Posts Tagged ‘contemporary-design’

15/11

Sigrid

TOKYO LLOVE HOTEL, POP UP HOTEL

This pop-up hotel in Tokyo is based on the phenomenon of the Japanese love hotel. Designed by eight Japanese and eight Dutch designers, each room is a unique installation which visitors can actually pay to stay in. Each designer has responded to the theme to create a room for every mood!

The pop-up hotel, initiated by Amsterdams’ Lloyd hotel,  celebrates 400 years of trade and cultural relations between Japan and the Netherlands, using theme ’still in Llove’ as it’s driver. The entrance area and cafe see the two cultures collide in bold graphic wall coverings including images of windmills, mount fuji and historical figures who symbolise love, designed by Thonik.

Highlights of the hotel include this ‘clockwork’ room by designer, Joe Nagasaka. The ricepaper from the traditional screens was removed leaving just the frames, adding to the mechanical aesthetic and the bed is mounted on a rotating disk, to be turned at the occupants will.

Another favourite of mine, room no. 304 by Riyuji Nakamara features a ‘water line’ out of fishing line creating the feeling of being underwater throughout the room, especially when lying on the bed as plastic toys float above you.

Photographs by Takumi Ota

The brief has inspired some exciting responses from the designers. Other rooms popular with visitors include a pebble filled room with trees in place of furniture by Yuko Nagayama and a pink and white room with the theme of fertility by Scholten&Baijings.

Image via Designboom

28/10

Sigrid

RICHARD CHAI AND SNARKITECTURE POP UP STORE


Brooklyn based architects Snarkitecture and fashion designer Richard Chai have teamed up to transform a retail space into an urban glacier using a single material, white architectural foam. An existing structure was lined with foam and walls were sculpted by hand with hot wire cutters creating a landscape of light and shade perfect for housing Richard Chai’s latest fashion collection.

Designed as part of the Building Fashion series at HL23, a collaboration between architects and fashion designers, the space reveals a curatorial approach to architectural design and fashion. Niches and insertions into the cavernous foam walls become moments of display, telling the story of the collection piece by piece. There’s just something so satisfying about the perfectly straight slices and rocky surfaces of the foam, however I did wonder about the use of such an energy intensive material for a temporary installation.Thankfully, the architects have recognised this issue and the sculptural walls will be re-incarnated as rigid building insulation.




10/06

Lisl

Central Saint Martins Pop Up 2060

103 students x 20 objects = 2060 Pop Up

After a five week process that I imagine involved a lot of hard work the second year BA Graphic design students from Central Saint Martins hosted a week long pop up shop in Clerkenwell. The focus was on manufacture being an integral part of design, and we’re all very grateful, it gave us a chance to buy work from talented young designers.

Apart from the great work they were selling they also hosted interesting events, they had everything from children’s design workshops to design speed dating.

Here are some pictures of the goods that were on sale:

(via Notcot)

02/06

Lisl

Soho House Berlin

The largest Soho House yet and the first one to grace continental Europe opened in Mitte, Berlin. The 1928 Bauhaus structure housing it has an interesting history. It was originally a department store, but has since been used by the post-war government and the Communist Party. However after the reunification of Germany it has been slowly fading into dereliction. The Soho House Group stepped in and turned the distinctly symmetrical structure into a luxury 40 bedroom private members club that will have signature Soho Group features such as a Cecconi’s restaurant and a Cowshed Spa.

The rooms are a delightful mix of raw industrial spaces with exposed concrete and dark paneling contrasted with lush and prissy 1930s glamour. The typical upscale fare is on offer, from custom beds to rainforest showers. A retro feel is evoked with special touches like the vintage record players and old school telephones that can be found throughout.

(via Soho House Berlin)

01/06

Lisl

Clerkenwell Design Week 2010

Clerkenwell has more than 60 design showrooms and loads of design and architectural practices amongst its elegant greens, squares and historic buildings. Not to mention all the cool pop-up clubs and shops, restaurants and hip bars. All of this makes it perfect location to host a design festival, and the organizers of Clerkenwell Design Week did just that. The three-day annual festival celebrated design’s creative richness, its social impact and its power for change.

The festival was packed with an interesting mix of exhibitions, product launches from leading brands, street entertainment, music, food and parties. It also included a stimulating series of seminars, workshops and debates by big names in design that tackled key issues facing creatives today.

All in all the Clerkenwell Design Week was entertaining, inspiring and challenged all your preconceptions.

(via Clerkenwell Design Week and Treehugger)

18/05

Lisl

London buses

The familiar face of a London bus will soon be less familiar. British designer Thomas Heatherwick has designed the replacement for London’s iconic Routemaster bus, in collaboration with bus company the Wright Group. The new design is set to hit the London streets in 2012.

It will be made of lightweight materials, with glass highlighting key features, that will produce a light and airy feel inside the bus. Visually dramatic, it will be asymmetric and features a glass ‘swoop’ at the rear and along its side.

In addition to its futuristic looking, flashy exterior the bus will use the latest green technology and will be 15 per cent more fuel efficient than existing hybrid buses, and 40 per cent more efficient than conventional diesel double decks and much quieter on the streets.

Its defining feature is the open platform, inspired by the Routemaster of old, which allows the reinstatement of a hop-on, hop-off service, speedy boarding will also be aided by three doors and two staircases.

A a static mock up of the bus is currently being worked on and we will probably get a glimpse of it later this year, but we’ll have to wait until late next year to see a full working prototype.

(via Dezeen)

18/03

admin

The Cristal Bar, Hong Kong

Funky new champagne bar at The Loop.

At Hong Kong’s Cristal bar every wall, ceiling and floor is covered with fantastic surreal mythological creatures with futuristic colors that populate the mind of the graphic designer Katrin Olina, making the bar as one big mural, where the visuals are completely unbroken.

The main effect of the wrap-around graphics can be seen as a dematerialization of the space, adding to the dreamlike atmosphere.

Colors ebb and flow to accentuate the bar’s spatial division into four areas. Where the areas meet, the different colored graphics overlap in a fluid transition.

The bar counter-top incrusted with almost 300,000 Swarovsky cristals illuminated with multicolored LEDs is equally fanciful.

The imagery in the bar is like a mesh of stories where everyone ca interpret it how they want.

17/03

admin

Duras Ambient Funabasy by Sinato

Tokyo boutique designed by Chikara Ohno.

At Duras Ambient Funabasy Tokyo there’s no any place where you can overall the whole space.
An empty wall cut into long and narrow triangles -painted dark brown on the outer surfaces and white on the inner- divides the center of the shop space where a triangular white sofa is placed as the boutique’s heart.

The triangular panels hang like icicles stand as if they dance and make an “aperture of the space” giving customers a completely new spatial experience.

Clothes hang on metal rails attached to three panels and we can walk following the zigzag pattern of the triangular partitions add to the complexity and intrigue of this fashion landscape.

16/03

admin

Aesop at "The Strand Arcade"

Sydney’s new Aesop shop.

Aesop launched its first shop in 1987 offering botanically based skin and hair cosmetic products for both men and women. Since then, Aesop has been well known for it’s store designs.

The slick, fluid lines of the new shop prominently located in Sidney’s Strand Arcade, are a departure from the utilitarian features of previously designed stores.

The simplicity of material and purity of white break from the otherwise busy arcade, show Aesop’s preference for space lines and clean aesthetic.

05/03

admin

John Lewis by FOA

New John Lewis department stores in Leicester

The decorative facade wrapped in pattered fabric that acts like a curtain allows customers to see out without being able to look in, and when viewed at an oblique angle from the pavement, the pattern becomes almost opaque.

To find the appropriate pattern, the Architect delved into John Lewis’ archive, picked a couple of its fabrics patterns, fused them and made them more geometric. Applied to the facades the frond-like motif became an optical device seen
from both inside and outside.

The building is connected to the Highcross with a bridge, and the inner street is left open, making the development permeable.
A bright public walkway a first-floor level links the mall to a second bridge across the main road.


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