Archive for August, 2009

13/08

Shoot the Stylist

UK pavilion at the Shanghai Expo 2010

British designer Thomas Heatherwick has released images of his updated design for the UK pavilion at the Shanghai Expo 2010. He was awarded the commission in September 2007, beating architects including Zaha Hadid, John McAslan and Marks Barfield. The six-storey pavilion is pierced by 60,000 transparent rods. The 7.5 metre rods will act as fibre optic filaments during the day, illuminating the interior of the pavilion with natural light. At night the rods transport the light from the inside to the exterior, allowing the structure to glow. The surrounding faceted landscape provides space for public events and also offers shelter for visitors. The pavilion will house the largest collection of wild plant seeds in the world – Kew’s Millennium Seed Bank partnership – displayed in the end of the transparent rods. Construction began in March on China’s annual national tree planting day.

heatherwickshangpav2

heatherwickshangpav5

heatherwickshangpav4

heatherwickshangpav1

http://en.expo2010.cn/

11/08

Shoot the Stylist

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion by SANAA

Here some pictures of this year’s Serpentine Gallery Pavilion in Kensington Gardens, London, designed by Japanese designers SANAA. The surrounding park is reflected in the temporary structure’s aluminium roof, which is shaped to curve around trees on the site and varies in height. Curved walls made of transparent acrylic surround a cafe and auditorium under this canopy.

The pavilion will remain in place until 18 October. A program of events called Park Nights will be hosted in the auditorium including performances, talks and screenings, and culminating in the Serpentine Gallery Poetry Marathon in October.

serp-10


serp-12

Photographs are by Luke Hayes

10/08

Shoot the Stylist

Planet 3 Studios Architecture facilities in Mumbai

Mumbai practice Planet 3 Studios Architecture have completed new facilities at Vidyalankar Institute of Technology in, Mumbai, India, the interior of which incorporates a lotus flower-shaped learning centre. The project involved converting an existing industrial building; the core of the structure was removed and a mezzanine floor added, as well as a new external skin. “The design borrows heavily from the language and forms of nature,” says Kalhan Mattoo of Planet 3 Studios Architecture. The building’s skin is intended to evoke “the sway of tall grass stalks up-close in strong wind” and shelters a patio connected to the canteen. The building includes laboratories, a learning centre and canteen.

x-block-by-planet-3-studios-architecture-16

x-block-by-planet-3-studios-architecture-8

x-block-by-planet-3-studios-architecture-1

x-block-by-planet-3-studios-architecture-5

Photographs are by Mrigank Sharma, India Sutra

09/08

Shoot the Stylist

Campana exhibition at the Vitra Design Museum

A retrospective exhibition of work by Brazilian designers Fernando and Humberto Campana has opened at the Vitra Design Museum in Weil am Rhein, Germany. Located in the Frank Gehry-designed museum and arranged thematically, the exhibition charts the brothers’ work to date and includes several new pieces. Exhibits include over 70 pieces of furniture plus prototypes, experiments, models and artwork by the Campanas alongside films, interviews, photographs, and objects collected by the designers. The exhibition continues until February 2010.

antibodiescampana14

antibodiescampanatop

antibodiescampana18

antibodiescampana4

Photographs are by Thomas Dix

08/08

Shoot the Stylist

New Camper Store in Paris by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

A special store project, designed by the Bouroullec Brothers, is located beside Paris’ imposing Centre Pompidou, a Mecca that everyone with an interest in design culture must visit at least once in their lifetime. Thus, Ronan and Erwan make their debut as Camper collaborators in the very city where they live and work.

“For us, Camper is a very interesting brand, in the sense that it has proven to have a very open mindset. Each store has its own atmosphere. The shoes also cover a very wide range of types and styles. Consequently, our collaboration has has been a unique chance for us to try to contribute a clear-cut idea of what a store in Paris should be, welcoming and straightforward. With the use of different shades of red, textile interventions and a furniture collection designed for private home use, we tried to create a space that was both evident and surprising, a space able to produce special sensations: the red adds warmth, the cloths muffle sounds and give depth and the household furniture confers an air of simplicity. The textile interventions consist of backstitched blankets that partially cover the walls and certain furniture and décor elements. They are irregular and their relatively bright colours contrast with the red tone that pervades the entire store.”

camper-paris-by-ronan-and-erwan-bouroullec-2

camper-paris-by-ronan-and-erwan-bouroullec-1

camper-paris-by-ronan-and-erwan-bouroullec-6

06/08

Shoot the Stylist

The Toaster Project

A design interactions student at the Royal College of Art in London has made a toaster – literally from the ground up. Thomas Thwaites has travelled to mines across the country to get the raw materials for his toaster. Processing these raw materials at home, (for example he smelted iron ore in a microwave), he has produced a ‘kind of half-baked, handmade pastiche’ of a toaster you can buy in Argos for less than five pounds (for those non-UK readers, Argos is like walmart, except everything is hidden underground and accessed via a combination of small slips of paper, small pens and trolls that guard the booty). Thwaites’ toaster has cost 1187.54 pounds and has taken him on a 9 month quest around Great Britain. The project web-site is here.

theToasterProject_image1_highRes_PhotoCredit-Daniel_Alexander-763622

Toaster-Project-mosaic

05/08

Shoot the Stylist

Maison Du Champagne in Hong Kong

Hong Kong designers John Lin, Joshua Bolchover and Jason Carlow have designed the interior of a champagne bar in Wan Chai, Hong Kong. Called Maison Du Champagne, the interior is furnished with raw MDF boxes, illuminated from inside. Each block is punctured by circular holes, increasing in diametre towards their tops and revealing interiors coated in high-gloss, bright colours. The inside of each box is colour-coded according to the area of the bar and its use.

maison-du-champagne-by-john-lin-joshua-bolchover-and-jason-carlow-12

maison-du-champagne-by-john-lin-joshua-bolchover-and-jason-carlow-14

maison-du-champagne-by-john-lin-joshua-bolchover-and-jason-carlow-15

maison-du-champagne-by-john-lin-joshua-bolchover-and-jason-carlow-17

04/08

Shoot the Stylist

House in Saijo by Suppose Design Office

Japanese architects Suppose Design Office built a residence in Saijo, Hiroshima, Japan, based on traditional pit-dwelling houses. Earth excavated from the site was used to build a wall around the house, creating a room below ground level surrounded by glass but shielded from its neighbours. The pyramid-shaped upper storey rises above the glazed level, filled with light from a skylight in the top.

modern-pit-dwelling-house-by-suppose-design-office-01

modern-pit-dwelling-house-by-suppose-design-office-18

modern-pit-dwelling-house-by-suppose-design-office-09

modern-pit-dwelling-house-by-suppose-design-office-14

04/08

Shoot the Stylist

Supermarket by reMiks

Serbian design studio reMiks has completed Supermarket, a concept store inspired by the “golden years of communism”. Hosting a bar, restaurant, salon and fashion boutique, the store is located in a former discount supermarket in Belgrade. Found objects including a fridge, hospital screens and a camper van are used as display devices.

img_7792-2_sq

img_2095-2

img_2189-2

img_2015-2

01/08

Tina Michelle Cheng

Monmouth Coffee at Borough Market

One of the best places to buy coffee in London.

Added to the experience of drinking great coffee prepared by the guru’s is the space. An old converted warehouse on the edge of the market place. They chose not to rip out the existing roller shutters that would have been used by the traders, but keep them, this gives the coffee connoisseur another experience of drinking under shelter whilst still being outside (demi fresco).

In the cold winter months, local traders, office works, huddle inside the space with their heavy coats, and their hands clasped around their coffee cups in the hope to extract as much heat from it as possible.

In the summer months, coffee drinkers sprawl outside the wide open shopfront, covering every inch of curb to soak up sun. The added bonus of being inside is the pastry selection and the large communal table with seats. On first arriving because everyone is packed around the communal table, one would easily be convinced that they are all friends.

They started selling coffee from their Borough site in 2001. Monmouth actually started in 1978 in Covent Garden, on Monmouth Street. Covent Garden was a very different place in 1978. With their own whole bean coffee which is delivered daily and you can try any of their coffees before buying beans to take home. They sell filter and espresso coffee to stay or take away, as well as pastries and cakes to have with your coffee. There is a large communal table where you can sit and enjoy baguettes from Paul, pastries from Villandry and jams from England Preserves. They have a small range of coffee making equipment, and like Covent Garden, in the winter they sell chocolate from Pralus, as well as chocolate truffles from Sally Clarke.

They are on the left, just inside the main market entrance on Borough High Street, London (SE1).

2 Park Street, Borough, London, SE1 9AB tel: +44 (0)20 7940 9960
Thursday – 11.00 to 17.00
Friday – 11.00 to 18.00
Saturday – 9.00 to 16.00

27 Monmouth Street, Covent Garden, London, WC2H 9EU
tel: +44 (0)20 7379 3516


SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline