Designed in Hackney: Darkroom by Multistorey

Darkroom by Multistorey

Designed in Hackney: today’s featured designers from the London borough of Hackney are graphic designers Multistorey, who created the geometric interiors and branding for accessories boutique Darkroom.

Darkroom by Multistorey

Completed back in 2009, the store features a hand-painted tile floor and cone-shaped pendant lamps with crisp black silhouettes.

Darkroom by Multistorey

Some products are displayed on top of brightly painted stands, while others are draped over a green ladder propped up against a wall.

Darkroom by Multistorey

Multistorey is the creative partnership of Harry Woodrow and Rhonda Drakeford, who also happens to be the co-director of Darkroom, and their offices are located in creative hub Shacklewell Studios on Shacklewell Lane in Dalston. See another project by the pair here.


Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

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.

Designed in Hackney: the Orangery by Spacelab

The Orangery by Spacelab

Designed in Hackney: next up in our Hackney design showcase is a conservatory with a five fingered roof that Shoreditch architects Spacelab installed at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital in 2004.

The Orangery by Spacelab

Located on top of a boiler house, the Orangery provides a dining room for both staff and patients at the hospital, as well as a space for temporary exhibitions or events.

The Orangery by Spacelab

Some of the the zinc and wood-covered fins that comprise the roof are angled upwards to draw light in through the glazed facade, while others are slanted downwards to create overhanging canopies.

The Orangery by Spacelab

Gaps between the different sections of the roof are also glazed, creating a row of high-level windows.

The Orangery by Spacelab

The wooden ceiling surfaces wrap down around the walls and floor, then extend beyond the facade to become stripes on the terrace outside.

The Orangery by Spacelab

Here’s some more text from Spacelab:


The Orangery, designed and built by award-winning architects, Spacelab was completed in August 2004 and picked up an influential RIBA Award in 2005. The architects’ brief was to create a ‘conservatory type building’ providing both an internal and external area for dining and drinking and SpacelabUK delivered an inspiring and exciting contemporary space, which hugely differs from a normal hospital canteen experience.

Set on the existing boiler house roof, the Orangery is a modern sculptural pavilion and a dramatic transformation from a forgotten, unloved space. The new internal space provides a dining hall for staff and patients and can also be used for presentations, exhibitions and entertaining by the hospital staff. Spacelab have also created a new landscaped external area, which provides a quiet space for rest and relaxation. The front façade of the Orangery is fully glazed to allow light in as well as to connect the internal and external elements into one harmonious space.

Spacelab spent 24 weeks on site and the total cost was £390,000. The primary structure is made of steelwork structural ribs, which have been bolted together. The steelwork is tied together with timber joists covered in plywood to give both rigidity and form a substrate for the zinc cladding used for the roof. Timber, glazing, resin and rubber materials have been used to unite the interior and the exterior, blurring the boundaries and adding light and warmth to the overall space. Timber and resin wrap through as one continuous element from the ceiling across the wall and the floor right through to the landscaped terrace area. Tatajuba, European Oak and Ash were used for their colour and texture and the timber forms an important part of the overall aesthetic. Glazed apertures between the intersecting roof planes allow light to penetrate deep into the building.

The Orangery’s external space connects to the adjoining coffee shop, also designed and built by Spacelab at the same time to a budget of £120,000. The design flows seamlessly from the Orangery into the coffee shop and connects the two spaces. Similar to the Orangery, Tatajuba timber forms the floor of the coffee shop and then wraps around to finish as decks on the terrace and the boundary wall is fully glazed to allow maximum amount of light in as well as views of the terrace and Orangery.

Spacelab opened their practice in 2002 and their offices are located in Shoreditch, right on the edge of the borough on the aptly named Boundary Street.


Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

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.

P&G Olympic Games

A l’occasion des JO de Londres 2012 cet été, le groupe Procter & Gamble, spécialisée dans la vente de produits grande consommation, présente le rôle d’une maman envers son enfant comme “le meilleur job au monde”. Des superbes images à découvrir dans la suite.



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Designed in Hackney: The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Designed in Hackney: London borough of Hackney architects Liddicoat & Goldhill have completed a garden cabin with a zigzagging facade that angles south towards the sun.

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

Located in the garden of a north London townhouse, the wooden pavilion has brick walls surrounding three of its sides.

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

The saw-toothed front elevation creates one large south-facing window, which maximises natural daylight and passive solar heating to the interior.

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

As well as the garden room, which the client uses as a space for both work and entertaining, the cabin accommodates a shower room and a storage shed.

The Sunday Stuga by Liddicoat & Goldhill

David Liddicoat and Sophie Goldhill founded their studio on Ramsgate Street, Dalston, in 2009. We first featured them on Dezeen shortly after, as they completed a glazed addition to a 17th Century house, then again when they designed and built their own home.


Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

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.

Photography is by Tom Gildon.

Wolsey Soho

Iconic British menswear label opens its first London flagship

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Two hundred and fifty-seven years after launching, British menswear brand Wolsey opened the doors last night to their first flagship store in London. Located on Brewer Street in the heart of Soho, the store’s aesthetics mirrors the brand’s ethos: contemporary styling of iconic classics. Brushed steel beams, exposed brick walls, aged wooden tables and original draper’s cabinets combine to create the perfect backdrop for the range of quality menswear.

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Drawing inspiration from Wolsey’s original Leicester factory (now the location of its brand operations), the store also features a wealth of salvaged, prismatic pendants, 1940s industrial light fixtures and Persian rugs. Down a small flight of stairs and located just outside the exposed brick changing rooms are two vintage leather armchairs separated by a reclaimed-wood table housing men’s fashion titles. Adorning the walls of both floors are framed prints of original Wolsey adverts, old and new campaigns, inscribed wooden boards telling its history and images of some of the explorers and pioneers who helped build its identity.

“We’re very proud of the heritage the brand has,” says Brand Director Stephen Reed. “While we are steering the brand in a new direction with the design of the latest collections, we’re making sure we keep the classic heritage and attention to detail
that has fueled Wolsey’s longevity.”

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Attention to detail is key to the success Wolsey has achieved, and it’s a thread sewn throughout the latest collection. Classic woolen jumpers and cotton gilets are injected with modernity through wider necklines and narrower silhouettes. Double-breasted navy blazers—complete with nautical gold buttons at the cuff—and plaid cotton shirts transform a traditional tailored look into today’s casually refined aesthetic. Leather accessories have been designed with today’s technological devices in mind, and the classic urban hoodie has been tweaked with chunky herringbone draw cords, 320gm heavy cotton and ribbed cuffs.

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“Our designs are modern and fresh while also being classic and iconic. It’s the choice of material or the details in a button that gives each piece its individuality,” says Reed. “The Wolsey guy is cool and subtly stylish. He takes the classic staples we create and puts his own twist on them.”

Wolsey

83a Brewer Street

London, W1F 9ZN


Pelicans & Parrots

Antiques and fashion take flight in two Dalston boutiques
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London’s East End is globally renowned for playing host to some of the world’s most stylishly eclectic fashion houses, art galleries and bars. But it’s the small gems you won’t necessarily hear about—unless you’re a local—that continue to fuel this reputation. Launched in 2010, Pelicans & Parrots is one such treasure. Nestled on Stoke Newington Road, just a short way from the beautiful chaos of Ridley Road Market, it’s a visual paradise, brimming with everything from vintage designer handbags through to antique leather armchairs. CH caught up with owners Ochuko Ojiri and Juliet Da Silva for a quick chat about antiques, aesthetics and avoiding the usual retail pitfalls.

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How did the name come about?

We chose Pelicans & Parrots because we like the juxtaposition of the elegant parrot and the awkward—but beautiful—pelican.

You have such a variety of stuff spanning homewares to fashion. Where do you source your stock?

Our stock comes from all over the world. Our furniture and objects are a mixture of new and vintage and come from different antique fairs and markets across the UK and EU. Much of our newer pieces are from the US as well as other areas of Europe. All our clothes are vintage and about 80% are sourced in Italy.

Do you ever have trouble parting with great finds?

Hahaha! We often argue whether or not we want to sell an item! I’ve currently got a rather nice hunting jacket that I’m very reluctant to part with and I seem to recall Juliet carrying a pretty special YSL bag!

You bravely decided to launch a concept shop, Pelicans & Parrots Black, in the middle of a recession. Did you have anything else to fall back on if this hadn’t worked?

Being a pair of creatives in the middle of a recession we felt we had no choice but to try our own thing. We had nothing to fall back on, and bills to pay. I think we have been able to survive as we both come from a strong design and retail backgrounds. We decided early on to concentrate on creating a beautiful space filled with things that we love that also have heritage and longevity. We are constantly sourcing and putting our own twist on current trends and this is something we think sets us apart from every other store.

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What are some of the challenges to owning and running Pelicans & Parrots?

Finding the money and convincing people that—although we do love them—there’s life beyond the Pound Shops. On the flipside, it’s a great and rare privilege to have one’s taste and indulgences validated. We also get to meet some fantastic characters!

Why did you choose this area?

After living in the area for many years we could see that Dalston had a fast-growing social scene and nightlife that had migrated from Shoreditch. But, there were no shops! We took great delight in being described as “Dalston’s first proper shop”. We basically created what we ourselves needed. We want both shops to create an aspired spectacle. Whether it’s our life-sized caged flamingo in our first shop or the anthropological chic we employ in P&P Black.

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Aside from your own store, where would you recommend people go if they’re just visiting East London for a day?

I would tell them to visit Ridley Road Market in Dalston, eat at Rochelle’s Canteen in Arnold Circus E2 and shop at Afrique Fabriks on Kingsland Road, Dalston.

Pelicans & Parrots

40 Stoke Newington Rd

Dalston, London, N16 7XJ

Tel. +44 20 3215 2083

Pelicans & Parrots Black

81 Stoke Newington Road

Dalston, London, N16 8AD.

Tel. +44 20 7249 9177


EllisMiller secure planning permissionfor Hackney House

Dezeen Wire: local architects EllisMiller have been granted permission to create a series of temporary structures in the London borough of Hackney that will provide a hub for media and commerce during the upcoming Olympic games.

Hackney House by EllisMiller

Furnished by PearsonLloyd, Hackney House will occupy a site beside Shoreditch High Street and will accomodate a media centre for journalists during the games, as well as exhibitions and events that will take place throughout the summer.

Hackney House by EllisMiller

The venue is scheduled to complete at the start of May and will remain in place until September.

Hackney House by EllisMiller

Dezeen’s offices are also located in the borough of Hackney, so we’ve been putting together a showcase of the best design talent from the area. More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Hackney House by EllisMiller

Here’s a full statement from EllisMiller:


EllisMiller: Starter’s orders for Hackney House

EllisMiller have secured planning consent for Hackney House – a media and investment centre for Hackney during the Olympic games.

During the summer it is expected that thousands of people will visit Hackney – including many individuals and organisations who are looking for businesses opportunities in the area. The Hackney House partners – led by Hackney Borough Council – seized this opportunity and commissioned Ellis Miller to design what will be one of the most vibrant venues of summer 2012.

Hackney House is located off Shoreditch High Street and will be used as a media centre for non-sports journalists during the games period, and will be the venue for a series of events designed to showcase business opportunities and creative talent in Hackney to UK and global business leaders, decision-makers and VIPs. Around 20,000 people are expected to visit Hackney House to enjoy an events programme that will promote Hackney as the creative heart of London in 2012. Visitors will be able to make use of exceptional networking opportunities while experiencing Hackney’s reputation as a crucible of enterprise, creativity and entertainment.

Visitors to Hackney House will first be greeted by a bespoke entrance structure, which juxtaposes highly functional materials with a decorative woven chainlink carrying a lace motif. Beyond an entrance garden, Hackney House will consist of a flexible series of marquees and other temporary structures that can accommodate a range of different uses throughout the summer. These will include exhibition and performance venues, spaces for formal and informal functions, catering and other visitor facilities.

On completion in April/May 2012, the venue will begin hosting events almost immediately including the Digital Shoreditch Festival, BBC Radio 1 Hackney Big Weekend 2012, the London College of Fashion graduate fashion shows and business networking events hosted by the Mayor of London. Hackney House will remain open until the end of September.

The site is currently a vacant brownfield site owned by development company Lirastar, who are developing a mixed use urban masterplan for its future development with EllisMiller. The scheme was initiated by EllisMiller’s strong relationship with Hackney Council, and EllisMiller were able to facilitate the temporary use of the site with the landowner. EllisMiller also encouraged Hackney Council to collaborate with emerging and fellow East London architect Harry Dobbs Design on the project. Other creative partners include design studio Pearson Lloyd and Ben Todd (Executive Director, Arcola Theatre).

Chris Patience, Partner at Ellis Miller said:

“It’s been a huge privilege working with the Hackney House partners to design one of the most exciting non-Olympic venues in London this summer. It will play host to journalists from around the world alongside thousands of people enjoying a wide range of activities including music, fashion, exhibitions and business functions. We’ve therefore worked hard to create a venue that is simple, flexible and fun.”

Carl Welham, Assistant Chief Executive, Communications and Consultation at Hackney Borough Council said:

“The Olympics will create investment, jobs and business venture capital. Hackney House will enable us to maximise this opportunity for the benefit of residents, artists and local businesses.”

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

London architects Featherstone Young have completed this day centre for homeless people in east London.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Built for charity Providence Row, which provides food, clothing and showers to London’s homeless, the new Dellow Centre centre provides space for activities to encourage self-expression and learning.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

It incorporates a bicycle workshop on the ground floor, art studio and performing arts space on the first floor and offices for the charity at the top.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

The new structure sits across a courtyard from the charity’s headquarters, completed in the 1980s, and is surrounded on three sides by tall neighbouring buildings.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Stripes of green and yellow perforated panels clad the top and ground floor, while the zig-zagging facade in between angles the large windows away from the street and towards the headquarters opposite to visually link the two.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

The upper storey has a zig-zagging terrace that follows the line of the facade and a bright yellow, irregularly shaped skylight crowns the building.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Featherstone Young previously designed the London offices for advertising agency Wieden + Kennedy and a house cantilevered over a river in Wales.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Photographs are by Tim Brotherton.

Here’s some more information from Featherstone Young:


Dellow Centre by Featherstone Young

Client brief

Featherstone Young were appointed by Providence Row to design a new arts and activity building as part of their day care facility in Wentworth Street in London’s East End. Providence Row is a homelessness charity that provides support to homeless people in Tower Hamlets (one of the UK’s most deprived districts) and the City of London. The Dellow Day Centre provides essential services such as food, clothing and showers, helping to restore users’ health and dignity.

The new building will allow Providence Row to operate a range of structured and meaningful activities for their users. The ground floor will house a bike workshop, enabling users to develop their skills and set them on the first steps towards employment. The first floor will contain an art centre for visual and performing arts activities, allowing users to express themselves creatively and develop their artistic skills. Providence Row will use the top floor for office space, while other parts of the building will contain storage and archive facilities for the charity.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Concept/solution

Featherstone Young were keen to create a thoughtful yet functional building that uses its landlocked site to its full advantage, in order to accommodate as many uses as possible in the limited space available. Because the building (on the site of a former storage building) faces the main day centre across an under-used courtyard, Featherstone Young also wanted to find a design solution that could animate the courtyard and improve connections and flow between the two buildings on the site as a whole.

The main feature of the building is its single-aspect angular façade. Likened to a mask the faceted blinkered windows take cues from the pod windows at Featherstone Young’s award-winning SERICC crisis centre in Essex, offering privacy to those within whilst also providing essential visibility for staff by designing a permeable façade. Above and below the main faceted level are vivid green and yellow perforated cladding panels to the ground floor workshop and the second floor. The building is topped with a colourful, irregular-shaped rooflight that provides a fun and lively aspect for those working in the surrounding higher buildings.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Conceptually, this mask elevation is intended by Featherstone Young to act as a visual metaphor for Providence Row’s users and to confront the invisibility of homeless people. The striking, colourful building challenges passers-by to ignore what was previously an anonymous space, while its appearance is a visual reminder that homeless people, like the new building created to serve them, can have great depth of character and dignity.

At ground floor level, the large workshop doors open out onto the courtyard, bringing natural light into the workshop and encouraging activity to spill out onto the courtyard towards the main Dellow Centre building. Behind the workshop, large storage spaces have been created for clothing and equipment. Inside, the space is functional and robust – a design approach that is continued throughout the new centre.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

A simple staircase leads from the ground floor to the first floor, where the main space is the art studio. Here the large full-height timber-framed windows flood the room with natural light – ideal for art activity during the day. The faceted windows face away from the street and across the courtyard to the main centre – giving privacy for users, valuable passive surveillance for staff, and creating a positive relationship with main centre. This space can also be fully blacked out for film screenings. Other spaces on this level provide further storage and archive facilities for Providence Row.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young
On the upper level, an open plan office space leads onto an external terrace, where a zig-zag balcony follows the line of the first floor windows. Like the ground floor, a colourful facade gives this level a lively feel, and the palette is repeated in bold vertical stripes along the length of the external wall. A small private meeting room accessed from the main room is lit from above by the large and colourful funnel-like rooflight.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Throughout the building, an emphasis has been placed on creating a series of robust, flexible and functional internal spaces. Lighting and services are simple and basic, and the building is designed to be easy to use and maintain.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

Planning/budget constraints:

The site is a small, landlocked site, accessed via a small private courtyard. It is landlocked on three sides by tall buildings (a building immediately adjacent to the centre has recently been demolished and will be replaced) and faces the main Dellow Centre which was built in the 1980s. Featherstone Young’s design response was a building that could project its own strong character alongside its neighbours, animate the underused courtyard and enliven the otherwise bland setting.

Dellow Day Centre by Featherstone Young

The client brief had originally been for a two-storey building, although Featherstone Young were also encouraged to explore options for three storeys in order to maximise use of the site. Planning consent was granted for three storeys after the trustees saw the additional possibilities of a higher building. With a strong design concept the building has withstood the rigours of tight cost constraints and was completed on budget.

Designed in Hackney: The Hackney Shedby Office Sian

The Hackney Shed by Office Sian

Designed in Hackney: today’s project from the London borough of Hackney is the Hackney Shed, a low-budget garden office designed by architects Office Sian.

The Hackney Shed by Office Sian

Oak-framed doors fold away from the facade to open the one-person workplace to the surrounding garden, which is located just behind the client’s house.

The Hackney Shed by Office Sian

Library bookshelves are sandwiched between the exposed structural columns, while a skylight brings natural daylight in from overhead.

The Hackney Shed by Office Sian

Office Sian also recently completed a Thai canteen elsewhere in London – see it here.

Architect Gurmeet Sian founded the studio in 2007 and their office is located on Penn Street, Hoxton.


Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

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.

Adidas – We All Run

Après la pub Adidas Is All in, la marque réutilise ses égéries, à savoir David Beckham, Lionel Messi ou encore Katy Perry pour un spot publicitaire nous rappelant que nous avons tous une raison de courir. Bien réalisé, la vidéo est à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.



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adidas-run2




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