Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

Posters mapping the rivers and hills that form the topography of London by Melissa Price are the final product to be featured as part of London design month at Dezeen Super Store.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

The River and tributaries poster (above) shows all of the small rivers, streams and brooks that feed into the Thames as it flows through London, some of which have been built over and trapped underground.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

The Hills and valleys poster (above) highlights all the London place names that are derived from the geography of their location.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

The posters are screen-printed in metallic silver with blue or green on 160gsm matt white paper and signed by the artist.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

Each poster costs £40, and Dezeen readers can get 10% off any Dezeen Super Store purchase (excluding sale stock and Jambox) and enter our competition to win a designer watch worth £150 by downloading this flyer and presenting it at the shop.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

We have been showcasing a range of products by some of the best designers and brands London has to offer all this month – more details here.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

See more products available at Dezeen Super Store »

Dezeen Super Store
38 Monmouth Street, London WC2
1 July – 30 September 2012

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LN-CC: Music

From Phil Manzanera to Zsou, our look at the London concept shop’s collection of rare vinyl and audio goods

LN-CC: Music

Late Night Chameleon Cafe—known by most as the covetable e-shop LN-CC—is a cosmic place of wonder, both online and at its Gary Card-designed brick-and-mortar location in the heart of Dalston. With an inventory of esoteric goods filling out the striking, cocoon-like space, it’s easy to feel intimidated by LN-CC’s…

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Samsung Paralympics London 2012

Samsung est fier d’être le partenaire des Jeux Paralympiques de Londres se déroulant à partir du 29 août 2012. La marque nous propose de découvrir son implication avec un spot réussi qui nous rappelle que le sport n’accorde aucune importance à ce que nous sommes, mais à ce que nous sommes capables de réaliser.

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Yoobi Branding

Yoobi est le premier restaurant spécialisé dans les Temakis à Londres. S’inspirant du Brésil, pays dans lequel les émigrés japonais ont fait de ce mets une spécialité, l’identité graphique très réussie du restaurant a été entièrement pensée par Ico design. A découvrir dans la suite.

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The War Rooms, St. James’s Park by Ned Scott

This series of hand drawings by Bartlett School of Architecture graduate Ned Scott presents a science-fiction world in which London grows a jungle of crops for fuel and food next to Buckingham Palace.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: The Mall

The War Rooms, St. James’s Park imagines a future in which the UK’s energy supply has been cut following a war over energy resources in 2050.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: The Mall – detail

Scott presents a closed-loop agricultural system where London provides energy and food for itself without relying on imports.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Smart Grid

An anaerobic digester would stand on the outskirts of St. James’s Park, filled with vertiginous crops.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: MP’s House

A sky-scraping ‘energy tower’ nearby would have plants growing on every floor, and a smart grid would be installed for efficient energy use.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: MP’s House – detail

Scott was inspired by Ebenezer Howard, the late 20th century thinker whose utopian writings led to the creation of several ‘garden cities’ in Britain.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: New St. James’s Park

See more work by Bartlett graduates »

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Energy Tower

See all our stories about conceptual architecture »

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Energy Tower – detail

See all our stories about graduate shows in 2012 »

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: The Instrument

Here’s some more information from Ned Scott:


The War Rooms, St. James’s Park

The War Rooms takes a science-fictional premise in which the UK’s energy supply networks are terminated following an Energy War in 2050.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Aerial Perspective

The project explores the implications of the decentralisation of the UK’s energy networks and the implementation of a closed-loop agrarian economy.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Aerial Perspective – detail

The science-fictional scenario presented and the subsequent urban strategies proposed address the challenges the UK faces regarding energy security and fuel poverty, and speculates on the hypothetical consequences of a future where the many risks associated with the UK’s long-term energy strategy come to bear

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Anaerobic Disaster

The War Rooms, St. James’s Park introduces an institutional framework for agrarian reform, inspired by Ebenezer Howard, which operates on three simultaneous scales representative of the three protagonists of Clifford D. Simak’s ‘City’: Man, Dog and Ant.

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Anaerobic Disaster – detail

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Energy Warehouse

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Energy Warehouse – detail

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Howard Boulevard

The War Rooms, St. James's Park by Ned Scott

Above: Howard Boulevard – detail

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UNESCO warns against further high-rise developments on London’s South Bank

South Bank by khrawlings

Dezeen Wire: world heritage body UNESCO has called for a crackdown on high-rise development around London’s South Bank, reports the Evening Standard.

The organisation has asked the British government to include it in the decision-making process on any major schemes proposed for the area in order to protect views from the Tower of London and the Palace of Westminster.

While UNESCO has no direct power over planning decisions, it can ultimately remove World Heritage status from sites if they are significantly altered by new building developments.

Deputy mayor for planning Sir Edward Lister said the Greater London Authority would “fight” for growth. “We understand their concerns but have to balance them with the demands of an expanding city,” he said. “It’s all about moderation from both sides.”

The South Bank is home to a number of London’s most recognisable landmarks, including the Royal Festival Hall, the London Eye and Renzo Piano’s Shard skyscraper.

See all our stories about London »

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The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

London architects Liddicoat & Goldhill added an extension to a south London home with an oak-screened staircase and double-height windows.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The 1930s house was originally built on sloping ground, which left the living spaces at the back hanging one storey over the garden.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The architects came up with an extension in the style of an orangery, with double-height windows to draw light into the lower levels.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

An oak staircase is bordered by a screen of vertical strips of oak which mirror the steel frames of the glazing.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

A glass balustrade has been positioned on the other side of the stairs, allowing light to reach into the rooms behind.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

An unusual double-height white door leads out to the back garden.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Projects by Liddicoat & Goldhill we’ve previously featured include another glazed extension to a period house in London as well as the architects’ own home which makes use of black bricks and white marble.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

See all our stories about residential extensions »

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Photographs are by Keith Collie.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Here’s some more information from the architects:


The family moved to their 1930s house in Southfields in 1989. Since then, they has gradually outgrown the house: in 2011 they asked Liddicoat & Goldhill to adapt it to theirs and their four teenage sons’ ever-evolving needs.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The original house, one of a collection built on a hill overlooking south London, apparently ignored the sloping ground on which it was built. Viewed from the street, it sits comfortably on the site. But at the rear, the living spaces hang one storey above the mature garden – they are left aloof and separate.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

This disconnection was also felt inside: the large basement spaces were dimly lit and truncated from the upper parts of the house.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Liddicoat & Goldhill’s solution is conceived as an Orangery. By stripping away the lower part of the rear facade, the Architects created space for this new double-height extension, floating half-way between the ground floor and basement.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The Orangery acts as a lantern, gathering sunlight into the living spaces deep within the house.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The kitchen is afforded wide views over the verdant rear gardens, while the split levels allow for separate and private operation of each of the living spaces.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Slender steel-framed glazing gives the new structure a sense of fine fragility, while the handmade oak furniture, staircase and kitchen – designed specifically for the project by the architects – creates a continuity between the new spaces and the old.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Project Particulars:
Site: London, SW18
Architect: Liddicoat & Goldhill LLP
Main Contractor: Considerate Building
Structural Engineers: Fluid Structures
Completion date: March 2012
Extension floor area: 56m2
About Liddicoat & Goldhill

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Architects David Liddicoat & Sophie Goldhill are focused on making. Their interest lies in the haptic and the imagined, the poetry of practical things. They work with humble materials in contested environments to create the unexpected.

The Orangery by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Their work has been critically acclaimed and published and exhibited worldwide. Named as one of Wallpaper* Magazine’s ‘Future 30’ in 2009, they were longlisted for Young Architect of the Year Award in 2011.

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Touch Digital by Post-Office

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Herringbone parquet covers the walls and floor of this photography studio in east London by local design practice Post-Office.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Partitions around retouching booths contain vertical slats covered in grey felt to provide a colour-neutral background for viewing images on a computer screen and dampen the noise from the open workspaces.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

The slats are finished in light wood on the side facing the communal areas and can be swivelled to control the levels of light in the booths.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Dark furniture in the reception and communal areas stands out against the wood.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

We’ve also featured herringbone parquet on the floor of a Parisian boutiquethe walls and ceiling of a personal shopping suite in London and seats in a Zurich cafe.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Post-Office is lead by designer Philippe Malouin and you can see more of his work plus interviews we’ve filmed with him here.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Photographs are by David Giles.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Here’s some text from the designers:


Touch Digital offices, Shoreditch, London.

Post-Office was commissioned to design the new offices of Touch, London’s leading fashion photographic service. Digital retouching agencies need a minimal amount of light in order to correctly visualise the computer screens. This constraint usually makes retouching studios a dark environment. We took this challenge to heart as we wanted communal areas of the new Touch offices to be bright and airy while providing low-light environments to facilitate the retouchers’ work.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

The new touch offices maximise the already generous amounts of space and light the warehouse had to offer. The space owes its aesthetic and choice of materials to Scandinavian classic modernism as well as 60s corporate American grandeur and the minimal art movement. The central retouching booths appear as minimal sculptures in a grand setting rather than individual work spaces. All of the retouching environments are lined in grey felt in order to offer a colour-neutral background for the retouchers while helping to noise-proof the open workspaces.

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A Fruitful Discomfort: The Face of the 2012 Olympics

The visual identity of the London Games was uncomfortable, like a shattered stained-glass window. But iconoclasm does have its fans; and the more ways we can look at something, and look through something, the better off we are.

The stated intent of the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) was to focus on youth; naturally this extended to the visual identity system, the centerpiece being the logo, which has received little love. The logo’s severe angularity does not mesh with the reality that for virtually everybody (except the parents of athletes) the Olympics constitute a pleasant vacation, or a comfy staycation – they’re not about stress or tension. Television “censorship” attests to this clearly, and this clash might be what puts people off.

To me the logo looks like how middle-aged men (coincidentally my own demographic) tend to feel about teenagers: uncomfortable. The logo also makes me think of the 1980s ski boots I once bought via Craigslist. And the Opening Ceremonies also betrayed the reality of who consumes the Olympics, of who the customer is – and it’s not young people. Looking at it that way, the logo just might be perfect. And adherents of the maxim “there’s no such thing as bad publicity” require no justification beyond the fact that the logo is indeed highly memorable.

2012Headline by Gareth Hague, the official typeface of the 2012 Olympic Games.

What is also memorable is Gareth Hague’s typeface for the London Olympics, 2012Headline. Besides being fervently discussed – and ridiculed – in typographic circles, it was also featured in the mainstream media, both at home and abroad. Unlike the logo however 2012Headline is quite difficult to wrap one’s head around. If you look at it as a formal outgrowth of the logo it just might make perfect sense. But if you look deeper, if you consider its genesis, it feels very different: uncomfortable. Fortunately it has one superb redeeming quality, one that’s highly relevant to the enclave of typeface design…

The logo of the London Olympics is based closely on Hague’s Klute typeface of 1997, a unique design that draws ideas from blackletter and graffiti. And in the context of the Olympics it’s possible to imagine the influence of Ancient Greek lettering on 2012Headline. The inherited visual language of the Olympics also seems to be what caused the “O” and “o” to be circular (inspired by the venerable five-ring symbol), a direct formal contradiction with every other glyph in the font. Hague reveals that the circular “o” was supposed to be an alternate; he had provided the expected angular “o” as the primary form.

It’s easy to agree that using the circular “o” was a confused, bad decision. I figured to see if that’s really true, so I decided to make an angular “o” glyph based on how I interpreted the font’s “internal consistency”. The first one I made didn’t have very happy proportions, so I decided to bend the rules and make a different one, which I found less jarring.

This one I subbed into the logo and was pleasantly surprised to conclude that opting for the circular “o” was a good decision after all – it seems to add a nice softness, whereas the angular one might just make the whole too mechanical. Olympic Games logos come and go, but apparently the rings are forever!

The Redeeming Quality

Although 2012Headline was designed after the logo was approved by LOCOG (so was presumably constrained to being a follower and not a leader) according to Hague himself the only thing the two typefaces share is a general angular spikiness; no blackletter, no graffiti, no Greek. But people will see what they see – the designer is never around to tell them what to think. What I myself see most prominently – something shared by Klute and 2012Headline but virtually no other design – is what motivated me to write this article: it might be a better way to make an italic.

Italic has long been a personal sore spot – to me a sort of drive-by shotgun wedding. Roman and italic might be able to tolerate each other after all these years, but pairing them up was still a bad joke. Now, if they can indeed tolerate each other, why worry? It’s a bit like the search for an energy alternative to fossil fuels, with its tinge of desperation. But to some it does seem like an alternative is the only way forward, or at the very least a break from the despotism of cursiveness being at the heart of emphasis in running text. The unduly reviled slanted roman has had its champions and svengalis, but even if I for one believe that can be an answer, it cannot be the only answer. And one answer might just be rotation, which is essentially what makes 2012Headline (and Klute) so special.

Gareth Hague might not have invented the idea. The passing of time has only cemented Frederic Goudy’s “the old fellows stole all our best ideas” and this is probably no exception. One can easily imagine the ATF boys making rotated glyphs a century ago with a quick adjustment of the pantograph – they certainly did everything else with it. Also, neither Klute nor 2012Headline can serve for emphasis since they have no roman. Rotation as a means of emphasis – dubbed “rotalic” – seems to have first been floated by Filip Tydén, but that was a decade after Klute. Also, virtually all rotalic fonts have been created via brute mechanical rotation, and thus deserve the derision they typically engender. This is clearly not the case with 2012Headline – it’s been designed with intent. So Hague deserves credit for applying the idea quite early with Klute, and maturing it before anybody else with 2012Headline.

Jackson Cavanaugh plays with an italic from his Harriet Series.

As with any novelty, rotalic’s potential for ridicule is great; people like to have fun. This is the sort of ridicule reserved for things that can be consciously evaluated by everybody: display fonts. The magic of text face design kicks in when novelties are applied so subtly as to escape general rejection… although there is no escape from rejection by some fellow type designers. We are now seeing a trickle of rotalic fonts including one that elevates the style to a fully respectable level: TypeTogether’s Eskapade.

Perhaps unsure what to do with the unusual orientation of 2012Headline, Olympics designers often resorted to a rotated baseline.

For many people however letters that seem to be falling over are… uncomfortable. So much so that many applications of 2012Headline – including high-profile ones – have resorted to rotating lines of type counter-clockwise, effectively eliminating the slant, even though the result is an often awkward “uphill” line of type. Then there’s Hubert Jocham’s Keks: older than 2012Headline but more recent than Klute, it seems to vie for the same sort of angularity, but critically without the “discomfort” of rotation. In a way Keks is to 2012Headline what Excoffon’s Chambord is to Peignot: they share a style, but the former avoids the latter’s iconoclasm (Cassandre’s design was nothing less than an effort at alphabet reform), resulting in something easier to sell. In fact it’s nice to imagine a retrofit of 2012Headline that would serve as an italic for Keks (similar to the genesis of Triplex Italic), which might become a first in terms of having a roman and an italic that are equally slanted!

It’s not possible to see 2012Headline as a text face, or even as an italic for a text face. But anybody who can see in it something that will enrich typeface design, that will perhaps propel a new generation of italics, is better off. To quote from a poster made by Hague promoting Klute: “It’s not what this is that’s important, it’s what it could or might be”. This is nicely parallel to a founding principle of the Olympics: “The most important thing is not to win but to take part.” Let’s not worry merely about making sellable fonts – let’s see where 2012Headline can take us.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

Gingham and lace patterns have been screen-printed onto the tables and shelves of this Breton crêperie in west London designed by Paul Crofts Studio.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

In the centre of the Hammersmith restaurant, a large communal table has been screen-printed with a gingham design hand-drawn by illustrator Katharine Gorham.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

The cast-concrete counter and concrete floor feature an abstract scaled-up version of the gingham pattern.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

Reclaimed French oak parquet flooring has been used on the main part of the floor.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

The shelves are screen-printed with a lace design inspired by traditional bonnets from Brittany in the west of France.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

See all our stories about restaurants »

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

Photographs are by Chris Tubbs.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

Here’s some information from the designer:


Paul Crofts Studio – La Petite Bretagne, a new crêpe restaurant in Hammersmith, west London.

The restaurant is inspired by the feel and aesthetic of the traditional French bistro, and the historic craft of Brittany from where the crêpe originates. Gingham tablecloths, industrial lighting, homely decorative details have all been given a contemporary twist.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

With a layout designed to evoke the intimate setting of a domestic kitchen or dining room, a communal table in solid ash dominates the main space. The bespoke designed table features an oversized hand-drawn interpretation of the French gingham tablecloth by illustrator Katharine Gorham, screen printed directly onto the tabletop.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

Crêpes are made to order at a cast concrete counter featuring an abstracted version of the gingham pattern, which is again reflected on the acid etched cast concrete floor.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

This concrete provides a contrast with the warmth of the reclaimed French oak parquet flooring found elsewhere in the restaurant.Bespoke shelving in solid ash reflects the material of the communal table, with red steel coat hooks making further reference to a relaxed domestic setting.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

The shelves are screen printed with a lace design, also by Gorham, which was inspired by Brittany’s famous lace ‘coiffe’ bonnets; framed prints of the lace appear elsewhere in the restaurant.

La Petite Bretagne by Paul Crofts Studio

With specially-designed industrial-style lighting and understated seating, the character of La Petite Bretagne is that of a modern, pared-back take on nostalgic French restaurant design.

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