Adobe Museum of Digital Media
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pWe’re thrilled to announce that an amazing resource for design eduction just went live: a href=”http://edutoolkit.designersaccord.org/”Integrating sustainability into design education: The Toolkit/a. /p
pYou’ll recall that last October, over 100 design educators and enthusiasts from around the world convened in San Francisco for a href=”http://www.designersaccord.org/initiatives/”The Designers Accord Global Summit on Sustainability Education/a, two days of discussion, workshops, presentations, and planning around the topic of design education and sustainability. It was a very rich and intense experience, and now there’s a new companion site, designed by Scott Stowell with support from the Adobe Foundation and Autodesk./p
pAt a href=”http://www.edutoolkit.designersaccord.org”edutoolkit.designersaccord.org/a, you’ll find published explorations around the big questions we addressed, mindsets needed to assimilate new perspectives, and examples of classroom discussion topics, exercises, and term projects./p
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pThe site is “more than a record of the Summit discussion,” notes Valerie Casey, founder of the a href=”http://www.designersaccord.org”Designers Accord/a. “It’s a strong statement about the future of design education. We hope the site will be a living library. Site users can add examples of their own discussions, exercises, and projects, as well as adding feedback, comments, and illustrations to enrich or improve other posted examples.”/p
pPlease check out the site, add your own examples and comments, and share with your education posse, students, administrators, and colleagues./pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/education/new_from_the_designers_accord_education_toolkit_17222.asp”(more…)/a
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Photographer Lisa Kereszi’s look at Detroit’s neighborhood art installation
by Lisa Kereszi
In a Detroit neighborhood punctuated by little more than defunct traffic lights and abandoned train tracks, Heidelberg Street stands out for its row of colorful houses decorated with repurposed bits of urban detritus and bright paint. I recently spent a little time shooting and surveying the street, the result of artist Tyree Guyton’s 24-year-strong mission (dubbed the Heidelberg Project) to inspire a fading community. Like NYC’s Highline or the New Orleans biennial, the row of houses make another great example of creative urban renewal, transforming the street into an outdoor exhibition.
The craziness extends from houses to lawns, which are like urban gardens of junk, filled with car hoods, cigarette posters, stacks of shoes, vacuum cleaners, appliances, plywood paintings, tires and more. One house, covered with weathered stuffed animals, looks like one of Detroit-born artist Mike Kelley’s Frankenstein pieces.
A program that aims to “heal communities through art,” the project makes the neighborhood a visually-fascinating destination and an example for potential future art spaces.
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pNew York-based designer and RISD graduate a href=”http://www.emilyrothschild.com”Emily Rothschild/a is interested in making the ritual of medication both more convenient and more beautiful. Her carafe and glass set, called a href=”http://www.emilyrothschild.com/index.php?/ongoing/bedside-carafe/”emMedical Glassware/em/a, wraps the ritual of taking pills into the familiar bedside carafe, replacing clunky plastic containers and cassettes. By integrating pills into the bottom of the cup, medication comes out of the medicine cabinet and into central domestic space, no longer hidden./pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/emily_rothschilds_medical_glassware__17221.asp”(more…)/a
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Candy-ColoredA bright pop of color is the best way to add fun and interest to an otherwise simple outfit. Or if you’re feeling bold, a more head to toe look of candy-colored pieces and accessories makes an ensemble instantly youthful and peppy. Neon and candy colors have been in for awhile and whether you want something sweet or trendy, Ideeli and others have gathered all the lust-worthy names and labels and are offering amazing deals to help you add a fun pop of candy color to your wardrobe! Ideeli – Tarina Tarantino, io?ion!, Juicy Jewel, munki munki Gilt Groupe – Marc by Marc Jacobs, Juicy Couture, Lee Angel, Sheila Fajl, Shashi Rue La La – Christopher Kon, Junior Drake, Tano, Salomon, BCBGMaxazria HauteLook – Stila Cosmetis, LnA, Jalda, Grayce by Molly Sims |
pAttention Coroflot job seekers:/p
pOur friends at a href=”http://thebigadgig.com”strongThe Big Ad Gig/strong/a alerted us that they have extended the deadline to their creative ad agency competition until midnight tonight. It’s a career opportunity of a lifetime with five winners getting their shot at a thirty day paid freelance gig at the following notable agencies:br /
Crispin, Porter + Bogusky, Ogilvy, TBWA, and New Co. (Ty Montague’s new shop.)/p
pYou’ve got a few more hours to assemble your 60 second YouTube video submission, portfolio, and resume submission for a chance to win./p
pVisit a href=”http://www.thebigadgig.com”strongThe Big Ad Gig/strong/a for complete details, and pencil us in for lunch when you land that sweet new job./pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/competition/big_ad_gig_deadline_extended_til_midnight_17219.asp”(more…)/a
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James Dyson, maker of the bladeless wonderfan that has allowed UnBeige HQ to make it through the summer sans air conditioning, and his industrial design-boosting foundation have announced the 18 regional winners of the 2010 James Dyson Award competition. The top American entry is the Copenhagen Wheel—a plug-and-play wheel that turns a regular bike into a smart, electric hybrid—invented by Christine Outram and a team of students at MIT’s SENSEable City Lab. Controlled through a rider’s smart phone, the wheel can capture the energy dissipated when breaking and cycling and save it for later use. The sleek red hub contains a motor, batteries, and an internal gear system, as well as environmental and location sensors that provide data for cycling-related mobile applications. Now in its final prototyping phase, the Copenhagen Wheel (named for those cycling-crazy Danes!) is slated to debut commercially next June at a cost of approximately $600 per wheel.
As national winners, Outram and SENSEable City Lab associate director Assaf Biderman are invited to visit Dyson laboratories in the UK (hint: tell them you have to go the bathroom and then grab a fan!) to participate in a workshop run by Dyson engineers. Meanwhile, their project and nine other U.S. finalists selected by alphabetically compatible design experts Allison Arieff and Amelia Amon have advanced to the next round of competition. Stay tuned to UnBeige to learn which problem-solving inventions make the international shortlist before the grand prize winner is announced on October 5. In the meantime, we suggest using your foreign language skills to peruse the other top regional entries, including an innovative Italian soap dispenser called “Whippy” that has a kicky Memphis group vibe.
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
Admit it. Your seven-year-old nephew could out-HTML tag you any day and you think that a Cascading Style Sheet is something with a thread count. That’s where the mediabistro.com mothership comes in. They’ve asked us to tell you about next month’s weekend course in HTML Fundamentals. In one backslashtastic late September weekend, designer and interactive developer David Tristman will teach you the basic structure of HTML and many commonly used tags as well as the role of Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) in HTML pages and current recommendations such as XHTML. By Sunday, you’ll be creating fully functional web pages and geeky birthday cakes like the one pictured above. Register here to get cooking with HTML.
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
Here are the latest images of UK architects drdh’s design for a new cultural quarter in Bodø, Norway comprising a library and culture house.
The Kulturkvartalet scheme originally won a competition in 2008 (see our previous story) and is currently in the design development stage with construction to start early next year.
The library and culture house will sit opposite each other on separate blocks.
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The library, which has three floors, is accessed from a new square on the harbour front and contains a flexible performance room, gallery, cafe and typical library spaces.
The culture house will look out over the roof of the library towards the harbour and contains three concert halls, with the main auditorium seating 950.
The Kulturkvartalet forms part of a wider redevelopment the area is to undergo over the next ten years.
Here’s some more from the architects:
The Cultural Quarter in Bodø
Introduction to the Exhibition
By DRDH Architects
This images show our work-in-progress for the new Culture House and Library. Located on the harbour front in Bodø’s future Cultural Quarter, the project is approximately halfway through design development. Following the international design competition held for the project in 2008, our design work began in 2009. It is anticipated that construction will start in early 2011 with completion due in May 2014.
The illustrations show our design intentions for the buildings. The size and massing of the buildings, and the functionality and arrangement of interior spaces are defined. In the coming months the materials and design of the exterior of the buildings will be developed in parallel to developing the detailed design of the interior spaces. This current design stage will be completed in October 2010 after which we will be able to share our progress on the developing design.
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Introduction to the Project
The new Cultural Quarter for Bodø, the Kulturkvartalet, is part of a wider urban framework for the city. In the planning for ten years, the Cultural Quarter is envisaged as a vibrant new performance centre and meeting place for residents and visitors. Two new buildings will form the harbourside Cultural Quarter; the Culture House and the Library, housing a variety of performance spaces for music, theatre and dance, as well as galleries, community spaces, and spaces for education and learning for all ages.
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The Site
The site is located across two city blocks on the harbour front. Block 105, which faces the harbour, will site the Library and Block 100 will site the Culture House. The surrounding streets and the quayside are also part of the Cultural Quarter development.
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Design Concept
Inherent to the design concept of our competition proposal was the way in which the two buildings faced both towards the harbour and the city centre. The buildings have a figurative quality. Each is distinct but related to the other, and with their city and waterfront contexts. The geometries and form of each building adjust to the variations in the grain of the city fabric.
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The main entrance facade of the Culture House is inflected to form a hinge in the shifting line of the street, whilst the waterfront facade of the library adjusts to the line of the harbour wall, recalling both the shed like nature of harbour-side structures and the civic qualities of a temple or basilica. Arriving by boat, the buildings present themselves as a single piece; a ‘hill’ of gabled forms, glittering on a sunny day.
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The Culture House has three auditoria compactly placed east west across the site. In the centre is the 950-seat main auditorium (Sal 1) and fly tower; to the harbour-side the 300-seat flexible auditorium (Sal 2); and to the city is the popular music venue, Sinus The interior public spaces that connect these auditoria are a series of generous, proportioned rooms, planned to take advantage of expansive views across the harbour over the roof of the Library.
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The principal entrance is situated on Storgata with a second, smaller lobby opening opposite the new city square created where the Culture House faces the Library. The back-of-house facilities wrap the main auditorium and fly tower. The Library is a building for the community and has, in addition to its Library functions, a number of spaces for the public: a flexible performance space for 150 people, a gallery, a multifunction room and a cafe. The three level Library is accessed from the new square on Storgata or from the harbour front. There is a route between these front doors through the Library. The public spaces and entrance to the Library are on the ground level, with Library spaces above.
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The Main Auditorium
The 950 capacity main auditorium is the centrepiece of the project and is designed to be both an international standard symphonic hall, providing a home for the new Nordland Symphony orchestra, and a world class stage for proscenium theatre, opera, dance, and amplified music.
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The space will achieve a high level of acoustic performance due to its scale and finish but also be adaptable to provide the stage requirements and intimacy of a theatre venue.This will be achieved through the innovative use of an adaptable orchestra shell, flexible proscenium and the adjustable linings of the room. We see the auditorium as the major congregational space for the inhabitants of Bodø and will above all else be a beautiful room and a symbol of the city.
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Bodø Kulturhus and Library by drdharchitects | Cultural centre at Bodø, by Langdon Reis Zahn | A Model City by drdharchitects |