Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

The asymmetric timber roof of this distillery by architects Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher rises up amongst the trees of a valley in Upper Austria.

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

The distillery’s entire exterior is clad with nothing but roughly sawn, untreated timber, which was milled locally.

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

The four-storey building nestles against the steep hillside and has its entrance on the second storey.

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

A bar is located on the top floor and leads out onto a secluded terrace.

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

We’ve never featured a distillery on Dezeen before, but we have featured a few wineries – see them all here.

Photography is by Dietmar Hammerschmid.

Here’s a few more words from the architects:


The building is situated in the north of Austria, in the middle of an isolated narrow valley.

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

The Shape of the ground plan is influenced by the regional building regulations and the existing slope.

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

Moreover the design follows natural limitation given by the adjacent river.

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

The main idea of the project is to create one homogeneous sculpture for both distillery and living areas, opposing the existing building in an abstract way.

Stoaninger Distillery by Hammerschmid, Pachl, Seebacher – Architekten

According to the characteristics of landscape the roof of the building is coated by facade material, using untreated rough sawn regional wood.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Paris 2012: Brussels designer Alain Berteau presents a series of oak products including this simple iPad dock at Maison & Objet in Paris this week.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Called New Basics, the range for his own brand Objekten also includes an iPad stand that’s just a double-walled oak tray and Twist task lamp with separate batons joined by magnets.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

A reversible tray with adjustable handles plus salt and pepper grinders in plain and blackened oak complete the collection.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Maison & Objet takes place from 20 to 24 January.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Here are some more details from Alain Berteau:


Beautiful tools with essential shapes and timeless functionality. Accessories versatile enough to fight the planned obsolescence of digital devices.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Dock box

Pen case with convenient docking possiblities for digital devices. Compatible with iPhones, iPads, and many other devices.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Manufactured in Germany.
Materials : Oiled oak coming from harvested forests.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten
Dimensions : 28,2 x 10,5 x 4,8 cm
Designed by Alain Berteau

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Dock tray

Elegant tray with numerous docking possiblities for digital devices. Compatible with iPads, iPad 2 and many other devices.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Manufactured in Germany.
Materials : Oiled oak coming from harvested forests.
Dimensions : 28,2 x 10,5 x 4,8 cm

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Service tray

Serving tray with comfortable self-adjustable handles.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Plain, natural light or dark oak

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Manufactured in Germany

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Twist lamp

Playful, sculptural, the Twist lamp system is made of beautifully crafted oak parts coming from harvested forests, combined with lasting leds components and stainless steel connectors. The system allows numerous configurations : bedside table lamp, floor lamp or fully adjustable desk lamp.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Manufactured in Germany
Assembled in Belgium
Materials : Oiled oak (harvested forest), high-quality Osram less components

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Spheres

The original “spheres” peppermill now available in wood. Iconic and convenient, it is so good-looking it can stay on the table forever.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

High-quality ceramic grinder made in Denmark.
Wood parts (plain natural varnished oak) produced in Germany.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten
Assembled in Brussels by Tamawa workshops.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Following our recent roundup of stories featuring ice and snow, here’s a timber lodge outside Prague that was photographed days after a blizzard.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

The two-storey house was designed by Czech architect Martin Cenek and was completed this time last year.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Larch batons clad the upper level and also create brise soleil shutters across windows on the south-facing elevation.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

A living room occupies one half of the ground floor and opens out to a wooden deck at the rear.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Elsewhere, steel rods suspend a staircase that leads up to bedrooms and bathrooms on the first floor.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

You can see more projects from the Czech Republic here, including a tea house with a tall roof and a combined art gallery and shoe store.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Photography is by the architect.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Here’s a detailed description from Cenek:


House on the outskirts of Prague
Zdiby, Czech Republic

The plot on the outskirts of Prague, protected by a forest from the north and sloping very gently into the fields to the south, seemed ideal for an energy efficient house.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

The final design that was developed for this young family of 3 (planned to grow to 4) is a timber house, energetically very close to the passive house standard, employing natural materials, but mainly trying to be as simple and rational as possible. These two are for us also very important aspects of sustainable architecture.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

The house is oriented parallel to the neighboring “catalogue” house and creates a clear contrast to its pitched roof and pseudo-classical details, but its ambition is not to overshadow it or criticize it. By its orientation on the plot the house creates a natural barrier between the road to the north and spacious garden on the south side.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

The concept was based on a composition of simple volumes arranged into a compact and clear shape. The whole first floor is clad in larch battens which are also used on the shading panels that slide in front of south and east oriented windows and on the balustrade of the first floor terrace (above the carport). This wooden “basket” of the first floor rests on two transverse grey walls – one on the west side and the other east side of the house.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

The ground floor volumes – of the day zones of the house itself as well as the one of the garden storeroom are inserted between the two grey outer walls and are finished in reddish rendering. The space between these volumes creates the carport and allows passage between the garden and the road.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

The house opens to the south with a terrace directly extending from the living room and connected with it thanks to the extensive glazing of the south wall (glazed in its full length) shaded by means of a wooden brise-soleil. In the future the terrace should grow further to the south and a swimming pool of the same width is also planned.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

The north side of the house is more compact and its main feature is a strip window above the level of the flat roof which provides zenithal light to the bathrooms. This sloping part of the roof also serves to mount solar collectors.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

The interior layout tries to open up the living (day) zones of the house as much as possible. Sliding floor to ceiling doors then allow different options of connecting or closing the various zones of the house (living and work/service on the ground floor, children and parents on the first floor). The aim was to minimize corridors and lost spaces. The main feature of the central part of the house is a very light staircase suspended on steel rods from the ceiling.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

All the built in furniture is simple and white, the aim of the design being to let it blend into the walls and thus give more importance to the occupants of the house and their life.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Click above for larger image

The structure of the house consists of very simple two-by-four timber framing, with all constructions open to water vapor diffusion. All glazing is made of insulated triple window panes in wooden frames (or frameless in case of the living room).

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Click above for larger image

Heating – a simple small electric boiler and low temperature floor heating on the ground floor, very simple radiators on the first floor in combination with air heat recovery system. Water is heated using the thermosolar collectors and an integrated heat storage tank. As the heat losses of the house are relatively low, the fireplace in the living room is purely an aesthetical feature.

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Architect: ing.arch. Martin Cenek (*1982)
Completed: 2010
Project: 2007-2009

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Total floor area: 145m2 + carport 20m2
Built-up area: 120m2 (including garden storeroom and carport)
Energy losses: 3,5kW

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Collaboration:
ing.arch. Vitezslav Cenek (garden design, supervision of construction site)
ing. Martin Trmal, ing. Martin Ruzicka – Penatus (production drawings)
ing. Jan Margold, ing. Roman Forfera (structure)
ing. Roman Schneider (heating)
ing. Martin Janko (ventilation)
Jiri Holub (water and waste management)
Petr Manek (electrical)

House on the outskirts of Prague by Martin Cenek

Selected suppliers:
Penatus s.r.o. (main supplier)
Kauri – Pavel Mikes (staircase)
Jiri Malek and Vestavstyl (built-in furniture)
Esentier s.r.o. (bathroom equipment)

Genesis by David Adjaye at Design Miami/

Genesis by David Adjaye

Visitors to this year’s Design Miami/ fair could climb into the hollow belly of a wooden pavilion by architect David Adjaye.

Genesis by David Adjaye

Adjaye was commissioned to create the installation after being named Designer of the Year by the festival back in September.

Genesis by David Adjaye

The temporary triangular structure was located at the fair’s entrance and comprised a framework of timber blocks slotted together.

Genesis by David Adjaye

The central hollow punctured the pavilion on every side to create oval openings framing views of the surroundings and sky.

Genesis by David Adjaye

A secondary timber framework also slotted inside the structure to form a bench.

Genesis by David Adjaye

Previous pavilions have been completed by designers including Zaha Hadid, Marc Newson, Maarten Baas and Konstantin Grcic, whose network of hammocks you can see in our story from last year’s festival.

Genesis by David Adjaye

Here’s some more text from Adjaye Associates:


Genesis Pavilion
Design Miami/ Commission, 2011

Designed to provide visitors with an immersive experience, Genesis is a complete environment, which integrates enclosure, aperture, views, respite, meditation and community.

Genesis by David Adjaye

Like a giant piece of architectural furniture, the Design Miami/commission has enabled Adjaye to combine structure, seating, window and doors into a single gesture for the first time.

Genesis by David Adjaye

The pavilion is a triangular prism measuring 10m x 10m x 10m x 3.6m, located at the entrance to the fair. It leads visitors to the courtyard space upon arrival, ushering people inside.

Genesis by David Adjaye

It is also the point of departure, and is a final gathering space as visitors leave the fair, with its curved window offering strategic views of the galleries.

Genesis by David Adjaye

Comprising a series of timber frames that form the roof, flooring and walls, these elements work together and through compression, provide the overall structure.

Genesis by David Adjaye

The internal space is formed by carving out an oversized ovoid shape from the centre.

Genesis by David Adjaye

This distorted shape is set at an angle and abuts the perimeter to form the exit, entrance and window.

Genesis by David Adjaye

The seating is established by a secondary subtraction from the interior – which repeats the distorted ovoid, creating a platform along the cut-away timber frames.

Genesis by David Adjaye

While compressed and joined together with additional filler pieces, the timber frames are not completely fused.

Genesis by David Adjaye

This allows light to filter inside from the exterior and roof, providing a dynamic filigree of light and shadow.

Genesis by David Adjaye

Light is further brought inside via an opening in the roof, which acts as a dramatic light well.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

The pitched roof atop this Paris house won’t keep out the rain – it’s actually a pergola for growing fruit over a roof terrace.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

French architects Djuric Tardio designed the two-storey house, which is constructed entirely from Finnish larch.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

As well as the terrace on the roof, there is also a decked dining area at ground level and a projecting first-floor balcony.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

Mobile kitchen furniture can be wheeled outdoors on sunny days, while in winter the house is warmed by a fireplace just inside.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

Walls inside the house slide open so that rooms can flexibly accommodate different day-to-day activities.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

The whole house is raised on a plinth above the ground to prevent flooding.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

If you’re a fan of timber houses, check out one out in the woods in Sweden and another perched on rocky terrain in Australia.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

Photography is by Clément Guillaume.

Here’s some more text from Djuric Tardio Architectes:


Eco-Sustainable House
Antony, Paris, France

The new project has been realised in a neighbourhood, Antony, that is an example of the belief that architecture, whether heterogeneous and homogeneous, is shaped by outdated zoning regulations. The delays in securing permits, along with conditions of the urban situation and our desire to continue and refine our own research on wood constructions, led us to propose a type of construction system. This type is still not released in urban areas and rather reserved for detached houses in less dense sites. The urban rules and the site context, which is very typical, have suggested the template, which has proved a real asset to the project.

Up there, the shape of the roof/pergola, which looks like an unfinished roof, has a specific function. On the one hand, it takes the archetype of the context, inserting the project in its environment without disrupting the urban rhythm, on the other hand, it won’t accommodate a closed roof that would become a catch-all attic or a wasted space.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

So we have inserted inhabitants in it, and have left it open by transforming it into a vegetable terrace, intimate and sunny. The choice of plants proposed by the landscape designer, grasses and vines on the pergola offering fruits (kiwis, squashes, grapes), will enable the owners to enjoy a vegetable garden, a suspended garden.

The program was for a blended family, calling for a flexible, modular design and design process. The answer was to instill two areas, separated but and overlapping. With very few adjustments, these two areas could become one larger, combined space.

The walls of the skylight illuminating the ground floor can be optionally removed, tomorrow perhaps working as railings and returning visual link between the two floors. The staircase is positioned in the central frame of servant areas, with the entry today common to both access. Tomorrow it might be possible to open this frame in onto the day spaces.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

Giant sliding walls on each floor divide into two day spaces in order to currently organize a new partition of the areas and create an office/library on the ground floor area and a cinema on the first floor, and tomorrow, to partition the space according to use. A sideboard on wheels slips between the kitchen and the terrace on the ground floor, moving the dining area outside on sunny days.

The layout has been designed to focus on flexibility and adaptation of the everyday living spaces, seasons (in summer, the space continues outside and is more open and more spacious, while in winter, it is gathered around the fireplace) and on long-term projects. This layout researches the adaption of the lifestyle of the owners.

Eco-Sustainable Construction System

Completely built in wood panels placed on a pedestal (the ground here is very bad), the house is completely prefabricated in a workshop and delivered to the site to be finally assembled in just two weeks. This is a building system in Finnish wood panels that come from sustainably managed cooperatives of small private forest owners.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

The pre-cut panels, supplemented by wood fiber insulation and non-treated siding, arrived at the site almost finished, reducing pollution to a minimum (the site being located in a dense suburb).

The façades, in wood panels too, were mounted along the floor. With a very efficient exterior insulation system which completely allows the elimination of thermal bridges, wood construction has the advantage to make the building very powerful. The under-floor gas-fired heating with low temperature becomes almost superfluous.

The double-glazed + argon windows of the patios and the South façades, deliberately oversized, capture the sun in winter and are sheltered by a canopy and a pergola in summer. This allows together with their performance and surface, an easy control of the solar gain and air flow as needed, without necessitating an intensive use of air conditioning or heating.

Eco-Sustainable House by Djuric Tardio Architectes

The main facade on the street, lodging the rooms in the North, is a composition of large glazed openings and single opening shutters designed in stainless steel mirror with no glazing. The reflections of the vegetation and the movement of these shutters in stainless steel mirrors make the façade changing. The ventilation of the rooms is regulated by the openings of the shutters, and the penetration of light through the windows.

The recovery of rainwater can water the garden and planters allow homeowners to cultivate aromatic plants and garden without water over-consumption.

Manulution

A contemporary twist on Bosnian Konjic furniture-making
Manulution4.jpg

Having survived WWII, the rise and fall of communism and the breakup of Yugoslavia, Bosnian furniture line Manulution has established an enduring legacy. Last spring, the company caused a stir at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF), and is now launching American operations from its Washington, D.C. headquarters. With a history of handcrafted wood furniture dating back to 1927 under parent company Rukotvorine (“handcrafts” in English), the avant-garde collection promises to be a big hit for North Americans yearning for some old-world regal craftsmanship.

Manulution3.jpg

A large part of Manulution’s appeal lies in their impeccable track record. With pieces often lasting across three generations, their collection runs in stark contrast to the recent surge of self-assembled disposable furniture. The wood is responsibly sourced from local Bosnian growers, mostly comprising old trees that have ceased to bear fruit and are ready to be replaced with younger saplings. Manulution also reclaims their old furniture from previous owners for resale to discerning antique collectors to ensure that their products never end up in a landfill.

Manulution1.jpg Manulution2.jpg

The company has three distinct lines that show a range of aesthetic leanings. The traditional selection features hyper-intricate detailing on ottoman tea tables and chairs while the modern and artisanal collections err on the side of pared-down modernism. Unique to this level of craftsmanship are virtually seamless joints, which give the pieces a fluid finish. The technique draws from the Bosnian tradition of Konjic woodcarving, which is currently under consideration for UNESCO’s World Intangible Cultural Heritage List.

Manulution6.jpg Manulution7.jpg

Some of Manulution’s pieces are available at the Mondo Collection in NYC and Haute Living in Chicago. Anthropologie has just started carrying Manulution’s “wave table,” a unique dining piece that features embedded “pockets” that swivel on the table’s planar surface to hold flowers, condiments, or other dinner-time essentials.


Gates

Romain Lagrange’s beautifully crafted set for indoor croquet

RomainLagrange_Gates_1.jpg

Nearly 300 years after King Louis XIV of France banned the game of croquet because it couldn’t be played during winter, French-born designer Romain Lagrange brings the royal pass-time inside from the fields with Gates. This simplified interior adaptation neatly bundles two mallets, six gates and two stakes in one clean, portable package. And although it’s been around the web as of recent we love the beautiful combination of wood, cork and leather and wanted to share in case you missed it.

RomainLagrange_Gates_2.jpg RomainLagrange_Gates_3.jpg

All materials used were specifically chosen to realize the project in its ideal form, as Lagrange told CH, “the cork absorbs the blows and will not damage the floor of the house, while the resistance of the leather elevates all parts of the game.” When asked about their aesthetic properties he explained that the uniquely beautiful grain of Maple made it a perfect fit for all pieces in the game. Adding that the wood’s sturdy weight was key in designing the gate’s unique shape as well—as to keep it upright even after being hit with the ball.

RomainLagrange_Gates_4.jpg RomainLagrange_Gates_5.jpg

For those outdoor devotes that fear the physical experience may be lost by playing indoors Lagrange swears the sound produced when the ball hits the gates is something unique to the materials that cannot be imitated elsewhere. This, combined with the expert combination of essential materials is sure to bring croquet inside from the depths of dark garages everywhere.

RomainLagrange_Gates_6.jpg

Although not if full production yet, Lagrange is currently in negotiations to bring this gem to the masses soon. For now head over to his personal site to learn more about Gates and other projects.


Moderne Wood Animals

Serie di animali in legno disegnati da Linnea Gits e Peter Dunham. Li trovate su DWR.
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Ty Hedfan House

Coup de coeur pour cette maison en bois située sur la rivière au Pays de Galles, avec un concept réussi du studio londonien Featherstone Young. La résidence est divisée en 2 ailes opposées : d’un coté surélevée au dessus de l’eau et l’autre aile immergée dans le sol.



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Base Station iPhone 4 Stand

Base Station per precisetti. Purtroppo si trova solo in giappo ma il mio falegname con 10 euro te ne fa uno uguale!
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