• 24/11

    Les Grandes Tables de L’île, Ile Seguin, Paris

    Les Grandes Tables de L’île on the outskirts of paris could be mistaken for a greenhouse – or even a house still under construction, but it is actually a bar / restaurant conceived as a temporary meeting place while Jean Nouvel completes a museum project in the area. The restaurant is housed in a large timber ‘container’ suspended in a scaffolding frame that doubles as an events space.

    The interior takes its cue from the restaurant’s temporary nature and uses simple building materials like wood in its crude form for both walls and floors, while playing with the positioning of windows and capitalising on the view it gets over the area. The restaurant will stay open for a total of two years before the entire structure is dismantled and removed, leaving the site practically untouched.


    (Images via Wallpaper)

  • 18/10

    Frieze Art Fair Pavilions by Carmondy Groark

    Each Autumn the Frieze Art Fair exhibits works from 1000 living artists represented by contemporary art galleries around the world. The fair’s program also includes talks, film projects and architectural installations. This year the fair was bigger than ever.

    The fair was hosted in a 2000 sqm purpose built temporary pavilion in Regents Park by London architects Carmondy Groark. The intervention consists of a series of interlinked, translucent pavilions housing hospitality spaces for both VIPs and the general public, along with large exhibition tents that take the form of timber lined spaces surrounding existing trees in the park.

    The intervention perfectly balances architectural expression that is sensitive to its context with the requirements of a large scale art exhibition.

    (Images via Dezeen)

  • 13/10

    UdK Bookshop 2010 by Dalia Butvidaite, Leonard Steidle and Johannes Drechsler

    The UdK Bookshop was created by students from the Berlin University of Arts to create an interdisciplinary platform for the works of students and professors. The brief dictated that the installation had to temporary, as the event would only last for three days.

    A final design was selected from entries in a student competition, the winning design was a cardboard structure, chosen for its flexibility, stability, affordability, sense of impermanence and recyclability.

    Six hundred 2,6 by 1,3 meter corrugated cardboard panels were cut, perforated, folded and glued together to form a massive block, which in turn was pulled apart like a giant accordian to achieve its final shape. Adaptable to any space, the entire shelving unit can be easily folded down to a tenth of its ultimate length for storage or transport purposes.

    The cardboard itself, despite being light in nature, provides enough rigidity not only for the books, but also for the lowest shelf, which doubles as a bench for events, a place to display oversized objects, or simply to sit comfortably while leafing through a book.

    At the end of the event, the shelving unit was auctioned off, ensuring funding for more publications as well as the continuance of the Bookshop in the coming year.

    (Images by Reiner Hausleiter)

  • 10/10

    The Past Was a Mirage I Had Left Far Behind, Josiah McElheny at the Whitechapel Gallery

    New York based sculptor and writer Josiah McElheny created a large-scale installation for the Whitechapel Gallery. Seven large, mirrored sculptures are dotted around the space. Abstract films are projected onto the screens and mirrors of these minimal sculptures to great  visual and spatial effect.

    The exhibition forms part of The Bloomberg Commission that invites international artists to create annual site-specific artwork inspired by the rich history of gallery 2, the former reading room of the Whitechapel Library,  a creative haven for early modernist thinkers like Isaac Rosenberg and Mark Gertler.

    McElheny’s installation explores how abstraction is used to depict an image of visual enlightenment.  The reflections and refractions created by the installation saturates the gallery in images and light, distorted and multiplied. The installation will be tranformed constantly by alternating the visuals projected onto the sculptures.

    (Images via Whitechapel Gallery)

  • 07/10

    The Great Viennese Coffee House Experiment, Vienna Design Week

    The Great Viennese Coffee House Experiment is work-in-progress exhibition that took its cue from Gregor Eichinger’s lecture “An Abstract of an Essay on the Origin of Coffeehouses and Varieties through Artificial and Natural Selection“. The exhibition explores the current state of the infamous Viennese coffee houses, where ‘sit-and-sip’ has been a tradition in the city for more than 300 years, and speculates on the future of this Viennese institution.

    Coffee houses have been a part of social infrastructure of Vienna long before the phenomenon emerged in most other cities, and while each coffee house has its own distinct design and identity, there is undeniably an underlying atmosphere in each that embodies Viennese culture.

    Alfred Polgar, a journalist who is famous for his wit for the city’s coffee houses wrote of the well known Café Central:  “Its inhabitants are, for the most part, people who are misanthropes, and whose aversion to other people is as acute as their need for people: who want to be alone, but must have company to do so. The habitué of the Central is a person who derives no sense of belonging from his family, profession, or party; the Café Central comes to his rescue, inviting him to join and escape. Its customers know, love, and underestimate one another. Even those who profess not to know each other regard this non-relationship as a kind of relationship; mutual dislike serves as a unifying force at the Central, a sort of camaraderie. Everyone knows about everybody. The Café Central is a village in the center of the metropolis, steaming with gossip, curiosity, and slander.”

    Julia Landsiedl, 2011’s MAK designer in residence, makes observations and conducts interviews around the coffeehouse scene, collecting examples from actual practice while also sifting through the MAK collection in search of helpful thematic clues under direction of Gregor Eichinger.

    The exhibition takes the form of a cognitively compiled and annotated map of historic and contemporary coffee houses throughout the city, along with a three dimensional ‘collage’ of artifacts associated with this culture.

    “I have always been fascinated by the Viennese coffeehouse as the core of our culture of thinking and art. In the future we will have to take care to secure the existence of the coffeehouse in the 21st century.” Christoph Thun-Hohenstein, Managing Director of departure.

    “Coffeehouses encourage their guests to develop and spend time cultivating their own habits. These are mechanisms that offer us time and space, channeling our attention.” Gregor Eichinger, architect and designer who assumed direction of The Great Viennese Café: A Laboratory.

    (Images via jeplus.at)

  • 04/10

    The Disappearing Dining Club, London

    The Disappearing Dining Club is a step away from the conventional restaurant experience. It occupies a permanent ‘Dining Room’, a one table space that can only host ten people at a time, in Featherstone Street near Old Street, but also throws dinner and drinks parties in empty warehouses, hidden rooftops and basements, secret galleries and gardens, and just about any unusual space you can think of.

    The interior of the Dining Room, which opens only for bookings, is warm and homely. Guests are encouraged to forget about time, as all of the clocks on the walls have stopped long ago. The shelf that runs all around the room just below ceiling level is stacked with well-thumbed novels and 20th century bric-a-brac. The large wooden table is set with mismatched cutlery and old-fashioned glassware and creates the feeling of sitting down to a big family meal. The dimly lit interior, along with its quirky decor and limited amount of place settings creates a nostalgic dining experience that you are unlikely to have anywhere else.

    (Images via The Disappearing Dining Club)

  • 30/09

    John Lewis Fashion Pavilion by Grimshaw

    London department store John Lewis has commissioned Grimshaw Architects to design a pop-up installation for their Oxford Street store. The installation is made of cardboard tubes of various lengths and diameters suspended in sheets of perspex held together with transparent rods, creating the illusion of a floating cardboard screen.

    After two months in London it will travel to other John Lewis stores in the UK. The modular nature of the installation means that it can easily be dismantled and reconfigured to suit the needs of specific stores and spaces. The ‘tube walls’ separate spaces in an unusual way by partially obscuring views and revealing glimpses of adjacent spaces.

    (Images via Dezeen)

  • 28/09

    Depot Basel

    Basel is synonymous with contemporary art, but it has been lagging on the contemporary design front. This is set to change: Laura Pregger and Matylda Krzykowski co-found Depot Basel to provide space dedicated to contemporary design. It is hosted in a disused grain factory, provided by the Habitat Foundation, and what what better way to furnish the space than to invite designers to create pieces purpose made for the it?

    Nine designers were handpicked by the founders and spent five days with the distinctive silo structure, which inspired a dialogue between space and craft. The narrative that developed can be seen in the objects created by each designer for the initial prelude ‘Infrastructure’. The finished pieces walk the fine line between concept and functionality and evoke a strong sense of the space they inhabit, while clearly reflecting the voice of each individual designer.

    Julien Renault + Camille Blin, Lightbox Library

    Damien Gernay, Display Table

    Damien Gernay, Lounge Chair

    Florian Hauswirth, Rammed Clay Bench

    Kaspar Hamacher, 3 L Shelf

    Mieke Meijer, Service Desk

    Mieke Meijer, Triangle Display

    Max Lipsey, Tree Bark Benches

    Max Lipsey, Concentration Chair

    Tristan Cochrane, Podium Desks

    (Images via yatzer)

  • 21/09

    Size + Matter by David Chipperfield

    The London Design Festival never fails to transform an already interesting city into a treasure trove of installations. This year, in true form, it features designs by big names in architecture and design, with David Chipperfield Architects’ design for Size + Matter one of the most notable.

    Size + Matter pairs designers with materials / manufacturing processes so that the dynamics between design and materiality can be explored. This year’s material is Sefar Architecture Vision fabric, a metal-coated fabric mesh sandwiched between two sheets of glass to give a translucent / reflective effect that is black on one side and metallic on the the other.

    This unusual material has been used by the architects to create a sculptural pavilion that plays with the orientation of the different surfaces of the glass to make full use of both it’s translucent and reflective qualities. Unframed laminated glass panels create simple vertical elements that visitors can move through, each time having a different experience depending on time of day and levels of activity.

    The delicate, complementing relationship between the installation and its host site, the Royal Festival Hall, becomes apparent both in the designers drawings and in the physical manifestation of the design.

    (Images via Dezeen)

  • 12/09

    RGB in London

    The RGB project, as previously previously featured on this blog, is now in London at DreamBags-JaguarShoes.

    RGB is by Frencesco Rugi and Silvia Quintanilla, an artist/designer pair from Milan operating under the moniker Carnovsky. For the London installation they explored the concept of “Jungle”, creating intricate, overlapping graphics depicting a dense forest. Each primary colour layer represents a layer of the jungle: green light reveals the foliage of the jungle, red light unveils the animal kingdom, bar the monkeys, which are playfully revealed under blue light.

    Since the space is actually composed of two smaller spaces, previously the shops ‘Dream Bags’ and ‘Jaguar Shoes’, the designers decided to treat one space as day (images above)  and the other as night (images below).

    (Images via Dezeen)

  • 24/08

    The Draughtman's Arms, London

    As part of ‘The Arhictect: What Now? exhibition that ran from 9 to 13 August, architects Gundry and Ducker designed a ‘pop-up-pub’ in the Crypt of a Marylebone church that served as a bar on the opening night and as a reception area for the rest of the exhibition. Its simple cardboard shell was decorated with 1:1 CAD drawings of wallpaper, art, windows with architecture related views and all the other little details that make up a typical English pub.

    The illustrated aesthetic was complimented by a simple trestle table that served as the bar and a minimalist chandelier made of wood.

    Its cardboard shell hovered dado height above the floor, partially revealing activity within.

    (Images via Dezeen)

  • 25/07

    Festival des Architectures Vives, Montpelier

    Festival des Architectures Vives, or the Lively Architecture Festival, ran for the sixth year in a row in the city of Montpelier. For the five days that it ran, it transformed the city into a space of encounter (which was also the theme of this year’s event – The Encounter), that aimed to make architecture more accessible to the public. The organizers selected 11 proposals from 120 submissions, and these were installed in spaces in the city.

    MOBA Studio produced an installation called ‘Between Doors’. The designers selected doors from a series of demolished buildings, each door with a unique history and installed them in a courtyard to encourage interaction, both with building elements and with other members of the public.

    Angela CO installed oversized silver balloon disks, called ‘Floats’ that invited visitors to inspect the shape of the installation and allowed the designers to investigate the effect of ephemeral installations on architectural space.

    Hold Up Architecture created ‘Souffle’, which is French for breath. Visitors could temporarily get into what looks like a box that dropped into the courtyard. Inside they could influence projections on the ceiling by using the microphone provided.

    Remy Roux received the Special Award for his installation ‘Balade Sensorielle’. Timber boxes partually obscured the visual connection between spaces, making visitors more reliant on sounds, encouraging a game of guessing who is on the other side of the walls.

    The prize of the public went to Plux.5 for their installation ‘Ma Cour dants ta cour’, its colourful, playful execution facinated visitors to the festival. The aim of the installation was to investigate the encounter between the apologue of the Quebecois courtyard and the image of the courtyard in Montpellier through its archetypes.

    The Jury Prize went to ‘Expo d’expe’ by the GoaGroup. Huge white cylinders, that invited visitors to wander and hide, where installed. In addition to the physical interaction it encourages, visitors are allowed to draw on the cylinders leaving traces of their encounters.

    Universite D’AALTO installed a textile sculpture named ‘Will’. The elegant installation was brought to life by wind and sunlight.

    ‘Le Mur Du Mou’ consisted of multiple mirrors, reflecting and distorting its surroundings and the image of the visitors exploring the it. Designers Yok Yok intended the installation to play with visitors’ perception of architecture.

    (Images via Yatzer)

  • 21/07

    The Truvia Voyage of Discovery

    The rooftop of Selfridges, Oxford street has been transformed beyond recognition by jelly mongers, Bompas and Parr. The Truvia Voyage of Discovery is a celebration of the arrival of Truvia sweetener in Britain that runs from the 21st to the 24th of July, tickets have sadly sold out already.

    Bompas and Parr have lived up to their reputation of delivering the strange and exciting, creating a rooftop landscape complete with rowing lake and waterfall. Rounded off by rows of the Stevia plant from which the natural, calorie-free sweetener is derived.

    Guests at the event can sip on cocktails by the Experimental Cocktail Club or teas and coffees by Caravan and the Rare Tea Company while drinking in their unusual surroundings and an amazing view over the heart of London shopping.

    (Images via Notcot)

  • 19/07

    Nomad by 1/100

    Swiss architects 1/100 have installed five timber-clad caravans in the garden of the Quai Branly Museum in Paris. Each pavilion serves a different function. Their somewhat plain shells unfold to reveal unexpected interiors, decorated with attention grabbing disco lights. The caravans are nomadic, like caravans should be, and come 4 September the carpets and stools surrounding them will be packed up and they will continue on their journey.

    The temporary installation was constructed of second-hand caravans that have been completely transformed, so that they can sit lightly on just about any site, yet have a big influence on the use and experience of public space.

    The five caravans accommodate disparate activities, from a  disco to a sheltered information point, an ice cream vendor to a sound-system and a kindergarten to a stage. The museum garden is probably experiencing its most animated summer yet.

    (Photographs by Thomas Mailaender)

  • 07/04

    The Modern Pantry at Meza

    You are always guaranteed a delicious brunch, lunch or dinner in a comfortable, relaxed atmosphere at The Modern Pantry. New Zealand chef Anna Hansen performs magic with fresh ingredients to create original dishes that are as inspiring as their almost all white interior.

    For a limited period this Spring, The Modern Pantry takes some of its relaxed atmosphere to vibrant Soho. For four weeks the interior of Meza on Wardour Street will be transformed along with its menu.

    The new interior features walls painted in muted tones and minimalist Danish furniture from design house Fritz Hansen. Interesting artworks from guest artists Kate Boxer and Robert Clarke can be seen throughout the space.

    (Images via We Heart)