Renovation Bruges by Room & Room

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

Belgian studio Room & Room opened this apartment in a listed Bruges building to the attic above, then opened the attic to the sky.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

The attic floor has been removed, exposing the existing wooden roof structure and doubling the height of the living space.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

Glazed roof panels inserted between the original structure and neighbouring building admit light to the deep spaces.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

The kitchen is concealed behind pale wooden panelling, while the living area centres around a triangular chimney breast.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

The listed building houses a pharmacy on the lower floors and a family home at the very top.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

The following information is from the architects:


Renovation Bruges (Brugge) – Renovation of a listed building in the historical centre of Bruges

In the shadow of the cathedral the protected building is since the 17th century pharmacy and a home.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

Expand wishes for the pharmacy made looking to expand the house. To connect the adjoining apartment to the attic floor offers the solution. Intensive discussions with the service heritage results in a integration into the sensitive historic urban texture.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

Shed roofs are connecting the bays of the historical roof trusses with the side lying flat. They bring light and space in the heart of the new house.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

The support functions of the house are grouped in the former apartment. This makes the attic fully opened and the trusses are restored to their value as defining elements in the space.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

Two contemporary sink dormer give the house a new identity restored. They open the closeness of the attic without compromising the historical character of the city.

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

ROOM & ROOM, architecture and urban planning

Renovation Bruges by ROOM & ROOM

Click for larger image


See also:

.

House NSV by
adn Architectures
Paris apartment by
MAAJ Architectes
Apprentice Store by
Threefold Architects

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Italian studio Antonio Ravalli Architetti have converted an old factory in Migliarino, Italy, into a youth hostel where guests can stay in these tall fabric-covered pods.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The cylinders are enclosed with translucent fabric, secured by tension cables and sitting on a wooden base to provide a kind of indoor camping space.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The reception is located on the ground floor, with bedrooms, bathrooms and a large lobby area housed over the two upper floors.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Photographs are © Antonio Ravalli Architetti.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

More interiors on Dezeen »

The following information is from the architects:


As a part of a program for the conversion of an old hemp factory into a new city center for the town of Migliarino, the project gains a youth hostel out of a 510 m2 portion of the building.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The site position is barycentric tothe touristic circuits which take place during the summer, thanks to the proximity of the Po River Delta Natural Park, but the project has to count on a reduced regional funding, 270.000 € including the furniture, and a doubtful management profitability.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Thus the management aspects, both with the energetic and economic saving, are the principal matters.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The hostel is imagined as a ‘passive machine’, in which natural air fluxes are conveyed in order to obtain climatic benefits, while the systems distribution and the morphological disposition of the rooms, conceived as to minimize the utilized elements and technologies, allow an elastic hosting capacity: the highest during the spring and the summer, or in case of special events, reduced to the essential during the low seasons.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

While the reception and the facilities are located on the ground floor, the second level presents a single big space with all the windows on just one side.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Four rooms for 2-3 persons each, bathrooms and a staircase are disposed on two levels on the other side.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

These compose a volume which, compact and well-defined, can be air-conditioned with traditional tools. In the main space instead, the air conditioning is based on passive ventilation, eased by the position of the windows on the north side and by two ventilation tower located on the roof.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The impossibility of this space to be divided in more units, due to the uniqueness of light and air provenance, suggests an alternative solution to the dormitory: like an indoor camping, autonomous cells are placed, enfolded in light wrapping.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Not just physically, but also climatically independent ‘rooms’: a punctual air-conditioning system permits to choose which ones to ‘turn on’. The entire system net is located under the inspectionable wood platform, which works as a connective tissue for the cells.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The difference in height marks the transition from the more intimate space of the ‘rooms’ to the common daily area. The movement of the platform perimeter creates occasions for sitting and relaxing, cosy niches in which to read or surf the net.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The space remains fluid, though allowing a multiplicity of distinct uses, while its plasticity is enhanced by the monochromaticity of the introduced elements and furnitures.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

project: MiNO, Migliarino’s new youth hostel
location: Migliarino, Ferrara, Italy
year: 2010

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

architects: Antonio Ravalli Architetti / Antonio Ravalli, Simone Pelliconi, Valentina Milani, Lorenzo Masini, Giuseppe Crispino

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

client: Comune di Migliarino (FE)
category: hostel

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

area: 510 m2
materials: wood, concrete, fabric

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Click for larger image


See also:

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Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli ArchitettiTextile Shipping Containers by Overtreders WNagi by Eiri Ota and
Irene Gardpoit Chan

Suburban Art

A look at domestic-themed work as seen at Miami’s recent art fairs

Call it a deadpan response to the U.S.’s role in geopolitical affairs or just a meditation on the unexpected truth and beauty to be found in contemporary Americana, Art Week Miami 2010 provided some interesting insight into the enduring theme of suburbia. The concept, seen at Art Basel, Scope, Pulse, the Rubell Collection and Nada, made for a refreshing and often witty departure from the highbrow atmosphere and VIPs admiring glossy surfaces and big-name works. Whether or not this focus on domesticity reflects a heightened interest in interior design or a nostalgic yearning for a return to the current generation of artists’ youth—afternoons spent gliding around sub-division sidewalks on skateboards or curled up on a La-Z-Boy watching “Married With Children”—there’s no doubt that the trend speaks to a particular phase in American culture. See some of our favorite examples below.

With contributions by Ami Kealoha, Evan Orensten and Jonah Samson

martinasauter1.jpg martinasauter2.jpg

L: “Roter Vorhang” (2010); R: “Schwarzer Rock” (2010) both by Martina Sauter, seen at Ambach and Rice

domesticity1.jpg

“Lamp” (2010) by Beth Campbell, seen at Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery

erwinwurm1.jpg erwinwurm2.jpg

“Indoor sculpture Zürich” series (2002) by Erwin Wurm, seen at the Jack Hanley Gallery at Nada

Felicity-Warbrick-Dwellings-Carved-Soap-.jpg the_hole_gallery.jpg

L: “Dwelling” series of “Untitled Soap” (2008) by Felicity Warbrick, seen at Waterhouse and Dodd; R:
The Hole
booth (2010), seen at NADA

trecartin1.jpg

“General Park” (2010) by Ryan Trecartin, installation seen at the Rubell Collection

dryer1.jpg

“Dryer” (2010) by Isaac Layman, seen at Elizabeth Leach Gallery

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“Skateboards” (2010) by Comenius Roethlisberger and Admir Jahic, seen at Scope

domesticity2.jpg

“Knitting is for Pus****” (2010) by Olek, seen at Christopher Henry Gallery


Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Italian studio Antonio Ravalli Architetti have transformed the ground floor of a warehouse in Verona, Italy, into a showroom featuring gathered translucent curtains hanging from the ceiling.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The translucent curtains create partitions within the double-height space, which houses a clothing showroom that doubles up as a temporary exhibition space.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

An air-conditioning system blowing air into the space causes the curtains to move continuously.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

On the exterior, a reflective black glass façade at street level means that while views into the space are restricted, visitors can see clearly out to the street.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Stacks of reclaimed wooden beams have been painted white and topped with sheets of treated metal to provide tables.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Photographs are by Antonio Ravalli Architetti.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Here’s a bit more information from the architects:


CONDITIONS:

The program plans to set a clothing showroom, with an inclination to host contemporary art exhibition, inside an anonymous warehouse of the 70’s located in the outskirts of Verona, counting on an absolutely limited budget.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

It’s necessary to gain more rooms for the different activities out of a whole, stereometric, double height space, perimetered by a high ribbon window.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Outside, the warehouse is placed inside a good quality urban scene, with a wide view which opens to east.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

DEVICES:

A light and permeable separation, made of nonwoven fabric used in agriculture, constitutes the structure for the different rooms.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

A black glass window establish the relation between inside and outside, softening the interior light, while signaling to the outside the singularity of the realized space.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The grey paint used for the whole interior space, is applied equally to the external façades, dematerializing the anonymous prospects of the existing building.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Furniture are entirely made with stacks of white painted, recovered wooden beams.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The tables, made of metal sheets treated with acid, host the working stations.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The industrial-like air conditioning system reacts with the lightness of the fabric walls, creating a continuous soft movement which emphasize the dynamism of the space.

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

CREDITS:

project: art gallery Showroom in Verona

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

location: Verona, Italy

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

architects: Antonio Ravalli Architetti / Antonio Ravalli, Simone Pelliconi, Valentina Milani, Lorenzo Masini, Giuseppe Crispino

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

client: Nord srl

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

category: interiors

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

area: 360 m2

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

year: 2010

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

materials: tnt curtain, black glass, wood, white beam, concrete

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti


See also:

.

Boa Hairdressers Salon by Claudia MeierKanebo Sensai Select Spa by Gwenael NicolasJapanse Winkeltje by
Nezu Aymo Architects

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

Industrial designer Konstantin Grcic’s installed seats made of netting suspended from a metal structure at Design Miami/ last week. 

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

Located in the courtyard of the design fair, Netscape featured a six-point star-shaped metal frame with netting forming a series of hammock-like seats.

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

The installation was commisioned by Design Miami/ for the fair, where Grcic was presented with the Designer of the Year Award 2010 (see our earlier story).

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

See all our stories about Konstantin Grcic »

The following information is from Design Miami/:


Konstantin Grcic

Each December, the Design Miami/ designer of the year award recognises an internationally renowned designer or studio whose body of work demonstrates exceptional quality, innovation and influence, while expanding the boundaries of design. Selected by a committee of esteemed design luminaries from around the world, each designer of the year must demonstrate a consistent history of outstanding work, along with a significant new project, career milestone, or other noteworthy achievement within the previous twelve months. This year, we are thrilled to name Konstantin Grcic as the winner of the 2010 Designer of the Year Award.

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

For years, konstantin has been celebrated for an exceptionally thoughtful approach to advanced design, factoring in not only aesthetics but also a wide array of the most pertinent questions facing design creation today: how are we to deal with material scarcity? how can the relationship between objects and their sites of usage be harnessed to create more effective design work? how should design interface with other disciplines — art, architecture, theory, etc. — to maximize its potential? how can we simultaneously tap design’s history while fulfilling the promise of new materials and new technologies, while also creating humanistic work that responds to the pressing needs of the present?

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

In addition to designing objects for both mass and limited-edition markets, konstantin has also begun to direct his unique vision to curating design exhibitions, always reminding us of what matters most in design production and discourse. konstantin is a true designer’s designer. We are honored to recognize his immense talent and his impressive accomplishments.

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

Konstantin Grcic was born in 1965 in Munich, Germany. he apprenticed as a cabinet maker at parnham college, uk, and then earned a degree in Industrial Design at the royal college of Art in london, where he went on to work for Jasper Morrison, before establishing his firm konstantin Grcic Industrial Design in Munich in 1991.

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

kGID has since become one of the most important players in the international design industry, creating objects that have garnered numerous important awards (e.g., the compasso d’oro in 2001) and that have been acquired for the permanent collections of the world’s most prestigious museums (MoMA, New york; centre Georges pompidou, paris; Die Neue Sammlung, Munich; and others). his impressive roster of clients includes vitra, Magis, classicon, flos and Established & Sons, and his limited-edition work is represented by Galerie kreo in Paris.

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

the commission

to commemorate this award, each recipient is given a major commission to be unveiled at Design Miami/. konstantin has chosen to create a two-part project. the first part involves a six-point, star-shaped installation featuring hammock-like seats, designed specifically in response to Design Miami/’s temporary structure and an idea of how to service fair visitors in an original, novel way.

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

More than a seating element, ‘Netscape’ is conceived as a catalyst for social interaction. the project embodies konstantin’s acute sensitivity to the physical site and to the contextual demands of the given project. We know our visitors will enjoy putting this project to good use. The second part of konstantin’s commission involves a special exhibition of the designer’s favorite projects representing the remarkable arc of his career.

Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/

The works in the exhibition, chosen by Grcic himself, include seminal pieces displayed on readymade modeling stands placed in front of large-scale digital images taken in konstantin’s studio. through this presentation, viewers are invited into konstantin’s world, where they can glimpse the logical yet romantic process that is so important to his work. We would like to thank Nasir kassamali and luminaire for generously providing objects for konstantin’s exhibition.


See also:

.

Konstantin Grcic at
Design Miami/ 2010
Bench Between Pillars by
Ryuji Nakamura Architects
Pole Dance by
SO-IL at P.S.1

Mulberry New Bond Street store by Universal Design Studio

Mulberry Store by Universal Design Studio

London firm Universal Design Studio have completed the interior of a shop on London’s New Bond Street for fashion brand Mulberry.

Mulberry Store by Universal Design Studio

Opening this week, the shop features a concrete floor, display stands made of oak batons and an 8.7 metre-long polished brass cash desk.

Mulberry Store by Universal Design Studio

More about Universal Design Studio »

Photographs are by Leon Chew.

The following details are from Universal Design Studio:


Mulberry unveils new store and design concept for its London flagship location

In December 2010 Mulberry will be moving its flagship boutique from its current location at 41-42 New Bond Street, London to a few doors away at number 50. The move is another manifestation of Mulberry’s overall success, evidenced by the company’s mid-term announcement that sales have jumped 79 percent across UK stores compared to last year as well as the recent launch of their app for iPhone and iPad. The opening of the 50 Bond Street store will seal Mulberry’s standing as a luxury fashion brand with a unique emphasis on desirable and responsible creative British output.

Mulberry Store by Universal Design Studio

The new store design is the result of Mulberry’s two year collaboration with Universal Design Studio. It is an innovative, thoroughly modern, dynamic retail environment that reflects the brand’s aesthetic, its commitment to craft, ecological and ethical concerns, and its ties to the English landscape.
According to Georgia Fendley, Brand Director, Mulberry; ‘We are immensely proud of our British heritage and our reputation for craftsmanship; we wanted to facilitate the translation of these quintessential elements of our brand into our retail interiors.

Rather than a pastiche of the craft used to create our products we have sought out the best of British craft for each material and function and let the quality and authenticity speak for itself. The teams have delivered an astounding result given the almost impossible brief we set – beautiful, totally Mulberry, authentic, responsible, flexible and innovative. They have wrestled with the sometimes conflicting agendas of aesthetics and ethics and their passion and commitment are evident in the attention to detail achieved. Unlike many slick ‘shop-fitted’ environments our new Bond Street flagship is designed to last and to develop a patina over time, like nearly all of the best things in life it will get better and better with use!’

Mulberry Store by Universal Design Studio

The new design will provide an open and informal layout over 5,400 feet of retail space set on one level, where customers will be encouraged to meander through the sections at their leisure. To maximise the ability to reflect the change in pace of retail life the majority of fixtures are freestanding and fully flexible, allowing for the manipulation and reconfiguration of the internal architecture.

The finished store will reflect many features of a modern art gallery; juxtaposing informal, open spaces and daylight-simulating, energy-conserving light boxes. The vast open space and raw concrete ‘warehouse’ style floor will be a visual canvas for the refined, bespoke features such as handmade irregular tiles and the textural contrasts between crafted oak, smooth brass and white lacquered surfaces.

Mulberry Store by Universal Design Studio

Different materials are contrasted in all aspects of the interior makeup, for example the brass tablets designed by Jonathan Ellery set into the floor, or in the service area where an 8.7 metre polished brass cash desk is contrasted with the gloss-lacquered panels behind that are designed to reflect light into the narrowest area of the store. There are also sculptured oak timber and textured brass ‘follies’ that break up the store space and offer an intimate shopping environment within the open-plan floor layout.

The environmental concerns of such a large space have been addressed as an integral part of the design brief. Mulberry has been working closely with Max Fordham, consulting engineers who implemented energy efficient concepts into the new store design. As well as the construction and design process there are measures in place for ongoing energy monitoring, designed to create an environmentally aware retail space and working atmosphere.

Mulberry Store by Universal Design Studio

A key feature supporting energy conservation is an undulating stone wall forming the backbone of the store, created using the traditionally British craft of dry stone walling. The wall is an ingenious part of the mechanics of the store, retaining heat in the winter and cooling the air in the summer. Equally inspired is the adaptation of a simple Roman idea; polished brass back plates behind lamps in one of the follies reflect light back into the space, maximising the efficiency of the fittings.

Universal Design Studio is expecting the store to receive a BREEAM rating of ‘Excellent’ which is very unusual in retail constructions and space.
The new Mulberry Bond Street store will be the first flagship to feature this new concept, with several international stores currently under construction. By subtly contrasting the traditional with the modern, customers will be given the chance to immerse themselves in a new retail environment, maximising their enjoyment of the product and appreciation of the space around them.

Mulberry has also created a micro-site, www.fiftynewbondsteet.com, to house exclusive content regarding the project. There are interviews with those involved with the store’s construction, and a time-lapse film showing how it came together, as well as various images of the interior and individual design concepts. Information is being added regularly to build a rich depiction of this dynamic new store and the myriad of components and people involved.


See also:

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Louis Vuitton Maison by
Peter Marino
Reiss flagship store by Universal Design StudioH&M Seoul by
Universal Design Studio

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

This narrow staircase with alternating steps is one of a pair installed by French studio MAAJ Architectes in a Parisian apartment.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Facing each other, the staircases each lead up to a different bedroom.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

The treads and risers have been painted black, contrasting with the predominantly white interior.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Panels on the side of the central staircase hide storage spaces within.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

See all our stories featuring staircases in our Dezeen archive »

Here’s a bit of information supplied by the architects (in French):


Petit appartement parisien en duplex, le projet s’organise en respectant les dimensions réduites de l’espace. Dimensionner, multiplier les fonctions dans un élément, éclairer, simplifier sont les thèmes qui ont dicté notre intervention. Le projet réhabilite la double orientation Est /Ouest nécessaire pour un éclairage naturel constant et diffus, agrandissant l’espace.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Restituer la double orientation démontre que par des mesures simples, un espace peut s’en retrouver complètement transformé par la lumière. L’essentiel du projet redonne accès aux combles afin d’y installer deux chambres. Dans cette espace en double hauteur, un jeu de pistons forme deux escaliers à pas décalés composé de rangements.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Les blocs se juxtaposent, s’emboîtent et s’encastrent afin de regrouper les fonctions nécessaires à chaque pièce (HI-FI, TV, Bibliothèque, penderie…). Regrouper les usages était essentiel pour éviter de réduire l’espace.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Fiche technique

Architectes : Anne-Julie Martinon et Marc-Antoine Richard (MAAJ Architectes)
Localisation : 36, rue Pradier / Paris 19e
Année de réalisation : 2010
Durée des études : 3 mois

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Durée des travaux : 3 mois
Surfaces : 43m² carrez / 71m² au sol (41m² au niveau bas et 30 m² à l’étage sous combles) / soit 57 m² pondéré.
Coût des travaux : 30 233 euros HT hors honoraires architecte


See also:

.

Loft Access by
Tamir Addadi Architecture
Origami Stair by
Bell Phillips
Santpere47 by
Miel Arquitectos

Candido1859 by LOLA

Candido1859 by LOLA

Design studio Local Office for Large Architecture (LOLA) have completed the menswear section of a department store in southern Italy that first opened in 1859.

Candido1859 by LOLA

Called CANDIDO1859, the project features a central round table with a reflective glass top, which allows light to penetrate through to the floor below.

Candido1859 by LOLA

Bent metal wires meander through the space.

Candido1859 by LOLA

See all our stories about shop interiors »

Candido1859 by LOLA

Photographs are by Francesco Prato.

Candido1859 by LOLA

The information that follows is from LOLA:


CANDIDO1859 – Department Store

Maglie-Lecce (Italy)
Surface: 627sm

The last of three floors, the men’s department of Candido (opened 1859) is among the first designer-label stores to open in Southern Italy.

Candido1859 by LOLA

The mirrored ceiling heightens a space which grabs the visitor before enticing them down a coloured path of light.

Candido1859 by LOLA

The raised central patio, which central round table works as skylight for the lower main hall, modifies the surrounding space through a combination of perspective and illusion, one blue tumbling into another.

Candido1859 by LOLA

Candido1859 by LOLA

Candido1859 by LOLA

Candido1859 by LOLA


See also:

.

Centre for Paper Restoration
by LOLA
Rhus Ovata Tel Aviv
by k1p3
More retail
design

Chapel of the Assumption Interior by John Doe

Chapel of the Assumption Interior by John Doe

Grégory Lacoua and Jean Sébastien Lagrange of French design studio John Doe designed furniture for the renovation of this Parisian chapel.

Chapel of the Assumption Interior by John Doe

The Chapel of the Assumption was originally completed in 1961 by French architect Noël Le Maresquier, and features a swooping ceiling and floor-to-ceiling stained glass wall.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

John Doe created oak pews and lecterns, a granite altar and stone font for the chapel, all with a 20mm gap between the supports and top surface to appear as though floating.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

The font is formed by a simple depression in a slab of stone, which holds a litre of water.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

Renovation of the chapel and circulation was undertaken by French architects 3box.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

See Dezeen’s top ten: churches »

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

Photographs are by Felipe Ribon.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

John Doe, the design studio created by Grégory Lacoua and Jean Sébastien Lagrange has hallmarked the new decor of the Chapel of the Carmelites of the Assumption in Paris (16th).

A chapel already intended as an architectural gesture in 1959 by Noël Lemaresquier (a disciple of Le Corbusier), but which was very quickly made impractical following the canonization in 2007 of Saint Marie Eugenie of Jesus, founder of the congregation: a canonization which provoked an immediate flood of visitors requiring efficient organisation.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

An original design and architecture strain that the nuns did not hesitate for a second to confide to contemporary designers to make it intelligible.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

It is over to the 3Box team of architects to whom the reconversion of the chapel has fallen, by rethinking the reception and the circulation of the pilgrims.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

Whilst the John Doe duo tackled liturgical furniture: pews; prie-dieu; altar; font; tabernacle and lectern; so many typologies beyond domestic design that John Doe handles accurately for his very first large- scale building project.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

The paths of design being penetrable, it is always a question of a small, terribly human creative detail which unites and gives meaning to the furnishing as a whole.

The John Doe duo worked on a small, exactly 2cm hiccup.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

A 2 cm gap between the levels and the supports, a small permanent elevation which draws a distinction in the formal vocabulary and that the nuns immediately seized upon to best adapt this new place.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

The font, the altar and the pews consequently levitate together visually.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

The impeccably designed pews have been produced in oak to allow large ranges and integrate other constraints, starting with prayer of the hearts: that is face to face, one of the Congregation’s peculiarities.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe
The centre of the chapel is therefore reserved for nuns who face each other, the regulars situated on the periphery.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

A spacialisation highlighted by the rhythm of the sound of feet: as the centre is approached, the denser it becomes.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

The seating is distributed according to different modules: stalls for the nuns (with or without integrated storage for psalters and bibles); 3 differently sized pews for the congregation with or without prie-dieu.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

The black Zimbabwean granite altar, containing a relic of St Marie Eugenie, has been designed with the same unfailing care, as if it had always been there, a slab of pure stone above ground, the perfect résumé of the altar reduced to its primary function (an altar is originally a simple flat stone which can be mobile and conserve the whole of its function).

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

The font is made from Auberoche stone and by the softness of its line becomes “a simple drop laying a stone,” as the John Doe duo desired.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

Capable of holding a litre, it is as functional as it is minimal and delicate.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

John Doe.

In the Anglo-Saxon culture, a John Doe is a corpse whose identity is unknown, someone anonymous.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

Mocking show cased design, Grégory Lacoua and Sébastien Lagrange therefore chose the proper noun of a unknown generic, an identity which is not one to personify their design whose vocabulary claims to be as free as possible.

Chapel of the Assumption by John Doe

Free of the need to establish themselves as personalities, but very determined to play in the big boys’ arena in the permanent competition register aiming to determine the best response for each question asked.


See also:

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Lumen United Reformed Church by Theis and Khan Kuokkala Church by Lassila Hirvilammi and LuontiMore churches
on Dezeen

David Rockwell Appears in Cosmopolitan Hotel Ad, Talking About His Interior Design Work

Proof that not everything in Las Vegas is cursed, unfinished hotels, pedestrian-frightening malls, and hair-burning death raysDavid Rockwell has appeared in this first of six short films/commercials publicizing the soon-to-open Cosmopolitan hotel in that city. Somewhere below his high-brow travels, being profiled in the New Yorker and joining the board at the Cooper-Hewitt for example, and somewhere nearer to his work designing the Academy Awards‘ sets or, heck, working with Daniel Libeskind in Vegas last year building a Tiffany & Co. shop in the Cosmopolitan-adjacent CityCenter development, Rockwell handled all the interiors for the new hotel. Working with the IFC cable network, who produced the films, the designer/architect appears in this first one, finding him explaining the make up of the swanky rooms. It’s all scripted and very much an ad, of course, but sometimes it’s nice just to see Rockwell in action, right? And we can’t deny that we wouldn’t enjoy staying in one of his nifty rooms.

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