Movie: The Leadenhall Building by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

This time-lapse movie by photographer Paul Raftery and producer Dan Lowe documents the construction of “the Cheesegrater”, a 225-metre skyscraper by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners that topped out today in the City of London.

The Leadenhall Building by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners
Photograph by Paul Raftery

Positioned opposite Richard Rogers‘ famous Lloyds Building, the 50-storey Leadenhall Building will feature a glazed body that is tapered to respect views towards St Paul’s Cathedral. It was this angular shape that inspired its popular nickname.

The Leadenhall Building by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners
Photograph by Paul Raftery

Set to open in 2014, the tower will predominantly contain offices but its base will house a seven-storey public space filled with shops, restaurants and exhibition areas.

The Leadenhall Building by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners
Photograph by Dan Lowe

The movie by Raftery and Lowe frames the first six months of a year-long project to record the final stages of construction. Work on the building previously stalled for over two years when developer British Land experienced financial difficulties but has been progressing steadily since the start of 2011.

The Leadenhall Building by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners
Photograph by John Safa

See more images of the Leadenhall Building in our earlier story, or see more architecture by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, including the soon-to-complete extension to the British Museum.

Music is by George McLeod and titles are by Alex Ashworth.

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Thomas Heatherwick reveals garden bridge designed for River Thames

News: Thomas Heatherwick has released images of a proposal for a garden to span the River Thames on a new pedestrian bridge (+ slideshow).

The design was developed by Heatherwick Studio after Transport for London awarded it a tender to develop ideas for improving pedestrian links across the river.

dezeen_Thomas Heatherwick reveals garden bridge across the Thames_1

Images show two fluted piers supporting a walkway planted with trees, grasses and flowers, offering views of the surrounding city.

“With its rich heritage of allotments, gardens, heathland, parks and squares, London is one of the greenest cities in the world,” says Thomas Heatherwick. “In this context we are excited to have been selected by TFL to explore the opportunity of a pedestrian river crossing. The idea is simple; to connect north and south London with a garden.”

dezeen_Thomas Heatherwick reveals garden bridge across the Thames_3

The structure is proposed for a site between the existing Blackfriars and Waterloo bridges, and will cost £60 million, which Heatherwick will be required to raise from private investors.

Isabel Dedring, London’s deputy mayor for transport told the Evening Standard that “The mayor has been keen to find an iconic piece of green infrastructure that can symbolise London as a high quality of life place to live,” adding “but if private sector funding isn’t forthcoming then the project isn’t going to be able to go ahead.”

This would be the first new bridge built on the river since the Millennium Bridge by Foster + Partners, which originally opened in 2000 but was closed due to safety concerns and reopened in 2002.

dezeen_Thomas Heatherwick reveals garden bridge across the Thames_4

Heatherwick Studio says it has been working on the idea with actor and campaigner Joanna Lumley, who adds: “It’s quite strange to talk of something that doesn’t exist yet, but the Garden Bridge is already vivid in the plans and the imagination. This garden will be sensational in every way: a place with no noise or traffic where the only sounds will be birdsong and bees buzzing and the wind in the trees, and below the steady rush of water.”

“It will be the slowest way to cross the river, as people will dawdle and lean on parapets and stare at the great cityscapes all around; but it will also be a safe and swift way for the weary commuter to make his way back over the Thames,” says Lumley.

“There will be grasses, trees, wild flowers, and plants, unique to London’s natural riverside habitat. And there will be blossom in the spring and even a Christmas tree in mid-winter. I believe it will bring to Londoners and visitors alike peace and beauty and magic.”

dezeen_Thomas Heatherwick reveals garden bridge across the Thames_2

Thomas Heatherwick designed the cauldron for the London 2012 Olympics and told us that its lighting was conceived as a religious ceremony.

Heatherwick’s design for a new bus took to the streets of London last year, and he has also recently designed a distillery and visitor centre for gin brand Bombay Sapphire – see all design by Thomas Heatherwick.

Yesterday the winners were announced in a competition to develop a new green space linking sites on London’s Southbank, which aims to rival the popular High Line park in New York – see all stories about parks and gardens.

We’ve also recently reported on a series of bridges in the Netherlands that were copied from the fictions structures depicted on banknotes – see all stories about bridge design.

Visualisations are by Heatherwick Studio.

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Green promenade to provide London’s answer to New York’s High Line

News: London is set to offer a rival to New York’s acclaimed High Line park with these competition-winning proposals for a landscaped promenade linking gardens and railways arches along the River Thames.

The competition, set by the RIBA and local organisation Vauxhall One, asked architects to “create an outstanding new addition to the urban environment” within a district of Nine Elms, along the South Bank.

dezeen_Vauxhall Missing Link competition winners_2

The winning entry from Erect Architecture and landscape architects J&L Gibbons is influenced by the Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens, an amusement park that was a popular location for promenading and entertainment from the mid seventeenth century to the mid nineteenth century.

A contemporary promenade will link major hubs within the site, with a series of permanent and temporary installations along the route acting as “curiosities” to emulate aspects of Vauxhall’s history.

dezeen_Vauxhall Missing Link competition winners_3

Rain gardens will provide sustainable drainage along the pathways, which will be composed of different textured paving to provide variety throughout the scheme.

Chris Law, public realm and development director for the Vauxhall BID praised the imagination of the winning entry: “Rain gardens mix with strangely pruned trees to create a real Cabinet of Curiosities. So Vauxhall! Who would have thought that sustainable urban drainage could be so cool!”

dezeen_Vauxhall Missing Link competition winners_1

The public spaces are located within a larger masterplan for the Vauxhall Nine Elms Battersea (VNEB) area, which includes the transformation of Battersea Power Station into a mixed-use development and the building of the new US Embassy.

The park will hope to replicate the popularity of the High Line, which first opened in 2009, with the second section opening in 2011. In a movie filmed on our recent trip to New York, designer Stephen Burks told us that the High Line is helping to transform the architecture of the surrounding areas.

Italian architects Massimiliano and Doriana Fuksas recently proposed an elevated park above a railway line in the Italian city of Bari – see more design for parks and gardens.

Here’s a statement from the developers and the RIBA:


Erect Architecture announced as winners of the RIBA and Vauxhall One’s International Design Competition

Following a unanimous verdict from the judges, the winner of the RIBA and Vauxhall One’s international design competition has been announced. London based Erect Architecture and J&L Gibbons will now work with Vauxhall One to re-design the public realm in the Vauxhall area of Nine Elms on the South Bank.

Over the last month the three shortlisted entries have had a chance to expand their initial ideas, along with a Green Infrastructure Audit from the Mayor’s Office, before presenting back to the judging panel. In winning the competition Erect Architecture have landed a five year programme of work in which they will work with the Vauxhall One team to realise their plans.

The winning plan demonstrated understanding of the site, history and context, offered exceptional design flair and innovation, and exhibited excellent understanding of Green Infrastructure. In addition the design was quirky and fun. The design entitled The Promenade of Curiosities, focuses on the creation of a Vauxhall Walkway and improvement to the Vauxhall Gardens and Railway Arches.

Chris Law, Public Realm and Development Director for Vauxhall One, commented: “We were absolutely delighted with all the entries. It shows what level of design interest there is in Vauxhall. But the Erect/ J&L Gibbons entry was really special. It has so many quirky and innovative features. We really want to make a difference by regenerating Vauxhall through green and sustainable measures and their entry was outstanding.”

The competition was judged by a panel of high profile figures (including Sue Illman, President of Landscape Institute, Stephen Crisp, Head Gardener to the US Ambassador, Christopher Woodward, Director of the Garden Museum and Doreen Lawrence, mother of Stephen Lawrence) and entries were judged on a number of criteria including opportunities for green intervention, inventiveness, viability and complimenting of existing planning to ensure a joined up and considered public realm for the entire area.

The aim is to create a striking new identity for the area in and around Vauxhall – a stretch of land dubbed the ‘Missing Link’ between the new US Embassy and London’s South Bank. Vauxhall is at the heart of Nine Elms on the South Bank, the £15 billion opportunity area between Lambeth Bridge and Chelsea Bridge which includes Vauxhall town centre, the new US Embassy and Battersea Power Station.

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Information is Beautiful Awards 2013: A global competition recognizing the best in infographics and data visualization

Information is Beautiful Awards 2013


We’ve been slammed with facts, statistics and reports for as long as we’ve known how to ingest and interpret them. There’s a reason why infographics have surged in popularity and been mobilized by the news media; no trick can plant a fact more…

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Clerkenwell Design Week 2013 movie

Clerkenwell Design Week 2013: designers including Patricia Urquiola, Ab Rogers and Jay Osgerby talk about their participation in Clerkenwell Design Week in the first of a series of movies we filmed during the event.

We spoke to designers at showrooms across the central London district, plus Farmiloe Building and House of Detention hub locations, which all make up Clerkenwell Design Week.

Clerkenwell Design Week 2013

In the movie, Jay Osgerby of design duo Barber Osgerby explains why the area is suited to hosting the event: “[Clerkenwell] is where all the architects and designers are based, it’s the perfect environment to show new work to an audience who’s really interested in it.”

“It brings a level of energy to a fantastic central location,” adds designer Ab Rogers.

Clerkenwell Design Week 2013

This fourth edition of the annual event saw the largest exhibitor and visitor numbers, though PearsonLloyd partner Tom Lloyd thinks it still retains a compact local atmosphere.

“I think Clerkenwell is maturing into a great design event,” he says. “I think its size is very nice, I think people like the intimacy.”

Clerkenwell Design Week 2013

Spanish designer Patricia Urquiola discusses why she likes exhibiting in the British capital: “Being in London always means to be involved in the work we are doing, [promoting] a new product and meeting new people,” she tells us. “London always gives you something else.”

Also in the movie, Giles Miller talks about his target of reflected pixels installed in front of a medieval gate “to stamp Clerkenwell on the map”.

Clerkenwell Design Week 2013

This year’s Clerkenwell Design Week took place from 21 to 23 May.

We will be publishing interviews with some of the key designers exhibiting at this year’s show in the coming weeks.

The music featured in this movie is a track called Octave by Junior Size, released by French record label Atelier du Sample . You can listen to more Junior Size tracks on Dezeen Music Project.

Photographs are by Jim Stephenson.

See all our coverage of Clerkenwell Design Week 2013 »
See more architecture and design movies by Dezeen »

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Interview: Sam Arthur of Nobrow and Flying Eye Books: This London publisher rejuvenates the children’s book market with a collection of beautifully illustrated stories

Interview: Sam Arthur of Nobrow and Flying Eye Books


by Gavin Lucas Independent publisher Nobrow has built a solid reputation since its inception in 2008 as a purveyor of beautifully produced image-based books. Now, from its headquarters in a shopfront studio in London’s Shoreditch, it…

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Nudie Jeans London by Maria Erixon Levin

The London store of Swedish denim brand Nudie Jeans has been fitted out as a repair station to mend old jeans (+ slideshow).

Nudie Jeans London

Original architectural features in the shop such as crumbling mouldings have been kept along with rough plastering to give a vintage appearance.

Nudie Jeans London

On the ground floor clothing and accessories are displayed on metal shelves, while more garments are hung on rods suspended from the ceiling.

Nudie Jeans London

Sewing machines threaded with orange cotton are lined up ready to fix customers’ ripped attire.

Nudie Jeans London

One wall, painted petrol blue to match the exterior, has a grid of white hooks to hang jeans from their belt loops.

Nudie Jeans London

Curtains made from patches of old fabric form circular changing booths against a tiled wall in the basement.

Nudie Jeans London

More clothes are set on a metal cabinet topped with wood, additional shelving and rails against the white and plywood surfaces downstairs.

Nudie Jeans London

Wooden blocks laid on the floor like bricks are covered with rugs made from recycled denim, reinforcing the repair and reuse concept.

Nudie Jeans London

Nudie Jeans creative director Maria Erixon Levin used a Gothenburg food market as a reference when designing the shop.

Nudie Jeans London

Other related stories include a pavilion built by G-Star Raw to display their clothes at Tokyo Designer’s Week 2007 and an installation of lightbulb arches in a Diesel gallery.

Nudie Jeans London

We spoke to Miguel Fluxá, head of shoe brand Camper, at the opening of the brand’s lastest New York boutique where he explained why all their shop interiors are different – read the interview here.

See more retail interiors »

Read on for the press release:


Swedish organic denim house, Nudie Jeans, this month debuted their first UK concept store, and officially their first Repair Station in the world, in the Soho district of London, UK. The 15th concept store for the brand, London follows Stockholm, Tokyo, Los Angeles,Zurich, Barcelona, Sydney and Nudie’s own backyard Gothenburg.

Nudie Jeans London

“We are very excited to be opening our first UK store, which will give us the opportunity to really tell our unique concept. The UK is one of our biggest profile markets and our store will meet the demands we have seen for our brand globally,” says Andreas Åhrman, Sales & Marketing Director.

Nudie Jeans London

Standing in a prominent location on the corner of Berwick and D’Arblay Street, the 100-square-metre store is presented over ground and basement floors, with a 40-square-metre showroom housed above. The interior concept is designed by creative director Maria Erixon and inspired by a Gothenburg food market, featuring raw and rustic vintage fixtures juxtaposed against a stark bright backdrop, while carefully preserving the beautiful architectural features.

The London store houses the first official Repair Station globally, and offers customers a complimentary repairs and alterations service by one of the experienced Denim Specialists.

Nudie Jeans London

The repair and reuse initiative reinforces Nudie’s ardent strive to set a new standard in sustainable production. With Nudie’s extensive range of unisex fits and washes, the store will be the faultless place for London and international visitors alike to find a perfect pair of jeans guided by seasoned denim experts.

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Peace Pavilion by Atelier Zündel Cristea

An inflatable pavilion covered with a clear tensile membrane has been installed in east London by Paris architects Atelier Zündel Cristea (+ slideshow).

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

A continuous white tube twists and undulates to create a three-armed form that visitors can walk or sit underneath and climb on top of.

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

“The design of the structure is a simple topological deformation of a torus and the shape was mathematically generated,” the architects told us.

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

The clear plastic sheet stretched over the top and attached with zips forms a springy surface, which can be reached by clambering up one of the sections that touch the ground.

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

An anodised aluminium platform with the same plan as the inflated structure forms the base, anchored to the ground at six points around the edge.

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

Atelier Zündel Cristea‘s design won first prize in a summer pavilion competition organised by ArchTriumph.

It is located in Museum Gardens in the east London area of Bethnal Green, next to the Museum of Childhood, and will be in place until 16 June.

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

Over in west London, this year’s Serpentine Gallery Pavilion by Sou Foujimoto was unveiled earlier this week. See the first photos of the structure here, additional images here and watch our interview with Fujimoto here.

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

Our other stories that feature blow-up design include the entrance to last year’s Design Miami fair that was covered by inflatable sausages and a balloon shaped like a naked fat man pressed up against a gallery window.

See more inflatable architecture and design »
See more pavilion design »

Photography is by Sergio Grazia.

The architects sent us the following information:


Enhancing the experience of the city does not always require projects of significant cost and time, but can often come about as the result of modest, temporary interventions and events, in key places, at chosen times.

Our office is dedicated to the conception of interventions likely to appeal to city residents, transforming the way in which they view the places around them and the practices possible in their cities.

Human beings carry within them nostalgia of a primordial happiness from ancient times. The notion of a return to these origins of happiness is often associated with Nature.

Our intention is to encourage inhabitants to participate in fun, uncommon events taking place within the urban landscape: an inflatable bridge equipped with giant trampolines rises above the Seine, a pavilion erected in a London park, a museum traversed by a roller coaster.

These projects offer, in the heart of the city, new forms of Elysian Fields, given over not to the Champs-Élysées of shopping and strictly urban activities, but rather to fundamental human practices, which liberate strong emotions calling on all our senses.

The site of this competition is the Museum Gardens, Cambridge Heath Road in Bethnal Green, London. It lies within the Tower Hamlets and Hackney boroughs. The gardens are on the English Heritage Register for Historic Parks and Gardens. It is approximately 1.05 hectares in size and is surrounded by: Cambridge Heath Road, Museum Passage, V&A Museum of Childhood, St John’s Church and Victoria Park Square. The site’s main use is as a recreational garden for living, working and visiting communities. Given it’s prominence within the community it serves, it is clear to us that it is important that the most is made of the site through our pavilion.

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

Our project responds to the desire to create a temporary transportable pavilion for the summer of 2013 in such a public space, with a need for inclusion, socializing, relaxation, discussion, reflection, escape, view and enjoyment of a high quality space.

It will provide an inspirational space where visiting architects, designers, families and the general public can stand and sit whilst admiring, embracing diversity and engaging with each other in discussions about design, the importance and benefits of peace and co-existence, or even novel stories they have to tell in a peaceful setting.

The Museum Gardens, and nature in general are the perfect settings to promote the idea of peace, to encourage the sharing of joyful stories and provoking discussions about architecture and design.

We propose a Pavilion which is visually and aesthetically engaging. We think it is capable of providing an ideal contemporary space which offers a sense of tranquility, beauty and an exceptional aesthetic value to the very heart of the Museum Gardens.

Peace Pavillon by Atelier Zundel Cristea

Peace is one of the highest possible human ideals. It is a state of equilibrium; it means NO WAR, but also harmony, silence, pureness, kindness, happiness, appeasement, calm, reconciliation, serendipity, tranquility…

To express all of these ideas, we have created a perfect and symmetrical sculpture, obtained by a precise geometrical manipulation. The beauty of the shape lies in its perfect symmetry and fluidity; we feel there is no need to explain it a great deal as it is a pavilion that speaks to everyone. It allows visitors looking at the volume for a split second to get a sense of the pavilion and its layout with minimum effort.

The symmetrical geometry of the pavilion blurs our notions of inside and outside, however the simple act of motion through the exterior and interior spaces of the pavilion bringing an understanding to the visitor.

The Pavilion is 4 meters in height and 20 square metres in area. Designed entirely with lightweight materials – 77.96m² of PVC membrane and 20m3 of air – our project is a self-supporting structure; it is easily scalable to inhabit larger dimensions of other sites.

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“I tried to create something between nature and architecture”

In this movie filmed by Dezeen at the unveiling of this year’s Serpentine Gallery Pavilion in London today, Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto explains how he used a rigid geometric grid to create a soft and natural atmosphere. 

"I tried to create something between nature and architecture"
Photograph by Iwan Baan

“The inspiration started from the beautiful surroundings,” Fujimoto says. “I was so impressed by the beautiful green surroundings, so I tried to create in this green environment something between nature and architecture, tried to create a transparent sturcture that melts into the background.”

"I tried to create something between nature and architecture"
Photograph by Iwan Baan

To achieve this, Fujimoto created his pavilion from a white lattice of steel poles, with variations in density creating a structure that appears more or less transparent depending on where you stand.

“The grid itself is quite straight, rigid and quite artificial,” he says. “But when you have such a huge amount, it becomes more like an organic cloud-like or forest-like [structure].

"I tried to create something between nature and architecture"
Photograph by Iwan Baan

“I was fascinated by such a beautiful contrast [beween] the really sharp, artificial white grids and the organic, formless experience.”

"I tried to create something between nature and architecture"
Image copyright Dezeen

Fujimoto goes on to reveal that it took him a while to work out how protect visitors to the pavilion from the rain. “We couldn’t put a roof on [it] because it would spoil this beautiful structure,” he says. “Finally we had the idea to use polycarbonate transparent discs,” which slot in between the gaps in the lattice.

"I tried to create something between nature and architecture"
Image copyright Dezeen

The polycarbonate tiles are not just to provide shelter, Fujimoto says. “Sometimes, if the wind is coming, [the roof] starts to swing and [creates] a more soft atmosphere, and a beautiful contrast with the grid.”

See our earlier story for more images of Sou Fujimoto’s pavilion »

"I tried to create something between nature and architecture"
Sou Fujimoto

See all our stories about the Serpentine Gallery Pavilions »
See more architecture by Sou Fujimoto »

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Photos of Sou Fujimoto’s Serpentine Gallery Pavilion

Here’s a full set of images from this year’s Serpentine Gallery Pavilion by Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto (+ slideshow).

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

Unveiled this morning, Sou Fujimoto‘s design features a cloud-shaped grid of steel poles with varying density.

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

The sticks part to form two doorways and visitors can climb up onto transparent ledges within the structure.

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

They can also sit at cafe tables and chairs underneath, sheltered from above by a layer of transparent plastic discs.

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

The pavilion will open to the public from Saturday and remain in front of the Serpentine Gallery in Kensington Gardens until 20 October 2013.

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

Dezeen published the first photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 from the press preview this morning, where Fujimoto explained how he wanted to “create a nice mixture of nature and architecture,” adding “that has been the great interest for me these last ten years.”

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

See more architecture by Sou Fujimoto on Dezeen, including a house that looks like scaffolding and a library with shelves on the outside.

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

The annual unpaid Serpentine Gallery Pavilion commission is one of the highlights in world architecture and goes to a high-profile architect who has not yet built in the UK. At 41, Fujimoto is the youngest to have accepted the invitation.

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

Past commissions include Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei, Peter Zumthor, Jean Nouvel, SANAA and Frank Gehry.

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

See our handy guide to all the Serpentine Gallery Pavilions »
Watch our interviews with Herzog & de Meuron at last year’s opening »
Watch our interview with Peter Zumthor in 2011 »

Photos of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2013 by Sou Fujimoto

Photographs are by Jim Stephenson.

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