Hooknook and Squeezers

Clever storage and dispensing solutions by Flip & Tumble

flip_tumble1.jpg

Known for their their eco-friendly ripstop nylon shopping bags, Eva Bauer and Hetal Jariwala—the industrious duo behind Flip & Tumble—keep themselves busy working on a multitude of projects. Two that caught our eye—the wall-mounted hooknook storage solution and the quirky but sleek salt and pepper shakers dubbed “squeezers.”

flip_tumble3.jpg flip_tumble4.jpg

The cylindrical hooknook has a slightly retro look—think ’70s-era school cubbies in miniature form—that belies the serious utility of its built-in storage. A perfect fit for the entryway or over a countertop, the multi-tasking unit hangs, holds and hides phones, keys, bags and all the other random stuff you’re either grabbing or dropping as you come and go. Over in the dining area, the tennis ball-like squeezers put their own spin on the design of our mundane items and how we use them, making the task of dispensing salt and pepper just a little more joyful.

flip_tumble2.jpg

The squeezers ($12) and hooknook ($24) are available in Flip & Tumble’s online shop.


Time Lapse View from Space

Une magnifique vidéo pour le time-lapse le plus impressionnant au monde. Réalisé par la station spatiale de la NASA pendant 3 mois, cette vidéo dévoile des images de la terre avec des superbe aurores boréales. Un montage composé par Michael König à découvrir en vidéo dans la suite.



space03

space01

Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners have completed the world’s first space terminal for tourists in New Mexico.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Flying displays by Virgin Galactic space vehicles WhiteKnightTwo and SpaceShipTwo marked the opening of Spaceport America.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

The low-rise building is dug into the landscape beside the El Camino Real road and is entered through a cleft between the two wings.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Full-height glazing wraps around the end of the building, facing onto the runway beyond.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

The spaceport hangar is located in the centre of the building, with administrative areas to the west and flight training and preparation areas to the east.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

The project was designed in collaboration with New Mexico architects SMPC and project manager URS Corporation.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Operators Virgin Galactic are currently running a test flight programme.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Dezeen originally published visuals of the spaceport back in 2007 – see our earlier story here and see more stories about Virgin Galactic here. For more about Foster + Partners, including their circular campus proposals for Apple, click here.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Photography is by Nigel Young, apart from where otherwise stated.

Here’s some more information from Foster + Partners:


Dedication ceremony for the Virgin Galactic Gateway to Space

A dedication ceremony was held at Spaceport America in New Mexico – the world’s first commercial space terminal. More than 800 guests attended the event, which included flying displays of Virgin Galactic’s WhiteKnightTwo and SpaceShipTwo vehicles.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Click above for larger image

The Virgin Galactic Gateway to Space, a combined terminal and hangar facility, will support up to two WhiteKnightTwo and five SpaceShipTwo vehicles. The 120,000 square-foot building has been designed by Foster + Partners, working with URS Corporation and New Mexico architects SMPC.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Click above for larger image

The Gateway will also house all astronaut preparation and celebration facilities, a mission control centre and a friends and family area.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Click above for larger image

Entrance is via a deep channel cut into the landscape and its retaining walls form an exhibition space that documents a history of space exploration alongside the story of the region. With minimal embodied carbon and few additional energy requirements, the scheme has been designed to achieve LEED Gold accreditation.

 

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Click above for larger image

The low-lying form is dug into the landscape to exploit the thermal mass, which buffers the building from the extremes of the New Mexico climate as well as catching the westerly winds for ventilation; and maximum use is made of daylight via skylights.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Click above for larger image

Built using local materials and construction techniques, it aims to be both sustainable and sensitive to its surroundings.

Spaceport America by Foster + Partners

Click above for larger image

Sir Richard Branson said:
“Today is another history-making day for Virgin Galactic. We are here with a group of incredible people who are helping us lead the way in creating one of the most important new industrial sectors of the 21st century. We’ve never wavered in our commitment to the monumental task of pioneering safe, affordable and clean access to space, or to demonstrate that we mean business at each step along the way.”


See also:

.

Cultural Center of European Space Technologies
Kuwait International Airport
by Foster + Partners
Shenzhen International
Airport Terminal 3

Yota Space 2012

Une présentation vidéo très réussie réalisée par le motion designer russe Nick Luchkiv pour cet évènement : le festival Yota Space 2012 qui tiendra sa deuxième édition à partir du printemps à Saint-Pétersbourg. A découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.



yotaspace4

yotaspace3

yotaspace2

yotaspace1

Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Astronaut Suicides

Une très belle série du photographe Neil Dacosta intitulée “Astronaut Suicides” interprétant la fin du programme spatial américain. Une mise en scène originale et poignante d’un astronaute tentant de se suicider dans des situations inattendues. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.



astronaut_suicides_07

56_astronautsuicidesneildacosta02

astronaut_suicides_01

astronaut_suicides_02

astronaut_suicides_03

astronaut_suicides_04

astronaut_suicides_05

astronaut_suicides_06

astronaut_suicides_08













Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Core77 Design Awards

Three projects that redefine usability from the design world’s newest competition
core77-trophy1.jpg

Starting with a reinvented trophy—designed as a mold for casting multiples to share with collaborators—the Core77 Design Awards is setting out to be a contest like no other.
The competition presents some of the industry’s most thoughtful concepts that often change the way we interact with the landscape around us. Below are three paradigm-shifting projects that enhance life by redefining space and usage.

core77-Alcove1.jpg core77-Alcove2.jpg core77-Alcove3.jpg
Alcove

Felix Chun Lam and Joe Kenworthy created the Alcove, both a lighting component and storage solution, as a response to the reality of today’s fast-growing, consumerist society. Inspired by Terence Conran’s notion that there are three different levels of storage (at-hand, nearby and deep), the team added “seasonal items” as a fourth category. Showcasing the value in untapped ceiling space, the unobtrusive and easily-accessibly unit holds essential off-season items until the weather changes.

core77-tallfurniture2.jpg core77-tallfurniture1.jpg
Tall Furniture

Winning the DIY-Hack-Mod category, Robert Turek’s Tall Furniture reassesses the stage’s role in live performances. Turek whittled the stage down to smaller, individualized platforms for each performer, in turn creating a more immersive experience for the audience by increasing visibility and mobility. Tall Furniture also allows for impromptu concerts by elevating performers even outside of traditional venues.

core77-node1.jpg core77-node2.jpg
Node Chair

In most schools, critical thinking sessions and collaborative assignments that more closely mock the professional setting increasingly replace droning lectures. The Node Chair—designed by IDEO and Steelcase—lends itself to team-based work and classroom reconfiguration with its space-saving desk-and-chair combo set on wheels. Focused on “mobility, storage and fit,” the chair features a bucket-style swivel seat, a shelf underneath and an adjustable work space.


The Archiver

L’école française d’effets 3D ArtFX a pensé et réalisé ce court-métrage “The Archiver” afin de démontrer l’étendue du talent de leurs étudiants. Ce film de Thomas Obrecht, Guillaume et Marc Berthoumieu Menneglier est visuellement impressionnant. A découvrir dans la suite.

the-archiver4

the-archiver3

the-archiver2

the-archiver1

Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Inner Space

Découverte du travail d’Owen Silverwood, un photographe qui a eu la bonne idée de créer cette série de visuels intitulée “Inner Space”. Simulant le décollage de fusées miniatures dans un verre d’eau, l’ensemble de ces clichés sont à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.



innerspace7

innerspace6

innerspace5

innerspace4

innerspace3









Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

See! Colour!

Artist James Turrell’s mind-bending experience of light, sound and space in Järna, Sweden
JT-Ganzfeld10.jpg

The average human takes many things for granted, but in the eyes of American artist James Turrell the light and color around us is top of the list.
For the past 30 years the pioneering artist has been creating breathtaking installations based around the simplistically multifaceted mediums of light, color and space. In fact, Turrell can lay claim to owning the world’s largest piece of art, the Roden Crater, which affords the viewer access to celestial phenomena at a location just outside of Flagstaff, Arizona.

While the crater is still very much a work in progress, a new exhibition entitled “See! Colour!” just opened in the unlikely location of Järna, a small commune just outside Stockholm which has played a huge part in the Swedish anthroposophical movement over the years.

The show features a host of Turrell’s site-specific installations—all of which are programmed according to their locations in the world and proximity to the atmosphere, light and climate. Each of the five works is undeniable proof not only of Turrell’s artistic acumen but of the potential of color and light to inform and baffle the mind.

JT-Ganzfeld-3.jpg JT-Ganzfeld4.jpg

Ganzfeld“, treats the viewer to an enormous room which cycles between the red and blue portions of the color spectrum (according to Turrell’s technician these color groups are chosen for their ability to overload the retina quickly). It takes seconds for the dimensions of the space to vanish while the mind attempts to locate corners, walls and angles, an effect that’s both disconcerting and exhilarating at the same time.

From Ganzfeld, a short walk leads visitors to the gentle hues of Wedgewood, which acts like a tranquilizer to the overloaded brain, structuring the exhibition cleverly with its change of pace.

JT-Skyspace5.jpg JT-skylight6.jpg

Many of the works at Järna are not only site but time specific. Skyspace, a work which perhaps epitomizes Turrell’s work, is best viewed a short time before the sun rises and sets. Inside a tall cylindrical room with a skylight-like hole cut into the center of the roof a series of lights are aligned in the direction of the natural light pouring in. The result is a disorientating change of color in the natural light, and a slice of the atmosphere which seems almost tangible. “Light is all around us, it’s what feeds out bodies, while we describe emotions, art and life through the language of light and color,” explains Turrell.

Discussing what many consider to be his most powerful piece, Bindu Shards, Turrell told us that, thanks to his time as a pilot, “My work has always been informed with an exploration of a landscape without horizons, like a whiteout, the rapture of the deep. I try to create a horizon-less, gravity-less space.”

JT-BinduShards-7.jpg

Bindu Shards is a 4.2-meter sphere in which the viewer is inserted, lying on their back, wearing headphones and carrying a panic button. Choosing from hard or soft, they are taken on an indescribable 15 minute journey that is likely to linger in the mind for weeks following.

A small sign plays in the headphones as a veritable light show plays out, triggering what Turrell calls “Behind the Eye Seeing,” in which you feel as if your entire field of vision is extended through to 360 degrees. Color, light and the audible sign take the mind to a place where breaks of solid color create the sensation of flying and physical release. The fact that you are enclosed, alone in the sphere also allows you to actually feel the different temperatures from the wavelengths of each respective color.

While there is a large number of installations on site at Järna, this is seemingly only a small slice of the potential color holds, and with every passing technological advancement, Turrell’s pieces are destined to become even more moving and pioneering.

“See! Colour!” is a stirring odyssey of color and light which has to be seen to be truly believed. The exhibition is open through 4 October 2011. All images by Florian Holzherr, see more in the gallery.


Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

This culture and technology centre based on the shape of a space station is under construction in Vitanje, Slovenia, and was designed by Slovenian firms OFIS ArhitektiBevk Perovic Arhitekti, 
Dekleva Gregoric Arhitekti and Sadar Vuga Arhitekti.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

The building design takes inspiration from a habitable wheel-shaped space station envisaged by rocket engineer Herman Potočnik Noordung in 1929.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

The building will feature a series of interlocking rings that lie on top of each other to create a continuous ramped structure.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

The upper part of the building will house a research area, while the lower parts will house exhibition spaces, a multi-purpose hall and an auditorium.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Construction is due to be completed this year.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Read all our stories on OFIS Arhitekti »

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

The following information is from OFIS Arhitekti:


SPACE WHEEL_NOORDUNG SPACE HABITATION CENTER

The Cultural Center of European Space Technologies (KSEVT)
2008-2011

With its program, The Cultural Center of European Space Technologies (KSEVT) will supplement the local cultural and social activities of the Arts Center in Vitanje.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

With its size and typology the existing object already indicates a publicly significant role, but its capacity and technological design no longer suffice for newer collective requirements.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

The architectural design for the building of The Cultural Center of European Space Technologies in Vitanje originates from the schematics for the first geostationary space station, or to be more precise its habitation wheel, described in his 1929 book by Herman Potocnik Noordung.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

KSEVT will have emphasized public significance and will generate social, cultural and scientific activities. In the KSEVT building that replaces the existing object of the multifunctional arts center there will be an abundance of social activities, with fixed and temporary exhibitions, conferences and club/study activities.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

The building will therefore be intended for the local population, as well as guests of exhibitions and participants of international symposia and conferences. In the club area at the top of the building researchers of the history of space technology will be able to focus on their work, removed from the activities in the lower part of the building.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

The building is a monolithic structure, freely positioned on the allotment between the main road on one side and the stream with a green hinterland on the other. The exterior and interior of the building are determined by two low cylinders.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

The bottom one is larger and rises from the North to the South, while the upper one is smaller and it joins with the larger one on the southern side and rises towards the North. The bottom cylinder is supported by the transparent surface of the entrance glazing. The spatial relationship between the two cylinders creates a dynamic effect, which is even more accentuated by full glass rings around the building.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

The effect of floatation and rotation of the building on its southern and western side towards the road and the entrenchment into the surface on the other side towards the stream and hill creates an impression of memorable importance of the building in this area, as well as its connection to its immediate surroundings.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Above: Potočnik’s Space Station (illustration (c) by Simon Zajc)

The spatial effects give the building its most distinguishing feature – the effect of artificial gravity due to floatation and rotation. The building has two entrances – the main one to the central space from the square in front of the building on the southeastern side and the northern entrance from the gravelly surface above the stream.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Above: image courtesy of the architects

The main entrance covers the overhanging part of the larger cylinder. Through this “tight” space, past the circular vestibule with a reception, we enter the interior of the hall.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Above: Potočnik’s illustration of inhabitable wheel – side and front view

The vestibule can be separated from the activities in the hall by a curtain. The entrance glazing can be completely opened and can connect the activities in the hall with the square. The circular hall for 300 people is surrounded on both sides by a semicircular ramp.

 Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

This marks the beginning of the exhibition area, which continues from here to the interior of the overhanging part of the larger cylinder. On the west side, along the ramp, there are smaller office areas. Ascending on this ramp also represents a transition from the bright space of the hall to the dark exhibition area.

Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

The separated vertical connection with a staircase and a large elevator connects the exhibition area directly to the vestibule of the hall.

Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

The exhibition space continues through the landing between the elevator and the staircase to the smaller cylinder, the multi-purpose hall, an auditorium which is raised like a terrace above the hall. From here there is a vertical view of what is happening below.

Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

The smaller cylinder is concluded at the highest, northernmost part with the club area – the library, the most intimate part of the entire building.

Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

MATERIALS AND WORK
The design of the objects creates a feeling of volume, which has a unique, memorable and characteristic expression. For this purpose, the materials are simple and clean.

Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

The basic construction of the object consists of reinforced concrete. In unison with the rest of the building, the exhibition area is without daylight, with an opaque surface.

Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

There are windows in the library and the lower part of the hall. The hall is fitted with zenithal lighting. The front in the opaque part is made of various types of aluminum. The interior of the object is made with a combination of self-compacting concrete, paint and wainscot. All of this will be defined in greater detail in the next phases of the project documentation.

Cultural Center of European Space Technologies by OFIS, Bevk Perovic, Dekleva Gregoric and Sadar Vuga

Click for larger image

PROTAGONISTS :
Architecture: ( in alphabetical order ) :
Bevk Perovic arhitekti, 
Dekleva Gregoric arhitekti, 
OFIS arhitekti
, Sadar Vuga arhitekti
Noordung Space Technologies Center concept & producer: Dragan Zivadinov, Miha Tursic
Graphic design: 
Atelje Balant
Client / project coordinator: 
Vitanje Community ( for /Srecko Fijavz )


See also:

.

Danish Pavilion at Shanghai Expo 2010 by BIG360 House by
Subarquitectura
The Ring by
OFIS Arhitekti