled car seats are used as chairs and benches are modelled on bus-stop seating.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

Large glass panels slide back to remove the walls between cafe and car park.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

More projects by Suppose Design Office on Dezeen »

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

Photography is by Toshiyuki Yano.

Cafe / day by Suppose Design Office

The following information is from the architects:


Café/day

When I was a child I caught some killifish and kept it in a sink. If I was in the same situation now I will by a fish tank. When a fish tank is called a fish tank it will be used as a fish tank. This is something simple but the sink could have been called a fish tank as it had similar function as a fish tank. When you give a name to an object it inherits the function of the name but if you design a place without a name then it is free to develop its own name by the occurring activities.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

Café/day is located within a quiet residential area 5minutes from the train station of Numazu-shi, Shizuoka. The project was to renovate two unit of a Izakaya (Japanese style bar) located on a ground floor of a two storey building.

In front of the building there are car parks, a road, and a driving school and it felt like the road continued forever. When observing the driving school, there were a lot of yellow cars and even the poles that configured the driving lane was yellow. The colour yellow was very influential and the surrounding feature gave influence in designing the café.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

The plan was to make the two Izakaya into one big space by demolishing the party wall and to selectively demolish parts of the wall to open up the space. The counter, lighting fixtures, and fixed furniture were painted to a single colour to make it abstract and erase the name of Izakaya from the space. The only new material that was use was the flooring was the most apparent feature of the surrounding, asphalt was continued into the shop and identify the internal space and external space by the white lines on the floor. The café was able to establish itself as a true open café.

The furniture also incorporates the characteristic of the outdoor space. The bench was designed to mimic a bus stop bench and for the sofa, the car seats were modified and changed to become a sofa.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

Click above for larger image

Inside the café, similar to the driving school, the colour yellow have been placed in the café and it creates a feel that the café is a part of the driving school.

We designed the space so that the bar counter to became book shelves, and the Izakaya itself to a café and the activities of gathering, talking and drinking coffee made the it more like a café.

We used power of names in a paradoxical manner and found a new approach a design process in renovation works. We would like to start with no names in the process of designing in future.

Cafe/day by Suppose Design Office

Click above for larger image

Location: Numazu city, Shizuoka, Japan
Principal use: cafe
Construction Company: Kanou kenchiku
Structural Engineer: N/A
Main Structure: existing building
Site Area: N/A
Total floor area: 73.71sqm
Completion: December. 2010
Design period: May – September. 2010
Construction period: October 2010-November. 2010
Project team: Suppose design office | Makoto Tanijiri,
in-charge: Hajime Nagano


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Hatched by OutofstockChiswick House Gardens
cafe by Caruso St John
West Beach Cafe
by Asif Khan

Maison Martin Margiela Redesigns Paris Hotel


A view of the Essling Bar and a suite at the renovated La Maison Champs Elysées, the first hotel project for Maison Martin Margiela. Below, a hall paneled in aluminum sheets leads to the garden and upper floors. (Photos: Maison Martin Margiela)

Maison Martin Margiela will kick off couture week with a July 4 presentation at La Maison Champs Elysées, the Paris hotel that has just received a stunning makeover by the fashion house. Designed in 1864 by architect Jules Pellechet for the Duchess of Rivoli, Princess D’Essling (grand mistress of fashion maven Empress Eugenie‘s household), the Haussmannian house was completed in 1866. Nearly 150 years (and a few owners and a modern addition) later, Maison Martin Margiela won a competition to redesign the historical part of the 57-room hotel. Team Margiela worked with landscape painters and lighting engineers to deploy materials ranging from wool and paper to Ductal concrete and “gypsum from the Urals” in a new restaurant, smoking room, bar, and reception area, along with 17 jaw-dropping hotel suites. One is papered in black-and-white photographs of the sumptuous salon below, while another drapes everything in Margiela’s signature white cotton covers. Museum fanatics can book the “Closet of Rarities” suite, where the coal black walls and black-stained oak parquet floors are offset by a cabinet of curiosities. “Maison Martin Margiela has created a dramatic world where reality and make-believe seem to blend,” noted the house in a statement. “The decor is like a succession of stage sets where references are mixed so as to create an unusual atmosphere where past and present jostle harmoniously.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Nike Canteen by UXUS

Nike Canteen by Uxus Design

Athletes are illustrated across a wall of orange tubes in this canteen at the headquarters of sports brand Nike in Hilversum, the Netherlands, by Amsterdam studio UXUS.

Nike Canteen by Uxus Design

Developed in collaboration with the Nike design team, the dining room contains individual tables and timber-slatted booths adorned with logos and statistics.

Nike Canteen by Uxus Design

Coloured chairs and picnic benches provide additional seating in the canteen, which is located at the company’s Europe, Middle East and Africa headquarters.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

White graphics on the walls of the kitchen list the favoured lunches of sports stars including Maria Sharapova and Paula Radcliffe.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

A glass-fronted mezzanine at first floor level overlooks the ground floor.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

See also: K-Swiss pop-up store by UXUS Design.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

More interiors on Dezeen »

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

Photography is by Dim Balsem.

Nike Canteen by Uxus Design

Here are a few words from Uxus Design:


Nike EMEA Headquarters commissioned UXUS to be part of the team to re-design their corporate canteen.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

The objective was to create a personalized, social hub inspired by sports that encouraged and enabled the exchange of ideas.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

Working alongside the Nike design team, UXUS created a space utilizing mismatched elements to accommodate the various moods and needs of the employees.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

Semi-enclosed areas and cozy spaces offer solitude,while vast tables and counters stimulate interaction.

Nike Canteen by Uxus Design

Every element was designed for efficiency and the ability of employees to create a personalized eating experience.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

Material choices were inspired by sports facilities with contrasting bright and neutral colors.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

Various ceiling elements such as low hanging lamps create rhythm to diffuse and humanize the tall volume of the main eating hall, while a striking, orange tube wall with super-graphic ties the 2 levels together.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design

The printed graphics were created by Matte Amsterdam.

Nike Canteen by UXUS Design


See also:

.

Rosa’s by
Gundry & Ducker
Niseko Look Out Cafe
by Design Spirits
Cocoro by
Gascoigne Associates

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Clustered pendant lights are suspended over one of the open food and drink preparation areas of this London restaurant by Chinese designers Neri&Hu.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

The open-plan Pollen Street Social restaurant bridges together two previously separate buildings, spread out across the ground floor and basement.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Dining areas are furnished with wood panelled tables and booths, Chesterfield-inspired leather sofas and green glass lamps.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

On the basement level, diners can see into the kitchen through a long horizontal slot window.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

More restaurants and bars on Dezeen »

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Photographs are by Pedro Pegenaute.

The following information is from Neri & Hu (NHDRO):


Recently completed: Pollen Street Social

Pollen Street Social, located in the prestigious Mayfair district of London, is the first independent restaurant by Jason Atherton, the Former Executive Chef at Gordon Ramsay’s Michelin starred Maze. Shanghai-based architectural firm Neri&Hu are the designers for the restaurant and Pollen Street Social represents their first completed project in London.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

The term Social always refers to the interaction of organisms with other organisms and to their collective co-existence, irrespective of whether they are aware of it or not, and irrespective of whether the interaction is voluntary or involuntary. –Wiktionary

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Neri & Hu’s design concept for Pollen Street Social examines the notion of “social” as a reorganization of the dynamic energies of human interaction.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Like navigating a conversation, the architectural spaces steer and negotiate the social relationships not only amongst guests, but also between diners and their food as it is prepared and served.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Within the confined basement and ground floor spaces of two disjointed historic buildings, the architects have woven a series of these social spatial experiences, from the Bar to the Main Dining Room or Private Dining Room to Atherton’s signature Dessert Bar. Placing those other functions such as the Show Kitchen, Service Station, and Back of House into strategic containers, the guests occupy the space in-between, a fluid zone celebrating the theatrics of eating, drinking, and socializing.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

As with the start of any conversation, it is appropriate to begin with a gesture of courtesy, and Neri & Hu’s design for the restaurant’s façade is indeed a nod towards the historic structures surrounding the site. A series of blackened bronze metal frames act as a stitching strategy, redefining the restaurant’s threshold with a modern touch while maintaining the proportions and details of the existing façade. Within these frames, a combination of transparent and translucent glass ensures visual continuity between diners and the life of the street beyond.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Within the restaurant’s ground floor spaces the inviting atmosphere is reminiscent of entering the chef’s own home, and feels as easy as falling into familiar dialogue with an old friend. Through contemporary and abstracted re-interpretations of Old English details—the continuous wood wainscot wrapping each space, the Chesterfield-inspired banquettes, or the green glass P-Lamps at the bar—Neri & Hu has crafted an ambiance that is at once casually domestic yet still retaining the elegance of fine dining.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Dramatic ceiling openings above flood the spaces with light and mark special dining areas, while jeweled pendant lights scattered throughout captivate the eye as food delights the palate.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

There is just the slightest pause in the flow of drinks and conversation as dining guests notice, through carefully carved apertures and aligned views, the stage that has been set in this theatrical dining experience. Through the architects’ willful juxtaposition of the disparate realms of food preparation and food consumption, such as the Finishing Kitchen just behind the Dessert Bar or the Service Station placed front and center in the Main Dining Room, these various spaces come alive as contradictions abound. The actions before them—the carving of an Iberico ham, the dabbing of sauce upon a plate, the practiced swirl of decanting wine—are initially, silently performed for their voyeuristic gaze, but then, with the first bite, the tables are turned and it is the diner that is now practicing a slow and deliberate choreography.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

Like a chance encounter, the basement level is a pleasant discovery with its distinctive material palette of weathered brick floors and glass display cases. The Private Dining Room features wine fridges enveloping its perimeter, providing an enclosed yet visually open environment for intimate gatherings. A slotted view across the corridor into the Working Kitchen deliberately frames the hands of the chefs and pays homage to their skillful mastery of fine cuisine.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

The restrooms on this level are contained within a frosted-glass enclosure with varying degrees of transparency, allowing glimpses of shadowy silhouettes and providing a moment of thrill and audacity. And as a final twist, the restrooms stalls themselves, clad solidly in wood, offer a chance to escape completely and disconnect entirely, should the anxieties of socializing overwhelm.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

With their masterful manipulation of spatial elements and materiality, architects Neri & Hu have captured the vibrancy of a social dining atmosphere as envisioned by Chef Atherton—it flows with comfort and familiarity, while occasionally improvisational and unexpected, but which ever direction the conversation turns, Pollen Street Social is sure to be the talk of town.

Pollen Street Social by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)

The custom furniture and accessories pieces featured in the interiors are from neri&hu, a product brand spin-off from the architectural firm.


See also:

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Nottingdale Cafe by
Found Associates
Restaurant at the RA
by Tom Dixon
What Happens When
by The Metrics