Dezeen’s top ten: planning cheats

Dezeen's top ten: planning cheats

In the last few weeks we’ve published a few projects where architects have come up with inventive ways of getting around restrictive planning requirements. Here’s a roundup of the most popular buildings we’ve featured on Dezeen where disguises, moving walls and even skis have been employed to skirt around these obligations.

l House by moomoo architects

1. at the top of the list are these designs for a plastic-covered house in Poland, which feature an extra wall where the planning authorities wanted the facade to be.

Sliding House by dRMM

2. in second place is Sliding House, a glazed house that can be transformed into a typical English barn by a 50-ton mobile structure that slides over the top.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

3. next up, architect Jack Woolley concealed this house and workshop behind a brick wall with a secret door so that no one would notice it was there.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

4. at number four is a leisure complex inside a former bullring, where architects Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners were able to retain the historically sensitive facade by lifting it up off the ground.

Balmain Archive by Innovarchi

5. a copper-clad house extension comes in fifth place, after the architects got around the stipulation for a pitched roof by designed the whole building as if it were one.

Wickstead Lodge by Baynes & Co

6. number six is a house with an electronically controlled stone wall that slides across the facade to hide a large window that wouldn’t otherwise have been allowed.

Denizen Sauna by Denizen Works + Friends

7. in seventh position is a sled-like sauna on skis that can be towed out onto a lake, which was constructed after the client was refused permission for a permanent structure.

House N by Sharon Neuman and Oded Stern-Meiraz

8. coming in eighth is a modern rectangular residence that hides behind a brick wall shaped like the silhouette of a gabled house.

The Round Tower by De Matos Ryan

9. this house, number nine in our countdown, was hidden underground in order to maintain sight lines towards a listed stone tower on the site.

University of Liverpool Heating Infrastructure by Levitt Bernstein

10. last but not least is an energy centre designed to look like a row of gabled houses.

See you next month for another top ten!

See all our top ten stories »

Dezeen’s top ten: spectacles and shades

Dezeen's top ten: spectacles and shades

This month our readers’ opinions were divided over the open-source WikiGlasses made of 18mm plywood (top right) so here’s a roundup of our most popular stories about spectacles and shades. 

SIRE glasses by Aekae SIRE glasses by Aekae

1: in pole position are these Sire glasses made of water buffalo horn, which readers labelled “simultaneously fabulous and disturbing”.

W-eye by Matteo Ragni for MAWOOD

2: second place goes to the W-eye reading glasses, made from layers of wood and aluminium without any hinges.

Sun Cutter by Markus Kayser

3: Royal College of Art graduate Markus Kayser is in third place with these sun shades that he made in the desert, cutting the material by focussing a beam of sunlight.

VerBien by Yves Béhar

4: Yves Béhar’s VerBien range of spectacles that will be distributed free to children in Mexico is in fourth place.

WikiGlasses by Lynton Pepper

5: this month’s controversial story on Lynton Pepper’s WikiGlasses comes in fifth. Tell us what you think here.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

6: in sixth place are these biodegradable spectacle frames made of human hair by Studio Swine.

Competition: five pairs of Reykjavik Eyes  spectacles to be won

7: next up are these frames made from a single sheet of titanium with no screws, joints or hinges by Icelandic spectacle company Reykjavik Eyes.

Stone Blind and Qanah by Sruli Recht

8: more from Iceland – these hand-cut Carrara marble eyeshades for the blind by Sruli Recht are in eighth place.

Origamaster Shades by BCXSY Origamaster Shades by BCXSY

9: the penultimate entry in this month’s top ten is a pair of shades made from a concertina of thin plastic by BCXSY.

Dezeen's top ten: spectacles and shades

10: and finally, tenth place goes to these beaded shades by Thorunn Arnadottir, which feature QR codes directing photographers to make a charity donation when they snap the wearer on their smartphone.

See all our top ten stories »

Dezeen’s top ten: machines

Due to the popularity of  Melvin, a machine we showed on Dezeen Screen that triggers a chain of strange events when an alarm sounds, this month’s top ten is all about machines. 

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

A 3D-printer that uses sunlight and sand to make glass objects in the desert by RCA graduate Markus Kayser is the most popular machine by far.

Audience by rAndom International

In second place are a set of motorised mirrors that turn to face visitors, wherever they happen to be standing in the room.

r2b2 by Christoph Thetard

Readers were impressed with this set of pedal-powered kitchen gadgets, which comes in at number three.

The Idea of a Tree by Mischer’Traxler

Next up, a solar-powered machine for making furniture takes fourth place.

Rotational Moulding DIY Machine by Andrew Duffy, Craig Tyler and Edward Harrison

In fifth position is a machine powered by a cordless drill to make plastic objects.

Melvin the Machine  by HEYHEYHEY

This week’s story about an alarm-triggered contraption called Melvin is our sixth most popular machine.

L’Artisan Électronique by Unfold  and Tim Knapen

At number seven is an upgrade to the potters wheel that makes clay pots in response to hand movements.

Till You Stop by Mischer’Traxler

The machine in eighth place is this cake-decorating device, which pipes out icing in a hypotrochoid pattern like a Spirograph toy.

Sun Cutter by Markus Kayser

Markus Kayser’s second sunlight-harvesting machine in the top ten is a low-tech, low-energy version of a laser cutter, which takes ninth position.

Applause Machine by Martin Smith

A device that produces applause at the touch of a button takes the final spot in our top ten.

See you next month for another top ten!

See all of Dezeen’s top ten stories here.

Dezeen’s top ten: swimming pools

Dezeen top ten: swimming pools

Zaha Hadid’s London Aquatics Centre was one of our most popular stories this month, so we’ve compiled a list of our top ten stories about swimming pools.

1: it wasn’t the London Aquatics Centre that took first place, but these pools of varying depths at a house in Bali.

2: the London Aquatics Centre came in second.

55 Blair Road by ONG&ONG

3: our third most-clicked story is this Singapore home, which features stepping stones stretched over a pool, connecting the living room to the terrace.

4: yet another Singapore home makes the cut; this swimming pool has a glass wall that reveals the basement of the house.

5: a floating swimming platform in Amsterdam takes fifth place.

6: this pool, located on the top floor of a home, lets swimmers have a peek through the floors.

7: yet another Olympic pool makes our top ten: the Watercube from the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

8: in eighth place is this Vienna spa, which features colourful mosaics and undulating slides.

9: a plus-shaped pool designed to float on the Hudson river comes in as our ninth most-popular swimming pool.

10: rounding off our top ten is this pool that wraps over a sunken shower room.

See all our top tens »

Dezeen’s top ten: robots

Two of our most popular movies on Dezeen Screen this month featured a robot that wakes its owner then poos on the floor and rioting robots on the streets of London, so we’ve compiled Dezeen’s ten most popular stories about robots.

1: this conceptual high-rise with a facade that’s constantly reconfigured by robotic arms is our most popular robot story.

2: second place goes to our story about Stefan Ulrich’s shape-changing robot designed to relieve loneliness.

3: at number three is a robot called R-O-B  that builds walls and was responsible for the award-winning Structural Oscillations installation at the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2008.

4: the Outrace robots, at number four, wrote messages in the sky at last year’s London Design Festival.

5: our fifth most popular robot story is Kacey Wong’s robot-shaped shelter for the homeless.

6: number six is Kibwe Tavares’ Robots of Brixton video, in which a downtrodden robot workforce battles with police against a backdrop of dystopian architecture.

7: the Robox shelving system by Italian designer Fabio Novembre comes in at number six.

8: a tea house for robotic kitchen appliances is our eighth most-read story about robots.

9: number nine goes to these robot figurines made from found objects and re-appropriated components by Rusti D.

10: last but not least is this week’s story about a combined vacuum cleaner, alarm clock and pet by Seoul designer Jeongmi Lee.

See all of Dezeen’s top ten stories here»

We’ll be back with another top ten next month!

Dezeen’s top ten: cars

top ten cars

Following the popularity of our story about the C-X75 by Jaguar last week, we’ve gathered together our ten most popular stories featuring cars.

top ten car

In first place is GINA Light Visionary Model by BMW, a fabric-covered car with an articulated frame underneath.

top ten car

Second place goes to the BMW Art Car by Jeff Koons.

top ten car

More from BMW: Vision EfficientDynamics with its wing-like doors comes in third place.

top ten car

Mutation, the spaceship designed for Citroën by Ora-Ïto and shown in Milan last month, is at number four.

top ten car

The battery-powered electric car Peapod by Chrysler comes as five.

top ten car

Number six is the Hypnos by Citroën.

top ten car

Our seventh most popular car story is about Cygnet by Aston Martin, a luxury compact city car.

top ten cars

The smallest four-seater car on the market, iQ by Toyota, is our eighth most popular car story.

top ten car

Our most recent car story on the C-X75 by Jaguar, which was at Clerkenwell Design Week, comes ninth.

top ten car

And we conclude our top ten stories about cars with the  MINI Rocketman Concept.

More car stories on Dezeen »
See all  Dezeen’s top ten stories»

We’ll be back with another top ten next month.

Dezeen’s top ten: shoes

This month we’ve compiled our ten most popular Dezeen stories about shoes. (more…)

Dezeen’s top ten: lighting

sqmain-image-cloud-lamp.jpg

For this month’s top ten we’ve compiled our most popular stories about lighting from the last year. In pole position are these intricately-cut paper lanterns by London designer Yu Jordy Fu. (more…)