"The pieces wouldn’t be anything without the people who interact with them" – Jason Bruges

A wall of digital animals that distract children on their way to surgery is one of the interactive installations presented by designer Jason Bruges in this movie we filmed at our Designed in Hackney Day.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: digital wallpaper at Great Ormond Street Hospital

In the movie, Jason Bruges shows 20 short movie clips of his studio’s installations and experiments as part of the Pecha Kucha event during our Designed in Hackney Day last summer.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: a hotel lobby with colour-changing walls

Among them is a project for Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, which saw the studio install a digital wallpaper along a corridor.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

“The whole rationale behind the piece is to distract children on their way to surgery,” explains Bruges. “We’ve created this sort of half-tone forest in which digital animals appear and disappear as you’re wheeled through en route to surgery.”

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: light installation at Tate Britain

“We’re a studio that crosses the boundaries of art, architecture and interaction design,” he adds.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: kinetic installation for More4 ident

He then introduces a hotel lobby in Madrid with interactive walls of dots that change colour with every visit, and an installation of thin, wobbly lights in the Tate Britain art gallery in London.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

The studio has also worked on projects with television companies, creating imaginary radio studios for a BBC ident and installations of flapping squares for TV channel More4.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: micro wind turbines on London’s South Bank

A project about “energy-scavenging” on the roof of Queen Elizabeth Hall saw hundreds of tiny turbines converting wind energy into a field of light.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

The studio installed a track in the Olympic Park where visitors can race 100 metres against a light representing sprinter Usain Bolt, while elsewhere in the park the studio created mechatronic bubbles for Coca-Cola.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: mechatronic bubbles for Coca-Cola

There’s also a piece for a Richard Rogers-designed building in Soho. “It’s a lift that remembers all the movements it’s made during the day and plays them back at night as a performance,” explains Bruges, “so it fills the time from dusk to midnight with this symphony of light, which is hacked into the lift’s control system.”

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

“None of these pieces would be anything without the people who actually interact with them,” he concludes.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: lights on a Soho building show the movements of the lift inside

We’ve featured a few projects by Jason Bruges on Dezeen, including a lighting mobile that moves around to map its surroundings and an installation of light panels that open and close like flowers – see all our stories about Jason Bruges Studio.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Designed in Hackney is a project by Dezeen to highlight the best architecture and design made in the borough, which was one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices.

Watch more movies from our Designed in Hackney Day or see more stories about design and architecture from Hackney.

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Designed in Hackney: Scan Mobile by Jason Bruges Studio

Scan Mobile by Jason Bruges Studio

Designed in Hackney: Shoreditch-based interactive designers Jason Bruges Studio are presenting a lighting mobile that moves around to map its surroundings at Light+ Building in Frankfurt this week.

Scan Mobile by Jason Bruges Studio

Named Scan Mobile, the installation comprises seven mechanised arms attached to eight lighting nodes, each fitted with a sensor that can detect objects beneath and calculate how far away they are.

Scan Mobile by Jason Bruges Studio

Jason Bruges set up his interactive design studio in 2002 and has since completed a number of installations using moving lights and mirrors. See a few of them here.

Scan Mobile by Jason Bruges Studio

Their offices are located on Bevenden Street, just north of Old Street roundabout.


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Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

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Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Mimosa by Jason Bruges Studio

Milan 2010: interactive designers Jason Bruges Studio of London have sent us a video of their Mimosa installation, featuring light panels that open and close like flowers. (more…)

Mirror, Mirror by Jason Bruges Studio

London designers Jason Bruges Studio has completed an installation of digital “mirrors” at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. (more…)