Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

Israeli architect Ranaan Stern has adapted a 15-square metre room inside an artist’s Tel Aviv apartment to create a studio with two desks, 36 drawers, modular storage compartments, pegboard display walls and even a folding bed (+ slideshow).

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

The unusual set up was designed to accommodate living and working spaces, as well as display areas for a collection of specific objects dating from the 1940s to the present day.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

“The artist creates and collects different kinds of art pieces, most are 2D but also some small sculptures, books and old materials,” explained Ranaan Stern. “We needed different kinds of storage units, different sizes and different ways of keeping the new and old pieces.”

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

The apartment is located inside a concrete block from the 1950s and two of the room’s four walls are windows, so expanding the space was not an option.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

The team spent four weeks measuring each object and organising them into four separate categories. These categories were then further divided into groups, dependent on how much a piece was needed for everyday use or for display.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

“We also needed storage for materials and tools for the artist’s daily work. During measuring we gave each category a colour, which is exposed only when one opens a drawer or any other unit,” said Stern.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

The result is a layout that would appear random to an outsider, but has a coherence that is instantly familiar to the artist.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

“The smaller sections can be removed from the larger frame units and placed on the table during work.” Stern continued. “Removable sliding doors are actually pallets that pieces can be placed on for presentation or that can be used as modular easels.”

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

Most of the cells, cupboards and drawers have been constructed from lightweight birch and treated with a clear coating that emphasises the wood’s natural grain. Birch has also been used for the flooring.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

“We also designed the storage by two rules: the easiest way to physically open and use, but always making sure everyday stuff and more needed pieces will be more accessible. Some pieces can be place on the pegboard which is also a painting stand for different sizes of boards,” added the architect.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

The windows were fitted with blinds to help give the artist control over the atmosphere and natural light. The addition of a folding bed that can be neatly stored away allows the space to also be used as a guest room.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

Photography is by Gidon Levin.

Here’s some more information about the project:


Artist’s Studio

In the artist’s central Tel Aviv apartment, architects Ranaan Stern and Shany Tal from Raanan Stern’s Studio designed a versatile 15 sqm studio workspace. The proportions of the room in the 60 year old concrete building allow the maximum amount of light to enter through the window. The window was carefully divided and blinds were hung with the aim of giving the artist control over the atmosphere and natural light.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

The artist’s varied family and personal collection includes 2d pieces dating from the 1940’s to the present. For this purpose: every piece that will be stored was measured: they were organised and ordered according to groups, sizes and artistic connections. After the organisational and calculation stage, four separate proportions were discovered that receive expression as each section is opened. Every cell, cupboard or drawer was designed internally according to the required proportions, only when the drawer is opened the colourful mosaic of the storage section is revealed.

Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern

In addition, different sections were planned and built for displaying and storing work, tools and materials. The smaller sections can be removed from the larger frame units and placed on the table during work. Removable sliding doors are actually pallets that pieces can be placed on for presentation or that can be used as modular easels. All the hidden mechanisms of the units and drawers such as the sizes and divisions were fitted to the proportions of the artist. The order of the space allows minimum movement outside of the work area and table and maximum accessibility to works tools according to their importance in the studio.

3D diagram of Space-saving modular studio for an artist by Raanan Stern
3D diagram – click for larger image

The closets and units are made of white birch as well as the flooring which is covered in bright birch tiles. The wood was coated lightly in order to give a light and delicate feeling, but still retaining the slightly wizened look of natural wood in the work space. The Artist uses the space to host colleagues and behind the sliding doors there is also a folding bed for the dual functionality of the room.

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House E/J in Tel Aviv by Paritzki & Liani Architects

This house in Tel Aviv by Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects has a transparent ground floor, which reveals a terracotta-brick floor that extends out into the garden (+ slideshow).

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Paritzki & Liani Architects demolished the end property from a row of existing houses in the coastal neighbourhood of Herzliya, then built a new three-storey residence with the same size and proportions as its predecessor.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Rather than using the same footprint as the old house, the architects pulled the new volume apart in the middle and rotated one of the halves by 90 degrees.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The two new volumes sit side by side, connected at one end by a corridor but visually separated by a semi-enclosed courtyard that slots in between.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The two ground-floor spaces provide a living room and a combined kitchen and dining room. Both rooms are wrapped on three sides by glass walls, making them visible to one another and the garden.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

“We wanted to unite the garden and the ground floor,” architects Paola Liani and Itai Paritzki told Dezeen. “We used terracotta bricks in a fishbone pattern for the flooring of both the interior and exterior.”

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Plaster-covered walls surround the two upper floors, which each accommodate a pair of bedrooms.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

There’s also a basement floor, containing a spare room and a laundry area.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Here’s a project description from the architects:


House E/J

House E/J is located near the sea, surrounded by closely positioned eclectic residential houses.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

On the site there was an existing semi-detached house of only 80 square metres with a sloping roof. The construction regulations did not allow to increase the 80 square metres of built area on the ground floor.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Thanks to the request of the inhabitants for a quite dense program (4 bedrooms, all equipped with private bathrooms, a separate guest suite, entrance, kitchen, dining, living, guest lavatory, laundry room, storage, shelter and parking) we found a strategy based on perceptive mechanism (light-wind) and typological devices (environment).

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The first consideration was to elude the surroundings and thus create a new and protective green garden.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

For reasons concerning scale and volumetric perception we decomposed the volume in two separate houses, two volumes rotated perpendicular to one another, with a patio between them.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The elements of this habitat, base, patio, stairs, were reloaded with a new operative function: they are devices with new possible levels of existence.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Design concept

The transparent base, that supports the three upper levels and reunites the functions (L,K,D), is considered an illusion box composed of intervals in the functional spaces, such as sliding doors and a mirror. These elements expand or increase the visual limits of the site.

Lower ground floor plan of EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Basement floor plan – click for larger image

The movements of the inhabitants in the house are fixed or hidden by new scenes of contemplation that differ according to the changing of light and reflections. The terrain is materially marked by the presence of continuous terracotta.

Ground floor plan of EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The patio tunnel is the insertion of zenithal light and wind into the illusion box. Above all it brings a sensorial and psychological implication of vertigo; in each floor the openings change according to the layout of the private rooms. Each bedroom has a view towards the surrounding growing garden or to the internal passage of the patio tunnel.

First floor plan of EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image

In order to obtain the forth façade we’ve cut a threshold of light above the stairs located between the confining wall of the adjacent property and the house, allowing a diffuse illumination in each and every level. The final result seems quite silent; nothing however is what it appears to be.

EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Second floor plan – click for larger image

Location: Herzliya, Israel
Site area: 375 metres squared
Total floor area: 263 metres squared
Storeys: 4
Completed: 2013

Section of EJ House by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Section – click for larger image

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Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

A black steel staircase links the six storeys of this townhouse in Tel Aviv by Israeli architect Pitsou Kedem (+ slideshow).

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

Pitsou Kedem designed the house for a family and added a private terrace and swimming pool on the rooftop.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

“The owners wanted to create the experience of life in a private residence, but within the city,” said architect Pitsou Kedem. “The authentic urban skyline reveals Tel Aviv’s rooftops to those in the courtyard and thus realises the urban experience that the owners wanted to achieve.”

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

All but one of the house’s floors opens out onto a balcony or terrace.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

A penthouse with sliding glass doors leads out to the roof deck and swimming pool, which are encased behind a clear glass balustrade.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

The fourth floor contains a study, small living space and a spa. A combined kitchen and living room occupies the floor below and is surrounded by floor-to-ceiling windows.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

The parents of the family have an entire floor to themselves, with an en-suite bathroom and extensive closet space, while two more bedrooms and bathrooms are located on the level below, and belong to the children.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

A guest suite consisting of a bedroom, bathroom and living space can be found on the ground floor and opens out to a small enclosed terrace.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

The black steel staircase ascends through the rear corner of the house, beside a grey silicate-block wall. Exposed timber floors and wooden panelling also feature throughout.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

Tel Aviv Townhouse is the latest in a string of residential projects completed by Pitsou Kedem in the Israeli capital, following a renovated house with vaulted ceilings and stone walls and a house with double-height glass walls that slide back across its facade.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

Photography is by Amit Geron.

Here’s a description from the architects:


Town House in Tel Aviv

A 270 square metre plot was used as the foundation for a Tel Aviv town house consisting of a basement and an additional 6 floors. The owners wanted to create the experience of life in a private residence but within the city.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

The architect Pitsou Kedem designed an urban style courtyard on the roof and, as a result, reversed the usually, permanent, order of things. The authentic, urban skyline reveals to those in the courtyard, Tel Aviv’s rooftops and thus realises the urban experience that the owners wanted to achieve.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

The architectural design was based on a cross section of the structure whilst creating a physical and visual relationship between all the floors. Each floor encompasses an area of some 100 square meters with every floor being used for a different purpose. This enables the house’s residents to create common meeting spaces alongside separated spaces that, together, maximise the usage off the space and maximise the privacy that day to day life in a home requires.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

Thus, the design incorporates a separate floor for the parents living area which includes a large library, a floor devoted to children’s rooms, a common living floor and the upper floor for the pool. Wooden paneling is used around openings on the ground floor and is also used to disguise the entrance hall and a separate living unit.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

The home’s internal stairwell is designed as a dramatic, vertical line. In contrast to the stairwell common in most apartment buildings which is usually designed to be hidden from view, in this design the stairwell is open and runs along a wall covered with grey silicate blocks.

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem

Architects: Pitsou Kedem Architects
Design team: Pitsou Kedem, Hagar Tzvi, Hila Sela
Location: Tel Aviv
Size: 610 square metres
Plot size: 260 sqm
Total floor area: 450 sqm
Design & build : 2009-2012
Program: Single family house

Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem
Ground floor – click for larger image
Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem
First floor – click for larger image
Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem
Second floor – click for larger image
Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem
Third floor – click for larger image
Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem
Fourth floor – click for larger image
Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem
Fifth floor – click for larger image
Tel Aviv Townhouse by Pitsou Kedem
Section – click for larger image

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Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Israeli architect Pitsou Kedem has exposed vaulted ceilings and stone walls inside this renovated house in the ancient port of Jaffa, Tel Aviv (+ slideshow).

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Pitsou Kedem restored the historical building, estimated to be hundreds of years old, by stripping back the interior to reveal walls of broken clay and shells, vaulted ceilings and large internal archways.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Small pockets are hollowed from the walls at various heights and are used to create storage areas and a desk.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

“The central idea was to combine the old and new whilst maintaining the qualities of each and to create new spaces that blend the styles together, even intensify them, because of the contrast and tension between the different periods,” said the studio.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

A set of three pivoting glass doors frame the downstairs bedroom, while a new kitchen extension on the west side of the house features a long window with views over the Mediterranean ocean.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Tall windows also lead out from the living room next door to a small wooden balcony.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

An iron staircase is set into the exposed concrete wall of the living room and is screened by a double-height balustrade of suspended wire cables. It ascends to a master bedroom on the mezzanine floor above.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Exposed concrete flooring throughout the house is covered with a mixture of patterned and textured rugs.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

“The project succeeds in both honouring and preserving the historical and almost romantic values of the structure whilst creating a contemporary project, modern and suited to its period,” added the designers.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Pitsou Kedem has also recently completed a house with double-height glass doors, a renovated 1950s house with a stone mosaic wall and a family house with timber screens that fold back in different directions.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

See more architecture by Pitsou Kedem »
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Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Photography is by Amit Geron.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Jaffa House: contemporary minimalism and historical asceticism

The language of minimalism imbedded in a historic residence in Old Jaffa. The 180 square meter residential home is located in Old Jaffa. Its location is unique in that it is set above the harbour, facing west with all of its openings facing the majestic splendour of the Mediterranean Sea.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Whilst it is difficult to determine the buildings exact age, it is clear that it is hundreds of years old.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Over the years, it has undergone many changes and had many additions made that have damaged the original quality of the building and its spaces.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

The central idea was to restore the structure’s original, characteristics, the stone walls, the segmented ceilings and the arches including the exposure of the original materials (a combination of pottery and beach sand).

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

The building has been cleaned of all of the extraneous elements, from newer wall coverings and has undergone a peeling process to expose its original state.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Surprisingly, modern, minimalistic construction styles remind us of and correspond with the ascetic style of the past, and this despite the vast time difference between them.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

The central idea was to combine the old and the new whilst maintaining the qualities of each and to create new spaces that blend the styles together even intensify them because of the contrast and tension between the different periods.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

The historical is expressed by preserving the textures and materials of the buildings outer shell and by respecting the building engineering accord.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

The modern is expressed by the opening of spaces and by altering the internal flow to one more open and free and the creation of an urban home environment along with the use of stainless steel, iron and Korean in the various partitions, in the openings and in the furniture.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

The project succeeds in both honouring and preserving the historical and almost romantic values of the structure whilst creating a contemporary project, modern and suited to its period.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Despite the time differences, the tensions and the dichotomy between the periods exist in a surprisingly balanced and harmonic space.

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem

Design: Pitsou Kedem
Design team: Pitsou Kedem, Raz Melamed, Irene Goldberg
Project: 180 sqm house in the old city of Jaffa

Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem
First floor plan – click for larger image
Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem
Second floor plan – click for larger image
Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem
Section through living room – click for larger image
Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem
Section through dining room – click for larger image
Jaffa House by Pitsou Kedem
Section through staircases – click for larger image

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Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

Play “spot the woman” in this photo set of an apartment that references Tel Aviv’s 1950s interiors by Israeli practice Jacobs-Yaniv Architects (+ slideshow).

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

As the clients are modernist enthusiasts, Jacobs-Yaniv Architects used materials, colours and furniture from the movement’s heyday to inform the design of the 190-square-metre space.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

“It was a great joy to study flats of Tel Aviv’s 50s, which were designed very cleverly,” said the designers.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

Spaces are kept as open as possible in keeping with this style and to allow maximum flexibility for the family.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

A corridor denoted by wooden flooring runs the full length of the long plan, utilised as a study area and library.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

The master bedroom sits at the far end, with an adjacent dressing room and its own terrace.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

Another larger terrace is positioned at the other end, accessible from the dining and lounge areas used for entertaining guests.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

Placed in the centre of the flat, kitchen units supported on an L-shaped black steel frame have oak doors lower down and lacquered yellow cupboards on top. These finishes are also used for storage compartments elsewhere.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

The children’s play area can be closed off with sliding doors to create a private guest room.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

Last week we featured another Tel Aviv apartment, which has perforated metal that screens conceal rooms and storage space, and we’ve also posted Google’s offices in the city with a meeting room full of orange trees.

Photography is by Amit Geron.

See more apartment interiors »
See more architecture and design in Israel »

Jacobs-Yaniv Architects sent us the following information:


Tel Aviv of the 1950s meets 2000

For the clients, who were born and bred in Tel Aviv, but spent most of their adult life in a house in the suburbs raising their family, the ultimate dream was to come back to Tel Aviv as mature and independent individuals, available to enjoy all that the city has to offer.

Informed and inspired by their love to modernist Tel Aviv of 50s and modernist design, with today’s influences and technological advantages, they gained what they had hoped for.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

The clients asked that the majority of space is kept open for maximum diversity in family activities.

There is only one formal bedroom placed in the far end of the flat while all other functions are concentrated in the centre of the space, holding the family area, a desk for two people, the kitchen and a play area which is a flexible space used both as a play room and guest room.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

This room is placed right by the family area and can be isolated by two sliding doors – very typical of Tel Aviv’s 50s. The design of the kitchen, which was placed in the centre of the flat as a piece of furniture, involved meticulous detailing. The oak and coloured Formica cupboards, lined with black internal finishing, are held within a steel structure.

The structure also houses all the required electric fittings – smart home control panels, lighting and speakers. The kitchen was tailor-made to the requirements of the owners who love to cook and host.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects

Great thought was put into day-to-day functionality. There is plenty of storage space and display shelves for items that the clients have collected throughout the years.

The utility room is placed by the master bed room. It serves also as the guest bathroom and can be accessed through the main living space too, providing great ease around house work.

Flat in Tel Aviv by Jacobs-Yaniv Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image

We strongly believe that optimum functionality and harmonious living in a home should be as flexible and fluent as possible. Therefore we plan a variety of access points from room to room and design at least one space as a ‘flexible room’ which can be used in different ways.

It was a great joy to study flats of Tel Aviv’s 50s, which were designed very cleverly providing exactly that; function, comfort and pleasure.

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Jacobs-Yaniv Architects
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O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Perforated metal screens conceal rooms and storage space in this Tel Aviv apartment by Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects (+ slideshow).

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Paritzki & Liani Architects lined two walls of the 110-square-metre flat with hinged translucent panels to hide away everything except the kitchen counter and a sofa.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

“The idea was to thicken the existing walls with vertical perforated metal panels that may be opened and closed, forming a thick wall that contains functions of the habitat,” said the architects.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The walls open up to reveal kitchen units, the master bedroom and bathroom on one side of the main living space, and shelving along the other.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

These spaces remain obscured until lights within are switched on and the glow emanates through the panels.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Larger windows are left unmasked, but smaller ones are consumed by the screens or covered with similar translucent blinds.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Doorways and corridors leading from the entrance and into the bedroom are lined with the same wood as the floor.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Positioned in front of the bedroom, the bathroom sits right up against the panels but is still separated from the living area by large sheets of glass.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Elliptical lights suspended at different heights look like hovering UFOs and are reflected in the shiny ceiling.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

A walk-in wardrobe is located completely out of view behind the kitchen and an L-shaped balcony faces west to look out over the city’s skyline.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Also in Tel Aviv, Paritzki & Liani have squeezed a house with an exposed brickwork interior into a space between two existing properties and installed a PVC ceiling at an apartment to mirror a panoramic view of the harbour.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Photography by Amit Geron.

See more apartment interiors »
See more projects by Paritzki & Liani Architects »
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The architects’ project description follows:


In an anonymous high-rise building, among many of those surrounding our skyline; we’ve decided to use the interior of this 110 sqm flat to elaborate, with simple elements, walls and lights, an experiment on the nature of perception.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The idea here is to thicken the existing walls with vertical perforated metal panels that may be open and closed; forming this way a thick wall that contains functions of the habitat (kitchen, closets, library, bathroom, storage). Above all, this wall is an optical device that transforms, depending on the type of light used, and modifies the height and depth of the space. In the light of day this thick perforated wall, composed of variable thicknesses, becomes a three dimensional veil that makes opalescent the different areas of the flat. Niches and deep spaces create visions of transitional forms.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image and key

In the dark we’ve drawn attention to a ritual passage, familiar to all of us, once we enter our home at night; the passage from darkness to illuminated space. Here we create a second view to the inhabitants. Our device adds new parts to the space, transforming itself into a remote architecture with new and profound windows: the vision exceeds the measurable borders of the flat.

The appearance of this new place vanishes once the lights are turned off.

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Paritzki & Liani Architects
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You are never alone with a Good Book

L’agence de publicité Grey Tel Aviv a créé une campagne pour la plus grande chaine de librairies en Israël Steimatzky. Intitulée « On est jamais seul avec un bon livre », elle met en scène des lecteurs endormis à côté des personnages de fiction dont ils explorent les aventures. Des visuels très réussis à découvrir.

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Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Google’s new Tel Aviv headquarters include a meeting area filled with orange trees, workstations on a make-believe beach and slides connecting different floors (+ slideshow).

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Swiss designers Camenzind Evolution completed the project in collaboration with Israeli studios Studio Yaron Tal and Setter Architects.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

The offices occupy seven floors of the Electra Tower, one of the tallest skyscrapers in the Israeli city, and were designed as a series of informal workspaces intended to encourage communication and collaboration.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Every area is themed, but each one is based on a scene found somewhere in Israel. Some of the corridors appear as narrow cobbled streets, complete with arched windows and flower boxes, while the reception area is an undulating timber landscape reminiscent of the public spaces at Tel Aviv’s port.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Fake grass covers the floor and seating in one room. Another contains surfboards that reference the city’s growing surfer culture.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

“Each floor was designed with a different aspect of the local identity in mind, illustrating the diversity of Israel as a country and nation,” say the designers.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Other unusual spaces include a meeting area surrounded by climbing plants, rooms resembling converted warehouses and space modelled on a desert landscape.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

One floor is assigned as a Google Campus, a shared workplace for startup technology companies modelled on one that opened last year in London.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Google frequently works with designers to develop wacky concepts for its offices and the latest London headquarters includes Union Jack flags and vegetable allotments. The internet company also recently revealed images of its data centres, which feature primary-coloured pipework and cooling rooms that glow green. See more stories about Google.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Other offices designed for well-known technology firms include a campus for Adobe in Utah and offices for Microsoft in Vienna, which also include a slide. See more stories about technology companies or see more stories about buildings with slides.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Photography is by Itay Sikolski.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Here’s some more information from Camenzind Evolution:


Amazingly inspiring new work environment for Google in Tel Aviv

At the end of December 2012, Google Israel has opened its spectacular new 8’000 m2 offices in Tel Aviv for their ever growing teams of engineers, sales and marketing.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Designed by Swiss Design Team Camenzind Evolution, in collaboration with Israeli Design Teams Setter Architects and Studio Yaron Tal, the new Google office now occupies 8 floors in the prestigious Electra Tower in Central Tel Aviv, with breath taking views across the whole city and the sea.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

It is a new milestone for Google in the development of innovative work environments: nearly 50% of all areas have been allocated to create communication landscapes, giving countless opportunities to employees to collaborate and communicate with other Googler’s in a diverse environment that will serve all different requirements and needs.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

There is clear separation between the employees traditional desk based work environment and those communication areas, granting privacy and focus when required for desk based individual working and spaces for collaboration and sharing ideas.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Each floor was designed with a different aspect of the local identity in mind, illustrating the diversity of Israel as a country and nation. Each of the themes were selected by a local group of Googlers, who also assisted in the interpretation of those chosen ideas.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Being in Israel, for lunch the Googlers can choose from three amazing restaurants, non-kosher, kosher dairy and kosher meat, each of the restaurants designed to it’s own style and theme.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Only 7 of the 8 rented floors in Electra Tower are actually occupied by Google. The remaining floor gives space to a new ‘Campus’, which was also opened in December by the Israeli Prime Minister. The ‘Campus Tel Aviv’, powered by Google for Entrepreneurs, is a new hub for entrepreneurs and developers, providing a base for start-up companies, and is only the second Google ‘Campus’ worldwide.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Sustainability played a vital role to Google in the development of their new Tel Aviv offices and the project is currently awaiting LEED ‘Platinum’ certification, the first of its category in Israel.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

The post Google Tel Aviv by
Camenzind Evolution
appeared first on Dezeen.

Google Tel-Aviv Office

Google a récemment emménagé dans de nouveaux bureaux à Tel Aviv dans la lignée des locaux Google. Avec un design signé par Camenzind Evolution en collaboration avec Setter Architects et le studio Yaron Tal, ces magnifiques bureaux aux ambiances diverses occupent 8 étages au sein de la Electra Tower.

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ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects has squeezed a house with an exposed brickwork interior into the space between two existing properties in Tel Aviv (+ slideshow).

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

“A new building almost ‘not present’ from the outside is generated,” Paola Liani and Itai Paritzki told Dezeen. “We tried to reinvent what is not present in this particular context and zone of the city – creating an intimate, rich, deep space overlooking a small garden.”

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The constrained site prevented the architects from giving the building many windows, so they added a long narrow skylight across the width of the roof to bring light down into both the ground and first floors.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

A first floor corridor lines up with this skylight and features a gridded metal floor that lets light filter through to the open-plan kitchen, living room and dining area below.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The metal floor also allows residents on the ground floor to see others coming in and out of bedrooms on the level above.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

A staircase with cantilevered iron treads connects the two floors and climbs up the side of one of two exposed brick walls. “We invested in this material because it moves the walls and the light, in a codified, almost historical way,” said the architects.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

More gridded metal is mounted into rectangular frames to act as a semi-transparent screen for the staircase, taking the place of a balustrade.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Paola Liani and Itai Paritzki founded their studio in 2001 and have also designed a house beside the face of a cliff and an apartment with a PVC ceiling.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

See more architecture in Israel »

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Photography is by Amit Geron.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Here’s some more information from the architects:


ZBL House | Paritzki & Liani Architects

The house is inserted in a series of row houses, not far from the university area in Tel Aviv. It is a pedestrian oasis composed of attached houses, only one story high, and filled with green areas. The building restrictions for that specific zone permit utmost a height of 4.5 m for the façade and 6.5 m for the roof top.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The idea of this residential volume situated between two walls and two strips of green is to design the space with the natural light, excluding any full-height subdivision or typological hierarchy; only by inserting two voids that trace the movements of the inhabitants.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Two shifted rectangular cutouts of light: the first, located in the center of the volume directs the light from the roof level to the ground level, which is lifted 90 cm above the pathway (kitchen, dining, living area). The second, located on the external border between the house, the pool and the garden, consents the creation of a second naturally illuminated court, on underground level.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Once entering the house, one perceives the visual depth between the different levels and micro gardens of Sambucus on ground floor.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The suspended passage (bridge) that leads to the night area on the first floor is a diaphragm made of metal net grid only 2 cm thick that assumes the value of a lightweight veil that refines the zenithal light while extending the silhouettes of who walks through it, “in order to see nothing but the sky”.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Total site area: 198 m2
Total floor area: 300 m²
Number of stories: 3
Status: Completed, 2012

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image and key

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image and key

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Above: long section

The post ZBL House by
Paritzki & Liani Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.