Office in a former strip club featuring concrete cast against bubble wrap

Swedish designers Toki Drobnjakovic and Per Sundberg have renovated an underground strip club in Stockholm to create a workplace where walls are embellished with concrete set against bubble wrap (+ slideshow).

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

A staircase covered in hexagonal concrete leaves, a wall of plants and a torso-shaped sculpture are just some of the additions to the former Blue Star bar, which is now named Studioverket, and functions as both the designers’ studio and as a flexible co-working space for freelancers.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

Using the working title Subterranean Concrete Orgy, Drobnjakovic and Sundberg teamed up with concrete manufacturer Butong to produce the new interior elements, and also enlisted the help of architecture student Noa Ericsson and movie producer Erik Liss.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

Each concrete structure was cast inside a sandwich of bubble wrap, which could be folded during the setting process to create irregular shapes.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

“We use high-strength EXM concrete,” explained Butong’s Lars Höglund. “After pressing, the panels can be shaped for approximately one hour. The leaf-thin layers of concrete where bubbles have connected can either be removed for transparency or kept for translucency.”

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

For the entrance lobby, the team added rectangular concrete panels across the walls, before wrapping the central staircase with overlapping layers of curving concrete hexagons.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

Seeds were sown into the circular pockets of another concrete structure, creating a wall of plants and herbs that was hung inside one of the largest studios, while the opposite wall presents an undulating concrete surface named Sound Wave.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

As a nod to the history of the building, Liss also cast concrete over a mannequin’s head to produce a sculpture designed to look like a girl trapped in a wall.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

The final touches were a series of concrete pendant lamps that hang down from the ceiling of one of the rooms.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

Photography is by Per Lundström.

Here’s some more information from Studioverket:


Studioverket – Subterranean concrete orgy when shady porn-shop goes office hub

Two young designers in architecture and sound, Per & Toki, nourished a long held dream for an office/studio environment to call their own & recently it came true when Studioverket took over the leasing contract from infamous “Blue Star”. Concrete producer, Butong, was contracted to realise Studioverket’s concept of “homogeneous diversity” using Sealed-Air bubble in a special casting process. New elements were produced and old projects were re-designed & tweaked for their new purpose at this basement location in bustling Stureplan area.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

The sequencing of space & placement of elements was determined by the two freshly baked entrepreneurs – Butong was then to propose design solutions. Starting with the stairs, the space needed to make a distinct division between exterior & interior space. Architecture student Noa Ericsson was asked to design for the subjects to forget that they have gone underground.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

Spatial formation and the relation to the cold light from the vertical garden aim at mirroring the cave typology. The entrance, with its dimmed light, is the darkest space and further in where people work regularly, a lighter environment is created.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

The four nodes of the project are connected by intricate moiré lighting effects, caused by small & sharp light sources behind transparent parts of the material, which are turned on when suitable for the setting.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

While the wall quickly found its form & expression, the ceiling had to take a few turns before finding its finished state. Noa, first influenced by traditional “kurbits”, gradually broke the elements down to hexagonal tiles. By manipulating the hexagons bend & axis parameters in production and by flipping & rotating the tiles while installing – freedom of organic design was achieved.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

On the vertical surfaces, the translucent layers of concrete are removed for an organic pattern of transparency, made possible by the moiré distribution of holes. The wall is also an acoustic barrier as acoustic foam behind the panels absorb street sound, preventing it from spilling down into the lounge.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket

The graphic organic of the entrance space has its continuation in the truly organic green-wall. A mix of seeds & plant cuttings were used. The seedlings break their way through the ultra-thin layers of concrete in the hollows & are root spread in the underlying substrate, giving a dynamic vegetation. The 1.2m x 3.6m wall is a re-designed bench from a temporary project & it is an inversion of a stone hedge – letting vegetation root in the stones, rather than in between.

Concept diagram of Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket
Layout diagram – click for larger image

Lots of herbs, chillies & other edible plants are grown to be used for drinks or as spice at company events. Tenants and visitors are also invited to plant seeds, available beside the wall. Hopefully this will give create a sort of connection between people and place.

Concept diagram of Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket
Staircase concept diagram – click for larger image

Opposite from the vertical garden a sculptural element defines the space between the two pieces. As a reference to the adjacent music studio – the shape is an illustration of sound waves, placed frozen on the wall.

Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket
Material sample

As this used to be a shady porn shop/erotic bar, the more expressive “Girl in the wall” has found its fitting home close by the emergency exit. This one of a kind piece was created by movie producer Erik Liss, by simply casting Butong on a manikin as he stumbled through the workshop in search for a new style in fashion.

Planted wall concept of Subterranean Concrete Orgy by Studioverket
Planted wall before installation – click for larger image

Site: Studioverket, Stockholm, Stureplan
Concept: Studioverket
Studioverket Team: Toki Drobnjakovic, Per Sundberg
Design: Noa Ericsson, Erik Liss
Details, Design: Butong
Butong Team: J-C Violleau, Andreas Berkebo, Lars Höglund

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Da Matteo, Sweden: Behind the scenes with the Scandinavian craft coffee pioneer

Da Matteo, Sweden


It might be a surprise to hear that Scandinavia consumes more coffee per capita than any other region in the world. On a recent trip to Sweden’s second largest city, Gothenburg—a cultural mosaic port city on the…

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Swedish shopping centre’s swooping entrances “drag people inside” says architect

Movie: in this exclusive video interview from Inside Festival, Joakim Lyth of Wingårdhs explains how the Swedish architecture firm used brightly-coloured curved glass to draw customers inside its Emporia shopping centre.

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

Emporia, which won the Shopping Centres category at this year’s Inside Festival, is a shopping mall located to the south of the city of Malmö in Sweden.

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

It features two gaping entrances made out of brightly-coloured curved glass, one amber and one blue.

“Two main entrances lead people into the shopping centre,” says Lyth. “They are formed by a double-curved glass [structure]. They should drag people inside the shopping centre.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

The use of coloured glass continues throughout the building to help lead customers through the shopping centre’s figure-of-eight plan.

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

“The coloured glass goes through the whole of the building, different colours are used in different circulation hubs,” Lyth explains. “One of the problems with a shopping centre is that they’re usually quite hard to find your way around. So [using] strong colours, giving a strong atmosphere and identity to different hubs seemed like a reasonable idea.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

He adds: “The figure-of-eight is quite a common feature when it comes to shopping centres. The curved shape gives you a hint of what’s hiding behind the next corner.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

The building features residential and office units on the levels above the shopping centre, as well as a publicly accessible roof garden on the top.

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

“The municipality demanded that the greenery we took with the shopping centre should be given back,” Lyth says. “The roof has no commercial value, so it’s just a place where you can relax.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

The whole project took five years to complete. Lyth says a shopping centre the size of Emporia only became viable in Malmö when the Öresund Bridge, which connects Sweden to Denmark, opened in 2000.

“It made part of Malmö, where Emporia now is situated, closer to the international airport of Copenhagen than Copenhagen itself,” he says. “That was a tremendous shift in the region and made it possible for [the site where Emporia was built] to gain a lot of new value.”

Emporia shopping centre in Malmo by Wingardh Arkitetkontor

Despite the large number of shopping centres in the area, Lyth believes Emporia stands out.

“The building is performing pretty well,” he says. “I think that people really like the atmosphere, the ambience. It’s something different than the normal shopping centre.”

Joakim Lyth of Wingardh Arkitektkontor
Joakim Lyth of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor

Inside Festival 2013 took place at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore from 2 to 4 October. The next Inside Festival will take place at the same venue from 1 to 3 October 2014. Award entries are open February to June 2014.

The post Swedish shopping centre’s swooping entrances
“drag people inside” says architect
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Fideli Sundqvist: I Love Paper: The Swedish artist’s book teaches the tricks of her very crafty trade

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In the summer of 2011, Fideli Sundqvist presented her graduation project at Stockholm’s Konstfack University. In the midst of the overblown gaudy work from the art departments, the conceptual…

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Studio Visit: Martin Björnson: Playful furniture from a Swedish designer at the heart of Malmö’s emerging scene

Studio Visit: Martin Björnson


Recently in Malmö for The Conference, we took the time to visit local designer Martin Björnson in his studio workshop. Björnson’s Bobbin stool has received a lot of design recognition this year,…

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Interview: James Thompson of Black Badger : From jewelry and watches made from NASA-grade materials to next-generation submarines, this designer knows no boundaries

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Black Badger Advanced Composites might not be a name you’re familiar with, but founder James Thompson is in demand from all quarters right now. In a remarkably short period…

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Stocktown: Sweden’s international video magazine focuses on Africa’s vibrant and diversely creative scene

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Holiday House Vindö by Max Holst Arkitektkontor

This wooden holiday house by Swedish studio Strömma Projekt Max Holst Arkitektkontor is perched on the edge of a gorge in Vindö, an island on the Stockholm archipelago (+ slideshow).

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Strömma Projekt Max Holst Arkitektkontor designed the single-storey house on a series of black concrete plinths, elevating it above the gorge so that surrounding trees appear at eye level from the windows.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

The dark timber exterior is surrounded by a sheltered deck, leading into a combined kitchen, living and dining room, while two children’s bedrooms are connected to a playroom and sit adjacent to a bathroom and sauna.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Large windows offer views out into the woodland from all four sides of the house, while wooden ceiling beams are left exposed beneath the gabled rooftops.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Timber lines the walls, ceilings and floors throughout the house, complemented by wooden furniture and kitchen units.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

“The material palette is simple and essentially rooted in local building traditions,” said the architects.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Wooden steps lead down to an exposed deck beneath the main house, then onwards to a small shed stacked with firewood at the end of a narrow walkway.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Other holiday homes we’ve featured include a cluster of holiday apartments around terraces connected by small alleys, a tiny wooden cabin containing a sauna and bedroom and a riverside house raised on tree trunks to prevent flooding.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

See more holiday homes »
See more Swedish architecture and design »

Photography is by Hannes Söderlund.

Here’s some information from the architects:


Holiday house Vindö

The site is located on Vindö, an island in the Stockholm archipelago, Sweden. Upon first glance the site appears a fairly typical archipelago plot with granite outcrops, pine trees and blueberry bushes but soon reveals it’s unusual dramatic topography presenting an exciting opportunity to the architect Max Holst as well as for the developer Strömma Projekt.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

The building stands on a ridge bordering a 10 m deep drop into a gorge. In which a number of magnificent trees, mostly pine but also some hardwood grow. On the sheltered terrace and in the house one finds the tops of these trees at eye level.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

The orientation of the ridge dictates the building’s form and the spatial subdivisions and the spatial emphasis is on the large living, dining and kitchen space, which leads onto to a large sheltered terrace towards south/east.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt

Children’s bedrooms are of a modest scale with a master bedroom located to the east. As a buffer between the living and sleeping areas, a bathroom and is located.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
Site plan – click for larger image

The hallway acts as a spacious playroom to the neighbouring the children’s rooms. The material palette is simple and essentially rooted in local building traditions.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
Floor plan – click for larger image

Tectonically, the house is composed on black concrete plinths and exposed timber rafters highlight the repetition of a 120mm module on which the construction is based. The only setback from this strict systematisation occurs in the bathroom where the room is simply not suited for these measurements.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
Section – click for larger image

Room dimensions fell easily into place, becoming an exercise in creating dynamic spaces with a constant connection to the sky and surrounding forest, all within this framework.

Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
North elevation – click for larger image
Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
East elevation – click for larger image
Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
South elevation – click for larger image
Holiday house Vindö by Stromma Projekt
West elevation – click for larger image

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Max Holst Arkitektkontor
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Sjötorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

Coloured storage units that double as cubby-holes and hiding places for children feature in this Stockholm kindergarten by Swedish firm Rotstein Arkitekter.

Sjötorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

Rotstein Arkitekter designed the L-shaped space on the ground floor of a residential apartment block, with the kindergarten’s entrance in the middle.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

Cubby-holes in the common areas are yellow, while each of the three classes has its own signature colour.

“We envisioned a playful environment designed to encourage and inspire the creativity of the children,” said architect Anders Rotstein.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

A small hut with a glass window is located on the first floor with views over the rest of the kindergarten space, providing a place to play or sit and read books.

The staircase widens towards the bottom for use as an amphitheatre and there’s a darkened hideout underneath it.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

Each classroom has three windows – two large and one small – to offer views in from the neighbouring street, while windows between classrooms visually connect spaces together inside.

Another project in Stockholm by Rotstein Arkitekter is an apartment with an open-plan, monochrome living space.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

Other kindergartens we’ve featured include one with a play area of wooden blocks shaped like a mountain, another with a cloud-shaped courtyard enclosing six mulberry trees and a small wooden nursery in a public garden.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

See more stories about kindergartens »
See more Swedish architecture and design »

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

Photography is by Åke E:son Lindman.

Here’s some information from the architects:


Sjötorget Kindergarten

Rotstein Arkitekter has designed a kindergarten on the ground level of a new residential block in Stockholm. We envisioned a playful environment designed to encourage and inspire the creativity of the children. The entrance is situated at the centre of the kindergarten, with an abundance of natural light and sight lines through the building.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter

The entrance space flows into the two studios, each with two connecting group rooms. All group rooms have three windows facing the lane outside: one placed low, one high and one bigger than the others. These scattered windows offer the passerby views of the activities from the outside, thus revitalising the street. Windows between group rooms open up sight lines within the kindergarten itself.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter
Site plan

The kindergarten is also a play with colours; yellow elements in the common areas and one specific colour for each department.Many of the units were designed to serve multiple purposes. For example, the storage units are built into the walls as coloured niches, serving also as caves and huts for the children.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter
Ground floor – click for larger image

A sculptural staircase leads down to the workshop. The stairway becomes a place for parallel activities. It also functions as cabin, lookout tower, forest, cave and platform. When descending the stairs it widens, turning into an amphitheater like area. This is the perfect place for play during the day. A quieter and darker room has been created underneath the stairs: a secret hideout.

Sjötorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter
First floor plan – click for larger image

Some of the interior design budget was earmarked for solutions with architectural qualities, specific for this space. Using built-in storage units and niches is space saving. Maximizing the room height makes a huge difference, especially when it comes to the acoustic environment.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter
Stair plan

Sjötorget is a kindergarten created by Rotstein Arkitekter, as part of a new residential block built by the developer JM at Liljeholmskajen in Stockholm, and designed by the same architect.

Sjotorget Kindergarten by Rotstein Arkitekter
Section – click for larger image

Architects: Rotstein Arkitekter
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
Project year: 2012-2013
Partner in charge: Anders Rotstein
Team: Katarina Bukowska, Måns Elander, Jonas Hesse, Petter Forsberg, Rickard Rotstein

The post Sjötorget Kindergarten
by Rotstein Arkitekter
appeared first on Dezeen.

Innovate Like A Misfit: Kyra Maya Phillips on how pirates, hackers and gangsters can teach us to be more creative and successful in business

Innovate Like A Misfit


Kyra Maya Phillips, the co-author of the upcoming book “The Misfit Economy,” encourages readers to think like pirates, gangsters and hackers when approaching business. While researching and writing the…

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